plan - library.ubc.ca · e 1 budget mys:tory . . (this is the second in a series dealing with...

4
e 1 Budge t Mys :tory . . (This is the second in a series dealing with athletics a t UBC by Ubyssey editorial writer Chuck Coon .—EdItdr) . By CHUCK COO N (Editorial Writer ) Student Council has not yet seen the budget of the Men' s Athletic Association for 1951 .52 . . Thia,has kept AMS treasurer Phil Anderson in a tizzy . H e wag pacified to a degree by the ;financial statement presented tp council January 21 . Ths actual budget cannot be are , the Board of Governors . }t'td officially by council until 'Nearly $18,000 of student mone y thi't .'Athletfo Board, aees It . was turned over to MAD at th e Tie Athletic Board has not been beginning of the year, Until a wee k lit'urp as ' yet by the faculty's Ad• ago, council had not heard, a thin g 'leery Council to the School of about MAD expenditures . Opoation . Council is at least supposed to re The promotion of the Physical ceive minutes of ,MAD meetings , Eduoatlon Dept, to a School was MAD president Bill Sperling claim s announced just one week ago by jilts board did not keep• minutes . fused e By Ostrom Pla n B y ln; his annual renbrt to council ; And Mr. B arling as lax fai l II1, $Pling maid .he was . contused ing to report to council until th e bY the Ostrom , Plan and its provl• faecal year was half over . etoae, . He bl,,ies part of the con- Perhaps' it would have been bet - fisted on the lack of an annual ter for Brock Ostrom to have ru n repo t . ti m Brock Ostrom, after for MAD president this year, ahem ,the series of tecotllenda• It is easy to say : 'If this is a n Wits 'Was named, example of ,student adminiatratiou , Atli a serious matter when the let's have no, more of it. lytudent head of athletics Is untamt• But university students are sup - list' with .the athletic revamping posed to be future leaders pi th e program he is supposed to be in nation, They moat get some ,eft charge of, pariance at . university. Thank goodness Brock Ostrom Admittedly, it ' is difficult t o remained on the campus this year, judge the success of a four•yea r said Mr. Sparling, plan in the middle of its first year . Otherwise we could hats chaos . Yqy if relations 'between studen t Its blear that Mr. Ostrom should council and the MAD are going to ba a made an annual report in be strained to this extent ever y tole the first, and brutal, year of year, the Ostrom plan is sure t o ' quicksand. s De ends On MA D The success of the Oftrom Plat AIMS ,is not held responsible fo r mae Well depend upon what hap- paying injury bills . pens in the Men's Athletic Mee. As a result of this antiquated ae torate during the rest ot i the year . cident benefit p lan ; the athlet e department has run uP an injur y The financial report submitted tai bill of close to $1,s00 only part o f council contains one piece of en• which has been paid by the acct . oouraging news . The America n football enpeditures• show a sui t plus of 1212,42 . , , However, according to the term s of 'the'""R QM"henotit'a hill the. Rhodes . Scholarshi p larden To Visit UB C E . T. Williams, C .B ., C .B .E ., D .S.O ., Senior Tutor of Ballio t College, Oxford, will speak to UBC students in Arts ' 100 o n Wednesday, February 6 under the sponsorship of NFCUS . i t Warden of Rhodes House, Wil Seccc 'lams looks after the Rhodes Scho- lars during their years at Oxford . He secures their admission to on e of the Oxford colleges, pays the m their scholarship money, keep s track of their academic progres s during term and theinejourneying s during vacation. He is adviser, confidant an d friend away tom bom/ to al l Rhodes Scholars . , Twenty ; o u r scholars from Canada will be i n residence neat year and there ma y 'be 150 more Rhodes Scholars fro m other parts of the Commonwealt h and the USA . Williams, with his wife, I s coming to Canada to meet th e Canadian Rhodes Scholars , Secretaries, and members o f Selection Committees and t o become familiar with the uni 'versitlef and constituencie s from which Canadian Rhdde s Scholars are appointed . The . new Darden of Rhode s House will spend a month In Las! , ern Canada, three months in th e U .S . and eleven days in wester n Canada before sailing for Ne w Zealand on February* 7 . During his visit ti USC Wll llama with meet with Pat Ta y for, Rhodes Scholar for 195 2 from this university . Co rtoon Misinterprete c The front-page cartoon whic h appeared in ye g tepday's Ubysse y has caused an indignant sti r amongst the students in Acadi a Camp, who interpreted it as a n attack on foreign students , The Ubyssey ' editors, however , never even thought of foreign stu- dents but only wished to pok e some fun at Engineers . The scen e was supposed to represent an E n glneer studying at a pool table . —Photo by Jaek Perkin s ' PREPARING FOR ' the chemistry department n uiiicai i comedy, kit "Depatured Boy" is student Willian4 ; (Fortitte) Smith . Smith is attempting to give a chemist's version of how to bake alike . Performance is tonight at 8 4 p .m . in Physics la. Tielcets !125c , CET ~140P STICKS OUT , FOR INT . HOUSE, DIVIN E ' You can eat your •favorite Chinese dishes at Acadi a Camp on Sunday, February 3, when .tl Interustional ' ouse . :tu a e g ottt i ft . ilt a 4Ohis se :'dihinee, a, , The, ieonauleGerieral for Nationalist china,, the Honor• . able Hsueh•Chth Wei, will speak on the general picture of Chinese culture up to the present time . Professor ping-ti Ho, of the UBC Dept . of . History , will speak ' especially on Confucius . I k3 Brotherhood Wee k To Feature Dance s February 17 to 24 is Brotherhood Week on the campus, an d the Brotherhood Week Committee has planned two , specia l activities for that time . A program including colorful ship Officer for the Dominion Go v dances by the Canadian Folk So• eminent, ,will bring greetings fro m clety, a panel of four outstanding Ottawa . There will be a 25c ad speakers' arranged by the U .N . mission charge to cover expenses . Club on the campus, dancing and Music for the dance will be arrang- refreshments, will be presentel l ed though Radsoc . Wednesday evening . ' The Committee is also arrangin g February 20, In the Brock visits of foreign studeuta . in cit y Lounge, Dr . W . G. Black, Citizen-hemes . APOSTLE OF THE GUITA R Currently . dh his eighth conse cutivo American tour, Andr e Segovia will come to universit y [or a recital on February 5t h at the Brock Hall . The virtuoso, to whom seve n noted contemporary composer s have dedicated guitar compos e times, is . also a specialist In th e music of the classic period, i n eluding Johann ,Sebastian Bache . Many of Bach's works wer e originally written for the lute , and transcribed by him for oth er instruments . When Segovi a atitemnted . early in his caree r to broadens the guitar repetoir e he turned to the original lut e quarts 'because of the .ins'tru- ments' similarity to the guitar . When Andre Segovia was a young man, he determined t o make the guitar his career an d to prove to the world that i t dent fund . But the accident benfit fund is ' another phase of the problem . I t will 'be dealt with in the next a n Melee * * USC SAILING CLUB will hol d an organizational meeting today . Friday, 12 :30 in Arts 104 . The in- vitation to the InterCallegiate Re- gatta will be discussed . , * * * . ANDRES SEGOVIA, one of th e 'world's leading , guitarists, wil l give a recital at UBC on Tuesday , Fah. 5 at 8 :30 . * * * THE VCF presents Rev . E . D . Brotsky, speaking on the "Creed s of a Jewish Christla'n " today i n Eng . 202 . ' * * * MUSIC APPRECIATION CLU B presents "Le Prophete--Corona tion March" by Meyenbeer ; "La Gioconda—+Dance of the Hours" b y Ponchielli ; and a sonata by Par adles today at 12 :30 in the Doubl e Committee Room, Brock Hal . M .P . Talk s To Liberal s "GO NORTH YOUNG MAN" wil l be the topic of George Murtay , M .P ., who speaks on Friday noo n in Arts 100 under the sponsorshi p of the Littoral Club . Mr . Murray i s the member of parliament for th e Caribou . ' * el * SQUARE DANCE PRACTIC E ir rlday noon in Women's Gym, fo r everyone going to nthe "F'armer' s Frolic ." * * * DANCE FESTIVAL rehearsal I n ballroom starts at '0 p .m, sharp i n a4 . on Friday . xxxiv . 5 CENTS NO . 4 4 S Counci l 00 Buildin g Ultra-Moder n Building Opened , On Campu s By ERNIE SCHLESINGE R Over 150 people stood i n urizzling rain to see the ne w British Columbia Researc h Council building formall y i opened by the Honorabl e Leslie H . Eyres, Thurday after noon . Among those present at the open- ing were Honourable C . D . Howe , Federal Minister ' of Trade aw l Commerce ; Honourable Dougla s Turnbull,, . Provincial Minister o f Trade and Industry ; and Dr . N . A . M . MacKenzie, President of th e University . of British Columitia . "One year and five days ago . " said the Hon . Leslie H. Eyres, " i turned the first sod for the con . struction of this building . ' To m e It's not just another building. I t is a milestone in British Columbia' s conatr g ctlon Industry , since th e building ' cost' $110,000, The groun d from MC . materials . " ULTRA MODER N Tlne . .ltltra modern three stor y building cost $11,000 . The groun d floor contains the' general office s and n the physical testing labora- tories . On the second floor are th e Applied Biology and Chemistry laboratories and the library, whil e the Physics and Metallurgy labor- atories are" located on the thir d floor . With the opening of its ne w permanent laboratory building on e the UBC campus, the British Co . inhabit° Re $' arch°Council eaters a period of enlarged usefulness t o the industries of the Province . "The history of British Columbig is the exploitation of raw ma- terials," said the Hon . Dougla s Turnbull, "That is not the righ t road to proslnerity . ' B .C . FORTUNAT E The Hon . C . D . Howe state d "British Columbia is fortunate t o have such a fine building ." He the n went on to praise UBC's outstand- ing contribution in the pure an d applied sciences .. PREXY CANDIDATE S TO GIVE, SPEECHE S Candidetee for president o f the AMS will give their open- ing campaign speeches toda y at 12 :30 In the Brock Lounge . Candidates are Mike Ryan , Raghbir Basl, Joe Nold an d Gerry Duclos, s Christia n History . ' Lectures . . Dr . Watt To Start -Serie s ' Next Week - The V e r y Reverend . Dr. Hugh Watt, a former modes ator of the Church of Scotland , will give a series of talks` i n Agriculture t00 commencin g Monday, February 4. He, .t> 11 ' speak ion -Shea f** of the . ho t four Christian centuries an d their leaders . Dr. Watt is Dean Emeritus of the Faculty of Divinity at the Univer - sity of Edinburgh' pnd is stlpe t vising PhD . theses JN`lChurch Hie . tory at this University . The President's Committee on , Spiritual Values are sponsoring th e talks . President MacKenzie, wh o will act as Chairman at the opening meeting, says : , "Because-of .Dr. Watt's dtstin guished record, and because o f the importance of the topic h e proposes to discuss, it le hope d that a number of the student s and staff of the University ali t attend these talks, and partle!1- larly, that some of those stndents who are interested In hat . Ing courses on religion given, wil l attend and find In . these lecturii s somethig to satisfy their inter est. " was more than an instrumen t suitable only to dance rhythm s and song accompaniments . in his autobiography, the fa - Moue . guitarist has 'told ho w strongly he felt : "I decided 1 would be the apostle of the gui- tar, or, to put it more exactly , her husband before God, swear- ing to provide liter with all tha t she might need so that th e world might respect her and re- ceive her with the honor sh e deserved . . . I would be enur e ly faithful . . As one critic subsequently ob- served ; "Marriage vows hav e seldom been m'bre scrupulousl y observed. " Tickets for general public ar e available at AMS Office, Broc k Hall and :4lodern Music, 53 6 Seymour St, Student tickets ar e available at the door . VANCOUVER,_ B.C ., FRIDAY, FEBUARY 1,195 2 Andre Segovia Plays February 5t h PAY GRAD FEES AT 0AMS

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Page 1: Plan - library.ubc.ca · e 1 Budget Mys:tory . . (This is the second in a series dealing with athletics at UBC by Ubyssey editorial writer Chuck Coon.—EdItdr) . By CHUCK COON (Editorial

e

1

BudgetMys:tory . .

(This is the second in a series dealing with athletics a tUBC by Ubyssey editorial writer Chuck Coon.—EdItdr) .

By CHUCK COON(Editorial Writer)

Student Council has not yet seen the budget of the Men' sAthletic Association for 1951 .52.

.Thia,has kept AMS treasurer Phil Anderson in a tizzy . He

wag pacified to a degree by the ;financial statement presentedtp council January 21 .

Ths actual budget cannot be are , the Board of Governors .

}t'td officially by council until 'Nearly $18,000 of student mone ythi't .'Athletfo Board, aees It.

was turned over to MAD at th e

Tie Athletic Board has not been beginning of the year, Until a week

lit'urp as ' yet by the faculty's Ad• ago, council had not heard, a thin g

'leery Council to the School of about MAD expenditures .

Opoation .

Council is at least supposed to re •

The promotion of the Physical ceive minutes of ,MAD meetings ,

Eduoatlon Dept, to a School was MAD president Bill Sperling claims

announced just one week ago by jilts board did not keep• minutes .

fused e By Ostrom PlanByln; his annual renbrt to council; And Mr. B arling as lax fai l

II1,$Pling maid .he was . contused ing to report to council until th e

bY the Ostrom , Plan and its provl• faecal year was half over.

etoae,. He bl,,ies part of the con- Perhaps' it would have been bet -

fisted on the lack of an annual ter for Brock Ostrom to have run

repo t . ti m Brock Ostrom, after for MAD president this year,

ahem ,the series of tecotllenda•

It is easy to say : 'If this is an

Wits 'Was named,

example of ,student adminiatratiou ,

Atli a serious matter when the let's have no, more of it.

lytudent head of athletics Is untamt• But university students are sup -

list' with .the athletic revamping posed to be future leaders pi th e

program he is supposed to be in nation, They moat get some ,eft•

charge of,

pariance at . university.

Thank goodness Brock Ostrom Admittedly, it ' is difficult to

remained on the campus this year, judge the success of a four•year

said Mr. Sparling,

plan in the middle of its first year .

Otherwise we could hats chaos . Yqy if relations 'between studen t

Its blear that Mr. Ostrom should council and the MAD are going to

ba a made an annual report in be strained to this extent ever y

tole the first, and brutal, year of year, the Ostrom plan is sure to

' quicksand.

s De ends On MADThe success of the Oftrom Plat AIMS ,is not held responsible fo r

mae Well depend upon what hap- paying injury bills .

pens in the Men's Athletic Mee. As a result of this antiquated ae •

torate during the rest ot i the year. cident benefit plan; the athlete

department has run uP an injur yThe financial report submitted tai bill of close to $1,s00 only part of

council contains one piece of en• which has been paid by the acct .oouraging news . The American

football enpeditures• show a suitplus of 1212,42 .

, ,

However, according to the term s

of 'the'""R QM"henotit'a hill the.

Rhodes . Scholarshiplarden To Visit UBC

E. T. Williams, C.B., C.B.E., D.S.O., Senior Tutor of Ballio t

College, Oxford, will speak to UBC students in Arts ' 100 onWednesday, February 6 under the sponsorship of NFCUS .

it Warden of Rhodes House, Wil •

Seccc'lams looks after the Rhodes Scho-lars during their years at Oxford .

He secures their admission to one

of the Oxford colleges, pays them

their scholarship money, keeps

track of their academic progres s

during term and theinejourneyings

during vacation.He is adviser, confidant an d

friend away tom bom/ to al l

Rhodes Scholars. , Twenty; o u r

scholars from Canada will be i n

residence neat year and there may

'be 150 more Rhodes Scholars fro m

other parts of the Commonwealt h

and the USA .

Williams, with his wife, I s

coming to Canada to meet th e

Canadian • Rhodes Scholars,Secretaries, and members ofSelection Committees and tobecome familiar with the uni •

'versitlef and constituencie sfrom which Canadian Rhdde sScholars are appointed .The. new Darden of Rhode s

House will spend a month In Las!,

ern Canada, three months in th e

U .S . and eleven days in wester n

Canada before sailing for New

Zealand on February* 7 .

During his visit ti USC Wll •

llama with meet with Pat Ta yfor, Rhodes Scholar for 195 2

from this university.

Co rtoon Misinterpretec

The front-page cartoon whic h

appeared in yegtepday's Ubysse y

has caused an indignant sti r

amongst the students in Acadi a

Camp, who interpreted it as a n

attack on foreign students ,

The Ubyssey ' editors, however ,

never even thought of foreign stu-

dents but only wished to poke

some fun at Engineers . The scen e

was supposed to represent an E n

glneer studying at a pool table .

—Photo by Jaek Perkins'

PREPARING FOR ' the chemistry department n uiiicai i

comedy, kit "Depatured Boy" is student Willian4 ; (Fortitte)

Smith. Smith is attempting to give a chemist's version of

how to bake alike. Performance is tonight at8 4 p.m. in

Physics la. Tielcets !125c ,

CET ~140P STICKS OUT ,

FOR INT. HOUSE, DIVINE

' You can eat your •favorite Chinese dishes at Acadia

Camp on Sunday, February 3, when .tl Interustional'

ouse.:tu aegotttift. ilt

a 4Ohis se:'dihinee, a,

,

The, ieonauleGerieral for Nationalist china,, the Honor• .

able Hsueh•Chth Wei, will speak on the general picture of

Chinese culture up to the present time .

Professor ping-ti Ho, of the UBC Dept. of . History ,

will speak' especially on Confucius .

I

k3

Brotherhood Week

To Feature Dances

February 17 to 24 is Brotherhood Week on the campus, an d

the Brotherhood Week Committee has planned two , special

activities for that time .A program including colorful ship Officer for the Dominion Gov

dances by the Canadian Folk So• eminent, ,will bring greetings fro m

clety, a panel of four outstanding Ottawa . There will be a 25c ad•

speakers' arranged by the U .N . mission charge to cover expenses .

Club on the campus, dancing and Music for the dance will be arrang-

refreshments, will be presentel l ed though Radsoc .

Wednesday evening . '

The Committee is also arranging

February 20, In the Brock visits of foreign studeuta . in cit y

Lounge, Dr . W. G. Black, Citizen-hemes .

APOSTLE OF THE GUITAR

Currently . dh his eighth conse •

cutivo American tour, Andr e

Segovia will come to universit y

[or a recital on February 5t h

at the Brock Hall .

The virtuoso, to whom seve n

noted contemporary composers

have dedicated guitar compos e

times, is . also a specialist In the

music of the classic period, i n

eluding Johann ,Sebastian Bache .

Many of Bach's works wer e

originally written for the lute ,

and transcribed by him for oth •

er instruments . When Segovi a

atitemnted . early in his caree r

to broadens the guitar repetoire

he turned to the original lut e

quarts 'because of the .ins'tru-

ments' similarity to the guitar .

When Andre Segovia was a

young man, he determined t o

make the guitar his career an d

to prove to the world that i t

dent fund .

But the accident benfit fund is '

another phase of the problem. I t

will 'be dealt with in the next an

Melee

* *

USC SAILING CLUB will hol d

an organizational meeting today .

Friday, 12 :30 in Arts 104 . The in-

vitation to the InterCallegiate Re-

gatta will be discussed . ,

* * * .

ANDRES SEGOVIA, one of the

'world's leading ,guitarists, wil l

give a recital at UBC on Tuesday ,

Fah. 5 at 8 :30 .* * *

THE VCF presents Rev. E. D.

Brotsky, speaking on the "Creed s

of a Jewish Christla'n " today i n

Eng. 202 .

'* * *

MUSIC APPRECIATION CLU B

presents "Le Prophete--Corona•

tion March" by Meyenbeer ; "La

Gioconda—+Dance of the Hours" b y

Ponchielli ; and a sonata by Par•

adles today at 12 :30 in the Doubl e

Committee Room, Brock Hal.

M.P. TalksTo Liberals"GO NORTH YOUNG MAN" will

be the topic of George Murtay ,

M.P., who speaks on Friday noon

in Arts 100 under the sponsorship

of the Littoral Club. Mr. Murray i s

the member of parliament for th e

Caribou .

'*

el

*

SQUARE DANCE PRACTIC E

ir rlday noon in Women's Gym, for

everyone going to nthe "F'armer' s

Frolic ."

* * *

DANCE FESTIVAL rehearsal I n

ballroom starts at '0 p .m, sharp i n

a4. on Friday .

xxxiv . 5 CENTS NO. 44

S

Council

00 Building

Ultra-Modern

Building Opened ,

On Campus

By ERNIE SCHLESINGER

Over 150 people stood in

urizzling rain to see the new

British Columbia Research

Council building formally

iopened by the Honorable

Leslie H. Eyres, Thurday after •

noon .

Among those present at the open-

ing were Honourable C . D. Howe ,

Federal Minister ' of Trade aw l

Commerce ; Honourable Dougla s

Turnbull,, . Provincial Minister o f

Trade and Industry ; and Dr . N. A .

M. MacKenzie, President of th e

University . of British Columitia .

"One year and five days ago . "

said the Hon . Leslie H. Eyres, " i

turned the first sod for the con .

struction of this building . ' To me

It's not just another building. It

is a milestone in British Columbia' s

conatr gctlon Industry ,since the

building 'cost' $110,000, The groun d

from MC. materials . "

ULTRA MODER N

Tlne . .ltltra modern three stor y

building cost $11,000. The ground

floor contains the' general office s

and nthe physical testing labora-

tories . On the second floor are th e

Applied Biology and Chemistry

laboratories and the library, whil e

the Physics and Metallurgy labor-

atories are" located on the third

floor .

With the opening of its ne w

permanent laboratory building one

the UBC campus, the British Co.

inhabit° Re$' arch°Council eaters a

period of enlarged usefulness t o

the industries of the Province .

"The history of British Colum•

big is the exploitation of raw ma-

terials," said the Hon. Douglas

Turnbull, "That is not the righ t

road to proslnerity . '

B .C. FORTUNAT E

The Hon. C. D. Howe state d

"British Columbia is fortunate to

have such a fine building ." He then

went on to praise UBC's outstand-

ing contribution in the pure an d

applied sciences . .

PREXY CANDIDATES

TO GIVE, SPEECHESCandidetee for president of

the AMS will give their open-

ing campaign speeches toda y

at 12 :30 In the Brock Lounge .

Candidates are Mike Ryan ,

Raghbir Basl, Joe Nold and

Gerry Duclos,

s

Christian

History . '

Lectures. .

Dr. Watt To

Start -Series

' Next Week -

The V e r y Reverend . Dr.

Hugh Watt, a former modes•

ator of the Church of Scotland,

will give a series of talks` in

Agriculture t00 commencing

Monday, February 4. He, .t> 11 '

speak ion -Sheaf** of the . hot

four Christian centuries and

their leaders .

Dr. Watt is Dean Emeritus of the

Faculty of Divinity at the Univer-

sity of Edinburgh' pnd is stlpetvising PhD . theses JN`lChurch Hie .

tory at this University .

The President's Committee on ,

Spiritual Values are sponsoring the

talks . President MacKenzie, who

will act as Chairman at the open•

ing meeting, says :

,

"Because-of .Dr. Watt's dtstin •

guished record, and because of

the importance of the topic heproposes to discuss, it le hoped

that a number of the students

and staff of the University ali t

attend these talks, and partle!1-

larly, that some of those stn•

dents who are interested In hat.Ing courses on religion given, wil l

attend and find In . these lecturii s

somethig to satisfy their inter•

est. "

was more than an instrumen t

suitable only to dance rhythm s

and song accompaniments .

in his autobiography, the fa-

Moue . guitarist has 'told ho w

strongly he felt : "I decided 1

would be the apostle of the gui-

tar, or, to put it more exactly,

her husband before God, swear-

ing to provide liter with all tha t

she might need so that the

world might respect her and re-

ceive her with the honor she

deserved . . . I would be enur e

ly faithful . .

As one critic subsequently ob-

served ; "Marriage vows hav e

seldom been m'bre scrupulously

observed."

Tickets for general public ar e

available at AMS Office, Broc k

Hall and :4lodern Music, 53 6

Seymour St, Student tickets ar e

available at the door .

VANCOUVER,_ B.C., FRIDAY, FEBUARY 1,195 2

Andre Segovia Plays February 5th

PAY GRAD FEES AT 0AMS

Page 2: Plan - library.ubc.ca · e 1 Budget Mys:tory . . (This is the second in a series dealing with athletics at UBC by Ubyssey editorial writer Chuck Coon.—EdItdr) . By CHUCK COON (Editorial

Page Two

THE UB SSEY

Friday, February 1, 1952 •

' MEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS

Authorized as second class mail by the Poet Office Dept . Ottawa, Stu-dent subscriptions $1.20 per year (included in AMS fees, Mail eubecrip-tton $2.00 per year, Single copies five cents . Published throughout th eUniversity year by the Student Publications Board of the Alma Mate rSociety, University of British Columbia . Editorial opinions expressedherein are those of the editorial staff of the Ubyssoy, and not neceesarlythose of the Alma Mater Society or of the University .

Offices to Brock Hail

For display advertising

phone ALma 162.4

Phone llama 3253

I

R•INeCNIEF .: LES ARMOUR

tiotitive Editor—Allan Goldsmith, Managing Editor—Alex MahGiltivray

tfhwt Editor, V. Fred Edwards ; City Editor, Mi1c3 Ryan ; CUP Editor ,Sheila Kearns ; Women's Editor, Florence McNeil ; Fine Arts Editor,.

f'$rookington ; Copy Editor, Jean )Smith ; Director of PUhotographyBruce Jatlfray ; Senior Editors : Myra Green, Elsie Gorbat, Denis Blake ;Ndihoriat Writers : Joe Schlesinger, Chuck Coon and Dot Auerbach .

N,At*i's to the editor should, be restricted to 150 words, The Ubi'ssey~~11gr"s1 the right to out letters and cannot guarantee to publish all

reeelved .

You Al S#ackerelections in the wind, the question has been asked

lately just what does Students' Council do?

Unfortunately most students become interested in the

Itril's week only when something sepsational happens ,

r the great part of the Council's work is to act as ag#iaig body between the subsidiary organizations on

pits, between the students and 'the faculty, and between

1 `8,C, and other Canadian universities, Thus' the Council act s

as a channelling body for student activity.

A glance at Council minutes each week would give one a

birds-eye view of all the different types of problems which

the Council handles. However, besides these activities i n

Council meetings, avast amount of interesting work is don e

by each councillor in a number of committees and in his own

particular office•

Students' Council is charged with promoting and con-

trolling the extra-curricular activities of one of the - most

autonomous student bodies in North America . Let 's all do

our part to make sure these offices are not filled by acele-

matlb and are voted in by a majority of the students . In

other words "DON'T BE A SLACKER!"

TED LEE.

N Friday January .25th Dr. W. G. Black closed the Inter-national Students's club Orientation series with a re-

bly profound observation to the effect that there is a

difference between toleration and acceptance .

. The trouble with us Canadians (to plagerize a prominen t

American) is that we tolerate, we seldom accept" And who ar e

we that our position calls for toleration of others .

After all, without the others, where would Canada Be?The Indians were here first, the French started the movemen twest, and the Chinese , the Slays, Scandinfivians, and Chines ebuilt the railroads : this is Canada .

The English brought tea an11 finance, the Americans, enter -prise, Without this mixture there could be no Canada, and w e

thank Dr. Black for his short and pertinent reminder.,

YESTEDITORIAL

Death DanceD,ECADENCE

is claimed to be the cause of pessimism .The widespread social pessimism prevailing today does

not spring from decadence . Nor does it spring as the Marxia ntheorists suggest, from the decay of, Western man and th efailure of the democratic fiber. If men have revealed new andunexpected sadism, they have also revealed new and unex-pected heroism .

Least of all should we project our sense of bewildermentand failure into a conviction of original evil . We disbelieveas much in original evil and man 's inherent brutality as wedo in original good and man's inherent perfectibility . There i sa little bit of the fascist in every one of us, and good deal insome of us. But we must learn to distinguish between th einnately brutal in the human animal, the institutionally tenaci-ous, and the historically reactionary .

Of the irtntitely brutal we can know little, except that evenwhen most of it is channeled and sublimated there is still a nuncomfortable deposit left . Of the institutionally tenacious inus, we know the immense force of habit patte'ns such as ar einvolved in the oraotions and ideologies clustering about pro-perty and profits and what brutal energies may be releasedwhen those habits are uprooted . Of the historically reactionar ywe can only say, that the direction of political emotions a tsome historical moment tell us more about the quality of ou rinstitutions than it does about our original nature .

Civilization today is a death dance because of the accumu-lated weight of confused ideologies . Our task is the heoric on eof changing and. directing those ideas so that their weight wil lsupport us, instead of crushing us .

Man's political life, like nature, is spendthrift of its ener-gies; there is a vast deal of ruin in it before li goes wholly t oruin. But the price of survival is militancy and social in-telligence . These alone can shape Ideologies .

GEORGE ROHN .

edey ck44/(k

Acceptance

SCENE ; Meeting `off theVarsity Indoor Club. The

VIC heirarchy is seated .on

two sofas stage ri t.. The

other members lounge in easy

chairs stage left .

A young man, his flushe d

face standing out in contrast

to the pallid VIC'ers, stand s

defiantly in front of the

brass .

4ritleSeDEVT : (to the youngmen) All you admit, Smtth-ers, 4artaking of conduct un•becoming to a member of theVIC ?

tglittTHERs : Yes.

PEES : You realise, o fcourse, the consequences ofyour actions. have you any:thing to say fqr yolwaelit

t'al'l' :' Yes. I'm glad I wentfor a Watt Sunday afternoon .And I'm even glad aoraeonesaw mo running along halter-etty Boulevard.

A low murmur arises fromthe members. Tits prsMdentstiutrms In his seat.

PROS : It would not hav ebeen so bad if you were onlywalking, abut I'm afraid I hav eno choke, (he turns to the ex-ecutive ; 'they nod solemnly i nagreement) but to ask you tohand in your metpbershtp tothe Varsity Indoor Club,

Smitten,. cltAohes his facewith both hands, moans dfeeble protest, and collapse son the floor Wilting his hea den's* *Orly of Plato'suRepi+hiltaq'°'Jt`'relsnber ~ptalwup the velum. to see that I thas not been damaged andplaces In back In the book -shelf.

'PRNS : Now if that's all the

business for the day, we wil lcontinue with our discussio nor O'Neill's "Desire Under Th eElms,"

hs the talking swells to aresonant babble, Ann, a tal lthin one nudges her frien dJoan, a short stalky one .

ANN : The secretary told m ebefore the meeting the realreason they ejected poor Smith-ors was that he went for that 'walk with a girl from the op-;position .

JOAN : You don't mean —ANNo–Yes, and apparentl y

he had even agreed to go u pMount Seemore with her .

JOAN : Traitor! He deservedall he got ,

A tall man with a jet-blackbeard enters left 'rid, shoutsat the top of his voice ; "extraExtra' Just 'off the pre ..,Thursday Review of Litere-ture ; Western Review) A.M.!Harpy's! Antarctic Monthly !Read all aboutslt! "members crowd around th e

news vendor golbbling up hi ssupply'of the popular litera-ture .

ANN : (addressing a chubbY -faced man tweed) Is that notone of Joy CogwheePe a ttors ?(indicating the newsy) .

PETER : Good heaven's no ,Thats Eric Dollar . He need towrite a humorous column fo ra downtown, if you will pardo nthe expression, newspaper. De-cided he wanted to do seriou swriting, so he grew a beardand gave up laughing. He'sselling that popular trash toput himself through Dr . Fiery' screative writing class .

ANN : Why doesn't he joi nthe VIC?

PETER : He tried of course ,but we would not accept him .He's a mental case. Some sortof fixation — claims he ca nmake a living writing for th eCanadian market .

ANN : (nodding sycnpathetncally) Poor boy .

Pi'TbR : (Refilling his cu pfrom the coffee spigot attachedto his chair) Oh well, we can' tall know what Life is reall ylike .

Up A Tree

C

CURTAIN . (quickly) .

VIC

abbot .the TSBand ' exchange stu• DRESSMAKIN Gdents, and plans for expanding DORO'mY OlJ'Wlt8 DRESSMAK -

this field by bringing in students Ing, evening gowns . Also tomato.from India and other _parts of the ho.ty elf. Aolteradenss. AL 0288R,

world to benefit' us with their eel- 442'5 W. ,l0tb.

total contributions.

TRANSPORTATIO NThe next 'International" feature RIDE WANTED 8 :30'8 MONDAY

supported by the U'byssey was last to Friday, vicinity l3th and Gran-1. week's 'Canadian Orten44ditin -See vlile, Phone CH 4308 .

Jet, which was an endeavour to RIDE F1ROM MINTY OF' 1)ZT Efamtllarlse foretell students with Ave . and Granville for 9 :30 lee -Oauadian :life in 'the interests of titres, Phone OH 147t ,better "rntAdtontrbipe .

ROOM 4 BOARDThe ; Y4110h,, 4n 'the peat, has TWO G1J1i11 TO SHARE ATTRAC •

also aapported the international tine suite on W . Broadway, Marchtheme ,o our university life—the 1; Phone ,6E 7293 ,wei'"Iiing of foreign Rodents and TUTORING

Snewcomers to Tandda, helping to FRENiCH : EXPERT COACHINGmatte'then%

that this univer• by teacher, M .A. (UBC) and sheaft)' Ibelcnigs to'them as much as to dent of Sorbonne. Grammar, corn-anybody site . '

position, vocabulary building phon •The Ubyney this week has pre. etics. Excellent record with other

sentsd a cartoon iYjustrabing qur UBC students.404M ,exohekge scheme which is,men to :interpretation that the (pr e.v4ons attttirtle had Wien hYPporiti -oa9, and a fame veneer ,

or those who think that thi soaetoe l was dUniW. rude or to ba dtaste, We *lab to )supply an infe r.Oath'. ***Weis.

'What do We mean by "ex -i4" Ma word implies th e

mom t#'It' df egttad Values. Or 'this hots We pre dietressea to fin dthat the dartooegst .apearently ha ssuch a low opinion of the exchangemake of a .Ciotodtan student, now -ever, it le also posstbte that th ecartoonist had in mind doctrines o fno celled "superior races." 1,r thi sshould be true, we wish to re -mind him that the "Deutschlan dweer odes" theory and other simi -lar ides. Mete repeatedly beenfailures in history .

Of ooaree, ire did not want tohumiliate the foreign students. If,hoe/Wet, :this was his intent, h eshould carry, tt through to a con -elusion by proposing the ending ofthe exchange scheme and the ter -mination of the policy of bringin gtortilla students to this university .That would be the logical exten-sion of such a barbaric attitude.

Odes the cartoonist think tha twhen the Student "body voted fo rthe Exchange Scholarship Scheme ,it was only to show people of oth-er nations—and also onrseives-how we wish to create better re-lationships by demonstrating res •pact tq foreigners to whom w egive equal moral and soclal chan -ces, or does he think that this I sall false protense—"negative pr oJudice? "

When the native groups on th ecampus Insult each other, thereis an equality of opportunity t oretaliate . 'However, whottover th eintention of the cartoonist, w emust draw to his attention the fac tthat ,many of the foreign student sare unable to take part in suc hexchanges, due to language ditf iculties and to their peculiar posi-tion to our university life .

if we were diplomats, we shoulduse the harshest expression allow -ed by international protocol—"W oare very much surprised." We are,oslly straightforward, *polishe dstudents and so we can say, "Mr.Editor ,

Editor, The Ubyesey :The Film Society wishes t o

thank all those who helpedmake our premiere snowing o fthe 1951 World Series a sue .

Itl fl sThanks are especially due t o

the Alpha Delta Pi's for book-ing arrangements, and Wal tSussel and the Pub Board NthUbyssey advertising, Radsoc Isalso )deserving of a bouquet fortheir spot announcement on CK -MO, and for letting ,Ftlmso orun this film as a premiere, MelHenderson also has our deep. 'set appreciation .

Filmset would like to poin tout that, if anyone would lik eto obtain this film for their ownshowing, )Mel Henderson, whocan )be contacted at CHerr y8195, will be glad to arrang ebooking and rental of it at anytime .

d hope that in the days tocome Fllmsoc will be able topresent more films of this typ eto varsity audiences and t ohave the co-operation whic hwas displayed to us in out' run-ning of this premiere ,

Glenn A. Clark ,

Editor, The Ubye.ey: ,

LOST

Two weeks ago the Ubyssey pub- MANS BLACK UMBRELLA '1N

Robed the MS (International Stu. car oh man who gave ride to three

dents Service) Uses, which featpeople

men., Jan. 28. Please phone

CE 5761, ask for Pat .used articles and Mertes, 'by and

we are disgusted . "Yours truly ,

aigdtta Bal'la ,Bob 'Loosmoro,

Public Relationstutor . 'louse Committee .

T EXECUTIVE AND PROFESSIONAL DIVISION

of the

NATIONAL EMPLOYMENT SERVICE

In Co-operation, with '

MR. JOHN McLEAN, UDC Director of Personne l

Announce that Effective Immediately

MR. LEONARD WI;LLOUG BY

Will be Available for Intervie w

Each Monday and Wednesda y

, At Hut M7Next Door to Placement Bureau

FROM 12:30 TO 4:30 P.M .

This arrangement will make it possible for students seeking per-manent positions following graduation, or summer, employment ,to take advantage of the opportunities offered by the Nationa lEmployment Service .

Unemployment Insurance Commission.

Mbar and Ouf s e e . . . and a d of

425

A COMPLETE

PriatiN y ~eps)ticE'

*

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4436 West 10th Avenu e

Printers of "The Ubyssoy"

For Uhyssey Display Ads Phone ALma 3253

ALma 3253

4

FOR expert advice oil money

matters call on • . , . .

BANK OF MONTREAL

&'4 7egee read

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e ' MERLE C. KIRBY,

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wOHIfNe WITN CANADIAN! IN IVIK•Y WALK Of' LIPS IINCI SWua n

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FRENCH COACHING BY EXPER.

fenced )M .A. Emphasis on prepay

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MCGILL GRADUATE MA DE.

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39-20

TYPINGWE HOLD THE GOLD MEDA L

for 'typing accuracy and speed aw-arded, by the Buhinese 'Educators '

Association of Canada . A. O. Rob

inson, 41180 W . 11th Ave., AL 09i5it

IT WIiJL F!AC!IIJITATE OUR TYt'-

ing service. he ytiu'• if your mantascript le Written in Ink .

TYPING DONE At' HOME, PH,Dorothy Clare, FA 5'l80M ,

BOARD AND ROO MTWO GLRLS TO SHARE A"FTRAM •

Live suite, W. Broadway, March 1 .GE 729'

ELOISE STREET, NO . 7 DAL•housle Apts, AL 0655R . Typ`mg,essays, thesis, mimeo, notes. Aspecialty . We keep our deadline.University area campus rates.

4

4

Page 3: Plan - library.ubc.ca · e 1 Budget Mys:tory . . (This is the second in a series dealing with athletics at UBC by Ubyssey editorial writer Chuck Coon.—EdItdr) . By CHUCK COON (Editorial

a

Fridays February IV 1%52

THE vaYessr

Page4'hree

R►.

PAMELA 9TRELE-LITERARY EDITO R

The literary page would welcome further contributionsto this page. It is not absolutely necessary to be in Dr ,

eBirney's~Creative Writingjtrse to have anything publishedon this page.

Above all, we ire interested in some ore short stories(not ovet 1000 words—novels Will be printed in instalmanta.) Deadline for all material is Wednesday .

,Two Poems IIy Merle Wldrlok

For AMS President

JOSEPH NOLD

• Se conder's Statement

S

a

.jL :

r

i

Unreal cityGlitteringIn the mttltlfoiiMe gardensOf its avenuesWith the gleamOf sus on glass ,Or in the , nightLurid in neon ghir eOf a painted paramourWith hair piled highAbove the painted lureOf mocking face.Or do the dayOf Monday *Whin!And hair, curlpapere dWith the sarirlsOf emokestsok's belchingAnd the unwashed

flirt •

Of last night's festivalOn the drunken heap!nett' in a skidroad door.'Virtuous only on !SundayOr ableep perhapsWith the mooting deferenc e?o enforced peaceor the innately had .

By, TERRY NICHOLLSBening general meeting of the

Alta I. scheduled for March 20 .The insugttration of the newConnell and , several conetite-tieasal amendments are already.on the' agenda .

Other points of business consldered Monday night include dthe following .

SWIMMING . .POOL — Bil lSparling, MAD president, re-ported that proceeds from the

Sig Block' Club raffle will b oused' to establish a Swimmin gPool Fund. A wishing-well I nthe foyer Will also aid the fund .

Blue note crying Into the night,Clarinet soul, trumpet sobbing,Echo or prophecy of pain?Sadness ;borne a of the night windBegun of the planters in the cot .

ton•sotithMemory of the paddle wheel, mud.

dy riverSwirling the chant of a people's

sorrow

,From the endless shuffle of craw.

(led bodiesFrom the stale smoke and easy

greasy smellsJakebox of an al1•night cafe.Dark in the shadow of a drifting'fogShifting uneasily over huddled

housesWalling dowp the brickwet alleys ,Beating out the heart of the city ,Sucking at the great claay crumb -

ling-Utopia .Why are we (born of a hunger?Why in our souls is emptinessSeeking God of the nightwind ?

FEE INCREASE — MAD hassuggested an AMS fee increase ,WAD is in favor of an increase ,but LSE is against suoh a move .These opinions have been ex•

pressed in minutes of the meet-ings of various organisations .

MASWV REPORT - Joh n(1e Wolfe, i .SE president, outlin-ed a series of lectures on th eMassey Report to be presentedby the LSE Feb. 22 to 29 .

I88 SCHOLARSHIP — Pro-posal to give lSS Scholarship sto local immigrant studentswas referred back to the ISScommittee .

MIKE /RYANSince he began university, Mike

Ryan lllia always combined highmarks with energetic participationin student affairs .

Last year, be won his secondscholarship tor' general scholasti cability while playing Senior "A "basketball for the UBC Chiefs .This year, alihough possibly Thun •derbird material, Mike retired re-luctantly to partake in severalmore worthwhile aotAvities, nam-ely :

'President of the Commerce thedergraduate Sbelety,City editor of the Ubyssey.ObMrmap of Guides and Tour sof the Open House Committee.Sit ability and experience are

important, Mike will be the bes tman for the job.

KAY STEWARTDuriryg the years that I hav e

known Kay Stewart I (have bee ngreat* tarpres'sed with her quail•tie of organissation and leadership.She was a very dive student atHigh School and has !maintaine dMt attitude since coming to ' Var.ally,

Kay is the vice .president of th epresent WUS exeoutive, At the be .ginning of the fall term, in the ateBence of the. president, . Kay or.ganised all the initial WUS tune .tons.

During the remainder of the yea rshe was the key tigers in the or .Sanitation of the Big and Littl eSister' Banquet, HWinx, the WUSPepaMeet, and ' the WUS Coe dDance.

Her experience in IVUS and he rother admirable attributes con .vtnoe me that Kay is the righ tperson for president of WITS . Isecond her nomination with dee psinoerity.

Francds Smith .

Born 22 years ago, Joseph Noldcomes from a scholarly family (hi sfather spoke six languages : )

At St . Andrew's Colleges in On.tart() his record was the wheel' smost brilliant since 1924 . Nold wascaptain of football and hockey,leading French and history scho-lar, winner of Lieutenant-Gover-nor's Medal and coawinner of Gov-ernor4engral's medal .

An adventurers traveller beforeenrolling In law. Nold' spent a yea rsailing' the Carrtbepn seeking pinate treaspre.

At UBC' Nold won the Inter.Faculty debate in 5949 and was onthe nMcOol vn Oup `team in !t811 ,Joe is president of Parliamentar yForam and U.N. Model Assemblychairman .

Tom Barks,

RAGHBIR BASXWhile studying In India Ragltbi r

held important positions in the stn •dent government at the Unlver'city of Punjab. Aifter arriving i nCanada in 1949 he was elected t othe exe4ttive of the U.N. Globand became its president in 1954 .

This year he organised UBC'efirst International House and isnow its 'chairman . He is also anexecutive member of the CivilLiberties Union .

When Raghibir is elected he will :1. Piglet fee increases and seek

student concessions from the B.C .Electric Co. and B.C . Hospital In-swans .

2. Work for greater student par•tioipation in the AMS, closer co -operation with the Alumni Assoc-iation and greater University con-sciousness in the city, and through -out the province ,

3. Investigate the UniversityFmploylnent Service,

Ken Faris .

i am seconding Gerry iDuclos fo rAMS president because I believehis ideas and principles are in th ebest interests of the students.

He has a varied background . Hehas held positions as Homecomttleg Publicity Director, Totem Ad.vane Sales chairman, NewmanClub vice•president and is Develop-ment Fund chairman, a member ofthe Open House Committee an dKickapoos .

Personally .1 believe his princi-ples and ideas are reasonable andsincere .

He males but a few promisesall of which are clear, simple ,strong and definite.

I am ttery sure he will give what 'you and t want, sound counci lgovernment.

Maryan (Much Maoieieweki .

1 take great pleasure In second .ing 'Marlene Buckle for presiden tof WUS .

Dulling the six years I hav eknown her she has been extremelyactive in student affair's ,

Notable among these are seers .tary of USC, and Pre•Med repr osentative on WUS .. She has alsobeen active in 'High $chbol flan •ference Committee, Phrateres sodMUseoc .

With these and other qualifies .tions I have not room to mantle *I feel she is more than capable offulfilling the office of president , ofWUS.'

Beverley A. Birkett._s1r_'n.loO

e

'u.DAY

POOL OF LONDO N3 :45, 6 :00 and a:15AMM issIon . . . 33o

Auditorium

rPhOtio TAtlbw 714 1

For Daily Home Delivery

GOSlIRl4 NOTES

LSE Chastised

eI

$j25 .PER MONT H

IS A GOOD BU YWhen you consider what are loosely tenured the IHflatlohar y

Factors now rampant all over, it becomes evident that th e

monthly subscription price of a metropolitan newspaper Ilk a

The Vancouver Sun is one of the unsung miracles of the age .

Penny counters are Invited to equate The Sun, with all it s

news and features delivered every day, against one—

twenty-five ; we expect their verdict to be "Good Value," "A buyl" ,

or some such .

CONSTITUTIONAL R E V 1 •Mon — Constitutional amend .meats changing the status ofthe Junior and Sophomore mem •ers has been prepared for theSpring General Meeting.

LSE MINUTES — Council re-fused to receive the LSE minu-tes Monday night . The minuteswere written in the traditionall yfrank style of Hansard rathe rthan in the quiet style so, pre •valent on this campus.

Art Phillips,

for WUS Pr.sident

Monday, Feb. 4—Election Speeches—Auditorium ,

Tuesday, Feb. 3—Film Soc. Production "Pool: of Lon-don"—Auditorium; L.B.E. Special Events—Andrea Sego-via—Brock Lounge—8 .30 p.m.

Wednesday, Fob. 9—Mrs. Grace McInnes—CCP Club—"Massey Report"—noon; Parliamentary* Forum–43rockLounge—Evening; James Sinclair, M.P.—Student LiberalClub "Recent Government Legislation"—12:30—P.G. 100.

Thursday, Feb. 7—UBC Alumni Development' Fund, —Brock, Evening; 'The Sultan's Daughter"w-Auditortot,Evening.

Friday, Feb; 8—George Pearkes--"Canadian Defe e"—Student Progressive Conservative 12:80 Arta- , 100; Ar-thur Laing, M .P.—"Liberalism—its Future"—Student ,Lib-beral Cktb—12:30 F,O. 100; Commerce Formal otelVancouver—Evening ; Pan Hell Alumni Aasociation—Lounge—Evening; "The Sultan's Daughter"–Audltorium

—Evening. ', ' .

Saturday, Feb. 9e—"The Sultan's Daughter"—Audi-torium—Evening ; Film Soo Screen Dance—Brock Lounge—Evening .

Coats with a flair for 1952—now in EATON'S Coat Departmeht! Poodle cloth, nubb ywools, tweeds, superbly cut with soft shoulder lines, deep cuffs, standing collars. To

wear with an air . . .

This gray and white Heather Tweed has the "Great White Coat" look, so timely thi s

Spring. Its loose cut fits smoothly over any ensemble, its casual elegance makes it easy

to dress up or down .

55.00Coat Department, Second Floo r

Drawstring pouch bags—every girl knows their value! Especially practical for campu swear, these bags are roomy and long-lived .

5.15Handbag Department, Main Floo r

r

EATON'S

Page 4: Plan - library.ubc.ca · e 1 Budget Mys:tory . . (This is the second in a series dealing with athletics at UBC by Ubyssey editorial writer Chuck Coon.—EdItdr) . By CHUCK COON (Editorial

Page Four

THE UBYSSEY

.-_:.. Friday, February, l•, 1952

SPORTS PAGESports Editor—BARRY DRINKWATER

Assistant Editors—CHARLIE WATT and BRIAN WHARF

ird, Hawks En~me With Braw

SHOWN ABOVE is Al . Hood, star puckster ,tow playing for UBC Thunderbirds . Al. will

be in the lineup when Varsity plays Alberta in the Hamber Cup Series . .

r

GIRLS' SPORT

jetCter

Hello Co • eds, Gals'Grass Hockey will bestarting soon again, be—(mule of the change in theweather, so how about afe : of you girls coming

see this team play onmay afternoons at

Connaught Park at 2190 ,Note: I am still plugging th e

Phy.. Ed show, Feb. 7, 8 and 9 .Tdakets are going like. Cigaret •tits, so get your ticket early ,only I S cents. But id you fail togat a ticket they will be sold a t

Eke door on Thursday noon,Tab, I.

Title od the chow is the "Sul •taa's Desalinise' and will tea•tare such sets as Harem Girls ,tape eliaditng, ,parallel bar act ,folk dancing, gymnastics an dan • outstanding number called"Spellbound. "*~ *

The Modern Dance Chub I ctravelling down to Oregon onFeb. 9 to 'a Modern Dance gym .

posium which will be conducte dby some of outstanding Moder nDanes teachers in the North•west. At lust On colleges will

be attending , this oymposium ,gild the' gli'ly are looking for.ward with interest to being th efirst group dam the, Universityof B;C, at each a symposium. •

Some of the girls who will begoing include: Solve* Lervold ,Jean Lelper and Miss Marjori eMiller of the Physical, Educatio nDepartment.* * *

From all reports Pat France ,1st year Arts, Is shaping up asa 'real threat in the backstroke .Last Satheday at the YMCAmeet she !won the 40 yds backstroke sprint quite handily . Shehas A good style and is expect•ed to lead the girl's swimmingteam in following meets ,

Wouldn't it be great if wehad a pool on the campus, 'sothat In future years our swim-mers could be seen in action ?

Don't forget tonight at KingEd. Gym at 8 :45 the Thunder•ettes are playing Kitailano Com-munity Centre. it wound be nic eif we heard something else fro mthe sidelines besides, "Come onKits".

Watch Tuesday's paper fo rnext week's lineaments. Solong for now .

BasketballMural SkedMonday, Feb . 4

Kappa Sig A vs Kits AMaggie A vs Newman ANewman B vs PE 4Tuesday, Feb, 5BA.s .a Nedshirai AFroth A

Comr" .r,e AComm.rree B vs D'+' e

Wednesday, Feb, 6•, "•C to hitsllan. P(Forestry vs VOCPharmacy vs Zetes

Friday, Feb . 8Beta B vs Maggie BBeta A vs Phi Kappa P IAggie B vs Fiji B

Monday, Feb . 4Phi Celt vs Pharmac y

Tuesday, Feb . 5Maggie vs PE 4

Wednesday, Feb . 6Beta vs Fiji

Friday, Feb. 8Kappa Sig vs C .E. 2

Birds Storm Back To .Gain . Tie With Hawks

By BRIAN PRENTICEIt often takes many different incidents to win a hocke y

game, and Wednesday's game between the UBC Thunderbirdsand the B .C . Electric White Hawks included them all . In a gamethat ended in a 7-7 tie were two misconduct penalties, eigh tminor penalties, and a dandy brawl frith but six seconds re• •maining in the game .

.lt was apparent in the opening played during the first two period speriod, to the 100 or so fans pre• did not do them any credit .sent, that the Thunderbirds were B .C. Electric rapped in thre eplaying on their reputation and not quick goals without a ply fro mon their hockey ability . Alt season the students, and even Though th ethe Birds have had no trouble de• conlensus of opinion around th eheating every team in the league rink was that Lady Luck was onexcept the PNE Indians, and the, the side of the transit boys, the yhaphazard manner in which theylstill scored goals that counted .

Haas Seeks Bloody RevengeHass saw red and proceeded t o

square off with the Hawk player.A couple of other fights started,and when two B.C. Electric player stried to back Al Hood into a corn ,er, off the bench came Rudy Riche rto handle the situation . But it ai lended in two minor penalties an da misconduct to Itudy for steppin gon the ice .

Don Anderson played a stead ygame in the Birds net after hi smonth and a half illness . lie kickedout shot after shot when the Hawk s

Sportsmanshi pIn' Table Tennis

A Few Pointers For TheFellows In Table Tenni s

By KOSPoor sportsmanship, unfairness towards your opponent ,

winning by unfair methods, have no place in Table. Tennis orany other game .

If no umpire or referee has decision, do not show your Wittebeen assigned to your match, the tion. Rather accept all decisionsplayers themselves call the de- in a sportsmanlike manner.cisions . Calling decisions must not

Do not stall during the game ;he abused under any clrcumstan• like going for a drink of water ,ces .

walking unnecessarily slowly beTo lose a match fairly is not a tween points, or to delay the play

disgrace, sometimes the loser may at the end of the game in orde rwin fame and recognition in his to get your wind back ,defeat. A reputation for fair play Don't show off and do no tis invalualble but a reputation for play to the gallery. 'Just pay strictunfair play spreads rapidly and is attention to the game and play t odifficult to forget or forgive.

win .DURING THE GAME

Do not accept coaching of an yin by chance your opporent's kind during your match from stn •

stroke is interfered with by a dents, fraternity friends, or girl -player on the adjoining table, a friend's, except during the res tspectator, or an accident not with- period (a five minute time is al -in his control, ,be the first to ask lowed between the 3rd and 4t hthe point to he replayed .

game only . )Should you get a questionable COMPLETION OF MATC H

Remember to shake hands wit h

BIRDS PLAY

your opponent, say a pleasant wor dto show there is no itldeeltijg, andthank the referee for his services .

Be a good loser . Be generous i nyour praise of your opponent, an dgive him full credit for his win .Never gloat over your victory.

PLEASE NOT EIn serving, the player mus t

with the Vikings . They were c ly serve with the serving hand OPENbeaten 71-,n by Whitman, while the i and FLAT, fingers straight and to-

i Pirate downed the Vikings 10t-50.i other and the thumb FREE .

Snow-Snarled

occer Starts

Prpviding 'Vancouver Weather

Holds, Soccer Will Start Sun ,

By VIC EDWARDS

Providing that the lower mainland isn't hit by a violent

snowstorm between today and Sunday afternoon, UBC's two

soccer squads wi6get back into action .

The Thunderbirds are scheduled to move into action again-

st tie tough Sapperton team this Sunday at Callister Park.

The game will start at 21:15 .

NEW MEN

'The Chiefs have added Brian

Wharf and Alex McCabe who start-ed for Vie College last year.

Team manager Roger Fox ha srequested that all players meet t othe Mount Pleasant S c It o o Igrounds, Khngsway and Broadway ,at 12 ;00 Sunday for transport s

his 'position on the forward wall : i lion to mission .Ken Campbell will move to inside ----------------left, and Doug Andrews will tak e

CHIEFS SEEK FIRSTTht UBC Chiefs, still looking fo r

their first victory of the season ,will journey to Mission to meetthe Missionmen at 2 :00 oe seedily .

Chief coach Ed Duckett bas pu tthe gang throught sortie gruellin gpractice sessions since the second 'term opened, and promises an hr. •provetnent over th'e next to wgames .

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tallied for the Birds, and beforethe period ended each team score done more goal. It was much th esame story in the middle session .Thunderbirds seemed to be .tryinehard enough but there was Borne-thing missing.

Between the second and thirdperiods, Coach Wagner u tsome fire into the team, and th esimilarity between the team tha tstarted the game and the one thatplayed. in the third period was lustnon-existent.

'Thunderbirds 'started from the

first whistle to go, and they di dnot let up until they had score dfour goals in succession to lea d7 .6 . At this juncture, the B .C. lilee•tric boys decided to do or die andby reason of persistent attempt sthey tied the score with a minuteto go .

With half a minute to go in th egatne, White Hawks received apenalty. Birds' power play wen tinto effect and then the fun began .Ted Smart of the Hawks prevente dHass Young from scoring the win-ning 'goal by falling In front o fHaas and clipping him on the chee kwith his stick .

Goal ,

were pressing, and even thoug hseven got past him, the score coul dhave .been much greater .

Jim Todd and Haas Young scar•ed two each, and Rodger Stanton,Rudy Richer and Lorne Irwin wer ethe other marksmen. Ted Smar tand Cordle Bremner scored fiv egoals between them for the Whit eHawks .

Next Wednesday the Thunder•birds play the Burnaby Beaversstarting at 7 :45 p.m. In the las tscheduled game of the season .

UBC Thunderbirdstion twice over the

will see ac •weekend a s

they tackle the Western Washing-ton Vikings tonight In Tacoma ,and Sat, night in the New Gym .

The home squad has a fai rchance of at least breaking even

Bird coach, Ivan Carr, has ha dthe boys working out three times aweek since the holidays, and mos tof them are in top shape . .

One of the mainstays of th eteam, Don Gleig has left Univer •sity and will thus be lost for thisremainder of the season. To fil l

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The first turnout will be heldSatarday, Feb. 2, at the Vancou-ver Rowing Club at the entranc eto Stanley Park. Practice time is3:35.

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