Faithless Are Most Dangerous To Life - UBC Library

UaYssz Y
VOLUME XXXV
BURSARIES AVAILABL E
FOR JAPANESE COLLEGE S
Application forms are now available at the AMS offic e
for a scholarship to study in one of the Universities in Japan .
Scholarships provide for room, board, tuition fees ,
text books, hospital insurance and $20 a month for pocke t
money.
The scholarship is open for one academic year to an y
student who has second year standing and who guarantee s
to return to UBC for at least one year for further study .
Applications mush be returned to the AMS office by th e
15th of March.
VANCOUVER, B .C ., TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1953
Treasures
Of
PRICE 5c ; No . 58
The
Far
Eas
t
Exhibited
At
New
Gy m
/
Indian Treasure Van
Goes On Block Toda y
Treasures of the far east will be exhibited and sold in the
War Memorial Gym today, Wednesday and Thursday . Ove r
30,000 items from the "India Treasur
i ll be offered to students.
ew
I
With the motto "Trade, Not Aid "
('anadl'tn Students of the Worl d
University Service , with organize r 'Tween Classe s
Mrs . E. W . Mulvaney, will sel l
scarves, 'jewel chests, jade ear• '
Famous Singe r
rings, bracelets, saris, carved o b
jects , and man y other Indian
An Indian university professor affirmed that "higher educaarticles .
To Appear Here
tion without faith makes the most dangerous form of life" in a n
Money from the exhibit whic h
I
address to students yesterday in Arts 100 .
has already been presented at 1 7
-C . W . David, Professor of Hindu
universities will be used to hel p
Tomorrow Noo n
Language and Literature at th e
Indian students stu Tying In CanSPONSORED SY the Arts tinder University of Aga in North India ,
ada and will also go towards a
graduate
Society, Elisabeth Davit
f
outlined the main problems o
WUS seminar in India this sumfamed
American
folk singe' ivt11
e
student life in India In his lectur
mer .
appear
in
the
Auditorium
tomoryoli►,
an "Students in the New India . "
WAR PRISONE R
at
12
:30
.
Plano
'accompaniment
'
Canadian born Mrs . Mulvane y
RELIGIOUS TRAINiN G
will
be
by
Norma
Abernethy
w'h
g
lived nine years in India and du e
Dave Robbins, an ex-Harr y
He stressed again and agai n
ing the war was taken prisoner by will also play several solos .'Odmilj•
T HAND-MADE INDIAN GARMENTS modelled by ,
James trombone player, led hi s what he thought was the need fo r
slop Is 15 cents .
the Japanese and spent over thre e
combo through another of Jazzeo c religious training in colleges an d
these attractive young ladies from queen's University will
8P
At
years in a Shanghai jail .
sponsored live concerts last Thurs- universities, maintaining that Inbe-among the items offered for sale at the Indian Treasur e
It was during her stay in priso n
WOMEN'S RESIDENCE 1111 1
dia students with no faith in day ,
Van
Wednesday
and
Thursday
,
that
Mrs. Mulvaney decided "tha t hold the annual residence tomtit
Paced by the steAdy drumming' o f variably entered the Communis t
I'd work to accumulate a lot o f Friday, March 13 at 8 :30 p .m. 'in
Pete Watt acid old Faithful Sta n Polity soon after graduation .
money
to help the poverty stricke n the Brock . Tickets are one dolla r
Johnson on base the group swun g
David gave a short history o f
people
in India . "
per couple and are available i t
mightily' throughout n program o f education in India, during whic h
ose Gives Profile
h
After
several
discussions
wit
Mary Bollerd Hall . All former
jazz ' standards including Ho w he attacked the British influenc e
university
students
and
leader
s
residence
girls are cordially invita 4
High the Moon, Cheek to Cheek . which at one time trlined student s
she
flew
to
Bombay
to
make
arto
attend
.
d
Five Cousins, The Continental an in universities and then offere d
rangements to buy a nucleus o f
Coral Reef.
them positions as mere clerks whe n Of Ukrainian Poe t handicrafts from skilled workme
n
n
Ray Lowden'. delicate solos o they graduated .
Well over a hundred students resisted the intoxicatin g in Indian villages .
PRE-MIDI UNDERGRAD SO .
f
the, wistful Yesterdays was one o
CIETY
will, hold their exeoatty *
effects
of
the
spring
weather
Monday
to
attend
a
noon
hou
r
BANANA LEAVE S
the brighter moments as was Dav e HIGH 'PERCENTAG E
elections
at noon Friday in Physic s
According to Professor David . lecture given by Dr . W . J . Rose . The well-known historian
Explaining that college student s
Roblin' Birth of the Blues .
202
.
Nominations
may be submitte d
there are now 30 universities an d captivated the audience with a vivid sketch of . the works an d In India often studied under th e
SOLO WOR K
at
Brock
Hut
No.
,2
or to any exeelk
d
Undecided, which Robbins ar • 1)50 colleges In India, He boaste
life of the great artist-poet of the Ukrainian people Tara s village light at . night ; had no pen • tive member.
.
percent
of
hig
h
ells or shoes and used banana
_
ranged for Harry James, feature d that In India 25
Shevchenko,
+-—
—
leaves for paper, Mrs . Mulvane y
some of the beet solo and unison school students continue thei r
After discussing the historical Hated teen the Art Academ y in St .
work , especially Ernie Blunt' e studies in university as compare d background of the the poet's lif e Petersburg, returned . to his be - pointed out that 10 cents woul d
JAllSOC WILL HOLD their
buy a meal . for seven people .
guitar solo and Stan Johnson ' s with 10 percent in B .C .
loved
1Zgmelund,
wrote
some
of
regular
meeting at noon today li t
d
Dr . N . A. M . MacKenzie an d
' He -stated that economies mid ,,nn times, Dr, Rose mentione s his best works then was arreste d
bass break''we*tete he played to -a
the Brock• sties return . Featured
some
of
his
better
known
work
Raghbir Bast will open the display '
stilled loose, Fraser MacPherson political science were the mos t
which included a collection o f in 1847 by the agents of the Tea r today and purchasers may obtain ) will be Jim Carney givtngee .rsoofd
on alto and Doug Parker on pian o popular courses at Indian univers '
poems called the "Kobzar," whic h for aprticipating in a societ y unusual textiles, carved ivory an d discourse on trumpet players i n
played their usual tasteful best . (ties, with the main emphasis o n
glorified the Cossacks and mourn - which hoped to improve the lot o f glass bangles depending on th e jazz,
combining with the group to pro - Arts courses . "Arts does not bake
men
and
ed the suffering of the peasant s the suppressed serfs .
zF ~
~
size of their respective pocke t
duce a lyrical quality not often 1 any bread, it makes good
under
the Flu-elan Tsars the "Ha y
After
ten
years
in
bitter
exil
books
'women,"
he
s"aid
.
e
.
heard in local combos .
THE CAMER A CLUB will,ter•
damaki," his first great wor k he returned, a broken elan, I)eatl h
__ ._.
.
. .-__ . . . . _ . .
.-- .
Students may purchase a jewe l tare slides from Kodak's ''Filters
e
w%1icl1 dest't'il,Nl it revolutionary' ,son followed, taking the lif e in casket valued at $30,()0O or jewel
• For Picture Improvement" at it s
ul"''sing, ttnl the still gt'eate r IS) 1 of a poetic genius who I s as ' ery items tit 35 ('elite
.
Exhibit
wil
l Meeting to be held in Library 85 9
works entitled the "Dream," th e well loved among his peopl e as also Include a larg e
p
number
of
at 12 :30 today .
S
Great Grave " and the "Caucasus, " Burns Is among the Scots ,
watereol1.irs by India's to p artists .
4
,
Ending the lecture with the read s
Ing of several tenslatiots incind •
"SEX AND THE LAW" will b e
• orkers and students will have their questions r» ; the t'`t'jestle "Teatime"t"' DI' .
the
subject of a debate by 13 . ..D,
Library w
Rose left the audience, with an inn Redshirts Begin Elections
Jones and Jimmy (tents in 14 w
answered by a series of talks in the Library beginning March 21 . Re g ale!' of a great, self educate d
North at 12 :30 Tuesday, Marshal ,
Some of the topics to he covered
, genius who was not only a chem •
All interested persons Invited .
'; Of New Officers Thursda y
and of interest to any persons who of day lots session .
Audience will he Association's Pion of the "common ratan" hilt a n
plan on library work as their new
noon break . enemy of all oppression .
Election of the 1953-54 Engineering Undergraduate Societ y
career are : Public, university, re• guests at lunch during ke
INTERNATIONAL, STUDINI'S'
convener, ! Shevchenko s f r e e d 0 rat fro m
and
Mae
Joan
O'Rour
tona
l
executive
starts this Thursday with the election of the President . CLUB will hold elections for next
o f liI) , and spatial libraries ; types would like all those planning to at- ertdom was bought 'by the grea t
.
Dave Dufton, 3rd s1oehunica l ~
of library service—art and music'
year's executive at the genera l
artist Brytrlov who noon came t o
business, children's work, medical tend to sign up at Ridington Room regard hies as his most belove d Engineering, and Deng Third It' d will be filled by a show of hand s meeting on Wednesday, March 11 ,
.
vote at the next general meetin g
and reference services, school ll• desk before noon, March 18
Pupil . At the age of 30 Tarns grad - Electrii'tl, lire running for the le e to he held Wednesday, March 18 . at noon, Arts 204 . All members are
tirades, science and industry, tie
Day-log session in library is di sition of next year's Reign of Terurged to attend .
Nominations for the remainin g
end cataloguing .
rest attack by British Columbi a
ror . Freshmen and other young,
rF
sters are warned at this time, a s Ilosltlona must be turned in to Ji m
Vital matter of financing this Library Association on proble m
NEWMAN CLUB general meetpost graduate training will be die- of securing tr ained librarians fo r Extravaganz a both men are capable of inflictin g Gilley, EUS secretary, at the EU S
ing
on Wednesday noon at the
office
by
9
:30
a,nt,
Monday,
Marc
h
dire punishment for the idle mecussed dur ing afternoon's panel C'anad'a ,
Clubhouse
(HL5) . Nominations fo r
16
.
anderi"gs of those girls ,
the
1953-54
executive will be held .
BLOOD
AND
BEE
R
Will Featur e
SECRET BALLO T
All those with blood In their eye ,
At
At
At
This ' election is by secret bal • beer on their breath, hair on thei r
ALL CAMPUS CLUBS are urge d
'Road' Players lot and AMS cards are required . chest, and possessing all the othe r to make their .contributions to th
e
Ballot boxes will be in the mai n qualifications of RedshIrts, are re .
Flood Relief Fund by Friday,
Top flight Vancouver talent wil l hall from 10 a,m, to 4 p .m .
minded to get their nomination s
be featured In a two-hour variet y
entered .
Other
positions
on
the
executiv
e
(Continued on Page 3 )
University of Washington production, University Encores , show In the Auditorium Thu r sda y
will appear at UBC on Thursday, March 12, at 8 :00 p .m, for one noon .
performance .
Including such big name, ; a s I $5 000 GIFT
-_ . ._. Purpose of their current tour i s Ernie Prentice, ('B(' singer : Joh n
to arrow what has been done i n Emerson, popular pianist 'and w r it :
the University of Washington, ' .l d Kel Service and \tills AIdrews . l
Good "Listening,' — Wot
to find out what other universitie s favorite Huss"c talent : and out .
accents ,
Is his Empress, "
and college :+ are doing in the lin e standing numbers by Dance ('lab .
By . DOT AUERBAC H
"I
am
about
the
equivalent
o
f
"Now look," said I, quit e
I nett a Chinese hook the.
Jazzsoc and Players Club , the sta r
Representatives of limn Society er entertainment .
three
good
sized
English
volthoroughly
rattled by this subtl e
studded Road Show will only cos t other day .
report that the recent series of PROFESSIONAL S
umes
and
.
,
,
repartee,
it
you're
pulling a wismade
lie
o
f
lint
I
must
have
been
skepti2 ., cents .
propaganda films has not been the . f r ost rat t he shots is
dom
of
the
ages
act
. . ,"
t01'IIIPI'
professional
talent
who
III'
e
cal
le-cause
he
(or
'She)
fixe
d
"Not
at
all,
by
all
means,
g
o
MC will he bang (Jester) Iles
work of a subversive element'
.
flow
attending
the
I'"iversity'
ul' kills of "'Tobacco Road" fame . ;
lie
with
one
gleaming
dragon'
s
ahead
don't
be
bashful,"
sai
"I,"
snorted
the
case,
imperl •
d
within their booking department
Washington. . Show is compose d Other Avon Theatre S'lay'ers, in - cis( ,uul said :
the book interrupting his pre o"sly folding one ivory peg ove r
The oh .lect of these propaganda ( e thirteen acts and tut orchestra , rending Bahl llltrhtnan, will round
. book . "
"I . . . ,inn . . .
pared lecture as I leafed throug h
the other and twitching its lid
fleas has beet to demotsh'ate the ' I ll til t, work on whic h has been ou t Lee show with severa l riolnu s
"You're nothing but a yello w
his extremely light weight page s
more flit; ly Into place, "wa s
effectiveness of motion pictures a s dent' by the cast .
o
linen
box,"
I
said,
shocked
int
with
their
black
and
scarle
t
horn relatively lute, in 1931 to
skits .
ao propagi .Ida media . "The Nazi s
script .
These people are net nevesvariiv
he exact and by Imperial Decree ,
in the Quad , every day at noo n :I reply ,
Strike," which will he shown to ' Mon t the School of Druaa hut tickets fur this exti'av i auz .l ar e
thank yon . "
"I r an foreigners ", the ho x
"Ily the way," he added, "fo r
day it I~'ilmsor's free molt slInty , feint every faculty on th e campus . being sold . The entire proceeds . mannered Willi derision 'as h e
year information I was it Roya l
"And Japanese," I said sweetdeMOnMtrates a holder techniqu e FEATURE AC T
Steens . "
I will he turned over to the Avo n pulled his tiny iytry pegs out o f
ly thinking that even a 'olum e
then was used in the Communis t
Show's [(allure acts will he le i Players to he used to help ('oyee r their silk loops ;nun shoot( bar k
"Some people claim they ar e
or 17th Century documents ha s
show last week .
accidents tvitli as much pride, "
Pelt and lord, a tonic tanni n the costs of the appeal Item th e his lid .
its limits, "do you speak it a s
SIII'tI'S
4
WESTERN
,t'hirh
h
;ls
just
finished
a
Police
court
decision
of
last
mont
h
S
I
muttered
in
disbelief
,
well„ "
This film is one of a serle ;l tise( t
.us
1'ftas,',Ind
e
There,
heutatll
the
handsom
e
IVORY
PE
fnl
season
ill
Reno
.
I
I:I't'orts
are
Bing
Made
to
hav
G
"Oh, fluently, "
by the Allies to try to cotvitlr e
V
,
4
,
(ices
alilnrnii
:
and
e
IIn'
I'
;uhrir
o
:lse
I
saw
It
smal
l
in
(
'
the
the
'quamish
Blind
ploy,
All
th
"Look
closely
at
my
rover
I
f
And that's the story of my en the I ' tlited States to enter Ih t
('l,tnticleera
.
n
yura
i
group
that
'hit's
rolleei'lteil
are
featuring
len
t
ae
.11l
hound
pallor
harked
tad
yen
have
to
he
so
d0gIntt9'
."
h
e
counter
with a learned Chines e
whr turia :; the dark day's of 1910 .
11,14 Islam(' pnpalaI t o the
Ilc ; hest acts, Sidney Risit and Dona Mlle s a r ch ;least the size of a
retorted waving one Ivory pe g
hook, one of the many in the ne w
1 parllctlarly lru"atit Hint, Northwest,
e°alai Sesterll pocket hook .
()Illy Davies hove made "ion '
wildly .
addition to tlll(''s I,ihrary, mod e
„ 'The Illue Veil,” slurring .lane y1'y
The n( tclil also he a variety of , meats to make the Avon Player s
lhll Innate ;nr Ina doubl e
"'Thal I ;Itc,eriae colored drag passible by a gift or tllntos t
Shat and ('harles I aau4Itto0, tylll be novelty, soil1 : dull dour n(I purl of the Stood SIit
to rich ul' Ihn . l ' . ;finne d
Intl of fu n I ire
on reer'sMls the 1Luu'hl Em;raffia from Vancouver's Chines e
shown tonight at 3,45, 6,00 and
the box in very plccise Oxford
which should prove entertaining . land light entertainment .
peror anti that Phoenix close by
Conuuuuity .
Faithless Are Mos t
Dangerous To Lif e
Robbins Star s
At Thursda y
Jazzioc Sho w
rof ess~onals Needed
I ilow For Library Work1
Famed Student Troup e
To Play Here March 1 2
Filmsoc Officials
Object To Charges
THZ UI YSSZ Y
MI?11111?It CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRES S
Anthnrl'ed as second class mall, Post OI'tleo Department, Ottawa .
Stndtml (whs('riJGnrs $1 .20 per year (Included In AMA fees) . Mall subscriptions $2 .0 0
per year . Single copies five ( r ents, Published In Vancouver throughput the llnlversity
year by the student publication ) ; Board of the Alma Mater society, University of Britis h
Columbia, N(111(11'1 ;11 opinions expressed herein are those of the editorial staff of te e
I Iiyssey, end not necessei'ily these of the Alma Mater 9oelely or the Iiniverwlty, Letters
In the Editor should not be more Um 1511 wordy . The 11hyssey reserves the right t o
cut letters, nod cannot guarantee, pebllcat.Inn of all letters received .
For Display advertisin g
off'ic'es in Bruck IialI
Phone A I,nn 1424
Phone Af4ma 325 3
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF JOE SCHLESINGE1al
Executive Edltor l Ed Parker ; ' Feature Editor, Miele Oorbnt ; ('ity Editor, Myra Green ;
Ntws Editor, Ran Sllp('ra ; I,tlerary Editor, ( ;alt Elltingtnn ; ('ITP Editor, Patsy Byrne ;
(1ieiiIatien Manager, Mrtrian Novak ; Steil Photographer, Ilex Lovely ,
Brian Wharf
Senior Editor this Issue
lteportere
:
Stu
I.Merton,
Ken Ferris, Mik e
slociates : Ron Hapera, Patsy Byrne .
Graham,
Bruce
McWlllhlms,
Luke
Edwards,.
roes, Peter Sypnnwich, ,I . S .
ISS EDITORIAL
Student Exchange
ating group (World University Service) . I t
therefore' participates in the Annual ISS
Seminars and it will in the future, finance s
permitting, participate in direct aid to Asia n
universities .
•
Today, perhaps more than ever before, a
world university student service is needed .
The U$C International Students' Service ha s
in the past and in the present been trying t o
fulfil this need . One of the means of Inter national understanding among nations is student exchange . This project has been th e
main field of activity of the Committee o n
this campus .
•
Tuesday, March 1(l, 195 3
THE UBYSSEY
Page 2
As part of its service to foreign students o n
the campus the Committee has a
bursar y
fund which is used to aid those capable an d
worthy students who need same financial
assistance in order to carry on their studies .
This year UBC has exchange students fro m
Asia and Europe---namely from Japan an d
Germany. It is interesting to note that bot h
these countries were, not long ago, at wa r
With Canada. Today it is our aim to show the
youth of these countries our way of livin g
and to gain for ourselves a better understanding of their problems,' What better way tha n
to exchange our university students for theirs .
both parties to the arrangement have the
identical benefit of first hand knowledge o f
each others present conditions and needs .
A counselling service has also been organized to help foreign students who need advic e
in any aspect of their life while at UBC .
Committee members give their time to speaking to these students and if necessary to direc t
them to people who can help solve thei r
problems .
The University of British Columbia is al ready known on this continent and through
student exchanges In Europe and Asia for its
internatioally minded outlook . We, the students of UBC should be justly proud of thi s
reputation . Let us keep up the good work .
UBC ISS is part of a Canadian Nationa l
~ornmittee and of tin International co-ordin -
4UEST EDITORIA L
Safety Las t
he Welfare State has come to stay . It is
up to us to make the best of what we ma y
look on as a good, had, or indifferent job de pending on our political beliefs .
But just as we share its benefits so we ar e
all subject to its dangers and the most insidiotil; of those is that we inay rout(' to rdop t
a philosophy el' securel y
Where is the modern sublirlatien of th e
pioneering spirit whirl( made the West? Ce1' ..
tainly not, ie business where Canadian investors are already by their caution earning ;
themselves the scor'n'nf the speculating Arneriean on whose risk we now depend for ou r
dovelopment . Certainly not in politics wher e
we have yet to attract our hest—()r even ou r
must colorful -men . And, most tragic of all ,
certainly not on this Campus, where comforting cli(luee and sexual security are th e
norm .
Where is the Communist, that t1BC so badl y
needs? Are Engineering disturbances the bes t
we can de as a challenge to conformity , , . we,
4
4
4
4
Lenin alive was "the scourge of civilizae
tion . When he died, however, he was presented to the world as a pure idealist and hi s
successor, Stalin, hNenne ", the (disciple of th e
devil" .
Now that Stalin is (lead, he ton in Inrn ha s
become a moderato, and his successor n1' sllecessnl :' are the militants . 'Phis would gn to
prove General Van Fleet's contention tha t
"dead ( 'n111nIllniettl are euo(I ('uti1111tIII)sL; " ,
It would therefore he in the hest interest s
of the world to keep Malenknv alive lest h e
be superce(h'(1 l) all even more militan t
communist . General l'isenhnwor could serv e
the cause of peace by sending the Whit e
I-louse physician and Jimmy Van Fleet ove r
to Nfnseew hi guff i Malenlnn"e life ,
Neverthelss, every rule has an exeeptinn ,
('Yen if plO)1 !ale(I by al general . If Tito ha d
(Iie(l in 14. 17, lie w(nlll have died as a "bail "
(or is it "geed"?) cenununist, ;Ind tin' Yu ,geelays went(' now else hotel "kid" rnnrnunists, however, 'file anal his e(ennunti, ;ts ar e
still alive ;Hid kickin ;t and yet they are stil l
" geed " ennllllllleien : ,
Y'
Y'
Y
Last tve ;'k one of the heed paper ; ra n
Slays ('X11111111111a 1v1i,Illlnl" 'S ~Ii)Ili,lll!Illl'lll Ili,
1''nrei ,r;l1 minlaer ;1, ;I (,Ilan ()f
Righ t
~IIOt i(II' Ilei~, ,.,I1I 1' y ;w 11i 'r arum((' prnc'ainu'l l
Illal Nhdill iv Il ;lil 111 I'tShcl~' 11,'11 )relle)l1'( .
the one-half of one per cent of the Province ,
the tiny minority, that does have the tim e
and the energy to question .
And yet where a student's popularity varie s
directly as the length of car he drives and inversely with his independence—which doesn' t
mean he has to rush off and grow a heard an d
call himself an existentialist, or that manner s
and serial reep(lnsihility haven ' t their place-le g (Ise; mean that al few more lost cause s
should he embraced and chances taken .
The generation before us used up its adventure in World War II and the one befor e
that had its dissipated in the Great Depression . Where is ours? We are now in a tim e
of unprecedented boom and we no longe r
have to face (ear—or even the fear of fear- hut the danger of going slack in it tensionles s
Society . (,el's have 'aloe living dangerously
-let's take some chances . We have th e
Security--let's adventure from it and not ,
ostrich-like, immerse ourselves in it .
—Peter Lowes, Law 2.
1'
4
Scep tiam
Admittedly, the political analysts have no t
hail enough lithe to make their stories jibe) ,
en we eh :ell have to excuse tht'it' tendency t o
play all possible combinations and permutalions ,
It seems, however, that they will not h e
able lu make up their minds for quite a fe w
years yet; at least, not up to the time they
deeide whether Melutov's departure from th e
Foreign ministry in 1947 was a demotion nt '
pronl(Iti(m . If demoted then, his appointmen t
now tV(0I1(1 evidently be a promotion ; if promoted in 1947, thetl demoted in 1953 ,
Sitnple, isn ' t it?
:
Seeing that everybody is making predicIiens on the outcome of the struggle of powe r
between Malenkov, Mulotnv and Beria, we
might as well get into the game ton ,
WE PREDICT that non' of the three con tenders will gain ahsnlute power unless the y
change then' names .
We have had 1VIa xisrll, I 'ninisnl,'Trotskyi-ln, Theism and Stalinism . But even Stali n
lead to ('badge his ?lame because he knew h e
)u 1(1 not he able to sell even the most abjec t
of hie ;allellilce on the virtues of "DeugashviIiion " .
Nlldenoviem, lVIelotevisnl or 12n)'iaisn l
enlidd Ihl'refere, eumtilule imenielep(eiee l
"II, L IIieniel'I ".
Letters To The Edito r
Exchange Studen t
Write s
Hamburg is grey In winter, an d
it rains or snows from dull skie,(
hanging low over the city, en closing it in layers of coldnes s
end dampness ; and the peopl e
on the streets look grey an d
tired and cold .
At bates wet mists drift acros s
the Milner hinter to the l .om•
hurtle brucke and past the bridg e
to the outer Alster, and It s
mlVentent is like the siuccessio n
of days Ind nights .
The rain blurs the' outlines a t
centuated by snow on stone, dim e
the angular liaee of the Students '
}louse and the ' peegdo-Venetia n
fancywork of the Carlille Club ,
the gelid mttaeive edge of th e
university btilldinga and th e
boinbed out shell of the oper a
Masse ; but the forms dt th e
heihttngs cite tie *ell kneel) t o
Me de thteM dt the Detache s
Rehahapetlhdtiit and the concer t
hall, ter *tih them I have spent
a lined part of three months ; an d
tease wed write and go throug h
their doors are net al+ tared ai l
these dhhltdb,
Within . ttieab hutdtngs, alon g
these eutriddra and through th e
doors, melt the Caen and Wome n
I know, th(ixe etth whom I Mine
htnghed and talked and eaten .
I know them well ; chillies, th e
Oxford educated , ((level, an d
teefttyseven, who wishes to be come a cosmopolitan and le tar
able l ;ecuuse of his English ode ration, moves slowly, his ever y
word std gesture effete and die
Iltatltie, and Werther, younge r
than he hut equally clever Matt
-mare vigorous, who le fanclticall y
Interested In music and dram a
and with whoa( I share this interest ; and i'eter, Use one bein g
educated, entirely normal nntl o f
fay age, who wants to becom e
what his father to, and who ea (lintel+ an earthy Joy In life, all
IIIs nervous end energy nimbl e
bile what he trays amt dues ; an d
Pamela and Ktniten nod Carla ,
Ilse women who prevail, Thes e
I know well.
in college houses and In privat e
home s , lit table.e crowding onto
postage doom steed (lance floor s
(nd In circles in halt deserted
seminar rooms they and I talk ;
fr om It is still (hefting to wring a
topic dry and discard it fur en .
, ',!., !e Maze Leith Ideas ;Ind
mi ;r(nee ;,Ilun4 ;all then trov e
them sneh'ed sal es yell p r o n e the
runrells earl try le destine th e
prejudices
p erk elil(g' .
' I 'n the rhythm ; er lifted rt.
fee raps (eel shuffling fee t
ethics, art . phllosopey, religion .
war, politics, peace and love an d
sc. an (Meath are counterpointed .
11'r)ry talk until we are tired an d
then we walk into the (ligh t
You can walk away from II hu !
it to '.I purl 01 you, es Iht nerv y
ui) ;le, et the theatre ► and al th e
(mere er concert hall are a pv' I
nl' yell, aWl yeti knew it is a p;u' t
of you and yell wanit it that wily ,
You emit to tall( ahem the thing s
Leal seem Important to &Mic e
until exIlausi, .,ll mu m p s you, an d
u he with amen and wennm who m
It'arlili(Ii I ; llut guar+ ,
At Itrst you Ley it, nnder: ;I ;m(l
su( u p tlnit•e you f'ten delude you
ell' thinker : yon du iilnlor .,t lid.
11111 later yell (( Ilnt tut'(', y i'
aveept . It ;ill seems to I'esely( :,
the ether voices . Other }'aces . th e
dieeii siun4 need (west hale 11111 1
I r'tial answers, Leo dranm an d
the flush aml the way el' life ,
end betnlllt part or a 4y'lllpllnlii (
movement . complex and subtl y
illusive but satisfying end time s
even beautiful.
EIH' NS'I' 11'IENS .
leading . On last y'ear's Executive ,
in addition to government an d
industry, the uul%et'sity wee rot) .
resented hy Or. (' . Itowles (if th e
Faculty of Agriculture, and my self.
Ubyssey Err s
I feel, In the interests of th e
standards of your newspaper an d
reporting en in order that th e
credit for the organization of th e
conference he in the right place ,
you should make every effort t o
correct the wholly erroneous le e
emission given by your article .
Yom's truly ,
.1 . B . ('HAPMAN ,
Dept, of Geography 'ar d
Geology.
Editor, 'I'I~rllbys4oy ,
Dear Sir :
,
I would like to draw your attention to an article in the Marc h
5 Issue of The Ubyssey on page
2 entitled "I'll(' Holds ftesource e
Conference ."
This Is an example of how no t
to report. The If,(', Natural It' sources Conference was Instituted by Dr. i). V . 'Parser (now di rector of Conservation, Depart •
ment of Lands and Forests, Victoria) in 1948 to bring togethe r
those people in government, lint •
vereity and Industry whose protexskrnal interests are in resourc e
development .
Thus, university members hav e
played ail active part In the, success of the Conference but n o
more and no less than those rep resenting government and industry . The annual conference I s
held in Victoria and Is planne d
by the conference executive o n
which the university is repre •
seated . To say that IUD(' hold s
Resources Conference is clearl y
quite unlnstifled ,
Further to report that I opene d
the conference tinder the auspice s
of the Geography Club is com .
pletely Imaginary on the part o f
your reporter . The conferenc e
was . In fact opened by the Hon ,
Mr, Kiernan, MInlster of_Agric'ul •
lure, in the absence of the Premier, I, as a Geographer . wilh'm y
colleagnes In the Department o f
neology and Geography, have : 1
deep interest In the deliberation s
of the Conference but to sugges t
that we organize it Is very mis •
Fraternities Agai n
Editor, the Unyseey ,
Dear Sir :
The New York Times recentl y
reported diet a certain chapter o f
the fraternity, Phi Delta Theta ,
is to be suspended for approvin g
the pledging of a Jewish student .
Phl Delta Theta's constitution, I t
seems, restricts membership t o
"nlen of white and full Arya n
blood,"
•
If members of' this and othe r
'fraternities at UB(' have an y
thing to be ashamed of, it 1 s
certainly their hult :aecret polie ~
or excluding "nliuovfty groups ."
In Canada—supposedly n pnragoh
of democratic countries—it no t
only discourages one to discove r
this 1ioRcy of exclusion amote t
many of the fntnre leaders o f
the nation, It ale() frightens one .
The policy is altogether worth y
uY Ilitierites . Is it worthy,• }tow •
ever, of ratiot:'.tl students wh o
profess( to belong to at freedom
Invite; society ?
ROBERT V . Mel :MG R
Second Year .Arts ,
Classifie d
TYPING : i';SSAYS, THESIS ,
Nettie, expertly anll promptl y
typed . Moderate rat( to We sa e
('Innph)'lls' Niel( of rules, 1tinke y
and Conk's, and Peony Specific &
Gone by the Dept, of Applied St I .
slice, serving students sIllef) I9(' ;•
Mrs . A. O . Robinson, 4180 W llt h
(tan
Avenue . AL, 09I5It,
TYPING : ESSAYS, THESI S
manuscripts, nllmeogrephhig ,
vise Street, No, 7 Dhlhnusie Apts . ,
I'oiversity Rlvd . AI, . out It . (r,i; l
IIESS, SIN(IIN C
sunnier, Itnleln?I'I ('Tape method .
lepertih°t french, II,Ili ;ui, Ger .
man . i'upily now Lein ;; ;leeepled .
her ;Ippniinm•ut, phone ICI;
(421
42 :111,,
1.'Olt SAI,I? -' :19 Ihut(k ;,•pen :-a
terpc . $ :125 . Phone ('II, 21171, el '
tel' 5I5 p .m.
A'I"I'EN'I'I()N, Ali . TYPING OI '
all kiud :I, Nnlc ;, t- . :i• , Ieri n
papers, Iheel ~', tar . . Ilene 110 ;lll y
ale( prnniplly at It i .annahle ril e
by le al slenoai ;Ipller, I'hnu t
mini l'tlti wholes • nt ('I?(l e
3971, al'I(l' I ; I) in .
( ;,R I
I,OS'I' : A F1lt11?h ('AS : :INI )
valrlahle note ; on (order of 10t h
u11(1 'I')lnlie, on Sallu•lhiy night .
hholrl' please ((intact 'rem, AI ,
217II' .
I :,$ )
Poll Si\l f -'•II Medilt :;td ;ni, A I
((il„ headtil'nl, er(nunittal, easy
t( peek, (wid by emend driver .
('ulna and sae it Offer, 11A, 2291 .
TItAVFLI .lNa I it 0 N WiTT !
heat indicator . Handle folds ,
Weighs Duly 2 lbs . and has neve r
been used . (rust $10,50, will sel l
.
for $fi,5e . Al .. I7981
11'AT('.II Iii?I'.AIItS . Sl'FCIAl ,
lakes for I'IN! students, i yea r
guaranteed . 21-hour service . F nr •
npean Watchmakers, 2783 Wes t
3938.
li;th Ave,
itt': .111N( ;'I'ON NfllsLES S
typelvrlter, nn excellent rendition ,
hIn'e~lin prier . I cave phone No .
iY lint in111)19 . Remo
, (311 1
71,
U'II,I, (1111? ('IIh;11IS'1'I I
ri, :t('11ale,
1Yr .I nth Ave .
I'Inene .11, . ICI ;, I l~frlubly he .
11v1,011
p.m . ;I 1141 4 ;41 . Arthur
I,telze .
I11'DitAl'I .lt'S h'Y C . X. R11S •
sell Molt) . }'lease turn it In a t
the hook store . (rill )
N'lla . DO IIENI ltAI, TYPIN G
nrh as I l e n e;; end notes for Ils e
a liege . Contact Mrs . '.11e('ullottgh
(tie )
et ICs;, 792-1,,
36 YEARS OF SERVIC E
TO THE UNIVERSITY OF
BRITISH COLUMBIA ,
ITS FRATERNITIE S
AND SORORITIES .
THERE'S A REASON
I,oi4'I' 1'+I I'p+ilnn hrnlerell y
Pin. Nellie on I, Irk . hilldtr pleas e
emit :t•t IIn1, Ilnilt el hurl '.'amp .
STATIONER( AN D
Ii- )
PRINTING CO . LTD.
1YAN'1'I?D :. I 11U1)1 .:I, "'I"' (II :
1ledel "i''(rd reall ;ler hills .
1',11 . 2 ;i47, afltr l ; 11 .111 .
1035 Seymour St ., Vancouver, B.C.
Save Wisely TODAY . .
for TOMORRO W
('onsult any of the following Sint Life Representatives who have had wide experience in budgetin g
your income to meet essential insurance needs :
JACK' PEARSO N
i,ARRY WRIGHT
J. R BRANDO N
14) 'AI, BAN( Itl .11)G ., VANCOUVE R
I'lleific 1:121
SUN LIFE CF-CANADA
s
Tuesday, March 10, 193 :3
THE
UBYSSEY .
'TWeen Classe s
ISS EDIT I
ISS Plan s
(Continued from Page 1 )
00
O.)),IM)
.4.0.41111't
.)IMotIMO)t4eln
t.01111ttelD
.4n
•
W
aj
4/10
iM
4
•
0,wIfIlb
.,MIb
Ofa,tals
I ~" "a"'
"~„
°
'1•°
'
°
) .+,,• j Jltuch 13 . (live contributlnna to Mr .
Seminar s
' 11'hite, accountant's office .
Two summers ago the Nationa l
ISIS
sponsored a seminar in Ottaw a
INDIA STUDENTS * ASSOCIA to
which
Canadian, American an d
TION will sponsor Mr . R . C . S .
It [ploy speaking on "1
"1Vhat Threat other foreign students studied to .
:
nw Peace"I is Art8 Ul
Wedne e gether for a month . This semina r
was a great success and this sumay, March 11 at 12 ;311 p .m .
mer a similar seminar will be hel d
Otet
In Bangalore In Mysore State i n
THE
ALPHA
OMEGA
SOCIET
Y
By ULRICH STIPKE
will hold its elections and las t India under the sponsorship of th e
Ulrich Stipke is an exchange student from Hamburg who
meeting of this year on Wednee • Canadian ISS .
is doing post-graduate work in International Studies here .
day, 12 ;31), in Arts 102, ArrangeThe Canadian seminar will em •
The first and most striking Im .
ments for the post-exam . party wil l
should not forget to stress th e
phasize
the problems of South-Eas t
pression offering itself to a Furo r
he made . All Ukrainian student s
Asian with the theme of "'Th e
pens who arrives In Canada fro m :Mare proepeets this I'111111tr' loll - are invited to attend .
Human . Implications of Ddvelopthe old cottlneut e is obviously th e tains with plottcular reference t o
calmness and lack of tension I n oni' orerrrowded I?urope ;ut rent( ; THE STUDENT LIBERAL CLU B meat Planning", 32 students and 8 1
'lent . Thousands of my couAtry . 1
professors will represent Canada ]
political afl'hirs ,
will hold a general meeting in Art s
men who became homeless an d
and South-East Asian countries 1
"U1 on March 20 .
fortunately there Is no Iron Cur.
Itolielss were and are-offered ' a
will send a similar representation .
\lain arhitearlly dividing the Mari chance of starting. a new life i n
The United States will be sendin g
times from British Columbia, wit h
FILMSOC EXECUTIVE election s
tt hospitable country .
10 delegates and 20 will come fro m
all its lurking lurid perils behin d
will be held this Friday, March 1 3
the most of the world .
it ; no latent Year from the night •
I ant convinced they will do their at noon in >Yj 102, Nominatio n
mare of dictatorship, nor th e best to strengthen the bonds of a sheet tr for the positions of Preel •
The seminar will last from Jun e
scenery of bombed and destroye d (omman cultural heritage which dent,
Vice-president, Treasurer , 1 to July 15 and will be followed
cities which are indicative of ° ou r unite your nation with us Euro• Secretary, and Public Relation s by a
five•weel study tout' in Indi a
wrecked old continent . /according - pearls . They will draw closer the Officer at 5 :00 p .m ;, Thursday , and Pakistan
. Among the Cana:
ly, this absolutely different po- links which combine these nationsI March 12 .
dian leaders will be Dean Lavek o f
i
united by their firm belief in the
liticai climate .
The positions of Personnel Man - the Laval School of Social Studies
,
unalienable rights of humanity and ager and Production Manager
will and Dr . Wildred Smith of the McDOMBSTIC PROBLEM S
freedom,
be appolntgd this spring .
Gill department of Islamic Studies .
;rlltl have, Reverthefesa, yoty r
own t roublesome problems in do .
nestle affairs, The antagonism be .
tween French–Canadians and Eng.
lieh deerendefte reveals to me tha t
it 1s not only the Scotch or th e
Ilavarians who appear always t o
he "on the very edge of iseparaIcon" fr om the rest of the community . NlstorIans, however, are
Inclined ' to criticize the over .
etttphasis on this factor In Canadian history .
The time has peeled when Canada had been a subordinate appeedix of the British Empire . Th e
growt hto nationhood, the (level •
opmen) of political nutonomy, pc t
t ► ru'ily in external affairs, ha s
retn'hed 11 stage which places Canada its a midtlio power right int o
the turmoil of our strained worl d
eftustion .
It destroys the short-lived Im o
InVlt►nlst dream of Canada's bein g
"\t flre(fl'oof Inmost?" and Impose s
polltictll responsihIlIties on thi s
crtuhtrV like ohlipattmns of co l
teethe security under the knlspice s
of the North Atlantic Pact whic h
('Ntttulu had been u long time re .
Ittctant to assume„
Exchange Student
Re port s On Canada
INTERPRETE R
The pre-eminent role ('amul a
has been p'ayi1u g D iu A1f,glu-Ame n
call rclut.ions IIII(P the earl y
twenties, namely that of an interpreter between the United State ;
;not the Briti s h ('omummnrl Alt I )
nil 'tIlie she i ; destined ti) plo n
n 111011 the IT( n 'Illlc eslsldi. Li d
No1Ih 111 ;~ntic ( 1lnnl11nily i s
•hunt Well yn%erI t
foci )vhhh is
out duly realize d
meet fiats ;
te r recognized by Welty ( . :uta+l i
efts .
There i a gap in rite pelitiea i
vnn ;clettee of ( r ams ; 1 . It. ('ttlh: e `
;t
lit ul' adntlretioo to a Fame to srr Call ai'tllla develnl.)lrt s
Ilrhair cultural, suci:Il and politica l
lire ou their twit iudivlrinol lines ,
'tile frequently heard t,rgeneut :
"l1'e are North .1eeiric .n ; Met no t
.1merirauv" confirms to one tha t
"('onadia'lism" means the cultural .
lolillral Bilk to maintain clos n
rnnlnctl"n with I :ur''l .
doct4te
k
r
.
wt ;
SOVEREf3NT Y
There is one I'euture n lanada' s
political conscience w'llich differs '
I'rotn the present N;nrope ;rn I'eIIIII :
the over-emphasis (hi
natiott,i l
so%(v'ei'nty title oIItuentny, shis h
is of emirs() explicable by ('a n
recent
Paola .
Ilue 1viNtin the ('onuuurwealth ;
h ill which It h ;elrope shoal(' h e
prest'rverf in the historic museum s
rather than n the I r urelk'n UI' I ' ices .
Scholarship s
To Continu e
' rho ISS is rnnttttnitit its schol •
)u' ;hlps wit ll (irrl'n ;I v nevi your .
The committee shins ti) spnll . ;m '
students from II, tit n'h and e e
Dana attat.her tlertn In I niversil) .
As port (,I' the etir11 ;1111;e I' ;uradi ;u l
> ;lurteits will be sent fu IlanlhiIra ,
Mainz tutu one oilier Urrlu ;ul 1111 i
t~ rally ,
' ;11Iv al'o 11+o hells, Inane fo r
tttu nrti% exc uul,es in f?er(I1, : us e
~lh Ilrlginnl on,l the other }" u' ;))
I at I . 1si .IIt ~1'!w!a!'sil ilr, s o . ,I ; 111
]Seine ne~ntialld ,111(1 it i s Imp, i t
11Ivt' n .eW one \V 1111 11111 . .
1Ilh,111!4 h Ihr re will he nn ,e , I
n - „nlin (r a m 1 11 1011 II yI t a m .
I
vIlerinletlnl srllul u
.11 ~ II ~,i urn ;Inllelil at 1 111 '
1 .111 ,1IIIIII a .1 .iulue t
111 t~I jI
c a res in I!1e I IIII ; of I!Ie ~
(bassi tilde It i ,',ti it
– R(si,tauce makes a toaster get hot .
11 ' Ra i you try to push your wa y
(Iu,wglea door and , fim resi s ts yo u
nr I i(s m push you back, you get hot .
:111(1 whcu electricity tries to push it s
lyay through some ( p etals, they resis t
and get hot too . The 1vite iu toaste r
elements is made ofa mixture of nicke l
and (IIriIIitnn, and gets hot just lik e
the fiLtntcnt in an dectic light bulb .”
,r
ti)f/irnruuu' i %,Irrl "
/ .l , /ally rlbnhtal l
u l i t ' ) rn t // 1 / h nn,tu ullrrr,lr,( .
"1479' dorsu'1 it null, Dacl :? "
"Wire made of some metals like iro n
would burn away in a second . In the early '
days they had trouble (lading a metal tha t
would last . Certain nickel alloy's beat u p
%cry tluickly', and can stay left hot over lon g
[meals of time without scalin g
(e I%awing . That's one of th e
r(asons alit nickel ft(nl(1,uladi art tunics is so much in dcalaad . "
\sins
•
The International Nickel Company of Canada, Limited, 25 King Stree t
Page 4
THE UBYSSEY
Birds
Tuesday, March 10, 195 3
And
Stadium
Bears .
Noon
aieds
Lose Agai n
i~Evergreen Meet
I n
Thursda y
Final World Cup Games ;
Oh Woe Is Poor Ole M o
FACING THUNDERBIRDS in the stadium Thursday wil l
be Max Howell, ex•Atlstralian Wallaby . Howell is one of
the standouts on the California Bears rugger team whic h
will play Birds in the final games for the World Cup Thursday and Saturday.
Clash
His Team Just Won't Go
In case you hadn't heard, Mo Slutsky ' s volleyball
outfit dropped three straight games to University of Washington in the War Memorial gym last week .
It's hard to make a volleyball game sound exciting i n
print unless you bort'ow some of Cecil B . DeMille ' s adjectives, but UBC gave the Huskies a fight .
Playing for Birds were Ron Stuart, Riiy Fee, Do n
Smythe, Pat Harmon, Elwood Flather, Walt Manning, Kur t
Ebner, Bruce Williams and Bill Arnold ,
On March 21 Mighty Mo and His Men will compete i n
a volleyball tournament at the gym with two YMCA team s
and a terrific squad from Chilliwack .
The Chilliwack Chargers will undoubtedly run away
with the gravy . t
Codville Fights Hi s
Basketball Cancelle d
By BRIAN WHAR F
UBC Thunderbirds and the University of California Bear s
resume their World Cup series Thursday noon in the stadiu m
witlfthe honours, injuries and points just about even .
In the two games played in Berk ley sat the-beginning of the mont h
flirts and Bears each ended u p
with one win, nine points and ,slat +
nt Injuries .
Th e
The series gave both teams a
severe shaking up with the lighte r
UDC Fumed corning offeecnnd best ,
Spor t
Captain Danny Oliver suffere d
severe cuts on his forehead, Dere k
Vullis spent two (lays in hospita l
with eoncnssion, (ferry Maim finScen e
ished the second game with a
There will be an' Importan t
twisted knee and Stu Clyne ha d
meeting for all members of
concussion ,
the swim team in the gym to-
day at noon . Pictures for th e
THREE INJURIE S
Totem will be taken then . Th e
(Sears had only three Injuries .
Way To 'Golden' Boy
photographer is petting sic k
Scrum half Nick Veliotee,'Jim Doa n
of chasing you clinks aroun d
UBC's "fightingest" student, Dave Codville, received an- and ' , rail ( Toombs were sideline d
so
be there or e10 no plc I n
y
other in his long list of awards when he was named "Golden alter the series hat will Probabl
Totem.
1
'
ain
roc
the
"'end
of
th
e
By STAN VANDERVOOR T
e tit a g
Boy" at the B .C . Golden Gloves championships Saturday night series .
UBC Gym Club presented a Ms Western 90; UBC 88
in Exhibition Gardens .
'—~
—
play
at Vancouver Normal Schoo l
Alth
o
u
h
the
y
have
lost
seve
r
a
l
g
t'odvllle family, Ott 1041 his broth e r,
' UBC swim team lost their• first Evergreen Conferenc e
Codville, first 'year Arts student, p oi, nn unheralded y o ungst er, firs t Ft lu g player s , n o t a bl y L e s last week. Acts included ma t
Swimming Championship in four years when they dropped th e blasted his way to the highly cov
came over to the Golden Gloves Richter anti Brian Piper, throug h tumbling, free exercises, spring title to Western Washington in the last event at Bellingham eted title by beating three oppon• and took home the •came title of graduation, Beat's are yielding a board and box tumbling, and tram •
ants In his Ilght•mlddlewelght divl
team on a par with any of recen t pollee displays . Girls PE departSaturday night .
On the whole the boys sworn a n sion during the two-day tourna• Golden Boy .
ment added to the show with a
of
years
•
meet,
between
UBC
,
The triple,
Boxing under the colors
excellent meet and really went all , meat,
modern dance weber and Bil l
n
Their
entire
football
backfield
i
s
Western end Eastern Washingto out to (take the met then succes s
Western Sparta Centre, he waltzed
Mitchell did the calling for a sgtfhr e
0
through
his
division
in
the
Mai
either
playing
or
in
reserve,
makin
g
with
la
total
of
9
decision
over
finished up
it was . Missing the Cup by two Dave gained a split
points for Western, 88 points fo r points was a little disappointing tough Steve Phare of Haney F"rlday mood Belts' earlier in the year. j for a very tough and very speed y dance green .
UBC and 26 points for Eastern . but coach Doug whittle has no night and pounded out wins over Only the tact that one of his op- I three line . Wingers Bob Brook e
This coming weekend, the men' s
The score up to the last event , complaints and says the meet was Gary Oakden of Sappertpn and poi; nts had to default a match' and Ray w'lliesy, members of th e
the 300-yard medley relay, stogd a t a well fought one and a fair on e Ronde Wiren,of Port Mellon Satur- prevented the sharp-punching stn• Bears' number one football squad , gym team will he competing i n
81 ter 80 In our favor, but Wester n all the way .
day to win the championship of his dent from twing named top fighte r are together with the canny fla x Pullman, eehington, in a threeHowell, a former Australian inter - way meet with Washington State ,
won this event, the meet and th e
division,
in the tournament .
Nine meets are alr eady in th e
national, the, most dangerous o f and University of Idaho .
Evergreen Cup heid by UBC fo r
Judges unanimously named Codair for next year Including a tri p
Bears' backfield ,
The tide club also has hopes o f
the past four years .
to ,Oregon . Next year the lineu p viite Golden Boy on the baalsiof all sponsoring
the Pacific Northwes t
r
' A total of four first places, fou
TWO-WAY PLAYIN G
will look somewhat different wit h rotted ability as the best fighter i n
(lymnastic
Conference
here soon .
four
third
places
wer
e
seconds end
Varsity 'Continue s
the tour nament.
One of the main reasons for th e TRACK AND FIEL D
taken by UB(' . In addition to a the absence of Don Smythe, Ime s
effectiveness of Bears is th e two The intri•mural track and fiel d
first and second place in the div- Hugh, and Jim McIntyre, who grad- FEUDIN' AND FIGHTIN'
w as playing of the three line . No t meet, highlight of the tetra-mura l
Irate this year .
Is'ighting seems to run In the Winning Strea k
ing competition, Ken Doolan an d
only can these boys cove r th e
season, will be March 31 an d
Al Borthwick gained six and fou r
ground at a terrific rate but thei r April 1 . One more week will b
e
points respectively with Bill WTI tackling is deadly . They are als o allowed for entries . Elimination
With two Goal s
s
son missing thir d position by on e
past masters at the art of coverin g
will be held March 23, 24 an d
point . Out of six divers this is a He Won't Be Here . . .
Varsity 2, Collingwood 0
up .
25 . Closing date for entries I s
pretty fine average of points to b e
By CHICK
California scrum i s reilorted t o March 16 ,
able to add ,
Varsity continued to shella c be as heavy as eve r despite th e
. their opposition in th e (I0f1sl ! loo of Richter and anothe r tree • MONDAY, MARCH 23
Ct3rry Marik , placing first lb th e
12c-yd . lbw In?rdlea ; 880 yards ;
League It Divisio n by scoring two like fot'wal'(I . Keith 1lerserve .
230-yard free style and the 440•yar d
unanswere d goals et central Park twisted knee and Stu Clyn e wa s Ina yards : Shot Put ; High Jump .
free style gained 12 points wit h
all Sunnily .
no 'effort at all . The 100•yard fre e
badly brie-el and had concussion , TUESDAY, MARCH 24
y0 yards ; 1 mile ; 440-yard relay ;
style 11. 11 ; goof' for eleven point s
The a am e afar hen and pt•oy!ded
Ten Meter . that hatnpered Birds 1
,talcum
; Ithee' ,Inmp .
wren Dun c ' 11ctwis nosed out .111! '
the rapaIty crowd with ell enter in tlo ; ;aloe, piayee down Smit h
WEDNESDAY,
MARCH 25
Sky for first position to cop sis I
lallllll! attcruoou (If wuuderl'ul snare the utn'rnw• .1i' and khorUles s
41a
yards
;
Medley
Relay ; Discus ;
points, ;(lilt's second brought i n
recite . Early ht the game Bud of the field . In the names to h e
hob)
Vault
.
S
four more points and Rees Hug h
Dub~ou seal a sc"rcher pint the held nl the ~t tdium Bi rds wil l
FRIDAY,
MARCH
27
added another point .
(nllineweed gu :llleeper which (lie have the adr,ulte g e and if th e
Open trot rained out days, o r
urlxed
a Im'illiunt piece o f !mashie' scrum play's the same superlativ e
k
Sky, McInnis, ()inland and Mali
(further
eliminations of abov e
by the forwards .
In'tutd of rugger it showed in out s
combined their efforts to plac e
events
,
fleft In the 4ou•yurd tree styli .
Lute In the first half Debson' s rut lr ting the cal for w ard' a m ' i t
d
.
Pete
Lusztig
contribute
again
found the goal after bein g the threw-qu Afters hi t top for m FINALS—2 DAYS
relay
Tuesday, March 31 ; Wednesday ,
tw( points in the 100-y'uu'd breas t
sent away in the clear by a per . ' Birds should milerage t o edge our
April
1.
stroke and another four points i n
let-1 pass (rum 11111 I'epewi(h . '('hi s Hears .
goal was . 'll !Wheel needed t o KEY PLAYER S
the 200-yard breast ;;troke . .11s (
BIG BASH FOR BEARS
swimming the 2eo-yard hreas i
clinch the league's leadership fu r
The Iwo sgtuld, s are,
IItruke, ,Hm McIntyre played fourt h
individual goal scoring honors , well .watched and Injuries to ke y
IN PARK
flirt two points .
Varsity also has the best goa l players such as Gerry Main coul d SATURDAY
The UBC Rowing Club woul d
tiv'erage ,
I :l ;ily determine the outcome , I, like all you culture lovers to
Jilt also seam the l,,o•yard in •
Ernie Knyt put up another aril s (Ironed conditions, too . w'lll mak e
dlviduui medley with Nlorga n
know that there will be a danc e
Rant display in goal, making every - a lot of difference to the lighte r
Jamieson and Ain Caulfield fo r
in honor of the visiting Callfor •
thine which came lily way loo k Inds .
a combined total of six point s
nia Bears Saturday night at
easy, i-lit defenders, Bud h're :le e
One roan whom the entire teal (
,11oa'gau and Iron Smythe place d
the Vancouver Rowing Club .
Ickson, Dun Renton, Icon Gleeig , and ('oath Albert Lal(Invaite wil l
fourth and second respectively fo r
Everyone who attended th e
Area a.hessMeat'i
Alec Reid, Dick Matthews an d he depending on is Iticker Bob Nlor •
a combined six points . Dan Smyth e
last Rower's bash will be bac k
A FAMILIAR FIGURE to UBC fans is Harry McLaughlin ,
Howie Uhoru v , all were indlspen s lord, who struck perl'e(tion in th e
swain the 440 . yu'd free style a s
for more so come out and se e
fable
in their checking and anticipa • Berkeley gameu to lead lairds t o
well as adding a good share o f
sleight-of-hand artist with House of David . McLaughlin, a
what a real party is like .
\fell . This together with the dead - victory, Mollerd, who had bee n
points for a man with little tin e
Site of the do is at Rowin g
former
star
with
Pacific
Lutheran,
was
national
scorin
g
I!nesd of the forwards proved t o elf his usual forme in games im r
for training .
Club headquarters at entranc e
be downfall of the Collies for had ' m)ediately prior to the Cal games ,
champ in 1950 . The bearded boys were to be here wit h
hoe Hanson contributed thre e
to Stanley Park . Tickets a t
they won they would have had a, ' kicked those two fantastic pen •
paints when he placed third in th e
door or from ,any member o f
Harlem Clowns Wednesday night for a polio benefit gam e
crud( at Dominions for the leagu e aides, one ofwhieh was over hal f
200-yard buck stroke . Ile also len t
Rowing team .
with
championship ,
Thunderbirds
but
suddenly
cancelled
the length of the field .
the
contest
las
t
a hand in the ;iuo•yau'd medle y
relay .
night .
MOSTLY STUF F
Victoria
Victoria College Vikings, onc e
coufideut of sueartu the paren t
Varsity, slunk hall( to thei r
little grey home across th e
straits SntIIt'dlly , laying been do "
fasted in three sportive event s
and umuluS in to tie at 1a1 er .
't'he ranger aide . ;porting stic k
l ;ary IVehstel' . Vlrfurl : l
lice hull' scrum hall' ;eel Gerr y
Itoyers, sinsllliulull Iln'onlln :u '
Lws, : ;nt ;I h! : ; surprise whe n
they took ea the V ;Irslly' ,, thir d
tent, tlui ' fnnwhsnl(s, and dre w
4t .n4 us
The tI ;lII played
fir s ,' hill', aiill flit
twist
()I'
Iliii
~•I,rel e
Iliu .,
pa(
this Vi c
I,, en,; h
;retie
Ionia llir\tarll : 11w11 ;criv1
over an mllrnnye~Ird lIy
vthe m
11'e11?le1'
(Iii u
yards out .
I111,I(
PI
CI'
(Paul
,
By
Me
Invasion And
Stuf f
Y
ff.
Chiefs, led by Vic Edwards' tw o
arsity, with their sid e goals, managed to edge out th e
Julio! college Ioundhallers :1 . 2 ,
~heuc,theued by the ;1Qdii )II o f
OA
At
ff.
nice, Spent(' aid (tartlet, 'then House of David and Harle m
men, tit null seam n a
Clowns runcelled the ir 11'etlues •
nil Ilse
Iwo minute- (1I' th e
duly ,game, probably because o r
,ante when Ken l'rgnhart lunc h
lack of ticket sales . . . hig h
lid (Jett a Sarima's Ut' ed pen scoring hoop game4 are the styl e
Illy (attn . 'I'il1 :; try vv :1 ; 1(11 ( nll now that Bevis, Francis has clim e
%te ed old 1'woad,
thie f
upon the scene . , the Ri o
(id 1!n
In1~i elided wilhunl tn .
Grande t'reslunan 1'inklled wit h
tiler 'lenient .
a :al .l average for h games . .
Iwo tyeel(s ago n emi r ', lot Lo s
I ,nnitH
i)iH I i ittt! , ,I ;n we e
Angeles State College scored le a
n :-'Ie'.:Ililill a
I si Ily
hen .
point ; (believe it or not) as hi s
nail era
11,1(1'11 . is \t .imi)( (I th e
lain edited nut Chapman Collhair . .
ht 1Va r
lege 208 . 82 , . . Dueck Powe r
. A l win j l t ( , (I l i S,~lurd 1,
ns h l
glides, the paraplegics who ap e
u'„iH Inei
Ieul .ile r .~'n ;l^1'h ; I
clali/e in Wheel chair hashc t
III 1,
Ii*
1 ' ~i'
tli
(\nllh'l l
11 ;111 recently, scored 118 point s
r .1
1
I
w il .le 1 ' 1 '. .
ll a rl .;ulu' •IU-nlhlute game , , .
The sclvmd division succor
oh Mr, Pomfret .
itillillrilf