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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" If\nTHE UB YSSEY\nVOLUME 27\nVANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1954\nSCENTS\nNo. 8\nUbyssey   Censured   by   Counci\nNEED CASH? WRITE A SKIT\nVARSITY REVUE IS ON AGAIN\n4\n1 A way for hard-pressed students to make some easy\n|   money was revealed Monday by Allan Thackray, chairman\nof the Blue and Gold Review Committee.\nThe Review is offering a total of $100 in prizes to the\nauthors of humorous skits that will be used in the show.\nAll the skits used in the final production, whether in whole\nor in part, .will net the authors $5, while the best three\nwill earn $50, $25, and $15 respectively.\nSkit entries should be handed in at the AMS office\nnot later than November 15 of this year.\nHie review, which satirizes the lighter side of campus\nUfa, is scheduled to appear on November 3rd, 4th and 5th\nof 1955.\nflection  Invalid;\nBallots  Incorrect\n* A re-election for Undergraduate Society Committee chairman ig scheduled for Friday, after last Thursday's election was\ndeclared null and void by the Student Council.\nA\nScientist's\nImportance\nStressed\n\"Sitting on the fence is, in\neffect, just as decisive as agreeing with a policy,\" says Dr.\nKathleen Lonsdale, a Fellow\nof the Royal Society, and Professor of Chemistry at University\nCollege, London,  England.\nSpeaking before a crowd of\nmore than 150 students in Arts\n100 Friday, the world-famous\nscientist declared a scientist's\nresponsibilities do not end with\nhis vote.\n\"Science must recognize its\neffect upon communities,\" said\nDr. Lonsdale, stressing that\nscience must be characterized by\na respect for truth, a dislike for\nhiding truth, and an international outlook.\nQuaker Lonsdale, who has recently visited Australia and\nJapan, expressed the belief that\nwhat the world needs is policy\nof relief for the poor and starving, not a policy of rearmaments.\n\"mix-up\" In the ballots\nwhich resulted In students voting straight choice Instead of\npreferentially coupled with the\nfact that no candidate emerged\nwiht a clear majority were the\nreasons given by Student Council for the extra election.\nCONFUSION\nFurther confusion resulted\nwhen the printers of The\nUbyssey ran Jim Killeen's\nname at the head of two seconder's statements leaving candidate\nVic Isfeld's name out entirely.\nNO CLEAR MAJORITY\nPreferential voting in all AMS\nElections is required by the constitution. However, had one\ncandidate secured a \"clear majority\" there would not have to be\nanother election, said Wendy\nSutton, election co-ordinator.\nA total of 1239 students voted\nin the USC election out of 5700\nstudents eligible to cast a vote.\nThe post of USC chairman was\nleft open when last year's chairman, Monte McKay, was declared  ineligible.\nPolls will be open Friday from\n10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Brock Hal.,\nthe Quad, the bus stop, the\nengineering building and the\nlibrary.\nPERT AND PRETTY nurses seen here were out for blood\nas they paraded the campus Monday noon hoping to encourage any healthy but hesitant students to give a pint.\nCharmaine Clugston and Dorothy Brown helped to raise\nthe blood pressure of spectators of the parade.\n\u2014-Photo by John Robertson\nBLOOD\nPsycnoiogy\nWeapon In\n.y.choh\nNew\nDrive\nFrosh Elect Executive;\nPoll Turnout Poor\nTurning out to the polling stations in disappointingly low\nnumbers, first year students Friday voted George Ross into\nthe top post on the frosh executive.\nGrad   Pics\nTo Be Taken\nAt  Studios\nRon Bray, AMS treasurer, announced today that graduation\nphotographs will be taken at\nstudios this year instead of on\nthc campus. Although the prints\nare prepaid, there will be a saving of 20% on reprints due to\nthc change of location.\nPresidents of the different\ngrad classes are requested to\ncontact thc proper photographer.\nStudios for Grad Photos:\nCampbell Studios, 581 Granville\n1. Arts\n2. Law\nKrass  Studios,  569  Granville\n1. Commerce\n2. Forestry\n3. Pharmacy\n4. Medicine\n5. Home   Economics\nD'Arcy Galleries, 2932 Granville\n1. Physical Education\n2. Engineers\n'.,. Architecture\n4. Nursing\nf). Agriculture\nCabinet members to back Ross\nare Vice-President Pat Russell;\nSecretary-Treasurer Mary Underhill; Women's Athletic Director Carol Humphries; and Men's\nAthletic Director, Gerry Moulds.\nFour hundred Frosh out of a\npossible 1235 took advantage of\ntheir vote in spite of the repeated appeals, campaign devices,\nwell-situated polling booths, and\nthe two positions new to the ballot form: those of the sports di-\nectors. Approximately twenty\nballots weres poiled.\n\"Not enough voted,\" said elections co-ordinator Wendy Sutton Monday, and \"surprisingly,\nconsidering the magnificent support contributed by the frosh\nduring Orientation Week to all\nother  activities.\"\nRoss has already organized his\nexecutive around the present fall\nbind drive. Frosh, contributions\nthis year will be recognized as\nsuch and not merely as additional\namounts for the Arts Faculty.\nUse of psychology has paid visible dividends in UBC's\nfall blood drive.\nNursing and Home Economics undergraduates, co-sponsors\nof the drive, have abandoned such \"pressure tactics\" as the\nkissing booth and are encouraging more voluntary methods.\nThe clinic was termed to be\n\"smooth as it has ever been, if\nnot better\" by Major W. A. Freeman, panel organizer for blood\ndonor committee of the,Vancouver Branch of the Red Cross.\nUp until press time Monday,\n228 pints had been collected of\nthe 2000 pint objective set for\nthe campaign.\nThe drive got off to a flying\nstart with a car parade around\nthe campus at noon. Fifteen decorated cars and 70 uniformed\nundergraduate nurses took part.\nMonday and Tuesday afternoons, the nurses planned to\nstorm the clinic en masse to\ndonate.\nA full scale raid on the engineers hideaway is scheduled\nfor Wednesday afternoon, it was\ndivulged today by Barbara\nBlackwood, president of the\nNurses   Undergraduate   Society.\nThe \"magnificent prize\" to be\ngiven to the winning faculty\nwill be in the form of a trophy\ncalled   the   \"Globulin   Goblet.\"\n(Continued  on  Pag*   3)\nSee  BLOOD\nFrat Expose Prompts\nHarsh Policy Criticism\nStudent Council at a stormy meeting Monday censured The\nUbyssey \"for the poor taste employed\" in the expose of three\ncampus fraternities with discriminatory clauses.\nEditor-in-chief\nPeler Sypnowich was not present at the\nmeeting which moved that \"the\nPublications Board be censured\nfor the taste employed in the way\nthe fraternities with discriminatory clauses were named in the\nOctober 1 issue -of The Ubyssey.\"\nOnly negative vote cast against\nthe motion was recorded, by Undergraduate Societies Chairman\nMonte McKay who pointed out\nthat The Ubyssey had net been\ncensured for criticism of numerous other campus organizations.\nKICKED OUT\nA motion to go Into commit-\ntee-of-the-whole and eject reporters from the meeting was narrowly defeated at the start of\nthe'heated two-hour debate.\nin the issue of The Ubyssey\nin question the names ot the\nthree fraternities on campus\nwith discriminatory clauses in\ntheir constitutions, Alpha Tau\nOmega, Kappa Sigma and Sigma\nPhi, were printed in large type.\nThe Ubyssey said: \"Their\nnames are revealed here for the\nfirst time for the information of\nstudents who are now rushing\nfraternities.\"\nAlma Mater Society president\nDick Underhill said, \"We have\nno objection to The Ubyssey\nprinting the names of the three\nfraternities, only to the manner\nin which it was done.\"\n(Continued on Page\nSee CENSURE\n3)\nuez vs. Batten\nIn Statement Clash\nTwo Canadian university students just back from a trip\nto Russia, were caught with their statements down last week.\nAMS Cards\nStudents may pick up their\nAMS Cards on Wednesday,\nThursday and Friday of this\nweek between 11:30-1:30 in\nthe hall outside the AMS office.\nAMS Meet\nDate Set\nBy   Council\nStudent Council called for a\nnew general AMS meeting on\nOct. 14 to allow campus athletes\nto fight the budget cut they received at the general meeting\nlast Thursday.\nMen's Athletic Directorate\npresident Bob Brady presented\na petition to Council Monday\nnight, calling for a meeting for\nthe purpose of rescinding the\nfollowing motion of the AMS\nmeeting September 30:\n\"That the undergraduate societies grant be restored to $1.10\nper member; this money to ho\nacquired by holding the MAD\ngrant al $3.10 per student.\n\"The surplus funds resulting\nfor nonorganized undergraduate\nsocieties shall revert to MAD.\".  |\nAMS treasurer Bray's budget:\nhad allocated undergraduate societies $1 per student and had\nraised MAD's grant to $3.20 from '\n$3.10 per student.. j\nThis increase in MAD's bud-\ngot, was automatically in effect\nwhen university enrollment passed Ihe .r>.r)()() mark under Ihe Ostrom Plan athletic program,\nBrady   explained. '\nLocal Talent\nLocal Writers\nIn   Operetta\nThe haze of secrecy surrounding the spring operetta of the\nMusical Society has finally been\nlifted.\nA new all-Canadian show,\n\"Bonanza,\" will be produced\nby the UBC MUSSOC in its\nwestern premier. Only twice before staged, the show was received with tremendous approval\nin eastern Canada.\nOrchestration for the operetta\nwill be under the universally\nacclaimed artist Lucio Agostini,\none of CBC's best known conductors.\nLibretto is by Jim Richardson,\nand Chet Lamerson has arranged\nthe musical score.\nAuditions for the operetta will\nbe directed by producer Harry\nPrice on Wednesday, Thursday\nand Friday from 7 to 10 p.m. in\nIhe  auditorium.\nThey were Tony Enriquez,\npresident of the National Federation of Canadian University\nStudents and Clyde Batten, editor of Toronto University student\nnewspaper, The Varsity.\nThe two\u201estudents attended, as\nobservers, the communist-domin\nated International Union of Students conference in Moscow this\nsummer.\nEnriquez and Patten drew\nwidely differing conclusions\nfrom their trip, particlarly concerning the contentious question\nof whether or not NFCUS\nshould affiliate with the red\nunion.\nThe NFCUS leader said on\nhis return that any affiliation\nwith the leftist IUS was impossible.\nWhereas Batten, in a separate\nstatement said that an \"associate\nmembership\" was possible in\nthe near future. The editor pointed out that several western student groups including the United\nKingdom have already joined\nIhe IUS on an associate basis.\nThe two students issued no\njoint statement.\n'twstn clouts\nLaing To Speak\nOn B.C. Problems\nLIBERAL CLUB will hold a\nspecial meeting at 12:30 today in\nArts 100. Quest speaker will be\nArthur Laing. Topic: \"Some B.C.\nProblems.\"\n* *     #\nREVEREND _F. .TEMPLE\nKingston will begin a series of\nlectures entitled \"God in Philosophy\" today in Arts 103 at\n2:30. He is being sponsored by\nthe President's Committee on\nSpiritual Values.\n#|* '#B1 Op\nEL CIRCULO LATINO AMSB-\nicano will hold a general meet*\ning'Tuesday, 12:30, in Aits 199.\n* \u00bb      \u00ab        \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0W-f\nCONSERVATIVE CLUB *!H\nhold a general meeting Wednesday, October 9, in Arte 291\nat 12:30.\ntft If) t\/> V^i\"\nPHOTOGRAPHER'S meeting\nwill be held at noon today la\nthe Totem Office. \"'!\nUBC FILM SOCIETV brings\nyou a special week-long series\noi propaganda films. The Meet**\nin this group of World War, It\nfilms, \"The Nazis Strike* wttl\nbe shown ln the auditothtti..\ntoday. \u2022 '\" \u25a0 \"\"\u2022''T<'\"' \u2022\nUBC ftLM SOCIETY will present a double feature attraction\ntoday at 3:45, 6:00 and 8:18, in\nthe auditorium.\nThe program will Include\n\"Turn the Key Softly,\" as w$l\nas Sidney Carroll's featurette,\n\"The Stranger left no card.\"\nALPHA OMEGA CLUB will\nhold their first general meeting\nWednesday noon in Arts 102.\n(Continued  on  Pag*  3)\nSe* CLASSES\nTo  Haze\nOr  Not\nTo  Haze?\n\"Hazing is desirable in freshmen orientation\" will be the\ntopic of a students versus faculty\ndebate on Wednesday at 12:30 in\nArts 100.\nDean S. N. F. Chant and Or.\nEdro I. Signori of the Psychology\nDepartment will oppose Danny\nGoldsmith and Bob Johnson,\nwho will take the affirmative\nside.\nThe Parliamentary Forum\nstated that the question of hazing\nshould be thrashed out now\nwhile it is still alive in everybody's mind.\nJudges will include i Vancouver Sun representative, AMS\npresident Dick Underhill and a\nUbyssey staffer.\nAPATHY    POLL\nMeeting?   What   Meeting\ne e *\nAlma Mater Society meetings are too dull, and. besides,\nthey're not ballyhooed enough.\nThis was the reaction of\nstudents quizzed in a poll to\ndetermine the reason why\nstudents were as scarce as\nmuurning tenant's at a landlord's funeral during last\nThursday's general meeting.\nMost of the freshmen\nqueried hacf heard nothing of\nthe meeting, or of the AMS in\nsome cases.\n\"II was very poorly publicized.\" said Judy delaVergne,\nArts 1.\n\"1 knew what the AMS was\nhul knew nothing about the\nmeeting,\" said Bob Grynch,\nArts 1.\nAnother sweet freshette who\nhesitated   Lo  reveal  her  name\nalso said she knew nothing.\n\"Gee, none of the kids in my\ncar chain even knew,\" she\nsaid.\nMore blase opinions and excuses were offered by upperclassmen most of whom stated\nthat the meetings were \"too\ndull.\"\n\"All they do is talk and\nargue,\" said Barbara Mller,\nArts 2.\nRon Summerville, Arts 3,\nfelt that the poorly atended\nmeeting was only a sign that\nthe \"moral decay\" which '\u2022affects the whole country has\nreached UBC.\"\n\"Statism has permeated\neverything in this country,\"\nhe said. \"We must find some\nother  inducement besides  the\ndubious privilege of helping\none's Alma Mater and doing\none's duty as a citizen to make\npeople attend these meetings,**\nhe stated.\nMost members of fraternities and sororities questioned\nmerely replied \"rushing function.\"\nBernie Beare, Arts 2, \"Just\ncouldn't be bothered attending.\" But if I had known the\nrowing team was going to get\na prize I would have been\nover like a flash,\" he said.\n\"More silver tea trays is\nwhat we need,\" said Ritchie\nWilliams, Arts 2.\nBut the prize must go to\nJoyce Phillips, Arts 1. \"AMS?\nI'm not joining anything this\nyear,\" she said as she sprinted\nfor  the caf. Page 2\nTHE tJBYSSEY\nTuesday, October 5,1954\nTHE UBYSSEY\nMEMBER. CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS\nhoots\nin hell\nBy PETER SYPNOWICH\nAuthorized as second class mail, Post Office Dept., Ottawa.\nMail subscriptions $2.50 per year. Published in Vancouver throughout the university year by the Student Publications Board of the\nAlma Mater Society, University of British Columbia. Editorial\nopinions expressed herein are those of the editorial staff of The _ , \/ u\nUbyssey, and not necessarily those of the Alma MateT Society or TOOOy S NtWS\nthe University. Business and advertising telephones are Alma 1230\nor Alma 1231.\nEDITOR-IN-CHIEF\u2014PETER SYPNOWICH\nManaging Editor\u2014Ray Logie\nC\u00abP Editor Bert Gordon\nAssociate Editor\u2014Stan Beck\nNews Editor Pat Carney\nSports Editor\u2014Ken Lamb\nExecutive Editor\u2014Oeoff Conway\nSenior Editor this issue\u2014SANDY ROSS\nDesk and Reporters:. Jackie Scale, Jacquie Trafford, Brian\nQuns, Judy Thormahelen, Rod Smith, Jane Skelton. Marge McNeil, Bob Johanson, Pat Russell, Marie Stevens.\nSports: Maurice Gibbons, Neil McDonald, Jerry O'Flanagan.\nA Good Thing\nPresident Eisenhower's \"atoms for peace\" plan can be\nhailed as quite possibly the salvation of mankind\u2014particularly since it was unanimously accepted by the United Nations\ngeneral assembly.\nThe specter of atomic suicide has been haunting the\nhuman race for the past five years. This plan is undoubtedly\nwelcome.\nBui we hope it is more than one of the U.S.'s celebrated\n\"propaganda victories,\"; however effectively it might squelch\nSoviet claims of planned aggression on the part of Americans.\nThe proposed atomic pool is too valuable to the world\nto be used as mere propaganda. Schemes similar to it have\nbeen bandied about enough during the past five years; if this\nproposal is treated with the same contempt, atomic cooperation could well be doomed.\nThe American announcement that the plan will proceed\nwithin two years \"with or without.Soviet co-operation\" goes\nfar to allay this fear.\nBut it gives rise to another\u2014one much worse.\nIs the United States entirely sincere, or has the proposal been presented with hidden motives? Is there any\npossibility of it being turned into an atomic super-NATO?\nIn other words, is the U.S. attempting to organize a\nwestern atomic alliance, in the interests of \"defence\"?\nNothing could be more tragic.\nPast tensions between East and West would be nothing\ncompared to the new situation which would arise. Newspapers\nwould carry \"war scare\" headlines daily.\nWe hope all this is merely suspicious conjecture. At the\nmoment, the U.S. must be congratulated for a move which\nbrings the first signs since 1945 for a workable co-existence\n\u2022 between the world's two armed camps.\nIf both Russia and the U.S. allow the plan to materialize,\nthe world would be eternally grateful.\nA FORUM\nThe   AMS   Budget:\nPresented here are both sides of the conflict hntu\/npn\nundergraduate societies and Men's Athletic Directorate i?r\nthe Alma Mater Society allotment to each group The Ubvssev\nurges all students to read each ar\u00abument in preparation for the\nAMS meeting petitioned by MAD, at which the quesSon will\nbe reconsidered. M \"     \"\nUSC\nAs one of the \"hypocrites\"\nwho had the audacity to\ncheer the rowing team and\nthen amend the budget at last\nThursday's AMS meeting,\nmay I take the liberty of introducing some facts into this\nargument?\nSo far all we have seen in\nthe editorial columns of the\nUbyssey are flagrant misrepresentations of the spirit of\nthe amendment.\nAccording to the editorial in\nFriday's Ubyssey, the reason\nthat the amendment to the\nbudget was moved was that\nUSC resented the fact that\nMAD was to be given a ten\ncent increase.\"\nThe truth of this matter is\nthat a group oi' us resented the\nfact that Undergraduate Societies were to be given an\narbitrary ten cent cut.\nWe resented this because it\nwould impose restrictions upon the activities of Undergraduate Societies and all felt\nthat these activities were important enough for us al least\nto stand up and fight for at\nleast as much money as we\nwere given last year.\nWe were NOT looking lor\nan increase bul were attempt-\ning only to maintain our grant\nat last year's level.\nMorris Carley,\n4th Engineering\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nAt last Thursday's General\nAMS meeting a motion was introduced by a group of well-\norganized students five minutes\nbefore the meeting was to begin. Their motion was to cut\nthe Athletic Budget and to turn\nover this sum to the Undergraduate Societies. The motion\nwas passed by 181 to 166 votes.\nIn all fairness to this group,\nI must commend them for their\nclose organization in the meeting, and their ability to keep\nthis motion secret until the\nright moment.\nI would like to present a few\nfacts to the students on the\ncampus so they will understand\nthe situation more clearly.\nH) Two years ago a General\nAMS meeting set the following\nrates for the Athletics grant to\nbe paid out of the AMS fees:\n$3.00 per student\u20145000 enrollment or less.\n$3.10 per student\u20145000-5500\nenrollment.\n$3.20 per student\u20145500 enrollment or over.\nLast year the Athletic budget was based on an enrollment of 5500 or less, i.e., $3.10\nper student.\nFor the year 1954-55 the budget was based on an enrollment\nof 5000 plus, i.e.. $3.20 per student. Tlijs was an automatic increase in line with the rates\nset by students two years ago.\n(2) The 11)54-55 athletic budget based on $3.20 per student\nwas passed by both University\nBoard of Governors and Student  Council.\nIt is very difficult to operate\nHie Athletic program under\nthese conditions, i.e., having the\nbudget approved by two responsible bodies nnd then bavin i; a  handful of students turn\nPolice court today was\namazed at the tale of a man\nWho admitted participating in\na series of bank holdups with\ntwo other men.\nThe robber, John \"the\nGreek\" Ignominos, said he\njoined his two companions\u2014\nwho are still at large\u2014in the\nholdups as a means of dissuading them from future\ncrimes.\nHe blamed \"rabble-rousers\"\nfor his arrest.\nHe said the other pair were\nhis childhood friends, and had\nthreatened to sever relations\nwith him if he did not join\nthem in the robberies.\n\"I stayed with them ln the\nhope of reforming them,\" Ignominos told the court. \"If I didn't\nthey would remain incorrigible.\"\nHe said it would be \"foolish\"\nto sentence him to a jail term\ninstead of allowing him to rejoin his accomplices.\n\"If you put me in jail, I\nwon't be able to help these fellows,\" he said. \"They will be\nwithout the benefit of my good\ninfluence.\"\nLong History\nHe asked the court to \"show\nsome tolerance\" for his two\nfriends. \"They don't know any\nbetter,\" he said. \"You should\nremember that they were\nbrought up to act the way they\ndo\u2014it's their environment.\n\"They have a long history\nof crime,\" he added.\nIgnominos bitterly attacked\npolice reporters present during\nthe hearing for printing his\nname in newspaper reports of\nthe robbery.\n\"It was wrong for me to be\nhumiliated like that,\" he said.\n\"I will become a pariah, and\nit isn't right.\"\nHe explained: \"I committed\nthose robberies not as a criminal, but only to remain in the\ncompany of my friends and attempt to help them mend their\nways.\"\nIgnominos, who was dubbed\n\"the Greek\" particularly because of his fondness for Greek\nletters, referred to his exposure\nin the press as \"especially unfortunate at this time.\"\nChances Good\nHe said that at his last meeting with his two friends they\nhad shown signs of \"wavering\"\nand appeared ready to stop\ntheir thefts.\n\"I would have seen them\nagain soon, and the chances of\nmy persuading them to reform\nwere pretty good,\" he said.\n\"The treatment you have\ngiven me is unjust and stupid.\nYou are penalizing me for my\nefforts to wipe out crime, and\nat thc same time you are making it impossible for me to\ncontinue my good work.\"\nIgnominos appeared in court\nwearing a tweed jacket and\ngrey flannels. On his inside\nshirt pocket he wore a bright,\nlarge, expensive pin with Greek\nletters inscribed upon it\u2014the\norigin of his nickname.\nHe denied buying the pin out\nof the proceeds of his robberies, and was puzzled why\nthe law so suddenly objected\nto his activities.\n\"Why all this sudden excitement?\" he asked. \"It's rabble-\nrousing. No one objected to\nwhat I was doing in the past.\"\nright around and  reverse  the\nbudget.\n3) The Undergraduate Societies' grant of $1.10 per student\nlast year was entirely due to a\ntyopgraphical error made when\nthat year's budget was drawn\nup. It should have been $1.05\nper student.\n4) I agree that the activities\nof the Unclegraduate Societies\nare just as important as those\nof the Athletic program.\nHowever, I don't agree with\nthe fact that they are receiving\nmore money than they ever received before and will have\nmore trouble than ever trying\nto find means to spend it all.\nI   sincerely    hope    thai    the\nabove .will  help you to under- '\nstand the situation as it stands\nnow.       \u2022\nRobert Brady, President,\nMen's Athletic Directorate\nCLASSIFIED\nFOR SALE\n1938    CHEV    COUPE.    NEW\npaint. Motor in good condition.\n\u00ab $190 or nearest offer. Phone\nAL. 1904R.\n* \u2022 *\nATTENTION MED STUDENTS\n\u2014Miscroscope for sale. Retired\nVancouver physician wishes to\nsell his instrument. Please telephone Kerrisdale 0176M after\n8 p.m. (Wrong phone number\nwas given in this ad last week).\nT * T\nLOIT\n\u2022 GLASSES IN BROWN CASE.\nName on cardboard in case.\n(Frank Tyers). Please phone\nAL- 3337-L.\n* '   *       *\nBETA THETA PI PIN, TUES-\nday. Rewardl. Phone KE.\n4996-R.\n* \u00bb   *       *\nWednesday   noon. ' phi\nDelta Theta pin. Finder please\nKE. 3474-R.\n* *       *\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BREAKFAST\nfor male student. $30 per\nmonth at 4S74 West 14th Avenue phone AL.*3S27 after 6.\nCCF Club\nElects  New\nExecutive\nWalter Schoen, Teacher Training student, was elected president oi the CCF Club at a general meeting Friday.\nPrevious president, Marney\nStevenson, found it necessary to\nresign owing to pressure of\nstudies.\nAl Forrest will be the new\neditor of the Socialist Challenge,\nthe club's campus newspaper.\nTaking over as associate editor\nwill be Johann Stoyva who was\nalso chosen to be a delegate to\nthe Provincial Council.\nAs a part of the year's programme there will be speakers\nin Arts 100 each Wednesday at\n12:30.\nWbfp vou Muse...make it count . hnve a C.qVv\nrftArafltew\n\"CeMe\" to \u25a0 nOMe*e4 twHto-mfh.\nCOCA-COUITO.\nSoft, precious pure\nwool in colors calcu\nlated to bring a\ntingle to your\nwardrobe.\n\"MERIDIAN\"\nFAIL   SWEATERS\nShort Sleeved Pullover\nLong Sleeved Pullover\nCardigan   ........\n6.95\n7.95\n8.95\nThe finest botany wool has been fashioned from tangy mix-match tones into\ncuddly budget-stretchers with a \"million air.'' Precious Meridians\u2014made\nwith the care and attention, the smooth expensive look that have made English sweaters famous. Make these I'ully-I'ashioiied beauties the backbone of\nyour college wardrobe. Sizes M to 40. While, black, light blue, Ughl green,\niark green, brown, aqua, pink, yellow, navy.\nHBC Sportswear\u2014Third Floor\nINCORPORATf D\nMAY   IG70.\ni Tuesday, October 5,1934\nMHE UBYSSEY\nVtftl\nCLASSES\n(Continued from, Page 1)\nBIG BLOCK CLUB will meet\nWednesday, October 6 <at 12:30\nin the Men's Club Room, Brock\nHall.\nop 9p Op\nPHRATERES members will be\nrecruited Tuesday, Wednesday\nand Thursday of this week in the\nPhra4eres Room, north wing of\nBrock Hall, from 12:30 to 2:30\np.m.\n\u2022|\u00bb Op op\nBIOLOGY CLUB will present\na talk by Al West'entitled \"Predator Control\" at 12:30 Wednesday in Biology 100.\nOp op Op\nAGGIE Barn Dance will be\nheld on Friday, October 8, in\nthe Alma Hall from 9p.m. to\n1 a.m. Music will be supplied\nby Reg Forbes and , his Roof-\nlifters. Admission is $1.25 per\ncouple. Girls are asked to bring\nbox lunches.\n* \u00a5      \u00a5\nJAZZ SOCIETY will throw\ntheir first swinging session noon\ntoday in the Brick Stage Room\nwith Stan Johnson, bass and\nChris Gage, Piano, as guest musicians.\n* *      \u00a5\nINDIAN  STUDENTS Association will hold their first general meeting at-12:36 today in\nArts 206.\nIf, M} M\nVISUAL ARTS CLUB will\nshow a film of the Winnipeg Ballet \"Shadows on the Prairie\"\nat a general meeting held in\nPhysics 202 Wednesday noon.\n*       *       \u00a5\nDANCE CLUB noon hour sessions will be held this week in\nHG4. Monday noon: folk dancing; Tuesday, Wednesday and\nThursday noon: ballroom dancing; Friday noon: square dancing. Professional ballroom instruction will be given Thursday\nevenings at 7:30 in HG4.\n* *J\u00bb      *\nSOCIAL CREfDIT CLUB will\nhold a general meeting in the\nBrock Hall Board Room at 12:30\nWednesday.\n\u00a5 * *\nCERCLE FHANCAIS will hold\ntheir first \"Causerie\" Tuesday\nfrom 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in the\nInternational House. Tea and\ncoffee will be served.\n* \u00a5     *\nSPECIAL EVENTS COMMIT-\ntee will hold a meeting at 12:30\nWednesday in the Brock Stage\nRoom.\nPROFESSOR  PROFILE\nA Typical Gaul Is Dr. Le-Gall\nBy JACQUIE TRAFFORD\nFrench professor, Louie Le\nGall does not like to be labelled as a typical Frenchman.\nBut his casual classroom manner, his adoration for his native country and his virbrant\nmanner of speaking prove him\nto be wrong.\nEndicott\nHits Press'\nSilence\nInformation on events taking\nplace in the Far East is being\nwithheld in this country, Steve\nEndicott, LPP Youth Leader,\ncharged during a student meeting\nFriday.\nThe black-out on the remarks\nof General Christian de Castries illustrates this, he said..\nThe \"Hero of Dien Bien Phu\"\nwas quoted as saying that -the\nAmericans have lots of war materials which they want to sell,\nand 80 per cent of their economy\nworks for war.\"\nThe General also claimed that\n\"the so-called defence of Western\nculture is only a propaganda\ntrick.\"\nEndicott noticed a great feeling of friendship towards the\nSoviet Union and New China\nthroughout Asia.\nHe also observed that the\nmovement for Colonial Freedom\nand independence is sweeping\nover tho whole of South East\nAsia.\n\"Basis of this movement is the\nfight against the relics of fuecl-\nalism and foreign exploitation\nwhere these tilings have brought\nabout an acute econmic crisis\nwhich has developed into a political  crisis,\"   he  said.\nHe said thai a seething mass\nmovement against poverty, hunger, illiteracy and oppression\nmay  be  seen   in   India.\nEndicott noted \"the growth of\ninfluence and prestige of tiie\nCommunist parties which are\none of the leading forces iu the\nNational Liberation Movements.\"\nProf. Le Gall . .. typical?\nEven the reason he is here\n' in Canada and not in his beloved Paris only adds to the\n\"typical\" list. Mr. Le Gall met\nhis wife in France while she\nwas touring and followed her\nacross an ocean ind continent\nto marry her  in Edmonton.\nThey now life in the Univer-\ncity area with their new baby.\nFOUR YEARS\n, Four years in Canada, one\nat Trinity College and three\nat UBC, have canadianized\nhim to such an extent that his\nfriends were hardly able to\nrecognize him when he visited\nParis this summer.\nHe is an M.A. graduate in\nHistory and English from the\nUniversity of Grenobles.\nFurther studies were taken\nat the National Institute of\nPolitical Studies in Paris,\nwhere he received his law degree. It was here that he developed his \"regrettable sarcastic nature' which he leels\nis not appreciated by either the\nstudents or faculty of the campus. However, he hastens to explain that he is just a \"retailer\nin sarcasm; he has friends who\nare wholesalers.\"\nWar broke out while he was\nstudying in Paris but for some\nThe Memphis Belle, one of\nthe last paddle-wheel steamers\nIn ply the Mississippi, was broken up in IK(i;i, Her boilers were\nmelted down lo make cannon-\nballs for the Confederate Army.\nIn spile of tlii-; Hubert Iv I ,ee\nlost   Lho  '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0ir.\nBLOOD\n(Continued from Page 1)\nThe cup will be appropriately\nfestooned by the nurses.\nMajor Freeman explained that\nin order to secure the quota\nof 2000 pints there will have to\nbe   2500   donors.\nOf this quota 1250 pints is a\nmust,,he explained. BC hospitals\nwill require 1000 pints before\nthe end of next week and 250\npints are needed to meet BC's\nquota  for  gamma  globulin.\nAll blood above the 1250\n\"must\" will be turned in to\nbring up BC's quota of gamma\nglobulin. The panel organizer of\ntho Red Cross Society told The\nUbyssey today that BC has fallen behind in this quota because\nof the drain on this blood bank\nduring the BEG and the Kelow-\nna   jaundice   strike.\nA new innovation this year is\nthe line of chairs which, Major\nFreeman explained, was introduced to keep the students from\nworrying aboflt the \"ordeal\"\nahead.\nActually, as anyone who has\ndonated blood will readily tell\nyou, giving blood is not an\n\"ordeal\" at all.\nClinic hours are 9:30 a.m. to\n4:30 p.m. in the Armouries.\nCENSURE\n(Continued from Page  1)\nCouncil member Danny Goldsmith said: \"It was never made\nclear to us at council whether\nthe report was an editorial or a\nnew story.\nNEWS STORY\n\"It is indefensible on either\naround. If it was an editorial it\nwas not labelled as such and\nreads like a news story.\n\"If it was a news story there\nis no excuse lor printing the\nnames in   large black type.\"\nThe motion of censure was\nmoved by J'on Longstnffe and\nseconded by treasurer Ron Bray.\nobscure reason that he still\ndoes not comprehend, he was\nnot conscripted. His only contact with military life was in\n1944 when he served as an interpreter for the American\narmy.\nHOBBYIST\nCollecting every marketed\nelectrical appliance is Mr. Le\nGall's main hobby. He is proud\nof the fact that a careful perusal at Macys and Gimbels this\nsummer in New York failed to\nbring to light any electrical\ngadget he did not own.\nHe plans to take them all\nback to Paris and exhibit them \u2022\nto his friends for twenty-five\ncents.   His   other   hobby   is\n\"working with his hands.\"\n''This can lend itself to all\nsorts of interpretations,\" Professor Le Gall added as a dubious explanatory note.\nUBC students are very \"nice\nand friendly.\" His only complaint is that he wishes they\nwould stop thinking that learning French is a useless exercise of the mind. He feels that\non the whole, Canadian stud\nents are much more ready to\nface the \"outside world\" in\ncomparison to French students,\nninety percent of whom are\n\"bookworms.\"\nHis future plans are very\nundecided. He would like to\nremain at UBC for a few years\nbut wandering feet could lead\nhim anywhere.\nChampion presents Pete Seeger of the Weavers, North\nAmerica's Greatest folk singer:\nWednesday, October 6,8:15 p.m.\nPender Auditorium       339 W. Pender\nADMISSION 75c\nDE HAAS STUDIO\nALma  2174\n4439 West 10th Are.\n(down from Sasamat)\n\u2022\u2014modern photography\n\u2014better photo-finishing\nCAMPBILL\nCLEANERS\nAcross from Varsity Theatre\nAL. 2480\nDiscount for Students\nThis ad worth 5% d-sooua*\non university activities orders\nat\nWEST POINT PRINTERS\n& STATIONERS\n\"Programs a Specialty\"\nALma 1245        4514 W. 10th\nBIG TIME glamour school comes to Vancouver!\nin person\nMr, Powert\nHedda Hopper\nMOREAU'S\nJ day course of ten tectum, $10,00, Presenting \u2022 three-\nday school to improve your looks, your poise, youf\nfashion know-how. Nowhere else in the world will you\nfind an opportunity like this one to learn from eight\nexperts on each phase of successful living the easy sure\nroad to a happier life through learning how to make\nthe most of yourself. Choose either the day or the night\ncourse. Both are exactly the same. The ten-dollar enroll*\nment fee covers the whole\nten lectures outlined below,     featuring \u2022 \u2022 \u00ab\nfashion\na __ * V\n(W\nWILL  LECTURE  ON THE SECRETS OF CHARM\nWILL LECTURE ON TODAY'S SUCCESSFUL WOMEN\ntake the day course or the night course Oct. 19, 20, 21\nGEORGIA AUDITORIUM ... Both courses are exactly the same. Choose the one most convenient.\n.    Day Sessions: 1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. _ Night Sessions: 8:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m.\nTUESDAY, OCTOBER 19\n1. Opening lecture by Marie Moreau, fashion editor,\nThe Vancouver Sun.\n2. Miracle of plastic surgery demonstration.\n3. Corrective exercises, diets, relaxed tension lessons\nby Vivien Ellis, graduate, Ernest Belcher L. A.\nschool.\n4. Sensible skin care, cosmetic magic by Miss B.\nMacDonald.\nI.   How to care for your own hair, successful home\npermanents, hair styles, by Phillipp.\n'6.   Secrets of Charm by Mr. John Robert Powers,\nFounder of the Powers Girls Agency and the\nPowers Charm School.   Author of \"The Powers\n(Girls\" and \"Secrets of Charm\".\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20\n1. The Most Beautiful Clothes In The World.\nLovely clothes from the world's leading designers will be flown here to Vancouver from\nEurope, N\u00b0w York, Montreal, Toronto and\nmodeled in a featured show.\n2. Miss Hcdda Hopper\nThe famous columnist, confidante of Holly-\nWood stars, author, and gay, witty lecturer will\ncome here from Hollywood to speak on \"Successful Women\".\nFREE BABY SITTING !!!\nDAYTIME ONLY . . . Leave your children In the\ncharge of registered nurses in a main-floor suite at\nHie Ritz Hotel within walking distance of the\nGeorgia Auditorium. No charge to mothers enrolled\nin the day fashion and beauty clinic.\nTHURSDAY, OCTOBER 21\n.1. Etiquette and deportment, entertaining tips by\nMrs. Daphne Ibbotson, Director of the school\nfor self-improvement.\n2. Managing Your Finances Successfully, by L\u00bbw-\nrence B. Jack, Ph.D. in Economics.\n3. Basic Wardrobes for each of four budgets.\n4. Choosing becoming clothes, a demonstration on\nmaking over your old clothes, and an illustrated\nlesson on accessorizing, by Marie Moreau, Fashion\nEditor, The Vancouver Sun.\nDOOR PRIZES\n2 OF HF.DDA HOPPER'S\nFAMOUS HATS\n2 KITS \"POWERS MODELS\"\nCOSMETICS\nTICKETS on sale tt Famous\nArtists, Kelly's on Seymour Street.\nHudson's Bay Co.\nT. Eaton Co.\nWoodward's Ltd., Edith Adams Cottage\nRunge's Ltd., 2225 (hamHie Street.\nThe New York Fur Co., Georgia at Howe.\nFashionwise, Marine Dr., West Vancouver.\nJ\nBOX OFFICE ttttV.\nKelly's, Seymour at Georgia\nMail this coupon now and have your enrollment\nsent by return mail.\nCash, money order or check.\nName .\nAddress Pafel\nTHS! UBYSSEY\nTuesday, October 5,1954\nCompost Heap\nBy Ezra Whtatcropt\nDon't despair, your Old Uncle Ezra is back digging down\ndeep in the compost heap to find his manure covered crystal\nball to bring you the low) down on the 1954 Birds.\nAfter watching Hawaiian Don's dandies through bloodshot eyes in their first three efforts old Ezra is ready to report\nto the faithful. To wit:\nUBC will finish fourth in the Evergreen Conference. No\nEzra's brain was not addled by all that lovely Molson's in\nMontreal\u2014UBC will finish fourth.\nHow, the faithful cry. Simple. By beating Eastern, Central and Western Washington. The crystal ball is clear enough to\nshow losses to Whitworth and College of Puget Sound. Coupled] with Saturday's loss to referee-supported PLC that leaves\nus with a three and three record.\nBO I'M A MATH STUDENT\nA slight improvement of 300% over last year's 0-6 record.\nEau-a is constipated, (that does mean crazy, doesn't it?) the\nfaithful cry! How can we be 300% better after losing Kushnir,\nO'Flanagan, Martinson, Taylor and Hutchison? Simpla\nTake better conditioning, better spirit, add John Newton,\nTed Duncan, Gary Williams, Kevin O'Connell, Donn Spence\narid Gary Taylor, mix with a year's experience for Buz Hudson,\nErnie Nyhaug, Gordie Elliott, Ross Rayment, Charlie James\nand Roe Ross; throw in the experience of Bob Brady, Pete\nGregory, Jim Boulding and Dick Matthews, shake well, add a\ndash of luck, make it two dashes and presto\u2014three victories.\nFIXED IN FOURTH\nNow that Birds are secure in fourth place old Ezra will\nshow cause why they won't finish higher or lower.  >\nCoryell is depending on many boys who are experiencing\ntheir first year of American football. John Newton is the outstanding case in point. An English rugger letterman, Newton\nplayed his first game of football three weeks ago in Montreal.\nYet he ia practically Birds' only break-away running threat\nand Coryell is counting heavily on him.\nKevin O'Connell, a 19-year-old 195-pound tackle, is counted\non to spell off Gregory and Elliott. His first game was also\nthe McGill affair. Five or six other players fall into the same\ncategory. So far they have been doing a great job but they\nare bound to make some mistakes, and mistakes are costly\nin a football game.\nAND MORE OF BOULDING\nJim Boulding at fullback is reason enough why Birds will\nwin three games. The hard-driving veteran has been little less\nthan sensational in Birds' first three games and he should be\nsure All-Conference material. Ted Duncan at quarterback is a\nvery welcome addition to Coryell's signal-calling staff. The\nheavy ex-Blue Bomber should be Birds' first string quarterback.\nGary Williams from Hamilton was expected to fill Hutchinson's shoes but a bad leg has kept him from showing his true\nform. A tip of old Ezra's topper to end coach Bob Hughes for\nsupplying UBC with four excellent ends in Charlies James, Buz\nHudson, Gary Taylor and Dave Stowe.\nAs we say,, all other things being equal and ignoring friction, Birds will finish fourth.\nThe Compost Heap has spoken.\nOFFICERS   ELECTED\nLocal Athletes\nAlready Started\nBy NEIL MACDONALD\nThe  intramural  league  opened   last  week  with   a  full\nschedule! of volleyball games and the electing of an executive.\nGavin Dempster was appointed\npresident; with Cal Rosen, vice-\npresident and John Shields, secretary-treasurer.\nThe volleyball season is already underway and there is\nroom for three or four more\nteams in the league. A new team\nis not necessarily handicapped,\nas it has been proved by inexperienced teams providing very\nstiff competition in the past.\nThe deadline is October 4, but\nit could be extended should any\ngroups show interest in forming\na team.\nWHO STOLE IT?\nThe elusive intramural cup\nstill hasn't been found. It is\nhoped somebody will do some\nhousecleaning and come up with\nthe silverware. It would be\ngreatly appreciated by everyone\nconcerned with the league's destinies.\nWith play having commenced\nthe demand for the cup is becoming urgent.\nWith time moving steadily onward, team captains are reminded not to forget the crosscountry.\nThere is only a scant four weeks\nleft till the annual grind is on.\nContestant should commence\ntraining immediately or they may\nfind themselves far behind the\nfield come November.\nRUN DOWN\nFollowing is a run-down of\nthis term's activities:\nVolleyball \u2014 Schedule commenced September 27 and continues throughout  this term.\nSoccer\u2014 Schedule commences\nOctober 11, Entries required by\nOctober 8. 1954. One team permitted lo enter for each group..\nCross Country\u2014To be run on\nNovember 9 at 12:40 p.m.\nNOT PING PONG\nTable Tennis\u2014Schedule commences October 18. Entries required by October 15. One\nteam from each group to consist\nof 4 men, one doubles and two\nsingles.\nBadminton \u2014 Schedule commences October 18. Entries required by October 15. Team\nmade up the same as for table\ntennis.\nGolf\u2014 Schedule commences\nOctober 9. Entries in by October\n6. One team of four men per\ngroup. All games must be completed before December 6.\nFor further information and\nentry forms, watch the notice\nboard, The Ubyssey, and keep\nin touch with R. Mitchell, in the\nschool of Physical Education Office.\nBIRDS   WIN\nWeekend\nSoccer\nSplits\nBy ME\nUBC's soccer season opened\non a muted note Sunday when\nthe Thunderbirds lived Hip to\nreports by downing a surprising.\nSapperton team 4-2 while the\nChiefs were being beaten 3-1 by\nGeneral  Hospital.\nBig gun for the Birds in their\nwinning effort was Somerled\nMacDonald, the goalie turned\ncentre forward, who connected\nfor three goals.\nThe other getter was George\nJack, the Birds new .addition\nfrom Trinidad. Except for Jack,\nit was old home week for the\nBi,rds, as the veterans put on\nthe best show.\nKUYT  BRILLIANT\nErnie Kuyt turned in another\nbrilliant goal-keeping performance, asissted by fellow veteran defencemen Bud Frederick-\nson, Ian Todd Jack Butterfield\nand Dick Matthews.\nVet Stan Glasgow on offence\nrounded out the showing for the\nold hands.\nIn the Vancouver and district\nleague game, Jim Schelling was\nthe lone UBC scorer, converting\na penalty.\nGamesToBe\nTelevised\nUBC athletic department has\ncotracted with CBUT to televise a total of 18 sporting events\nat UBC this year.\nFor a sum estimated at somewhere around $3000, the television station will show five\nfootball games, five basketball\ngames, and six other sporting\nevents, probably Including some\nEnglish rugger games.\nThe money will be used for\nmoving 2700 seats from the pool\nto the stadium.\nT.V. GONDOLA\nAt present, the university is\nconstructing, at university expense, a television gondola which\nwill be ready for use ln th<\nVancouver College game to be\nplayed at the stadium this Saturday.\nCBC will \"live'' broadcast the\nremaining Thunderbird home\ngames, starting With the October\n16 tilt against Western Washington.\nAs the games will be broadcast the same time as they are\nbeing played, the gate is expected to suffer, but as yet, has not\nbeen  estimated   how   much.\nSwimming\nClasses\nTo Start\nSwimming classes for non-\nswimmers will be held in the\nBEG pool at 3:30 Monday\nthrough Friday, starting Monday, October 4.\nThe clases will continue being\nheld until weather makes them\nimpossible, or at the latest, November 4, when the pool shuts\ndown for repairs and the winter.\nRegistration for classes takes\nplace at the Memorial, Gym\noffice and is open to all non-\nswimmers not already enrolled\nin a class. Credit for a P.E.\ncourse  will  not  be  given.\nGlads, Tooters\nUp Don's Dander\n  <\nStudent   Stands   Full,\nWhere Were Alumni?\nPLC e - UBC 0\nBy JERRY O'FLANAGAN\nA; young UBC squad showed strong, but were stopped in\ntheir initial bid to hit the win side of the ledger in \"the\ntoughest small college league in the nation,\" as they opened\nthe Evergreen Conference at home against the Gladiators of\nPacific Lutheran College.\nWIFU Football\nWinnipeg 24 : B.C. Lions 8\nEdmonton 21 : Calgary 6\nUNIVERSITY TAM O'SHANTER\nUNDER  WAY THIS WEEK\nDivots began flying on Monday when opening ceremonies of the annual Varsity Golf Tournament were held\nat the University golf course.\nGreens have been trimmed, fairways have been raked, and all bodies removed from the ruff for the week-\nlong competition. \u25a0'\nThose who wish to participate should form their own\ngroups, preferably threesomes, and sign their names on\nthe sheet in the pro-shop before teeing off. Score cards\nmust be turned into the pro shop. Flights will be arranged\naccording to score.\nFurther details may be obtained by phoning George\nBarnes at Al. 3317-L.\nSome \"hairline\" official decisions combined with the tight\ndefensive play and sharp down-\nfield blocking of the Tacoma\nboys to give them a final 6 to 0\ndecision over the Thunderbirds\nby merit pf an' unconverted\nfourth quarter touchdown.\nPLC came out to the field at\nfull strength, with a squad\nstrong in experienc and fortified\nwith some seasoned transfer students, to prove their reputation\nas one of the toughest defensive\nclubs in the league.\nUBC wen out knowing that\nthe game could be won, but lacking the break-away running of\nhalfback John Newton, sidelined\nwith a cut eye, to put them at\nfull strength.\nkick-opt to williami\n.After Gary Williams returned\nP.L.C.'s opening kick-off to his\ntwenty the action was slow, the\nball going from the Birds to\nthe Lutes and back before things\nstarted to pop.\nRegaining the ball, the home\nboys played true to form, giving\nit full throttle in one of their\npowerful first quarter drives. A\nDuncan to Rayment pass and\ntwo hand-offs to Jim Boulding\nsending him over guard and thru\nthe arms of defensive backs gave\nthe big blue machine three consecutive first downs. But the\nLutes dug in on their fifteen\nand U.B.C. lost the ball and their\nfirst scoring opportunity on\ndowns.\nTURNING POINT\nA turning point in the game\nseemed to come early in the\nsecond quarter as Ross Rayment,\nthe boy who looks best in tight\nsituations, made a neat interception of Jerry Benson's pass\nand boomed up the sidelines\nlo the Gladiator's twenty-six.\nWith quarterback Jerry Stewart running U.B.C.'s split-T the\nstatue of liberty play was good\nfor a first down on the fifteen\nyard stripe. But three running\nplays and an incompleted pass\nhadn't advanced the ball when\nthe black-sweatered Lutes took\nover.\nU.B.C's crashing ends and a\npenalty put P.L.C. in a hole\nwith third down and fifteen to\ngo when the Birds were unable\nto stay on top and some sharp\nblocking gave the Glads a\ntwenty yard gain and safety.\nAs the action advanced to\nmidjield, time ran out with the\ngame remaining a scoreless tie.\nSECOND   HALr   TENSE\nIt was in the air that this\nwas going to be a tight one all\nthe way as the two teams roared\nback on the field from the\nbreak. The Birds came out to\nput on a sharp defensive and\nstrong offensive display that had\nthe penants waving like crazy\nbefore the final whistle, 'but the\nball just didn't bounce their\nway.\nAfter 5 minutes of play the\nBirds found themselves on their\nown twenty and from there,\nBoulding was elected to lead the\nattack. Running a fullback delay\nand a slant over guard, the 195\npounder from Penticton rammed\nto the fourty-six with two successive  first  downs.\nThe attack was stalemated\nuntil a Lutheran kick was caught\nclean by Rae Ross who ducked\nthrough and around tacklers to\nhis forty-six to one of the\nbest runs of the day.\nTHE LUTES ATTACK\nAs the third quarter reached\nthe ten minute mark the Gladiators took over and turned on\nfull pressure. Running off tackle\nwith honours reverting between\nLancaster and Campbell, the\nball was moved to mid-field\nwhere the Lutes got a break in\nthe form of a hotly disputed\nfifteen yard holding penalty\nagainst UBC.\nAs the quarter changed the\nLutes were hot and with third\ndown on the thirty-one Lancaster boomed over tackle stepping through everyone till\nKenny Ross raced back from\nscrimmage to drag him down\nwith eight yards of daylight\nahead to the goal. The fans roared for a goal line stand as Lancaster found another hole and\nbarreled to the three.\nGilmer found his Gladiators\nwith fourth down and a yard to\ngo for the major after the UBC\nline charged low and held tight\nfor two downs. Both lines moved\nwith the ball on a quarter sneak,\nbut, almost immediately the referee, standing two yards behind\nscrimmage and out of line with\nplay, signaled six points.\nOFFICIALS   QUESTIONED\nThe score was official, but for\nthe UBC players its still a moot\npoint. The headlineaman, the\nonly official Justified in calling\na play this close, never did signal the score, and it was close.\nThe try-for-points was smothered by end Charlie James.\nThe Birds received a short\nkick-off and seemed to catch\nfire as Duncan moved his team\nlo the twenty-four. Taking the\nball from centre he faded back,\nfaked left and heaved to James\nstanding by the right corner\nmarker. It was an easy grab and\nthe ball was over. However, an\nofficial raced up the sidelines\nand nullified the UBC score signalling that the pass had been\ncaught inches out of bounds.\nThis was the last scoring opportunity of the game and action\nslowed as PLC held on for time.\nOUTSTANDING   PLAYERS\nOutstanding in the game was\nheady passing and play-calling\nof Ted Duncan, Jim Boulding's\nbattering rushes and Ross Ray-\nment's ability as a ball-hawk.\nErnie Nyhaug, Bob Brady and\nBuz Hudson turned in outstanding  defensive  games.\nOn PLC's side Frank Lancaster and Tommy Campbell\nlooked good in using the sharp\ndownfield blocking of their front\nwall to put the Indian sign on\nthe Thunderbirds.\nYardstick\nUBC\nPLC\nRushing plays\n30\n45\nYards rushing\n140\n226\noLst rushing\n7\n20\nNet yards rushing 133\n207\nPasses attempted\n12\n7\nPasses completed\n5\n1\nPassed had intercept. 1\n1\nIntercepts returned 23\n0\nNet passing\n22\n4\nFirst downs rush\n8\n11\nFirst downs pass\n0\n0\nFirst downs pen\n0\n1\nTotal first downs\n8\n12\nPenalties\n4\n4\nFumbles\n4\n5\nPunts        \u2022\n5\n5\nPunts yardage\n146\n185\nPunt returns\n5\n5\nYardage punt ret.\n28\n4\nKickoffs\n1\na\nKickoff yardage\n45\n58\nYards kicko ret.\n32\n10\nFILMSOC\nFor SruoCNTs And Swr Onlv;\nTODAY\n8i4S. Ii00. till\nTURN\nm\nKtY\nSOFTLY\n... The first day of freedom\nfot three women convicts\nAUDITORIUM ...*\u2022*\n1522 W. Broadway      CE. llll\n2263 W. 41st at Yew St\nKE. 1171\nFRANCES MURPHY\nDANCE SCHOOL\nBAyview 3425\nPrivate Instruction\nRhumba \u2022 Tango \u2022 Samba\nFox Trot - Waltz'- Jive\nOld Time\nBeginners - Brush Up\nAdvanced Courses\nIf no answer CEdar 1171\nMmi Hall. 3178 W. Broadway\nGREETINGS TO OUR GUESTS AND\nNEW STUDENTS from\nStudent Special Lunch ^ $1.00\nJ\/ut (DolphinA\n660 S.W. Marine Dr.\nALma 1962\nNOW!\nYOUR MONEY BACK\nA BRAND NEW SUN LIFE PLAN WHICH*\n1\n2\n3\nProvides insurance protection to age 65.\nReturns all basic annual premiums paid\nif assured lives to 65.\nIs available for male and femato\nlives ages 15.to 50.\nAt 65, tfce fends can be (a) taken hi cash; fo) wed to pweftate\na paid-up policy for the original sum assured and the balance\ntaken in cash or as guaranteed income; (c) used to provide ae\nannuity; (d) left on deposit at a guaranteed rate of interest.\nInquire now about this remarkable)\npew Sum life plan, Jusl call at wrm*\nSUN LIFE OF CANADA","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. 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Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from The Ubyssey: http:\/\/ubyssey.ca\/","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1954-10-05 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. 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