{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","CatalogueRecord":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isReferencedBy","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Subject":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/subject","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"CatalogueRecord":[{"@value":"http:\/\/resolve.library.ubc.ca\/cgi-bin\/catsearch?bid=1211252","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"University Publications","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2015-07-24","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1960-10-27","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/Ubysseynews\/items\/1.0124754\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Homecoming\nEdition\nTHE UBYSSEY\nVol. XLIH.\nVANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27,  1960\nNo. ]Si\nA.M.S. Honours Col. Logan\nCOL HARRY T. LOGAN, former head of the UBC Classics Dept. being presented with the Great\nTrekker Award by AMS president Dave Edgar and Homecoming Chairman Alan Cornwall\nat a press conference Wednesday.\nP!io.-o  by  A.   Tanner\nFormer Classics  Head\n1960 Great Trekker\nBy SUSANNE CLARKE\nColonel Harry T. Logan, Professor Emeritus and former\nHead of the Department of Classics at UBC has been awarded\nthe 1960 Great Trekker Award.\nMexican Students\nFreedom Restricted\nA letter has been received at UBC written by a group of\nMexico City ^udents charging thatUexiean students are being\nseverely persecuted for expressing anti-government views.\nThe  group,  under  the  name\ngroup,\n\"The Provisory Committee for\nthe Defence of Human Rights\",\nclaimed that students have been\narrested, beaten or assassinated\nin the streets, as the government puts restrictions on democratic ways of expression.\nThey requested that Canadians\npresent a petition for liberation\nof Mexicans now in jail for political crimes.\nIMPRISONED\nStudent officials said the letter,\naddressed to the Rector of UBC,\nwas received by Dean Geoffrey\nAndrew on Oct. 4. It was writ-.\nten in French on brown paper.\nThe Dean turned it over to International House for translation.\nThe Mexican group is not a\nrecognized student organization.\nAMS plans to investigate the\norigin of the letter.\nThis is the letter:\nThe Rector,\nA group of students from the\nFaculty of Philosophy and Letters of the University of Mexico,\npreoccupied by the grave events\nMust Renew Visas\nForeign Students\nForeign students must have\ntheir temporary landing permits\nrenewed Friday.\nImmigration department officials will be at the registrar's\noffice between 9:30 a.m. and\n4:30   p.m.\nStudents must bring passports\nand other relevant documents\nin order to have the visas renewed.\nlately taking place in our\ncountry, address themselves to\nyou with the greatest respect to\nacknowledge you of the following facts.\nDuring the course of the two\npast years of the government of\nthe actual president, the national\npolicy has been characterized by\na growing restriction of the\ndemocratic ways of expression,\none has arrived in the past few\nweeks to repressive methods that\nare reminding of the dictatorial\npractices of General Porfirio\nDiaz.\nOne of the branches most affected has been the students.\nDuring August, several hundred\nof them have been arrested,\nsavagely beaten and even assassinated in the streets while manifesting their discontent.\nThe persecution of the freedom of thought has now become\nthe official attitude. The great\npainter David Alforo Siqueriros,\nthe 74-year-old writer Filomeno\nMata, and several leaders of political and social organizations are\nare still in prison for having expressed their ideas freely.\nWe have the honour to address\nthis request to you in order that\nyou may be able, in a most appropriate way, to transmit our\nanguish to the free men of your\ncountry, in order that they may\npresent a petition of amnesty for\nall those that are still in jail for\npolitical crime, in accordance\nwith the Declaration of Human\nRights, to which all countries of\nthe world are subscribed.\nRESULTS OF\nBLOOD  DRIVE\nThe UBC blood drive ended\n180 pints short of its 2,300 quota,\nteriod; s\nColin CameTon, co-chairman\nof this year's drive stated that\nthe committee was pleased with\n87% of the quota reached. Of\nthe 1,996 persons attending, 212\nwere found unfit to give blood.\nForestry won the ihter-faculty\ncompetition with 245% of its\nquota. The nurses placed second\nwith 180%. The Aggies third\nwith 165%. At the bottom were\nCommerce   and   Medicine.\nSerum donors turned out the\nfollowing week to bring the\ntotal  over the  top.\nCol Logan will be officially\npresented the Cairn Trophy and\na replica by AMS President\nDave Edgar at the Homecoming\nPep Rally noon today in the\nWar  Memorial  Gymnasium.\nAt the unofficial ceremony\nWednesday, Colonel Logan said,\n\"I am delighted to know there's\nno condition that I must do the\nGreat Trek again.\"\nHe recalled the original Great\nTrek in which he participated\nwhen students and faculty members, carrying stones marched\n\"over a log trail\" from Sasamat\nstreet, to the present Chemistry\nBuilding and deposited the pile\nof stones there. t\nHe remembered that the theii\npresident of AMS referred to\nthe pile of stones and said that\nit would be the first complete\nunit built on the campus.\n\"It was,\" Col. Logan concludes.\nANNUAL AWARD\nThe Great Trekker Award, instituted in 1960, is presented\nannually by the Alma Mater Society to an alumnus of the university who has achieved eminence in his chosen field, made a\nworthy contribution to his community, and has evidenced'keen\nand continued interest in UBC.\n\"It's a  terrific honour to be\nClasses Cancelled\nThere will be no lectures\nor Labs this afternoon. Classes have been cancelled because   of   Fall   Congregation.\npresented with the Great Trekker Award by the students,\"\nCol. Logan said, \"and it gives\nme great pleasure to receive it.\"\nSaid Alumni Association Director Art Sager of Col. Logan,\n'He's the youngest old man I\nknow. No one has devoted himself so much to service both to\nhis community and the university.\"\nACTIVE LIFE\nColonel Logan was born in\nNova Scotia, received his public\nschooling in British Columbia,\nand obtained a B.A. from McGill. As a Rhodes Scholar, he\nlater earned his B.A. and M.A.\ndegrees from Oxford.\nHe has been an active member\nof the UBC Alumni Association\nsince its founding, and became\neditor of the Alumni Chronicle\nin 1953. He also edited \"Tuum\nEst\",, a history of UBC.\nIn 1915, as academic representative, he helped draft the\nconstitution of The Alma Mater\nSociety along with Sherwood\nLett and others, giving the AMS\ncomplete self-government.\nSERVED   OVERSEAS\nCol. Logan left UBC as a\nClassics Instructor to serve\novesiseas as commander of a\nmachine-gun battalion during\nWorld War I.\nHe returned after the war and\nrose to the head of the Classics\ndepartment.\nLast year's recipient of the\naward was James Sinclair, provincial Minister of Fisheries and\nan ex-editor Of The Ubyssey.\nTHE MILLS BROTHERS will headline the Homecoming Pep Rally at 12:30 to-day in the Memorial Gym. Admission will be 25c with all proce eels  going  to  Red  Feather.  See story page  5.\nIN GYM AT NOON Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nAuthorized as second class mail by Pbst Office Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS\nPublished three times weekly throughout the University year\nin Vancouver by the Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society,\nUniversity of B.C. Editorial opinions expressed are those of the\nEditorial Board of the Ubysey and not necessarily those of the Alma\nMater   Society  or   the  University   of   B.C.\nTELEPHONES: CA 4-3242, locals 12 (news desk), 13 (critics-\nsports), 14 (Editor-inChief). 15, 6 (business offices).\nEditor-in-Chief: Fred Fletcher\nManaging Editor Roger McAfee\nFeatures Editor Ed Lavalle\nPhotography Editor    Ray Grigg\nSenior Editor Ann Pickard\nSports Editor Mike Hunter\n' Acting News Editor Denis Stanley\nCritics Editor Dave Bromige\nLayout Editor: Clarence Buhr\nNEWS STAFF: Susanne Clarke, Joe Bolduc, Derek Allen,\nWendy   Barr,   Bob   Hendrickson,   Bill   Piket,   Ian\nBrown,   Jerry   Pirie,   Margaret   Obana,   Coleman\nRomalis, Kitty Watt, Fred Jones.\nHOMECOMING EDITION: MIRIAM ROBERTS and\nFRANK   FINDENIGG.    Others:   Fred   Jones,\nDave Dawson, plus student writers and alumni\nRon Robinson.\nSPORTS\u2014Bert   MacKinnon,   Herb   Walker,   Chris   Fahrni\nInvective Out\nIt is indeed a shame when our precious right to freedom of expression is denied, but it is an even greater shame\nand a crime when that freedom is abused.\nIt is on the latter charge, Mr. Clive Ansley, author of\n\"Searchlight\", that you are indicted.\nIt was with some horror, and with an even greater\nrevulsion, that I read your column in The Ubyssey of\nOctober 25.\nTo imagine that ai supposedly intelligent, broadminded\nstudent of this university, (especially one whose inquiring\nmind has penetrated many of the issues on this university\nmore than has the average student) would stoop so low as\nto slander and insult an employee of the university is beyond my comprehension.\nThe Brock dietician, whom you childiishly termed\n\"Miss Grundy,\" was merely doing her duty, that is, complying with administration regulations which disallow commercial advertising in most university buildings.\nBut, as you say, \"the principle involved . . .is more\nimportant.\"\nI agree with you, Mr. Ansley, the principle of a matter\nis always more important, but what of your principles?\nEven were it true that the dietician refused to allow\nthe \"Sunny Trails\" match folders to be placed in the vending machine on the grounds of \"conservatism\" and \"depressing conformity,\" there would still be no need for you to\nsubject the object of your displeasure to the invective and\ninsulting inferences (examples: \"hypocrisy,\" \"ignorance\",\n\"deceit\", and \"prejudice\") that you used to freely in your\ncolumn.\nThe defender of principles and rights need never employ\ninnuendo, and direct insults as his chosen weapon.\nMr. Ansley, you must learn, and I truly hope you will\nlearn, that both fee -rights of freedom of expression and\nthe privilege of being a member of the student community\nrequire  certain obligations.\nNot until yqu,learn,tb^se obligations and practise them\nwill you achieve that maturity entitUng you to the rights\nan?l ,priy$figes we are so fortunate to have in a democratic\nSOuntEy.\nI mu$t apologize for you, Mr. Ansley, not for your\nright tP criticize, Tbut ,\u00a3or ,the discourteous and undignified\nway in w-hich you attempted to accomplish it.\n-,Ed Lavalle.\nTHE    UBYSSEY\nThursday, October 27,  1960\nHN\u00a3ft\u00a3 MICK\nSlick. That's what it was.\nNot mob violence. Not destruction. Not impulsive or\n\"jstupid.\nBut slick. Clever. Like a good confidence man or an\nartsman would do it.\nThey sliDped up on the two of them and spirited them\noff to the Engineering Building. They had tough luck.\nThey missed one. ;His class had been moved.\nBut they had two. ,TTiey could show that they were\nthe strongest faculty on campus.\nThey had an attraction for their general meeting to\nsupplement their Homecoming Queen candidate.\nThey went over to scare the Brock-types. And they\ncame out on top, even though the Brock-types used a fire\nhose.\n<Hail ^engineers.\nSTIMULUS\nBy GARRY NIXON\nI should have realized that\nMr. Peter Morris of Cinema 16\nwould not take my.remarks on\nhis last movie lying down.\nThe following is from his\nreply: \"You are under a sad\ndelusion if you consider that\nyou can cover up a pitiful lack\nof critical faculties in your\n\"review\" of \"Le Sang d'un\nPoete\" by your turgid twitting\nof Cinema 16 and its policy. As\nan adult film Society we aim at\npresenting cinematic art in all\nits aspects.\nI assure you that we make no\nclaims that \"every well-known\nforeign film is a work of art\".\nOne would only have to see\nThe 41st or 12 Night to be\npurged of this illusion. We only\nclaim the films we present are\nexamples of film art in its many\nforms.\nThis point, however pales\ninto insignificance when it is\ncompared with the lack of\naesthetic judgement, sensibility, and critical ability which\nyOu so patently demonstrated\nin your review of Blood of a\nPoet. It is obvious that you\nhave a prejudice against films\nof this type, and, since you refuse to lower the barriers of\nyour mind you missed the\nwhole point, one should t:ke\ninto consideration that you\nwalked into the film when it\nwas half finished (I or.ly wished\nthis was true. G.N.) you would\nprobably   find   even   Pollyana ]\nincomprehensible under these j\ncircumstances. Because Cocteau\ndid not give you his thoughts\nand ideas in words of one syllable, and did not follow the\naccepted film form but chose\nto experiment with his medium,\nyou dismiss his work as \"incoherent\" and \"lack continuity\". Because he did not use a\nliteral, naturalistic .overworked\nplot and cliched conventions\nyou sneer at his film as \"lacking meaning\".\nIn Blood of a Poet Cocteau\ndefines the poet as a hierophant\nwhose function is to initiate the\npublic to mysteries. His method\nof presentation is like that of\nthe surrealists who, content\nwith expressing the language\nand image of dreams and of\nfree association do not seek to\ninterpret the dreams or the\nimages    of    their     work.\nAny poem, mystery or\nfantasy (as is Blood of a Poet)\nmay appear at first too inaccessible, too personal or private in its symbols. You denounced the film as toeing incomprehensible to anyone but\nCocteau (I never said it was\ncomprehensible to . Cocteau!\nG.N.) You apparently forget\n(or do not know) that surrealism has taught that what is\noften called a personal symbol\nis really universal.\n\"It is no use simply saying\n'surrealism is bosh' it is an art\nmovement which has had tremendous influence on our generation, and, as such, any critic\nworthy of the name should\nmake an effort to understand\nand appreciate its means of expression. To dismiss the film as\n'incomprehensible' and 'lacking\nmeaning' is to demonstrate\nyour woeful lack of understanding of poetry, the poet's mind\nand one of the most influential\nart movements of the present\ncentury. May I respectfully\nsuggest you limit yourself to\n'criticizing' Pollyana, on which\nflim the blankness of your\nmind will prove no handicap.\"\nThere not being space, I\nshall  reply  next  week.   G.N.)\nLetters To The Editor\n'Red Hairy Mass'\nEditor,\nThe Uibyssey,\nDear  Sir, i\nPlease enclose this declaration in the Thursday edition of\nyour  paper.\nWHEREAS it is common\nknowledge that the Engineers\nare the lowest form of life on\nthis campus, 'and\nWHEREAS their competence, capabilities and capacity\nare at their lowest ebb, and\nWHEREAS the ignorant Red\nhairy mass have, in the past,\nrelied on brawn rather than\nbrains, and quantity rather\nthan quality, in which they are\nsorely lacking, and\nWHEREAS apathy and inertia\nreign supreme in the offices of\nthe EUS,\nWE, the illustrious members\nof the Law Undergraduate Society, the elite intelligentsia of\nthis campus, do hereby declare\nourselves to be the spirited,\nenergetic, imaginative, and in\nfact, the ONLY LEADERS of\nthe student body.\nThe Law Undergraduate\nSociety.\nBooster Position\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey,\nDear Sir,\nI wish to clarify the position\nof the Booster Club with regards to Tuesday's \"Letters to\nthe Editor\" in The Ubyssey.\nThe Booster Club's main objective is to promote student\nspirit towards various athletic\nevents on campus. This problem, although not completely\nthe result of the students themselves, is the one which our\norganization faces.\nThe Engineering and Agriculture Undergraduate Societies\nhave just cause for taking their\nstand in Tuesday's edition.\nThey were correct in saying\nthat Friday's Pep Meet was\npoorly planned and improperly\nstaged by impulsive members\nof   the  Booster   Club   without\nany executive authority to do\nso.\nThe point in fact is this. Our\norganization, although active\non campus for several years, is\nin a state of complete reorganization. Anyone previously connected with the Booster Club\nknows the magnitude of our\njob. One only has to attend a\nfootball game to realize how\npeople utterly become discouraged and attempt to break\ndown the present apathetic\nsituation by radical means.\nThese were the people who\ncaused last Friday's disturbance.\nHowever, their intentions\nwere meant in the best interests of the student body as\na whole, and, despite what happened ,they accomplished something. They emphasized that\nsomewhere on this campus,\nthere IS spirit. We as Bird\nBoosters are proud to be the\nnucleus of that spirit. We are\nlearning a valuable lesson,\nthat it does pay to organize\nthings properly. For Friday, we\nare sorry.\nThe students of UBC will be\nhearing a great deal from the\nBooster Club in the future. We\nwant people to know that we\nexist ,and that our problem is\ntheir problem. We want them\nto know that it is very worthwhile to be a part of the spirit\nwhich we represent.\nSincerly,\nEv  Phillips,\nPresident,\nThunderbird Booster Club\nLaw I.\nWhat, No Beatniks?\nEditor,\nThe Uibyssey,\nDear Sir:.\nI note in the Uibyssey of Oct.\n18 that \"Jazzsoc has no beatniks and wants none.\"\nAre any steps being  taken\nto ban this discriminatory  organization from campus?\nCooly yours,\nIan Brown. Thursday, October 27,  1960\nTHE    UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nFIVE-THIRTY CLUB\nBy IAN BROWN\n'We're rolling\u2014and that's for publication!\"\nThus an exultant Dave Edgar welcomed a decision on the\nproposed new Union Building that commits Council \"right up\nto their necks.\"\nCouncil Monday night recommended that the student body\nsupport the building on D parking lot of a combined Student\nUnion -Building, cafeterias and winter sports arena, providing\nthat details of finance can be arranged. This decision, in effect,\nmeans that Council has chosen a definite path of action out of\nthe morass of alternatives bogging this project  down.\nAdministration has already indicated it might be prepared\nto help finance a Union Building, if it were built in conjunction\nwith a winter sports arena. However, no definite commitment\nwas made, and it looks as though it's their move. Should they\ndecide not to participate, Council would probably go ahead\nwith plans for the Union Building alone.\nSo, all the Student Union Building Committee has to do\nis draw up their plans and find a way to finance the project-\nMortgage, an 3'one?\nIn an interim report to Council on Frosh Orientation, FOC\nChairman Jim Meekison was somewhat less than encouraging\nabout the orientation program.\n\"The present program,\" he said, \"has been about as successful as this type of program can be. The trouble is that it is\nnot the right type; it is only reaching one or two hundred\nof the 2,500 Frosh on campus.\"\nMeekison admitted that, even after two years on FOC\nhe just couldn't tell what the right program would be, and\nsaid the problem would need extensive study. He suggested\nthat Council appoint a committee to investigate and report or\nthis matter.\nHe also pointed out that there was not as much co-operation as there cpuld be between Student and Administration\nefforts. Several Councillors felt that much of the Admimstra-\niion program could be presented in writen form; this would\n. give FOC more time to get to the Frosh in the first few days\nof term.\nTwo weeks ago, a member of Players' Club came to Student\nCouncil pleading for an increase in their budget allowance.\nHe said they reeded about $1,100 to operate, and it had been\nwhispered to him that UBC was giving\" them a mere $200 \u2014\na statement that astounded UCC Councillor Patience Ryan,\nwhose budget hadn't even been drawn up.\nIt turned out that this chappie wasn't even on Players'\nClub executive, that UCC and the Finance Commietee weret\nquite prepared to give the club sufficient operating funds, and\nthat the club's treasurer settled for a grant of $400, saying\nthey should make up the balance on English 100 play readings.\nSo everybody's happy\u2014except, presumably, the guy who started the schemozzle.\nThe Discipline Committee has decided that Engineers\nshould pay for the removal of the bricks they used in their\nrecent Brock extention project. It has not yet been resolved\nwho will pay the bill for broken bricks.\nThe Lost and Found Office, formerly housed in the College\nShop, has been relocated in the Book Store (that's at the bus\nstop, in case you happen to be lost). Sales of unclaimed items\nwill be held about once a month, at the College Shop.\nJudy Jack reported a very successful University Day, with\na turnout of about 1,400 parents. Apparently a few tour leaders\nmanaged to get themselves and their parties lost, but there is\nreason to believe that they have all been recoverd.\nKOUNCIL KWICKIES\nAMS Budget was given final aproval by Council\u2014congratulations Mr. Robinson!\nAn increase in A-Card sales was reported of almost\n$1,000 over last year.\nA meeting on Student Government Revision will be held\nFriday noon in Bu. 212.\nExecutives\nShould Run\nice\nEDITOR CAGED Ubyssey Editor-in-chief, Fred Fletcher doesn't\nseem the least bit worried as he peers through what the\nengineers    considered    a    fitting    receptacle    for    anything\nassociated  with  the  pub. Photo  by A.  Tanner\nEngineers Foiled\nIn Kidnapping\nEUS was partially foiled in a kidnap attempt Wednesday.\nFate intervened and prevented Roger McAfee from being\ncaught and held with two other prominent students. McAfee\nwas to have had ,a class at the Frediric Wood Theater; however,\nthe class had been moved.\nMcAfee stated that he hoped\nthe Engineers sent to catch him\nhad not got vet waiting.\nUbyssey editor, Fred Fletcher,\nASUS ANNOUNCES\nNEW PIX DEADLINE\nand Frosh Orientation Chairman, Jim Meekison, were kidnapped thouffh. The incident\nwas described by EUS president Bob Noble as a normal kid-\nmapping.\nFletcher wss taken completely by surprise upon leaving a\n11:30 lecture by president Noble\nand seven other Engineers. Fletcher and Meekison were detained in the Engineering building\nand were taicen to the EUS general  meeting.\nThe Fr^inre-= had obtained\ncopies of the victim's timetables\nfrom some unkewn source.\nApparently the Engineers\nhave been trying to ret Meekison into their clutches for some\noirrne. The kidnp.p^ing was a pro-\nrest over ' Meehison's banning\nFrosh hazing.\nThe Engineers claim that they\nheld Fletcher for printing the\nEooster Club letter in Tuesday's\npaper.\nArts and Science Grad photos\n^\"Uit be taken before Tuesday,\nthe Undergrad Society warned\ntoday.\nIt had been previously announced that the deadline would\nbe November 15.\nPictures will be taken between\n^ a m. and 5 p.m. at Krass Photography Studio, 563 Granville St.\nappointments c?n be made by\nphoning MU 1-9340.\nGowns and \"Personal History'\nforms are at the studio. Boys\nmust wear shirts and ties and\nsirls must wear white bonuses\nUBC Flags Haifmasr\nFor Gerrnon Professor\nFlags on the Main Mall and\nthe Faculty Club were at half-\nmast Tuesday in remembrance\nof  Dr.   Marianna  Jetter,   Dept.\n: of   German,   who   passed   away\n| Monday.\nCorporations and businesses\nmust encourage their senior executives to run for public offices, John Haar told Liberal\nClub members Wednesday at\nnoori.\nHe spoke on \"The Relation\nof Business to Politics\", contending that, \"Corporations, and the\npeople that make them up, have\nevery right to support their\nopinions. To put them in perspective is the job of the rest of\n;he country, and especially the\npolitical parties.\"\nHaar stated that the glorification of  industry  in our  soci-\ny has bred lack of respect for\npolitical institutions. Business\n\u25a0xecutives would rather remain\n'i private industry then lend\niheir talents, to public admini-\n1 ration, he said.\nThe stratification of political\n>ffices has contributed to this,\n\u25a0e said. The most distinguished\noffice is the federal parliament,\n,ust below that comes the provincial  legislature.\nAt the bottom, is some sucker\nrunning for the school board,\nhe said.\nBusiness needs a well run\ncountry in which to function,\nhe stated, and it is to their\nown advantage to see that the\ntalented people in private enterprise get out to help run and\npreserve our form of government, i\nHe cited the case of'Bethlehem Steel in the United Sates\nto support his contention. Instead of maintaining a lobby\nBethlehem has urged its executives to try to get into Congress as members.\nThis is a much more direct\nform of influence, he said.\n\"Where you have an elective\nsystem, you have influences being exerted.\n\"I have often heard it said,\nparticularly toy businessmen,\nnat politics is a pig sty, that its\na dirty business. The only way\nthat I know of to clean out a\npig sty is to get in there and\n-hovel,\" he stated.\nAll The News\nOn Monitor\nUBC Radio has introduced a\nprogram covering campus, national, and world activities each\nTuesday morning 11:30 to 12:30.\nIt is monitor including fifty-\nfive minutes of interviews,\nspecial events, student council\nhighlights and good music.\nFuture programmes will feature a survey of the American\npresidential election, an exclusive series on \"The Rise of\nKhrushchev\",    and    interviews\nDue to popular demand\n'Works of the Masters.\" will return to the air 10r30 to 11:30\neach week day morning.\nCanadian Money For Olympic Site\nOnly Canadian capital is\nwanted to develop Garibaldi\nPark if it is chosen as the site\nof the 1968 Olympic games,\na director of the Garibaldi\nOlympic Development Association said he:e Tuesday.\nThe director, Dave\nMatthews, spoke to about 250\nstudents in UBC Auditorium.\nMatthews said many United\nStates lirms are interested in\ninvesting money in the project,\nbut that it is not wanted. Expected cost of developing the\narea is about $10 million.\nMost of the money required\nwould be supplied from the,\nfederal and provincial governments. Any private capital\nthat is required should come\nfrom B.C., Matthews said.\nA two-lane highway will definitely be built to the area,\nsaid Matthews, and Highways\nMinister Phil Gaglardi had\nindicated a four-lane road will\nbe built if Garibaldi is chosen\nfor the games.\nHe said the road would put .\nVancouver only about an hour .\naway   from   the   Games  area\nand   Seattle   would   be   only\nabout four hours away.\n\"Garibaldi will be a greater\nresort than either Sun Valley <\nor Squaw Valley, if it is de- -\nveloped,\"   stated   Matthews,   j Page 4\nTHE    UBYSSEY\nThursday, October 27, 1960\nCUP. Capers'\"'\nBy BOB HENDRICKSGN\nTORONTO (CUP)\u2014A.B. Ga-\nchinga, the third African student\nto be brought here to U of T by\nthe African Students Foundation\narrived in Toronto Oct 20.\nOver 280 African students\nhave been brought to Canadian\nand American universities by\nway of the Kennedy airlift. Of\nthese 19 have come to Canada.\n* * *\n' OTTAWA (CUP)\u2014A Canadian\nstudent representative attending an 'international student conference was charged last week\nWith bein g \"a running dog of\nAmerican imperialism\" and told\nthat Canadians were still \"lackeys of the Queen\".\n. Walter Tarnopolsky, former\nNational Federation of Canadian\nUniversity Students president,\nattended the Sixth Annual Congress of the communist dominated International Union of Students, held in Bagdad on Oct.\nS-17.\nTarnopolsky said that Cuban\ndelegates from Latin America\ncalled Canadians hypocrites because Canada never helped the\nLatin American countries and\nbecause she can not clear up her\nown English imperialism.\nNFCUS president Bruce Raw-\nson said the incident \"is an unfortunate confirmation of the intolerance and the dogmatic attitude of an assembly dominated\nby a group of miltant Marxists.\"\nNFCUS is not a member of\nthe IU1S but belongs to the 70-\nnation International Student\nConference which was formed\nin  1950.\n*   *   *\n. - SASKATOON ,(CUP)-^Prime\nMiister Diefenbaker told The\nSheaf that he was in favor of\n\"the widest possible extension\nof  university  scholarships\".\n\"Only about 15% of Canadian\nUniversity students hold scholarships.\n. This should be compared to\nother , democratic countries\nwhere the figure is as high as\n7j5%,\" he said.\n\"I want to see Canadians\ngiven the opportunity to obtain\nthe highest level of education,\naccording to ability, and that\npoverty shall not be a bar to\nthe development of individual\ncapacities.\"\nHe described himself as \"a\nvery strong advocate for the extension of  scholarship plans\".\nThe Prime Minister said that\nthe government established\nabout 1000 exchange scholar\nships not available before and\nwhich were given to the Commonwealth exchange  plan.\nDiefenbaker did not say what\nthe next federal move would be\nregarding    university    schplar-1\nShips.\nHe denied that he, or his party, had promised 10,000 $600\nscholarships in 1957.\nHe did not comment on\nNFCUS president Bruce Raw-\nson's promise to inquire about\nthe fate \"of campaign promises\nregarding student assistance,\nscholarships and taxation relief.\nWUS Candidate\nStandards Rise\nKINGSTON* (CUP)\u2014A more tightly defined me?ns of selecting candidates for the WUSC summer seminar was approved\nhere at the fifteenth National Assembly.\nThe action followed criticisms,\nlevelled by University of Montreal   professor   Jacques - Yvan\nMorin   and   four   past   seminar\nparticipants.\nSo I said to this most wretched Engineer . . . 'No Man My\nBetter, None My Worse, Liberty.\nBanners Removed by\n\"Buildings and Grounds\"\nBuilding and  Grounds  removed  all outdoor homecoming\nbanners Wednesday morning but replaced them by mid-after\nnoon.\nAlan Cornwall, homecoming\nchairman, said that permission\nhad been granted for the banners\nand that the B & G gave then?\nvery little information and poor\nco-operation.\nThe banners were to be taken\ndown Wednesday night before\ncongregation and put back up on\nFriday.\nBUY A TOTEM\nHow Your Mind\nCan Keep You Well\nAre you among the 50% of all\npatients with a disease you\nyourself can cure ? Most doctors\nagree t*at viuch physical illness\nis caused by the patient's\nmental attitude. Read this\nvaluable guide-to-living in\nNovember Reader's Digest . . .\nit could save you years of suffering, thousands of wasted\ndollars! Get your copy of\nReader's Digest today \u2014 38\narticles of lasting interest and a\nlong book condensation.\nA bloc resolution passed by\nthe assembly was concerned\nmainly with the selection of candidates on each campus.\nPart of the resolution with the\nestablishment and organization\nof the selection board; the other\nhalf stipulates the requirement;\nof the applicants. The assembly\nwas told the definition of th\nboard was made because this hac\nbeen a weak point on sonv\ncampuses. It was learned tha'\none university sent a candidate\nwithout even bothering to ap\npoint a board or even to advertize the seminar to the studenl\nbody.\nNational      Chairman      Dear.\nTames   Gibson  of   Carleton   lef\nhe  chair  to   tell  the  assembly\nhat  \"the  whole   good  faith  of\nVUSC is pledged to the seminar\n. . and scrupulous care must be\nused    in   selecting    candidates.\nWUSC should not be exposed to\nselfish  self - seeking  individuals\n. . . that have no part in it.\nThe resolution also declares\nthat a certificate, indicating that\nthe proper requirements have\nbeen fulfilled in selecting a candidate, must be forwarded to\nthe National Office with the application form .\nNo site has been chosen for\nthe 1961 seminar but Sweden has\nfirst choice with Tunisa. Other\nseminars considered: Poland,\n1962; and Malaya or China, 1963.\nLaff, Dam You!\nThere once was a writer who\ndribbled on forever. His editor\ncommanded him to write no\nmore than three pages in his\nnext chapter. The writer got\nthrough one and two pages all\nright, but then creative genius\nconquered him again, and he\nfilled fourteen more sheets. He\nsolves his problem by taping all\nfourteen pages together and\nlabelling them \"Page three.\" The\neditor wen out and got drunk.\nFIRST UNITED NATIONS FEATURE FILM\n\"POWER AMONG MEN\"\nVogue Theatre: 7:00 and 9:00 p.m.\nSunday, October 23rd\nCOLLECTION FOR WORLD REFUGEE YEAR\nPhotographs\nfor Christmas\nTo the discriminating student who knows and appreciates fine photography, we are pleased to\noffer our personally created, expertly finished portraits at special student\nprices.\nPhone for an appointment\nRE 1-8314\nAtlas Studios\nPhotographers\n3189 WEST BROADWAY\nVancouver 8, B.C.\nMSI Services\nWill Continue\nMore than 2700 students have\nsigned up for the UBC-Medical\nServices  Incorporated  plan,\nUBC Health Service director\nDr. A.K. Young, said MSI will\nprobably continue to offer its\nservices to students in future\nyears because of the numoer\nthat   signed up.\nLost License\now Restored\nHamsoc went off the air last\nweek when their license wes\nsuspended by the Department\nof Transport.\nThe suspension occurred as\na result of Hamsoc operating on\na distress frequency ior ships.\nSince Hamsoc had no phone the\nDOT could not notify them when\nthe frequency was needed.\nThe difficulty w'as technical\nand has been cleared up.\nHamsoc's license was restored\nand they how have a phone.\nTUX1ED6\nRENTAL & \u25a0 SALjfcS   \u2022\n\u2022 Full Diess\n\u2022 Morning Coats\n\u2022 White and Blue Coats\n\u2022 Shirts eSnd Accessories\n\u2022 $1.00 discount to\nUBC  Students.\nE. A. LEE LTD.\nP23 Howe    MU 3-2-457\n\"Tke $twfe\u00bb<jb well equipped.\n-(W architecture...\nThe student well equipped to\nspan the widest horizons of\nopportunity uses a B of M     ty|Y 0\/||^n\nSavings Account as a dependable\nladder and uses it rung by rung.\nBank of Montreal\n@a*uideCa. \"pout S<u*& fan Student*.\nYour campus branch in the Administration Building\nMERLE C. KERBY, MANAGER, Thursday, October 27,  1960\nTHE    UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nClasses\nOff\nPep Rally At Noon Today\nMills Brothers Stage\nShow In Memorial Gym\nCome one, come all, to the\nTHE GATEWAY SINGERS headline homecoming bali.\nDR. ALBERT LEPAWSKY\n\"Should Canadian University\nStudents Prepare Themselves\nfor University Service?\" will\nbe the topic of a panel discussion to be held in Bu 106 at\nnoon tomorrow.\nThe four panelists are F. H\nSoward, Dr. Albert Lepawsky.\nDean Neil Perry, and Chairman,\nWarden Hugh Christie.\nDEAN SOWARD TO SPEAK\nDean F.H. Soward, F.R.S.C.\nis Professor and Associate Dean\nof the Faculty of Graduate Studies at UBC. He received his B.A\nat Toronto and his Bachelor cl\nLiterature  at  Oxford.\nCHRISTIE ON PANEL\nWarden Hugh Christie who\nwill chair this discussion, received his diploma in Social\nWork from U.B.C, in 1942, and\nhis BA., with 2nd class honours\nin Sociology and Economics in\n1945.\nDIRECTOR UN TRAINING\nDr.- Albert Lepawsky is director of the United Nations Training Centre at U.B.C. He received !\nhis Ph. B., and Ph. D. at the University of Chicago.\nNEW COMMERCE DEAN j\nDr. Neil Perry is Dean of j\nCommerce at UBC. Until he be-,\ncame Dean, he was Assistant Di-:\nrector of the World Bank in\nWashington, D.C. He was educa- \\\nted in Victoria high schools, Victoria College  and  Harvard.\nHear these four men present\ntheir views on this topical issue\n\u2014 tomorrow.\nFour Distinguished Speakers\nAddress Students Tomorrow\nGreetings From\nOur Chairman\nTo come here is always a\n! time for though, a time for nostalgia, sentiment, and a little\nsorrow. When a graduate returns to his alma mater, it\ns-hould be a time of joy.\nThink of the changes during\nfour short years at university,\nthe new buildings, the population increase, and even the\nchanged   parking   system.\nTry to envision a grad \"of forty\nyears ago returning to such an\nenvironment. Impressive? Yes.\nConfusing? Perhaps. Beneficial?\nOne sometimes wonders  ...\nHomecoming is not named for\nthe students, but for the grads.\nThis is the student's chance to\nshow their hospitality, to be\nfriendly, helpful, and to show\nthe grads that in spite of the enrollment increase, the congenial\natmosphere of the University\nstill exists. This must be done\nwith dignity for people often remember bad impressions longer\nthan good ones.\nThe Alumni Homecoming\nCommittee has provided a program, for the grads. The Student Committee has attempted\nto provide a schedule that will\nplease the varied tastes of the\nstudents.\nHappy Homecoming  1960!\n\u2014Alan Cornwall\nWARDEN HUGH CHRISTIE\nHomecoming Pep Rally at noon\ntoday in the Memorial Gym.\nFor 25c you can see and hear\nthe Mills Bros., and all proceeds\nwill go to the Red Feather Campaign.\nFeature Attractions are:\n\u2022 The Mills Brothers with\na supporting cast from\nthe Cave Theatre Restaurant.\n\u2022 Presentation of the Great\nTrekker Award.\n\u2022 Introduction of the\nHomecoming Queen Candidates.\n\u2022 Mr. J. Gordon Gibson on\nbehalf of the Red Feather\nUnited Appeal.\n\u2022 U.B.C. Thunderbird Foot\nball Team introduced by\ncoach Frank Gnup.\n\u2022 Pep Band with U.B.C.\nMajorettes and Cheerleaders.\nThe star feature of the Pep\nRally, courtesy of the Cave, is\nthe appearance of the Mills\nBrothers. This well-known trio\nhas appeared in Europe as well\nas US and Canada where they\nhave gained millions of friends\nand fans.\nThe Mills Brothers, supported\nby the Dave Robbins Orchestra,\nhave agreed to appear gratis at\nthis Pep Rally as it is in aid o\u00a3\nthe Red Feather United Appeal.\nDon't miss this opportunity \u2014\nattend the Homecoming Pep\nRally ! ! ! ! !\nThis year there will be seats\nfor everyone.\nAlumni Return To\nActive Schedule\nHomecoming Activities planned for graduates returning to\nthe hallowed halls of their\nhigher learning, this year combine new highlights in stimulating discussion, with ever-popular\ntraditional social and athletic\nevents.\nThe official \"kick-off\" of the\nAlumni portion of the Homecoming Programme is the Keynote Address Friday night, by\nSir Frank C. Francis, Director\nand Principal Librarian of the\nBritish Museum in London, England.\nDuring Homecoming registration a coffee hour will be held\nin Brock Lounge at 9 a.m. Highlighting the event will be a wide\nvariety of faculty displays, arranged by undergraduate faculties and alumni.\nAt 10:00 Saturday morning\nthree panel discussions will get\nunderway simultaneously in the\nLaw Building.\nTHE FUTURE OF OUR UNIVERSITIES is the topic to be\ndiscussed by a panel chaired by\nDr. J. L. Keays, BA. Sc. '41, of\nthe research division of Macmillan,  Bloedel and Powell River\nLtd. Opening the discussion will\nbe Eric Nicol.\nAmong the questions under\ndiscussion will be these: Are we\ntrying to educate an elite group?\nas important as quality in our\ndo we believe that quantity is\nuniversities; have our universities a role to play i>, research,\nboth in humanities and the\nsciences? and have junior colleges a role in British Colmbia?\nThe third panel topic is ATH-\nLETICS A.S EDUCATION\nChairman is Charles M. Campbell, Jr., former chairman of the\nAC A.\nOpening discussion will be\npresented by Dean A. W. Matthews (UBC Faculty of Pharmacy). Panelists will be Frank\nRead, Dr. Max Howell, and Herb\nCapozzi.\nTo be discussed: Is the amateur spirit dead? Is it true that\nCanadians are better at spectator\nsport than participant sport?\nnot be given as freely as academic scholarships? Do winning\nWhy should athletic scholarships\ngames promote better public re*\nlations? Page 6\nTHE    UBYSSEY\nThursday, October 27,  1960Thi\n1960 HOMECOMING\nMISS ACADIA CAMP\nJOAN HUDSON\nivuii AvirtiCULTURE . . . MARGARET LEROUX\nMISS ARTS . . . P\n*\\\u00bb.\n&&<. -f   V*\nMISS ENGINEERING . . . JANE SPRATT\nMISS FORESTRY & HOME ECONOMICS .. . BONNIE WAUGH\nMISS FORT CAMP . . . IR\nMISS MEDICINE . . . ELAINE JEFFERY\nMISS MEN'S RESIDENCES . . . SANDRA LEE HYMAS\nMISS PHARMACY ... A October 27,  1960\nTHE    U BYSSEY\nPage 7\n3UEEN CANDIDATES\n.NGLIN\nMISS COMMERCE\nCHRIS LESLIE\nMISS EDUCATION . . . GLENN IS McLEOD\n\"4NACCHIOTTI\nMISS FROSH . . . DIANE COOPERBAND\nMISS LAW . . . KAREN YOUELL\n'    1\nCAMPBELL\n.J\nMISS PHYSICAL EDUCATION . . . JOANNE JACKSON\nMISS SOCIAL WORK . . . MARY BROWN !\nPhotos by\u2014Lloyd Spence  (Totem) Page 8.\nTHE    U.BYS-S.EY\nThursday, October 27, 1960\nCALENDAR\nStudents\n\/\nTHURSDAY, OCTOBER 27\n12:30 P.M.\u2014PEP RALLY \u2014 MEMORIAL GYMNASIUM\nFeaturing the Mills Brothers and a supporting cast from the Cave.\nFRIDAY, OCTOBER 28\n12:30 P.M.\u2014PANEL DISCUSSION \u2014 BUCHANAN 106\nPanelists: Chairman Dean F. H. Soward, Dr.\nAlbert Lepawsky, Dr. Neil Perry and Warden\nHugh Christie.\n7:30 P.M.\u2014BASKETBALL   GAME   \u2014   MEMORIAL\nGYMNASIUM\nGrads  vs.   'Birds.\nPresentation of Homecoming Queen    candidates and the Great Trekker.\n9:00 P.M.-^HOMEieOMING   DANCE \u2014   ARMOURIES\nCrowning of Homecoming Queen.\nGateway Singers\nMusic by the Orchestra of Brick Henderson.\nSATURDAY, OCTOBER 29\n2:00 P.M \u2014HOMECOMING FOOTBALL GAME-\nSTADIUM\nThunderbirds vs. University of Saskatchewan\nAppearance of the Homecoming Queen candidates and the Great Trekker. \u2022\n9.00 P.M.\u2014HOMECOMING DANCE \u2014 ARMOURIES\nGateway Singers and Orchestra of Brick\nHenderson.\nAppearance of the Homecoming Queen and\nher court.\nAlumni\nDR. HUGH KEENLEYSIDE\nDR.  KEENLEYSIDE\nCHAIRS DISCUSSION\nDr. Hugh L. Keenleyside will\nchair an alumni discussion^ \"Are\nCanadian Standards in Education and Scholarship Too Low?\"\nOpening speaker will he Dr.\nWilder Penfield, UBC 1946, a\nresearcher with the Montreal\nNeurological Institute.\nHe will be followed by Prof.\nG. O. B. Davies, Dr. George Vol-\nko:i, and Dr. Nell Perry.\nThe chairman, Dr. Keenleyside, graduated in 1920.1 n 1928\nhs began a distinjeirshed career\nin government service and retired in 1959 as chief of the United Nations Technical Assistance\nAdministration. He is now chairman of the B.C. Power Commission.\nFRIDAY, OCTOBER 28\n8:30 p.m.\u2014KEYNOTE ADDRESS: Sir Frank C. Francis.,\nDirector and Principal Librarian, British Museum, London. Subject: \"Libraries\u2014The Great\nInternational Network.\"\nA coffee hour to follow.\nSATURDAY, OCTOBER 29\n9:00 a.m.\u2014COFFEE HOUR & REGISTRATION \u2014 Brock\nLounge.\n10.00 a.m.\u2014PANEL DISCUSSIONS (held simultaneously)\n1. Are Canadian standards in Education and\nScholarship too low?\n2. The future of our Universities.\n3. Athletics as   Education.\nLaw Building. Cost: no charge.\n12:00 p.m.\u2014BARBECUE LUNCHEON\u2014The Field House.\n2:15 p.m.\u2014GUIDED CAMPUS TOUR, by bus, departing\nfrom the Field House.\n6:30   p.m.\u2014CLASS REUNIONS\u20141920\u2014Faculty Club.\n1930\u2014Buchanan Bulding.\n1935\u2014Mildred Brock Room, Brock Hall.\n1940\u2014Cafeteria, Auditorium building.\n1945\u2014International House.\n1950\u2014Brock Lounge.\n9:00 p.m.\u2014ALUMNI HOMECOMING BALL\u2014Brock\nHall. Dress semi-formal. Music by George Cal-\nangis Orch.\nJ\n*  GATEWAY  SINGERS\nFriday\nOctober 28\n$3.00 fmhooupk\n\u2022\ni\ni\n''I\nSaturday\nOctober 29\n$3.50 p&Ajcoupk\nhmdlininq ths.\nHomecoming  Ball\nWith Brick Henderson and His Orchestra\nTICKETS ON SALE NOW AT AMS. OFFICE, BROCK HALL\nHOMECOMING QUEEN WILL BE CROWNED FRIDAY NIGHT Thursday, October 27,  1960\nTihWE M,BYiSS\u00a3<Y\nrRage.,?\nHomecoming\nQueen picked\nThis Friday\nA busy week ends Friday\nnight when one of fifteen\nQueen andidates will be chosen\nto reign over Homecoming.\nThey who have been selected\nby their respective faculties as\nHomecoming Queen candidates\nhave had a busy round of official duties leading up to their\nfirst public appearance today at\nnoon in the Memorial Gym.\nVoting for the Homecoming\nQueen will continue today until\nG p.m. at the South Brock and\nalso at the Pep Meet from 12:30\nto 2:30 p.m. in the. War Memorial Gym, where the candidates\nwill be escorted down the aisle\nby Student Councillors.\nStudent votes will account for\n40% of the total points awarded.\nBalloting will be in the form of\na preferential ballot, 1st, 2nd\nand 3rd choice only.\nYesterday, the Queen's Tea\nwias held in the Mildred Brock\nRoom from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m.\nNine judges scored the candidates on the basis of poise and\ngeneral presentation, beauty of\nface and figure, and personality.\nThis accounted for 60% of the\npoints awarded.\nJudges for this event were:\nMrs. Kathy Hassard, Vancouver\nSun; Mrs. Betty Runcie, The\nProvince; Mrs. Ethel Rose,\nJames Lovick and Co.; Mr.\nWE. Ellis, Goodwin and Ellis\nAdvertising; Mr. Barry Baldwin:,\nAlumni H.C. Chairman; Peter\nHolborne, Extension Dept.; Prof.\nC.W.J. Eliot, Classic Dept.; Prof.\nJohn K. Stager, Geography\nDept.; Prof. W. Read, Psychology Dept.\nThe Queen candidates will receive corsages at the reception\nin the Mildred Brock Room on\nFriday, at 8:00 p.m. The reception is for all candidates, patrons, special guests, council, and\ncommittees.\nAt 9.00 p.m. on Friday, the\ncandidates will toe introduced\nduring half time at the basketball game in the Memorial Gym.\nThe Homecoming, Ball will\nfollow on Friday and at 10:45\np.m. the candidates will be intro\nduced on stage. The crowning\nceremony will follow.\nOn Saturday at 9:00 a.m.,\nthere will toe an Alum Coffee\nParty in the Brock Lounge,\nwhere all faculty Queens will\nserve.\nThe faculty Queens, the\nHomecoming Queen and the two\nPrincesses will ride around the\ntrack at half time during the\nfootball game.\nAt 10:25 p.m., there will toe a\npresentation of the faculty\nQueens, the Homecoming Queen\nand the two Princesses at the\nAlumni Dance. Later at 10:45\np.m., they will be introduced\nSt the Student Homecoming\nBali.\n\/^ - f '\u2022R*4:>^ i^ps^^^r^ *<\nFRATERNITY AND SORORITY pledges of 1960 conducted tours\nof the campus for members of the Indoor Sports Club, a\ngroup   of   physically   handicapped   people,   last   Saturday.\nPhoto by Atlas Studios\nFOLKSY MUSIC\nFOR HOMECOMING\nEntertainment at Homecoming dances both Friday and\nSaturday evening will feature the guest appearance of the\nGateway Singers.\nTHE ANSWER\nTO BALDNESS\nSad but true, baldness has become more prevalent. There\nis a reason for this but the\nimportant thing is that we\nhave the answer! The Nuvia\nProcess guarantees new\ngrowth from the very first\ntreatment. This new hair is\nvisible in exactly two weeks,\nbeing 1\/16\" long at that time\nand bristly. As it continues\nt\u00bb grow, it retains its strong\ntexture. Your satisfaction and\nconfidence will increase as\neach treatment produces a\nnew crop.\nNUVIA CLINIC\n618 Davie St.        MU  1-5650\nThis mixed foursome will entertain with \"folk songs lor\nmoderns\" gleaned from around\nthe world. Africa, Israel, Korea,\nthe Bahamas, Latin America and\nNorth America are represented\nin their repertoire.\nTheir informal between-\nnumbers banter amusing heckling ,aimed mainly at themselves,\nand centered around banjo-\nstrumming Jerry Walters, provides refreshing wit and sparkle\nto their performance.\nSinger-guitarists Marc Rich:\nards and Adam Fredericks, and\ncontralto Elmerlee Thomas,  the\nonly woman in the group, complete the quartet.\nEssay   Typing\nReasonable Rates\u2014Accurate\nWork \u2014 RE 3-3780 (evgs.)\n\"PERfEGT MILDNESS\nIN YOUR PIPE\"\nirafia&t's\nFurnished H.K.R. close to\neverything. Private bathroom. Suit one or two\nmale students. CA 4-7224.\nE L VI RA'S\nPalma de Mallorca\nSpecial selection in\nIMPORTED  GIFTS\nfrom Spain, French Morroco,\nItaly, etc.\nful\"And for the man who has\neverything\" there are colorful leather wine bags with\nreal bull-horn stoppers . . .\nguaranteed to keep the wine\nal its fragrant best for 50 yrs.\n4479 W. 10th Ave.\nCA 4-0848\n.. . Brahadi's smoking\ntobacco is a special\n\"Cavendish\" blend of\nMild tobaccos. Comfortably, satisfying... a mild\nsmoking tobacco with a\ndelightful aroma.\nBrahadi's is available\nat select tobacco stores.\n53$ for 2 ounces\nSuggested price, all taxes Included\nLast Miriute Club\nOffers Top Bargains\nOne dollar, your name on a priority list and you might\njet to see such talent as Harry Belafonte Singers, Mort Sahl\n<nd Van Cliburn through the efforts of the. Last Minute\nClub.\nPersons with their names on a\nriority list will have a chance\n>  pick  up   cancelled  seats  one\nili hour before curtain time at\n*e Queen Elizabeth Theatre.\nTo get your name on the list\nall you have to do is get there\nfirst  and, pay  one  dollar.   The\ncashier in the AMS office will\n^ive you a  voucher which  en-\nitles you to one seat.\nWith   this   voucher   you   car\ntin entrance for  only  75c for\nckets   which   wculd   normally\nm from $2.50-$10.\nSome of the c~;ming attraction\"\niclude: Mort Sahl; \"The Plea-\nire of his Company\" with Joar\nU.B.C.  Aggie\nElected  as\nN.W.   Chairman\nA University of B.C. Agriculture students has been elected\nchairman of the Pacific Northwest branch of the American\nSociety of Agricultural Engineers.\nGordon Timbers, Agriculture\n>, was elected at the ASAE stu-\nlent branch convention in Vic-\n\u25a0oria  last   week.\nDelegates from B.C., Washington, Oregon, and Idaho were\npresent at the  convention.\nBennett and Donald Cook; Van\nCliburn; Caladonia; Belafonte\nFolk'Singers and.Mischa Elman.\nPoster for these events will be\nposted about the campus three\ndays prior to each event.\nRIDGE\nTHEATRE\n16th and Arbutus\nFREE PARKING LOT\nOCTOBER 25th to 29th\nTuesday to Saturday\nAn Outstanding Program\nPaul Muni \u2014 David Wayne\n\"THE LAST ANGRY MAN\"\nBetsy Palmer\"\n\"ONCE   MORE  WITH\nFEELING\"\nColor\nKay Kendall \u2014 Yul Brenner\nNews\nDOORS 6:45\nSTARTS MONDAY OCT 31\nPeter Sellers in\n\"BATTLE OF THE SEXES\"\nLaurence Harvey in\n\"THE TRUTH ABOUT\nWOMEN\"\nTab Collar Shirts from $5.95\nIvy Button Down from $6.95\nFoullard  and   Repp\nStripe Ties $2.50\nChoosing interesting shirts and lively ties isn't <fiffi\u00bb\ncult when you've only excellent ones to choose from.\nThose being the only kind we admit to our selections,\nthey are bound to delight you, every one. Highlight*\nare herewith presented.\nthe shirt 'n tie bar\n658 SEYMOUR STREET\n(In Bay Parkade)\n\"come in and tie one on\" Page 10\nTHE    UBYSSEY\nThursday, October 27,  1960\nALUMNI TO HOLD\nREUNION  DINNERS\nBy ANN HOWARTH\nSix classes ranging from 1950-1925 will hold reuni\nons\n\u25a0weekend- during the homecoming\nReunion dinners have become\nan integral part of the Homecoming activities. Each year,\nclasses return to the campus for\na special get-together with the\nold class-mates and professors.\nThese six follow at 5 year intervals, the most recent having\ngraduated 10 years prior to the\npresent date. This year the\nclasses are from the years '50,\n'45, '40, '35, '30, and '25.\nThe arrangements lor each\nclass are looked after by the\nclass executive, elected each\nyear at graduation time.\nThis year the plans for dinners\nare chaired by Class of '50 Mr.\nDon Lanskail, Class of '45 co-\nchaired by Mr. Jack Heathering-\nton and Mr. Bob Binnie, Class of\n'40 Mrs. Helen Belkin, Class of\n'35 Mrs. Marnie Steward, Class\nof '30 Dr. Malcolm McGregor,\nClass of '25 Mr. Bert Smith.\nEach chairman is assisted by\nDelta Sigma Pi\nMembers\nUBC's honorary sorority will\ninitiate six new members,, October 30.\nMemlbers of Delta Sigma Pi\nare selected on the.tbasis of their\ncontributions to the campus\nthrough scholarship, leadership\nand service.\nThe initiates are:\nRuth Kidd,  WUSC chairman;   Sidney   Shakespeare,\n';        WAA    president;     Marilyn\nPeterson,  WAA and  Big\n'I        Block;   Inge   Andreen,   Big\ni       Block   president;    Patience\nRyan, UCC chairman; Marnie Rogers, Academic Symposium chairman.\nPatient Loading Zone\nFor UBC Hospital\nA new parking area has been\nassigned behind the hospital for\ncars transporting patients.\nThe new lot is a 30-minute\nparking area and has room for\nfour cars.\nThis action was prontpted by\nincidents where Buster's towed\naway cars transporting patients\nOne of the ears was impounded by Band G and another was\nrescued by the owner just as it\nwas being prepared for the trip\nto the \u00a9propound.     \/.,;,_.\u201e\",,,-\nAn Engineer Defined\n\u25a0\u2022\u2022' -An-Engineer is a person who\npasses as an exacting expert on\nthe basis of being able to turn\nout with prolific fortitude in-\n\u2022finite strings of incomprehensible formulae calculated with\nmicro metric precision from the\nvague assumptions which are\nbased on debatable figures\ntaken from inconclusive experiments carried out with instruments of problematical accuracy by persons of doubltful\nreliability and questionable\nmentality for the avowed purpose of annoying and confounding a hopeless chimerical\ngroup of fanatics referred to,\nall   too  (frequently,   as  Engin-\n; eers.\na committee, which arranges the\ndetails for ecah function. The\nAlumni Office on campus, to- \u25a0\ngether with one of the members\nof the Board of Management,\nhelp to co-ordinate plans.*\nA good tunrout is anticipated\nby each class, even with football offering strong competition\nfor attention.   . !\nAnd when 700 or 800 graduates return to the campus for\nthe parties, some to be held in\nold familar buildings, others will\nbe held in the new, they will not\nbe disappointed.\nCocktails before dinner, and\nentertainment to follow, plus the\nfellowship of by-gone days, will\nmake October 29 a memorable\nevening. (Oct. 28 in the case of\nClass of '25.)\nThis year the Cl'ss of '20 will\nbe holding a reunion at the time.\nUsually these \"'older\" graduates\nwill have convened at the tir*>\nof spring congregation.\nThis year however, with congregation falling at the same\ntime as Homecoming ,they are\njoining the other reunion years,\nand reuniting at the same time.\nA very able committee, chaired by Judge Swencisky, has\nbeen planning their 40the reunion for the past year and a\nhalf. The yhope to see many of\nof their class-mates at the\nFaculty Club, starting with cocktails, dinner ,and some reminiscing, to round out the celebrations.\nSocred Williston\nTo Open New Wing\nHon. Ray Williston, Minister\nof Lands and Forests, will officially open the MacLean Fraser Wing of the Biological Sciences Building on Friday.\nThe opening, in conjunction\nwith other Homecoming activities, will take place at 4:00 p.m,.\nFollowing imimediate.ly, Dr.\nT.W.M. Cameron, head of the\nInstitute of Parasitology at MacDonald College, McGill, will\nspeak to  the gathering.\nJACK POMFRET\ncoaches Birds\nNew Halftime Show\nUBC'S annual Homecoming\nbasketball game is traditionally\nfeatured by wild entertainment.\nIn past years, faculty and student council have performed\namazing feats of skill and daring\nin trying to outdo each other.\nThis year, the entertainment\nwill be less hairy, and nicer to\nlook at. The Homecoming Queen\ncandidates will be presented.\nDR. WILDER PENFIELD, former\nhead of Montreal Neurological Institute, will take part in\nhomecoming panel discussions\nin UBC's Law Building Saturday at 10 a.m.\nTwo Awards\nAvailable\nCeylon is offering an unspecified number of Commonwealth\nScholarships to Canadian students.\nApplication forms are available at Dean Gage's office. Closing date is November 30,  1960.\nThe Japanese government is\noffering a 20,000 yen ($60)\nscholarship tenable in the Orient\nfor two years beginning April,\n1961.\nWinner of the award will be\nexempted of tuition, matriculation, and examination fees but\nmust pay his own travelling expenses.\nPreference will be given students doing research in Japanese\nculture or science.\nApplication forms may be obtained from the Consulate of\nJapan, Rm. 1401 Standard Building, 510 West Hastings.\nDeadline is Nov. 1.\nENROLMENT JUMPS\nAS USUAL AT U.B.C\nEnrolment has increased more than 11 per cent to a record\ntotal of 111,657 students, registrar J. E. A. Parnall announced\ntoday.\nOfficials had predicted an increase of six or seven per cent\nwhich would have meant an enrolment of 11,300 for the 1960-\n61 session.\nThe largest increase wTas in\nthe faculty of arts and science\nwith a total of 5,837 students\u2014\n665 over last year.\nFaculty of education showed an increase cr 3 71 students\nwith a total of 2,190. The only\nother faculty which grew substantially was graduate studies\nwhich has 707 as compared to\n616.\nJapanese   Film\nShowing   Today\nCinema 16 presents the Japanese film \"Seven Samuria' today, 12:30, in Bu. 106.\nNo one who has seen Rosho-\nmian or Gate of Hell will need\nan introduction to the imaginative work of the Japanese theatre, or the force and effect of\nthe direction of Akira Kurosawa.\nSeven Sumurai is an excellent\nRegistration in other faculties : example of the suspense, excite-\nis as follows with 1959-60 figures j ment and humour with which\nin brackets: agriculture 1791 Kurosawa embellishes the -es-\n(171); applied science, 1,339 ] sentially simple folk stories of\n(1,351); forestry, 183 (188); law,! Japan.\n235 (245); pharmacy,  153  (142);       The film has been shown pre-\nmedicine,   203   (212);   commerce\nalmost exactly three to one.\n631 (654).\nA total of 8,253 men and 3,404\nwomen are registered making\nthe ratio between the two groups\nviously in Vancouver, at the\nSummer Festival, where it was\nvery warmly received. It has\nreceived international acclaim,\nwinning the Silver Medal at\nVenice in  1955.\nUNIVERSITY JAZZ SOCIETY\npresents\nContemporary Jazz\nby way of\nTHE TONY CLITHEROE\nQUARTET\nFRIDAY, OCT 28, 12:30 p.m., Bu. 104\nMembers Free . . . ^Others 25 cents\nMemberships Available at the Door Thursday, October 27,  1960\nTHE    UBYSSE.Y\nPage  11\nFRIDAY NIGHT\nHoopster   Host\nAwesome Alumni\nThe UBC Thunderbirds basketball squad officially opens\nthe hoop season Friday night against formidable opposition supplied by the Grads.\nThe galloping Grads will be\nably coached and otherwise directed by internationally-famous\nbasketball star Big Jim \"Pinky':\nCarter.\nThe awesome lineup facing\nthe Birds will include such former UBC greats as Nev Munro,\nReid Mitchell, Harry \"The\nHorse\" Franklin, \"Long John'\nForsythe and \"Silver Fox\" Osborne.\nNEW OLD TIMERS\nThe first string will be backed\nup toy old-old timers like Ed\nWild, Barry Drummond, Gordie\nGimple, and Brian Upson. All\nfour played last year in the\nInter-city league, Upson and\nWild with Dietrich^Collins, Gimple with Cloverleafs and Drummond with  the Birds.\nThe UBC side will toe formed\ntoy the nucleus of last year's\nWCIAU champions, and toy\nseven high school scholarship\nplayers.\nForemost for the Birds will\nbe All-stars Ken Winslade, Ed\nPederson, and standouts Dave\nWay, Kieth Hartley, Ed-Gushue;\nand company.\nSEVEN STARS\nThe seven newcomers are\nireshmen John Cook, Ron Parker, Mike Harcourt, Eckhardt\nPerdinandi, Brian Adams, Jon\nHenderson, and Jim Jamieson.\nA  banquet  for  the ..grads  at\n6:00 will precede the game,\nwhich begins at 8:15. At hali\ntime the Gymnastics team will\nput on a display and the Homecoming Queen candidates will be\ndisplayed.\nLast year, the Grads surprised the Birds 62-58 in the\nHomecoming game. The Grads\nwere led by John Forsythe and\nMike Fraser, Forsythe getting\nthe winning basket with a min\nute left.\nIn a hilarious preliminary\ngame last year, a group of old\n\u2022old, timers whipped a group oi\nnew-new Birds. The oldsters\nwon 6-4 in the abbreviated game\nmainly because of a sudden\nmeeting of the Basketball Commission which decided to allow\n\"the bad guys three points per\nbasket.\nOfficials will not say whether\nthe spectacle will be  repeated.\nThe Homecoming game, although more in the class of a\npractise, will be one of only\nthree games before Christmas\nfor the Birds.\nTOTEM FOR TWO\nBesides this and two Totem\nTournament contests in early\nDecember, all UBC's games are\nin the second term.\nThe Birds will play only in\nthe WCIAU this year, and not\nin the Senior A league as they\ndid in 1959.\nVArttuoVtn JUNIOk. cANU, here displaying a pattern honouring the UbC rowers \u00abf a ba_.\nLions game will provide half-time enertainment at Saturday's UBC-Saskatchewan football\ngame.\nNoted Vancouver Junior Band\nTo Entertain Football Fans\nWhen UBC Thunderbirds meet the Saskatchewan Huskies\nin the annual Homecoming football game, they will have fa\nwork hard to win.\nBird coach Frank Gnup said they will work and they-will\nRowing Offers Plenty\nFor Ambitious Men\nBy DAVP ANDERSON\nIt is difficult to sit down and\nwrite an article on rowing because rowing is something a\nperson can only experience, not\na person can describe.\nThe simplest description of\nrowing at UBC would be to say\nit is long hours of preparation\nterminating in six minutes of intense competition. But rowing is\nfar more than that.\nIt includes months of arduous\ncalisthenics designed as much to\ntest the perserverence, the mental staying power, as it is designed to condition the body.\nEARLY TO RISE\nIt includes morning after\nmorning of pre-dawn rows,\nsome remembered for being wet,\nchoppy, . freezing and unpleasant; while others, with a glass\nsmooth harbour to row on, and\nwith the sun spilling golden\nlight over the mountains, water,\nDAVE ANDERSON\n. . . crew captain\nand the sleeping city, are remembered for being beautiful\nbeyond belief.\nRowing includes day after\nday of frustration, when the\nshells just won't move.\nDay after day the oarsman\nwonders why he voluntarily\nsubjects himself to such pressure, fatigue and abuse. And\nyet more than compensating .for\nthe toad times it also includes\ndjays when the bladework is\ncrisp, clean and powerful \/when\nthe shell seems to leap forward\non its own account; when the\noarsman delights in the control-\ned explosion of his perfectly\nconditioned body; when it is, in\nfact, sheer joy to sit in a boat.\nGLOBETROTTERS\nThe sport holds rewards of\ntravel\u2014the next four years will\nsee UBC boys in Brazil, Australia, Japan and quite possibly\nEngland and Europe. It also\nholds the less certain advantage\nof prestige and recognition.\nBut travel and prestige are\nfar from being the important\nparts of the sport. They are only\n-ncidental to the satisfaction of\nbeing part of the crew.\nWhat is important ,and this i'\n;he same whether one sits in\nthe Varsity boat or not, is the\nsatisfaction of being part of\nCanada's most dedicated and\nsuccessful amateur athletic\norganization.\nWhat is important is to have\ntried the university's most mentally demanding and physically\nexhausting sport, a sport which\ntakes more in the way of self\ndiscipline and desire than any\nother, and to have the satisfaction, of knowing that you were\n-iot found wanting.\nSTAN KNIGHT\n. fights for QB slot\nGRAD GIMPLE\nOut to whip . . .\nwin.\nLast week the Birds came up\nwith their best display of football this season, against the\nSeattle Ramblers, but came out\non the short end of a 19-7 score.\nThe Huskies also lost their\nlast game, to the WCIAU champions, the Alberta Golden Bears.\nBoth teams will be battling\nto stay out of the cellar.\nTrue to the Homecoming tradition, Saturday's a c ti v i t i e s\npromise to be an extravaganza.\nHalf-time entertainment will toe\nprovided toy the Vancouver\nJunior Band, an internationally\nfamous band that has won 19\nchampionships in the last 10\nyears.\nThe contestants for the Homecoming queen honors will also\nbe iri attendance and this alone\nshould toe enought to fill tfce\nstadium-.\nBIRDS ARE UP\nFor the fans who go to see\nthe footbal game, the Birds plan\nto put up a real fight and-this\ncould prove to be the game of\nthe year. The team is in good\ncondition, both mentally and\nphysically, and the only regular\nwho may not start is Tonis Tut-1\nti who suffered a concussion in\nthe Birds' last outing.\nUBC is also looking forward\nto the services of Jim Olafson\nand Jack Schriber who were\nstandouts in the game against\nSeattle. Olafson scored the only\nBird touchdown and was leading ground gainer, while Schriber was a continual thorn in\nthe Ramblers\" side as he played\na brilliant defensive game.\nGame time is 2:o0 p.m. Saturday and the early birds get the\nseats.\nSPORT\nEditor: Mike Hunter\nFrosh Volleyball\nTeam to be formed\nA Frosh volleyball team will\nbe formed for the B.C. Senior\nBoys' championships November\n25 and 26.\nProspective players must have\nbeen under 19 on September 1.\nPractices will be held Wednesdays in the Memorial Gym from\n6 to 8 p.m.\nThe traditional matches with\nthe University of Washington\nwill be played in addition to the\nVancouver City and B.C. Open\nchampionships. UBC will also\nsend a team to Saskatoon for the\nIntercollegiate tournament.\nPractices for all teams are held\nWednesdays from 6-8 p.m. in the\nMemorial Gym.\nMore players are needed, and\nare welcome to come to the\npractices.\nStudents!\nFor a new dining pleasure\ntry our daily special.\nDEAN'S\n4544 W. 10th\nOpen 'till 11:30\n'BIRD WINSLADE\n.   1960 Thunderbirds\nNOW   PLAY ING\nKirk Douglas \u2014 Tony Curtis\nJanet Leigh \u2014 Ernest Borgnine\n\"THE VIKINGS\"\nThe Greatest Adventure Picture Ever Made!\nColor \u2014 One Showing at 9:15\nPLUS\nMontgomery Clift \u2014 Myrna Loy \u2014 Robert Ryan in\n\"THE LONELY HEARTS\"\n7:30 \u2014 Doors at 7\nHollywood Theatre\n3123 WEST BROADWAY Page  12\nTHE    UBYSSEY\nThursday, October 27,  I960\n'TWEEN CLASSES\nCancel all for Homecoming\nMeeting to-day cancelled. Pool\ntraining (meet on pool deck):\n6:00. Skindiver class pool exam\nscuba,\u2022; 4:0.0-5:00; skindiving, 5:00-\nto be held to-day and next Thursday. \"> ....\n* *    *\nCINEMA 16\n-Presents Japanese classic\n\"Seven Samurai\", directed by\nAkira Kurosawa.\n* *    *\nCCF CLUB\nAll club members interested\nin debating asked to attend\nmeeting, Bu. 225, noon Friday.\nNISEI VARSITY CLUB\nGeneral   meeting   today,   Bu.\n205.\n.*    *    *\nBAPTIST STUDENT UNION\nBible study today in Bu. 2202\n<new wing).\n* * . *\nEAST ASIAN SOCIETY\nToday at 12:30 Dr. Ping-to Ho\nwill deliver a lecture on Chinese\nclassified\"\nWOULD the person who took\nthe wrong raincoat from outside Chem. 250, Tuesday, 9:30\ncall Joel,  AM  1-0933.\nFOUND\u2014Man's wrist watch.\nGold band. Call CA 4-6786.\nFOR SALE\u2014Royal, silent-writer\nportable typewriter, recent\n\u2022 model, excellent condition,\n' reasonable price. Phone AM\n1 1-8419 after 6 p.m. Cliff Ains-\nworth. \t\nMUST sacrifice 24 watt Bogen\nistereoi*idndc amplifier only\nused 3 mos. Phone Kerry at\nCA 8-8032 after 6.\t\nLOST\u2014Black leather wallet\ncontaining important~~ papers\nand  queen's   picture.   Please\n1   phone Connie after 6:30 p.m\nBR 7-7963.\npainting      in      Anthropological j\n| Museum (in Library). j\n* *    *\nSOCIETY OF BACTERIOLOGY\nMeeting Wes. 100, Friday,\nOctober 28, 12:30. Film: \"Human\nDiseases and Immunity\". Everyone welcome.\n* *     *\nCLC.\nMr. Howard Edwards of Vancouver Food and Drug Labs will\ngive lecture and film, Friday\nnoon, Ch. 250.\n* *     *\nFRIENDS OF CHAMBER\nMUSIC\nTickets for 13th Season of.\nConcerto by famous chamber\nmusic groups are on Scfte in\nA.M.S office. Students' season\ntickets $1.00.\n* *    *\nSTUDENT CHRISTIAN\nMOVEMENT\n\"The Impact of Western Civilization on Africa.\" First study\ngroup on Africa Friday, 12:30,\nHut 1-6, East Mall. All welcome.\n* * *\nVARSITY CHRISTIAN\nFELLOWSHIP\nDr. Roy Seibel will speak Friday in Arts 100.\nPHILOSOPHY CLUB\nThe paper to be given Monday\nnoon in Bu. 225 is \"Dialogue Between Wittgenstein and Socrates\" by Jack Ornstien.\n* *   . *\nIMMUNIZATION CLINIC\nRegular immunization Clinic\nnormally Thursday 2:00-4:00 cancelled today because of con\nvocation.\n* *    *\nJUNIOR CHEM CLUB\nFilm, Friday neon in Ch. 150.\nLast day for new members to\nregister.\n* *     *\nBIOLOGY CLUB\nFilms \"Between the Tides\"\nand \"The Electric Eel\" will be\nshown Friday noon in Biological\nSciences 2000.\n* *    *\nGERMAN CLUB\nHear about Germany from\npanel, including exchange students. Bu. 204, Friday noon.\n* *    *\nCCF CLUB\nA discussion group on \"Socialist Philosophy of the CCF\" in\nBu. 2208, Thursday evening, 7\np.m. to 9:30 p.m.\nApplications    Due\nApplications are now being\nreceived for the positions of Public Relations Officer and Editor\nof the News-letter for Frosh\nCouncil.\nFor    Frosh    Council\nAll qualifications for the position should be included in the\napplication. They must be placed\nm Box 140, AMS office by Friday afternoon.\nStudents Involved\nIn Gambling Raid\nSeveral UBC students were among those arrested at mid\nnight Friday in Vancouver's largest recent gambling raid.\nAfter surrounding  the ibuild-\nWHOEVER lifted black umbrella from mens' room Caf should\nknow it is radioactive. Save\nyourself and return to office\n154 Buchanan.\nWANTED\u2014A ride to 8:30's\nMon. to Sat. from 41st ave\nand Rupert St. Phone HE\n4-7778.\nWANTED\u2014 Ride to leave UBC\nat 3:30, vicinity of 41st and Arbutus. Phone AM 6-0617.\nWANTED-^-2 students, roomi\nand board, $65 mo. Car pool\n$1.50 wk. Phone MU 1-4076\nafter   5:40  p.m.\nXjOST\u2014Pet squirrel, of sentimental value. Finder please\ncontact   Neil   Woolliams,   CA\n,i 4-9962 or Bob Cannon, CA\n4-9949, Okanagan House. Reward.\nCONSUL for sale.exceptionally\ngood condition, engine and\ntransmission recently overhauled, new tires. Call RE\n1-8003  or RE 3-0809,  eves.\nLOST\u2014Would the person who\ntook my dark reversible raincoat out of Physics 200 last\nSat. please return it to Brian,\nTR 6-0892.\nLOST-^Silver and blue Schaffer\nSnorkel pen between Education Bldg. and Buchanan\nEldg. Return- to lost and\niound. Reward.\ning, police raided a skiers' \"stag\nparty\" in the Moose Hall on\nHowe St., and arrested 130 men,\ncharged with toeing inmates of\na  gambling house.\nMany of those arrested listed\nthemselves as university students. Only three of the -men\ncharged    appeared    in    police\nLiquor Sales\non Campus?\nDo you think liquor sales\nshould be allowed on campus?\nYour opinion can be heard\nduring Student Forum debate\n\"Besolved: That the cafeteria\nshould be licensed to serve wine\nand beer.\" noon Thursday in\nBu. 104.\nThe audience will then be\nasked to question the speakers-\nand to give their own opinions.\nEUROPEAN TRAINED\nBARBERS\nIndividually Styled Haircuts\nUPPER TENTH\nBARBER & TOILETTRIES\n4574 W. 10th\nTAKE IT TO\nSPOTLESS\nSHIRTS 191\n5 or\nMore\nVOLKSWAGEN OWNERS!\nWe have over 250 satisfied V-W owners patronizing our\nstation. Qualified V-W mechanics make expert repairs and\nservice a specialty.\nWhy not give us a try!\nUNIVERSITY SHELL SERVICE\n10th Ave & Discovery CA 4-0828\nFREE; PICK UP AND DELIVERY\nCourt,   the rest   forfeited  their\nbail.\nThe party was to support Junior Skiing.\n\"It's a pleasure to do business with them.\nSuch a selection and pleasant service.\nThey always cash cheques for the students and offer credit when required.\"\nRICHARDS & FARISH MENSWEAR\n802 Granville St. MU 4-4819\nVancouver, B. C.\n\"Complete Stock of University Clothes\"\nTRAIN FOR TOMORROW\nserve your way through university","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Vancouver (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"LH3.B7 U4","@language":"en"},{"@value":"LH3_B7_U4_1960_10_27","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0124754","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Vancouver : Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C.","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from The Ubyssey: http:\/\/ubyssey.ca\/","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1960-10-27 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1960-10-27 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives","@language":"en"}],"Subject":[{"@value":"University of British Columbia","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Ubyssey","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0124754"}