{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0123917":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isReferencedBy":[{"value":"http:\/\/resolve.library.ubc.ca\/cgi-bin\/catsearch?bid=1211252","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"University Publications","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2015-07-23","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1954-02-25","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"Misprinted volume, should be XXXVI.","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/Ubysseynews\/items\/1.0123917\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" EMPTY SEAT at head table of Applied Science ball is filled by surprised pubster,\nMichael Ames, who is welcomed by Ed. Patton, Civil Engineering 3, in the absence of EUS\nvice-president Monte McKay. Ames, who was seated between Chancellor Sherwood Lett\nand President N. A. M. MacKenzie, took Monte's place card home as a souvenir. Other\nguests at the table were Dean G. C. Gunning, J. Merchant, registrar of Association of\nProfessional Engineers; Mr. Oscar Orr and Eric Hartley, president of.Engineering Institute of Canada, Vancouver Branch. \u2014Photo by Dick Dolman\nBLOTZ STOLEN\nEUS 'Cannon Stealing'\nEpic Proved Dirty Lie\nThe reported \"stealing\" of a,\n400-oound   cannon   from   Royal!\nRoads  bv  Applied  Science  students was revealed as a hoax by.\nThe Ubvssev. I\nAt the same time it was learned that Applied Science students\nhad to enlist the help of lawyers\nnnd the police lo recover their\npagan idol. Joe Ble4z, who was;\nstolen from under their noses\nMonday afternoon.\nDIRTY LIE\nIn the Anolied Science issue\nlast Thursday it was claimed i\nthat four Applied Science stu-!\ndents travelled to Victoria and]\nspirited the. cannon from Royal]\nRoads Tri-Sefvices College. The!\nname issue carried a picture off\nthe \"cannon\" enclosed in a can-,\nvas  cover\nInvestigating in Victoria. Monday, two Ubvssev reporters who\ntalked  to Roval  Roads officials;\ndiscovered that the Applied Sci-1\nencemen     reached    the cannon;\nbut   weren't   strong   enough   to\nlift   it  over  the  shrubbery.\nFRUSTRATED FIASCO\nIn   frustration,   the   students\nlifted the canvas cover from theI\ncannon   and   returned   to   UBC\nwith  it as their onlv souvenir.\nFurther studv of the picture car-;\nried in Thursday's issue reveals j\nthat the canvas cover was stuf-1\nfed to make the final result re-1\nsemble  the  brass  cannon.\nThe Applied Science students;\ndo not even possess the cover at j\nthe moment. Hours after their!\npaper appeared. FOUR UBC of\nficer cadets entered the Applied,\nScience buildinn. home of FIVE\nHUNDRED     voung   thugs,   and:\ncarried off thc cover.    It is now !\nsafelv back  in Roval Roads.\nMonday afternoon, exactly at,\n4:06.   24   students   representing:\nthe  three  services,   carried  out\na   well-olanned   assault   on   the\nApplied Science common room.\nSeconds later, thev made off in\na  car  with  Joe  Blotz.  the  Ap-j\nplied   Science   faculty's   legendary mechanical dummy. i\nBUGLES BLAST\nA buele. which was heard by:\nmanv students on the campus, i\nsignalled the completion of the!\nplan. The dummv was hidden in |\nHMCS Discovery . where it was i\ntho truest of honour at, a Navy\nmess dinner Monday night.\nIs Unexplained\nIn one of tht weirdest happenings in recent\nyears at UBC, the vice-president of the Applied\nScience Undergraduate Society missed the\n\"Red Bacchanal'' at the Commodore Wednesday night.\nMonte McKay was not present at the head table to welcome patrons Dr. N. A- M. MacKenzie, Dean Gunning or any of\nthe distinguished guests. Over 300 Applied Science ktiftients\nwere stunned at the spectacle of their annual ball held without\nthe vice-president.\nNone of the Applied Science executive could give any explanation for the disappearance of one of the top men of' the\niacuity. At 1:00 a.m. this morning they still seemed stunned by\nthe mystery.\nSTRANGE COINCIDENCE\n, The disappearance of McKay was strangely reminiscent of\nan incident in the fall of 1951 when Ubyssey Editor-in-chief\nAllan Fotheringham, then a columnist on the paper, disappeared\nfrom a formal dance and was found penniless and practically\nnaked in the bush at Horseshoe Bay.\nThinking back more recently, it also resembled a \"kidnapping\" in 1952 when Fotheringham was chained to a lamppost at Georgia and Granville. Monday's disappearance of McKay followed the same pattern, the man in question just vanished into thin air.\nGOOD MOURNING\nThe Ubyssey joins in mourning with the entire Applied\nScience faculty as this paper realizes how unfortunate it is for\nthe vice-president of an organization to miss so important a\nfunction as the \"Red Bacchanal.'\nApplied Science students may rest assured that The Ubyssey will do everything in its power in the hunt for the missing\nstudent and that the Applied Science executive will be notified\nonce the body is discovered.\nSutton Elected VP\"\nIn Landslide Vote\nBy MICHAEL AMES '\nUbysseyElcction Reporter\nDefeated presidential candidate Wendy Sutton, Arts 3,\nbounced back Wednesday to win the vice-presidential election\nwith a landslide margin of 1507 votes to 639 for Gerry Hodge,\nApplied Sciencce 1. *>\u2014:     r~: r~7\"~      .      V\nt\u00ab \u201e o\u00ab ~\u00ab-\u201e\u00ab\u201ei *h*~A \u00ab.w\u201e ceived two write-in votes for\nJ<\u00bb   ninS   Pr IhJoH    n^.LSE   president.   U.S.   vice-preai-\nM\u201enri,S rLSnSn h. M \u201e\u201e ' dent Nixon and UBC Baru Ny-\nMaurice Copithorne by 62 votes  ,\u201e,,.\u201e\u201e \u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e:\u201e_A  ,,\u201e\u00bb\u201e,,  \u00ab\u201e\u201e   ah\/to\nto win the post of Literary and  J^t   'fS\nScientific   Executive   chairman,  vice-president.\nJerome   Angel,   Commerce   3, Vice-president-elect    Sutton\nwalloped A. D. Manson, Arts 2, took a 300-vote lead over Hodge\n1247 to 864 votes to take the po- a half-hour after ballot counting\nsition of coordinator of activi- started, and never looked back\nties. ; all night.\nDon Jabour, Arts 2, nosed out | Unsuccessful in her bid for the\nrunner-up Jim Carter, Arts 4, on ; presidency, Sutton was \"con-\nthe third count for second mem- scripted\" for the vice-president's\nber at large. Jabour ended up race bv over 400 students who\nwith 10*7 votes to Carter's 961.  signed their names to a nomina*\nArchie McGugan, Arts 4, third \u25a0 tion form,\nin  the   race,   polled  311   votes, i     Sutton's   victorious   campaign\nValerie    Haig-Brown,    Arts    l,j platform was,   \"The key to stu-\npolled 293. \\ dent    government    is    coopera*\nSenator Joseph  McCarthy  re-  tion.\"\nJ \u2022mmmju&L 0.\n^^S.^mmmmmmmmooim \u25a0*.     .. , \u25a0,.,.   ,.   . -. -. -,\nTIE IITSIE\nMEMBER, CANADIANjTNIVIBRSnTrFL^\nAuthorized ai second dais i#.*5* JK^KHt&ffi\nMall subscriptions &Wft year.Jg*n* \u25a0fe^^ffAfi!\nyear (Include* ln-AW *\u2022*. Publtohed inV*wotw4f J^ftSS\nthe university year bjrthe ta^t Mrtnthm ^IsL^JJfi\nMater Society, univdrsity ot British Columbia. Editorial oeiniaae\nexpressed herein are those of the editorial stall <* j^Wi,*f\u00bb\nand not necessarily those of tha Alma Mater Society or tht\nUniversity.\nEait0-.ln.Ch.af - ALLAH FOTHER1*OHAl*\nManaging Editor\u2014Patar Sypnowlch Maws Editor\u2014Ed Paskoa\nExecutive Editor\u2014Jaroma Aaflel Ipefts Editor   Hi Beeta\nCUP Editor         Ken Lamb\n\u25a0anlor editor this Issue -NilStevdal\nDesk and* reporters; Fat Carney, Diete ^^^^I^CifgfiS'\nPeter Krosby, Ian MacKentiej Be*t Gordon, Marybtth Kowlttfe,\nMike Arhes, SWndy Rosa, ^bo Kent\nSporta: Geoff Conway, Mike Glaspie.\t\n8EY\nw*-mm\nn^^mmrLim\nNO iOKG\nA joke is a joke, ia a joke, as Gertrude SHein would say,\nbut this time the joke has gone too far. The Applied Science\nfaculty is justly noted'for its pranks and students on thla\ncampus have been greatly amused by the shenanigans of\nthe exuberant member* of that faculty.\nBut when the vice-president of the faculty can not\neven bother to show up at the annual Applied Science tell\nthere is definitely something wrong.\nMr. McKay may think it is funny to suddenly disappear before the ball, but the hundreds, nay thousands, of\neager little Applied SclShce types who slaved all year\njust to attend the \"Red Bacchanal\" don't think it is very\nfunny.\nThis is borne out by the hundreds, nay thousands, of\ntear-soaked pillows in Applied Science homes this morning as the hundreds, nay thousands, of Applied Science students cried themselves to deep last night after they learned\ntheir vice-president wouldn't take the trouble to attend the\nball.\nFrivolity is alright, Mr. McKay, but there is no excuse\nfor breaking the hearts of hundreds, nay thousands, of\ninnocent little Applied Science students.\nGUEST EDITORIAL\nBrotherhood Week\n\"Dozens of Vancouver organizations which have been\nworking without much publicity under the Vancouver Civic\nUnity Council for the development of civic unity are receiving a share of popular applause this week as they are\nsimultaneously producing shows, demonstrations and panels\nas a part of National Brotherhood Week.\nThe idea behind all this is to make Vancouver a better\nspot for living, not only by helping minorities achieve full\nSocial privileges but also by educating majority members\nso that they can accept as a part of Canadian culture the\nunique contributions minority groups can make.\nThis University's contribution to National Brotherhood Week will be in the form of a panel discussion, sponsored by the Civil Liberties Union and Parliamentary Forum today at noon in Arts 100. H. Goyert, member of the\nCo-Ordinating Council on Citizenship, J. Miyazawa of the\ninternational of the Woodworkers Union, A. Scow of the\nNative Brotherhood, will discuss problems of minority integration.\nBesides this, the Civil Liberties Union, through its\naffiliation with the Vancouver Civic Unity Council, will play\na part in the organization of a brotherhood variety program\naround the theme, \"A Living Newspaper,\" which will bring\nBrotherhood Week to a climax in the Vogue Theatre at 2:30\nthis Sunday afternoon, February 28. Annis Stukus of the\nB.C. Lions and Bill Rea of CKNW will be headline speakers.\nBesides its part in today's forum and its affiliation\nthrough the C.L.U.'s representative on the Civic Unity\nCouncil, U.B.C. shows its interest in the problem of miv\nnority rights by the fact that three U.B.C. professors, including President N. A. M. MacKenzie, are on the executive\nof the Civic Unity Council.\nA U.B.C. professor once told his class, as an illustration\nof the effect an \"all-white\" or \"all-anything\" policy can have\nupon a nation, that \"Australia is certainly one of the dullest\ncountries in the world.\nThe theme of that lecture could well be considered the\ntheme of Brotherhood Week and the year-long activities\nof the Civic Unity Council. Canada needs the new ideas and\nstimulation internal sub-cultural groups can give.\nThe hundreds of employees of Franeschini's Canadian\nshoe industry or the thousands of readers of novels by Joseph Conrad would agree heartily with the statement, that\nmen who have lived in two cultures often have the bright\nideas that bring progress.\nOn the other hand, the Vancouver Civic Unity Council\nand the coordinators of National Brotherhood Week realize\nthat this productivity is impossible when the minority member faces prejudice or lack of understanding out of which\nsprings discrimination.\n\"Unity, without uniformity\" could properly be called\nthe theme of Brotherhood Week.\nMarney Stevenson,\nCivil Liberties Union.\nHERE'S HOW YOU VOTED\n-     I\nfcr PITER SYPROWICH\nLet me teU vou about the\ntime Letter Pearson interview-\ned nfe. It should have been\nthe other way around,, but\nMr. Pearson was interested in\nYoung Canada. I'm only 21.\nIt was last summer, when I\ngot a job on a downtown newspaper, determined to work at\nsomething more Interesting\nthan a areenchaln. I saw myself covering apartment house\nblazes, and meeting public futures on windsweot runways\n(in mv trenchcoat). I would\nwitness the movements of his.\ntorv. I thought, recording them\nfor the oubllc.\nUnfortunately, the city edi\u00ab\ntor had other movements tor\nme to record, and put me to\nwork making out th\u00bb ship cal*\nendar.\nBut one day I was entering\nthe Hotel Vancouver to cover\nanother convention when a\nblacks shining airport taxi pulled uo. Out stepped a small,\ntired man with a small, tired\n#Ke. I gawked as the president ol the United Nations\nGeneral Assembly walked past\nme.\nIt must be a sneak visit, I\nthouaht. This is my chance.\nJBt brain whirled with\ntheuehtt for an exclusive interview.\n\"llti\u00bb\" Pearson grinned\nhis friendly *rin as he rattled\nthe ice cubes in hfs glass.\nThen his rounded law shot\nforward. He said: Ike has\nassured me that the American\ntariff well will be lowered.\"\nFifteen minutes later Associate Defense Minister Ralph\nCamonev welcomd me into\nMr. Pearson's suite. \"I don't\nbelieve I've met vou before,\"\nhe boomed. They must have\nexoected our craek political\nreoorter. I thought with die*\nmav. I told him my name\nhesitantly.\n\"Oh ves.\" he said heartily.\n\"I've read some of your stuff.\nI looked at him. shocked. Maybe he meant the ship calendar,\nI thouaht wildly.. I managed\na weak. \"Oh?\"\nHe led me into a small but\nBlush room, where I saw an\nopposition reporter. No exclusive interview I realized, but\nat least ray paper wouldn't be\nscooped. I pictured the gratitude of the city editor.\nThen Mr. Pearson came into\nthe room and the interview\nstarted. The other reporter\nbegan shootina questions. I\nscribbled madly, meanwhile\nracking my brains for a question to shoot.\nMr. Pearson frowned at my\nsilence. I could see he didn't\nregard me as another Stewart\nAlson. \"How long have you\nbeen reDorting?\" he asked.\n\"Three weeks.\" I replied.\nMr. CamDnev choked. I guessed he didn't read the ship calendar.\nFifteen minutes later, he\nhad unearthed mv vital statistics, ambitions, everything.\nHe knew more about me than\ndid mv mother.\nWe left the suite, me mumbling mv thanks and trying to\navoid the eves of Mr. Camp-\nnev.\nBut I walked into the newspaper office- 15 minutes later\nwith a iaunty step. I had\nenoueh notes to make a story,\nat, least.\nThen the night reporter\nspotted me. He had been assigned to interview Pearson\nhimself, he said, but had been\n\"tied uo elsewhere.\"\n\"This is a pretty big story,\"\nhe said \"Mavbe you'd better\ntvpe out vour notes, and let\nme handle it.\" I stared at him\ndumblv. Mv voice cracked as\nI replied cheerily, \"All right.\"\nThe next dav. I reluctantly\nscanned the paper. There it\nwas. on page two \u2014 my notes,\nalmost to the word. And above\nit. in what seemed to me to be\nhorriblv black type, HIS byline\nI thought of how Mr Pearson had grilled me. Maybe\nhe. too. had to turn his notes\nover to someone. I guess Mr.\nSt. Laurent knows all about\nme.\nI\nSill      I\nCarter  .. Hi tiMWW- if Wia6M \u00bb3#   Mf\nHaig-Brown  .. 72 80     89     86 40 20   298 \t\nJabour  99 280   187   218 94 41   814 898 100*\nMcGugan     86 70     86     77 82 20   311 311    \u2014\nHodge\nSutton\n199   148    118   106     49     28   639\n181   487   268   389   128    109 1807\nAngel\t\nManson ...\nGop-thorne\nRiopel \t\n*a___t__ai---_\nJuan In Holl\nHn m \u25a0M-U-M--M il_i_a,_l__a_k\nExcellent\nhv BUtT GORDON\nSpecial Events deserve a real\nbig bouquet for bringing the\nexcellent portrayal of George\nBernard Shaw's \"Don Juan In\nHeM\" to the Auditorium Wednesday noon.\nThe olaf was presented as a\n\u25a0__h___a_________A______ J __!\u25a0_, \u2014 4 __h       ____S       _____e_____&_i^___i_\u25a0___.\nnarration devoid ef costumes\nand oroos. The cast sat on\nstools reedinf their scripts from\nan ilhtminated stand, but this\nadded to rather than detracted\nfrom an aeoreeiation of the\norodtiction.\nThe scriot was superbly\nadaoted bv Avon Theatre's\nDeua Haskins from the fuller\nShaw work \"Man and Superman\" and contained all the dynamic dialogue for which Shaw\nis riehtlv famous.\nDoug Haskins narrated Don\nJuan's nart and turned in a ter-\nrlficlv clear and natural performance. No less impressive\nas the Devil was Avon's Stan\nJones whose resonant George\nSaunder's tvoe had the clarity\nand changing modulation so\npleasurable to listen to.\n147\n896\n289\n284\n88\n78 1247 \u2014\n-\u00bb \u2014 M\n194\n198\nno\n214\n98\n66 864 ...\n\u00ab\u00abM\nlit\n898\n179\n899\n98\n64 1026 ...\n- \u2014 \u00ab\u2022\nlit\n898\n198\n808\n80\n72 1088 ...\n\t\nI\nMme. BLLA HB88, TBACHSB\nof singing    \u2014    Italian \"Bel\nCanto.\" Experienced European trained artist. Coaching\nOpera. Concert and Radio-\nTV. Correct voice* production,\ndefective   singing  corrected.\nKE. 8834.\nTYPING AND MIMEOGRAPH,\ning. Accurate work. Reasonable\nrates. Call anytime,  lim. Oow,\n4468 West 10th. AL. 8688. (ff)\n'Imam cJfjitot\n\u25a0i-i\nMiaorilfes\nTate Today\nCLUB AND PARLIAMENTARY FORUM will sponsor a\ndiscussion on' \"Problems of\nMinority Integration\" as a part\nof National Brotherhood Week\ntodav noon in Arts 100. Speakers will be H. Gavert, citizen-\nshin council. Joe Miyazawa,\nInternational representative of\nIWA. and Alf Scow, executive\ndirector of the National Brotherhood.\nVARSITY REVUE will show\ncolor slides of tbe Varsity Blue\nand Gold Review today noon\nin the Green room.\nUBC SYMPHONY will resume rehearsals today 6:45 in\nBand hut.\nBADMINTON CLUB will\nhold a general meeting today\n8:00 p.m. in the Memorial Gym.\nThere will be no more Tuesday\nsessions after the month of\nFebruary.\nNEWMAN CLUB will sponsor \"Evening in Paris\" Saturday 8:30 p.m. in the Stanley\nPark Pavillion. Tickets $4 a\ncouple. Music by Brick Henderson.\nFROSH UNDERGRADUATE\nSOCIETY will sponsor a basketball dance following the\nWestern Washington - UBC\ngame Saturday, in Brock Hall\nfrom 9 to 12. Orchestra. Everyone welcome.\nBADMINTON CLUB will\nhold an ooen tournament Sun-\ngvm. Entry fee 50c per event\ndav 1:30 p.m. in the Women's\nfor non-Badminton club members.\nGLEE CLUB holds important\nrehearsal In Hut Ml today\nnoon. Full turnout is essential\nto eet program underway.\nTYPHHO. PICKUP*\nand delivery service. Sundays-\nPR. 9881. (69)\nRELIGIOUS SOCIETY OP\nFriends (Quakers) meeting lor\nworshio every Sunday 11:00\na.m. 838 H. 10th (Cambie\nat Broadway). All interested\nverv  welcome. (98)\nEXPERT TYPING AT HOME\u2014\nALma 2768-L (49)\nFOR SALE: TUXEDO, size 86.\nLike   new.   Phone   AL.0398-Y\n(45)\nTWO BRIGHT ROOMS, BED\nroom and study with private\nbathroom. Suitable for two or\nthree students. Will give board\nor eouio room with kitchenette. 4448 W. 6th. Al, 1752-Y\n(44>\nBLACK LEATHER COVERED\nnotebook 4\" bv 7\". Reward\noffered. Phone H. Thornton.\nAlma 0881. (42)\nA BARGAIN! 1948 DE-LUXE\nFord Sedan. Immaculate condition. Phone FA. 4242-M after\n6 o.m. (45)\nFAST AND EFFICIENT TYP-\nIng. Any kind. Call FRaser\n7962 after 4 p.m. (48)\nROYAL PORTABLE TYPE-\nwriter S78. Miss Massey, Phil-\nosoohv. (45)\n\"TUX\" WANTED. SIZE 42,\ntall. Phone: Bob. DExter\n4050-L (47)\nLIGHT BLUE SHEAFFER PBN-\ncil with initials J. H. Y. engraved on band. Finder please\ncontact Jim Young. Fort Camp,\nor leave at Camo office.     (45)\nBLACK LEATHER COVERED\nnotebook 4\" bv 7\". Reward offered. Phone H. Thornton\nALma 0051. (36)\nUBC FILMSOCIETY\nTODAY.  1280  \u2014 ADD. 25c\nPSYCHOLOGY CLUB presents Dr. Cvril Belshaw, anthropology department, speaking on\n\"Problems of Methodology in\nthe Social Sciences\" noon today\nroom 19. Hut M3.\nDANCE CLUB will hold a\ngeneral meeting Wednesday\nMarch 3 in Phvsic. 202. Next\nyear's executive will be elected. frNiffyM ,!\u00a7\u00bb\u00a7\u201e\n\u25a0M**\n\u201efg#;\nmommm\nU *\u00a5\u00bb-\u00ab\u00a5\nlaLL\n-M.\nAtliltHnts: Jim Warn*, John Wick\n_H--l-i_-M---_-Mfei\nm^kmmmh^t^mtm\nAL CORY\nThe President's Message:\nThe Pharmacy Undergraduate Society's purpose as an\norganization is to sponsor, promote and coordinate all activities concerning Pharmacy students. These activities in\nelude^publicixing Pharmacy as a faculty on the campus as\nwell as endeavoring to put-all fields o f tiie profession before\nthe interested student.\nTo accomplish this task the Ph.U.S. sponsors films,\nt\u00bbnel discussions, and guest speakers to Illustrate or describe the opportunities available, the facilities of the\nUbyssey, University Radio Society along with Intramural\neities are responsible for getting Pharmacy bettor\nm on the campus, while the writings of our Publicity\nesentative in both local and national journals report\nour activities throughout B.C. and the rest of Canada.\nIn our endeavour to Improve the relations of the faculty\non the campus we do not forgot the social phase. New students are introduced to their colleagues through stages, teaa,\nskating parties and ln tho spring the annual Graduation\nBanquet and Formal. ^_\t\nKJf   JflPUHililllllP\nCriticism has long been levelled at the profession of\nPharmacy with regard to the high cost of medication. What\nfew people realize, however, is the fact that this cost of\n| medication involves several intangible benefits which must\nbe considered.\nLife expectancy has been increased for persons suffering from such ailments as congestive heart failure, diabetes,\ntuberculosis, pernicious anaemia and countless others. The\nnumber of people reaching old age has, in fact, increased to\nsuch an extent that their care and treatment has given rise\nto a new field of medicine called geriatrics.\nWith the advent of the new chemotherapeutic agents\nJ and antibiotics, treatment time for many diseases has been\nmarkedly reduced. This results in a shorter period of convalescence and a quick return to normal life. Earning power\nlis thus restored in a much shorter time.\nThe elucidation of the action of Cortison and ACTH\nI in the treatment of Rheumatoid Arthritis has helped to restore a more normal way of life to many suffering and\ncrippled arthritics.\nAll of these things did not just happen, however, they\noccurred gradually. Perhaps they occurred too gradually\nfor people to realize that they have shorter periods of illness\nj and less pain to endure whilejhey are living longer.\nThe cost of development of production of the newer\n| types of medicinals is tremendous, but the Pharmaceutical\nindustry has achieved the reputation of returning a higher\npercentage of their net earnings to research than any other\nI industry.\nDrugs are more expensive than they were twenty years\nago but they could cost twice as much and still be twice as\neconomical, judged by their ability to reduce death and\ndisease in proportion to health in the community.\nJ. A. Warne\nEvaluation, Drug Producer\nGive Lie To 'Coat' Theory\n'id You Know\n\u2022 \u2022\n\u2014That the first pharmacist in North America was Louis\nHebert, who came to Quebec with Champlain. Hebert was\nthe son of a Parisian apothecary who was in the service of\n| Queen Catherine of Medici.\n\u2014That while drugstores are considered to be pharmacies in Canada, they are not pharmacies in England? A\nrecent code of ethics draft published in England advises\na pharmacist not to own, have a financial interest or be\n[ associated in any manner with drug stores.\n\u2014That while the pharmacist is the chief custodian of\nI narcotics and other habit forming drugs, not a single Canadian pharmacist has ever been convicted on any charge associated with drug addiction?\n[others Nightcap\nby Burma Lather\nBIOLOGY 400 ITEM: Colloidal particles in solution,\nrecognizable by the glitter of the Tyndall effect, tend to come\ntogether collectively or coalesce if an electrolyte is added.\nIf, however, the particle is protected by an envelope of water,\ni.e. if it is an emulsoid, it tends to be more stable.\nTwinkle, twinkle, little colloid,\nSuspended in solution,\nYou will be a poor suspensoid\nCome the revolution.\nHowever, chuck \"Das Kapital\"\nAnd communism avoid;\nBig business will  help  you  be-\nA stabilized emulsoid.\nGood Evening to Everyone, but especially pharmacy\nstudents whose prescriptions are indispen3ible.\nPharmacy, many people erroneously believe, ends with a\nman in a white coat behind a\nglass window, cautiously weigh*\ning and mixing medical compounds. This is not so. lot pharmacy extends into many fields;\nfor example, the pharmacologist,\nwhose dutv it li-to evaluate the\nmedicinal prdducw and the pharmaceutical chemist whpte. work\nIt IS to produce new drugs. .\nAt the end of a dark hallway\nin the biological science building\ntwo pharmacy students, Claude\nMurison and Tom Wickham, are\nnow in the process of making\none of these new druga\u00bb which\nthey hope will possess antihistamine properties. The synthesis\nof their ntw compound involves\nthe production of several ln-fei,\ntween compounds known as in-\ntermdiates. Two particular intermediates. Two particular in-\nmethvl aminoethane and cyclo-\nhexvlcarboxvlic acid to which\nthe above students have respectively assigned the descriptive\nnames of \"dead fish\" and \"stinky\nfeet.\" Thev believe that these\nintermediates Will compete successfully with the \"fowl\" emissions from the poultry department and the (body) aroma of the\nEngineers.\nIn ah effort to svtheslze this\nnew compound they have been\nintroduced to new techniques\nand have nolished up on old\ntechnlaues in the many proced-\nTo Sorority Uknm..\nI've taken my fun where I've\nfound it\nThough maidens blush prettily\noink\nTo hear Doctor Kinsey expound\nit.\nIt's different than most people\nthink.\nIn   it's  practical  technique  of\nromance\nMv  knowledae  is meagre and\ndim\nBut Kinsev's my Saviour\nIn masculine behavior\nI learned about men from him.\nures of organic synthesis. Some\noi'the procedures lead to art involved array of equipment which\nat times makes the laboratory\nlook like the birthplace of another Frankenstein.\nWith each new procedure\ncomes new problems and the\nthrough road is not obvious till\nmanv blind alleys are sought\nout and manv disappointments\nare endured, for instance,\nClaude set uo a refluxing apparatus which operated at a controlled temperature lor seventy-\ntwo hours. At the end ot which\ntime he carefully removed the\nglaseal mantle (heating apparatus) ohrv to watch the bottom\nof the flask and seventy-two\nhours work flow out over the\nfloor. With a disgruntled look,\nand different eonipment, he\nstarted atsM and successfully\nworked his way to the desired\nproduct.\nThe Pharmaceutical Research\nchemistry course is so designed\nto give basic training in one of\nthe many branches of pharmacy.\nThis, lt is hoped, will give you,\nthe reader, a peek it one of the\npharmacy courses and also illustrate that pharmacy ia by no\nmeans limited in it's scope.\nTo those first year Arts Students who aren't too sure what.\ncourse to take next year, Pharmacy has a place for you. The\ndemand for pharmacists in B. C.\nat present and in the future appears great.\nDrue detailing is done by graduate pharmacists employed by\nPharmaceutical man ufacturers. -\nTheir service is to inform the\nphysicians of the new preparations on the market.\nHospital Pharmacy is becoming more and mere important;\nThe demand for specialised Hospital pharmacists has reached\nsuch a height that some Universities have special courses in that\nphase of work.\nThere are also positions available al the research centers\nwhere work is Constantly being\ndone on new therapeutic substances.\nLips, Babies' Bottoms\nServed By Silicones\nThe Silicone Fluids have an unusual commbination of properties which has led to their use in many varied applications.\nThey have been used in Engineering devices as damping\nmedia and lubricants. Since the fluids do not freeze or boil, they\nhave found unlimited use in torsion machine's and as lubricating\nagents for any moving parts of machinery located in any climate.\nA surface that has been treats\ned with silicone fluids is com\npletelv non-adherent. Thus baking tins which have been treated with silicones allows easy\nand complete removal of cakes\nand bread without any previous\ngreasing.\nPaoer treated with silicones is\nmade waterproof. Thus maps,\nblue prints or blank paper for\nwriting uDon may be treated\nand used in any sort of weather.\nClothing is also treated in a sim-\nDENTAL HEALTH\nNon-Smokers, Light Eaters\nNot Immune From Cavities\nThe maintenance of dental health is essential for the well-\nbeing of an individual. The facts of this statement have been\ncontinually pointed out to us ever since our baby teeth arrived\non the scene. Those of us who have neglected to brush our teeth\ntwice daily have probably suffered through various sessions in\nthe dentist's chair.\nThose of  us who  brush our! ^ae, ^J^! flincl ,\u00a3, \u2122mUh Jl!\nteeth regularly have likely ex- l\u2122i?t?\u00bbnJ!^La E^W. \"\u00a3\nperienced \"dentist's hold'\" as\nwell. Dental caries exist in almost everyone except those rare\nspecimens who eat only twice a\nday with an immediate prophylaxis following, engage in no\nbetween meal snacks and are\nnon-smokers (it has been shown\nthat smoking definitely raises\nthe incidence of dental caries).\nIn the past few years, we have\nseen the introduction of various\ndental creams and powders into\nlevel and tooth corrosion is prevented.\nEducational\nRegulations\nThe new B.C. educational regulations   in   Pharmacy   which\ncame into effect last vear, make\nthe    twelve-month    apprentice-\nwhich an extraneous compound ship  and  entrance  examination\nhas been added in an effort to  optional to students entering the\nincrease the effectiveness of the\npreparation\nSome of these have been penicillin, the fluorides, ammoniated\nsubstances and more recently,\nchlorophyll. The newest type of j\nfaculty. Previously, these requirements were compulsory but\nnow the \"interneship\" may be\nserved after graduation if the\nstudent so desires.\nWhether this lack of practical\ningredient is the ANTI-ENZYME I experience will be a drawback\nsubstance.   This   substance   was  \" ... .      ~\u00ab.\ndeveloped as a result of extensive study of the proteinaceou3\nfilm always present on the tooth\nsurface.\nThe anti-enzymes show inhibitory action toward bacterial enzymes responsible for the acid\nproduction  in the mouth.  Thus\nhas vet to be proved. The\n\"learn-bv-doins\" formula has\nworked well in the oast in acquainting the prospective student with some of the drugs,\nprocedures and references used\nbv the graduate pharmacist in\neveryday store or dispensary\nroutine.\nilar manner to make it waterproof .\nMedicinal and dental equipment can be sterilized and at\nthe same time be lubricated with\nSilicone Fluids.\nInvestigation into the incorporation of silicone fluids into ointments has been in progress in the\nDepartment of Pharmacy this\nyear. The fluids have been emulsified into various creams and\nprovide the skin with protection\nagainst the weather, chemicals,\nbacteria, acids and alkalies, animal and mineral matter causing\nallergies, and also Set as lubricants.\nThe creams have been proved\nverv effective against chapping\nof lios. hands and face, and in\npreventing diaper rash on babies.\nThev have also been used on\nburns providing a complete air*\nproof protection and have been\nused effectively on weeping\nwounds and sores.\nA. J. Spencer\nPharmacy\nPrayer\nA Pharmacy Student's Prayer\nDear Lord perched high on heaven's lid\nLook down on me vour little\nkid.\nAnd  in   this  last  and  dreadful\nhour\nHelp me with vour Almighty\nnower.\nI lapsed a little. Lord I know;\nSometimes I hiked down to the\nshow.\nI danced a bit and skated too,\nBut never more than others do.\nPerhaps to vou. O Lord, it seems\nI    wasted    time  on    foolish\ndreams.\nBut if vou know this little guy,\nI'll bet a buck vou'd do as I.\nOh Lord, perched high on heaven's lid\nLook down on me your little\nkid.\nForeet the times I've been an ass\nAnd helo me now to get a pass!\nJack Duller Page Four\nTHE   UBYSSEY\nThursday, February 25,1954\nMens Crasshockey     |\nTarn Faces Camera\nThe UBC men's grass hockey\nteams moment of glory has\ncome. All vou big handsome\nbrutes are asked to display your\nmugs tomorrow at 1:00 on the\nwomen's hockev field to have\nyour pictures took for this year's\nTotem.    A full turnout please!\nUniversity of Washington\nvollevball team will be here on\nFridav noon to do battle with\nUBC's vollevball team. Earlier\nthis month our bovs travelled\nto the Inland Empire Where they\nwere soundlv trounced by the\nHuskies 15-9. 18-13 and 18-8.\nA nominal admission fee of\n10c will be charged. The money\nwill so to a fund for underprivileged coaches.\nJV's Bow\nf o Western\nDown South\nWestern Washington Jayvees\nswamped the UBC JV's 77-39 in i.\nBellingham Tuesday night to\neven their four game basketball\nseries at a game each.\nThe series continues Friday\nin Bellingham and concludes Saturday night in the War Memorial Gvm.\nTuesday'* game UBC was\nnever in the game as the American kept pouring it on. The\nscore at the half was a decisive\n41-1.9, count. The reason for the\nloss lies in the dismal performance of Jim Carter and the absence of Keith Merrill. Glen\nDrummond. Jim Pollack, and\nKevin O'Connell.\nCarter, the star of the UBC\nsouad. played his worst game\nof the vear as he got only three\npoints. Besides. Tyler and\nYounk. the Western pivot men,\ngot bv Carter to check in with\n24 and l4j points respectively.\n_ u^|_\u2014__\t\nWestern\nPlay U of California\nSaturday And Monday\nBy GEOFF CONWAY\nTwenty Varaity rugby players depart from the campus\ntoday for a wefek-long sojurn south of the border to defend the\ncoveted World Cup against the University of California and to\nmeet UCLA inkn exhibition match on the letter's home field.\nThe Thunderbirds will play<t>\nthe World Cup contests on Saturday, February 27, and Monday,\nMarch 1, against the University\nof California Golden Bears and\nwill engage in one exhibition encounter with UCLA on Wednesday, March 3.\nThe fifteen will be making\nthe trip in the role of defending\nchampions tor the first time in\nthree years. Last season Albert\nLalthewaite's proteges split the\nfour game series with the Golden Bears, but won the trophy\nby amassing a total of 27 points\nto Cal's 26 points.\nThe second two games of the\nWorld Cup series will be played\nand Bob Morford\u2014'Whose three\npenalty kicks in the final contest\nwon the World Cup for the\n'Birds last year. Tail-up Derek\nVsllts will be flanked by break\nforwards Doug MacMillan, vice-\ncaptain of this year's squad, and\nDave Morley.\nJoe Warnock, Ray Forrester,\nPat Kinney, and Frank Harvey*\nSmith v^ll be spelling off the\nabove forwards.\nHowever. California will probably held the edge in'tockfield\nplain as tnelr big stars are still\nwith them\u2014including Max Howell, the former Australian Wat-\n_ able and-All-World selectee Whe\non the campus on March 28 and {has already won four letters for\n27 when California will make\ntheir appearance. UCLA Will\npossibly appear for a return exhibition contest on March 15,\nfour days after Varsitv takes\non the touring New Zealand All\nBlacks\nrugby if*- and there are many\nbright prospects trying out for\nthe vacancies there are.\nRivalry\nRenewed\nbv STAN BECK\nJack Pomfret's UBC Thunderbirds will be trying for their\nthird and fourth wins in Evergreen Conference play when,\nthev go after Western Washington Vikings in a home and home\nseries this weekend.\nFridav night Western will host\nus (the Bellingham police are\nready and on Saturday night we\nwill return the compliment at\n8:00 in the War Memorial Gym.\nAfter the game on Saturday\nnight the UBC Rowing Club will\nsponsor a gigantic sock dance\non the gvm floor so bring a date\nand make an evening of it.\nThe games against Western are\nalwavs the highlight of the year\nand this vear should be no\ndifferent than anv other. Western*, no matter how poor a season thev have had. alwavs manage to give UBC a good battle\nBIRDS BETTER\nOff their respective records\nBirds should clip the Vikings\nwings but don't bet your last\ndollar on it.\nWestern out up their best\nshowing of the season last weekend when thev rolled over\nSeattle 86-77. The niaht before\nSeattle had made UBC look\nsillv. beating them 75-60. You\nfigure  it   out.\nThere is no doubt that Birds\nare far and awav the better\nteam but the wav they have been\ngoing latelv, Western can't be\ncount<\u00bbd out, especially in view\nof tho fart, that thev just love to\nbrat  UBC.\nBob Sinclair will handle the\nscrum-half chores for Varsity\nwith captain Bill Whyte or John\nEssentially the same forward! ^\"^J?! w^\u2122 .nH tt\u2122\npacks will be facing each other \u2022 _ W \"** J6h\" Newton and Jim\nthis year as last, with California i f\u00b0uld'n* %1.11 be\u201e %\"\u00a3*& b*\nagain holding a slight weight! Skip McCarthy and Hugh Green-\nedge over UBC with a 205-pound :woocd- J.W Kronquist, Whyte,\naverage over a 200-pound one.! or Sandilands will take oyer at |\nWith Bill Mullholand back in[tul1 Dackl i\nhis regular hook position, UBC| Here in Vancouver on Satur-\nshould again be able to control j day the second division Braves\nthe majority of forward play. j will meet the Ex-Techs at Hill-\nBill will be flanked by foot-1 cfeSt Park and the third division\nbailer Ralph Martinson and Pete \\ Tomahawks and Ex-Techs sec-\nGrantham in the front row and i onds will face off at Hillcrest\nbacked by blocks Jim MacNichol Park.\nED JOHN, captain of Alberta Golden\" Bears, acccepts the\nHamber Cup from its generous donor, Hon. Eric Hamber. Bears\nwon the right to keep the Cup for another year by defeating]\nBirds 16-3 in the two game total goals series.\nSoccer Should\nInternational\nGet\nTilts\nBy MIKE GLASPIE\nCORYELL S0UT EARL Y: FOOTBALL\nHOPEFULS MEET FRIDA Y NOON\nA special meeting will be held in the training room in\nthe Stadium at 12:30 Friday for all aspirants for next fall's\n'Varsity and Jayvee football squads.\nCoach Don Coryell says with the nice (?) weather\ncoming practices will be held Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 3:30 p.nx, starting Monday to sweat off Old Man\nWinter's protective coat of fat acquired by the athletes.\nFull details concerning practice sessions will be given\nat Friday's meeting by Coryell.\nBears\n'Birds\nCan Skate;\nCan't   Fly\nBy STAN BECK\nAlberta Golden Bears won the Hamber Cup for the fourth\nconsecutive year as they defeated UBC Thunderbirds Tuesday night at Kerrisdale Arena to win the two game total goals\nseries 16-3. .\u2666-\u2014--         \t\nIt was the same story both with U^Cs B(* Giegerich pick-\nnights \u2014 Alberta was too heavy }\"* up *ou* and Alberta s Cyril\nand too fast for Dick Mitchell's!1?\" and. Don Gouriey getting\nbovs.    Bears were obviously in\nbetter shape and were able to\nskate UBC right off the puck.\nWhen the Birds did threaten to\nscore Bear goalie Jack Lyndon\nlived uo to his reputation by\nstopping almost everything that\ncame his wav.\nSTEWART GETS FOUR\nBears dimunitive Bob Stewart\nwas the star of the second game\nas he did tho hat trick one better bv getting one goal in the\nsecond period and three more\nin the third frame. Always the\nopportunist. Stewart scored three\nof his four goals bv picking up\na loose ouck and flying in on undefended Bird goalie Don Anderson.\nThe game was rough but not\ndlrtv as* 300 odd fans were\ntreated to a good rugged game\ndespite the lopsided score. Referees Bob Glover and Bill Wilks\ncalled   a   total  of   15   penalties,\nIng   and   Don   Gouriey\nthree apiece. Bears Ed John received a 10 minute misconduct\nThis column  is aimed  in  the general direction  of athletic\ndirector Bus Phillips and those of you who are interested in thc |\nfurtherance of sports at UBC.\nCup time has rolled around once more with the Hamber Cupl\njust completed and the World Cup just getting underway and I\ngot to looking over the schedules of our major sports teams.   They\nare schedules any university would be proud of, with one glaring]\nexception.\nAmerican football and basketball as members of the Evergreen Conference have ideal collegiate schedules. Rugby and ice-\nhockey are not so lucky, having to rely on city competition. However, their schedules have been remedied in a big way by trips to |\nUCLA, California, Alberta, and Colorado. .\nBut how about soccer,- the last of our major sports. To my\nknowledge the farthest md probably only trip a UBC soccer team\nhas ever been on was last year's junket to Powell River to play\na jcam equivalent in calibre to a mediocre high school team. From\nthe beginning of October to the end of March the Varsity soccer\nteam's lope opposition is five commercial teams.\nAnd now the athletic department has been busy scheduling\nrugby's new series with UCLA and hockey's Colorado games. That's\nxine\u2014but what about soccer? Shouldn't at least an attempt be made\nto get the fitba boys out of Vancouver? It is kind of ironic that the\nhockey team has the games but not the players whereas the soccer\nteam has the players but not the games.\nI was talking to soccer coach Ed Luckett the other day and\nho was moaning about how hard it was to keep up team morale\nand get his boys in peak form with no real objective to prep for.\nHe sugested a series with an  American  collegiate team  and II\nam going to develop his thought in hopes it might lead to some-1\nthing. ' j\nThis soccer series could''be modeled on rugby's World Cupl\nplay with the University of California. The opposition could come\nfrom the same vicinity, it being the  closest place a long way froni|\nVancouver, if you get what 1 mean.\nIt could also be a four game total point series with two gamesI\nat each university, playing Thursday noon and Saturday afternoonf\ngames. I\nIn my opinion the logical opponent would be Stanford Uni-1\nvcrsitv. The reasons favoring Stanford are many. First, for yearsI\nthe \"Big Red\" have consistently turned out the best Californianl\ncollegiate soccer team and it would take a good team to give our\nn any\npenalty for protesting a holding\npenalty too loudlv.\nThe heavier and faster Bears i Birds a battle. Secondly, UBC and Stanford\" do not meet.\ngot oft' to a fast two goal lead\non goals bv Kirsten and Ing.\nUBC got one back before the\nperiod ended when Moe Cunningham backhanded a loose\nouck bv Jack Lyndon in the\nBear's not.\nREST HELPED\nBirds apparently rejuvinated\nbv the 10 minute rest, completely\ndominated the plav in the second period. But the Bears,\nthanks to some sensational goal\ntending bv Jack Lyndon still\nmanaged to outscore Birds 2-1.\nLvndon turnod back 19 shots in\nthe hectic period compared to\nDon Anderson's seven. Alberta\nmarksmen were Stewart and\nKirsten while Eric Lovett countered for UBC.\ntthletic activity at the present time. Also, for some reason Stan-\nlord seems to be especially well-known in Vancouver and they|\n.\u00abliould have excellent gate appeal.\nIf Stanford for some reason is not feasible, the University of I\nSan Francisco would be a good substitute. It was this team that\nwanted to come up here last year to play our Birds under the\nauspices of Callister Park, California would not be desirable as |\nit would detract from the gate of the rugby series\nThe fact that Callister Park and the Pacific Coast soccer\nleague wanted to sponsor a collegiate soccer series last year indicates that there must be some merit in this plan\nIt has been darkly rumo.-ed that UBC has not engaged in any\ncollege soccer competition in the past because they did not feel\nthc calibre of this university was up to the American level.\nAs a student in California for four years I had plenty of opportunity to see the American brand and compare it with our\nsoccer.\nI believe, if anything, the Birds are a few goals better than\nthe American teams. The 3-0 victory scored by tho New Westminster Royals over the U.S. champion Chicago Falcons last Sop |\ntomber should be an indication.\nWell  there's the plan. Lei's make it a reality","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Vancouver (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"LH3.B7 U4","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"LH3_B7_U4_1954_02_25","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0123917","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Vancouver : Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society, University of British Columbia","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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\/","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/subject":[{"value":"University of British Columbia","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Ubyssey","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}