{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0124792":{"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":"2015-07-24","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1947-12-04","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/Ubysseynews\/items\/1.0124792\/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":" The Daily Ubyssey\nVol. XXX\nVANCOUVER, B. C, THURSAY, DECEMBER 4, 1947\nNo. 40\nGym Planning Group Asks\nChange Of Memorial Site\nStudents, Faculty Members\nAppeal To Trustees' Board\n\u2014Daily Ubyssey Photo By Tommy Hatcher\nCO-ED PULCHRITUDE PLUS is what Mardi Gras officials will feature at their annual fiesta,\nslated for January 22 and 23 at the Commodore cabaret. These co-eds are five of many girls\nwho are trying out for the chorus line, which off icials claim will be enough alone to pack the\ncustomers in on both nights. The smiling lassies were reluctant to release their names to the\npress, at least until they've beeh definitely signed on the chorus line.\nLegion Pushes Drive To Get\nIncreases For Married Vets\nEUS Holds Ball\nOn December 19\nFollowing the precedent set last\nyear, the Engineers will hold their\nannual informal, the Passing-Out\nParty, at the Debonair ballroom en\nFriday, December 19, the EUS announced yesterday.\nWhat they promise will be \"a gala\nprogram\" has been arranged by Jack\nMcFadden, to include a 15-piece orchestra, and draws with mystery\nprizes.\nNotification of Survey Results\nGoes To B. C. Parliamentarians\nResults of a survey made on the UBC campus claiming that\nmany university student-veterans have incurred a 20 percent\nincrease in cost of living in two years will be sent to every\nBritish Columbia Member of Parliament.\nAnnouncement of the survey results came Wednesday from Legion\nsecretary Ray Dewar who told a veterans' meeting that ex-servicemen at\nLittle Mountain camp were paying\n20 percent more in living costs, but\nat the same time had suffered a\nreducticn in income from part time\nemployment.\nTWO SURVEYS\nThe   results   of   two   surveys   taken\nArtsmen Join Engineers\nxam v-rusaae\nA ,';i'<>up of UBC Artsmen have joined the enroll1 -\nsecond-year Engineers to return to \"the old system ' of formal\n.Christina-; examinations.\nClose to fifty signatures are  now on a  petition  circulated\nimi'iiv.' an honours class in Maths and Physics,\nthe\nfive\n>mp.(a\nforn.a\ninterferes   with   an    all-round    study\nprogram,  and\nWHEREAS lab periods and wrileups\nrequire a great deal of time durin.i\nthe  term,   and\nWHEREAS, a one-hour exam i.s\ninsufficient for a .student to do his\nbest, especially when the exam is\noverly long, and\nWHEREAS assignments are a sufficient method for determining work,\nand\nWHEREAS many students assumed\nclub and extra curricular responsibilities before the new policy was\nannounced and consequently were\nnot able to devote su.fieient preparation   for   mid-term   work,   therefore\nWe, the undersigned students, peti-\n\"Regarding the new system of mid-   tion  the  university  to  return  to  the\nterm examinations: old system of a formal exam  perked\nWHEREAS    the    over-learning    re-   at   Christmas,   and   discount   the   required for cxamsiespecially in Maths)   suits of  the  midterms.\"\nheading   the    resolution   arc\nreason   for   returning   to   the\nexamination  system.\nTOO LATE\nHowever, the two students responsible for drafting tlie pelilion. Harry\nWolfe and Martin Edwards, said yesterday that they \"realize it is too late\nto change the arrangement now\" bu'\nthey \"hope to influence departmen'\nheads to discount\u2014or at least give\nthe lesser consideration to\u2014the mid\nterm exams held this fall.\"\nThe petition was forwarded yesterday to department heads who, Edwards\nreport, are \"more or less sympnthet'c\"\nwith  the  petitioners'  cause.\nSigned by 50 of the 60-odd class\nmembers, the petition reads as follows:\nNEW  SYSTEM\n4-> .. .\u2014\nrecently on the campus will be incorporated in a brief to be sent to\nevery BC member of parliament. In\naddition, the action taken will be\nrought up for support from otner\nuniversities at the conference this\nmonth  of Canadian  student-veterans.\nThe  branch  decided  to concentrate\non obtaining grant increases for married veterans with children.\nHIGHER GRANTS\nHowever, the Branch will continue\nto support efforts to obtain increase^\nfor  other  classes  of  veterans.\nt'tuarl Chambers reported to t'.r-\nmi-eli: '.' n his conference will) Min\n\u25a0sier of YotenriV Affairs, Tan Mae-\nK-iai :ia. He said, the min; Ser lr-,1\nlist\"iied e-irefully l< Ihe T crSan's ca \u25a0\u25a0\nand had promix d thai th,- pa' -!\n'anceh!   up   veould   ha   inve.-l i-Jalei!\nThe mu ting pas erl a, : c sahs km\n'asking for im leases for all vetcan.s\nwith unemployable dependents, :i;. ;\nsii pa-ling the Canadian Legion and\nother organizations in their requests\nfar increases in the rales of (lis I 11,ty\n1 rnsions, burnt out pensions and\nwidows' pensions.\nAMS Office Sells\nUBC Xmas Cards\nStocked for the first time by tlie\nAMS, a distinctive Yuletide greeting card, bearing a picture of the\nBrock Hall, will be available to students at the AMS office.\nThese cards, the first of their kind\nto be earieel en the campus, are being\nsold to supplement those already being\ndistributed   in   the   Bookstore.\nIn addition to the cards, the AMS\nwishess to announce that they have\nquantitities of sheet music and recordings of 'Hail UBC,\" as well as the\nnew university nlaques. These also\nmoy be purchased at the AMS office.\nRadio Society\nAsks Air Time\nFor 'Culture'\nMusicians Union\nCuts Night Show;\nStations Comply\nUBC    Radio    Society,    now\nAlthough first sod has already been turned for UBC's war\nmemorial gymnasium, the half-million dollar structure may be\nmoved to another location on the campus.\nThe war memorial planning commit- \u00ab\ntee,  made up of students, staff and\nother interested persons, has asked for\nthe change.\nFIRST GYM FAVORED\nThe committee announced Wednesday it has requested that the site of\nthe proposed structure be altered\ncompletely cut off from the I fi.om University Boulevard near West-\nuse of evening time on Van- brook Camp to the plot of land where\ncouver stations, today demand-  *\u00bb present gym now stands.\nod  that  the Vancouver Musi-     Its rec*uest wil1 be Passed on to the\ntt   \u2022        , a t-it \\ .,   ..      war memorial's Board of Trustees, the\ncians Union (AFL) permit the ^ authorltyi\nbroadcasting   of   a   University >   The planning committee has object-\nmusical    programme     on    it^ ed to the view which would be seen\nprogramme    on\n\"cultural merits.\"\nFollowing a union  ban  on  amateu\nmusicians  broadcasting  after   7   p.n,\nRadio  Society  President  Ernest   Perrault attempted Wednesday to obtain\nradio time between 6 and 7 p.m.\nHe reported, however, that no time\nwas available between those horns f;\nMusic     from     Varsity,   the   studene\nbroadcast which touched off the dispute.\nThis will shut the program off all\nstations during evening hours, despite\nan earlier offer from one station to\nair the student show at 9:30 p.m.\nPerrault said he will ask today\nthrough A. E. Jamieson, secretary -\nmanager of the union, that \"Music\nfrom Varsity\" be permitted on the\nair because of its cultural value.\nMr. Jamieson told Tlie Daily Ubyssey his union wm attempting to \"help\nthese boys\" but that \"it is not usual\nto speak to the press while negotiations are continuing.\"\nUBC Students\nRepresented\nAt SCM Meet\nTwenty-four students, under\nthe chairmanship of Stu Porteous, will attend the North\nAmerican Conference on Christian Frontiers to be held at the\nfrom a \"memorial window\" to be in- ! t'.niversily  of Kansas,  Decern-\nSchuschnigg Talk\nReaps $150 Profit\nProfits from the speech delivered\nNovember 18 by Dr. S. Kurt von\nSchuschnigg under the auspices of\nthe Newman Club totalled approximately $150, announced club president  Phil  Brocking  yesterday.\nBrocking has instructed the Student Council on behalf of the Newman Club to turn the money over\nto the International Students Service.\nNear East Topic\nFor UBC Address\nUBC students will hear Basil\nMathews, professor of world history\nat Union Theological College in a\nspecial address today at 12:30 p.m. in\nPhysics 200.     *\nProfessor Mathews, the author of\nseveral books on eastern affairs is\nto speak on \"The riddle of the near\neast.\"\nThe meeting is sponsored jointly\nbv ll'.e United Nations Snricty and tin\nfnlernnHnnal   Relations   Club.\nunder\nets New Deadline\nTalented sludents have less (ban\ntwo weeks left to submit their worir\nfor thi.s year's second issue of Thi-\nThunderbird campus mafTazine which\nwas a sellout in November.\nIn a reminder to .students that tbe\ndeadline is December If), Editor John\nWardroper listed tho following requirements;\nShort stories, preferably about l\"'Vt\nwords; .sketches and articles, preferably 500 to 15(10 words; poems, \"sennits\" or light, short lengths preferred:\nand  cartoons.\n\"Readino; the November issue will\ngive an idea of the magazine's level,\"\nhe said.\n\"Although The Thunderbird has\nbeen described in one quarter as rf\n'pulp' quality, please send your Thr'l-\nling Western or Romatie Love stories\nelsewhere.\" he said.\nContributions, with name and address indicated, should be left at The\nThunderbird desk in the north basement of Brock Hall.\nstalled   in   the   new   gymnasium.   It\nwould   look   out,   it   is   said,   on   the\nstadium, and women's residences.\nVIEW WANTED\nInstead, the committee wants the\nwindow to look over Howe Sound\nfrom the corner of the Main Mall and\nMarine Drive, near the Faculty Club.\nThe committee also feels that the\nsite near UBC's present gymnasium\nwould be \"more central\" to student\nactivity.\nber 27 to' January 1. officials\nof the Student Christian Movement announced Wednesday.\nStudents plan to leave V: ncouver\nvia Great Northern Railway's \"Empire Builder\" December 24, for\nLawrence where the University is\nlocated,\nStudents pay one third of their expenses, the remainder being paid by\nthe Student Christian Association of\nUSA and  the  SCM of Canada.\nThe   action   comes   as   a   complete\nreversal   of  plans  which   seemed   to  THOUSANDS ATTEND\nhave  been put  into  operation  when j    The   conference   described   as   \"the\nHon. E. C. Carson, minister of public   largest youth gathering in North Art>\nworks,  turned the first  sod  for  the   erica\u00bb win feature discussion on \"the\ngymnasium at the site which has now '\ndrawn fire from the group. j\nLEGION  PROPOSALS I\nTheir action stemmed from proposals\nformulated   by    the UBC Canadian I\nLegion,   which   first   asked   for   the I\nalteration in plans. '\nThe legion listed the old gymnasium\nsite as its first choice, with the ori- !\nginal plan as its second  choice. |\nThe proposed new site is bounded\nby the Main Mall, East Mall, Brock\nRoad and Marine Drive.\nUBC 'HAMS' CUT\nCAMPUS ACTIVITY\nCompetition between the university's short wave transmitter and sens-\native equipment of the physics department is expected to be eliminated\nby the first of next year.\nThe station of the UBC Amateur\nRadio Society, VE7ACS, has been\njinxing intricate vacuum tube voltmeters used in physics laboratories\nhoused in nearby army huts.\nworld today and the task of the\nChristian Faith.\" Two thousand delegates are expected to attend from\nall parts of the continent.\nDevotional services will be led by\nDr. K, H. Ting. Discussions will feature Dr. T. Z. Koo, who spoke to\nUBC students at West Point Grey\nUnited Church  last year.\nOfficials of the leading Protestant\nChurches and the foreign and home\nmission services will be in attendance.\nThe gathering embraces all Protestant denominations of the Christian\nFaith.\nBritish Columbia will also be represented by two delegates from Victoria College, delegations across\nCanada having been selected on the\nbasis of enrolment in each university\nto be represented.\nFourteen other colleges and universities throughout the Dominion\nare sending students to the Kansas\n^onffcrence. The total number of\nCanadian representatives will be approximately   four   hundred.\nUBC Instructors Write Musical Comedy\nSONGWRITER Norm Campbell and scriptwriter Eric Nico!\nhold a conference with CBC songstress Juliette about then-\nforthcoming musical comedy \"Oh Please, Louise,\" scheduled\nfor production on the Trans-Canada network of the CBC\nThursday, December 11 at 9:00 p.m,\nCampbell, seated at left, an instructor in the Physics department, wrote for the popular CBC \"Summer Romance\" show\nlast summer, Nicol, English lecturer, center, adds another\ntriumph *to his ever-increasing list of achievements, HLs first\nbook of humorous essays was published in Toronto last week.\nSetting of the humorous epic is a highly improbable summer\nresort on the B.C. coast. PAGE 2\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nThursday, December 4, 1947\nThe Daily Ubyssey\nMember Canadian University Press\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail,, Post Office Dept., Ottawa. Mail Subscriptions \u2014 $2.50 per year\nPublished throughout the university year by the Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society of the\nUniversity of British Columbia\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nEditorial opinions expressed herein are those of the editorial  staff  of  The   Daily   Ubyssey   and   not   necessarily\nthose of the Alma Mater Society nor of the University.\nOffices in Brock Hall. Phone: ALma 1624\n\u2022 \u2022 *\nFor display advertising phone KErrisdale 1811\nEDITOR-IN-CHIEF    ....     DONALD FERGUSON\nMANAGING EDITOR   ....   LAURIE DYER\nGENERAL STAFF: Cop;, Editor, Ron Haggart; News Editor,   Tore   Larssen;   Features   Editor,   Geoige   Robertson,\nPhotography Director, Bob Cave: Sports Editor, Dick Blockberger.\nCITY EDITOR THIS ISSUE JOAN GRIMMETT\nASSOCIATE EDITOR, HAL TENNANT      *\nMERRY HUMBUG\nIn the upper left hand corner of page\none of this edition of The Daily Ubyssey you\nwill see in small type the significant note:\n\"Number 40.\"\nThis indicates that exactly one half of\nthe scheduled regular issues of The Daily\nUbyssey have already seen the light of day,\nThe significance, of course, is that this is\nthe last issue before the Christmas holiday\nseason. The next sheet is not due until January 6.\nThis brings us to the point where it is\ncustomary for the Publications Board to wish\na very Merry Christmas and a Happy New\nYear to our readers.\nTransfused with the rosy glow of Christmas spirit, we would like to wish an especially\nMerry Christmas to several campus groups\nwith whom The Daily Ubyssey has been closely associated during the past four months.\nFirst of all\u2014A Very Merry Christmas to\nthe boys of the Applied Science faculty, to\ntheir executive, and to Mr. Ron Grantham\nwho besides struggling under the heavy load\nof administering to his sometimes a little un\nruly boys has, for the past two weeks, been\nClassified Ad editor of our board.\nSecondly\u2014an equally Merry Christmas\nto the members of the Undergraduate Societies Committee, We will even go so far as to\nwish Rosemary Hodgins, their chairman, a\nMerry Christmas\u2014she's not altogether bad.\nFor all their suppression of the freedom\nof speech and locked doors we wish to extend\nour best wish to the members of Student\nCouncil . . . all twelve of them. To Stuart\nPorteous who thinks that the Ubyssey is immoral. To Grant Livingstone who thinks\nthat the Ubyssey is too free. To Bob Harwood\nwho thinks that the Ubyssey costs too much.\nTo Rosemary Hodgins who thinks that the\nUbyssey distorts. To Nora Clarke who thinks\nthe Ubyssey is peachy. And to Taddy Knapp\nwho doesn't think,\nFinally we wish a Merry Christmas to\nall our readers who have jostled each other,\nabout in the bus stop and in the quad every\nTuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday\nmorning to scoop up their daily ration of\ntruth.\nOn The Wagon\nwith DON STAINSBY\nOur second year En-\nCHRISTMAS gineers   have   shown   a\nEXAMS spark    of    intelligence.\nThey have taken the\ninitiative in an overdue fight with the administration. They are asking the university\nto return to the previous system of formal\nChristmas exams.\n\u2022\nLong the blight of every undergrad,\nChristmas exams were looked upon as insufferable, undesirable and unnecessary. Apparently the powers that be got to thinking\nin the same vein, for early this year, following\nweeks of the annual rumours, the announcement was made that no formal exams would\nbe held.\nIn their place, it was announced, there\nwould be short, informal term or mid-term\ntests which would take place at the discretion\nof instructors and departments concerned.\nThe announcement was, at first, hailed\nwith much enthusiasm by most students.\nThere were a few, however, who, prophetic\nsouls, saw through the mist into the forthcoming round of inconvenience and confusion\nthat would inevitably result from the proposed plan.\nBut the rest plodded unwarily on, happy\nwith the thought that they would never really\nhave to get down to work until some indefinite\ntime in the spring. Most didn't even think\nabout the midterms, and the few who did\nwondered \u2014 and still wonder \u2014 just what\nstress, if any, would be put upon the grades\nreceived in them.\nWhat has resulted\nmay be hailed as the\ngreatest nightmare this\nside of Dante's Inferno.\nTests have piled upon tests. Essays have been\ndelayed. Study schedules have become a\nlaughing stock, usually thrown out the nearest window accompanied by demented\nlaughter.\nThe whole system, so-called, has become\na mess.\nIt has become impossible for a student to\nplan anything. Formerly, many students took\noutside work during the term, dropping it in\nsufficient time to review his courses before\nthe exam-period. Now\u2014what hope to study?\nAnd perhaps a student had decided to\ntake Thursday night off, but Wednesday is\ntold of an exam on Friday (it's often just that\nUNDERGRADS\nDILEMMA\nconfusing)\u2014what hope to study? And to take\na night off is neither improbable nor undesirable. Or it may be, worst of all that another\nprofessor had assigned a \"short quiz\" for tlv.'\nsame day\u2014what hope to study then?\nThese midterms remind students of tlie\nsummertime; they are reminiscent of mosquitoes buzzing around one's head. While in\nthemselves neither mosquitoes or exams are\ndangerous, they are annoying and cause\nmuch abortive slapping in the air.\nThe  difficulty seems\nTHE WORMS to be that tests are pop-\nTURN ping up at all odd times\nand all odd angles. And,\nin some cases, exams are being held as well\nafter the close of lectures in mid-December.\nWhat kind of a set-up is this? Many professors moan about the inadequacies of advancement by exams, and readily admit tint\nan exam does not necessarily show what a\nstudent knows about a subject but rather\nshows whether or not a student happened to\nreview, the night before, the particular phases\nrepresented by the examination paper.\nIn the old, formal examination system,\nstudents had a chance: They knew ahead of\ntime that they would have to keep up with\ntheir work. They knew that they would have\na certain amount of time for every necessary\nreview. They knew the exams would be\ncounted. They knew what they were supposed\nto be doing.\nNot now. And the farce of a system\nwhich is now being used will never develop\ninto anything either desirable or effective.\nIf a student happened to have stayed home\nthe week before the exam, chances are he\nknows more or less what the course is all\nabout.\nBut on the other hand there are certain\nundeniable business and social contracts that\nkeep popping up, and they can wreak disastrous results on a student's grades.\nIt is time for a sane, thoughtful review\nof the whole botched-up mess by the faculty,\nthe board of governors, the senate and all\nparties interested. The students could be\nconsidered too; after all, they are concerned\na Jittle.\nLet's return to formal Christmas exams.\nLet's get out of this SNAFU. Let's return to\nsanity,\nLETTERS TO THE EDITOR\nEqually Disgusted\nDear Sir;\nI am most peeved to find that a\nparticular student \u2014 and probably\nmany more like him\u2014disaproves of\nthe story \"Borkum\" published recently in the Thunderbird.\nI should like to point out that, in\nmy opinion there is a vast difference between the literary value of\n\"Forever Amber\" or \"Lurid Love\nConfessions\" and \"Borkum\". On the\none hand the literature is designed\nto satisfy and compensate for\ncertain desires and curiousities. On\nthe other hand the aim is to brint<\nout into the open the realities of\nlife, even though they may not b\u00bb\npleasant.\nI   venture   to   say   that   perhaps\n.egion\nLetter\nBy BOB ELLIOT\nThis present grants campaign is Ihe\nlatest in a long fight fcr improved\nliving allowances for student veterans,\nnot only at UBC but at universities\nall over Canada and many universities in other parts of the World.\nBranch 72 has been prominent in this\ncampaign. Members attended the first\n\"engagement\" in Montreal in December 1945 and one of the points they\nbrounht up at the conference was\nInter approved by the Canadian Government in June of the next year,\nnamely the case for the pensioner-\nstudent,\nIt may be remembered that the\noriginal system was the deduction of\nthe amount of the pension from the\ngrant. This was changed. The pensioner now receives the full amount.\nOther demands were refused for various reasons. The need, however, is\nstill pressing. Costs of living are still\nrising and there has been no increase in the income that can be used\nto meet those increased costs.\nValuable support has been forthcoming in the matter of surveys that\nhave been caried on on the Campus\nand at Little Mountain during the last\nweek. The results of these surveys\ncleave very closely to the expected\nresults and will be of invaluable aid\nin presenting the case to the Minister\nof Veterans Affairs. However, although the campaign has \"come to\na head\" in Ihe present action, it is\nin almpst constant operation. Branch\n72. as one of the largest branches of\nthe Canadian Legion in B.C. hits carried a large part of the burden, not\nonly for increased grants for student-\nveterans, which would be natural and\nunderstandable, but also for increased\nallowances for all classes of government beneficiaries whom it was felt\nwere in need of increased benefits.\nTo do this 'requires a' large and\nactive membership. It is impossible\nfor a small branch' to cover all\naspects .of the situation. The more\nbrains there are to study and act on\na problem, the more comprehensive\npicture of the existing situation may\nbe formed.\nAlso, representation at Provincial\nconventions is based on the number\nof paid-up members of the Branch.\nThe larger the paid-up membership\nthe larger the delegation and therefore the better represenation that\ncan be obtained. To enable the branch\nto be a fuller representation of the\nfeeling of the student-veteran the\nMembership Committee is appealing\nto those of you who have not yet\njoined tlie Legion or have fallen\nslightly behind in payment of dues.\nCome in to the Office or sign up at\nthe desks at Pay Parade Thursday,\nDecember 4th and Friday, December\n5th. Help the Legion to help yourselves.\n* \u2022 \u2022\nThe Legion Basketball team lost to\nWoodflbre \"Reps\", 62-48, last Saturday November 29th. Bill Gee informs\nus that in spite of the score the team\nspent a most enjoyable weekend. The\nteam was composed of John Haar,\nRoy Widmeyer, Hal Shugg, Hugh\nGabrielse, Brian Quinlan, Ell|s Lindsay, Ian McHardy and Bill Gee. The\ninvitation was secured by Johnny\nHaar, a former president of Branch\n181,\nLEGION CANTEEN\nHM 12 - West Mall\nOpen Daily Monday to Friday\nInclusive\n8:15 \u2014 4:30 p.m.\n7  \u2014 10 p.m.\nSaturday \u2014 8:15 \u2014 1 p.m.\n\"Btgl^est and Best Cup of Coffee\nOn  the  Campus\"\nOperated  by Branch  72  Canadian\nLegion,   B.E.S.L,\nv. J\nthe student concerned was shocked not by the actual contents of\nthe story but by the fact that these\nconditions do exist and are unfortunately, all too prevelant today.\nI should also like to point out\nthat   the   sooner   such   conditions\nand matters are written and spoken\nabout in an honest and wholesome\nmanner, such as Mr. Bonney has\ndone  the  sooner  the  demand  for\nsome of the really filthy trash wil!\ndisappear.\nS. C, B.\n\u00bb \u2022 \u2022\nAnnoyed\nDear Sir:\nWhy in heavens name can't\npeople do anything but criticize!\nR.L.I. Fjarlie, in his dribble in\nthe \"letters\" section on November\n28 does no more than exhibit his\nignorance. Just because \"On the\nWagon\" does not appeal to him,\nhe says that the whole paper :s\nstupid and a waste of time.\nThis is my first vear on the Pub.\nIf I hadn't been a self-styled\njournalist, I never would have\njoined the organization. Only because I thought that I had a spark\nof writing talent did I come down\nto the north basement of the\nBrock.\nMr. Fjarlie apparently is also a\nself-styled journalist, otherwise he\nnever would have undertaken the\ntask of writing to the editor. The\nreason that he is not on the Pub\nis either because he's just too\ndamn lazy, or he's afraid that\nhe'll be shown up as a writer of\ninferior ability.\nNo, nobody asked us to work\na. hard as we do, and if this attitude of Mr. Fjarlie's is the only\nthanks we are going to get, to hell\nwith the whole thing. We \u00aban all\ntake honors in English and apply\nthe \"blood, sweat, and tears\" usually spent on the papers, on the\nstudying, and all come up with\nfirst class honors.\n\"Annoyed''\nCoffee co*\n\"YES, GORDON, that's right. And tea comes\nfrom Ceylon, sugar from the West Indies.\nCanada imports all sorts of goods from\ncountries all over the world.\"\n\"But Canada not only buys abroad, Gordon,\nshe sells abroad, too... Grain and lumber\nand fish and fruit. . . manufactured goods\nand raw materials ...\"\nAll the complex operations involved in\nforeign trade call for the use of bank credit,\nforeign exchange, world market information and collections \u2014 vital services performed by Canada's banks.\nSPONSORED     \u00bbY     YOUt     IANK lursday, December 4, 1947\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nPAGE 3\nieneva-Born Architect\nleads New Department\nHow many buildings can be situated on a given area so that\nfach receives three hours of sunlight per day at a certain time\n|f year?\nProblems such as this are what students in Professor\nFrederick Lasserre's Department of Architecture have to con-\nlend with.\nI Professor Frederick Lasserre, wai\nDrn in Geneva, Switzerland, and\name to Canada in 1921.   He graduated\n1934 from the University of Toronto\nHth   a   Batchelor    of    Architecture\negree and continued his post gradu-\nte studies  at Zurich,\n| For four years, Prof. Lasserre was\npractising   architect   with   'Tecton'\nLondon. While with this firm, he\nfcsigned many buildings, centres and\nardens,  as well  as  being  co-author\na book entitled   \"Planned ARP.\"\ntAINED IN ENGLAND\nI Prof.    Lasserre,    who   returned   to\nlanada in  1940, claims that England\nwhere he received his \"real train-\n[g\" and he would have stayed there\nthe war had not broken out.\nI The main object of the department\n|dd Prof. Lasserre, \"is to bring to the\nnpus more fine art, particularly\nsual art; also to improve the stand-\ntd of architecture in Vancouver, al-\nkough the standard is higher here\ntan anywhere in Canada.\"\n| \"Community and town planning are\nbiggest   roles   in   the   city   and\nin the province our role is regional\nplanning with utilization of our natural heritage.\"\nThe utilization of our heritage is\nbeing neglected, inferred Prof. Lasserre. For example he cites that\n\"Many houses are built on the best\nagricultural land in the province and\nit is wasted.\"\nAn eye to the surroundings is advocated   by   him   so   that   buildings,\nroads  and  other  construction  forms\nwill not be a blot on the landscape,\n87 STUDENTS\nThe department at present has 87\nstudents of which seven are third\nyear; fourth and fifth years are as\nyet unfilled owing to the newness\nof the department,\nLOST\nTUESDAY 25th, JN ARMORY Parker\n\"51\" fountain pen. Black barrel and\ngold cap. Please return to AMS oi\nphone Ted, MArine 3787. Reward.\nBLUE WATERMAN'S PEN-without\ntop. Please phone HAst. 0573.\nModern kitchens end launciry rooms o.e the workshops of\nthe home. They should be designed to serve the house-\nwife ... to make her work easier, more pleasant.\nTo make kitchen and laundry planning easier and the\nresulting workshops more practical, B.C. Electric, through\nthe Home Service Center, will prepare plans (or practical\nkitchens and laundry rooms. Before you build or remodel,\nconsult the Home Service Center for a better planned,\nmore useful kitchen and laundry room. This service is\nfree, of course.\nsans\n\"'W,\nYW'WVWX\nNW \\.\n* B347U\nFashion favorite of the week\nby MAXINE\nI wish I was a muskrat\nWithout my head or paws;\n--Then I'd have a fur coat\nJust as nice as LOIS SHAW's.\nforest mink shade muskrat flank . . . $325\n\u2022\nDAVID SPENCER\nLIMITED PAGE 4\nTHE DAILY  UBYSSEY\nThursday, December 4, IS\nName Of UBC 'Open Sesame7\nTo East, Says ISS Delegate\nBy HAL TENNANT\n\"UBC\" and the name of Dr. N. A. M. MacKenzie are two\nmagical words to keep in mind if you ever make a trip back east.\nThat's the advice of Bob Currie, who represented UBC at\nthe recent Canadian conference of the International Student\nService at Toronto. *\nIn fact, Currie said, we got a warm*\t\nCivic Officials\nTo Speak Monday\nSpeakers from the Civic Improvement Committee, the CCF Reform\nCommittee, and tho Non-Partisan\nAssociation will be presented in the\nAuditorium, Monday, December 8, at\n12:30 under auspices of the SPC.\nTheir speeches are to be limited from\nseven to ten minutes duration. After\nthey have delivered their talks questions will be invited from the floor.\nSPC officials explain that they present these speakers, the second of the\nseries, as one of their duties to the\nstudent body.\n-reception all round, except for the\nweather. And even the weatherman\nhimself put on a good performance\nright up until Currie and UBC's other\ndelegate, Sue Young, had to return\nhome. ^\nCurrie was \"amazed\" and \"overwhelmed\" at the words of praise easterners had for his University and its\nfamous President. One delegate, he\nsaid, pumped his arm enthuiastically\njust the the mere mention of UBC.\nEXPAND ACTIVITY\n\u2022Sixteen Canadian universities were\nrepresented at the three-day conference, the results of which, in Currie's\nopinion, should do much to expand\nand co-ordinate ISS activities in Canadian universities.\nStudent apathy toward their movement came under discussion at the\nmeeting in the Ajax division of the\nUniversity of Toronto.\nThis apathy, the meeting decided,\nwas probably due to the fact that up\nto the present the ISS program has\nbeen largely \"take,\" with little \"give\".\nConsequemtty, the group spent much\ntime in drafting resolutions to further\nthe cultural scope of ISS work. Included in the program for the future\nare student tours throughout many\nparts of the world, the purpose of\nwhich is to familiarize the travelers\nwith culture and society of foreign\ncountries.\nUBC delegates attribute their gratifying reception to the exchange of\nideas which has been taking place\nbetween eastern and western universities during te past two or three\nyears.\nBOUQUET FOR PRESS\nCurrie tossed a bouquet at Canadian University Press, which, he says,\nhas figured largely in the new east-\nwest unity and understanding. He\ncited as an example the recent innovation of beauty contests at Queen's\nUniversity, an idea borrowed from\nlast year's contest between western\nCanadian universities.\nUBC's political club setup, Currie\nreports, was apparently badly misrepresented in other Canadian university papers. However, he said he\ntried to clarify the situation \"as best\nI could\" for those students with whom\nhe had informal chats.\nFiguring prominently at the conference was Maurice Sauve, the young\nFrench-Canadian who recently received universal student acclaim during his visit tt this Coast.\nSauve's spirit of co-operation, Currie said, was typical of that of all\nFrench-speaking delegates at tke conferences.\nMAKE CONC10SIOMS\nCurrie happily relates tkat tke enly\nmisunderstanding between Freack-\nspeaking delegates was Hie amazement each group had for tke concessions tkat the other was willing to\nmake in tbe interests of unity.\nAlso eneowraging was tke cooperation promised by national representatives \u2022\u00a3 the Student Christian\nMovement and the Xewmaa Club.\nCurrie feels that botk these groups\nwill be of invaluable aid in furthering\ntke cause of ISS on the UBC campus.\nEngine trouble delayed the two\nUBC students in their east-bound\ntrip, and as a result the pair arrived\nsome five hours after tke conference\nhad begun.\nFog clamped down on tkeir homeward joumcr and tke pair had to\ntravel the last lap by train.\nFriday Dance\nGoes Old-Time\nOld time dancing will be the\nfeature attraction at a dance to be\nheld at the Brock on Friday evening,\nDecember 5, starting at 8:30.\nMusic will be provided by an old-\ntime orchestra together with a professional caller, \"Curley\" Johnson,\nwho is at present appearing at the\nTown Hall Ballroom,\nTickets may be purchased at tlie\ndoor, at the gym office, or at the AMS\noffice, and are, selling at'twenty-five\ncents.\nThose who plan to attend are asked\nby the committee in charge to dress\nsuitably for the occasion. They ask-\nthat the girls bring a box lunch for\nthemselves and for a boy.\nThe dance is being sponsored by the\nSquare and Ballroom dancing classes,\nRefreshment\narrives\nwa\nCoke\nAsk for it either way , . . both\ntrade-marks mean the same thing.    COCA-COLA LTD., VAN.\nSocial Democrats\nSeen As Mediators\nSocial Democrats throughout the\nworld could well take on tlie role\nof mediators between Capitalists and\nCommunists in the struggle for world\npeace, Mrs. Dorothy Steeves, former\nCCF MLA, told a student audience\nyesterday.\n\"It ks up to us Social Democrat.-;'\nto prove that Communists and Capitalists can together in peace and\nharmony,\" she asserted.\n''This does not mean that wt- should i\nconsider ourselves middle men. Wc j\nare not. If anything, we are more\nleftist than the Communists. But wc'\nhave much in common with the Com- '\nmunists and we have learned u>;\naccept tlie Capitalists a.s one of the I\nrealities of life.\" I\nTHE NICKEL WORKER\ndepend on each other\n-^!e\u00abSSSfels|F\nIn these flotation tanks in the Nickel plant at Copper\nCliff, large quantities of chemicals are used for\nseparating the  Nickel from the Copper.\nIN THE COURSE OF A YEAR, the International Nickel\nCompany buys about 7500 tons of sulphuric acid and 250\ntons of muriatic acid. About 2300 tons of soda ash and\n1500 tons of salt are used annually, as well as large\nquantities of xanthate and other chemicals for the\nflotation process.\nIn the manufacture and processing of chemicals, Nickel\nand its alloys are in almost universal use for tanks, kettles,\npipe, pumps, valves, evaporators, and practically every\nother piece of equipment which comes in contact with the\ncorrosive substances.\nThe wide use of chemicals by the Canadian Nickel industry\nprovides employment in the chemical industry. The use of\nNickel and Nickel alloys in chemical equipment provides\nemployment in the Canadian Nickel industry. Each and\nevery industry in this country creates employment in other\nindustries. No matter how we earn a living, we are all one\nfamily, each depending on the other.\nCanadian Nickel\n\"The Romance of Nickel\" a SO-page book fully illustrated,\nwill be sent free on  request to anyone  interested.\n'ten lu-Nfe&r-\u2014\nTHE  INTERNATIONAL   NICKEL   COMPANY  OF  CANADA,   LIMITED,   25   KING   STREET W., TORONTO Thursday, December 4, 1947\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nPAGE 5\n'Bird Pucksters Prepping\nFor California Ice Tilts\nDespite the fact that New Westminster Cubs have slipped\ninto the lead in the city Senior B hockey league by virtue of a\n6-3 win over the Vancouver Indians, the UBC Thunderbirds\nfeel that the situation will be changed on Sunday after their\nscheduled tilt with the Queen city men.\nThe game is listed for 1:30 .~unday<\u00bb-\nI r ii'St\nafternoon   at   Queen's   Park   aren i,\nUBC RUGGER\\0 TO MEET N.V,\nwith the 'Birds shooting the work:,\nin quest of their third straght wir.\nand a share in' the league lead.\nCALIFORNIA PRACTICE\nThe tilt will also serve as a prep\nfor the 'Birds trip to sunny California\nthe following weekend. This will be\nthe first of a home-and-home series\nto take place in alternate years, v.-.ii.\nthe California clubs coming north in\nthe latter part of 1948.\nOn December 16th the 'Birds wil-\nmeet the California Golden Bears on\nthe campus rink at Berkeley, while\non the following night, the 17th, the\nUBC crew moves to the famr.us\n\"Winterlands\" for a contest with the j\n'Olympics,' another leading team in I\nthe same loop as the Bears.    * I\nAMERICANS UNKNOWN '\nLittle is known about the merits of\ntwo   American   out.'its   except    that!\nthey  are  one-two   in   the   Californ -i!\ncircuit. j\nOnly fourteen players will make Ii e\ntrip, leaving the 'Birds in the positu. n\nof having but one goal tender, 1 '.v\u25a0>\ndefence pairs, and three forward lines.\nCoaches Frank Frederickson and\nPaul Thompson have decided to stick\nby the line-up which made the last\ntwo starts, winning enra. This >iu.- .;\u25a0\nthat Bob Saunders will rem .in r.\ngoal with Koch and Nel ore! pairing\nup for one defense while Hughes and\nWilde form the other.\nFORWARD LINE FAST\nThe attackers are set up into lines\ncomprising Ycung, Wagner and T.u>\nfason on the first, Berry, Johnston t.k!\nAndrew on the second, and Reid,\nLerbenko and Rowledge on the third.\nSTOP PRESS\nIn the fastest tussle seen on the\nCampus maples in many a he:>pla\nday, the UBC Chips battled ri -lit\ndown t . the tree matched the Clover\nLeafs \u2022ihnasi point for iiiitit tl\"r 1\nfinally bowed out 53-4!).\nCompletely covering the court, lh:.\nChic \u2022; ri! !ii!i had !'.\u00bb\u25a0:- P-mi'i V.a\nChamps stymved, hut the d^ni'v 'ia .\nting accuracy of men such as ex-UBC\nstar Ole Bakken, who garnered 22\nmarkers, told the tale and proved\njust a little too much for the students\nto handle.\nHalf-time had the Chiefs one tally\nup with the score reading 26-23.\nRight until the final \"buzz\" it was\nanyone's cake, as is indicated by the\nfact that at no time in the tilt was\nthere more than Ave points dividing\nthe squads.\nFred Bossons, captain of the chiefs,\nled their attack, tallying 14 points.\nsecond and third mean little\nas the lines are equally potent, having\naccumulated almost identical scoring\ntotals.\nLONG TRIP\nThe club leaves on the fourteenth,\nfacing a two day train trip before\narriving in Berkeley. A workout is\nscheduled for the morning of the\nsixteenth prior to the game which will\nstart at 8:30 in the evening.\nOver the Christmas holidays, the\ntc:<m will get little rest, facing a tough\ngame with the dangerous Nanaimo\nClippers in the coal city, two days\nafter Christmas.\nAlthough the Varsity English\nRugger squad will not be playing this weekend, fans will get\na chance to see a brother UBC\naggregation take on tho lior.'i\nShore All-Blacks in a feature\nmatch to be played at Douglas\nPark Saturday afternoon.\nVarsity, who at the moment i- -\nly enscounced atop the local  1-ei w<\nwill be receiving a well-eirncd  \u2022   ;\nRather, the opposition will be re-e v-\ning a well-earned rest,  for tho ?.' \u25a0\nand Gold ruggermen have noi  d <\nped a contest in the last tw:> yc \u2014\nand show no signs of weakening their\ntorrid pace.\nUBC, on 'the other hand, will be\nout to add the North Shore scalp-:\nto their already impress ve list cf\nvictories. In a previous contest between these two rugger fifteens, UBC\nemerged victorious by virtue of an\n8-3 count.\nHoliday Hoop Schedule\nGEID NOTICE\nAll the memhe-.s of the Football\nte: ni are rec|it.-^ed U, lee pre.s.nt at\na special meetier; to be held Monday\nnocn in the: Stadium. TotDm pictures\nwill be taken.\nDecember 5\nDecember 6\n\u2022December 20*\nDecember 29\nDecember 30\nJanuary 2\nJanuary 3*\nJanuary 5*\nSeattle College at Seattle\nSeattle College at Seattle\nPacific University at UBC\nPacific Lutheran College at UBC\nPacific Lutheran College at UBC\nPacific Lutheran College      at Parkland, Wasn.\nLewis & Clark College at Portland Ore.\nWilliamette University at Salem, Ora.\nPlankmen Prep\nor Ski Meets\nw\u00abB\u00abi.-\u00abKcr^ar'K^f\nNat only will the highly - ratfd\nmen's ski team be entered in the\n.-' v.v.i i:-an Intercollegiate ski tournament at Sun Valley, December 28-31,\nbut also a four-girl team of campus\nv,omen plankstars under the captainship cf Mr.ise- Ewart, top notch campus   eakier.\nWAD UNDECIDED\nThe  men's  team  had  received  definite)   word   that   they   were   going\nyeveral   weeks   ago,   but   the   WAD j\nwere undecided whether the expend-j\nit ure would warrant the trip for the |\ngirls. I\nAs a result, a WAD meeting Tues-1\ni\nday approved the girls budget for the'\n2000 mile trip, providing other Colleges have entered girls teams.\nAt  Press  time Wednesday,  confir-\nmaticn had not Been received whether the other colleges had entered\nteams but it is thought that the\nofficial O.K. would be received today.\nTIME FOR PRACTICE\nTentative plana call foe the team\nleaving around December lfi-19 which\nv. ill include one or two days Jump-\n;\u25a0!\u25a0< vra'.'th.o at Snooualmio Pa.ss\nunder Olav Ulkind. Two days travel-\nI'm\" time will si e the team at their\ndestination which still allows them\nfive days practice on the Sun Valley\ndownhill run and jump.\nEVENT-PACKED ,\nSchedule calls for th\u00ab. downhill\nevent on the first day followed by\nthe slalom, cross-country and jumping in that order on consecutive days.\nRules for colleges require that the\nteam consist of six men, of which\nfour men may compete in each event\nwith the best.three times counting.\n*335r**\n4W\n<;oij>\nw\nArticle* are lOkt. natural goW.\nPrictt tubjtct lo purchaet tax.\nthem are Shopping\nDays\nBe smart . . . make out your list\nnow! Here are a few suggestions:\nMUSICAL RATTLES\u2014If there's a b5by on your list. ;;et\n.something new in a rattle\u2014one that, plays a tune when il.'.;\nshaken. They come in pink op blue S9c\n- Children's Dept.. First Fhmr  Up,\nPERSONALIZED TUMBLERS \u2014 A distinctive \u00ab[[[\u2014\nhave your friends' name permanently inscribed on\nsparkling clear tumblers. Choice of 12, 9, 8 or 5 ounce\n.sizes. Set of 8 in a carton   $1.60\nCOCKTAIL SET\u2014A 7 piece set that has a shaker and 6\ncocktail glasses of clear Swedish Crystal, plus tax $6.95\n\u2014China, Third Floor.\nWOOL BED JACKETS\u2014These wool bed jackets are\ndifferent looking, dainty and warm. The yoke is crocheted\nand the rest is a hairpin stitch. They come in pink or\nblue $12.95\n\u2014Lingerie, First Floor Up.\nMEN'S WOOLLEN PULLOVER SWEATERS\u2014V-neck\nsweater with rib knit waistband and cuff. In wine, green,\nyellow, beige, powder and white. Sizes 36 to 44 $4.95\nMEN'S WOOLLEN CARDIGANS\u20142 pockets, 5 button\nfront, in grey heather and blue heather. Small, medium\nand large   $5.50\n\u2014Men's Wear, Main Floor.\nBRILLIANT     CROWN     SET \u2014 Crown     pin \u2014 plus    E\ntax   $4.94    =\nMatching Ear Rings\u2014plus tax   $4.95    ^\n\u2014Jewellery, Main Floor.      T\nHANKY VENTURES\u2014A story book with 6 hankie\ninserts by Walt Disney. All the children's favorite\ncharacters\u2014Mickey and Minnie Mouse, Porky, Donald,\nDuck, the Dwarfs, etc. are all featured   98^\n\u2014Handkerchiefs, Main Floor.\netf&to\"**1\nVANCOUVER\nMAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS\u2014A gift that pleases the\nwhole family\u2014a subscription to their favorite magazine\u2014\nReader's Digest   $2.75\nLife      $5.50\nTime    j     $6.50\nPopular Mechanics           $2.50\nLadies Home Journal   $3.00\nMcLean's  $2.00\nPLASTIC COATED PLAYING CARDS\n$2.25\nFLORAL NOTES\u2014Note size paper with floral prints on\nthe front. 12 in a box  98\u00a3\nCHINESE    NOTES\u2014Dainty    prints    by    Chang    Shu\nChi $1.19\nROLLIT BALL POINTED PEN $1.69\n\u2014Stationery Dept., Main Floor.\nPRINCE    MATCHABELLI    ROYAL    ENSEMBLE^\nPerfume, cologne and talcum in Duchess of York.. $4.25\nLELONG CASTLE OF PERFUME\u20144 Bottles of perfume\u2014Sirocco, Balalaika, Tailspin, and Indiscreet $5.50\nMUSICAL POWDER BOXES\n\u2014Drugs, Main Floor. PAGE 6\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nThursday, December 4, 1947\n\/4wutd tfo (famjtoa ^\\f<\nd:ck m.ocKiiEijci::?. s;im-i;, Vu\\X)v\nEDITOR T<IU-:  VXE'J  :  B n \u00ab r-u:>uleis\nNo Xmas Rest For 'Birds;\nHeavy HoopSeasonSlated\nJust because the rest of the University is going to take time\noff in the next month to do a little work and take part in a little\nChristmas spirit doesn't mean that the basketballing Thunderbirds won't be in action during that time.\nAlthough the   Birds will be on the '\nroad this weekend when  they  t. .\/\nsouth   to   meet     ealtle   CYa.-.ge.    ..\ntwo game series, they will be :c:u.:\ning to the campus for three home i\ngagements   before   they   take   t.    .\nroad again.\n-Daily Ubyssey photo by Uus woiunngi\nWATCH IT!\u2014The Smith brothers, John and Brian, go throu\/.i\na little pre-game workout before assuming their duties as\ntowel-boys to the basketballing 'Bird..\nTrainer Owen Gets Help\nFrom Young Ho:pSa Fans\nBy BRUCE SAUNDERS\nNobody seemed to know anything about them. All they\nknew was that these youngsters were at every Thunderbird\ngame, running around with armsful of towels during the game,\nand putting on a two-person show during halftime, potting\nbaskets with such dexterity that they drew the applause of the !\ncrowd.\nDuring half-time that night, in the|\u2014^^j^^ getting ^^\n\u2022bird game in the Gym, I talked to I ^.^  frightened   them   but  thev\n4V.\u00ab.  **l*-i\/1o\"    t\\\\a  RrnitVi   hrnfhpm    .Tnhn.\nthe \"kids\", the Smith brothers, John,\n12%, and Bryan, 10%. Brother John\ndid most of the talking since brother\nBryan was pretty busy putting on an\nexhibition of basket-pottiny.\nJohn told me that the whole thin3\nundertook the task, and since then\nhave attended practically every 'Bird\nhome game acting as towel boys.\nGAMBLING?\nThese sports-minded Smith brothers\nhave a system where they \"toss-up\"\nSEATTLE STRONG\nThe two games on Friday a   !\nurday of this week will see lev- '.; .\nmen matched against a  learn   a\nsaid   to   play   a   better   braiau   '-.'   L\nthan   some   of   the   club:;   at   i ri s\nentered  in  the Winco loop of  \\X.\nthey were once a member.\nThe last c mI  \\\\?X\\  j \\J )v:u  ....\nteam  saw   the  Blue   and  Gekl   .;\nsplit their twe gam..- bhl wV.\\\\ C \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\nWashington   on   the   LUinpus   iru.  :\nWith the extra games unck-r  lh \u25a0  ,j\nthat    the   'Bird;    have    phi- .  !    .  ,.\nthen,   they   hope   to   aa:i   -,.'\u25a0\nwins to the records.\nFollowing   tlie   f.catilo     ;\nplays   host   to   Pacific   Unive,-'..,-\ntho first North West Cen.'e <-\u25a0   e ' >\nthe   year.     The   schedule   e:-s   ;\narranged so that all Cenfeei.-i  e   .;:\u2022 :-\nwill    play    a    hemc-and-'eo   e\nwith every other team. The Pael\".\nfracas is carded for .'-aKrr.hy. De  e.r\nber 20 at the UBC gym.\nwith possibilities. The Gladiators are\nalso in the Washington lntercollegiaie\nConference and boast an impressive\nschedule that sees them in action\nagainst three Coast Conference squads.\nWith games against University of\nWashington, Washington State Colege, and University of Idaho, not to\nmention contests with U. of Montana,\nCollege of Puget Sound and an Invitational Meet in Wenatchee, the Pacific Lutheran quintet will be no easy\nmark for the Blue and Gold of UBC.\nRETURN  MATCH\nTaking   to   the   road,   the    Birclimn\nplay the second half of the lionie-aod-\nhonio series with the Paeifie Lui'.-o   >:\u25a0.\nrp ad   in   Parkland   ( is   Jan.   2.\nTie eecend Confeieme tilt \".1 a.\neeasan will be played in Pnri. in I -a\nJanuary 3. when the 'Birds mate. Le v \u25a0\u25a0\n; d ( 1 rk. Tk'.y da. n hi; the roeri\n.. a '...-'e n v. lie ei I .ey \\eill t.iii.iie\nveit'a tho Bea.'e .Is of Wiil-innatle in\nam.thcr  Conference  affair.\nFirst home gair.es <>\" the new year\nwill, be en Jan. 'J aid 10 against\nLewis and Claik and College of Idaho.\nBoth are Conference contests. I\nWe are gathered today to\ndiscuss the cumulative effects of environmental influences, '\nEgbert's audience doesn't seem very\ninterested in that type of cumulative effect...\nbut they \u2014 like thousands of students from\ncoast to coast who have B of M Savings\nAccounts \u2014 know all about the cumulative\nadvantages of money regularly deposited.\nThey know what it is to experience that\n\"Rich-as-Rockefeller\"   feeling   every   time\nthey check on their bank balance . . . and\nthey're glad they have-become\nmembers of the \"Money-in-\nthe-Bank\" team.\nio a miiioii emmn\nSOCCER FANS\nA film  \"How  to Play  Soccer\"  will\nbe shown in the Stage Room of (the\nBrock   on   Tuesday,   December   8   at\nPacific   Lutheran   College   will   be   4 p.m. A special invitation is extended\nUBC's guests on December 29,  30  : .   to all those wishing to see this most\na series that moguls figure i'-  loade '   interesting film.\nGfljp\nWhy not be another .\naccumulating brother!\n, start\nAFTEB-XMAS TILT\nBank of Mon iri ai\nworkinq   wifh   Canadians   in   every   wa\/k   ol   life   since   1817\nstarted last year when the California to determine which of them is going\nGoden Bears were up here for their ' to work from the .Bird bench for\nseries with the 'Birds. John and | each partiCular game. The \"loser\" then\nBryan and their parents were sitting goes to the visitors' pew.\nin the crowd expecting to watch the MRS. SMITH TALKS\ngame just as ordinary fans when the j \"if the boys were not here they\nCalifornia manager approached them would be at a show or listening to the\nwith a proposition. He wanted the radio at home. Here they are learning\nkids to act as towel boys; to take the ' the rudiments 'of clean play and\ntowels out to the players during time-  sportsmanship.\"\nARROW\nfor 8 o'clock classes\nA.M. or P.M. , . . whether steering a\npencil over paper or a gal around a\ndance floor ... an Arrow outfit does\nyour frame full justice. Viz:\nA handsome Arrow Shirt,\nfor trim-fit.\nA perfect-knotting Arrow Tie.\nA matching Arrow Handkerchief.\nP.S.\u2014 See your favorite Arrow dealer today\nARROW SHIRTS\n&$\/HA*r~looicS'MA*r\n^^ USE\nBrylcreem\nL\nTHE  PERFECT HAIR  DRESSING\n\u2022 Applied every morning, Brylcreem will\nkeep your hair looking smart and well-groomed\nall day long. The natural oils in Brylcreem\novercome dandruff and dry scalp, give the hair\na healthy, natural lustre without that greasy\nappearance. Buy Brylcreem in the handy,\nconvenient tube today!\nEARTH TURNS . . .\nOut of the moist, brown soil come the vital needs of life. There is food\nfor living in Canada, a surplus for export to starving countries where it is urgently\nneeded. As an industry, farming ranks second in British Columbia. In 1939,\nB.C. produced food to the value of 48 million dollars. The 1946 value was 112\nmillion dollars\u2014a tremendous contribution   to   the   world's   health   and\nWelfare. ^ participant {n tnis thriving industry,\nShanahan's supply insecticides, feed conn\ncentrates, and salt to farming needs. Tlw\nprogress and growth of agriculture helped\nto inspire the growth of Shanalian's\u2014\nfour-fold since 1939.\nBR5W\nNO GUM NO SOAP-NO ALCOHOL NO STARCH\nshanahan's limited\nVANCOUVER     \u2022     CALOARV     \u2022     SASKATOON     \u2022    WINNIPEG","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_1947_12_04","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0124792","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 of the 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 Daily Ubyssey","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}