{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0125014":{"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":"1948-01-13","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/Ubysseynews\/items\/1.0125014\/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., TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1948\nNo. 45\nPIRACY RULED on the campus for a while last week when\nswash-buckling Commercemen hoisted the skull and corssbones\nover their campus huts. But Long John Silver failed to appear\u2014\nit was all a gag to advertise a forthcoming Commerce dance\n\"The Privateer Promanade.\"\nLocal Woman Donates\n$1000 To UBC Symphony\nOne thousand dollars a seat, even in inflation-ridden times,\nis a pretty heavy tariff to pay for one symphony concert.\nBut $1000 is what one Vancouver woman paid for the\npleasure of hearing UBC's student symphony.\nThe conductor of UBC's new Sym-\n#_ f*.t I phony  orchestra  answered  his  office\nTween Classes. I pnone Thursday.\nA feminine voice made sure it was\nProf. Harry Adaskin speaking, then\ninquired if a donation to the orchestra\nwould be acceptable.\nPleased with that prospect and with\nher praise of the Christmas orchestra\nconcert, the Music Department head\nimmediately visualized a modest donation.\n\"I'll make you out a cheque for a\nthousand dollars,\" the voice said,\n\"and I wish to remain anonymous.\"\nAnd it was no gag. Next day, orchestra President Dave Morton received notice of the cheque from a\nlocal bank. It had been signed by the\ndonor's  bank manager.\nMorton read, \"Pay to the order of\nUBC Symphony orchestra, one thousand dollars.\"\n\"Now we can go places,\" he grinned.\nSubject of Talk\nUBC's Hillel Foundation will inaugurate a new series of lectures entitled, \"Hatch, match and dispatch\"\nin the Hillel meeting room at noon\ntoday.\nRabbi David C. Kogen, B'nai B'rith\nKillel director at' UBC will begin the\nnew series of classes. They are open\nto all Jewish and non-Jewish students\non the campus and will deal with\nJewish customs and rites.\nIncluded in the series will be lectures on marriage customs, dietary\nlaws, the Jewish house and burial\nand mourning rit'es.\nThey will be held every Tuesday\nand   Thursday   for    the    next   four\nweeks.\n\u2022 * *\nRARE COLLECTION of V-discs will\nbe heard at the regular meeting of\nthe UBC Jazz Society in the club\nroom behind Brock Hall 12:30 today.\nFAMOUS FILM, Lost Horizon, will\nbe shown today in the auditorium\ncontinuously from 3:45 p.m. Sponsored by UBC Film Society, admission\nis 20 cents.\nTHE NEXT MEETING o*f the Royal\nAstronomical Society of Canada, Vancouver Branch, will be held at 8:15\np.m. today, January 13, in Room 200\nof the Physics Building.\nDR. K. R. MORE, Department of Physics, will address the Society on the\ntopic,  \"The Search For Oil.\"\nAMATEUR RADIO Society meets today in its clubrooms.\n\"SEEDS OF*DESTINY\"-* film,depicting the moral and economic chaos of\nEurope's displaced persons, will be\nshown in Physics 200 at noon today.\nTwo shorts depicting the one-world\ntheme, \"One World or None\" and\n\"Brotherhood of Man,\" will complete\nthe program.\nORCHESTRA PHOTOS\nTAKEN ON THURS.\nPhotographs of the UBC Sym-\ncrchestra will be taken at' a rehearsal\nto be held in the auditorium Thursday   at  5:30  p.m.\nPlans for the orchestra's dance will\nbe discussed at the meeting. New\nmembers are needed for instrumental\nections of the orchestra, President\nsections of the orchestra, President\ntend this rehearsal to be eligible for\nfree admission  tc  the dance.\nW\nn\nReds Seek To Discredit Legi\nIn l^umorWar'i Livingstone Claims\n'Communists Out To Regain\nLost Power Among Veterans'\nAPPTITUDE TEST REQUIRED\nFOR MANITOBA SCHOOL\nWinnipeg, Jan. 13 \u2014 (CUP) \u2014All applicants for admission\nto the University of Manitoba's Faculty of Medicine will be required to take the Association of American Medical Colleges'\nProfessional Aptitude Test in the 1948-49 session.\nThe purpose of the test is to determine by objective analysis,\nthe nature and scope of candidates' abilities for the study of\nmedicine. The results obtained will be used as one of the factors\nin the process of selection.\nArms Shipments Described\nAs  Boomerang7 By Faris\nHalting of all arms shipments to China was urged Friday by\na five to one vote of UBC's Student Socialist Club.\nThe resolution followed an address\u00bb\nby Rev. D. K, Faris in  which the\nUNRRA official and former missionary to China described the shipments\nas a \"boomerang\" which were likely\nto   strike   back   at   Canada's   foreign\nCollege\nHeads\nSeek Food\nFor Students\nLondon, Engalnd, Jan. 13\u2014Representatives of British universities have demanded better\nrations for students from the\nMinistry of Food.\n\"Manchester University refectory,\nwhich prepares nearly 6,000 meals a\nday, has to serve students with smaller portions than those given to secondary school boys,\" a university\no'ficial  declared.\n\"It is ridiculous to give a healthy,\ngames-playing lad of 18 or 20 less to\neat than a 12-year-old.\"\nUniversities only hold \"C\" licences\nthe same as commercial cafes. Schools\nreceive \"B\" licenses entitling them\nto rations only less than those of\nindustrial canteens.\nStudents are complaining that the\nmeals are not sufficient for brain-\nwork  plus sport.\ntrade.\nREDS WILL WIN\nThe Chinese Communists, are a\ndetermined group of idealists whose\nefforts are bound to succeed against\nthe demoralized Nationalists who fight'\nonly under compulsion, the clergyman declared.\nCommunists will establish a Democratic government in which all parties\nwill have representation,\" he predicted.\n\"Then will come Canada's opportunity for vast trade with China. However, if the Canadian government\npersists in supporting the corrupt\ngovernment of Chiang Kai Schek our\nfuture trade will be jeopardized,\" he\nsaid.\nThe Kuomintang was severely criticized for its failure to check the inflation which has made China a bankrupt nation while government \"officials waxed rich with the common\npeople's money.\"\n\"During the last' year the Communist dollar has risen to 50 times the\nvalue of the Nationalist dollar,\" he\nsaid in praise of Communist financial administration.\n\"In all my time in red territory I\ndid not see a single Russian nor\nmany Russian arms,\" he retorted to a\nstatement from a student that \"the\ncommunists are being supported by\nRussian arms.\"\nScoring the lack of integrity of the\nChiang Kai Schek rule, he reported\nthat UNRRA supplies destined for\nred-held territory had been straffed.\nMcGoun Debaters Discuss\nGovernment Curb On Labor\nMcGoun Cup debaters clash Friday\nin Brock Hall to delve into possible\ngovernment action to curb the power\nof  organized  labor.\nJudging the merits of contestants\ndebating the important question will\nbe three men well-known to the\nUniversity. They are Dean C. F. Curtis, head of the faculty of Law, Aid.\nAlex Fisher, graduate of UBC, and\nDr. Roy Daniells, professor of English at UBC.\nBen McConnel and Stewart Chambers from UBC stand in defense of\ncurbing labor. Opposing them are\nMargaret Mann and Charles Smith\nof the  University  of Manitoba.\nCampus Tories Reject\nTies With National Body\nCampus Progressive-Conservatives will give \"unqualified\nsupport\" to the recent ruling of student Council denying\naffiliation of UBC political clubs to national political organ-\nMembers   of   the Progressive-Con-\nizations.\nHEPCATS TO TAKE OVER\nSYMPHONY FOR A NIGHT\nUBC's Symphony orchestra members will lower their\nbrows a few notches on Saturday night when \"Boogie\" and\n\"Behop\" replace Bach and Beethoven as their source of\nmusical enjoyment.\nChief purpose of the informal production dance at\nThe Gables is to allow members of the supporting organization, the Music Appreciation Club, and new and old members of the orchestra to meet on a social basis.\nOrchestra members will be admitted free of charge,\nwhile admission will be charged to all others attending\nservative Club were unanimous in\npassing thus resolution Friday, bowing\nto Council's stand against active participation in outside politics.\nImmediate results of their action\nwas the non-representation of the\nUBC group at the two-day convention\nof the B. C. Young Progressive-Conservative Association, held last week.\nMembers of the UBC group attended\nas observers only, without vote or\nvoice in the proceedings of that body.\nAir Force Officer\nSpeaks On Campus\nSQUADRON LEADER SMITH of\nNorthwestern Air Command will address student's interested in the RCAF\nas a career, in App. Sc. 237, Wednesday at 12:30.\nFormer UBC Legion president, Grant Livingstone charged\nonday that an \"insidious, Communist minority\" within the campus branch of the Canadian Legion is attempting to disrupt and\ndiscredit the campus veterans' organization.\nIn a blunt, forthright attack which &\npulled  no  punches,  Livingstone  said\nCommunists within the legion had\n\"seriously affected\" the reputation \"of\na very fine organization.\"\nCommunists, he said, had continually\nobstructed and slandered\" the executive of the campus branch.\n\"I am unsure,\" he said, \"whether\nthe  faction  is  the university  cell  of\nthe Communist's ex-service wing, or\nthe legion cell of the Communist's\nuniversity wing.\"\nThe student President made tbe\ncharges at the close of a legion meeting at which he was scheduled to\u00bb\nreply to allegations of Roland Penner,\nLPP student leader at the University\nof Manitoba.\nRumor - Mongering Weapon\n\"'I'he largest legion meeting\" ever~held   quoted,\non the campus went away disappointed however, when lack of time \u2022 prevented Livingstone from speaking.\n\"I had intended,\" Livingstone said\nlater, \"to bring to light some of the\nconsequences to Branch 72 of an in-\nsiduous minority faction within the\norganization.\"\nThis faction, Livingstone said, was\nresponsible' for distributing the false\nLivingstone was * apparently referring to an article by Penner in tbe\ncurrent issue of the Manitoba university newspaper in which the LPP\nleader charges Livingstone with fostering oppositipn to a cost of Irving'\nbonus for student veterans.\n\"This rumor-mongering has had a\nserious effect on the reputation of a\nvery fine organization in other parts\nof Canada where the truth is not so\nrumor  which   Penner   (of  Manitoba) well known,\" Livingstone declared.\nTactics of 'Character Assassination'\nBut, he said, \"this character assassination is a familiar tactic of this\nfaction.\"\nSuch \"character assassination,\" he\nsaid \"has laid an undue burden on\nthe hardworking executive mtmber of\nthe branch during the past three\nyedrs and unless it is checked will\ndiscourage responsible individuals\nfrom running for executive posts.\"\n\"This,\" he declared, \"is exactly whjr\nthe tactic is employed.\" The minority\nfaction, he said, was attempting to reassert its influence on the affairs of\nthe campus legion.\n\"Two years ago they lost their grip\nhere,\" Livingstone declared, \"when\nthey overplayed their hand by running\na full slate for executive offices. Ever\nsince, they've been obstructing1 and\nslandering its executive around UBC.\"\nSocial Work Head Travels\nTo Ottawa For Convention\nA transcontinental trip will take Miss Marjorie J. Smith,\nhead of the University of British Columbia department of social\nwork to Ottawa and Minneapolis this week to address two\nprofessional conventions.\nMiss  Smith will idscuss the train- >\u00a3\ning of social workers from the point\nof view of institutes, short courses\nand extension studies at the Ottawa\nmeeting of the Canadian Welfare\nCouncil, January 15 and 16.\nShe will also attend the meeting\nof the National Committee of Canadian schools of social work January\n17 while she is in the federal capital.\nRepresentatives of the seven accredited Canadian schools of social work\nwill discuss standards of training,\nteaching methods and other problems\nduring the one day meeting.\nOn January 21, Miss Smith will be\nin Minneapolis to attend the annual\nmeeting of the American, schools of\nsocial work organiation, in which she\nhas recently been elected a member\nof the board of directors.\nMiss Smith will discuss the topic\n\"Developing Curriculum\" before this\nbody, the highest accrediting group\nfor schools of social work in North\nAmerica,\nOn her return trip, Miss Smith -will\nstop off at Regina for January 26, 27,\nand 28, to lead an institute for Saskatchewan government welfare workers. \\\nSCIENTIFIC OSCULATION, as good an excuse for kissing fair'\nlady as any, was on display in Brock Hall Friday night at a\ndance sponsored by the UBC Radio Society. The Kiss-o-meterr\nsaid to measure the power of \"l'amour\" is demonstrated here by\nMarg Hodgson and Hank Sweatman. PAGE 2\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nTuesday, January  13,  1948\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\nJhose of the Alma Mater Society nor of the University.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nOffices in Brock Hall. Phone: ALma 1624 For display advertising phone KErrisdale 1811\nEDITOR-IN-CHIEF    ....    DONALD FERGUSON\nMANAGING EDITOR   -   -   -   -   LAURIE DYER\nGENERAL STAFF: Copy Editor, Ron Haggart; News Editor,  Tore  Larssen;  Features   Editor,  George  Robertson,\nPhotography Director, Bob Cave: Sports'Editor, Dick Blockberger.\nCITY EDITOR THIS ISSUE:  CHARLES MARSHALL\nOF, FOR BY, THE PEOPLE\nCaf table controversies are once more\nturning to the annual subject of forthcoming\ngeneral Alma Mater Society elections\u2014one\nof the first unmistakable signs of spring.\nWhen the election committee came out of\ntheir first meeting last week they announced\nthat nominations for the two key positions of\npresident and treasurer will close at 5 p.m.\nJanuary 28. Elections will follow on February 4. The balance of the slate of new\ncouncillors will be nominated and voted in\ntwo groups to follow at one week intervals.\nMeanwhile campus chatter is running\nhigh as armchair forecasters are predicting\nlikely candidates. Although opinions are\nwidely separated, one thing is sure: this year's\nvoters will see a campaign seldom equalled in\nenergy ... or we miss our guess.\nIt is altogether likely that at least several\nof the members of the present council will\nrun for re-election if not in their present\noffices certainly in the next higher notch.\nWhile we do not wish to prejudice Ihe\nodds on any candidates we do think that it\nmay be time for a word to the wise in connection with a precedent that has grown up,\nof re-electing members from one year to another.\nCertainly, a year's past experience is an\nexcellent platform plank, but if the situation\nwere examined more closely we feel that it\nmight appear in a different light.\nAn oligarchic cheque within the governing body could have adverse effects on the\nadministration and could develop directly\nfrom this policy of re-electing.\nThink it over.\nGETCHUR TICKETS EARLY\nStudent council was evidently getting\nserious last week about its fabulously ambitious open house scheme.\nMore than sixty representatives from as\nmany campus clubs and organizations turned\nup at a meeting late last week to be indoctrinated by ringmaster, Grant Livingstone.\nNet result: sixty people who think; it's terrific, it's huge, it's important, it can't miss.\nThe succinct sixty were returning yesterday to their home fields, spreading the councillors' enthusiasm,\nThe plan, according to the originators, is\ndesigned to raise something like $30,000. This\nsum will be distributed among a number of\nworthy enterprises like the aid to China, the\ncrippled children's hospital, the Red Cross,\nthe International Students Service, and the\nAlma Mater Society.\nCurrently drafting the stacked-high suggestions into a skeleton plan, Councillors are\nat least sure of one thing: that the plans will\nhave to be big .. . bigger than any open house\nyet. So far, the program seems to center\naround a monster raffle with an automobile\nas grand prize, a huge dance on the final\nday, a lavish carnival, comprehensive displays\nby each club, department and faculty with\nthe emphasis on the laboratory courses. The\ndate for the two-day show will probably be\nset near the end of February.\nWhile the rest of the student body is\nstanding by, waiting for Council to come up\nwith the final result of its drafting, they too\nare sure of one thing: if the show is to be\nsuccessful to the tune of $30,000, it will demand the complete support of every one of\ntheir 9000.\nClover Hill\nBy GEORGE ROBERTSON\nANNOUNCER: Sam Spoon, detective!\nMUSIC: Ominous, threatening, fade for following.\nANN: The adventures of Sam Spoon, detective, brought to you by the maker of Acme\nWhips!\nSOUND: Crack. Crack. Crack. Scream.\nANN: That sound you heard, ladies and\ngentlemen, was the sound of three cracks of\nan Acme Whip. Only the Acme Whip Company makes the whip with that same, crackly\nsound, that same, brisk report. Like a rifle,\nsays Mr. Harley Farrington, of Oswego, New\nYork.\nMR. H. F.: Like a rifle.\nANN: Yes, and ask anyone who has felt the\ncool sting of an Acme Whip across his bare\nback, how satisfying, how refreshing it can be.\nIn an actual nationwide survey conducted in\n294 State Penitentiaries, criminals spoke out\nfor Acme Whips above all other brands.\nCRIMINAL: I'm speakin' out for Acme Whips\nabove all udder brands.\nANN: Yes, for fun\u2014\nSOUND: Crack.\nANN: For games\u2014\nSOUND: Crack.\nANN: It's an Acme Whip!\nSOUND: Crack. Crack. Crack. Scream.\nANN: And now on to the adventures of Sam\nSpoon.\nMUSIC: Ominous, jittery, bubbling, foreboding.\nANN: We find Sam Spoon in his private office\nhigh above the city in his private office in the\nTerrace Building miles above downtown Manhattan. As our scene opens, the buzzer sounds.\nSOUND: Buzzer.\nSAM: What was dat?\nSOUND: Buzzer.\nSAM: Oh. The buzzer. Come in.\nSOUND: Door opens, closes.\nMAGGIE: Hullo.\nSAM: Yeah?\nMAGGIE: I wanna job.\nSAM: Yeah? What can ya do?\nMAGGIE: Yeah.\nSAM:  Yeah?\nMAGGIE: I c'd also be yer secretree. Ya need\none, doncha?\nSAM: Yeah.\nMAGGIE: Here I am.\n'SAM: Got guts?\nMAGGIE: Yeah.\nSAM: Okeh, ya start now. C'mere honey.\nMAGGIE: Yeah. Y'know \u2014\nSAM: Yeah?\nMAGGIE: I t'ink I'm gonna like you.\nSAM: Yeah.\nMAGGIE: I t'ink we're gonna get on very\nwell tagedder.\nSAM: Yeah, yeah, I know. Now gitcher hands\nouta my hair - yer gettin' oil on my suit.\nMUSIC: Chords - bright, cheerful, introducing\na note of deep melancholy.\nANN: And so we leave Sam Spoon as he embarks on another adventure. The underworld\nwill cringe at his daring, gang-busting*tactics,\njust as you too can cringe under the staccato\nblows of an Acme Whip.\nSOUND: Crack. Crack. Crack. Scream.\nANN: Feel the cool, hard rubber caress your\nback. Like the touch of a flaming feather,\nsays Mr. Forbes McBride of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.\nMR. F. M.: Like the touch of a flaming feather.\nANN: Yes, only one who has been lashed by\nan Acme Whip can describe the tingle of sheer\npleasure,   the  shivers   of  pure   delight  that\ncome from an Acme Whip. Acme Whips are\nmade in three handy sizes: Junior, for use\nin public and private schools; Medium, for\nthe average, all-round sensualist; and Senior,\nfor use in State Institutions. Yes for fun \u2014\nSOUND: Crack.\nANN: For games \u2014\nSOUND: Crack.\nANN: It's the Acme Whip!\nSOUND: Crack. Crack. Crack. Scream.\nANN: Get a lash in a flash from your nearest\nAcme Whip dealer. And now, here's a closing\nword from Sam Spoon.\nSAM: Yeah. I just wanta say, folks \u2014 a lash\nin your living-room is worth two in the bush\n\u2014 let's all work to keep sensualism in the\nGood Old American Home - where it belongs.\nMUSIC: Theme to climax and out.\nMission Books\nDear Sir:\nA check of the Reserve book collection in the Library shows that the\nfollowing ten books are missing, and\nI wonder if you would be so kind\nas to insert a brief item in the Daily\nUbyssey to this effect. We are hopeful\nthat the books have disappeared more\nthrough carelessness than deliberate\nintent, and perhaps the sight of a\ntitle listed in your columns will lead\nto their recovery.\nShaffer-Psychology   of   Adjustment.\nStagner-Psychology   of   Personality\nCreighton-Dominion of the North\nHoway-Making   of   a   Province,   B.C.\nCanada Year Book 1943-44\nCanada Year Book 1942\nPhillips - Marketing\nPerry - Study of Prose\nBaskervill   -   Elizabeth    and    Stuart\nPlays.\nWilson - Fortunes of Falstaff.\nYours very truly,\nW. Kaye Lamb,\nLibrarian\n* \u2022        \u2022\nSentence Error\nDear Sir:\n1 am only a first year student, but\nI can recognize a sentence error.\nThe following sentence from an\narticle entitled \"Swiss Exchange Student To Show Color Slides\" was printed in our paper on Friday last. Quote\n \" there are mountains very similar to those in Switzerland in British\nColumbia, except that the trees are\nbigger.\"\nJust where are the trees larger\u2014\nin Switzerland or British Columbia?\nThis type of error in my opinion\nsholud be watched very carefully as\nit certainly looks out of place in a\nuniversity  publication.\nW. S. Newton\n1st Arts\n* \u2022 \u2022\nArms To China\nAt the present time we are being\nbeseiged with another outthrust of\nCommunist loyalty,\nThis time they want us to back up\ntheir boycotting of arms to China, a\nprogram they are themselves carrying\nout in defkinee of the leaders of their\nown unions.\nThe idea seems fine and splendid\non the surface. Personally, I should\nbe only to glad to send food to the\npeople of China, But what good\nwould it be to them if their stomachs\nwere full of Red lead?\nIf the \"University of Moscow\" and\nevery Communist in North America\ngoes on record as protesting to the\nRussian Government against Russia\nsending arms and men to the Communists, then we too shall join the\n\"Bread for Bullets\" chorus.\nIn the meantime rather than selling\nthe Chinese people into Communistic\nenslavement, it is our duty to uphold\nthe legitimate  government  of  China.\n\u25a0 * * *\nED.  NOTE:\nThe Daily Ubyssey is ashamed. It is\nnot unusual for us to receive nasty\nletters but this time they are all\nabsolutely true.\nLate last Thursday afternoon a headline writer sat over the late copy for\nthe Friday edition. He was tired. A\nstory came across about a debate at\ntho Parliamentary Forum. What with\na negative resolution and all\u2014the\nstory required a little advance logic\nto figure out. He figured It out the\nwrong way. He's sorry, we're sorry,\nthe Parliamentary Forum is sorry.\nTo make matters worse the misleading story was picked up In the \"From\ntho Files\" feature on page three of\nthe same edition.\nRather than publish all the letters\nreceived on the matter we have attempted to collect the more Interesting\nparagraphs from several of them.\nThey all said the same thing anyway.\n\"What kind of stupid nonsense is\nthis\" cried a certain N.N. In red\nink too. He figures he has the facts\nall summed up in the sentence: \"We\nvoted against any policy that would\nprevent labour unions from not loading the munitions to China.\" Sec what\nyou arc up against with a negative\nresolution.\nE. Whlffeti Is right, of course, when\nhe points out that It was all a mistake \"and cannot believe that you\ncould have done such a thing deliberately.\"\nTo allay fears expressed by Jack\nKirkaldy . . . neatly printed in ink\n... we have \"notified our Sleepy\nHollow boys that Forum roundly\ncondemned the arms shipment to\nChina and upheld the right of union\nmembers . , . to protest.\"\nThank  you Mr. Kirkaldy.\nMeanwhile Chiang Kai Shek was\nunavailable for comment.\nEd.\n10 Minutes To Deadline\nTypewriters are clattering . .telephones are jingling . .\nThe editor \"in the slot\" is screaming for copy . . .\nThe \"copy editor\" is putting his big black pencil through\nthe folios for the \"second lead\" ... the \"associate\neditors\" are working out \"heads\" . . .\nThere's News Room Atmosphere\nas\nGOES TO PRESS\nYour campus paper offers experience in\n. . . news writing\n. . . features\n. . . sports coverage\n. . . photography\nDrop in at \"the Pub\" in the North End\nof the Brock Basement.\nTHE PUBLICATIONS BOARD\nWhat Better Way Of Knowing What  Is  Going On\nAround Your Campus\nVISIT THE NEW MODERN\nSHOE STORE\nSpecializing In\nSHOES FOR VARSITY\nMEN AND WOMEN\nVancouver's  Newest and Most Up-to-\nDate Shoe Store\nClapps\nSHOE STORE\n4442 W 10th\nALma 0408 Tuesday, January 13, 1948\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nPAGE 3\nLOVE IS THEIR BUSINESS in Commerce hut G9 where students Dick Crump and Shirley\nForrester have a roster of blondes, redheads and brunettes for Commercemen still date-less for\nthe department's \"Privateer Promanade\" at Commodore Cabaret Thursday.\nCUS Date Bureau Gets\nBrunette For Kitchener\nBy HAL TENNANT\nIf your name is Jack Kitchener,\nyou have a blind date for the\nCommerce prom next Thursday\nnight.\nThat's the name I used last\nFriday when Shirley Forrester of\nthe Commerce Date Bureau promised me a cute brunette for the\nbig affair. *\nI dropped in to their office\nin Hut G9, fully expecting to be\nasked to select one of the sundry\nblondes and brunettes who (I\nthought) would be draped around\nvarious sofas and easy chairs, just\nwaiting for guys like me to call.\nNO DAMES\nNo blondes, no brunettes, no\nsofas and no easy chairs. But also\nno chance of me not getting a\ndate next Thursday night. That\nwas sworn to be on a stack of\nwomen's applications by Miss Forrester herself, a blond young lady\nwho interviews applicants, feels\npulses and generally makes all\ncomers welcome.\nFiling an application is just\nabout as easy\u2014well, as easy as\nlooking at Miss Forester as she\nsits there in the inner sanctum of\nthe Commerce reading room.\nCUPID INC.\nI put down a phony name, address and phone number, as well\nas my specifications for the date.\nBut there was no insincerity on\nthe other side of the desk, for\n,Miss Forester and her associate\nCupid,   Dick    Crump,    definitely\nfeel that there is a need for such\na service.\nParticularly out-of-town people,\nthey say, very often don't have\nthe time or opportunity to meet\nothers socially. They want prospective applicants to know that\ntheir service is no Lonley Hearts\nSlub, but a plan to enable all those\nwho don't want to miss the Com-\nmercemen's big night to be on\nhand.\nFIRE THE FILES\nAfter next Thursday the Date\nBureau will go out of business,\ntheir confidential files will go into\nthe fire, and many a guy and gal\nwho would otherwise be staying\nhome will be going to the Commerce prom.\nCLASSIFIED\nNOTICE\nREHEARSAL OF FULL University\nSymphony orchestra in Auditorium,\n5:00 p.m. Thursday.\nALL PHRATERES \u2014 meeting which\nwas scheduled for today at 12:30 in\nArts 100 will be held Monday, January 19 in Physics 200.\nGENERAL EUS MEET Thursday,\nJanuary 15 Ap. Sc 100 12:30 p.m.\nAgenda new songs, exam situation,\nthe Ball and Pep meet.\nWOMEN'S BIG BLOCK Meeting on\nWednesday January 15 in Arts 103.\nMEN'S PUBLIC SPEAKING CLUB\nAnyone interested in joining please\ncontact Ralph Goodmurphy at ALma\n1874-R.\nFENCING CLUB Election Meeting\nFriday Jan. 16 in Arts 102. Last week's\nmeeting was cancelled due to mixup\nin room reservations.\nGLEE CLUB MEMBERS please register your names and faculty on the\nlist posted in Auditorium 207. Very\nurgent.\nFISH AND GAME CLUB general\nmeeting, Jan. 14 in Ap Sc 100 Next\nweek, Jan. 21 same place Jack Yar-\nwood will speak on rifle shooting.\nGLIDER CLUB meeting 12:30 Thurs.\nJan 16 Ap. Sc 204. Members in arrears\nwill be excuded from club activities\nuntil fees are paid.\nALL INTERESTED in singing for\nenjoyment are invited to Glee Club\nmeetings. Every Tuesday and Thursday  at  12:30  p.m.\nENGINEERS' BALL TICKETS will\nbe awarded for best new Engineers\nSong Crest Design, or Name for the\nBall. See Class Rep. Contest ends\nSat, Jan. 17th.\nATTENTION!!  DAMN YOU!!\nWould  S.   L.   Ramble  please   call   at\nthe AMS office to pick up his Ronson\nlighter he won  in the Bridge Tournament  on November 27,  1947.\n'\u2022THE STORY OF NICKEL\" Free\nShow in the Auditorium today at\n12:30 p.m,\nLADIES GOLD WATCH Thurs Jan, 8\nbetween Science building and Library\nLeroy make. Please turn into the\nAMS   office.      Kay   Loring.\nTHE AMATEUR RADIO Society has\nagain resumed code practice at Monday and Friday noon. All interested\nshould come to Hut HS 5 at 12:30.\ntiem after 3:45 p.m. Tuesday in the\nAuditorium.\nFOR SALE\n51.50 STUB FOR 1948 TOTEM. Phone\nMickey at ALma 2905-L.\n1940 A.J.S. MOTORCYCLE in good\nrunning order, best offer over $250.00.\nPhone 201L New Westminster. 223\nMowat Street.\nLOST\nRONSON Whirlwind lighter between\nCaf and Comm Huts Reward Phone\nFA 7500-R.\nBISECTING SET Between Auditorium and Physics Bldg. Friday morning. Phone West 1539-L-l.\nSLIDE RULE Sun Hemm, Polyphase\nDuplex. R. Archibald cut in ledge.\nJust before Christmas in or near HL\n12.   Phone   AL  2172-R   or  return   to\nAMS.\nLOST IN THE AUDITORIUM one\nblack wallet, containing my worldly\nwealth, on Saturday, Jan. 10, Finder\nplease turn into AMS office or phone\nKErr. 3985-M.       Reward\nAMBER WATERMAN'S TAPERITE\nPen inscribed A. Deane M. Burnside\nPlease leave at AMS.\nDID YOU MAKE A MISTAKE? Light\nfawn dress hat and blue naval raincoat taken from Science building,\nbefore   Christmas,   Please   turn   into\nAMS.\nBLACK WATERMANS fountain pen\nwith gold band, Thurs. between Brock\nand the Mall. Old model. Turn in to\nAMS for Reward.\nBLACK KID GLOVES with bow at\nwrist. Probably in Caf or Quad.\nPlease phone AL 1565-R or turn in to\nAMS.\nA PARKER FOUNTAIN PEN Black\nwith gold trim. Old style No sentimental value. Not a family heirloom,\nIt cost a hell of a lot of money,\nWould finder please return to R,\nBaines,  office  of  the   Ubyssey.\nLesion Favors\nVancouver\nFor Meeting\nUBC Branch 72 of the Canadian\nLegion declared itself in favor of\nholding a B. C. Provincial Convention\nof the Legion in Vancouver this\nMarch by a three to one vote, Monday.\nThe resolution was approved despite\na statement by Branch President\nPerry Millar that other branches in\nthe province opposed a convention\nin Vancouver because of the lack of\navailable acconu.-iodation and the expense involved in sending delegates\nto the national convention at Saskatoon.\nDon Lanskail, who represented\nboth UBC and the University of\nAlberta at the National Conference\nof Student Veterans in Toronto at\nthe end of December reported on\nNCSV efforts to obtain increased student veterans' allowances.\nHe stated that a special brief had\nbeen submitted to the government declaring the DVA educational scheme\nwas \"in jeopardy\" because of the inability of students to meet the high\ncost of living, and noting that the\ngovernment had recognized the situation with regard to civil servants\nby  granting  them  increases in  pay.\nI'he brief called for a cost of living\nbonus based on the increase in the\ncost of living index between the time\nthe allowances were established and\nthe present date. In addition it called\nfor an increase in allowances of five\npercent for every subsequent rise\nof six points in the index.\nLanskail said that government interest in the NCSV conference was\nindicated by the presence of observers\nfrom Ottawa.\nH stated a second brief would be\nsent to the government later dealing\nwith text-book allowances, the ceiling on students' earnings, medical\ncare for their dependents, and educational assistance for the children\nof war dead.\nThe NCSV, he reported, had deferred decision on affiliating with\nthe Canadian Legion and the National\nFederation of Canadian University\nStudents, since it was afraid of losing\nits autonomy. i\nStudents Boycott\nDiscriminating\nEastern Barbers\nFredrickton, Jan. 13 (CUP)-University of New Brunswick students\nhave clamped an official boycott on\nfour local barber shops which refused1\nto cut the hair of three negro students.\nWhen the incident occured, a circular of protest containing more than\n500 students' signatures was obtained.\nThe student newspaper, The Bruns-\nwickan, devoted an entire issue to the\nmatter of racial discrimination and,\nfinally, the student council passed a\nmotion   to   boycott   the   four   shops.\nIn addition, the Council has written\na letter to the Fredrickton Chamber\nof Commerce and to city churches\nasking for their cooperation.\nThe Council resolution calls for a\nboycott of not only the four shops\nwhich refused to serve the negro students, but also any other shops which\nshow  discrimination.\nLETTERS TO THE\nEDITOR\nMore Arms To China\nDear Sir:\nI gather the essence of Dr. Farris' speech on China's civil war to\nbe as follows:\nThe amount of munitions that\nCanada might send to aid the nationalist troops to win the war\nwould hardly be sufficient to Influence the outcome of the battle\neither one way or the other. The\ncommunist army will win eventually anyway; therefore, so that\nthey, as the probable victors, might\nnot be able to propagandize against\nus either now or In the future, and\nthat they might not have excuse\nto be at enmity with us regarding\nthe matter we'should be unwise\nto send arms to assist the nationalist government.\nI, too, feel it obvious the Chinese\nReds will win the war, and, in\nview of this, I agree that we should\nnot commit ourselves by \"adding\noil to the fire.\" However when the\ncommunists will have taken over\nnot only China, but Japan, Burma,\nIndia and Iran\u2014the whole of the\nAsiatic continent in fact\u2014I should\nlike to be able to look back and\nsay that I took my stand as a\nCanadian against the impending\nthreat of Communist World Domination.\nCommunism in the true sense, is\nfine, but not the type we find in\ncertain countries today. I should\nlike to be able to think that I had\nnot been afraid of provoking communist disfavour at the expense\nof standing up for what I believe\nis the better way of life.\nDr. Farris informed us that much\nof the munitions intended for the\nnationalists come eventually in\npossession of the Reds, the former\neither submitting themselves to\ntheir opposition or actually bartering their arms to the enemy.\nI presume that what they are\ntrading them for is FOOD; this is\nwhat the people of Canada should\nbe sending to China. The starving\n\u2022 wretches are crying for food and\nwe sell them guns. \"If a man ask\nfor bread, will ye give him a\nstone\".\nI agree with Dr. Farris to the\nextent that these shipments of arms\nbe stopped . . . may the much\nneeded food and clothing be sent\nin their stead.\nN. C. Cornish, Arts 2.\nMunitions Protest\nBacked By Forum\nRight of trade union members to\npicket ships carrying munitions to\nChina was upheld Thursday by members of the UBC Parliamentary Forum.\nInadvertently, The Daily Ubyssey\nreported in a headline that the Forum\nhad favored the shipment of arms to\nChina.\nOldest Book In Library\nWork Of 1476 Printer\nJacobus Rebeus de Chablis was probably quite proud one\nday in 1476 when his latin grammar rolled off the hand press.\nToday, the UBC library is\nproud of his volume too, but in another way\u2014it is the oldest book in the\nlibrary.\nThe old volume, now riddled with\nsmall wormholes, rests in a small\ncollection of old texts in tlie library\nvault.\nWhen the book was printed, no\ncapital letters were set in type. Tlie\njob of filling them in by hand was\napparently too tedious, and many\nspaces are still blank.\nThe students of the fifteenth century\u2014even ps today\u2014wrote comments\nin the margins of their books, The\npages of the old grammar are marked\nwith notes, and there are many\nsmall fingers pointing to underlined\npassages which contain mistakes in\ngrammar.\nThe aged tome was presented to the\nuniversity by C. S. Sherrington, of\nCauis College, Cambridge, in 1938.\nThe book is listed in Hain; number\n15806.\nMerritt To Visit\nCampus Wednesday\nLt.-Col. C.C.I. Merritt, V.C, Dieppe\nhero and Progressive-Conservative\nMember of Parliament, will address\na meeting open to all students in the\nAuditorium,  Wednesday at  12:30.\nOutspoken critic of fiscal policies\nof the government, the Vancouver\nMP will speak on \"Cost of living in\nthe austerity program.\"\nProgressive-Conservative Club will\nbe sponsor of the address.\nFarm Problems\nSubject Of Course\nB.C.'s rural youth are converging\non Acadia Camp to start an eight week\ncourse in agriculture and handicrafts at the Youth Training Centre.\nEmphasis for the men will be placed\non agricultural problems and the\nhandling of farm machinery and e-\nquipment. Women will concentrate on\nhome economics, sewing, glove-making and leatherwork.\nOther projects scheduled include\ntraining in carpentry, field trips to\ninspect UBC's agricultural equipment, visits to industrial plants and\ncommercial meat packers and farms.\nAge groups for the school run from\n16 to 30 and so far 31 women and 62\nmen have signed for the course.\nPhrateres Attend\nPot-luck Thursday\nPhratereans, who attended the\ngroup's camp last spring, will have\na \"Pot-luck\" get-to-gether on Thursday.\n\"Camp clothes are thje order,\"\ncommanded Sheila Ketchen, president\nof Phrateres, \"and every girl is reminded about bringing some kind of\nfood as well as camp snaps.\"\nThe reunion, which begins sharp\nat 7:30 p.m., will be held at the homes\nof Eleanor Cock, 4022 Quesnelie Drive.\nRegistrar Calls\nBursary Winners\nWinners ot bursaries and scholar*\nships should call at the Registrar's\noffice for their scholarship cards.\nThese should be signed by theih\ninstructors and returned to the Bursar's office at once, in order that\ncheques may be issued.\nWinners of special bursaries and\nDominion-Provincial Youth Training\nBursaries do not require cards.\nPhrateres Alum\nMeet Wednesday\nFirst 1948 meeting of the Phrateres\nAlumni Club, Theta Chapter, of UBC\nwill be held Wednesday at 8p.m.\nConducting the meeting will be\nMiss Pat Mayne, newly elected president.\nThe meeting will be held at the\nhome of Mrs. Harvey Edwards, Sultie\n2, 1310 West 13th Avenue.\nSt. Johns Course\nBegins On Friday\nPractical instruction for UBC first\naid students will begin Friday at 7\np.m. in St. John Ambulance Hall, 710\nDavie Street.\nStudents who intend to write a first\naid exam to be given in two weeks\nmust attend the practical classes.\nVERY SATISFYING\nVERY NOURISHING\nPeter S Mathewson\n803 Royal Bank Building\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\n',\u00bb\nTelephone\nPA 5321\nBAy 7208 R\nSUN LIFE OF CANADA 'BIRDS SWEEP WEEKEND HOOP TILTS\nEdge Lewis And Clark\nIn Hard-Fought Contest\nIt was nip and tuck all the way for the basketballing Thunderbirds last Friday night, and the campusmen managed to give\nthe fans some anxious moments before they finally edged out the\nLewis and Clark Pioneers 60-58.\nThe 'Birds, who at one I'ime  were &\non the wrong end of an 11-poir.t lead,\nprovided the fans with one ejf the\nmost thrilling contests ever witnessed\nat the UBC Gym. The game was\ncomplete with last second do-or-die\nattempts by the gutty Pioneers, who\nfought tooth and nail the whole way,\nequally desperate efforts by the\nThunderbirds to hold on to their slim\nlead.\nUBC TALLIES FIRST\nAlthough the Blue and Gold quintet chalked up the first score of the\ngame, the Pioneers stayed close on\ntheir tail, and towards the end of the\nhalf, managed to draw ahead. The\nUBC quintet which started the game\nwith some really sharp shooting inexplicably grew cold in the dying\nminutes of the first half, and this\nfact, coupled with some expert playing from the Pioneers accounted for\nthe 13-point deficit of the UBC score\nat the half-time breather.\nThe second half started where the\nfirst canto left off \u2014 the Pioneers\nwere hot and the 'Birds were cold.\nAt one time the American college\nwas leading the campus squad by an\nimpressive-looking 41-30 count. Dpwn\nbut not out, however, the Thunderbirds came roaring back to cut the\nPioneer lead down to one point. From\nthere on in, it; was anybody's game.\nMatching each other basket for basket, both teams fought a brilliant\nbattle down the home stretch. Employing a tight zone defence which\nkept the Pioneers at bay, the 'Birds\nwere able to score an extra basket to\ntake a slim one-point lead at the beginning of the fourth quarter. Nothing\ndaunted, the Pioneers managed to tie\nup the game once more with a foul\nshot which swished through the Blue\nand Gold basket. With only 15 seconds to go, Pat McGeer, ace sharpshooter of the campus quintet, notched what proved to be the winning\nbasket, putting the 'Birds ahead 60-58,\nLewis and Clark made some desperate last-minute attempts to knot the\nscore up, but the Thunderbird defence proved to be a little strong for\nthem.\nKERMODE STARS\nLanky Harry Kermode showed the\nway for the 'Birds, scoring eight! field\ngoals and a couple of free throws for\nan 18-point total. Right on his heels\ncame Pat McGeer, who has been\nturning in a consistently high performance. McGeer's 17-point record\nincluded five foul shots which swished home. High man for the losers\nwas Gordon Mills with 14 points\nwhile Dean Semperta and Clarence\nFredericks were runner-ups with 12\npoints apiece.\nSoccer Team Edged\nBy Collingwood XI\nVarsity's top-place soccermen\ncontinued to hit the skids as\nthey dropped their second game\nin succession to Collingwood,\nwho banged out a 1-0 win at\nKerrisdale park, Saturday afternoon. The win gave Collins\na share \u00bbf first place with the\ncampus men, and leaves North\nBurnaby a single point behind.\nThe suburbanites tied Empire\nHotel 1-1 over the week-end.\nFrom the play, Varsity were well-\nworth a win, but the only goal of the\ngame came after 30 minutes had elapsed in the first half, when Stu Wilson's\nattempted clearance bounced into the\nnet off an unsuspecting Collie forward. The rebound caught goaler\nFred Morrow flat-footed and he made\nno move to save.\nJunior Hockey Squad\nTies Western & White\nJunior Varsity, the Thunderbird\nfarm club, played at Queen's park\narena Sunday and left the ice with a\n6-6 saw-off against Western & White\nin the Westminster Twilight League.\nThe draw left UBC a full game ahead\nof the W & W boys in second place.\nVern Shale and Mel Pruner lead\nthe campus attack, each with a brace\nof goals, while Broman and Page\nfilled out the ledger.\n\u2014Daily Ubyssey Photo by Tommy Hatcher.\nUPSADAISY\u2014Pat McGeer, one of'UBC's most reliable hoopla\nsharpsters, is seen reaching for a high one off the Lewis and\nClark backboard. Bobby Haas, looking slightly agape, is the\nother Thunderbird in the picture.\nPAGE 4\nTuesday, January 13, 1948\nDICK BLOCKBERGER, Sports Editor\nEDITOR THIS ISSUE: Fred Moonen\nChief Hoopsters Show Fire;\nTrample Stacys Quintet 55-45\nHot and cold has been the term used to describe Doug\nWhittle's basketballing Chiefs, but  for the  present  at least,\nThe club will practice in the Forum J the heat is definitely on.\nfrom 5:45 to 6:45 on Thursday, prior\nto the senior practise at 6:45.\nThunderbird Hoop Schedule\nAn example of this was the Students**'\nDate\nJan. 17*\nJan. 19*\nJan. 23\nJan. 24\nFeb. 4*\nFeb. 9*\nFeb. 13*\nFeb. 14*\nFeb. 20*\nFeb. 21*\nFeb. 24*\nOpponent\nWhitman College\nCollege of Idaho\nSeattle College\nSeattle College\nCollege of Puget Sound\nWhitman College\nLinfield College\nPacific University\nLinfield College\nWillamette University\nCollege of Puget Sound\nPlace\nat Walla Walla\nat Caldwell\nat UBC\nat UBC\nat UBC\nat UBC\nat McMinnville\nat Foerst Grove\nat UBC\nat UBC\nat Tacoma\n*\u2014Denotes Northwest Conference Games\nThunderbird Ruggermen\nPractise With Battle\nBy HAL MURPHY\nCampus fans weren't overly impressed by the play of the\nVarsity rugby squad in their exhibition tilt with the second\nstudent team\u2014UBC\u2014Saturday afternoon. But in spite of the\nunexpected power and spirit of the UBC team, the cold weather,\nand the lack of spectators who turned up at the Stadium, the\nBlue and Gold stalwarts managed to come out on top of an 3-0\nscore.\nWingman  Joe   Pegues,   substituting^\nfor Stan Clark, whose leg suffered a\nlittle heavy cleating in the first half,\nran over for the only try of the day.\nA convert and penalty kick made up\nthe rest of thp 8 points, with Hilary\nWotherspoon starring as the Varsity\nhooter.\nTlie UBC squad, entered in the\nVancouver Tisdall Cup race, was\npaced by hard fighting forwards such\nas Phil Nixon, Hank Sweatman and\nDmitri Goloubef (whose usefulness\nwas nil late in the game because of\na bad limp).\nVICTORIA WARNED\nVictoria Crimson Tide, who invade\nthe campus for a McKechnie Cup tilt\non the coming weekend, will run into\ndifficulty hen they meet the Blue and\nGold backfield, if Saturday's play was\nany indication. Tlie Varsity (now\nknown as the Thunderbirds) three\nline was impressive as five eighths\nBud   Spiers   and   his   supports   Russ\nLatham,   Hilary   Wotherspoon,   Jack\nArmour and Joe Pegues worked together  like  clockwork.\nPOWERFUL TEAM\nThat the 'Birds, who are currently\nprepping for a heavy session with\nVictoria, Vancouver Reps, Australia\nand California, are a powerful team\nwas underlined by the fact that even\nagainst the inspired fight of the Yellow Shirts they could take it easy\nand still win handily.\nThe game Saturday was noticeable\nfor its amount of kicking out of\nbounds. The New Zealand rule, which\ncurtailed this kicking and necessitated\nmore running, having been discarded,\nwatchers were treated to a continuous\nseries of \"kicks to touch.\" Although\nthis eliminated some of the running\non the field, it also cut out some of\nthe raggedness which resulted from\nthe former continuous milling around\nthe field.\neffortless 55-45 win over the hapless\nStacy's, Saturday night in the North\nVancouver Armories. The victory gave\nthe Indians sole possession of third\nplace in the Senior A Loop, close\nbehind the now-absent Clover Leafs\nand New Westminster Luckies.\nThe Chieftains had little trouble in\nlifting the scalp of the Shoemen as\nthey ran up a 13-7 lead in the opening canto, and then stayed well out\nin front for the rest of the tilt.\nOnce again it was a story of too\nmuch power as the Students hit the\nhemp from every angle.\nChief scoring honors for the evening\nwere shared by centre Art Phillips\nand forward Robin Abercrombie, who\naccumulated 11 points apiece. High man\nof the contest was Stacey's Gord\nLynn, who checked iri with a nice\n12 point effort.\nSummary: UBC: Abercrombie 11,\nAmm 4, Bossons 5, Broadhead, Bell,\nPhillips 11, Raitt 4, Walker 7, Watt 6,\nCapozzi 7, Fowler. Total 55.\nStacy's: Rippon 11, Ray 4, Minions,\nSwanson, J. Lynn, Fullerton 1, Forrest, 3, Johnstone 9, G. Lynn 12, Lade\n5. Total 45.\nFriday night the Indians were equally hot against the league-leading\nLuckies in the Royal City, but they\nstarted too late and wound up on the\nshort end of a 58-56 overtime count.\nBehind 15 points going into the\nfourth quarter, the Students staged\none of those rallies you read about in\nbooks. Consistently out-shooting the\nrough and ready Luckies, the Chiefs\npulled up slowly. Then, with seconds\nto go, Bob Boyes sank a spectacular\nshot from center-court and the contest was knotted at 50 apiece.\nGoing into overtime, the Luckies\nbroke loose once more and when the\nfinal whistle sounded, they were out\nin front 58-56.\nHigh man in a scoring way was\nBobby Boyes who lead both teams\nwith a dazzling 21 points. Mosdell\npaced the winners with an 18 point\nscore.\nRUGGER NOTICE\nVarsity's Sophomore rugger aggregation will travel to Victoria this Saturday for an exhibition match. Coach\nLalthwaite asks all players to turn out\non Tuesday and Wednesday afternoon in order to pick the team.\nCHIEFS SUCCEED\nIN APPEALING\nFRIDAY CONTEST\nUBC Chiefs have successfully appealed the results of last Friday's\nhoop contest against the New Westminster Luckies, It was announced\nSunday.\nPresident Ron Andrews said that\nthe game had been thrown out when\nit was discovered that the overtime\nperiod had been timed Improperly. It\nseems that there was a slight mdxup\nin the overtime period, when the\nclock, which was supposed to stop\non every whistle, was allowed to\ncontinue on Its merry way, thus robbing the Chiefs of valuable time which\nmight have been instrumental in reversing the decision.\nSophs Smother Rowers\nUnder 23-3 Blanket\nThe driving Sophomores left Rowing Club at the light end of a 23-3\nscore carrying glory to UBC in a\nspectacular rugby game held Sat. at\nBrockton Oval.\nA new year's spirit possessed Soph\nboys Grant, Puckering, Mark, Mason\nand Millham, who shone in their perfect handling and complete success\nat bewildering \"the Rowers.\" Still no\nsuch conquest could be attained without the backing of the rest of the\nboys and their continual fight. And a\nfight it was for one of the Club's\nmembers was packed from the fray\nwith a mean head injury.\nTho one sided score 23-3 points t'o\na future of greater victories for this\nfast moving unit, and this they deserve in return for the tough breaks\nthey suffered earlier in the season.\nphi delts7betas~\nmeet in final\nvolleyball tilt\nIntramural volleyball finals scheduled for the Gym today at noon will\nsec the Phi Delts oppose the Betas in\nwhat promises to bc the most action-\npacked contest of the current season.\nBoth of these teams have stacked\nup enviable records in the last few\nmonths, and will be meeting In a\nsudden-death series for the championship. There will bc an admission\ncharge of ten cents at the door. Game\ntime Is 12:30.\nIdaho   Coyotes Succumb\nTo\nleaking Play\nBefore one of the largest crowds lo witness a hoop contest\nthis season, the mighty men of the Blue and Gold put on a\nterrific display of basketball at its best to trounce the highly-\ntouted Coyotes from the College of Idaho by a 61-45 margin\nSaturday night at the UBC gym.\nThe   mighty   men   from   Caldwell, <*>\u2014\u2014 \u25a0\t\nIdaho, who last year took both games | opinion- but many of the homo *r\u00b0wd\nCandom   seemed   to   think   that   the\nBirds were coasting during the last\nten minutes.\nMcGEER STARS\nDependable Pat McGeer was once\nagain high man for the 'Birds with\na 13 point total. Reid Mitchell also\nturned in a steady show and contributed 10 points to the cause.\nThe work of Bob Jennsen was outstanding for the visitors as he swished\n16 markers in a game that turned out\nto be fast, and for the most part,\nclean.\nGrassHockeySquad\nTakes Another Win\nVarsity Men's Field Hockey\nsquad won an exciting close-\nchecking contest at Brockton\nPoint on Saturday, when they\nedged out a hapless India squad\n2-1.\nFAST PLAY\nPlay was fast and furious in the\nfirst half, with Bruce Benham of the\nBlue and Gold notching up the only\ntally of the period.\nIn the second half, tricky play by\nthe veteran East Indian players was\nresponsible for the lone India score,\nKarmel Singh receiving credit for the\ngoal. Lester Bullen, banged in the\nlast and deciding goal of the game\non a fast follow-through.\nUBC  RECEIVES BYE\nVarsity's brother team, UBC, drew\na bye in the first division, as did also\nVarsity B in the second division.\nIn the 'second division the new\ncampus entry, the \"Dawson Club\"\ncombined some good playing with\nfast action to tie a strong Vancouver\naggregation 2-2. Stan Turner and Jim\nRoddick both scored for the students.\nfrom the Thunderbirds to share the\nConference honors with Linfield, were\nno match for the 'Birdmen after the\nfirst five minutes of a fast, smooth\ncontest.\nFAST PLAY\nFeaturing a fast-breaking play in\nto the hoop, the Idaho quintet matched the 'Birds up to the nine-all point\nbut for the rest of the first half, the\nlocal quintet had the matter well\nunder control. Three quick baskets\nmade it 15-9 and the home team just\nkept working up their lead from\nthere on.\nA change in strategy on the part ol\nClem Parberry, the Idaho coach saw\na complete new string trot on to the\nmaples as his first string began to\nfall apart. Not to be outdone by this\nmove, the local squad put a new\nteam on the floor that proved iust\nas torrid as their predecessors.\nPlaying steady ball, the \"second\nstring\" set to work and more than\nheld their own against the visitors.\nAs the teams left the floor at the\nhalf way mark, the score board\nlighted up a brilliant 33-20 lead for\nthe Blue and Gold.\nFIRST STRING BACK\nThe first string returned to the floor\nat the beginning of the second half\nand continued to work the score in\ntheir favor. The score was 48-28 before\nthe visitors began to match basket\nfor basket with the dazzling display\nof the 'Birdmen.\nA small falling apart seemed to set\nin a few moments later as the Idaho\nsquad intercepted passes, worked the\nball around and came up with n\nscoring spree that netted them eight\nstraight points without reply from\nthe locals.\nTwo more baskets for each team\nended the contest at a 61-45 margin\nfor the 'Birdmen. Just whether or\nnot the home squad could have increased that margin was a matter of\n'BIRDS LOSE TO SPOTS\nIN SUNDAY HOCKEY\nUBC Thunderbirds may not have kept pace on the ;ce\nwith their brethren of the basketball court, but for two periods\nof Sunday's game at New Westminster, they looked to have\nevery bit as much scrap and fire as any club should need.\nYet in spite of the spirit, the 'Birds<\u00ae>\nlacked that little extra scoring punch\nnecepsary to beat the White Spots,\nand consequently came out on the\nwrong end of a 6-5 count.\nCondition and lack of sufficient\npractice were the telling factors in a\ngame featured by ganging attacks,\nas well as several pretty solo rushes\nby both teams. Ernie Dougherty was\nthe big gun for the Vancouver club,\nfiguring in four of the six goals and\ngenerally giving the campus defence\na busy afternoon. For the students,\nWag Wagner played a similar role,\npotting two goals and assisting in\nanother.\nSTUDENTS TALLY\nUBC opened the game with an attack that lasted for fifteen minutes\nof the first period, giving the Spots\nlittle chance to break from their own\nzone. The Birds' first period scoring\nwas sandwiched between (he eight\nand twelve minute marks, and in\nthose four minutes piled up a three\ngoal lead that looked good enopgh\nto coast home on. Hugh Berry rifled\nthe first one past Roy Worrall at 8:25,\non a pretty three-way passing attack\nwith Andrew and K\u00bbch. Forty-five\nseconds later, Koch set up Berry once\nmore and the cagy forward made no\nmistake, to ptit the students two up.\nAt 12:40 Hass Young drove a shot at\nWorral, who saved, but could not\ncontrol the rebound, and Wagner\nscored his first from about four feet\nout.\nThe White Spots got one back at\nthe 16:00 minute mark when Dougherty stole the puck at centre ice,\npassed to Mirtle who relayed to Lang-\nton, giving Bill House no chance in\nihe Bird net.\nThe second period opened slowly\nand after Worral and House had exchanged sensational saves, Dougherty\npicked an opening with a backhand\nto bring the Spots within one goal.\nBut, one minute later Wagner took\nex-goalie Bob Saunders' pass to score\nfrom an almost impossible angle.\nLangton scored the Spots third\nmarker  from  Mirtle  and  Dougherty\nwhile Saunders was serving a boarding penalty. The teams left the ice\nfor the second interval with 'Birds\nstill ahead 4-3.\nThe third period was disastrous to\nthe students with Ramsden, Dougherty and Clark banging in markers,\nbefore Young could reply for UBC.\nHad it not been for great goal-keeping\nat both ends, the score would have\nbeen higher and the outcome doubtful, with both Worrall and House\nturning aside shot after shot on what\nappeared to be sure goals.\nUBC DESPERATE\nIn a desperate attempt to tie the\nscore, Frank Frederickson sent out\nfive forwards with two minutes to go,\nbut the Spots held to their slim lead\ntill  the  final whistle.\nUBC suffered a bad blow in the\nsecond period when Angus Reid,\nplucky little centreman took the butt\nend of a stick over his left eye and\nhad to be carried from the ice.\nDRAUGHTING\nINSTRUMENTS\nFrom $10.00\nT-Squares, Protractors, Set Squares\nMECHANICAL ENGINEERS\nAND\nPOLYPHASE   SLIDE   RULES\nAMES  LETTERING\nINSTRUMENTS\nZIPPER RING BOOKS\nComplete wit,    Sheets  and Index\nFrom $2.69\nFOUNTAIN   PENS\nClarke & Stuart\nCo. Ltd.\nStationers  and   Printer*\n550 Seymour St,      Vancouver, B.C.","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_1948_01_13","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0125014","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"}]}}