"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2016-01-18"@en . "1937-11-23"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0123793/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " (3JIj-> ItbgBBpg\nPublished Twice Weekly by the Publications Board of the University of British Columbia\nVol. XX\nVANCOUVER, B. C\u00E2\u0080\u009E TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1937\nNo. 16\n-ft***********************\nj This Week in Review:\nt By r. t. Mckenzie i\nCOLONIES-\nJUSTICE OR DANEGELD?\nSince becoming Reichsfuehrer,\nAdolpf Hitler has changed his\nmind. In 1024, in his autobiography\n\"Mein Kampf,\" he attached prewar German imperialism and wrote\n\"the atrength of our nation ought\nnot to be founded in colonies, but\nin the soil of our native Europe.\"\nOf late, with persistent regularity,\nhowever, he has raised the cry that\nGermany must have more territory\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nd that she lacks raw materials\nand cultivable lands. He hss directed scornful attacks against countries which refuse to give back to\nGermany ss \"rightful owner\" those\ncolonies lost after the World War.\nLast week, two steps of perhaps\nvital importance were taken towards s solution of the problem of\ncolonies. Lord Halifax, emissary\nof the British National Government, concluded hia private conver-\nsations with Hitler and must inevitably have discussed Germany's\ncolonial demands. Then, too, in a\ncommunique Issued last Friday, the\nFrench Popular Front government\nvirtually invited Germany to ahsre\nin the exploitation of the French\nAfrican Colonial Empire. The min-\nistry of colonies announced ita willingness to study a project for opening credita whereby Germany would\nexchange manufactured goods\nwhieh can be used in the development of the colonies for raw na-\nteriala Germany lacks.\nIf a genuine offer of justice is\nmade and that justice could be\nbacked by collective force, a foundation would have been established\nfor the rebuilding of the collective\npeace system. The most important\npoint seems to be that the democratic powers should make their\nconcessions before the Nasi colonial\npropaganda geta fully underway.\nOtherwise any concessions will appear merely as further Danegeld\noffered to placate the increasingly\nbelligerent fascist states.\nTRADE\u00E2\u0080\u0094HOPES AND FEARS\nThe problem of developing international trade ln an age of vicious\neconomic nationalism is one that\nhas keenly perplexed students of\ninternational affaire. In the main\ntherefore they greeted with enthusiasm the announcement from London laat week that negotiations for\nthia long expected Anglo-American\ntrade pact will begin early in the\nNew Year (provided that present\nplans are not disarranged by objections from any Britiah dominion).\nEnthusiasm was, however, far\nfrom universal. The controlled German press was both suspicious snd\nangry at the possibility that this\nnew move waa intended as a threat\nagainat the Faacist bloc or that\nit might presage the formation of\na world tariff league embracing the\nUnited States, British Dominions,\nScandinavian Statea and other\ndemocratic countriea. Sectiona of\nCanadian opinion, too, were vlgor-\noua in opposition at the prospect\nof a partial loss by Canada of her\nfavored position in the British market. A projected Anglo-Canadian\ntrade pact did not entirely allay\ntheae feara.\nWAR\u00E2\u0080\u0094VIGOR ANO SENILITY\nThe Japanese steam roller appeared to have broken the Chinese\nresistance last week as the much-\npublicized Chinese \"Hindenburg\nline\" virtually fell apart. It was\nbroken with little resistance at its\ncentral point \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Soochow \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and at\neither end\u00E2\u0080\u0094Hashing and Changshu\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094and Japanese troops swarmed on\ntowards Nanking. Steps were taken, however, for a gallant defence\nof the latter city, as the capital\nwas formally moved 750 miles inland to Chungking.\nThe Brussels Conference meanwhile stood adjourned till November 22 while the delegates \"consulted their governments.\" Possibilities of very vigorous action further\ndiminished as Japan hinted that she\nwould consider as a hostile act by\nthe countries concerned any decision by the Conference to accede\nto the Chinese appeal for material\naid.\nContinued on Page 8 Col 6\nMcGEER TO\nSPEAK HERE\nWEDNESDAY\nCelebrated K.C.'s\nColorful Career\nBy JACK MERCER\n\"Gerry\" McGeer, statesman\nof dramatic action, and prophet of a new economic order,\ncomes to the university Wednesday noon to open his surprise-packet of ideas on the\nsubject, \"After University \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nWhat?\"\nThe National Confsrsnoe Committee haa aeeurad the auditorium ao that Oerry's \"sllvsry tones\nef a Bryan\" may be enjoyed by\nall.\nThe experience obtained from the\ntime of Gerry, the little red-faced\nboy delivering milk from his father's dairy in Vancouver, to that ot\nMr. G. O. McGeer, K.C., M.P., well\nqualifies him for the discussion of\nthe large subject he haa chosen.\nDEVELOPED BRAWN\nAt an early age \"Gerry\" became\nan apprentice in an iron foundry,\nwhere he developed his brawn and\nhad an opportunity to develop his\noratory, making himself heard in\nthe shop and in labor organisations.\nEnthused with the desire to become a politician, McGeer worked\nhis way through Dalhousie Law-\nSchool and was admitted to the B.\nC. bar in 1915.\nOne year later the young lawyer\nbecame the Richmond member in\nthe Provincial Legislature, where\nhe horrified the sedate politicians\nwith his disturbing orations.\nIn 1921 \"Garry\" assailed the\ngiant \"Rail Tariffs\" and gained\nrate adjustmsnts which established Vancouvar aa one of the .\ngreateat grain porta In the world.\nHe alao beoame a K.C.\nIn 1928 came the Vancouver police investigation ln which McQeer\nexposed intolerable conditions. His\nwork in this connection was completed ln 1934.\nMONETARY REFORM\nThe depression created a new\nGerry. He became an ardent student of economics and politics and\nafter months of preparation emerged with hia \"monetary reform policy.\"\nHla approach to the economic\nproblem ia described as that of \"a\ntub-thumping evangelist who believes in a personal devil.\" His\nfavorite devils are the gold standard and the international banker.\nIn 1933 he became M.L.A. for the\nVanoouver \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Burrard riding, which\nposition he resigned in 1986 to become Federal member.\nTwenty-five thousand Vancouvar cltisens, with a whistle on\ntheir lips and eroaaed fingers,\nsleeted Oerry to the position of\nmayor of the olty In December,\n1934, with the greateat majority\nvote In hlatory.\nMcOeer didn't believe in keeping\npeople in suspense. In less than a\nmonth he had proclaimed a 60 per\ncent reduction on interest on the\ncity bonded debt, reorganised the\npolice administration, called a conference of western mayors, and prepared an extensive program ot public works.\nThis unique figure in Canadian\nlife, beloved by cartoonists, known\neverywhere for his Irish grin and\nhearty greeting, ls described ln the\nCanadian \"Who's Who\" as \"The\nman with the faith of a true convert, the spirit of the crusader \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nand who seems destined to play a\nmajor role ln Canadian affairs in\nthe next decade.\"\n[\n'HUMAN DYNAMO\"!\n'The Blind Spot of\nScience/' Lecture Wed.\nA pictorial panorama of progress\nwill be presented in Science 100,\nWednesday noon, 'when A. Lawren\nBrown, educational director of Investors Syndicate, will give an informative lecture entitled, \"The\nBlind Spot of Science.\"\nMr. Brown contends that science\ncan be applied effectively to bring\nabout a solution of the world's problems. The pictorial presentation\nwill ahow how that can be clone,\nand will include colored stereopti-\ncon slides, graphs, stories and anecdotes.\nG. G. McGeer, K.C, M.P., who\nwill speak in the auditorium on\nWednesday noon. ''Gerry\" is\nnoted as one of Canada's most\n forceful speakers.\t\nOdette, Stella\nWin Debate\nFollowing the resolution \"That\nthe professions constitute a bar to\nreform,\" Stella Brldgeman and Ort-\nettn Hicka of the negative, were\ngiven the decision of the Literary\nForum over their opponenta, Margaret Flndlay and Emily Fraser, at\nthe session held in A. 206 Friday\nnoon.\nFor the affirmative, Margaret\nFlndlay stressed the fact that ln\nthe teaching profession anything\ntending toward the radical is not\ntolerated, therefbre the members\nof this profession adopt a conservative viewpoint which does not tend\nto further reform. These conservative fundamentals influence and Impress the children who come under\ntheir jurisdiction. These influences\nact as inhibitions to future progress\nof reform.\nThe legal profession, as stated by\nEmily Fraser, \"worked for the Individual and the opinion which he\nexpresses is a purely bread-and-\nbutter one.\" Legal authorities prove\nthe greatest barrier when it ls necessary for a reform to be passed.\nNeed for such a measure often passes before tbe reform oan overcome\nall legal red tape Involved.\nStella Brldgeman, on the opposition, simply quoted namea ot men\nof political power and fame wbo\nranked aa aome of the greateat reformers. It was noted that the majority were men of .profession. As\nfurther support of the negative,\nOdetta Hicks pointed out that \"our\npresence at university Indicated our\nknowledge of the fact that in order\nto progress we must have education\u00E2\u0080\u0094and progress la aided by reform.\"\nLightbody to Speak\nHere Thursday\nMr. James Lightbody, who due to\nillness, was unable to give the address on the \"Psychology of Advertising\" last week, will do so Thursday ln Arts 100 at 12.15.\nMr. Lightbody is the editor of\nthe \"Buzzer,\" and the publicity\nmanager of the B.C.E.R. During\nthe past seven consecutive years\nthis company has won 12 major\nawards in the annual better copy\ncontest for the Public Utilities Association, and ls the only Canadian\ncompany to have won such an\naward.\nSong, Yell Contest\nClosing on Friday\nEntries in the U. B. C. song and\nyell contest sponsored by the Pep\nClub must be handed in by Friday,\nit ls announced by Grant Cameron,\nhead of the club. So far, three\nsongs have been entered, and will\nbe heard at the next Pep Meeting\nto be held December 4.\nFirst prize in the competition will\nbe a Totem and a ticket to the Science Ball, while second prize will\nbe a ticket to the Science Ball.\nThursday Will Be\nStudent Night For\nChristmas Plays\nProduction To\nHave Variety\nWith the last dress-rehearsal over, members of the U.B.\nC. Players' Club are prepared\nfor Thursday night, when, at\nhalf past seven, the curtain of\nthe University theatre will\nrise, and the annual Christmas plays will begin.\nWith four plays, eaoh one different In type fro mths other, on\nthe evening's program, gussts are\npromised a treat In dramatlo entertainment. Thsrs will be laughter and taara, action and deathly\nstillness.\nOn Thursday the performance\nwill begin sharp at 7.30. The Caf\nwill be open till seven o'clock,\nwhen the doors of the Auditorium\nwill be opened. Admission is by\nstudent pass only. On Friday and\nSaturday nights admission is by invitation only.\nTHIRTY AOTORS\nThe various casts, including some\n30 actors in all, and the different\nproperties, costumes and stage\ncommittees and crews went through\ntheir final paces Monday night.\nEach play was presented just as\nit will be on the three nights at\nthe end of the week. The lighting\narrangements and sets have been\nfinished, together with the collection of properties for the various\nscenes.\nThe program opens with a light\n\"tomfoolerie\" by G. B. Shaw, \"The\nFascinating Foundling.\" Directed\nby Mrs. D. C. B. Duff and Dr. Joyce\nHallamore, this short, snappy, little\nproduction provides 20 minutes ot\namusing entertainment. The plot\nls not complicated, but the dialogue\nls typically Shavian ln its cleverness.\nTRAOIO PLOT\nFollowing this comedy, comes a-\nplay called, \"The Blind,\" by Maet-\nerlln. Directed by Miss D. Somerset, this production ls a heavy\ntragedy, and la an atmosphere play.\nThe plot la tragic, and the aound\neffects, lighting effects and scenery\nhave all been carefully thought out\nto add to the aombre atmoaphere.\nThird on the list ls a problem\nplay by John Drinkwater. Called\n\"X=0,* 'or a \"Night in the Trojan\nWar,\" the play is directed by Prof,\nIra Dilworth.\nAlthough It might bs classified\naa psaee propaganda, It la by no\nmeana boring nor la Ita Intereat\nand aoope limited to any one period, or audienoe. It la written\nIn blank verae.\nCalculated to send the audience\nhome in a pleased and happy state\nof mind, the last play is an old-\nfashioned \"mellerdrama,\" \"Curse\nYou, Jack Dalton.\"\nIt has been written according to\nthe well-known formula\u00E2\u0080\u0094a hero, a\nheroine, a villlain, a villalness, a\nswish of poison, a shiny black revolver, lots of dastardly scheming,\ncursing and shrieking\u00E2\u0080\u0094and presto 1\nresult, a happy ending. This play\nis directed by Prof. Walter Oage.\nCOMING EVENTS\nToday\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nB.C.T.F., 12.00, Arts 204.\nWednesday\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nL.S.E.. 12.00, Science 100.\nO. G. McGeer, 12.20, Auditorium.\nMusical Society, 6.00, Ap. Sc.\n100.\nThursday-\nPsychology Club, 12.00.\nArts 100.\nChristmas Plays, 7.30.\nParliamentary Forum, 7.30, Ap.\nSc. 100.\nJapanese Student Club, 12.00,\nArts 208.\nDIRECTOR\n]\nProfessor Walter Gage, honorary president of the Players'\nClub, and director of \"Curse\nYou, Jack Dalton,\" one of the\nfour plays to be presented here\nthis week.\nQueries Sent\nOutJTo All\nAll students will receive ln the\nmail this week a questionnaire regarding their expenses while at\nuniversity.\nStudents' Council ls asking for\nco-operation on the part of the\nstudent body in correctly filling in\nthe forms, and returning them to\nthe council offlce.\nStatistics compiled from answers\nreceived will be used in the drive\nfor financial assistance for the university. It is stressed by council\nmembers that students should an\nswer the questionnaire as Boon as\npossible.\n100 NAMES\nREQUIRED ON\nTHE PETITION\nDiscussion\nWanted\nCOUNCIL TAKES NO\nACTION\nCounoil will take no further aotlon on the Issue of political parties, It was dseldsd at laat night's\nmasting, In spite of rumors that\nthey would oall an emergency Alma\nMatar masting for Prlday to explain\ntheir stand. Studenta muat organise ths meeting themselves.\nSupporters of the petition\nasking for a special A. M. S.\nmeeting to discuss the council\nban on political clubs declare\nthat they will have the required 100 names signed up\ntoday or Wednesday.\nIt Is stated by those pressing\nfor an open meeting to dlaeuss\npolitics on the campus that thsrs\nIs no Intention of registering a\nlack of confidence vote against\nStudsnts' Council.\nAll that ls wanted, they aay, Is\na full discussion of the matter\nwhich took on an importance that\ncouncil did not foresee, after the\nban had been passed last Monday\nevening.\nThe question of what attitude\nuniversity authoritiea would take\nif students asked for political cluba\nls an Important aspect of the issue.\nIt is believed that council had\nsounded out faculty opinion before\ndiscussing the clubs, and had proceeded with the ban for this reason.\nThere la a possibility that ths\neontroversy may cease to be between the student body and eounell, and become mn laaue between\nstudents and university authoritiea.\nMost likely day tor a special\nmeeting ls Friday, as a 48-hour\nnotice of meeting must be posted\non the campus.\nThere is little chance that the issue will die a natural death, as\nthose objecting to council's stand\nare anxious to have the decision reversed, and political cluba instituted at U.B.C.\nHli)** Hbgaarg\nA Story of Twenty-One Years\nTwenty-one years ago, U.B.C. students attending olaaaea at the old\nFairview aite, read their flrat campua newapaper.\nFor the flrat few montha of ita existence the paper was virtually\nnameleas, merely being oalled \"Anon.\"\nBetween thla remote beginning of a pocket-sised magaslne, and the\npresent six-column, four-page semi-weekly paper now being publlahed,\nlie, neatled together on the ahelvea of the Library, recorda of twenty-one\nyears of student publications on this oampus.\nDuring the first two yeara of ita\nlife the \"Ubicee\" was a 7 Inch by\n9 inch monthly magaslne of some\n80 pages. It contained a number\nof well-written essays and literary\ncontributions. No attempt was made\nto cover student news.\nThese were war-time issues and\ncontained news from*the front regarding the activities ot ex-students. Frequently there were letters\npublished from men at the front to\nPresident Wesbrook, who constantly forwarded news of the university to students overseas.\nPROFESSORS QUOTED\nIn these flrst editions of the paper mention was made of the active\nfigures and groups around the campus. Even in those days Dr. Sedgewick was quoted alike by Freshman\nand Senior. Such people as Dr.\nKlinck, Dr. Sage and Chancellor\nMcKechnie were well known to students and had already found their\nniche in the university which they\nhave steadily strengthened ever\nsince. The Players' Club, Orchestra, Literary Society and C.O.T.C.\nalso provided a goodly percentage\nof material which made up each\nedition.\nIn aplte of the efforts of the\nUbicee staff, the monthly waa not\nmn entire suoceas. For that reason the publications board suggested In Maroh, 1917, that financial aupport for the paper be obtained by Increasing the Alma\nMater fee from two dollars to\nfour dollars.\nPrevious to thla time the paper\nhad bsen paid for by voluntary\nsubscriptions from the studente\nand waa, therefore, never euro\nJuat how large Ita budget would\nbe.\nThis steady source of revenue\ngave the paper a new leaae of life,\nand, a year later the monthly Ubicee became the weekly Ubyaaey.\nIt consisted of 13 halt-columns, a\nfraction of the number which make\nup the present Ubyaaey.\nB^ch page, of course, contained\nonly the lead stories of the paper.\nStories, skits and poems which had\nbeen the mainstay of the monthly,\nwere still very acceptable and necessary, but the main aim of the\npaper was to print news while It\nwas \"hot'* and, by means of its columns, to encourage all forms ot\nstudent enterprise.\nEach individual paper had its\nowner's name stamped on it showing that a subscription system was\nin use.\nOVERCROWDING THEME\nEven then, with only some 900\nstudents there was evidence of\novercrowding. This is shown in\nthe frequent editorials and open\nletters on the subject. There was\nno gym for students Interested in\nbasketball and other indoor sport.\nNoon hour lectures Interfered\ncontinually with extra currlcular\nactivity. During the 'flu epidemic\nthe students were also without an\nauditorium, since 'flu patients were\nquartered there.\n(Continued on Page 8) Two\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 23, 1937\nTHE UBYSSEY\nIssued twice weekly by the Students' Publications Board of the Alms Mater Society\nof the University of British Columbia\nOffice: 206 Auditorium Building\nCampus Subscriptions, $1.50\nPhons Point Orsy 206\nMall Subscriptions, $2.00\nEDITOR-IN-CHIEF\nKsmp Edmonds\nNIWS MANAOIR\nDorwin Baird\nSENIOR IDITORS\nTUESDAY: Frank Perry FRIDAY: Dorothy Cummings\nFEATURE EDITOR SPORTS EDITOR\nJames Beveridge Frank Turner\nASSOCIATE EDITORS\nMonty Fotheringham Bill Sibley\nASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR EXCHANGE EDITOR\nJack Mair James Macfarlane\nASSISTANT EDITORS\nRosemary Collins Irene Eedy Beverley McCorkell Robert King\nASSISTANT SPORTS EDITORS\nVan Perry Hugh Shirreff Myrne Nevison\nCIRCULATION MANAGER\nNorman Depoe\nREPORTERS\nJack Bingham, Joyce Copper, Joan Haslam, Ann Jeremy, Ozzy Durkin, Barbara\nMcDougal, Jack Mercer, J. C. Penney, John Garrett, Keith Allen, Victor\nFreeman, Verna McKenzie, Ed. McGougan, Virginia Galloway, Katherine McKay, R.\nKer, Eiko Henmi, Lester Pronger, Doug Bastin, Helen Hann, Molly Davis.\nSPORTS REPORTERS\nOrme Dier, Norm Renwick, Basil Robinson, Frank Thornloe, Archie Byers, Bob Melville\n^9vsrt5in^ffles\nPacific Publishers, Limited, 303-A Pender Street West, Vancouver, B. C.\nTelephone: TRINITY 1002\nAll sdvertising handled exclusively by Pacific Publishers, Limited\n________-____s_-_-_Ss_--_-----------S--:\nA MILLION DOLLARS A YEAR\nSometime this week every U.B.C. student will receive by\nmail a questionnaire, prepared by the Alma Mater Society\nexecutive, to discover how college students spend their money.\nIt has been roughly estimated that each of the 2500\nstudents at U.B.C. is worth $500 annually to local commerce\nthrough expenditures on food, clothing, board, transportation,\nentertainment, fees, etc. In other words, the university each\nyear brings more than $1,200,000 business to Vancouver.\nThe object of the questionnaire is to verify these figures\nand to discover how the expenditures are distributed among\nlocal businesses. The questionnaire is strictly confidential,\nand no names are desired, but the results themselves should\nprove very valuable as an aid to creating better feeling between the University and local business men.\nThe questionnaire offers every student an opportunity to\nhelp his Alma Mater by supplying complete and accurate information. The committee will provide a ballot box at the\nfoot of the Cafeteria stairs, and students are requested to\nreturn the filled questionnaires as soon as possible.\nBAD VENTILATION\nOne of the more remarkable features of our University is\nits bad ventilation. Ostensibly the home of the arts and sciences, a few of which might be expected to deal with thermodynamics, aerodynamics or whatever the really corny name\nfor the science of ventilation is, U.B.C. classrooms seldom\nknow the feeling of moderate temperatures. Air conditioning remains a thing to be dreamed of, or read about in scientific magazines and steamship folders.\nRooms such as Applied Science 100 are daily roasted at\ntemperatures well in the 80*8, we suspect, although there\nare no thermometers in evidence. Thermostats, of course, are\nas unheard of as air conditioning.\nVentilation has as important an influence on scholastic\nstandards as many other factors which are better publicised.\nVentilation is a problem that could easily be solved without\nexpense or inconvenience. Sometimes we suspect it is due\npurely to stupidity or indifference on the part of those responsible that we have bad ventilation at all.\nWhatever the cause is, we suggest that students and\nfaculty should suffer no longer in heroic silence, but should\ndiscuss the matter in class if necessary, and summon the\nguilty parties before them for a court martial. As a fitting\npunishment we can think of nothing more fitting or horrible\nthan to sentence'the criminals to a period of one hour in any\nof the rooms for which they are responsible.\nr|EBATES and VICTORIES.\nXJ Friday U.B.C. \"lost\" another\nIntercollegiate debate. This depart\nment has long been an advocate of\ndebates where there is no victory,\nand where the enjoyment of the\ndiscussion and argument is not\nmarred by constant striving for\nthe goodwill of the judges.\n\"Debates have been costing us\ntoo much money,\" I declared in this\ncolumn January of this year. I\nadded that U.B.C. has developed a\ndiscouraging habit of losing, and\nit seems that the habit ia hard to\nbreak.\nFriday, U.B.C. won everything\nbut the decision. Our speakers\ngained valuable experience, the\naudience enjoyed the discussion, the\nintercollegiate spirit engendered\nwas good for the university, but, in\nthe eyes of all, the debate was lost.\nCan't we nnd some way of debating or formal discussion that can\nbe carried on without decisions? Is\nthere not a way of rearranging our\ndebate method to get away from\nthe necessity of having judges, and\nat the same time perhapa give more\ncolor to the contests, thus drawing\nbigger crowds and cutting down the\nannual loss incurred by the Forum ?\nTo repeat a thought I used here\nnearly a year ago, some move to\nimprove their set-up must be made\nby the Forum. Students do not like\nto feel that their money is being\nspent to cover expenses of debates\nthat have, on the whole, been poor,\nrather than good, publicity for the\nuniversity.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00BB\npOME.\nLast year's files yield another\nnote. In days gone by pubsters\nused to dash off reams of poetry,\nthrow it away and dash off some\nmore. I picked up a gem of verse\nabout two years ago, and placed it\nin print for posterity. Here it is\nagain.\n\"FOREIGN SOLDIERS IN\nSPAIN\"\nThe fires burn low . . .\nredder\npopping suddenly . . .\nand longer grow the\nshadows\nlurking behind each sleeping lump\nthat is a man.\nPyramids of stacked rifles\nsupport the\njewelled stars.\nWe knew those stars once . . .\nin another clime.\nHere \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0084\u00A2*\nThere ****\nThe Exchange Editor\nof STORE No. 2\nVancouver's newest snd molt up-to-date\nMEN'S SHOE STORE\nA complete range of individually selected\nFine Grade Shoes at three popular prices\nStscy ARISTOCRATS $4.85\nStscy BRITISH WALKERS\n $5.85\nStscy HAMPTONS\n......... $7.85\nSTACY'S\nLTD.\nNew Store: Ed. Armstrong, Mgr.\n762 GRANVILLE\nOpposite Lytic Theatre\n528 WEST HASTINGS\nOpposite Spencer's\n'T'lD BITS.\nPub phone users provide an Interesting study for us of the fourth\nestate . . . every day we can sit\nback and watch an almost-endless\nparade of students coming to make\ncalls . . . because we can't help\nhearii g some of the conversation,\nwe note that dates are arranged,\ntickets bought, mothers told that\nsonny isn't coming home till late,\nand a score of Interesting little\ndramas enacted ... all by way of\nthe Pub phone . . . John Bird, who\nbegged off hia Discipline Committee duties at the Arts-Aggie because \"he had three essays to work\non,\" took in the Kerrisdale preview\nthe night of the dance ... a good\nmajority of U.B.C. students think\nalong Fascist lines . . . varsity students should be interested in the\nnew radio feature of CJOR, \"Names\nThat Will Live Forever,\" handled\nby Dick Diespecker. Wednesdays\nat 9.30 p.m.\n* * *\nQAF SCENE.\nAbout aix o'clock the caf takes\non a new air, one far removed from\nthe noon-hour hustle and ahouting.\nScattered groups of students slowly pick at food and talk about\nessays . . . the waitresses take their\ntime in Ailing orders and nobody\nseems to mind . . . Jean sits by her\ncash register and tries to balance\nthe day's books . . . the executive\nof a club has supper in a corner\nand discusses policy . . . two professors Hght their pipes and argue\nover the Oriental situation . . . and\nso on . . . after half the lights go\nout and so do most of the people\n. . . soon, in pairs and groups they\ndrift over to the Library to settle\ndown to a dreary night of reading\n. . . and the girls in the caf sweep\nthe ashes from the floor . . .\n\"Fraternity Jewellery a Specialty\"\nFIRBANK & LANGE\nSeymour at\nDunsmuir\nSEY. 2088\nPERSONAL JEWELLERS TO EVERY MEMBER OP THE FAMILY\nPlan Big Campaign\nAmong U. Women\n\"University women, especially\nthose on executives, need more preparation for public speaking,\" stated Kay Armstrong, president ot the\nLiterary Porum, at its meeting last\nFriday.\nWith this thought in mind, the\nmembers of the Forum are planning\na campaign of all campus clubs and\norganizations in which women take\nan active part, and to induce them\nto attend public speaking classes\nunder the Literary Porum.\nBy J. D. MACFARLANE\nThwarted co-ed would-be sharpshooters, whose tendencies to lay\na pretty eye over the sights of a\nrifle were squelched by a fainthearted council unwilling to accept\nresponsibility, will glare with envy\nat the picture of three smiling\nWashington co-eds all ready to \"let\n'er rip\" which reposes on the front\npage of today's \"Dally.\"\nThe three smiling ones are part\nof a contingent of 85 co-eds now\nturning'out for the University of\nWashington rifle class, which again\nthis year will seek national honors\nln intercollegiate competition.\n\"The 86 girls are the hopefuls\nwho are turning out dally for the\nwomens rifle squad, a team coached\nby Major Thebaud, assistant professor of Military Science.\"\nAmongst the many progressive\ndevelopments on the Washington\ncampus leading to useful co-ed activities this organization, together\nwith the Women's Marine Corps,\nwhich specializes in telegraphy,\nranks high, and the girls are creating quite a name for themselves as\nother than drawing-room machinery.\nThese events, taking place In\nan Institution Isss than 200 miles\nfrom U. B. O. prsssnt, upon the\nfaee of thlnga generally, a great\neontraat to tho Istharglo atate of\naffaire In the U.B.O. Alma Mater\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2oelety.\nThe preaent stand which the Students' Council has chosen to tako\nupon the existence of political\ngroups on this campus is somewhat\nrepresentative of this attitude, a\npolicy which is slowly heading towards the definitely reactionary\nstage.\nThe crux of the whole problem of\npolitical groups appeara to rest ln\nthe belief that these factions might\ntake actions that would prove fatal\nto the university's relationships\nwith Victoria.\nIn point of fact to the contrary\nwe recall a press dispatch from the\nU. of AlbSrta to the Ubyssey ln\nSeptember of last year which announced, \"Prosperity certificates\nwill definitely not be accepted in\npayment of fees, room or board, and\nare in fact completely useless for\nmaking payments around the university.\"\nThis uncrlnglng refusal to accept\ncurrency legalized by the government, ln a province where the premier is apt to have Illusions as to\nhts dictatorial powers, has brought\ndown no reprisals from the powers-\nthat-be. The opening of the fall\nterm, 12 months after, found the\nAlberta university making the usual\nfaculty appointments and additions,\nand apparently planning for as vigorous a year as has been seen for\nsome time.\nIf this university Is to dsvslop\nIn a free and healthy manner,\nsuch things aa \"playing politico\"\ncannot be aooepted aa part of the\npolloy of either ths A.M.S. or the\nAdministration. And whsn we say\n\"playing polltlea\" we mean restricting our affairs that we may\nconform to what appeara to be\nthe pleaaure of theae In power at\nthe time.\nFor too long have Canadian affairs In general been affected by\nthe baffling winds ot political skullduggery. This institution is of imperative necessity to the progress\nand development of the province;\nand if the rising generation who\nnow pass through its doors are impressed with the fact that they\nmust conform to the powers of the\nmoment, regardless of what honest\nconscience may dictate, then the\nadministration of public affairs ln\nB. C. ls doomed to descend to a\nvery low level.\nThe Hon. J. S. Woodsworth, M.F.,\nC.C.F. leader, has challenged youth\nin Canada by saying that the party\nsystem ls decadent. (He ls by the\nway, advocating his own party.)\nWe contend that the putrefaction\nls the school of thought behind\npolitics, emanent from the past generation who have done such a fine\njob of piling up debts for us to pay\noff.\nWe further contend that the obvious necessity of the study ot this\nsystem which ls revealed by this\nstate of affairs can only be carried\nout efficiently, and with any amount\nof vigor, by the organization of\nstudents Into separate groups, definable in actual life as political parties, in that these are the basis of\nthe whole affair.\nIf Council would advocate the\nforcing of these groups Into one\nclub we might point to the somewhat questionable achievements of\nthe Parliamentary Forum, whose\nefforts at discussing pressing problems approaches sterility from lack\nof organized Impetus.\nWe further suggest that a strong\norganization of the orthodox groups\nwould, in time, earn a healthy pub-\n\"LET ME SERVE YOUR CAR, AND YOUR CAR WILL SERVE YOU\"\n\"FRANK\" FICKK\nU.B.O. 8ERVI0E 8TATI0N\n24-Hour Emergency Sarvlco \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Cemplsts Rspalr Facilities\nSOUTH END OF McGILL ROAD PT. GREY\nUNIVERSITY\nBOOK STORE\nHOURS, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturdays 9 a.m. to I p.m.\nLOOSE-LEAF NOTE BOOKS, EXERCISE BOOKS AND SCRIBBLERS\nAT REDUCED PRICES\nGraphic Engineering Paper, Biology Paper, Loose-leaf\nRefills, Fountain Pens and Ink, and Drawing Instruments.\n^^KH----------_---____---________B________-__3_______-_:\nXMAS\nCARDS\nNOW ON SAL!\nPlayers Committee Has\nTrouble Finding Asphodels\nBy MONTY FOTHERINGHAM\nDepartment stores may boast\nthat they sell everything from pins\nto elephants, but one thing they\ndon't have are asphodels. Ask Hasel\nWright, convener of the properties\ncommittee for the Christmas plays.\nShe should know, becauae she tried\nto get some.\nBlank looks were the only response she got from pussled salesgirls. Even explaining that they\ngrew in Elysian fields and were\npale blue, didn't help any, and ao\nHasel and her committee had to\nmake them, at the rate of one every\nseven minutes. '\nTwice a year, at the Christmas\nplays and the Spring play, the resourcefulness and ingenuity of the\nstudents are tested to the fullest.\nThe asphodel \"incident\" is only one.\n\"We want snow,\" challenged the\ndlrectora of \"The Blind.\"\n\"You shall have snow!\" exclaimed the committee and forthwith began to tear up vaat quantities of white paper into little\npieces. Now every spare moment in\nthe Green Room is spent in beating the weather-man at hia own\ngame and making snow.\nThroughout the entire play, \"The\nKREUTZBERG\nDANCES HERE\nHarald Kreutzberg, internationally famous dancer from Salzburg,\nAustria, Is coming to the University. After playing before super-\ncapacity houses In New York,\nwhere he ls rapidly winning much\nacclaim, Kreutzburg ls embarking\non a transcontinental tour, thus enabling dance lovers of this city to\nwitness \"the greatest enjoyment\nImaginable,\" to quote the Salzburg-\ner Volksblatt.\nIt is Indeed a rare opportunity\nwhich brings so famoua an artist\nto the campua and marka the flrat\ncultural event of its kind to appear\nat tho Unlveralty Theatre. The appearance here ot Kreutzberg, December 6, la being aposored by the\nGamma Phi Beta Sorority, who\nhave taken considerable care in selecting an artist with such versatile appeal. On his program appear\nsuch divergent titleB as \"Hangman's\nDance\" and \"Three Merry Dances\nFor Children.\"\nThere is a contrast between \"Angel of Annunciation\" and \"Soldier\nof Fortune.\" From the tragic intensity of the \"Jester's Dance,\"\nfrom \"Don Morte,\" to the light-\nhearted gaiety of the \"Vagabond\nDance,\" Kreutzberg runs the gamut\nof emotional portrayal. His programs display a greater verattlity\nthan those of any other modern\ndancer. In an hour and a half of\nan evening's entertalment, he presents the humorous, the satiric, the\ntragic and the tender faceta of lite.\nKreutzberg ls now acclaimed the\nworld's leading male dancer. The\nseat sale is being conducted by the\nsorority through the box office at\nM. A. Kelly, Oranvllle Street, Trinity 2418.\nBlind,\" anow is to be falling, ending\nin a sudden flurry at the end.\nThroughout the acene of \"X\nEquals O\" ia laid in a tent, rich\nfurnishings are required, amongst\nthem a very fine tablecloth. This\nmust be bordered with a Greek key\npattern, but aa the cloth waa borrowed, no permanent design could\nbe put on it.\nTherefore Hasel haa had to cut\nthe pattern out of gilt paper and\nsew it on.\nAutumn leaves are alao needed\nin \"The Blind,\" and so membera of\nthe \"props\" committee gathered\nsacks full of them.\nThis same play calls for a very\nwell-behaved, intelligent dog who\nwill obey commands. Finally a tremendous pure black poodle waa obtained and it haa been groomed\nintensively for its atage debut\nThuraday night.\nThe uaual miscellaneous assortment of furniture has been gathered together, including impressive\nQueen Anne, florid old Victorian\nand modern atyles. Antique shops\nand stores downtown have co-operated considerably with the \"props\"\ncommittee in loaning them furniture and other furnishings.\nKEY-CASE LOST\nA brown leather key case with\nzipper and initials \"RHK\" was lost\nat the end of last week, likely\nin the Science building. A reward\nIs offered if the finder will please\nreturn the case to the Publications\nofflce immediately.\nHe respect, and build up an outside\nopinion very favorable to the University. In this regard we recall\nthe appeal ot the Chancellor to the\nnew graduates ln his recent Fall\nCongregation address, and the present endeavors of L.S.E:. via radio.\nDr. C. M. Whitworth\nDantlat\nTelephone Elliot 17*6\nHours: 9 to 5\nSaturday: 9 to 1\nCor. 10th and Sasamat St.\nChinese Youth to\nSponsor Tea at\nW. K. This W\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00ABk\nThe Chinese Youth Organization,\na group sponsored by local Chinese\nuniversity students, has been formed to unite the younger members\nof the colony here for service in\nthe community.\nA tea will be held in the W. K.\nOriental Gardens on November 24,\nproceeds of which will be uaed to\naid refugees ln China.\nThis ls the initial function of the\norganization, all goods being donated by sympathetic Chinese merchants. Chairman of the committee in charge ls Quon Wong.\nTickets to the tea are obtainable\nat all Chinese fruit and vegetable\nstores and cafes, alao at tbe door.\non being\npart of the\ncommunity\nThe Vancouvar San can be fairly\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2aid te havs taken the lead In\nforwarding the realisation among\nths public thst the University ef\nBritish Columbia Is s vital part ef\nthe community which It serves and\nwhose Meals It gives form and educational expression. We hsvs always consldsrad ths Unlvsrsity as\n\"news,\" have chronicled its activities continuously snd have kept\nbefore ths paopls the Importance\nof Its problems. Ne body of cltisens have greater familiarity with\ntha University or more understanding of Its place in tha commonwealth than those who make up\nthe 73,000 families who read the\nVsncouvsr Sun.\nVANCOUVER\nSUN\nUniversity people who wish mora\nknowledge of and closer connection\nwith ths community they serve will\nphone Trinity 4111 and order de-\nllver\u00C2\u00ABd the newspaper which Is\npeculiarly Vancouver's home newspaper. Tha cost is 60 cants a\nmonth. Tuesday, November 23, 1937\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThree\nCLIPPINGS\nBy \"Aggie Joe\"\nJ1J1.I1 l-inf \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094--^-^\u00C2\u00BB>-^^^*Jfc*JMMMMM*S-_s\u00C2\u00BBSS>>-^s_--^--_\u00C2\u00BB\nWhiskers in The Dark\nJoe Sees the Light\nWhen Joe flrst came to College\nhe pitied Sciencemen. He felt that\nthey beefed without justification\nabout their long hours in crowded\nlabs. He considered their waitings\nwith something which approached\na lofty disdain.\nBut Joe decided after a while to\ntake an Agrciultural degree, and\nia at present striving manfully to\nachieve that worthy goal and at the\naame time retain the small degree\nof sanity which he is at present\nproud to call his own. The situation\nwhich has even caused bitterness\namong students of Applied Science\nhas at long last come home to Joe\nwith burning force.\nImpossible Situation\nSix three unit courses are required in the third year of Agriculture, and Joe happena to have\nAve of those courses with laboratory work. In order to complete the\nexpected practical aapects of his\nstudies, he would have to spend an\naverage of eight houra per week on\neach of thoae labs, apart from any\nleotures, reading, studying, or essay writing which might also be,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nd generally Is, necessary to ob-\ntan oredit.\nThis is obviously impossible. It\nis positively absurd that such a sit-\nuatlon ahould exist in a university\nwhioh claims to train men, cltisens\nof tomorrow.\nJoe does not wish to censure anyone, but most especially in depart-\nmenta which are only secondarily\nconcerned with Agriculture, he\nfinds an almost incomprehensible\nunwillingness to realise that a atudent ia taking more than one oourse.\nAt least that aeems the only explanation for the almost selfish\nattitude aasumed by certain departments in this university.\nCo-operation Lacking\nThe health and scholastic standing of many students in Agriculture and Applied Science is being\nseriously jeopardised, if not entirely disintegrate' _y the tragic absence of co-operation between departments\u00E2\u0080\u0094in the pure sciences\nespecially\u00E2\u0080\u0094which results in leaving\nthose students in the unhappy position of having to forego their academic pursuits in order to complete\nvast quantities of practical work,\nthe only alternative being to neglect the all-important- technical\naspects of their courses.\nJoe feels that perhaps a substantial increase in laboratory facilities\nboth with regard to equipment and\npersonnel would go far in alleviating the condition.\n* * \u00C2\u00BB\nAlumnua Comes Home\nHenry Shaw, brilliant. Aggie\ngraduate of several years ago, who\nhaa been working with a dairying\nconcern in Shanghai aince he left\nthe unlveralty, has returned to U.\nB. C. on holiday thia week.\n* * *\nWeed Seed\nMr. Moe asked Gil Morrison the\nother day in class whether he had\nwritten a term teat given about a\nmonth ago. Gil replied, \"O, yea,\nit's at home. I'll bring it out tomorrow.\"\n* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nOdetta Hicks asked Joe what was\nthe difference between a duck with\none wing and a duck with two\nwinga. He thought that they would\nboth make good eating, but it seems\nthat it's just a matter of a pinion.\nCHAPTER VI.\n\"Ths Rids of Death\"\nIn the subterranean pool beneath\nChinatown four weary men splashed about ln inky blackness, vainly\nseeking an escape from the thickening solution of Cat coffee that\nalready was scorching thetr bodies.\nFinally J. Meredith Tutt's hand\nfound a metal panel on the alimey\nwall, and with numb fingers he\npulled lt open.\nA roar of rushing water smote\nhis ears, and a foul odor filled the\nchamber.\n\"Thank- Ood. A sewer!\" cried\nTutt. \"It's our one chance, chaps!\nWho's coming?\"\nScrlbblewell, Hambury and sapBoberts refused. In spite of Tutt's\nexhortations they stayed behind\nand dissolved. All of them. Utterly.\n(We apologise if the plot seems\na bit strained here, but we had to\ndispose of the heels somehow.)\nTutt would have remained, but\nhs had a mission to fulfill, and\nresolutely he plunged Into ths\nmurky sswsr beyond. Swift eur*\nrents swept him down through\nfoul, blsek labyrinths filled with\nthe roar of waters. After what\naesmsd hours he distinguished\nmn even grsatsr rumble evsrhsad.\nI J. MEREDITH TUTT I\nGladys Swarthout\nRecital Displayed\nSinger's Fine Voice\nIn an Interesting If not spectacular recital, Oladya Swarthout\nentertained a large audienoe In\nthe Auditorium Prlday evening.\nChief comment heard from thoae\nattending was that the selection\nof numbers allowed the singer no\nopportunity to display her versatile ability.\nMiaa Swarthout haa an exceptionally fine voice, whioh was\nnoted Friday to be capable of\nhandling the lighter numbers selected for the ooncert. Bright\nspot in the evening was the encore rendition of the Flower Song\nfrom Carmen.\nIt Is felt that Vanoouver should\nhave had the opportunity to hear\nMlas Swarthout In a selection of\nnumbers thnt would reveal all the\nqualities of the voloe of thia\nyoung operatlo singer.\u00E2\u0080\u0094D. R. B.\n. . . only survivor of tragic\ndrowning.\n\"A B. C. Electric bus!\" he exclaimed. \"I must be approaching\nthe campus!\" A few minutes later\nthe current quickened, a growing\nroar reached his ears, and suddenly he was swirling down the awesome spiral sewer beneath Marine\nDrive. His head struck concrete,\nand everything went black. . . .\nWhen he recovered consciousness\nit was morning on Belch Beach. A\nwoman's sweet voice was calling\nhts name softly, gentle feminine\nhands caressed his brow. Tutt\nopened his eyes and recognized\nBlare Crown bending over him. He\ntook a deep breath and closed his\neyes again. . . .\nTHB SPECTRE AT THK FBAST\nIn a remote balcony high above\nthe floor of the Crystal Ballroom\nthree sinister Orientals stood waiting, half concealed by the tapestry,\nwatching the aea ot dancers below.\n\"The signal is known to you,\"\nChang Suey waa saying, his malevolent yellow eyes never once ceasing ~ to search the throng beneath.\n\"Afterwards you will collect the\nbodies and place them iu the wait-\n\"I have plaeed them In the Arta\nletter rack,\" aald Chang. \"No one\nwould think of looking there.\"\nSuddenly he stiffened and pointed\nto a figure just entering the far end\nof the ball room. Silently hia two\nhenchmen nodded and vanished\nthrough the doorway behind.\nTHK TIOKR SPRINGS\nIn another part of the room Tutt\nand the lovely Blare Crown sat,\ndeep In conversation. Her eyea\nwere misty with admiration as she\nlistened to his tale.\n\". . . and so when I learned that\nthis lovely singer was marled to\nthe piano player,\" Tutt was saying,\n\"I left without a word, and aatled\nto Peshawar to join my regiment.\nI thought I could never love again\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094until I met you . . .\"\nHla voloe died away and he\nrose to his fset, amaasmsnt written on his faee as ha starsd\naeroas the danoe floor. Haybsrt\nRawman, prominent playboy, had\nentered t he room, esoortlng a\nlovely golden halrsd girl.\n\"Lenore!\" gasped Tutt, aa the\nwoman stepped up to the microphone before the orchestra.\nAt the same instant a wlngjing\nflashed from the galery above. Raw-\nman gasped, clutched his stomach,\nand fell dead. Another wlngjing\nflashed and another. Tutt dodged\nin time to escape one, and clutched\nat an Oriental arm that waa attempting to strangle Blare Crown.\nSuddenly above the pandemonium\nof the room came the clatter of\nhooves, and a band of Cossacks\ncharged the milling crowd.\n\"In the name ef the Discipline\nCommittee, stop this fighting,\"\nroared the aavage commander,\nths notorious John Blrdovleh.\nThs crowd flsd sereamlng before\nthe oabrss of ths aadlatlo horsemen.\nBefore Tutt could move, rude\nhands seized and bound him. \"Tell\nIt to the Council of Nine ln the\nmorning,\" roared Blrdovitch drun-\nkenly, as Tutt tried to remonstrate.\nSnatching up girls and bottles of\nchampagne the Cossacks clattered\nout into the night with their prisoners.\nContinued From Page One\nSuch clubs as the Glee Club^\nfound themselves without a room\nin which to hold their meetings.\nThe sidewalks and halls came in\ntor their share of discussion. The\nflrat were too narrow to hold students travelling ln different directions.\nOpen letters s u g gested that\nFreshmen be required to walk on\nthe grass. This much-abused class\nwrote hot letters ln defense of their\nright to use the sidewalks. The\nhalls received much the same atten\ntion.\nMKN OBJKOTKD TO WOMEN\nOther subjects for complaint were\nsomewhat unusual. The men students objected to the presence of\nwomen in classes (where it seems\nthey were a disturbing faction) and\nin cluba such aa the debating society.\nBoth the public and the university condemned the behavior at the\nArts Danoe of 1919. The patronesses were Ignored and ln some\ncases insulted, at least that waa the\nopinion of some of the more etiquette-minded.\nIn those daya every dance, formal or Informal, had its receiving\nline down which guests must\nmarch and pay their respects to the\nhostesses. This affair provided\nample material for a large number\nof pro and con letters.\n*x)froir'**eHT\n*4to\u00C2\u00A35\u00C2\u00A3t)&\nTH*\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\nCSOCOV.KT*\nC.17S\nU.B.C. Debaters Lose Split\nDecision To Eastern Team\nTO BK CONTINUKD\nNow what? And where are the\nmen of Heta Kal thla time? (They\nall had eompllmentarlea, remember,\nso don't ssy \"The Oeorgla\"), and\nwho do the Dlaolpllne Committee\nthink they are, anyhow? Don't miaa\nthe next Instalment of this amir\nIngly revealing picture of eollegiste\nActivities of Minor Clubs\nBiological Discussion\nSubject of Club\nYou Don't Have\nTo Like Music\nBy M. RACHLIS\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 22 (WIPU) \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"Be yourself, let us get out of the\nidea that we've got to like music,\"\nstated Mr. Olin Downes, music critic of the \"New York Times,\" in an\naddress at the second music convocation of the University of Manitoba.\n\"We're awful fools to go after\nanything that doesn't seriously interest us; we've committed a mortal sin against our integrity if we\ndo,\" he continued, as he made a\nplea for honesty in the public's attitude to music.\n\"I advocate the pursuit of it\n(music) as the indulgence of an appetite just as far as that appetite\ngoes. We should regard our wishes\nand appetites as the most important things about us.\"\nThe advertisers In THE UBYSSEY can easily and completely satisfy your every need.\nBUFTON'S *m8SF\n3708 WEST 10th AVENUE\nSHOP\nBAYVIEW 9594\nOn your way homa from Varsity\ndrop in and pick up your Corsage. Wa ara open till 8 p.m.\nCorsages 50c.\nand\nup\nThe presentation of papera and\nthe stimulation of discussion are all\nmajor aims of the Biological Discussion Club.\nThe club has thirty-flve members. Because either Zoo. 1 or Bot.\n1 is a pre-requisite to membership,\nthe members are all Senior students or grads.\nThe club aims to give its members practice in presenting papera\non Biological subjects. Many of the\nmembers intend to take up either\nresearch work or medicine. Therefore the experience gained in the\nclub in invaluable to these students.\nOne paper is presented at each\nmeeting and then it is thrown open\nto discussion. An interesting paper\nhas been given by Maurice Walsh.\nHis subject was \"The Dominion\nExperimental Station.\"\nThe highlight of the Club's activities this term will be an exhibit\non the Open House. Of more influence, however, will be the group's\nparticipation in the series of radio\nbroadcasts. ^\nNext term two graduate mem-*\nbers of the club will present papers.\nBUI Cameron, Zoo. grad., has chosen \"Spiders\" as his subject. Dr.\nClifford Caul, also a Zoo. grad.,\nwill present a paper on \"Limnology.\"\nDr. C. McLean Fraser, honorary\npresident of the club, takes an interest in its work, as do other members of the faculty. Clarence Idyll,\na senior student in Biology, is the\nactive president.\nIn the debate held last Friday\nevening at the Hotel Vancouver, U.\nB.C. debatera Jim MacDonald and\nMaurice Belkin lost to Universities\nof McMaster and Ottawa by a close\nvote of two to one, Gerard Gobeille\nof Ottawa and Norman Dobbs of\nMcMaster, defeating the resolution\n\"that democracy ls suitable only ln\nperiods of economic prosperity.\"\nBelkin opened the case for the\naffirmative. He declared that because of the defects of democracy,\n\"peoples throughout the world have\nclimbed on the bandwagon of dictators.\" The resulting dlctatorahips,\nhe claimed, were degenerate forms\nof democracy.\nAs an illustration of his statement that \"democratic government\nhas been unable to withstand the\nonslaught of economic crisis,\" Belkin described rooms ln tenement\nhouses ln New York where a single\nfloor was divided for four families\nby chalklines.\nPointing out that we must not\nexpect too much from a democratic\ngovernment, Gobeille claimed that\n\"nature realized no perfection ln\nany human enterprise.\"\nIn rebuttal of Belkln's statement\nthat autocracy was sweeping the\nworld. Gobeille Introduced the\nthought that since the war there\nhas been an increase of from 38 to\n61 per cent of democratic peoples\nin the world.\nM. E. Nichols, C. W. Brozler and\nWinston Shllvock were the judges\nof the debate and Dr. C. W. Topping was the chairman.\nBritish Schools Stress\nCultural Subjects\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094McCorkindale\nAmple evidence that the Britiah\nIsles are keeping well abreast ot\ncurrent trends In education waa\ngiven on Friday by Mr. H. N. McCorkindale, Superintendent of the\nVancouver School Board, speaking\nln Arts 100 at noon.\nIntroduced by Dean Buchanan as\n\"a man who can play golf and talk\neducation,\" Mr. McCorkindale, who\nvisited the British Isles early this\nyear with a party of Canadian\nteachers, gave a very informative\ntalk on British schools.\nIn particular he noted that secondary education is now more specialized and that lt begins at an\nearlier age than formerly, usually\neleven or twelve.\nFilms taken ln the class-rooms of\nBritish schools were presented.\nThese Indicated the new trend toward practical subjects of a vocational nature.\nHowever, the speaker stressed\nthe fact that the British have not\nlost sight of the value ot cultural\nsubjects and mentioned that a large\npart of the curriculum was devoted\nto them, even ln a strictly vocational school.\nNoel Coward\nTwo more nights of Noel Coward playlets lived up to the promise\ngiven by the flrst offerings last\nweek, when on Friday and Saturday\nthe remaining six plays of the \"Tonight at 8.30\" cycle were presented\nat the Empress Theatre.\nThe Friday night group was probably the most pleasing, with \"Ways\nand Means\" standing out for sophisticated (how Coward must hate that\nword) dialogue and sheer effervescence. \"Fumed Oak,\" styled an\n\"unpleasant comedy\" was strongly\nreminiscent of some of Mr. H. G.\nWells' fictional work in spots, but\ngave Bramwell Fletcher, Estelle\nWlnwood and Helen Chandler an\nadmirable opportunity to display\ntheir versatility, and the effectiveness of their character acting.\n\"Shadow Play,\" last on the program, was noteworthy for the use\nof lighting ln Inducing the mood,\nand supplementing the spoken lines.\nSaturday, with \"Red Peppers\"\nthe outstanding play, was not quite\nup to the standard of the other two\nnights, ln our opinion. The program was not as well balanced, but\nno one can deny the individual\nworth of the plays. \"We Were\nDancing,\" amusing bit about one-\nnight romances, drew laughter and\nconsiderable applause, while \"Red\nPeppers,\" telling of two music hall\nperformers in the flve-a-day belt,\nwas easily the best tor characterisation. \"The Astonished Heart,\" a\nstudy of an obsession, again demanded apecial talents on the part\nof Bramwell Fletcher, but he lived\nup to the requirements in the most\nsatisfactory manner.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094N. R. D.\nThe Spanish Grill\nWEDNESDAYS and SATURDAYS\nfeaturing\nMart Kenney's Music\nSENOIRS\nf hot* who haven't had their\nTOTEM pictures taken ss yet,\nmutt contact ARTONA STUDIO, and arrange for an Immediate appointment.\nYou had your chance to g\u00C2\u00ABt\nthem taken on tho campus, and\nyou missed it ... so hop to a\nphono (wo havo ono In tho Pub)\nand call Seymour 5737.\nRemember, TOTEM pictures\nshould bo taken at onco . . .\nSENIORS, AWAKE!\nPositions Open On\n1938 Totem Staff\nAnyone wishing to work on the\nTotem, contact Dave Crawley, Totem editor, at once. Positions open\nfor application are Photograph editor, preferably a sophomore; Fraternity and Sorority photograph editor; Publicity, and an editorial\nstaff representatives of freshmen,\nsophomore and junior classes.\nAll applicants must be of industrious inclinations and have considerable time to devote to this work.\nSpecial Student Rates\nDuring Xmas Holidays\nFollowing a policy adopted in\nprevious years, Canadian railways\nhave announced that they will\nagain Issue special rates for university students returning home for\nthe Christmas holidays.\nThe special first-class fare will be\nnormal one-way first-class fare and\none-quarter for the round trip. For\ncoach class, the special fare will be\nnormal one-way coach fare and one-\nquarter for the round trip.\nTickets are good going from\nNovember 26 till January 2, and returning not later than January 31.\nFurtHer details and also special\ncertificates which must be used may\nbe obtained from the Registrar's\nofflce.\nBOOK BXCHANOE PAV8\nPositively the Last Time!\nBook Exchange Pays on Friday\nNoon.\nPor that Personal Xmas Gift Choose\nA BLOUSE LENGTH,\ncut, ready to sew $1.00\nIn Vyella $2.50\nLITTLE LADIES' SHOP\n4403 West 10th Avenue\n(Continued From Pago 1)\nThis Week in Review\nNOTKS\nUnited States Congress opened\nlast week with business aotivity\nand the stock market in the worst\nslump since 1928 and with the end\nnot yet in sight. So serious had\nthe situation become that the Prealdent is faced with the possibility of\nhaving to moderate hia vigorous\nprogram of social legislation,\u00E2\u0080\u0094for\nthe execution ot which he had\ncalled this special aeaaion of Congress\u00E2\u0080\u0094and attempt to enaure the\ncharges that the adminlatration ia\nto blame for the new depreaaion\nwith concrete action to stem the\ndecline.\nThere is none Better than tha \"Bess'tt\"\nUrsstt ijy\nm%hOpptf,0,*mim*l\n-T&<\n\j$ GIRLS\ncoma in and saa our\nPartv snd Street\nFrocks, also Smart\nCosta. Wa will be\nvery pleased to show\nyou. Our slses are 11\nto 17 and 12 to 18.\nYou will find they fit\nJust right.\nTHE G I R L S'\nAPPAREL SHOP\n445 GRANVILLE ST.\nCor. Granville and Pender, 1st floor up Cross Country at 12:15 To-day Rain or Shine\nSPORT RESULTS\nBASKETBALL\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSr. \"A\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Varsity 32, Nanaimo 24\nSr. \"A\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Varsity 40, Pt. Alberni 14\nSOCCER\u00E2\u0080\u0094 *\nSr.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Varsity 2, Maccabees 1\nJr.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Varsity 1, Kerrisdale 2\nSPORT RESULTS\nENGLISH RUGBY\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n1st Div.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Varsity 9, Meralomas 3\n2nd Div. \"A\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Varsity 15, Rowers 0\n2nd Div. \"B\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Varsity 0, Meralomas 17\nFour\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 23, 1937\nVARSITY WINS CRUCIAL\nILLER CUP TILT\nU. HOOPERS\nWIN TWICE\nON ISLAND\nVaralty'a Senior A cagsrs copped a couple ef wins over ths\nweek-end, defeating Nanaimo Senior B's 32-24, Prlday night, and\nawamplng Port Albsrnl \"Ooea-\nalonala\" Saturday.\nAnd while the Collegians wsrs\naway hooping It up on tho Island,\nRyereon and Adanaea substituted\nfor thsm vsry ably at horns,\nchalking up victories ovsr Westerns and Munroa rsspsotlvely.\nThis doubls-hsader upset leaves\nU.B.O. on top of the Inter-City\nLeague by a two-point margin.\nPOOR FORM\nIn Friday night's tilt in Nanaimo,\nthe coachleas Thunderbirds failed\nto show anything like championship\nform, holding only an eight-point\nlead at half-time, and actually being held even in the second canto.\nRann Matthison and By Straight\ntied tor acoring honors, collecting\nnine markera apiece, while \"Joe\"\nPringle starred at his spot at guard.\nIt was the earns story In the\nesoond tilt on Saturday through\nthe flrat half; the Rah-Rah boys\nfailed to click either In passing,\nor shooting, holding a slim 12-7\nload at the breather.\nCLASSY HOOPING\nBut in that aecond stansa, a\ncheering mob ot Port Albernlana\nwere treated to some classy hooping. Time after time the Collegians\nswept down floor on pretty passing\nplays to score almost at will,\n\"Hunk\" Henderson, who came\nover in the a.m. taking \"Joe\"\nPringle's place, climbed into the top-\nscorer's spot, chalking up 12 markers, just a single more than Captain\nRann Matthison. Bud Matheson\nbreesed into the show slot with\neight points.\nTHUNDERBIRDS\nPLAY STACY'S\nMaury Van Vliet'a Thunderbird\nquintet, at present holding a precarious two-point lead in the Inter-\nCity hoop standings, will be out to\nincrease that margin tomorrow\nnight in the campua gym, when\nthey meet Stacy'a at 0 o'clock.\nStacy's are now firmly established ap cellar-dwellera In the\nloop, s duo of markers behind\nAdanaea, Munroa Ryeraon snd\nWesterns, all tied for aecond, snd\nwill be ont to change that atatua\nIn thia mid-week tilt.\nArne Bumstead, Lefty McLellan,\n\"Jake\" Purves, Russ Kennlngton,\nEddie Armstrong, and all the shoe\nlada are figuring on another upset\nwin. But it seems Rann Matthlaon,\nHunk Henderson, Joe Pringle,\nHooker Wright, Pat Flynn, and all\nthe rah-rah boya have the aame\nIdea, so well see what we'll see this\nWednesday p.m.\nJr. Soccermen\nDrop Game\nAfter grabbing the first counter\nearly in the game, Varsity's Junior\nsoccermen weakened to allow a\nfighting Kerrisdale team to win by\na 2-1 score.\nWEAKENED TEAM\nAlthough weakened by the loss\nof Harrower and Herd, who've been\npromoted to the Senior team, the\nCollegians gave a good account of\nthemselves on Satvirday. Affleck\nstood out for U.B.C. on the defense.\nBASKETBALL STANDING\nInter-City League\nP. W. L. Fts.\nVarsity 8 3 2 6\nAdanacs 4 2 2 4\nMunroB 4 2 2 4\nWesterns 4 2 2 4\nRyerson 4 2 2 4\nStacy's 3 12 3\nDOBBIEMEN TURN IN SMART\n9-3 VICTORY OVER 9LOMAS\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2__- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u0094_.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 m\nCollegians Score Two Trios and Penalty to a\nSingle Kitsy Penalty; Lumsden, McPhee and\nTeagle Star\nmy PRANK O. THORNELOE\nFifteen determined Varsity ruggers bowled over the\nhighly-touted Meraloma squad in decisive fashion Saturday, crushing the Kitsles by a 9-3 score. And with their\npopular win, the Collegians became the numbr one\nchoice to retain the Miller bauble this semester.\nAbout 800 equally determined fans saw the U.B.C.\nline unchallenged and uncrossed as Captain Dave Carey\nled his \"ruggaha\" through their paces in near-superb\nstyle.\nTWO TRIES, PENALTY TO\nPENALTY\nScoring two tries and a penalty\nto a lone 'loma penalty, the Rah-\nRah boya proved conclusively that\nthe Miller win atreak of five gamea\nla no fluke, but a result of smart,\nheads-up rugby.\nBall handling on ths raln-sosked\naod waa away above par, and\nonly on occasion did the sorum\nfall to keep In play as Tod and\nHowie MoRhse broke looae for\nwide, sweeping thrss runs. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2er-\nnle Teagle, replacing Bird at full,\nturned In hla beat game ef the\naeaaon.\nHOWIE SCORED\nOpening with somewhat ragged\nplay Varsity lost several opportunities to score, chiefly because of a\nstrong adverse wind. After some\nten minutes, however, \"Joe\" College took command of the play, with\nHowie McPhee grabbing the ball\nfrom a loose scrum, and acoring on\na short run. The convert was too\nmuch, even for the optimistic A.M.\nS. Prexy.\nIn the next eouple of mlnutea\nthe Meralomaa got Its lone ohanoe\nto oount with a penalty klok on\nthe Rah-Rah 30 yard line, whieh\nthey made, tying It up at 3-3. Old\nman Eaat Wind deaerves full\noredit for an aaslst.\nThe remaining play of the flrst\nhslf waa conspicuous for lost opportunities aa the teama took\nturna at breaking through for\naure eeorsa, only to politely end\nup with a knook-on.\nBEACH HURT\nIt waa during thia apell that\nBeach, star acrum player for the\nKitsles, met his Waterloo ln the\nform of a dislocated shoulder, a\ndosen amateur flrat aid men, and\none good anonymoua medico.\nWith the wind at thslr backa\nIn the second half, Varaity boya\nreally atarted to brseae through\nthe 'loma defense. Harry Lumsden bseama the hero ef the hour,\ngoing over at the flag after 16\nminutes of sparkling but fluffy\nrugby. Carey mleasd the convert.\nVARSITY POROES\nFrom this time on Varsity forced\nthe pace as the weakened club\nteam backed down the field. Nobody knows what tbe score might\nhave been had the Collegians cooperated with their usual gusto.\nUpward made the other score on a\ndifficult penalty kick to make the\nfinal score. Varsity 9, Meralomas 3.\nA REAL THRILLER\nThough lacking finish, the Varsity policy of forcing the play in\nthe open made this one of the season's most thrilling matches with\nCarey, Lumsden, Ted and Howie\nMcPhee, Leggat and Tremblay\nplaying the solo \"effects.\"\nPete Crickmay Stars As\nU.B.C. Ties Cricketers\nMen's Grass Hockey finally got\na break trom the weather man on\nSaturday and the Varsity curved\ncudgel wtelders came through with\na hard-fought tie with the Cricketers on a greasy Connaught Park\nfield.\nMike Crickmay sparked his team\nto a one-goal lead late in the game\nonly to have one of his own halts\nknock in the tying goal for the\nCricketers in a melee near the Varsity goal. Pete Crickmay with two\nand Gavin Mowatt with one were\nthe Varsity point-getters in a game\nthat was a heart-breaker for the\nyet winless Students.\nWell, well, it begins to look as\nthough our girl hockey teama will\ncontinue on their separate ways\u00E2\u0080\u0094\none winning and one losing.\nOn Saturday, the U.B.C. grass\nhockeyists managed te vanquish\na Pro-Rac outfit by a 4-3 count,\nwhile thslr fellow-playmates, the\nVaraity team, loat by a single goal\nto North Vancouver, 3-2.\nAnd from an onlooker's viewpoint, it's pretty sate to say the\nU.B.C. Bquad, who led 4-1 at one\ntime, would have chalked up an\neasy, lopsided victory, if they hadn't got bo conceited about their initial margin. Don't forget \"team-\nplay\", girls\u00E2\u0080\u0094sometimes it helps.\nOdds and Ends Department: The\nAwards Committee has sent out\na call for all girls who have played\non any teams here and are eligible for points under the new system to list their teams and number\nof years on each, together with a\nlist of awards won already and aend\nit in to Margaret Haspell via the\nArts Letter Rack. These lists must\nbe in by the 6th of December. None\nwill be accepted after that date.\nMarjorie Lean, foremoat archer\naround theae here parts, never\ntouched a bow and arrow until a\nmonth ago. In the recent Inter-\ncolleglate tournament, she led our\ncontingent with 281 points, while\nHilda McLean was second with 1S8.\nBoth the basketball and hockey\nsenior teama are moaning about\nthe loss of Dot Yelland to sports\nfor at least three weeks. Dot hurt\nher back again in the basketball\ngame Wednesday night and may be\nout of aports for the reat of the\nyear.\nU. Soccermen\nScore Second\nWin Saturday\nNew Deal Made\nFor Awards\nAt a recent meeting ot the Men'a\nAwards Committee, an entirely new\nsystem of athletic awards waa outlined and approved.\nIt was decided that Freshmen\nwill not receive the Big Block,\nwearing instead the year ln chenille\nacross a.regulation aweater.\nMANAGERS MUST WORK\nManagers of major sports will not\nbe given the Big Block at the beginning of their terms aa In previous years. They will be awarded\nthe light blue aweater, but must\nwin their Block like any member\nof the team. \"This ls to prevent\nany slacking,\" states Lyall Vine, M.\nA.A. representative.\nFinally, lt was decided that\nawards will be granted in ratio to\nthe merit ot the teams. Thus, the\nteam making an oustandlng showing during the year will gain more\nawards than the team whose record\nis not so good.\nWhat college students think is\nfunny ls pitifully lacking ln humor,\nPean Irving H. Berg, of New York\nUniversity, said at the Lafayette\nCollege baccalaureate service.\nThe American undergraduate's\nlack of a genuine sen_e of humor\nand good taste is evidenced ln the\nquality of so-called humorous magazines published by students, he\nexplained.\nA bullet-like, thirty-yard drive\nby hard-working Dick Footer\nthat whistled paat the enemy custodian with just three minutes\nremaining, proved the margin\nwhich gave the Blue and Oold\nsoccermen a thrilling upset victory over the atrong Maccabee\noutfit at Cambie St. on Saturday.\nTODD HURT\nFulfilling pre-game predictions,\nCoach Charlie Hitchins sent out\npractically the aame team as last\nweek. The only change wss the\nreplacing of Kirkpatrick with Fos\nter at right-half. When Doug Todd\nwaa taken out of the game with at\nbad concussion, Foster was shoved\nup to inside-left and more than\njustified his inclusion by breaking\nthe 1-1 deadlock late in the game.\nQUAYLE SCORES\nU.B.C. opened the scoring half-\nway through the flrat half, when\nDan Quayle took a long paaa up\nthe centre and registered one of\nhla typical hustling counters.\nTwenty minutes after the start\nof the second half, Maccabees equalised on a header that gave Harrower no chance, and the count atayed\nthat way until Foster staged his\ngame-winning effort.\nCHATTER\nFor the Collegians, the defenae\nwas outstanding and more dependable than before thla year, Misu-\nhara in particular ahowing to good\neectff, while Croll waa hla usual\nsteady self. The forwards, especially in the flrst half, showed the\nMaccabee defenders up time and\nagain with pretty criss-cross combination plays.\nTODD OUT FOR TWO WEEKS\nBy their win, the campusmen\ntightened up the league race considerably and they have now\ndefinitely left the cellar. Their\nchances for victory next week,\nhowever, look leas bright with the\nannouncement that Doug Todd'a\nconcussion waa so serious that lt\nwill keep him out of the line-up\nfor a fortnight.\nOnce more Rookie Ben \"Thundering\" Herd and John Held down\ntheir positions creditably, Herd\nespecially impressing with his abil\nity to get out of impossible situ\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2tions.\nCross Country Will\nBe Run Today\nCross-country runners aro expected to have aome heavy going\nIn their annual dlatanee run '\nwhich takea place today In aplte\nof Mr. Weatherman, after being\npoatponed from laat week.\nMost of the boys have been keeping in shape and a lusty battle for\npoints in the Intramural competition for Governor's Cup is expected.\nAll finishers in the grind will be\nawarded points to count towards\nintramural supremacy \u00E2\u0080\u0094 bo watch\nthose hoofs flip.\nGrantham^ Wins\nEssay Prize\nNews of the final distribution of\n$5200 prise money in an essay contest sponsored by the New History\nSociety of New York, reached Can-\ncouver this week.\nBest essay on the topic, \"How\nCan the People ot the World\nAchieve Universal Disarmament\"\nwas written by a woman in Geneva.\nOf n\pre personal interest to U.B.C.\nstudents, however, is the announce-\nSHent that the National Prize for\nCanada was won by Ronald Grantham, graduate of this university.\nGrantham had a rather turbulent\ntime at Varsity. During his term\nas Editor-in-Chief of the Ubyssey\nhe became engaged in a hectic\nthree-way controversy with Faculty\nand Council, which resulted finally\nin his suspension.\nSince graduation Grantham has\nbeen teaching in schools on Vancouver Island.\nGRfll-T HULL\nQUEENS UNIVERSITY\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 emplstsly renevatari In 1934,\nthle plalurs\u00C2\u00ABe\u00C2\u00ABs 33 year old\nbwlldlnf, named In siamery el Principal\nGrant,,. who died Just prior lo Its arse-\nMen .:. I* new considered ena of tha\nUntil university auditoriums In Canada.\nBritish Consols\nSCIENCE '40 BASKET TEAM\nWINS CLASS CHAMPIONSHIP\nJack Ross Leads Squad to 19-17 Triumph Over\nScience 38; Foul Shooting Starts Friday\nThe Men of Science '40 rule the roost in Intramural\nBasketball for this year, after coming from behind to take\na bitter battle from a stubborn squad of Engineers of the\nclass '38 in the final at the gym on Friday noon before a\nlarge, enthusiastic crowd.\nMURAL BODY\nNAMES ALL\nSTAR SQUADS\nMaury Van Vllet, ex-offlclo\nmember of the Intra-mural Committee along with Paul Trussell,\nRann Matthison of the M.A.A.,\nand the Committee in aeaslon yesterday named two all-star basketball squads chosen from the teams\nseen in action.\nCOMPETITION KEEN\nThe competition waa ao keen\nthat trouble waa met in trying to\nsingle out the stars, but after due\nconaideratlon two line-ups were\npicked. Jack Roaa, of Science '40,\nand Pat Love, of Science '88, get\nthe call for flrat team torwarda,\nflanking Taylor, of the Agglea, at\ncentre. Guard positions on the\nfirst team are given to Barney\nBoe, of Science '88, and Kyle\nBerry, of the Agglea.\nThe second aquad Is almoat sa\nformidable aa the flrat, with\nCampbell Oilman, of Arta '41, and\nFrank Clark, of Ate '89 , sa the\nforwards, and Roy Elfatrom. of\nScience '88, at centre. Angy Pro-\nvansano, of the winning Science\n'40 team, and Bud Machln, of Science '88, are the guards picked.\nFOOTBALL BANQUET\nThe annual Canadian Football banquet will be held on\nFriday night at 6.30 sharp at\nthe Pacific Club.\nAll players are invited and\nare advised that the charge\nfor dinner will be 75 cents a\nplate. As a further inducement for all the boys to attend, some first-class entertainment has been arranged.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0HIND AT HALF\nAfter trailing 13-0 at half time,\nthe '40 aggregation turned on the\nheat in the last half to pull up even\nat the three-quarter mark at 15-all\nand then snatch a lead that withstood the final drive ot the '38 squad\nln the dying moments ot the game.\nAlex. Lucas handled the whistle to\nkeep the warriors well in hand and\ngive the crowd something to hoot\nabout between halves by a marvellous display of shooting.\nJaok Ross led both squads In\nseorlng by popping 11 snappy\npointa for the team of '40.\nStan Roberta and Angy Prov-\nenaano were also outstanding for\nthe winners, while ths reliable\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0arnay Boe and and Starry Pat\nLove led the fifth year men In\ntheir brilliant atand againat the\npollshsd clasa of '40 lineup.\nPOUL SHOOTING FRIDAY\nFoul shooting ls the next item on\nthe Intramural schedule, with practising to take plaoe on Wedneaday.\nClass reps, are asked to get ln\ntouch with Maury at once to give\nhim their oandldatea for the com*\npetition which geta under way on\nFriday.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094-O. DIKR.\nVarsity Seconds\nWinJ5-0\nVarsity Seconds scored a 15-0\nrugger waahout over Rowing Club\non the inundated Memorial Park\nfield on Saturday, with the aae of\na powerful, cagy acrum.\nTwo trlea were made In the\nflrat half, by Taylor snd Long.\nThe aecond atansa aaw Carruthers,\nWallace and Smith over the line\nfor the remainder of the acore.\nNone were converted.\n\"AS NEAR AS YOUR PHONE\"\nc*\u00C2\u00BB SEYMOUR 2405\nFREE DELIVERY ANYWHERE IN CITY LIMITS\nI T C H I E ' S . . . 840 GRANVILLE\nORDER NOW\nAn entirly new selection of\nPERSONAL GREETING CHRISTMAS CARDS\nSample books will be sent for your approval\nTHE\nCLARKE & STUART\n550 Seymour Street\nCompany Limited\nSTATIONERS AND PRINTERS\nPhona Trinity 1341\nVancouver, B. C."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1937_11_23"@en . "10.14288/1.0123793"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Students' Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society of the University of British Columbia"@en . "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/"@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives"@en . "University of British Columbia"@en . "The Ubyssey"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .