"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2016-01-18"@en . "1946-10-08"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0123820/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " GENERAL AMS\nEET NOON TODAY\nQueens At\nPrincess\nPow-Wow\nPREMIERE appearance of the\ncandidates for princess at the\n\"Princess Bali\" will take place at\nthe Princess Pow Wow, Friday,\n12:30 p.m., ln the Armory.\nIncluded in the line-up will be\nthe as yet unnamed princess candl.\ndates from Arts, Commerce, Nursing, Home Ec, and Agriculture,\nwith a beauty representing the\nFreshettes.\nSCIENCE REJOICES\nEmceed by Al Dean, and featuring Oeorge Calanguj* orchestra, the\npepmeet will follow the accepted\nstyle of '41, claimed by science-\nmen as the best method of ensuring\nsuccess for this type of entertainment.\nFran Dowie, Jubilee show star,\nwill also lend his talent to the\naffair.\nElection of candidates representing the Parlous faculties will take\nplace as follows:\nArts: Yrs. 2, 3, 4 - Arts 204\nat 12:90 pjn. Wednesday, Oct. 9\nNursing \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Arts 108\nat 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. B\nCommerce \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Arts 102\nat 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 0\nHome Ec. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Arts 101\nat 12:30 pan. Wednesday, Oct. 9\nFreshettes \u00E2\u0080\u0094 App. Sc. 100\nat 12:30 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 10\nUBC Grads\nHonored\nIn Gazette\nBy GERRY BATTEN\n\"TOE KINO has been graciously\npleased, on the occasion of Dominion Day in Canada, and on the ad-\n, vice of His Majesty's Canadian\nMinisters, to give orders for the\nfollowing appointments:\"\n. Amongst those honored on that\noccasion were a number of UBC\ngrads and several men who have\ncontributed a very great deal to the\npresent high standing of the University.\nThe Chancellor, The Honorable\nEric Hamber and Dr. Norman Archibald McRae MacKenzie have\nbeen appointed Companions of the\nMost Distinguished Order of St.\nMichael and St. Oeorge.\nProfessor Charles William Argue,\nB.A., B.S.A., M.Sc., D.S.C., and\nPhyllis (Mrs. Frank) Ross, B.A.,\nM.A., Ph.D., L.L.D., are to be Additional Commanders (Civil Division) of the Most Excellent Order\nof the British Empire.\nProfessor O. M. Shrum, M.A.,\nPh.D., F.R.C.S., and R. Murray\nBrink are also included as officers.\nThe following are appointed to the\nOrder:\nThomas O. How, Ph.D.\nArthur Laing, B.S.A.\nAndrew McKellar, Ph.D.\nDonald McK. Morrison, Ph.D.\n(Camb.)\nJohn B. Munro, M.S.A.\nOeorge M. Volkoff, Ph.D.,\nL.L.D.\nHarold E. Walsh, B.A., B.Sc.\nProfessor Argue was concerned\nwith blood plasma research during\nthe war. Mrs. Ross was with the\nDepartment of Fats and Oils. Murray Brink was the organizer for\nB.C. of Victory Loan drives, while\nArthur Laing was Food Controller\nfor western Canada.\nBURSARIES\nVOL, XXIX\nVANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1946.\nNo. 7\nJazz Society Sponsors Celebrities\nNORMAN GRANZ\nTHE ABOVE pictured expert on modern music, Norman\nGranz has been signed to lead an illustrated and demonstrated\ndiscussion on recent trends in the Jazz world to be held\nWednesday noon in Brock Ball. Assisting Granz will be a\ngroup of starry musicians currently appearing in the stage\nshow, \"Jazz at the Philharmonic\".\nURS Presents\nDrama Series\nC O MM ENC1NG Wednesday,\nOctober 9, the University Radio\nSociety will present a 13-week\nseries of plays over station\nCKMO, at 9 p.m. The proposed\nplays have a wide variety, featuring themes of mystery, comedy\nand fantasy, and including some\nadaptions of better literary works.\nThe first presentation, \"There\nWas A Young Man,\" has been\nspecially written by UBC studenv\nPeter Duval in aid of the War\nMemorial Drive. It is a serious\nfantasy, and the cast, composed\nof student actors, includes Joanne\nWalker, Joy Coghlll, Don Wilson,\nAlbert Mansfield, Jack Cowan,\nArnie Watson, Norman Campbell,\nGerald Eddy, and Ernie Hall.\nErnie Perault is the drector, and\npioducer.\nMost of the planned skits have\nbeen written by members of the\nRadio Society. Special programs\nwill be offered at Halloween,\nChristmas, and other notable\nseasons, Wilf Ray and Al Goldsmith will be in charge of technical operations.\nnow available CKWX To Air\nUBC Speakers\nWINNERS OF Bursaries and\nSholarships should call at tho\nRegistrar's Office for their scholarship cards. These should be\nsigned by their Instructors and\nreturned to the Bursar's Office nt\nonce, so that cheques may be issued.\nWinners of Special Bursaries\nand Dominion Provincial Youth\nTraining Bursaries do not require\ncurds.\nBond Purchases\nTo Aid Gym\nAU students, alumni and their\nfriends are urged by the War\nMemorial Committee to purchase\ntheir War Savings Bonds, at the\nBond Office in the AMS offices.\nIt is pointed out by the War\nMemoriil Committee that all\ncommissions from bond sales arc\nto go to the War Memorial Drive.\nTHE BEGINNING OF a neu\n.series of Canada\".* foremost youth\nprogram will commence on Thursday, October 10. The discussion\nwill take place in the CKWX\nPlayhouse, 543 Seymour Street, at\n8:45 p.m. and will be broadcast\nover CKWX on 3unclay, October\n13 at 4:30 p.m.\nThe .speakers include Cliff\nCreer, treasurer of the Parliamentary Forum, Marie LeBrun\nand an additional speaker from\nUBC, as yet not selected.\nThe topic will be \"Does Youth\nSupport Compulsory Military\nTraining.\"\n\"A large accidence from UBC is\nexpected since two of the speakers hail from the University.\"\nThree Days Free\nThanksgiving\nWeek End\nAS MONDAY, October 14, is\nThanksgiving Day, the University of British Columbia\nwill be closed Saturday, October 12 to Monday, October 14,\ninclusive.\nThough the university will\nbe closed on Saturday, October\n12, the Ubyssey will be published as usual and the papers\nwill be distributed in the\nafternoon at the football game\nin the Stadium.\nBecause of the holiday on\nMonday, October 14, there will\nbe no Ubyssey on October 15.\nPress Blamed In\nRussian Scare\nHEARST and McCormick press is\nlargely responsible for the \"hysterica1, fear of Russia\" existing in\nUnited States today, Dr. Sedgewick told Parliamentary Forumites\nThursday noon.\nRESOLUTION\nSpeaking at the first Forum\nmeeting of the year, he defended\na resolution urging support of the\nviews on U.S. foreign policy expressed recently by former U.S.\nSecretary of Commerce, Henry A.\nWallace.\nDr. Sedgewick said that Wallace\nwas taking a stand against the\nwave of fear now sweeping the\ncountry.\nFEAR\n\"All we have to fear is Fear\" he\ndeclared, quoting the late President Roosevelt.\nDr. J. A. Crumb, honorary president of the Forum, in opposing thc\nresolution, attacked Wallace's\n\"lofty idealism.\"\n\"Unless Mr. Wallace forsees 'one\nworld' governed by the Russian\nprolettariat this is not an ideological struggle,\" he said.\nRUSSIA\nDr. Crumb went on to say that\nRussia has much to learn too, from\ntho western democracies. \"What\nwould have happened to Wallace\nif he had taken that action in\nRussia,\" he asked.\nThe resolution was defeated foi.\nlowing a standing vote.\nAIDING THE Gym Drive will be Norman Granz, America's leading authority on Jazz. Accompanying Mr. Granz\nwho is to lecture on Jazz, will be the group of well-known\norchestra leaders and soloists, playing at the Strand Theatre\non Wednesday night. These Jazz Philharmonic musicians,\nincluding a few big-name negro artists, will illustrate Mr.\nGranz' lecture. Straight from San Francisco, these Jazz promoters promise an interesting lecture.\nOn Wednesday noon, the Jazz ___________\nSociety will present Mr. Granz\nand his Jazz group in the Brock\nHall Lounge. Admission is free,\nalthough a donation for the Memorial Gym Drive will be welcome.\nMEET HELD\nThe Jazz Soc held its first\nmeeting Thursday ln Ap. Sc. 100\nwith President John Crofton ad-\nressing the assembly.\nIn his remarks, Crofton outlined\nthe programme planned for the\nyear.\n\"Tho purpose of the Society he\nsaid, \"is to further the understanding and appreciation of Jazz\nin Canada and the States, Jazz is\nslowly being recognized as a music\nform of great beauty . . . not as\nmerely a lot of loud and raucaus\nnoises.\"\nMeetings every Thursday noon in\nthe Brock Stage Room will deal\nwith the B.C. Society for Jazz Pro-\nwill study and criticize everything\nfrom early to modern forms.\nThis year the Society is working\nwith the B.C. Society for Jazz Promotion and the two organizations\nplan to exchange members to sit in\non the executive meetings.\nHistory of jazz will be featured\nat the first weekly meeting and\nrecord session of the society\nThursday noon in the Brock stage\nroom. New members are urged to\nattend in order to pick up mem\nbership cards. Featured musicians\nwill be Louis Armstrong, Bunk\nJohnson, Coleman Hawkins and\nMugsy Spanier.\nLegion Broadens\nMembership Base\nTHIS WEEK Branch 72, inau-\ngrates a \"Join the Legion Now\"\ncampaign, in an effort to broaden\nout its membership base among\nthe hundreds of new veterans\nstarting in in at UBC.\nA letter outlining the objects\nand accomplishments of the Canadian Legion' is being despatched\nto all veterans on the Campus this\nweek in oredr to fully acquaint\nthem with the facts before being\napproached to join.\nNext Tuesday in the Armouries,\nduring the issue of DVA cheques,\nmembers of the Legion Membership committee will be on hand to\nanswer questions and sign up\nanyone who wishes to join.\nNURSES ELECT\nEXECUTIVE\nELECTION OF officers of the\nNurses Executive was held early\nlast week. Betty Scoones was elected to the presidency.\nOther officers are: Certificate\nRepresentative, Ellen Johnston,\nAthletic Representative, Miss\nDelisle; Publicity, Miss Harvey\nSecretary, Miss Armit; Treasures,\nMiss Willy.\nVice-president, Barbara Gillies,\nand Social Convener, Sue Harrison were elected last April.\nProgram for the year will hn\nt'iscussed at a meeting in tho\nGeneral Hospital next week.\nBlood Donors\nAid Memorial\nGym Drive\nBLOOD DONORS are urgently\nneeded by the War Memorial\ndrive.\nStudents willing to donate their\nblood are asked to report to the\nGym drive headquarters immediately, as tests will be conducted at 12:30, Wednesday, October 9, in the Health Clinic.\nActual blood donations will be\nmade at his convenience at his\nhome, by doctors from the Genei-\na! Hospital, who have donated\ntheir services.\nAttention is drawn by Penn McLeod, manager of the drive, to the\ntwo-fold benefit of the donations.\n\"This service helps two different\ngroups; not only does the Gym\nbenefit, but the hospitals, especially Shaughnessy, is in urgent\nneed of the blood.\"\nGym Boosted\n$3,400 Saturday*\nCHEQUES totalling $3,400 were\npresented to the War Memorial\nDrive, during the half-time intermission of the UBC Willamette\nfootball game, on Saturday.\nMrs. Mark Cununlngs, chairman\nof the Gamma Phi Beta \"Night\nFlight\" cabaret, held September\n27, turned over the amount of\n$1300. This, to date, is the largest\nsingle conation by any sorority,\naccording to Drive officials.\nHarry Gilpin of the B.C. Rugby\npresented a cheque for $2,100. This\namount was the toal proceeds of\nlast years flnal McKechie Cup\nrugby game.\nPROF. WOOD\nDENOUNCES\nSTAGE '47\nThose who failed to listen to\nthe CBC's Sunday night \"Stage 47\"\nproduction of Jane Austen's \"Pride\nand Prejudice\" are to be congratulated, ln the opinion of Prof.\nFred Wood, Professor of English\nand lecturer on the novel to senior\nstudents.\nThe noted critic believed that\nthe characterisation of the perennially popular novel of English\nlife and manners In the early 19th\ncentury was poorly done.\nCOED VETERANS\nELECT WUS REP\nEX-SERVICE girls will elect ;.\nrepresentative to the Women's\nUndergraduate Society at 12:30.\nOctober 10 in Arts 208.\nNominations will be accepted\nfrom the floor to elect the girls\nwho will be Ex-officio representing all ex-service girls on tho\ncampus.\nChairman Barbara Keisburg,\npresident of the WUS, requests aU\nex-service girls to attend.\nIssue First DVA Cheques Oct. 15\nThe first DVA j\u00C2\u00BBy cheques of the fall term will be available to veteran\nstudents en October 15 and 16 at the Armouries], Students whose last\nnames begin with A to M inclusive will receive their cheques on the 15th,\nwith Mc to Z following the next day.\nA new regulation has been brought into effect this year, to the effect\nthat cheque^ will remain on the campus for only one week after issue.\nMajor J. F. McLean, head of the DVA office on the campus, advisee, all\nvets to pick up their cheques on their designated day, if possible. Cheques\nnot claimed after Oct. 28 will be returned to the DVA office downtown,\nwhere recalcitrants may obtain their monthly allotment.\nConstitutional Revision,\nPolicy Outline Slated\nWHAT IS EXPECTED to be the largest Alma Mater\nSociety meeting in the history of the university is scheduled\nto start at 11:40 this morning in the Stadium, rain or shine.\nThe Admnistration has cancelled all 11:30 lectures and\nlabs so that everyone of the 8500 members of the student\nbody may attend.\nThe agenda as revised up to press time yesterday listed\nthe following items of business:\n1. Auditors' report for the 1945-46 financial year, to be\npresented by Don McRae, treasurer of the AMS;\n2. Outline of Student Council policy for the coming\nyear, to be read by Ted Kirkpatrick, president of the Alma\nMater Society;\n3. A motion to set up a standing Constitutional Revision\nCommittee, to be composed of non-Council members;\n4. A motion authorizing the transfer of the three dollar\nportion of the AMS fees which is now used to retire the Brock\nHall bond issue to be used instead as a yearly levy for the\nMemorial Gymnasium fund.\nYesterday noon, the treasurer\nconfirmed previous Ubyssey reports that a move was underway\non the campus to increase that\nportion to five dollars, thus boosting the total Alma Mater Society\nfees to fifteen dollars per student.\nIMPOSSIBLE\n\"From reports that I have heard,\"\nsaid McRae, \"I believe It quite\npossible that such a motion will be\nintroduced from the floor.\"\nAnother matter expected to come\nup for discussion at the meeting\nis the method which Student\nCouncil adopts te till the vacant\nCouncil position of Chairman off\nthe Undergraduate Societies Committee.\nUSC BY-ELECTION?\nJoy Donegani, secretary of the\nSociety, told the Ubyssey yesterday noon that \"there were still no\nnominations for the USC by-election even after the extended deadline\" and \"that Council was faced\nwith the necessity of finding some\nsolution for the problem.\"\nToday's meeting is officially\ndescribed as the semi-annual general meeting of the Alma Mater\nsociety. With the annual meeting\nwhich is held in the spring it forms\none of the two regular AMS meetings which are open for motions\nintroduced by the general student\nbody.\nSTADIUM\nThe expanded registration has\nmade it necessary for Council to\nchange the site off today's meeting\nfrom its traditional place in tha\nAuditorium to make use of the\nlarger seating capacity off the Stadium. In addition, travelling microphones will be used to carry discussion from the floor of the\nmeeting.\nAs every one of the 8500 registered students is eligible to take\npart in today's gathering, Student\nCouncil has made the prediction\nthat it should be the largest AMS\nmeeting in the university's history.\nWith Miss Donegani, Kirkpatrick,\nand McRae on the platform will be:\nBarbara Kelsberg, president oi the\nWomen's Undergraduate Society;\nPat Macintosh, president of the\nWomen's Athletic Association; Jerry Macdonald, president of the Literary and Scientific Executive;\nKeith MacDonald, president of the\nMen's Athletic Directorate; Bugs\nWalker, Co-ordinator of Social Activities; Bob Harwood, Junior\nMember; and Phil Evans, Sophomore Member.\nDON MACRAE\nCanada Offered\nTen Scholarships\nTEN RHODES Scholarships, valued at \u00C2\u00A3400 each and tenable at Oxford University, England, will be offered this year to\nCanadian University students. The\nannual awards were resumed last\nyear after their suspension during\nthe war.\nSERVICE MEN\nExtension of the age limit for\nservice candidates will bring the\npossibility of a Rhodes Scholarship to all service men whose education has been delayed by the\nwar. Relaxation of the rule regarding marriage will also allow\nmarried veterans to benefit.\nOrdinary candidates must be\nsingle, between the ages of 19 and\n25. Service candidates are eligible\nwho are between the ages of 19\nand 25 anytime from Oct. 1, 1939\nto the date of application. All\ncandidates must be male, British\nsubjects with at least five years\npermanent residence in Canada.\nAPPLICATION\nApplication for these scholarships must be made to the secretary of the Provincial Selection\nCommittee, Dean F. G. Curtis,\nFaculty of Law, UBC not later\nthan November 10 ,1946 and appointments will be made in December. Application form and full\ninformation may be obtained from\ntho registrar.\nArt Loan Service Revived\nWide Selection Offered\nTHE UNIQUE and popular Art Loan Service inaugurated at UBC during the 1945-46 term will reopen this week\nlibrary officials announced yesterday.\nThrough this service, students\nmay borrow original oil and water\ncolor paintings by Canadian artists\nand many reproductions from the\nCarnegie collection.\nONE MONTH\nPaintings may be kept for one\nmonth for the nominal charge of\n$1.00 per session. They will be on\ndisplay in the Periodical Room of\nthe library from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.\nfor one day each month. The first\nloan day will be Thursday, October 10 and thereafter the loan day\nwill be on the first Friday of each\nmonth.\nA well known Canadian artist\nwill be on hand each loan day to\nanswer queries and conduct informal discussions in connection\nwith the paintings. Mrs. Dorothy\nH. Willis will be the visiting artist for Thursday. Also in attendance will be Mrs. Illingworth Kerr,\nartist and secretary of the B.C.\nbranch of the Canadian Federation\nof Artists, and member of the Library Reference Department.\nThe Art Loan Service is now\nopen only to students, but later it\nmay be extended to include the\nfiiculty and staff.\nAPPEAL TO ARTISTS\nTo supplement and enlavge the\ncollection of paintings an appeal\nhas been made to Canadian artists throughout B.C. asking them\nt> offer their paintings to the\nservice.\nWith money received from the\nservice last year, a further supply\nof prints of classic paintings has\nalready been added.\nArtists who have already contributed to the service include Lew-\nion and Mrs. Harris, C. H. Scott,\nW. P. Westin, Cliff Robinson, Dorothy Willis, Jack Shadbolt, Delisle\nParker, Dorothy Bell, Nora Lawson Cheney, Harry Hood, Illingworth Kerr and Cattelle Porter.\nThe Art Loan Committee includes Mrs. Norman Mackenzie,\nMrs. Vyner Brooke, Mrs, Lawren\nHarris, Mis. C. E. Dolman, Mr. J.\nH. Creighton, Dr. Kaye Lamb and\nMiss Marjorie Smith. TfoeWpHsy\nPresident and Secretary, Canadian University Press.\nAuthorised as Second Class Mall, Post Office Dept., Ottawa. Mall Subscription \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 $2.00 per year.\nPublished every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday dur ing the university year by the Student Publications Board\nof the Alma Mater Society of the University of British Columbia.\n******\nEditorial opinions expressed ore those of the Editorial Board of the Ubyssey and not necessarily those of the\nAlma Mater Society or of the University.\nOffices in Brock Hall. Phone ALma 1624. For Advertising - Phone KErr. 1811.\nEDITOR-IN-CHIEF JACK FERRY\nGENERAL STAFF: News Editor - Nancy Macdonald; CUP Editor - Bob Mungall; Sports Editor - Laurie Dyer;\nFeatures Editor, Norm Klenman. and Photography Director - Tommy Hatcher.\nSTAFF THIS ISSUE: Senior Editor, Don Ferguson: Associate Editor, Gerry Batten.\nCOMMAND PERFORMANCE\nThere have been few general meetings\nof the Alma Mater Society as important as\nthe one which will be held in the Stadium\ntoday at noon.\nThe meeting should show two things.\nFor one thing, it should demonstrate how\nsuccessful UBC's student government will\nbe in handling the complex problems which\narise from the universitie's new stature. By\nits out-of-the-ordinary planning for today's\nmeeting, and by its general work to date this\nfall, the Student Council has shown itself\nto be somewhat aware of those problems.\nBut the Council must realize fully that\nunless it can arouse tiie enthusiasim of an\nenlarged student body for undergraduate\ngovernment of undergraduate affairs, it will\nnot be able to carry on student government\nwith optimum success.\nThe recent failure of any person, or\ngroup of persons, to show enough interest\nto nominate a candidate for the vacant\nCouncil position of Chairman of the Undergraduate Societies Committee, can only be\nregarded as an unhappy omen.\nWhat Council intends to do about that\nsituation will be one of the topics for dis-\ncussion from the floor at today's gathering\nin the Stadium. It is to be hoped that President Kirkpatrick will call for nominations\nfrom the floor rather than announce a\nfait accompli for an expedient solution of\nthe problem. The privilege which students\nhave of electing their own representatives\nmust be nurtured even if it sometimes means\npatience and skill in encouraging the same\nstudents to fend for themselves.\nWhat prestige the Student Council will\ndeserve in the eyes of the ordinary undergraduate will also be determined today by\nthe policy for the year which President\nKirkpatrick will read.\nThe other thing to be demonstrated today will be the length to which that ordinary undergraduate intends to go in supporting his leaders' efforts to build a Memorial Gymnasium on the campus. Important\nfinancial decisions affecting those efforts\nmust be made today by those attending the\nmeeting.\nWith such a program today's Alma\nMater Society meeting should be considered\nby all students as a command performance\nfor them to attend.\nThe Mummery\nBy JABEZ\nHaving been thrown out of the Library\nthree times, twice by the revolving door,\nthe principle of which he hadn't yet mastered, and once by the procter for sitting\nat the bottom of the stairs watching the\ngirls go up and down, Homer Quincey was\npretty leery about entering the place.\nOnly once had he summoned up enough\nnerve to climb the stairs to the Main Reading Room. Sure enough, the Room was filled with hundreds of people, all reading or\nlooking as though they might start reading\nat any moment. Some were even reading\nstanding up, leaning against the wall, and\nothers were reading on the dead run, padding around the tables in hot pursuit of a\nhigher education.\nWeary and Bookless\nFeeling naked and suspicious without a\nbook in his hand, Homer sidled up to the\nlarge desk where several librarians, crouched behind steel fretwork, were firing books\ninto the mass of students at the counter.\nHomer waited until he saw an opening, then\nsqueezed in to face one of the beselged.\n\"Gimme a book,\" he said.\n\"What book do you want?\" asked the\nlibrarian.\nHomer's eyes widened.\n\"You mean I got to choose it myself?\"\nhe asked, and flinched as the librarian's\nnostrils flared at him.\n\"There are a hundred and seventy thousand volumes in this Library. You'll have\nto make out a call slip.\"\nPulling his CVSM ribbon out of his\npocket, Homer began:\n\"I served three years at Brandon Manning Depot, and thirty days at Lachine,\nand three month at. ...\"\n\"You still have to make out a call slip,\"\ninterrupted the librarian firmly. \"You'll find\nslips over by the Card Catalogue.\"\nAdversity Mounts\nStuffing the ribbon back into his pocket,\nHomer retreated, face burning. The Library,\nhe felt, was out to get him. The \"Card Catalogue\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Jie'd never heard of it. Eaton's\nCatalogue he was familiar with, even intimate, but he couldn't see anything that\nlooked like a catalogue in the Room.\nWith studied nonchalance, Homer lounged into the area behind the loan desk. His\nbeady eyes quickly noticed that people carrying books were running up and down a\nflight of stairs, obviously leading to the\ncache of 170,000 volumes. Homer swung in\nbehind a plump senior and started down\nthe stairs, to be halted immediately by a\nvoice in his ear.\n\"Just a minute,\" it said. \"Have you a\npermit?\"\nHomer stared at the grey-haired lady.\n\"Yes, ma'am,\" he said slowly. \"BuTall\nI got left on it is a half-dozen beer.\" Although his tone, was civil, inwardly Homer\nbridled at this threat of extortion, just for\none lousy book.\n\"I mean a stack permit,\" said the lady.\n\"Don't block the stairs, please.\"\nHomer stumbled back up the stairs, again\nhumiliated. Stack permit, Card Catalogue,\ncall slips\u00E2\u0080\u0094Homer saw his chances of getting a book fading. Even if he did succeed\nin borrowing one, he'd probably never find\nout how to return it. So, he sat down at the\nbottom of the stairs and took out a large\npeanut butter sandwich, which he was still\neating when the proctor threw him out.\nNatural Alliance\nAfter that, Homer found that the best\nplace to borrow books was from the bench\nin the men's cloakroom. He made Nature\nhis ally.\nBut now necessity demanded that he\nfind \"HL3,\" which somebody told him\nmeant \"Hut 3 in the vicinity of the Library.\"\nSo, Homer tiptoed up from the basement\nand started looking closely at the different\ndoors on the first floor. He had his eye to\na keyhole when the proctor tapped him on\nthe shoulder and asked:\n\"Looking for something, son?\"\nHomer straightened up to meet the issue\nsquarely.\n\"Yeah,\" he said, \"I'm lookin' for this\nhere 'vicinity,.\"\n\"The what?\"\n\"The vicinity,\" Homer whispered hoarsely. \"Hut Three's in the vicinity of the Library, feller told me. I was due there a week\nago Thursday.\"\nWatching Homer narrowly, the proctor\nsaid:\n\"The vicinity is outside, son. Round the\nback.\"\n\"Outside? Round the back?\" Homer repeated querulously, for this struck him as\nbeing a pretty fancy name for a privy.\n\"They teachin' school in them things?\"\nAs the proctor nodded and steered him\nto the door, Homer couldn't help admiring\nthe ingenuity of the authorities in creating\nlecture rooms. And as he circled around to\nthe back of the Library, to a row of some of\nthe biggest damn privies he ever saw, he\nsuddenly realized that this must be where\nhe'd find that catalogue the librarian was\ntalking about. At last, things were beginning\nto make sense, he thought, and promptly\nfell into a fresh excavation.\nBEAUTY-on-the-SPOT\nTHE BRIGHT SUN, as it shone down on our fair campus,\nwas no brighter than my spirits as I arrived to join the milling\nthrong. The broad sweep of lawns on every side were no\ngreener than I.\nWhere to begin? Throwing caution, to the winds I fixed my\ngreen (it says here) eyes upon \u00C2\u00AB\nsterling looking character who,\nwith square jaw set, was standing\nat the end of a long, longline.\nSlowly we advanced to our goal.\nAfter an hour or more the end\nwas in view. Alas! it was the\nwrong end!! We had arrived at\nthe Book Store. This would have\nbeen well and good if I knew\nwhat books to get. However my\naim was to join tills here Institution first\u00E2\u0080\u0094and then find out\nwhat I had to study.\nAttracted no doubt by my\nblonde hair, at that time untouched by grey, the man ahead of me\nintroduced himself in a quaint and\nsomewhat foreign way. He turned\nout to be Homer Quincy of\nMoose Groin, Sask. He who Jabe<.\nwas to immortalize; He to was\nin the wrong line. After two or\nmore false starts Homer made the\ngrade. Still trusting to his judgement in spite of all, I too finally\nfound myself a full fledged freshette.\nAway dull care!! Let joy be un-\nconflned!! Life would now be\nsimple. Striking out on my own,\nI headed for the Caf. I soon found\nout that others (8,548 in fact,\nHomer had gone to see the cow\u00C2\u00AB\nin the Aggie Building) had the\nsame idea!\nAnd so it went, Caf, Book Store,\nand Bus Stop. Then came the\ngreat news! They picked me for\nSIGNBOARD\nMAVIS COLEMAN\n\"Beauty on the Spot\" Surely, I would get a seat in the Library! Now I would find the doors\nswing wide before me! My road\nof learning would be smooth and\nuntrammeled! But, do I get a\nseat In the library? on the bus?\nLady Godiva complete with horse\nwould be out of lucx and so was It\n\"God is on the side of the biggest battalions\" or should I say\n\"the heftiest shoulders\" and I'm\nno fullback; So now I have\nscrambled up the steep banks to\nthe road of success, here's hoping\nI don't get pushed off at\nChristmas!\nWith Malice Aforethought\nBy Peter Remnant\nTHE SUBJECT of obscene literature is far too big a one for the\nmiserable allotment of space at my disposal, but it's a grand field to work\nin. Possibly the beet way to save time is to dispose of the related subject\nof pornography with D. H. Lawrence's definition of it, as 'the rubbing\nof the dirty little secrets In the mind*; that Is, the guilty and furtive\ntreatment of sex, to the delight of the young or perverted\nWith pornography ruled out we still retain the whole range of great\nliterature virtually untouched. The obscenity of Chaucer\u00E2\u0080\u0094in all its\nbroad Anglo Saxon plain statement\u00E2\u0080\u0094differs widely from the sensual and\nover ripe romanticism of Baudelaire, and both differ from the cold, harsh\ndissection of Joyce and Zola. But in no case do we find the shoddy,\nslimy suggestions of vice and evil that flaunt themselves in the vast\nproduct of the pulp industry, and even sneak into the closely guarded\nworld of movie and radio.\nHARDY, JOYCE, AND LAWRENCE\nThe return to obscenity in literature, which began, 1 suppose, with\nHardy, is an effort on the part of authors to reestablish an honest and\nnatural approach to matters sexual, which have remained underground\nand denied since the onslaughts of the nineteenth century moralists.\nD. H. Lawrence has, in particular, identified himself with the specific\ntask of bringing sex out of the sphere of illicit and forbidden subjects\nand giving it the- status of a natural force, to be discussed and treated in\na rational manner.\nJames Joyce is scarcely as purposeful in his treatment. Possibly he\nhas built on the firm ground won by Lawrence. Whatever it may be.\nin the writings of Joyce sex takes its place as an important constituent,\noften a brutally destructive one, in the minds of his characters, but never\nmore than a constituent.\nART VERSUS PULP\nIn every case the author is attempting to depict real people, with\ngenuine, life-like minds and motivations. As literature probes deeper\ninto thought and mental process the presence of what has been called\nobscenity becomes more and more unavoidable. If this fact is offensive\nto some readers, possibly as a result of a conditioned dishonesty in their\napproach to reading, they should avoid exposing themselves; but to ask\na great author to frame his work for such an immature public would be\nworse than criminal.\nWhat it really comes down to is that such books as 'Ulysses' are banned, not because they are untrue, not because they condone and glamorize\nimmorality, but because they do just the opposite. Let a book like 'Kitty'\nappear\u00E2\u0080\u0094tawdry and vicious, and, as Oscar Wilde would say, 'what k\nworse, badly written\u00E2\u0080\u0094and we welcome it in five editions. But give us a\nbook which allows us no condescending smile, but cuts into the deepest\nsecrets of our minds and exposes the most purulent of our social abuses,\nand we ban it and burn it for fear someone should believe lt.\nSo we are finally forced to the conclusion that there is no such thing\nas obscenity in literature\u00E2\u0080\u0094if we are to regard that term in Its conventional\nsense. There may be, and often is pornography, but what has been\ncalled obscenity, if we try to put our finger on it, slips either into pornography or out of the field altogether. If we call Shakespeare and Joyce\nobscene we must extend the term to include Gray's 'Anatomy' and the\n'Oxford Dictionary'.\nCLASSIFIED\nWANTED\u00E2\u0080\u0094One genuine Anglo-\nSaxon mediaeval Wassail Bowl,\nwith the Inscription \"Was Hail,\nChums\" in old English script on\nthe rim. Highest price will be\npaid for the genuine article.\nBring to PUB OFFICE any noon,\nFOUND\u00E2\u0080\u0094Wallet belonging to Catherine McLean. Phone BAy. 6265R\nafter 7 p.m.\nLOST-On UBC Bus 11:05 Monday\nmorning a black wallet with broken zipper codtaining about $120\nand valuable papers. Please\nphone PAc. 7296 or turn into this\noffice.\nLOST-Thursday, in vicinity of the\nRegistrar's Office a Ronson lighter. Finder please return to the\nAMS office. Reward.\nLOST\u00E2\u0080\u0094Silver chaip bracelet with\nsilver heart attached, on Thursday. Reward. Return to AMS\noffice or phone BAy. 3655R. S.\nOgilvie.\nLOST\u00E2\u0080\u00941 navy blue rain-coat.\nPlease phone KErr. 2425-M.\nLOST\u00E2\u0080\u0094Red change purse on the\ncampus on Wednesday. Please\nphone Dorothy Patterson at\nKErr. 2124-L.\nLOST-Will driver of car in which\nI left my lunch-box on Tuesday,\nOctober 3, please phone J. Mon-\ngomery at ALma 2456.\nFOR SALE\u00E2\u0080\u0094Room and board 140\na month. Phone FR. 4282.\nWANTED\u00E2\u0080\u0094Motorcycle; Harley or\n500 c.c British make. See Bob\nScott, Hut M 15.\nTUESDAY, OCTOBER 8\n12:30\u00E2\u0080\u0094Womans' Rifle Club meeting for new and old members, Tuesday October 8th\nat 12:30 p.m. in Arts 101.\n12:30\u00E2\u0080\u0094All new students interested\nin competitive skiing should\nturn out to the V.O.C. meeting Tuesday, 12:30, in Ap.\nSc. 100.\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER i\n12:30\u00E2\u0080\u0094New member applications for\nthe Glider Club on Wednesday\nOctober 9 at 12:30 in Applied\nScience 202.\n12:30\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Symphonic Club will\npresent the Violin Concerto\nin D by Brahms, at 12:30\nWednesday in the Double\nCommittee Room.\n12:30\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dr. Frederic Lasserre, UBC\nArchitectural Head, will speak to\nthe Architectural Club, Wednesday, 12:30, in Ap. Sc. 102.\n12:30\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Symphonic Club will\nmeet on Wednesday, October 9,\nin the Double Committee Room\nin the Brock Building, Program:\nConcerto in D for violin, by\nBrahms.\nTHURSDAY, OCTOBER 10\n12:30: THERE will be an important\nmeeting of the UBC Swimming\nClub on Thursday. Oct. 10th, at\n12:30 noon. All members and prospective members are urgently\nasked to turn in Arts 103.\nALL PHRATERES will meet\nThurs, at 12:30 in Aggie 100 to\nhear Dean Mawdsley speak.\nNOTICE\u00E2\u0080\u0094Have transportation from\n16th and Dunbar Monday to Saturday, inclusive. All 8:30 lectures. Phon BAy. 6970-L between\n7:00 and 8:30 p.m.\nNOTICE\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Ubyssey has a letter\nabout sorority rushing which it\nwill be glad to print if the writer\nwill send in his or her name.\nSWEET CAP0R1L\nCIGARITTIS\n\"The purest term in watch\ntebetee see he smelted\"\nBegin the\nAUTUMN SEMESTER\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 With a visit to our Art Department\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 A complete line of Art and Drafting Supplies\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Fountain Pent and Pencils\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Loose Leaf Ring Books and Exereise Books\n566 Seymour Street\nPAciflc 0171\nGEHRKE'S Ltd.\nPhone PA-0171\nADVANCE SALE\nOF\nSTUDENT\nTELEPHONE DIRECTORY\n25 Cents\nAT AMS OFFICE\nAND\nQUAD BOX OFFICE\nLimited Number of Copies\nContains name, address and phone number\nof all Students\nTOTEM PICTURES\nThe Photographer In\nBROCK HALL Is Now\nTaking FROSH PIX\nONLY.\nFreshmen\nMust Have Their\nPictures Taken By\nOctober 12.\n*\u00C2\u00A7f^ V\nOutdoor Club Members URS Announces\nPlan Thankssiving Climb W**f-\nA week-end of roughing it is in store for the members of\nthe Varsity Outdoor Club on Thanksgiving when they hike\nto Vancouver's guardians, the Lions. An annual. affair the\nhike will be compulsory for all new members and 150 to 200\nare expected to participate.\nNoted News Man\nVisites Campus\nJAMES M. MINIFIE, Washington, D.C. correspondent for the\nNew York Herald Tribune in his\nvisit to UBC yesterday stated that\nhe thought \"the fact that all su-\ndents have been accepted here is\na great tribute to the resourcefulness of the university.\"\nMr. Mlnlfie, who often broadcasts from Washington, D.C. on\nthe Sunday evening CBC Roundup, was, during the war, a member of the United States Department of Psychrtogical Warfare.\nHe helped establish 18 Italian\nnewspapers between Sicily and\nVienna.\nMr. Mlnlfie studied at Oxford\nafter graduating from the University of Saskatchewan.\nCommerce Crests\nExpected Soon\nFIRST SHIPMENT of Commerce crests Is expected Saturday,\nannonuced Frank Philips, president of the Commerce Undergraduate Society.\nThe crests are in three brilliant colors, hand cut and sewn\nby a student veteran and his wife.\nThe Commerce crests are a replica\nof the commerce pin and sells\nfor $1.25.\nOrder Lists were posted yesterday in the outer commerce office\nand on the Quad notice board,\nand all interested commerce students are asked t\u00C2\u00B0 Put thelr\nnames on the list.\nOrders will also be taken for\ncrests of other faculties or clubs,\nand interested groups are advisen\ntc contact Bob Young.\nUBC FENCING\nCLUB EXEC.\nCALLS FENCERS\n\"TO FENCE, to practice sword-\nplay, to use the sword scientifically.\" These words of wisdon, the\nwatchwords of this years UBC\nFencing Club, are to be strictly\nadhered to by this years fencing\naspirants under the guiding foil\nof coach Hale Atkenson.\nAt the first organizational meeting of the club, President Ken\nCarter said that the club wanted\nyou providing you are Interested\nin fencing. Ken also gave a general outline of the years activities\nand announced the new fencing\nschedule as follows:\nTuesdays 9:30 to 10:30\nThursdays 9:30 to 10:30\nwith a special Training Period for\nexperienced fencers on Wednesdays from 3:30 to 9:30. All classes\nare to be held in HO 4 (just west\nof the Oym). Coach H. Atkenson\nwill be ln attendance at all sessions, demonstrating and teaching\nthe \"poke, parry and point\" technique.\nAll members please pay fees as\nsoon as possible to enable the executive to complete the budget.\nSTAFF SEEKS\nSTUDENT AID\nSTUDENTS eating in the Snack\nBar in Brock Hall are asked by\nMr. Grantham to return their\ndishes and trays to the large table\nat the side of the room where\nthey will be removed to the kitchen by the maids.\nBecause of the shortage of help\nstudents are asked to help as\nmuch as possible in easing this\nsituation.\nComplaints have also been registered thai gum has been found\non the floor ot the Lounge.\nThe party will leave Saturday\non the bus to Horseshoe Bay where\nthey will transfer to the Howe\nSound boat. The night will be\nspent at St. Mark's camp with the\nascent scheduled for Sunday and\nthe return trip for Monday.\nThe club is also planning some\nrock-climbing courses during which\nGrouse Mt. will be climbed the\nNOTICE\nAll prospective new members of the Varsity Outdoor\nClub are reminded that:\n1. Your application forms\nmust be handed In at the Quad,\nnotice board not later than\nWedesday, October 9.\n2. If you are going on the\nlong hike to the Lions you\nmust pay fl.00 deposit and 2\nmeat tokens at the Quad, not\nlater than Wednesday, Oct. 9,\n3. Work hike discipline must\nbe obeyed at all times or, your\nwork hike will not be credited.\nhard way over the sheer rock of\nthe Capilano Valley.\nMore excursions of this sort are\nbeing planned for November with\na hike up Crown Mt. for the boys\nwhile the girls climb Goat Mt.\nSki gymnastics classes, dry siding and ski teams are also on the\nagenda with the services of Peter\nVajda, eminent Swiss and Vancouver skier having been procured\nfor the first\nCampus Tag Day\nProfitable\nTAG DAY, Saturday, October\n5, for the Loyal Portestant Home\nfor Children was successful on the\nUniversity campus, in the opinion\nof Barbara Kelsburg, director.\nWhile volunteer workers tagged\nIn the city, girls from the executive of WUS tagged on the\ncampus. They reported that students gave generously to this\ncause and that results were gratifying.\nAs this institution for under-\npriveleged children is a province-\nwide organization it does not\ncome under the Community Chest\nDrive and so must collect funds\nprivately.\nBrock Hall May\nOpen Saturdays\nCOUNCILLORS have written\nto Mr. Lee, superintendent of\nbuildings, but no word has yet\nbeen received confirming the\nopening of Brock Hall on future\nSaturday afternoons.\nThe Snack Bar was open last\nSaturday afternoon but as no\nstudents appeared after 2 p.m. it\nclosed, and students turning up\nafter the Thunderblrds-Willamette\ngame were out of luck.\nNext Saturday Uie lounge wlh\nnot be open as a Faculty Tea Is\nbeing held hi the afternoon and\nthe Football Dance at night.\nDirectory Card\nSales Soaring\nSTUDENT DIRECTORY SALES\nare booming. Up to 5:00 pjn.\nTuesday, 1,500 order cards haa\nbeen sold, according to Jack Was-\nserman, sales manager.\nSale of 5,000 order cards is predicted, but this is not the limit\nand sales will continue until the\ndemand Is met. It is emphasized,\nhowever, that only those buying\norder cards will be able to obtain\na directory. No extra copies will\nbe published.\nOrder cards will be sold at the\nBus Stop, Quad, and at all important gatherings.\nSmall or Large\nORCHESTRA\nFor Your\nPEP MEETS, CLUB DANCES OR FORMALS\nPhone\nJOE MICELI\nThree Orchestras At Your Service.\nMAr. 2812 or MAr. 2561\nRichards Room 1\nWEDNESDAY NIGHT is Radio\nNight for UBC.\n\"There was Once A Young\nMan,\" a whimsical fantasy by E.\nPeter Duval a UBC student, will\nbe presented over CKMO at 9 p.m.\nen the UBC Hour. This program\nis in support of the War Memorial Gym.\nThe same evening, immediately\nfollowing the Drama series over\nCKMO, a new series \"UBC\nEoundtable\" will be Inaugurated.\nThis program will be in the form\nof a discussion group featuring\nrepresentatives of various campus\norganizations in co-operation with\nthe Parlamentary Forum. The\nmonitors will be professors of the\nFaculty and Department concerned.\nOver station CJOR at 10:30 p.m.\nthe series \"Music From Varsity,\"\na program of concert and classical music will go on the air featuring student Artists of the University Musical Society.\nFOOTBALL HOP\nSATURDAY NITE\nSECOND football dance of the\nseason will be held in the Main\nLounge of Brock Hall on Saturday, October 12, from 8:30 to\n12:00.\nTickets for the dance, which is\nbeing arranged by the Gamma,\nBeta end Alpha sub-chapters oi\nPhrateres, will go on sale on\nThursday, in the AMS office.\nFrank Nightengale and his Varsity orchestra will provide the\nmusic. The Snack Bar will remain open for refreshments.\nArrangements are being made\nby Ruth Irish, Beryl Reed and\nMary Tremalne. - \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nAMS CARDS\nAVAILABLE\nWEDNESDAY\nDistribution of AMS cards will\ncommence Wednesday at 11:30\na.m. Weather permitting cards\nwill be distributed in front of tho\nBrock, In the event of rain, fables\nv/ill be set up in the north end of\nthe Brock. Cards will be distributed from 11:30 to 1:30 for several days and at a later date may\nbe obtained at the AMS office.\nOct. 12 Final Day\nFor Frosh Pix\nOCTOBER 12 is the last day\nfor Freshman Pictures.\nMr. Walberer, photographer,\nstresses the fact that those who\nintend to have pictures taken had\nbetter report to the Brock before\nthe rush at the end of the week.\nTo date, 460 Freshman have been\nphotographed, an average of 45\nper day.\nThe price of $1.50 entitles each\nstudent to a finished enlargement.\nThe same photo will be used\nfor Senior years.\nWARN VETS\nOF DVA TESTS\nMajor J. F. McLean, head of\nthe veterans counselling staff, announces there are still a few first\nyear student veterans who have\nnot taken the DVA apptitude\ntests.\nIt Is essential that these students report to $* DVA hut\u00C2\u00BB oa\nWest Mall, near the Armouries,\ntoday at 6:30 p.m. This is definitely the last chance to write the\nexams, and failure to report will\nprobably result in a long delay\nin pay cheques.\nMussoc Banquet\nPlans Complete\nANNUAL FALL Banquet and\nDance of the Musical Society Is\nscheduled for Thursday, October\n10, at 6 p.m. in Brock Hall.\nPatrons at the Banquet will\ncomprise : Dr. N. A. MacKenzie;\nProfessor W. Gage, Honorary\nPresident; Dean Dorothy Mawdsley, Honorary vice-president; C.\nHaydn Williams, musical director;\nE.V. Young, dramatic director; H.\nAdaskin, Head of the Music Department; and Dean Buchanan.\nErica Nalos, who played a leading role in the Musical Society\nduring her days on the campus,\nwill be vocal soloist.\nTeno Genis, active member of\nthe Mussoc, will render violin\nsolos, and John Fish, Business\nManager, will lead the community\nsinging.\nAny former members of the\nSociety who would like to aatend\nthe Banquet and Dance are asked\nto get their tickets by Wednesday,\nOctober 9 from any member of\nthe executive or from room 207,\nAuditorium.\nFRESHETTE TEA\nPLANNED TUES.\nALL FRESHETTE Home Economics students are invited by\nthe Home Ec executives to a tea\nto be held hi the Brock Hall on\nTuesday, October 15.\nThe tea will take place in tho\nMildred Brock room from 3:30 to\n5:30 p.m. and ls to be arranged by\nJoan Park, president of the Home\nEconomics Undergraduate Society.\nMembers of the faculty and up-\nperclass women will be on hand\nto greet all new Home Economics\nstudents.\nTHE UBYSSEY, Tuesday, October 8,1946. Page 3\nUBC Concert Orchestra\nNeed Student Musicians\nWOULD YOU like to play in the concert orchestra?\nStrings, violas, and woodwinds are wanted, and bass\nplayers are desperately needed.\nLack of instruments need not put\noft any interested musicians, since\nthis year high quality instruments\nwill be loaned to any student desiring the use of one.\nREHEARSAL HELD\nFirst rehearsal was held Sunday\nnight at Harmony Hall, and a tentative program was drawn up for\nthe year.\nEntering its third year on the\ncampus, the Concert Orchestra So.\nciety, under the direction of\nHenning Jensen, is aiming for a\nversatile students' orchestra by\ntaking a survey of orchestral talent\namong the students.\nTOUR PROMISED\nAn excellent library of music is\navailable and this year will be\nclimaxed by a tour in the spring.\nNext rehearsal will be held\nSunday, October 13, at Harmony\nHall, 1655 West Broadway, beginning at 7 pjn. sharp. All mem\nbers are asked to be there early to\nensure the rehearsal starting on\ntime.\nAnyone interested is requested\nto phone President Howard Barton at KErr. 4725-R or Jim Court\nat FA. 2828-R for further particulars.\nDO YOU NEED\nEXTRA MONEY ?\nYou can add to your Income\nand help Meet rising Brine\ncosts by selling Christinas cards\nIn your spare time.\nBEAUTIFUL PERSONAL\nCARDS AND BOXBD\nASSORTMENTS\nFREE SAMPLES\nCOMPLETE RANGE\nHIGHEST COMMISSIONS\nNO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY\nWrite today TOOTHILLS LTD.\nDept. A., OaM Bldg.,\nEstablished IMS.\nHat Section\nsi\nOur Young Modern Section\nhas )ust received a grand\nshipment of super-smart heti\nfor you\u00E2\u0080\u0094the Young\nModern of Vancouver\u00E2\u0080\u0094perky,\nbrisk and breezy hats\nfor smart young heads. Soft\nfelts in crisp Pall\nshades at wall as black,\nbrown and gray.\n2.95 eei 3.95\n Moiiuoc) HAIR CKOOMII) lOR\n1. ':\ ' '\n,.3V"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1946_10_08"@en . "10.14288/1.0123820"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Student 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 .