"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-07-23"@en . "1939-10-27"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0123832/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " HARDY OUP OAME\nTEA DANOE\nPLAY\nDon't Forget the Smoker\nPublished Twice Weekly by The Publications Board of The University of British Columbia\nHOMEOOMINO\nALUMNI DINNER\nRALLY\noo_r^TcTge^_i^Smoker\nVOL. XXII.\nVANOOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, OOTOBER 27, 1939\nNo; 10\nGraduates Return To Alma Mater\nHomecoming Program Recaptures\nSpirit Of Undergraduate Days\nHamber Delivers Address\nAt Annual Congregation\nUrges All to Join Patriotic Groups\nTo Ensure Economy of Material\nAnd Human Endeavour\nThe black shadow of war hung like a pall over Wednesday's\nThirteenth Annual Autumn congregation, where two honorary\ndoctor's degrees, and eighty-four master's and bachelor's degrees\nwere conferred, as the Honourable Erie W. Hamber, Lieutenant-\nGovernor of the Province of British Columbia issued a call to\nservice in civilian auxiliary forces, after receiving with Dr. Paul\nA. Boving, professor emeritus, the Degree of Doctor of Laws,\nhonoris causa.\n -\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ESSENTIAL WORK\nAcademic\nRegalia\nBy KEN KEEFE\nThe Auditorium was ths soene\nof a colorful procession last Wedneaday aa the faoulty membera made\ntheir entrance to the Fall Congregation wearing the hoods indicative of\ntholr various degrees.\nThere were blue hoods, red hoods,\ngreen hoods, yellow hoods; in fact\nthere were hooda of almost any\ncolor you care to mention.\nThe origin of these marks of scholastic achievement lies away back In\nthe times when monasteries were the\nsole centres of learning and monks\nled the field In scholastic endeavour.\nFRIAR TUCK\nIn those days, however, the hood\nwas more practical ln design and\nserved both as a badge of scholarship\nand a serviceable headgear. Those of\nyou who were fortunate enough to\nhave an Illustrated edition of Robin\nHood stories (in your youth) will remember how Friar Tuck wore his\ncowl thrown back from his head and\nhanging down between his shoulder-\nblades. From this, the monkish fash-\nIon of the day, lt is easy to trace the\nevolution of the hood as a mark of\nlearning.\nThe universities, as they arose In\nsuooesalon to the monasteries, took\nover thla characteristic garb of the\nscholar and conventionalised It In\nthe form you aaw In the auditorium laat Wedneaday afternoon.\nEach university adopted a distinctive color for its hood. Consequently,\nas more universities sprang up, lt became necessary to have some body to\ngovern the distribution of colors and\nInsignia. This need was filled by the\nOollege of Heralds in England, and it\nls from this college that the University of B.C. received Its University\nShield and colors.\nARTS BLUE\nIn 1030 a committee composed of\nfaculty members from the university\nwent to a great deal of trouble to\nasoertaln the exact shade of blue\nused on the Shield and to ensure that\nthis same shade would be used on\nevery hood granted to U.B.C. graduates ln Arts. It was also decided that\nred should be used for the Science\nhoods and maize for the hoods ol\ngraduates ln Agriculture.\nIf you should wonder at the\nkhaki braid on the gowns of undergraduates, It la there In memory of\nthose university students who were\nkilled In the last war.\nOowns have always presented a\nticklish problem on this campus. As\nfar back as 1022 the faculty agreed\nthat they should wear gowns \"If\nconvenient\", but apparently the vast\nmajority of our lecturers find lt Inconvenient. Students also have never\nbeen enthusiastic over the prospect\nof donning gowns although the question comes up with monotonous regularity every year. Students and pro-\nlessors alike are. generally speaking,\nallergic to gowns and prefer to run\ntheir scholastic course ln n condition\nof academic nakedness.\n\"It Is essential that all who oan\npossibly do so should join some one\nof thoss splendid organisations\u00E2\u0080\u0094the\nRed Cross, St. John's Ambulanoe\nand various other patriotic societies\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094said tbe Lieutenant-Governor as\nbe delivered the Congregational\naddress.\nIf It la not possible to Join an\norganisation, His Honor suggested\nregistration for some form ot duty\nbeat suited to the peraon concerned, \"ao that, by organised efforts,\nthere will be no wastage of work,\nmaterial or human endeavour.\"\n\"No matter how small or restricted your contribution, every little bit\ncounts and will help the Allies to\nwin the war more quickly,\" he said.\nHis Honour offered speolal congratulations and encouragement to\nthe B.C. Contingent of the CO.\nT.C., whloh now has an enlistment\nof some Ave hundred graduates\nand undergraduates, saying, \"Keep\nIt up.\"\nThe Lieutenant-Governor referred\nto steps which' had been taken ln\nthe dlrectipn of provision of national\nscholarships.\n\"There should be some form of\nnational scholarships designed to\nenable the talents and abilities of\nthose brilliant young men who,\nthrough circumstances, are unable\nto pursue their education, to be further developed to the benefit not\nonly of themselves but also of their\ncountry,\" he concluded.\nNominations For\nNovember Queen\nDue Immediately\nSweetheart of Ball\nTo Be Chosen from\nSix Candidates\nThe Arts-Aggie Sweetheart, feature of this year's Arts-Aggie Ball,\nwill be selected from a maximum of\nsix candidates, four from the Arts\nFaculty and two from Agriculture,\nDon McGiil, A.M.U.S. secretary, announced yesterday.\nNomination lists containing at\nleast twenty signatures ahould be\nhanded Into the Council Office Immediately. Deadline for nominations\nls noon Saturday, November 4.\nIn the Arts Faculty, each olass may\nnominate as many co-eds as desired.\nHowever, each contestant can be\nnominated only by members ot her\nclass.\nAt the close of the nominations the\nco-ed ln each class with the largest\nnomination list will automatically\nbecome that class's official candidate.\nThis provision limits the number\nof would-be Sweethearts ln Arts to\nfour. On the same basis, the Aggies\ncan have two final candidates.\nNO SKULLDUGGERY\nOnly those students buying tickets\nfor the Ball may vote. They can Indicate their Sweetheart on the ticket\nstub.\n\"We will tolerate no skullduggery\nin this election,\" warned McGiil.\n\"Names appearing on more than\none list will be discounted. In order\nto ensure fairness to all contestants\nlists will be checked and rechecked.\n\"Hence co-eds desiring to be Sweetheart i'or a night are advised to make\nsure that their campaign managers\ndo not get too ambitious.\"\nMANAGER\n]\nTodd Tremblay, recently elected\nJunior Member, la the man responsible for the extensive home-coming preparations of this week. This\nyear's schedule of events Is the\nmost ambitious one ever attempted at a Varsity celebration.\nGovernment\nUpheld By\nStudents\nConscription of Men\nIneffective in War\nProsecution\n\"Conscription would render Canada less effective In the prosecution\nof the present war\" was the decision unanimously upheld by students\nof the Parliamentary Forum of the\nUniversity of B.C. at the noon-hour\ndebate Wednesday. Government\nspeakers In support of the resolution showed the Ineffectiveness of\nconscription from military, economic, and nationalistic points of view.\nAlf Carlsen, leader of the government, smashed any concerted opposition at the outset when he seized upon the prerogative of his side to define the resolution. His Interpretation\nwas that conscription should refer to\nman-power only.\nCONSCRIPTION UNWI8E\nFrom a military point of view, he\nsaid, quoting Premier Mackenzie\nKing, conscription is tactically unwise, for just so long as the men of\nthis country believe that they are\nfighting a defensive war, Just so long\nwill they fight voluntarily. Once conscription is applied, the moral effect\nof defensive fighting ls lost forever.\n\"Wars are not lost through lack of\nman-power,\" Oarlsen declared, \"but\nthrough lack of adequate supplies.\nHence, the role of Canada ln the\npresent struggle must be that of the\nprovider, not ot men, but of raw materials. The days of mobilization of\nlarge infantry foroes ls past. Let us\nmobilize our supplies.\"\nSpeaking on the current election\nIssue In Quebec he stated that, whatever the outcome of the present election, the seeds of discontent were\nsown ln Quebec by conscription during the last war and that no alleviation from the danger of secession\ncan be expected until Federal Governments learn to compromise with\nthe Quebec people.\nUNIVERSITIES PLEDGED\nLeader of the opposition, Bill Back-\nman, pointed to the fact that eleven\nuniversities In Canada had already\npledged their brains and resources\nfor the good ot Canada, maintaining\nthat this was conscription working to\nits greatest effectiveness. Instead of\neleven universities solving a problem\nln eleven different ways, here was\nconsolidation and efficiency as a central bureau allotted to each university some portion of the work to be\ndone.\n\"A period of reconstruction is necessary,\" he declared, \"before we can\nhave complete national unity. Therefore, if the present Quebec struggle\nleads to secession lt may be as well\n(Continued on Page 2)\nSee OOVERNMENT\nAlumni Dinner, Football Rally, Parade Through City,\nFootball Game, Tea Dance, and Players' Club\nProduction Make Up Varied Program\nQraduates from all parts of the Dominion will gather on the campus Saturday for the annual Homecoming week-end, and undergraduates under the direction of Junior Member Todd\nTremblay together with other members of Council have arranged a series of events in their honor.\nThe'Alumni dinner at the Hotel Georgia will precede the football rally which will be held at\nthe new Hotel Vancouver on Friday evening, Saturday, the graduates will witness the parade of\ncars of the undergraduates and in the afternoon their shouts will mingle with the student body\nto encourage the Thunderbirds to ultimate victory over the Saskatchewan Huskies.\nAt the tea dance in the gymnasium after the game they will have an opportunity to meet\nundergraduates and exchange life histories with former class mates.\nThe climax of the day will be the comedy presented by members of the Players' Club in the\nAuditorium.'\nSTRAIGHT'S ORCHESTRA\nAs a climax to the activities of\nHomecoming week, a tea dance will\nbe held in the Oym from 0 p.m. till\n7 p.m., Saturday.\nByron Straight's orotu-atra wlU\naupply the music, and ten unlveralty glrla wlU serve the refreshments.\nBiddy McNeil is in charge of the\ncommittee making arrangements for\nthe affair.\nALUMNI DINNER\nThe U.B.C. Alumni Association\nwill hold its annual meeting at a\ndinner to be held at the Oeorgla\nHotel at 6:80, Friday, October 27.\nThe election of officers will take\nplace after the dinner and following It Professor Ellis H. Morrow,\nhead of the commerce department,\nwlU speak.\nLater in the evening there will be\na football rally in the Hotel Vancouver.\nVolunteer Polls\nFor Co-Eds\nStill Open\nThe polls for Voluntary Registration of Women on the campus will be\nopen until noon Saturday in Dean\nBollert's office.\nThe response of the ooeds here has\nbeen disappointingly low: only one\nquarter of the women have filled out\nthese forms and returned them to\nthe Dean's office.\nStudents are again reminded that\nthis drive ls merely an attempt to\nAnd to what use women can be put\nln the case of a national emergency.\nHanding ln a registration form does\nnot signify that you have bound yourself to actual service of any kind\ncither here or abroad.\nIf overseas service ls required, registration for this wtll be done when\nthe necessity arises, but the preaent\ndrive carries no such significance.\nHOME-COMING\nPROGRAM\nFriday\nAlumni Dinner, Asteo Ballroom, Hotel Oeorgla, 6:80.\nFootball Rally, New Hotel\nVanoouver, 0:00.\n70 cents a couple\nSaturday *\nParade, 12:30.\nOames; English, 20 cents and\nstudent pass, 2:00.\nCanadian, 8:00.\nTea Dance, Oym, 25 cents a\ncouple, 5-7 p.m.\nHomecoming Play, Auditorium, Free, 8:10.\nHardy Cup\nHistoric\nBy ARCHIE PATON\nWhen Varsity and Saskatchewan\ngo into their second game of the current series at the Stadium tomorrow, they will be fighting for the\ntrophy which has symbolized 'Western Canadian University football\nsupremacy for the past twelve years\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094the Hardy Cup.\nThe trophy was presented in 1027\nby Dr. Burke, of Saskatchewan, for\ncompetition between the Universities of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and B.C. It waa won that year\nby Manitoba, B.C. not entering the\nseries.\nIn 1028, B.C. waa beaten two\nstraight by Alberta, the prairie\nchampions. The series was played\nIn Vanoouver.\nFirst Thunderbird victory oame\n(Continued on Page S)\nSee HARDY CUP\nDAY-SMITH\nCOMMERCE\nPRESIDENT\nLyman C. Day-Smith, 4th year\nCommerce, was elected at noon Tuesday to the presidency of his class,\nsettling a long-disputed contest for\nthat office. Dr. E. H. Morrow, head\nof the Department of Commerce, was\nchosen as honourary president.\nThe completed slate of officers for\nthis class now reads: Lyman Day-\nSmith, president; John Stevenson,\nsecretary-treasurer; Peter Minlchlel-\nlo. men's athletics; and Doris Pratt,\nwomen's athletics.\nSENIOR PICTURES\nWill all senior students have\ntheir Totem pictures taken\ndowntown at Artona immediately or not at all.\nUnited Airlines\nScholarships\nAvailable\nSponsored by the United Air Lines\nTransport Corporation, United Airlines Scholarships are being awarded to deserving oollege men in Canada and the United States, who have\ndetermined on aviation as a vocation.\nCandidates must submit a treatise\nof not more than 3000 words on some\nteohnloal or non-technioal aeronautical aubjoct.\nCompleteness, soundness, and originality of subject matter will be considered by the Committee of Award\ntogether with the candidate's success in analyzing the subject matter\nand drawing conclusions, the merit\nof the paper as a composition and\nthe choice of subject.\nCandidates must be undergraduates in good standing at a recognized university. They must be white,\nbetween the ages of 18 and 35, of\nnormal sight and hearing, of average\nheight and weight, and free from\nphysical handicaps.\nFour awards will be given, consisting of a choice of a non-flying\ncourse, and In addition, 10 hours instruments flight training, and 20\nhours of dual and solo flight instruction.\nPARADE\nSaturday's automobile parade\nthrough the olty will be an Important part of the Homeoomlng festivities.\nMore than 00 oars are expeoted\nto leave Varaity at 19:80 sharp-\nDecorated with blue and gold ribbons, and with placards advertising\nthe afternoon's game, the cars will\ntravel down Tenth to Alma, than\nalong Broadway to Burrard and\nacross Burrard to Oranvllle.\nThey will roll up Oranvllle to\nTwelfth Avenue, then out Twelfth\nto the University where the parade\nwill disperse.\nEaeh fraternity la supplying several automobiles, and other students with decorated cars are also\nInvited to Join the fun.\nThere is no danger of the parade\nbeing broken up downtown, because\nTodd Tremblay has taken the precaution of asking the city police for\npermission to hold the parade.\nMODERN COMEDY\nSmooth modern comedy will be\noffered football-weary graduates after\nthe tea dance Saturday.\n\"Invitation\" Is the title of this\nyear's one-act play, traditionally\nprovided at Homecoming week-end\nby the Players' Club.\nMary McLeod and John Glen head\nthe bill as She and He. Tom McDowell and Evelyn Barwlck will flit\nabout the soene\u00E2\u0080\u0094the Savoy dining-\nroom, London\u00E2\u0080\u0094as efficient ragout\nservers, and Doug Milsom will rely\non a profile ln the part of Charles,\n\"who looks as if he had been in the\nNavy.\"\nThe performance is scheduled 8.15\np.m. and undergraduates are Invited,\nas well as graduates. There ls no admission fee.\nBOTANY EXPERT\nWILL SPEAK TO\nINSTITUTE\nDr. John Allardyce, of the University's Department of Botany, will\nspeak on \"Bio-chemical Diplomats\"\nat the Vancouver Institute A100, Saturday 8 p.m.\nThe lecture will be a discussion of\nthe physical\u00E2\u0080\u0094and to a lesser extent,\nthe mental\u00E2\u0080\u0094behaviour of the human\nbody and mind as a result of maladjustments due to lack of balance of\nhormonlc action. It will be illustrated\nby lantern slides.\nThe chair will be taken at 8:15 by\nthe President, Hon. Mr. Justice Man-\nson.\nPROCEEDS OF\nSMOKER SWELL\nBROCK FUNDS\nOne hundred and fifty dollars will\nbe added to the housing fund of the\nBrock Memorial Building, as a result\nof the Interfraternity smoker, it was\nannounced today.\nThe smoker, which took place last\nTuesday night in connection with\nHomecoming festivities, was pronounced a definite success by campus\nfraternities who managed it. Two\nth:\nUBYSSEY\nFriday, October 27, 1939\nTHE UBYSSEY\nIssued twloe weekly by the Students' Publication Board of the Alma Mater\nSociety of the University of British Columbia\nOffloei 806 Auditorium Building .... Phone Alma 10*4\nOampus Subscriptions, $1.00 Mail Subscriptions, 93,00\nEDITOR-IN-CHIEF\nJohn Garrett\nSENIOR EDITORS\nTueaday\nJames Maofarlane\nFriday\nJaok Margeson\nSPORTS\nLionel Salt\nASSOCIATE EDITORS\nJoan Thompson Janet Walker Bill Baokman\nASSISTANT EDITORS\nMlml Schofleld Ann Jeremy Pat Keatley\nASSISTANT SPORTS EDITORS\nAustin Frith Oerry Armstrong\nO. U. P. EDITOR\nJoyce Cooper\nLITERARY EDITOR\nVirginia Galloway\nPUB. SEORETARY CIRCULATION MANAGER\nVarna MaoKenale Harry Campbell\nREPORTOHIAL STAFF\nPierre Berton, Cecil Brett, Cornelia Burke, Oil Clark, Buntle Dawson,\nWallaoe Gillespie, Vlo Johnaon, Ken Keefe, Jack McMillan, Margaret Mo-\nOlory, Barbara Moe, Margaret Morrla, Barbara Newman, Archie Paton,\nHarry Ritchie, Hugh Ritchie, Victor Hopwood, Daniel Tatroff, Dorothy\nTupper, Mary Woodworth, Oordon Fllmer-Bennett, Hugh Wllaon,\nEdna Wlnram\nCharles Craig\nSPORT REPORTERS\nDuncan McTavlsh\nDoug Watt\nEditorials\nDEMOCRACY SURVIVES!\nFirst threat to the unity of Canada has been frustrated by the\noverwhelming defeat of Premier Maurice Duplessis forces in the\nQuebec election. The new Premier Adelard Godbout, and his party\nboast a smashing victory over the man who claimed that Confederation was unnecessary.\nFew students have displayed concern over the eastern crisis,\nperhaps because they were blissfully unaware of the dangerous\nsituation which existed on the far side of their continent, but perhaps, too, because they were certain of the inevitable conquest of\nthe forces of evil by the forces of good I It is probable that the\nformer reason bears more weight than the latter.\nFor the time being it now appears that Canada will be able to\ndevelop, and to prosecute her endeavors in the war as a solid\nnation. The British ideal of freedom has beeff upheld, democratic\nprinciples have been more skillfully advertised. The electorate\nwas presented with the opportunity to express its opinion. It was\ntold that freedom was being replaced by oppression, freedom of\nspeech by censorship, democracy by fascism.\nThe electorate gave its answer . . . \"balderdash and bunkum,\nSir\"!\nTo the student who is ostensibly keenly aware of the rights\nand privileges of a citizen in a democracy, this election in Quebec\nmust be an encouragement, and to the critics of the Federal Government, now in power, a bitter blow.\nCRITICIZING CRITICISM\nIt has been said that the purpose of a university is not to teach\na student to pass examinations in order to obtain a degree, but\nrather to teach the student to teach himself, and to think for himself.\nWhether or not this university is succeeding in its attempted\nattainment of this ideal is a debatable point. The chief feature\nof our university life is that any mature thought among the * average' member of this student body is either carefully concealed or\ntotally absent.\nThe desire of the average student to contribute to the community which boasts his domicile expresses itself in caustic criticism of those at present in control, or in drab indifference to present day issues and policies.\nThe Board of Governors of this university, the Students' Council of this Alma Mater Society, the members of the faculty of this\ncampus all receive their full share of damnation ond scorn nt the\nhands of the students. Freedom of speech is, of course, a treasured principle of democracy, but it is itself to be condemned when\nthe critic's knowledge of facts is superficial, or based on vicious\nrumors.\nCriticism from the tongues of the students does not restrict\nits field of activity to the university area. Governments ore treated to the same blasts of arrogant opposition by scholars whose age\nlimit could be placed well below thirties.\nCriticism is not, itself, a deplorable characteristic of this\ncampus, but the lack of thought which obviously accompanies such\na large proportion of the criticism defeats any purpose such criticism may have had.\nThe students of this university would do well to forget the\nidea of automatically opposing the policies and decisions of their\n-superiors, and to spend a little more time in consideration of possible reasons for the steps taken, and for steps not taken.\nIn brief students might benefit from that process known as\n\"growing-up,\" both in mind, and body, with considerable emphasis placed on tho former.\nL\nBANISH\nTIMETABLE TERRORS\nwith a\nCHALLENGER\nWATCH\nSmart in appearance\nAccurate in performance\nA Challenger is always\ncorrect everywhere\nPRICED FROM\n$25.00\nVANCOUVER\nGOVERNMENT\n(Conttnued from Page 1)\nto allow It so that we may begin our\nrebuilding on a clean foundation.\nConscription ls only a very small factor\" ln the Quebec dissension. We\nmust remove all the seeds of discontent before hoping to strengthen our\nalready jeopardized unity.\"\nBoth speakers were strongly supported by members of the audience.\nOovernment speakers were emphatic\nin maintaining that loss of personal\nliber* y incurred by conscription could\nnot be compensated for by the so-\ncalled effectiveness of a large mobilized force.\nOpposition speakers were as em-\nCrackling of Thorns\nBy D. Xahma\nTWO CONTRIBUTIONS BY R.C.F.\n[. INCUNABULA\n1.\nCold Introspection, Arnold's curse\nIs quickly flung aside by Wundt;\nForgotten his admission terse\nHis precepts nuno rellotae sunt.\nThe synapss constitutes a schism\nIn thought that had produced an epic,\nIn Dr. Leavls' crtttolsm\nSltwsll detects tbe anaesthetic.\nEuglena's swift revolving pseudopodton\n< Sweeps unicellular victims towards the vortex,\nThe telodendrla stunned by collodion\nSlowly oonduot tbe Impulse to the cortex.\nThe sonnet Is a symptom of neurosis\n(Psychologist employed by Baptist Mission)\nKant tt Is said when young displayed myosls\nHyperion doubtless had had an inhibition.\ne\nPythagoras and Xenos were not mystics\nIn Eddy's sense, and had no mental scales\nBut the precision of Blnet's statistics\nApproximates the Light's that never falls,\n3.\nThe plain evasion of what's difficult\nIs Tennysonlan shallowness in vain.\n- Don't be Swlnburnian dealing with Yaeult,\nPater la Inexplicable In the main.\nBut when Francois, better known the genius\nPolaea hla pen before an adjective\nHe graapa Roget'a Theaaurua firmly, thua\nHla modifiers are quite palliative.\nStephen wrote of Pierre de la Verendrye.v\nIt waa called the flrat Canadian epic\nBy critics whoae sole guides to the aesthetic\nAre Dryden's* Iliad, Lang's Odyssey.\n8.\nPro Bono Publico Is nice\nHis soul Is kind, his heart Is warm,\nHis wife's as raw and cold as ice\nBut she has the Hellenistic form.\nWhen discontented Parent's eyes\nPeruse plump Francois' plotured page\nHis facile tolerance, snapping, dies,\nBewilderment Is turned to rage.\nAnd Francois' gross and flaccid lips\nOlve sagging rhythm to an outworn curse.\nAa Francois, turning savage, quickly clipe\nElysium for Rua In Urba; Taxpayer will reimburse.\n4.\nIndignant Citlssn'a mlnd'a a haae\nWhioh speotres stark and grim shall haunt,\nHe has an apathetlo gaae\nAnd narrow shouldsrs, pinched and gaunt.\nUphold the moulded head whoss mild\nOlased rodent eyes stare toward tho chasm.\nHe has no love that affect wild\nBut only a nostalgic spasm.\nII. SONNET\nOoethe, Olympian or phtllstlne,\nFaust takes no place with Dante's ctooco;\nWerther or Verulam may incline\nand Harry Heine's rural mallecho\nmakes lovs around the rose.\nBut then no Hamlet's burden Brutus' woes\nor Caesar's murder unfulfilled;\nunmoral conscience might have willed\ndemonstrable 1' the senate a passing show\nnot without dreams or poisons, that bis ear\nlend him affright, lend cheer his foes\nwatching, soored deeply In his face suoh fear\nas weighs unselfishness and his estate's\nwreckage for wrecking's end prognosticates.\n\"Are thero any local regulation* I should obterve?'\n\"Yet, -.moke your own Sweet Capt.\"\nSWEET CAPORAL CIGARETTES\nnThc purtit form tn which tobacco can be smoked.\"\n1\nVoluntary registration poll (tn\nDean Bollert's office) for women Is\n-till open, and it is expected that\nevery University women student will\nregister at once if ahe haan't done\nso already.\nLEADERS\nIt has been called to the attention\nof every woman ln the Dominion of\nCanada, that this registration does\nnot involve overseas war service\u00E2\u0080\u0094nor\ndoes it entail war service in Canada.\nIt is Just a census of the woman-\npower of Canada.\nNow, University women are the natural leaders, therefore lt Is the duty\nof all women on this campus to lead\nthe way, ln aiding the Dominion\nOovernment.\nIf only one-third ol our campus\nphatic in declaring tnat, despite the\ndefinition of conscription as given,\ntt did not necessarily Imply shipment\nof men overseas but might equally\napply to the conscription of men for\nindustry at home.\nA show of hands at the close of the\nmeeting showed the audience unanimously in support of the government.\nReserve\nSALISBURY\nBANQUETS\nLUNCHES\nCAFE\nAFTERNOON\nDINNERS\nTEAS !\npopulation were women, they would\nnumber approximately 700. Not more\nthan 300 have registered ao far.\nThat leaves 400 who have had\nneither the loyalty nor the Intelligence to register.\nFIT FOR WHAT?\nThe opinion expressed by numerous\ngirls on the campua who stepped forward to volunteer the salient facts\nabout their capabilities that might\nbe of use to the government, was that\nthey knew nothing about the practical side of life.\nWhen it came to languages, they\nknew their own shortcomings so well\nthat they wondered If It was of any\nuse to mention that they had studied\na little French, Oerman, Spanish,\nItalian, Oreek, Latin, etc. or if they\nshould leave that out altogether.\nThey forgot that the form was\ngeneral. That lt must glean Just general information from thousands of\nwomen of all classes and races. Education counts, only If applied. Practical experience without education Is\nnarrow and experimental ln the flrst\nstages. An educated person can comprehend a new idea more rapidly\nthan an uneducated person.\nSo don't feel too discouraged with\nyour Ignorance of munitions, air mechanics, and the other hundred and\none things asked of you.\nFORMER STUDENTS\nWith Homecoming week-end ln the\neffing, news of graduates ls more\nplentiful. . . . Frances Anderson Is ln\nVictoria working diligently in the\nParliament Buildings . . . Peggy Jones\nwent to England to visit relatives,\nand is still there. Among the teach\ners arc Doreen Davie in New Westminster instructing the youngsters in\nmuAc, social studies and French .\nwhile Phyllis Baxendale ts at Point\nOrey Junior High . . . and many\n^ttJr^ctn^^fttt dumprntg:\n*WCO*iPORATEO 8-.\"* MAV IO***_.\nA 'Better' Wave Costs You Less\nat The Bay Beauty Salons\n.... because wive a PERMAWEHT\nWAVE SPECIAL\njust for College Women/\nNo need for you to envy thoae naturally curly looka\non the girl across the aisle\u00E2\u0080\u0094not when you, too, can\nhave soft, natural-looking waves, simply by taking\nthe time out to have a permanent ln one of our\nsalons.. . . . and, because you're a College student\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nlt costs you less to have this really SUPER wave.\nAll Waves Are Teet Curled and Expertly Treated\nOALL SEY. 9131\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 You may have your wave in our Sixth Floor\nSalon at THE BAY . ... or in our beautiful new\nSalon, First Mezzanine Floor, Hotel Vancouver.\nUNIVERSITY BOOK STORE\nHrs.> \u00C2\u00BB a-m. to 5 p_m.| Saturdays \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 a-m. to noon\nLOOSE LEAF NOTE BOOKS, EXERCISE BOOKS AND\nSCRIBBLERS\nAT REDUCED PRICES\nOraphlo Engineering Paper, Biology Paper, ALL YOUR\nLoose Leaf Refills, Fountain Pens and Ink BOOK SUPPLIES\nand Drawing Instruments. SOLD HERE\nAsk About the Remington\nPortable 10c a Day Plan\nJ. E. KADZIELAWA\nU.B.C. Representative\nPhone FR. 0873 L or communicate through\nArts Letter Rack.\nRemington Rand Limited\n647 Seymour St.\nothers we will welcome this weekend.\nOnoe again the symphony offers an\nopportunity to music lovers on the\ncampus to listen to a rehearsal program. And free of charge. This service comes to students through the\nMusical Society.\nAll one need do ls apply at the\nMusical Society room backstage ln\nthe Auditorium. Just as simple as\nthat.\nSCRIPT WRITERS\nThere will be a meeting of all\npersons Interested In radio script\nwriting today, Friday, at 13.30, In\nthe radio studio, top floor of the\nAgriculture building.\nSOCIAL PROBLEMS CLUB\nMervyn Davis will relate his experiences in Cuba Tuesday noon in\nArts 100 for the Social Problems Club.\nLABI-ROE INTERVIEW\nLionel LaBerge, captain of the\nSaskatehewan Huskies, will be Interviewed during the U.B.C. newscast tonight by Murdoch Maelaeh-\nlan of the Varsity Radio Society.\nCJOR, 7:45.\nV.C.U. FIRESIDE\nThere will be a fireside meeting\nof the Varsity Christian Union at\nthe home of Mrs. McAllister, 1626\nTrafalgar Street, at 4 p.m. Sunday\nafternoon. Everyone welcome.\n*v\u00C2\u00B1r*r+^++*'\n/vwvvwv+*A/>+*m*\nMART KENNEY and His Western\nOentlemcn . . . available for private\nengagements.\nHOTEL\nVANCOUVER\n_VW_\u00C2\u00ABWWW_V\n.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2y'sjvvuvvvv.yw Friday, October 27, 1939\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThree\nEvery institution has a tradition and this column is not unlike\nothers in that matter . . . our tradition is . . . service and personality\n. . . every member of the staffs of the various firms advertised is selected for his particular position ... so when you enter the business\nestablishments . . . mention the item you saw described here ... it\nwill facilitate service . . .\nfi fi fi\nSaskatchewan team and homecomers must make the Dolphin Tea\nHouse on Marine Drive behind the nurseries one of their stop-overs\non their visit to our campus . . . for nourishing, appetizing luncheons\nin quiet, cheerful surroundings, treat yourself to a super-meal at the\nsign of The Dolphin . . . and in the quiet restful part of the afternoon\nIt must be nice to know a constant soul that can remain so for\na whole year . . . one Husky was found in the pub the first day of\ntheir arrival . . . and he was thumbing the telephone directory . . .\none helpful coed said, \"I know a good number,\" \"Thanks,\" he replied,\n\"but I have a good number . . . the same one I had last year . .'. .\"\nNow if you intend to do a little informal entertaining or if your\nclub wishes to hold a social evening . . . phone Alma 010) and arrange\nfor an evening of bridge ... in the delightful \"habitant\" room at The\nDolphin . . . the rates are reasonable, and a delightful repast can be\nserved following bridge ....\nf) fi fi\nCoats . . . coats and more coats . . . Lora Lee Dress Shop, 2814\nGranville Street, has a group of select winter coats all beautifully lined\nand finished . . . and these are on sale this week . . . fur trims include\nlovely squirrel, ring-tail possum, lynx and baby wolf . . . beautifully\nfitted and featuring the polo coat with gathered back ... a chamois-\nlined coat will make you feel comfy and warm these chilly pre-winter\ndays ....\nWe're not quite sure whether the Phi Delts are practising to be\n\"stage door johnnies\" or just \"stage johnnies\" ... it appears that one\nmounted the Beacon stage recently and kept the audience in continual\nlaughter with his quips . . . while the others . . . well . . . 'nuf said\nMoss green is the newest color for afternoon frocks ... a youthful\nmodel has the round collar stitched with angora like the pockets on\nthe front full skirt .... wooden buttons complete the front decora\ntion\nChoosing shoes is a fascinating experience . . . how on earth\ncan the men find the shoe you want among the many mysterious boxes\nthat line the shelves? .... so while we were on Rae-Son's Mezzanine\nFloor, -08 Granville Street ... we peeked into a few boxes . . . dainty\nevening sandals in white satin . . . low heels and high heels . . . open\nand closed toes and heels . . . and all so reasonable.\nA blonde A.O. Pi who swiped a Husky badge last year has decided to make a collection of them this year, minimum five . A. the\nminute we looked at a very svelte black suede elastic high-cut shoe\nwith a high or junior heel... we thought of the tea-dance to-morrow\n.... the ideal thing to impress a Husky . . . Senior Class Party reminds\nus of black satin, the sophisticated colour, or dainty braided white\nsatin slippers or tinted to match your dress . . . 608 Granville Street\nand prices range from $4.95 to $7.50.\nfi fi fi\nChrysanthemums and football games go hand in hand .... just\nthink how proud your girl will feel when a beautiful shaggy 'mum\nto harmonize with her ensemble, arrives direct from Roselawn Ltd.,\n724 Granville St., a dainty corsage of baby 'mums will make an artistic\ninformal corsage and every co-ed will delight in having one for the\nFootball Rally tonight or the tea dance tomorrow . . . table decorations\nare also to be remembered ... a romance is blooming from its former\nashes, at least one would think so watching a blonde, athletic Fiji and\na brunette thespian . . . What will she be wearing)* Is she blonde,\nbrunette, or what? Is she short, tall, etc.? With this data, Roselawn\nLtd., know exactly the type, design, combination of flowers to set off\nthe particular beauty of the co-ed ... so phone Sey. 7746 for her\ncorsage today . . . deliveries are prompt and at the desired time.\nfi fi fi\nDear Wilbur i\nDo you still want to keep tbat bet? We don't think we should\ntake you up on it, first because It's unconstitutional; second, because\ntbe Regina Dales beat the Huskies; third, because the Thunderbirds\nbeat the Huskies Wednesday and lastly, because the ex-Romeo wasn't a\nSaskatchewan boy anyway ....\nTtto*?*\"\"\nFOR SALE\nHere's a bargain. High power microscope, oomplete with\noil immersion lens, for quick\nsale\u00E2\u0080\u0094cheaply. Apply \"Hobbles\nShop,\" Richards and Fender.\nPalommar\nDANCE FRI. AND SAT.\nFrom 0-1\nVERN MoINNIS\nHla Trumpet and Hla Oreheatra\nPat Qldney, Vocalist\nFri. 28c - 40c Sat. 3Bc - 60o\nHALLOWEEN DANOE\nTUESDAY, OCT. 31\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Novelties \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Balloons\nAdmission SOo\nt *. * * .^*=*^*-*-+ * + ,****.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0>.**.*\nFraternity and Sorority\nPrinting and Engraving\nOur Specialty\nDANCE PROORAMMES\nINVITATIONS. 'AT HOME,'\nLETTERHEADS and\nCHRISTMAS CARDS\nGEHRKE'S\n5tl0 Seymour St.\nHARDY CUP\n(Continued from Page 1)\nIn 1999 againat Saakatohewan\nwhen Cokey Shields ran IS yards.\nfor a touchdown In the Anal game. I\nIn 1030 the Birds travelled east\nand lost the oup to Saskatchewan,\nafter beating Alberta.\nVarsity regained the trophy In\n1031 by beating Manitoba ln a sudden-death game here.\nLack of funds called off the aeriea\nin 1033, but the following year B.C.\nagain won from Alberta. In 1034\nthe Beara got revenge by beating the\nBlrda 11-1 at Athletlo Park.\nVarsity defaulted in 1030 owing to\nthe playing of American football,\nand lost in 1036 and 103T.\nLast year the Thunderbirds again\ntook possession when they defeated\nAlberta and Saskatchewan In home\nand home gamea.\nThis week tney will be seeking\ntheir fifth championship In twelvo\nyears, an enviable record, Indeed.\nLAMPLIGHT\nFaahlon note from Wedneaday'a\ngame; the elegant bright green and\nbright blue ear muffs worn by two.\nfana a la atyle of Shadow. By the\nway, what did you think of the Hus-\nkle ohorua girl routine. The Illusion\ncould only have been Improved by\nthe addition of filmy chiffon aklrta.\nAt this time of football games, tea-\ndanoaa, balle, and other diversions\nwhloh may keep you from the\nstraight and narrow of forty hours\nper weak, a word to the wise.\nLittle rows of seroes\nNot so very quaint,\nMake your graduation\nLook as though It aint.\nBLONDES\nDid you know tbat the U.B.C.\nblondes are. renowned as far east as\nthe University ot Saakatohewan? If\nnot, lend an ear, the following la\nprinted In toto from the Saakatohewan \"Sheaf.\"\n\"The Huaklea are away pursuing\nthe Hardy Cup, ao now la the time\nto take atock. While the aotual\ntheory of the rugby trip ia to win\ngamea, our man, being versatile, will\nprobably do much more than that before they get baok to Saakatohewan.\nThere la a big bounty on blondea thla\nyear . . . and blondea, ln caae you\nhaven't heard, are quite the common\nthing around the Unlveralty of Britiah Columbia. Don't be aurpriaed If\nour ofuaadera return to the C.N.R.\natatlon carrying acalpa 'n aoalpa 'n\nscalps and perhapa, away down at\nthe bottom of the sack, the old forgotten Hardy Cup.\"\nThis dossn't say much for ths\nSaskatchewan coeds. As to the\nHardy Cup, Saturday's game will decide that, but after Wednesday's\nsoore, we wonder.\nPIOSKIN\nWhile on the subject of football,\ndid anyone ever think to compare\nthe noble horse to ths humble pig.\nThe answer Is, the Brunswickan did.\nIn fortune and glory.\nThe horse had his share,\nAnd he spent all his life\nIn the limelight's bright glare.\ni\nWhile this little pig\nLead a life (to be sure)\nThat was shockingly dull\nAnd most sadly obscure.\nBut now tbe great horse\n(Just between me and you)\nIs a duaty, dlaconaolate bottle\nof glue.\nWhile the pig la distinguished\nAnd noted beoause\nHe sails through the goal-posts\n'Mid thunderous applause!\nROOMMATE\nThe Aoademlquette column of tbe\nSheaf carries suggestions on how to\nmake your ceil attractive, nay, even\nlivable for the oomlng year. The\nfurnishings include ohlnts ourtains,\na jute floor mat, an oilcloth covered\ndesk and a bulletin board, all In the\ndiscreet Saakatohewan colors of\ngreen and white, perhapa you have\naeen them around. Tbe author gives\nno Ideas on how to furnish your\nroom mate. Perhaps these few lines\nwill give you an Idea.\nYOUR ROOM MATE\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nWho borrows all your ready cash?\nYour room mate.\nWhose talk ls senseless haberdaah?\nYour room mate.\nWho confiscates your socks and ties?\nYour room mate.\nWho never thinks to wind the clock?\nWho smokes the last one In the box?\nYour room mate.\nWho brings around his low brow\nfriends?\nYour room mate.\nWho breaks the furniture and lamps?\nWho uses up your postage stamps? *\nWho corresponds with movie vamps?\nYour room mate.\nWho giggles at you when you flunk?\nYour room mate.\nWho always comes home late and\ndrunk?\nYour room mate.\nBut who's a constant pal to you?\nWho overlooks the things you do?\nWho knows and loves you through\nand through?\nYour mother.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Plainsman.\nWALLET LOST\nLost at inter-fraternity smoker, a\nwallet containing student paas, driver's license and some ohange. Finder\nplease return to Mr. Horn's office.\nPUB MEETING\nThere will be a meeting of the\nentire Ubyssey staff in the Pub\noffice at noon today.\nAFTER THE\nV\nAfter-Theatre\nSHOW . . .\nisit Vancouver's Most Beautiful Cafe\nCHRIS'S GRIIX\nBELOW THE COMMODORE\nTeas Fascinating Teacup\nReading\n*y*aU\nya****1\nCONGRATULATIONS ON\nYOUR BRILLIANT 16-0\nVICTORY OVER THE\nUNIVERSITY OF\nSASKATCHEWAN I\nWe Know What You Want\nAnd We've\nGOT IT I\nCollege clothes that rate an At . . . Fashions\nthat are young\u00E2\u0080\u0094but not school-girlish . . . and\npretty\u00E2\u0080\u0094but not \"cute.\" \"We've chosen these\ncollege fashions with an eye to your activities\nand your casual school life . . . and, the prices\nare low enough to leave lots left over for\nbright young extras 1\nW. Knew Wn.t Yon Want\nin MILLINERY\nWe call this new casual felt MISS VANCOUVER! And it's the grandest little\nlid that ever found it's way into the\n\"Caff\". . . In your own favorite snap-brim\nstyle\u00E2\u0080\u0094of serviceable felt. Your choice\nof practically any color you wish All\nsizes $2.95.\nSoftie Hat Bar\u00E2\u0080\u0094Main Floor at THE BAY\nWs Know What You Wsnl\nin COATS\nAU the alert young styles: full\nswagger, straight boxy swagger, belted reefer and enveloping Balmacaan. All the lively\nyoung fabrics: tweeds, checks,\nfleeces, herringbones and novelty woollens. All the smart\n\"outdoor\" colors and \"natural.\" All beautifully tailored\n$14.95 to $25.00\nCoats\u00E2\u0080\u0094Third Floor at THE BAY.\nWs Knew Wh.t You Wsnl\nIn SWEATERS\nEvery type of sweater from\nsoft wooly cardigans you can\nwear in the new \"back-to-\nfront\" way to brief little pull-\novers. Botanys, imported English and Scotch woollens, angoras and laeey knits. Long\nor short sleeves\u00E2\u0080\u0094and classic\nnecklines. A host of luscious\nnew colors and your old favorite ones too. From 97c to\n$15.00.\nSportswear\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Third Floor at THE BAY\nW\u00C2\u00AB Know Whst You Want\nin SKIRTS\nTheso new styles ore more than just skirts\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094they feature the newest and most popular en.mnl skirt fashions! You'll find\nthem in wool failles and flannels\u00E2\u0080\u0094soft\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nbut firm enough to keep their shape ! All\nthe wanted colors. $2.95.\nSportswear\u00E2\u0080\u0094Third Floor at THE BAY\nWs Know Whst Vou W.nl\nin SHOES\nTrim graceful shoe styles\u00E2\u0080\u0094sturdy enough\nto take lots of campus trending .... und\ntfood-lookinu* chough to please even the\nmost shoe-conscious co-ed ! Black or\nbrown calf oxfords styled, by the Pied\nPiper makers! All sizes. Pair $5.50.\nShoes\u00E2\u0080\u0094Main I'loor at THE DAY.\nijWj-aittVBittt (titmjfitng.1^5\nTNCO\"\u00C2\u00BB-*0\"*ATED .W MAY IS7Q. HARDY OUP OAME\nVARSITY vs. SASKATCHEWAN\nSATURDAY at STADIUM\nHARDY OUP GAME\nVARSITY vs. SASKATCHEWAN\nSATURDAY at STADIUM\nPour\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 27, 1939\n'Birds Down Saskatchewan 16-0\nVarsity Blanks Huskies To Take\nLead In Hardy Series; Play\nAgain Saturday\nG\nRIDIRON\nLEANINGS\nBy DUNO MacTAVISH\nWith a muoh superior line and an\nedge In the baokfleld, the Varsity\nThunderbirds well earned their\nswamping over the Huskies Wednesday.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe Saskatchewan Huakles showed very badly on their famed deception plays as thsy waated time getting their ball-carrier started while\nthe U.B.C. squad waa breaking the\nvisitor's Una.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe utter look of underhanded dirt\nwaa an unusual feature of the game\nfor those who have followed Big\nFour Football.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nTho Birds tell us that this was\ntheir most enjoyable game thla year\nas they did not have to oope with\nthe holding, clipping and even sling-\nIng flats that ia ao prevalent In the\nlocal senior football. In faot the\nBlrda thamsslves had troubls refraining from tbe dirt after being\nexposed to it so much.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nAndy Lang showed his best form\nthis year as he consistently plunged\nfor first downs. It Is no oredit to\nLang for the plunge through the\nline- aa the Varsity linesman always\nhad a truok-slaed hole opened but\nLang beat out the Saskatchewan\nsecondaries time and again for extra\nyardage.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nDanny Capraru, the highly touted\nHusky triple threat, had little\nchanoe to show his kicking ability\nas his own defence broke In front\nof him before he had time to get\nthem away. But Capraru, even when\nhe was hurried lifted the ball for\nfifty yards. The Varaity squad has\nlt that Capraru is the best defensive\nplayer seen in these parts.\n\u00C2\u00AB \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nMax Oortler was the Husky who\nstarted the Saskatchewan part of\nthe game with a beautiful 30 yard\nweaving run In the second quarter.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nTbe fans who came out to see the\nHuskies play saw thsm work no\nmore than two plays ln the first\nquarter. And these were ill-chosen\nby the quarterback Bowman.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe Huaklea ahowed the local\nfootball fana a touoh of Amerloan\ncolor whloh greatly adda to a collegiate oonteat when they truoked\nout on the Held ln a line that would\ndo justice to Lieut. Col. Shrum and\nthen lined up on their own goal line\nand proceeded to do puahupa, bloyole\npedalling, running exeroiaea and toe\ntouching to looaen up for the fracaa.\nForming a striking oontraat on the\nother aide of the field waa the Varaity team haphazardly toaalng and\nkicking, the ball around.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nHank Stradlottl, while thruatlng\nhla 315 pounds of man In front of\nthe Huaklea graduated in abaentla\nat the grad oeremoniea on Wedneaday afternoon.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nElaewhere on thla page you will\naee the official atatlatloa on the\ngame. \"Take them with a grain of\nsalt,\" la the advioe of Maury Van\nVllet. Theae figures would have you\nbelieve the oonteat waa even oloae.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nContrary to the report in laat\nweek's edition of thia blat, the blankets allegedly donated by downtown\nbualneaa men were given by the parents of the players who did not like\nto aee Joe Player catch oold on the\nwlnd-awept benchea.\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0080\u00A2M-+++++++++*\nH. JESSIE HOW, B.A.\nPublio Stenographer\n-Max wast loth Ave.\nlutli and _\"\"-,\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 TypaA\n*+*+*++++*++++*+*l-+*+++++-f>\nProvince Sponsor\nBroadcast Of\nHardy Game\nThe Radio Sooiety announoed the\nsooop of the century Thursday Just\nbefore press time, when they gave\nout the Information that the seoond\nHardy Cup game on Saturday between Varsity and Saskatchewan\nwill be broadcast over Radio Station CJOR.\nThe broadcast, whloh is sponsored\nby the Vanoouver Dally Provlnoe,\nwill feature the voloe of Leo Nicholson, aoe sports announcer of the\nPaolflo Coast, with the in-between\ncommentary being handled by Bill\nForat, aporta editor of the Provlnoe.\nThe announoement oame aa a climax to the frantlo efforts of Dick\nJarvla of the Radio Sooiety to Intereat aome down town aponsor ln\nthe all-important grid game.\nPaaa catching will be the orders\nfrom now until game time, Saturday, for Coaoh Colb MoEown's\nHusky team. Their passing attaok\nfell apart at the seams on Wednesday, although young Danny Capraru\nwas throwing perfeot strikes into\nthe arms of the receivers.\nAnd so the ends will be out on\nthe practice field learning to hang\nonto the plgakin, and passing will\nplay an even larger role in the Huskies' game,\nTOUOH JOB\nThe Saskatchewan boys will have\na tough Job on their hands when\nthey trot out onto the green at the\nStadium tomorrow. Confronting them\nwill be the task of making up a\nsixteen point lead whloh the Thunderbirds hold against them, aa a\nreault of the flrat In a two-game\naeriea.\nSTOP GAP\n:\nFROSH BASKETBALL\nThe Frosh Intermediate \"A\" basketball team started the Varsity hoop\nseason Tuesday night when they\nwalked off with a 37-10 viotory over\nBoys' Brigade In the first Community League game.\nBrigade grabbed a 3-0 lead in the\nfirst quarter, but were left far behind\nwhen the Varsity sharpshooters Anally got going. It was 14-3 at half.\nYoung Duncan MacTavish, lean\nfreshman And, led the scorers with\n10 points. Three potential Senior \"A\"\nplayers, Jim Scott, Doug Pedlow and\nDon Duncan, were also In the Frosh\nline-up.\nTeam i MacTavish 10, Soott S,\nHill 6, Pedlow a, Duncan a, Davies\n5, Hobson a, Armstrong 8, Paton 7.\nMURALS\nThe Intramural oross country raoe\nscheduled for today at noon has been\ncancelled because ot the clash with\nthe Homecoming. The race will be\nheld next Thursday, November 3.\nThe volleyball schedule will continue when Science '41 meet Arts '43\nn.xt Wednesday. Sclenoe '43 will\ntaokle Arts '43 the same day.\nThe following Friday Arts '40 and\neducation will wind up the first round\nof the tourney and then all winners\nwill get Into action the following\nweek.\nNow Ploogie is a Phlat Phoot gal,\nWho's poor on dance traditiona,\nBut she'll be dancing Saturday,\nOad! how she Intermissions.\nGreat Aerial Offense Paves Way to Three\nMajor Scores While Saskatchewan\nAre Held Scoreless\nUnsheathing a dangerous passing attack the Varsity Thunderbirds went sixteen points up on \"Saskatchewan *s Huskies at the\nStadium, Wednesday, when they blanked the Prairie squad 16-0.\nThe game, which was played in bitterly cold weather, was the\nflrst of the two-game total point series for the Hardy Cup, now\nin the hands of U.B.C.\nPor three periods, the Thunderbirds muffled Saskatchewan's\npowerful passing attack, and surprised fans by unleashing a lethal\naerial approach to the Husky line, with Graham Finlay and\nI Tommy Willlame throwing perfect\natrlkea to the Varaity receivera.\nLiving up to pre-game notloea waa\nyoung Danny Capraru, triple-threat\nman of the Huaklea who ran, kioked,\nand paaaed, and then atopped play\nafter play on defenae with hla demon tackling.\nCAPPY OOOD\nCapraru, laat year'a star of the\nRegina Dales, out-kicked our own\nJohnny Pearson if the statistics are\ntrue, who couldn't get set againat\na faat charging Husky line. Here the\ncredit goea to the Prairie enda who\nbroke through Varaity'a defenae\nforcing Pearson to hurry his klcka.\nJohnny, however, was getting them\nhigh, and the Varaity enda had\nplenty of time to get down on the\nreceiver.\nFirst score of the game came half\nway through the flrat quarter when\nafter losing the ball on the Huaky\n12-yard line on a fumble, Finlay ran\nthe Saskatchewan kick back to the\n22-yard line where he threw a paas\nintended for Pearson. Nell McLeod,\ncoming up to knock the pass down,\nkicked the ball into the air and Milt\nAngus, in on the play, grabbed lt\nfor a freakish completion on the\nHusky eight yard line.\nHARMER SCORES\nFrom a close formation, burly Jim\nHarmer plowed through the middle\nof the Saskatchewan line, for Varsity's first major acore. Harmer\nadded another point when he booted\nthe oonvert.\nIn the third quarter a Varaity paas\npaved the way to another soore when\na Finlay to Joplln combination in\nthe flat netted the Coast team thirty\nyards and carried the ball down to\nthe Ave yard line where Milt Angua\nbuoked it over for an unconverted\nacore.\nAgain in the Anal frame, the new\nVaraity aerial offense clicked, thia\ntime with Tommy Williams throwing the plgakin. It came on the heela\nof a brilliant run by Lee Straight\nwho intercepted a Husky pass on\nthe 45-yard line and broke through\nthe secondary for thirty yards, lat-\neralling to Lang on the Afteen,\nwhere he was hit by a host of prairie\ntacklers.\nSURPRISED\nCompletely surprising the Saskatchewan board of strategy, Tommy\nWilliams, whom they had been\nwatching all day in running plays,\nfaded baok and threw a pass to Joplln who was standing In the end-\nsane near the corner flag.\nThis left the oount at 16-0 where\nIt remained for the rest of the game,\nalthough the Huskies started clicking with their passes, late In the\nfame.\nVarsity mainstays were Andy Lang\nIn the baokfleld, and Straight, Smith,\nand Stradlottl In the line who handled the Job of stopping Danny Capraru, Husky scoring threat capably.\nsssfts\nbat*\n35&\u00C2\u00A3\nCflg\no\Js2Sk\nTHE BEST miLK CHOCOLATE IT1f.DE\nShown above Is stocky Freddie\nSmith, raw-boned guard of the\nThunderbird line who proved to be\nso effective In Wednesday's game,\nbreaking up oountleaa plays, and\nopening wide holea for the Varaity\nbaokfleld. Smith Is a senior In\nCommerce.\nVARSITY DAIRY LUNCH\nTrimble at Tenth\nGREETINGS! GALS AND BOYS OF FALL SESSION!\n\"OO CJKT 'KM VARSITY\"\nRuggermen\nTackle\nMeralomas\nVarsity's Senior \"A\" rugby lads\nare scheduled to meet the Meralomaa in the tuaale for league leadership when they olaah at the Stadium\nat 2 o'clock Saturday in the preview to the Hardy Cup enoounter\nbetween Thunderbirda and Huaklea.\nThe Ubeeoeea gained a bye this\nweek ao will have to be oontent with\nwatching the major oonteat from\nthe atanda.\nCROOSHUL\nThe \"A\" game Is a perfect setup\nfor the well-known \"orooshul,\" aa\nboth teams are unbeaten ao far thla\nseason and Itching for the win, slnoe\nIt will virtually ensure possession of\nthe Miller Cup. Varsity ls determined to keep possesalon of the\nmug, while the Kitaiea are Juat aa\ndetermined to wreat the silverware\naway from the Studenta, who have\nhad poaaeaaion of lt for a quartette\nof auooeaalve yeara.\nMoat potent threat of the somewhat ahorn Thunderbird aquad thla\nyear, la freahman atar Carrol Chapman who haa been kicking valuable\npointa for the Collegians.\nFreah from high aehool, Chapman\nla faat proving to be the And of the\nyear and la working In nicely with\nthe three line.\nAlao a atrong influence In the\nbaokfleld ta Captain Ted McPhee,\nthe playmaker of the aquad. Ted,\nwho has been the apearhead of\nVaraity In every game, la one of\nthe beat three quarters In the\ngame.\nThe Students will endeavour to\nfield a stronger scrum this time,\nagainst the threatening Meralomaa,\nwith Tommy Robson, the focal point\nof the pack.\nThe team will not be picked until\nROLLER SKATING\nOn Monday, October 30, from 8 to\n10:30 p.m. the Newman Club will\nhold a roller skating party at the\nMoonlight Roller Rink. Tickets are\n30 cents and may be obtained from\nany of the members.\nCo-Ed Sports\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094By Oerry Armstrong\nThe co-ed Melon-tossers go Into\naction when they take on the strong\nWestern quintet at the Y. W. at 7.30\ntonlte.\nThe Thunderbird squad la optimistic of viotory, but their big worry Is the loss of Fay Burnham, who\nwill be on the opposing team for\nthe battle.\nVOLLEYBALL\nIn the Interclass volleyball schedule, next Monday, Arts '41 play Arts\n'40 and the Aggies will try their luck\nagainst Arts '43.\nThen on Tuesday, The 6th Year\nNurses will take to the badminton\ncourts with the idea of beating the\nArts '41 team.\nP. A. SYSTEM\nFor Hire\u00E2\u0080\u0094Publio Address system;\nmodern recorded music for dancea.\nReaaonable ratea. Bill MoCarter, Be.\n'44, 3838 Dunbar. Phone BAy. 9154R\nor Arta letter rack.\nHOMECOMING!\nBigger and better than\never \u00E2\u0080\u0094 that's this year's\nHomecoming program. And-\nHomecoming really means\njust that to thousands of\nGrads. from all over the\nProvince. It means a lot,\ntoo, to the students who arranged the program. And\nwhile we're on this \"Homey' subject don't forget\nthat when you buy that\ndependable 100% B. C.\nProduct\nHOME GAS\n\"You Can Buy No Better\"\ntoday, Friday, aitnougn tne probable\nline-up will be chosen from the following: Price, Mason, Pyle, Mlnguay,\nMcKinnon, Craig McPhee, Robson,\nLane, Wilson, Urquhart, Wood, Dav-\nlos, Shannon. Billings, Smith. Hos-\nklns, Richards, Chapman, Ted McPhee, Lang. \u00E2\u0080\u0094WATT."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1939_10_27"@en . "10.14288/1.0123832"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Students' Publication 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 .