"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2016-01-18"@en . "1947-10-23"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0124299/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " The Daily Ubyssey\nVol. XXX\nVANCOUVER, B. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1947\nNo. 18\nSocialists\nAdopt\nNew Name\nThe Student Socialist Forum\ntoday announced that it has\nchanged it's name to the University Socialist Club.\nIn answer to an announcement\nthat they faced \"suspension of grant\"\nSocialist officials declared they \"had\nreceived no official statement from\nthe AMS.\"\nHowever, they said, \"We have decided to call ourselves the University\nSocialist Club, but we stand firm in\nour refusal to adopt the name of\nCCF Club.\"\nBILL \u00C2\u00BBMT\nAt a meeting of the club Wednesday, British Columbia's \"Bill 38\" was\nsubjected to verbal bombardment\nfrom Eamon Park, international representative of the United Steel Workers of America (CCL).\nHurling charges of \"mockery of\njustice\" at B.C. lawmakers, Mr. Park\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0aid, \"there haa been a moat pernicious discrimination in the enforcement\nof Bill 39.\n\"It is a law enforced at the request\nof individual employers. I certainly\ncannot say that B.C.'s labor legislation\nis progressive.\"\nWISMER ATTACKED\nAttacking Attorney-General Gordon\nS. Wismer, he declared: \"today Mr.\nWismer is acting as Crown Prosecutor against B. C. Steel Workers\nand at the same time he ia acting\nas a judge in hie capacity as \"Attorney-General.\"\nExplaining the present position of\nlabour in the Dominion, Mr. Park\nblamed the Dominion Government\nfor \"ignoring labour union requests\"\nwith regard to price control thus\nmaking strikes 'inevitable.\"\nDrinking 'Common'\nAl Montreal U.\nDrinking is considered to be on a\npar with smoking in the Province of\nQuebec, in which there are no liquor\nrestrictions, a University of Montreal\nstudent told The Daily Ubyssey Tuesday.\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E Cocktails are served at university\nfunctions by the university on the\ncampus. But there is never any\ndrunkeness, he said.\nAdjournment of student council\nmembers to small taverns is considered a matter of course, the student, who preferred to remain a-\nnonymous, stated.\nPetitions Oppose\nFall Ball Plans\nTwo petitions circulated in the caf yesterday noon drew\nmore than 300 signatures of students who oppose Student Council's move to hold the Fall Ball in the Armory.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Daily Ubyssey I'hoto by Micky Jones\nPOINTING TO THE CAIRN, Aubrey F.Roberts (Arts \u00C2\u00BB23) reminisces with three other UBC\ngraduates who served on the publicity campaign committee during the Fall of 1922, when\npresent campus buildings were a dream rather than a reality. Left to right, the onlooking\ntrio are: Frank E. Buck, (Arts '23) now Honorary Professor in Horticulture and supervisor\nof campus development, Joseph F. Brown, Jr. (Arts *23) and Miss Marjorie Agnew (Arts '22,\nM. A. '23) now a lecturer at UBC, who was the committee secretary.\nPlans\nArts Undergraduate Society Executive, Wednesday, directed Ralph\nHuene, chairman of Fall Ball Committee of USC, to seek council's reversion of their decision not to hold\nthe formal at the Commodore.\nOther petitions were moving through\nthe caf Tuesday noon and Jack\nFraser, fraternity member who started the movement, said they would\nbe presented to Student Council.\nHe feels that 00 percent of fraternity\nand sorority members want the Fall\nBall held off the campus and will\nnot attend if it takes place in the\nArmoury.\nPhi Kappa Sigma's Tom McCulloch\nand Ray Turner were generally\nagainst the idea of taking the dance\nout of the Commodore. They cited\n\"poor floor, expensive cab fate all\nthe way out here, effect of the floor\non the clothes.\"\nFrank Lanehester, second year applied science and a non-fraternity\nman, likes the idea of student vets\nbeing able to bring their wives If\nthe affair is held on the campus. So\ndid scienceman Keith Younger, and\nthey both thought all big university\nfunctions should be helS here, where\neveryone could attend and promote\nuniversity spirit\"\nOthers were of the opinion that\nholding the affair on Ihe campus,\nwould be fairer to the majority.\nMcGoun Tryouts\nGo Next Week\nThe University Parliamentary\nForum has'announced that tryouts\nfor this year's McGoun Cup debating\nteam will take place in Brock South,\nFriday October 31, from 2:30 to 5:30\np.m.\nAll students interested in entering\nthe tryouts are requested to sign the\nlist on the Parliamentary Forum notice board in the Arts building.\nCandidates for the team will be required to give a five minute speech\non the pro or con of;\n(1) Resolve that: The present high\nschool system in British Columbia is\ntotally inadequate.\n(2) Resolve that: The immediate\nformation of a World Government is\nessential to achieve world peace.\nAt the close of the initial tryouts,\neight debaters will be selected for\nthe final tryouts to be held in Arts\n100 about mid November.\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6- An enlarged program of meetings, entertainments and\nathletic events is in readiness for graduates of the University\nof British Columbia when they return to th* campus Satiurday,\nNovember 1, for their annual homecoming celebration.\n \u00E2\u0080\u0094 $ Student guides will sponsor informal tours of {the Ptynt Grey campus,\nlnclvdi^g..yW\u00C2\u00A5> i*w buUdj^, a^\nto, classes in action at various laboratories. Members of Phratert*--uhder-\ngradiiate women's organization\u00E2\u0080\u0094will\nexplain the mysteries of some lift\nbuildings on the campus, remembered ten years ago as possessing only\nabout 30 or 35.\nWashington Paper 'Sorry'\nOver Invasion' Incidents\nBellingham, Wash, Oct. 23\u00E2\u0080\u0094UBC students who participated in the recent \"Bellingham invasion\" received an apology\nthis week from Western Washington College for \"slighting\nincidents\" at the weekend football game.\n\u00C2\u00AB-\nThe apology was part of a stinging\neditorial in the Western Washington\nCollegian, which berated the general\nconduct of the American students at\nthe meet.\nThe editorial stated, in part, \"We\nowe a distinct apology to our visiting\nCanadians for the unconcerned manner in which we received their rendition of the Canadian anthem. More\nplanning would ensure . . . that a\nrepitition of slighting Incidents will\nnot occur again,\"\nThe editorial goes on to say, \"...\nthere is a need for members of the\ncollege who have interest enough in j r>. Sedgewick believes a certain\ntheir institution to cooperate with - - . .\ntheir chosen cheerleaders. To have\na cheering section that can be drowned out by the opposing school is no\nSedgewick Takes\nElection Chair\nEh-, G. G. Sedgewick, head of the\nDepartment' of English, will take over\nthe chairmanship of the Arts Election\nCommittee, the president of LSE announced today.\nThe committee has received a gram\nof $200 from the AMS which sum will\nbe disposed of by the discretion of\nthe committee members.\ndisgrace-but when it happen on our\nown home field, it's no compliment.\"\nOther complaints by the Collegian\nincluded one on policing of the meet.\n\"The police department failed to\nearn its money as far as many people\nwere concerned when attention was\ndistracted from the game by the\nasinine antics of younger people and\ncollege students, as well as local and\nvisiting spectators,\" the editorial\nstated.\nCairn Trekkers\nHistorical trek of UBC students\nfrom the Fairview shacks to Point\nGrey will be commemorated by a\nunique anniversary ceremony staged\nWednesday, October 29. The students of today will honor those\nstudents who 25 years ago. instituted\nthe tradition of dynamic spirit on the\nUBC campus.\nOne of the Trekkers, a former\nmember of the Publicity Campaign\nCommittee of IMS, will deliver a\nspeech at the ceremony. Other members of the platform party will include President N.AJH. MacKenzie\nand several former members of the\n1922 Publicity Committee.\nThe climax of the commemorating\nactivities to mark this historic occasion will occur when these same\ntrekkers, organized by their own\nI anniversary committee chairman, Joseph F. Brown Jr., will attend the\nsilver anniversary banquet in the\nHotel Vancouver Banquet Room\nstarting at 7:00 p.m.\nMr. J. F. Brown Jr., Chairman of\nthe Anniversary Committee and a,\nformer member of the Publicity Committee of '22, is no stranger to this\nyear's huge Freshman class as it\nwas he who gave the inspiring Alumni\naddress at the traditional Cairn Ceremony in September.\nTickets, $2.50 per person, will be\nobtainable from Dr. Harry Purdy,\nDirector of Research, BCER, Joseph\nF. Brown, Managing Director of\nBrown Bros., Aubrey F. Roberts,\nBraun & Co. Dr. John Allardyce,\nDepartment of Biology and any other\nmember of the anniversary committee,\nor from the Alumni Office in the\nBrock Hall.\nOpen house activities at 9:30 am.\nand will continue until 1:30 p.m. No\ndisplays of work are planned by\nstudents, who intend te give graduates instead a view of the normal\nworking, day at the University*\nMembers of the Athletics Honour\nSociety-the Big Block Club-will\nattend their annual luncheon at noon.\nin the Brock Memorial BuikUnfr\nLater in the afternoon, following a\nfootball .game between UBC Thunder-\nbirdes and Lewis and Clarke College\nPioneers at the stadium, a student\ntea will honour alumni in Brock\nMemorial Hall. Tea will be poured\nfrom 4:30 to 5:45 pm.\nA special student entertainment, to\ninclude a war dance is scheduled for\nhalf-time at the football game, which\nbegins at 2:30 pjn.\nMembers of the University Literary\nand Scientific Executive and the\nPlayers' Club will present the traditional homecoming \"potlatch\" al\n8:00 p.m. in the auditorium, while\nthe annual alumni versus students\nbasketball game is scheduled at the\nUniversity Gymnasium at the same\ntime. The alumni team is almost entirely composed of the members of\nthe 1946-47 champion Meralomas\nsquad, while the regular Thunderbird basketball team will represent\nundergraduates.\nTwo dances are scheduled to wind\nup the day's celebrations: one, sponsored by students for students and the\nAlumni at 9:00 p.m. in the University\nArmoury, the other, sponsored by\nthe students for Alumni only in\nBrock Memorial Hall at the same\nhour.\nForum Debaters\nPonder Loyalty\nLoyalty tests for all civil servants\nlikely to have contact with the Ru*;\nsian legation will be the requirements of a bill to be introduced by\nthe government in today's session of\nthe Parliamentary Forum.\nJack Maguire and Jack Kirkaldy\nwill be the debaters.\nThe government is assumed to &e\nprogressive, but lawyers will not be\nbarred, Forum spokesinan, with\ntongue-in-cheek, told THe Daily\nUbyssey yesterday. In fact, they said,\nthey would be glad of a good turnout of law students, since they will\nbe in need of expert legal advice\nin drafting the bill.\nKin Of Trekkers\nAsked To Rites\nHow many of today's students are children of UBC\nstudents who took part in the\nfamous trek to Point Grey\ntwenty-five years ago?\nThe Cairn committee would like to\nknow, for it wishes to invite\ngeneration students to,the cairn\nquet in Hotel Vancouver, Wednesday,\nOctober 29, twenty-fifth anniversary\nof the trek.\nSTUDENTS LOTTED\nAt the moment the cairn committee\nhas nearly a deoen such students oa\nits list Thay \u00C2\u00ABw\nLots Shaw, Arte '4B, daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. Kei^h Shaw (Gladys\nWeld), both of Arts'23,\nBeverley Roberts, Arts 'ft delights*\nof Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey P.'Bebarts\n(Zella Smith), both .of Arts 13.\nClaire Lord, Arte'4l,,ead Dp* Lord,\nArts. '\u00C2\u00AB, daughter and son of Mr.\nand Mrs. Harry Lord (Gertrude\nBlckell), of Arts *22 and '23.\nJoyce Oa*k\u00C2\u00AB, Aito '50,'daughter el\nMr. and Mrs.G. IVW:darke (Lenin\nCampbell), Agriculture -fl and Arts\n,l22\u00C2\u00BB\nNancy Fraser, Arts 'St,, daughter\nof Mn r. A. Shepherd \nFrank M. Ross (Phyllis Gregory),\nArts '25.\nJohn Creighton, Arts '41, sob ef\nMrs. John Creighton, res\nTHEY ALL\nPHILIP\nMORRIS\nYes, it's a call that's echoed\neverywhere, the call to more\nsmoking pleasure offered by\nPhilip Morris English Blend.\nYou too, will like the distinctive flavour of this very\ndistinctive cigarette. It's so\nsmooth \u00E2\u0080\u0094so mild\u00E2\u0080\u0094so com*\npletely satisfying. '\"'\nU.-57A Thursday, October 23,1947\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nPAGES\nStu Porteous Switches\nFrom Law To Ministry\nBy CHRIS CBOMBIE\nIt often happens that a non-too-bright honors course man\nends up in pass arts, but Stu Porteous, committee member of\nthe Student Council and a very successful law student is now\nin first year theology at Union College- The change from law\nwas made early this week.\n -* Approached by Tlie Daily Ubyssey,\nPorteous was, appropriately enough,\nwriting an essay on the work of St.\nPaul. \"This change isn't as sudden\nas you might think, I have been interested in church work for some time\nand feel that there is an increasing\nneed for men in this field,\" he said.\nStu's active interest is quite apparent when you find that he is\nvice-president of the B. C. Conference of the young peoples union of\nthe United Church. He spent part of\nhis summer vacation at a United\nchurch camp near Chilliwack, and\napparently some of the men he met\nthere were largely influeniial in his\ndecision to change.\nPorteous is a member of the Van-\nsouver Heights United Church, and\nis very active in its YPA.\nThe friendly, straight-forward council member feels that there are tremendous possibilities for men interested in the field of theology. \"There\nis a great shortage of ministers in\nthe province,\" he said. For instance\nat Union College there are only two\nof us in first year, and only nine\nin second. Compare that with the\ntremendously crowded arth courses.\"\nTold of the change in courses, tho\nparents weren't especially surprised,\nhaving had some inkling of Stu's\nplans. Mrs. Porteous' only comment\nwas, \"That means three more years\nof making sandwiches.\"\nPorteous has been at the university\nfor five years, and is a* B. Comm.,\nas well as having completed two years\nof law. \"It seems like a lot of university, but I feel I'm definitely on\nthe right track,\" he said. He also\nhas a year and a half of service\nin the Canadian Army, where he\nserved as a lieutenant.\nSTU PORTEOUS\nAdmin Announces\nUK Scholarships\nMyrtle L. Kievell, assistant registrar, has issued ihe following information' regarding British Council\nScholarships and Bursaries.\nThe British Council offer scholarships and grants-in-aid tenable in the\nUnited Kingdom for one academic\nyear of ten months. They may be held\nat universities or at other institutions\nwhich can provide the facilities required.\nThe cost of maintenance and fees\nfor one academic year *s calculated\nat approximately $162L (350 British\npounds) plus fares. A full British\nCouncil scholarship provides for maintenance, fees and fares at this rate:\ngrants-in-aid of $570 ( 1 20 British\npounds) or $1140 (240 British pounds)\nwith or without fares, and of $1623\nwithout fares are awarded in some\ncases.\nThese awards are open to men and\nwomen and are primarily intended\nfor those who have already successfully completed a course for a university degree or professional qualification. Preference is given to candidates betweenthe ages of 25 and 35.\nLETTER TO THE EDITOR\nDear Sir:\nIt was with amazement that we\nread of the Student council's decision to hold the Fall Ball in the armories this year.\nJerry MacDonald, LSE chairman\nsaid, \"... the LSE will turn in a\nprofit of $1000 more than the amount\nreceived if the dance were held in\nthe Commodore.\" We have always\nbeen under the impression that the\nFall Ball was a social rather than a\nmercenary advent, but obviously must\nbe wrong.\nAlso, it should be remembered that\nthe expenses of last year's Mardi\nGras were covered by Nick Kogos,\nproprietor of the Commodore. This\nis certainly a fine way to repay Mi.\nKogo's generosity.\nAside from all this, the Armories\nis a building totally unsuited for a\nfunction of this type. The Fall Ball\nis,or rather, always has been, a formal\nHowever, if the council persists in\nthis rather odd idea, why not burn\ncandles or kerosene lamps at the\nBall? Maybe we could save even more\nmoney.\nSincerely.\nRoss Henderson, Roy Kelsberg Thos.\nMcCulloch, A. Bain, C. Lawrence,\nBUI West, V. Young, Jerry Walls, R.\nTurner and Dick Blockberger.\nElections Foil;\nOnly Four Votts\nThe freshette class is ittll wtth-\na WUS executive after the elections were cancelled when only\nfour freshettes attended the election meeting yesterday.\nA second attempt to complete\nthe freshette executive will be\nmade next Tuesday noon in Arts\n103.\nJohn Bracken\nHere Saturday\nThe Hon. John Bracken, national\nleader of the Progressive-Conservative Party, will pay a visit to the\nUniversity of British Columbia during the course of his Pacific Coast\ntour.\nThe Progresslve-Concervatlve leader will address an open meeting of\nstudents and faculty at 12:30 p.m.\nSaturday, October 25th, in Arts 100.\nAnnouncement of Mr. Bracken's\nvisit came as a surprise, as the Pro-\ngressive-Concervative leaders busy\nschedule had previou Iy forced him\nto decline an invitation to address\nstudents.\nLibrary Show\nFeatures URS\nPictorial presentations in the Library this week features the work of the\ndrama department of the drama cf\nthe University Radio Society.\nPictorially outlined are the phases\nof production in radio drama, from\noriginal script to recording studio.\nPart of the exhibit is a Radio Society record cutting.\n30 Cows, Six Employees\nHelp UBC Dairy Thrive\n\"Hold still Bessie or you'll short circuit the machine.\"\nWith admonitions such as this, the six employees of the\nUBC dairy (and some 30 cows) daily produce 1320 bottles of\nmilk for consumption in the university area.\nMoreover, while drinking this milk, students may justly\nassume a \"Gentlemen of Distinction\" pose for they are inbibing\nsome of the finest bovine brew in the province.\nThe cattle responsible for this record are pure-bred Ayshire stock\nimported directly from the highlands\nof Scotland and they prove their\nsuperiority by producing milk with\na butterfat content of 4 percent and\nbetter. The government requirement\nfor dairies is only 3.25 percent.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2WORLD'S BEST\nThe original herd of 24 head was\ndonated to the tbe university in Aug.\nof 1929 by Scottish cattle breeders,\nwho, to quote a memorial plaque- in\nthe barn, \"were inspired by a desire\nto see the world's best dairy cows\nrepresented in a province settled\nchiefly by Scots.\"\nSince their arrival, the Ayrshires\nhave been very prolific, so that despite constant culling and repeated\nAggie experiments, they now number 47.\nTlie last of the original bovine\nimmigrants died only laht year after\nhaving been the cause of no less\nthan 18 blessed events.\nFIFTEEN YEARS\nThe dairy itself has been in operation for 15 years now and besides\nproviding milk for nearly all of the\ncampus snack bars, it supplies about\n200 customers within the university\narea.\nWhether they're able to read their\nnames on the signs orer the appropriate stall or whether it is just force\nof habit, each cow knows her proper\nplace and why she is there.\nThe milk is quickly collected and\npasteurized so that by 10 a.m. it is\n*\nsitting in the refrigerator, ready for\ndelivery next a\u00C2\u00ABiy. From cow to\ncustomer it is never touched by hand.\nAs a sideline from the humdrum\nof dairy routine, several of the employees at the plant run a day nursery for calves whose mothers are\nbusy working.\nCeremony Marks\nStart Of Gym\nA ceremony for the turning of tbe\nfirst sod for the War Memorial Gymnasium is being planned for November 11, Armistice Day.\nThe War Memorial Gymnasium\nCommittee was told by Mr. R. F.\nOsborne, Director of Physical Education, t'he architect's plans will be\nin the Committee's hands this week\nfor final revision.\nThe plans will be discussed in detail\nwhich will offer final recommenda-\ntionh for the consideration of the\ncommittee as a whole.\nThe committee unanimously approved a vote of thanks to J. D.\nMcLeod, who served as official organizer of the campaign for funds\nuntil December 31, 1946.\nSYMPHONY ORCHESTRA\nOwing to transportation problems\nthe Symphony Orchestra will begin\ntheir rehearsal at 4:00 today instead\nof 5:30 as previously announced.\nHOODED COATS\nFOR ALL\nOCCASIONS\nA fashion that competes\nwith the winning Touchdown\nor adds to your Glamour on\nDate nights ... Choose yours\nwith sweeping width or casually belted\nin shades of Winter Wine,\nGreen Red, Black or Blue.\nSizes 10 to 16.\n$2950 \u00C2\u00B0$39.50\nFashions, Floor Two\nTViendly\nKeep in step . . . wear \"Friendly Sports.\"\nThere are two very smart styles\nto choose from . . \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 . the\nsaddle oxford in white with trim of Red,\nGreen or Tan Mocca-Dillies, a\njaunty shoe buckled on the side,\nin Town Brown or Ox Blood. Sizes 5 to 9.\n9oot7u\nShoes, Main Floor\n\nVANC70UVER'S FASHION CENTRE PAGE 4\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nThursday, October 23, 1947\n'Birds Get\ni? n\nCHICK TURNER, Sports Editor\nREPORTERS: Jack Melville, Roy Huisii, Bruce Saunders\nEDITOR THIS ISSUE: Dick Blockberger\nTHE BLARNEY\n. . . ACCORDING TO HAL MURPHY\nA SYMPHONY IN FOUR PARTS\nA note of confidence is in order. Confidence which may\nhelp to dispel a few of the I> flat utterations which have been\nsounded lately in the direction of Greg Kabat. Sour notes to\nthe fickle fans who have been nattering about a change in grid\ncoaches. In spite of the small thanks he has received lately,\nGreg has done more than any other man, on the campus, to\nkeep the Birds fighting like they have.\nOnly a couple of years ago Greg was the campus here as\nthe Birds rolled over everything in Western Canada. There\nwas no talk about poor methods of coaching as long as the team\nwas whining, and it strikes me as ironical the way past glories\nare so soon forgotten*\nThe Irish hereby take objection to any person, whether\nhe is in the Caf, the Brock, or in the newspapers, that tries to\nfoist the blame for a few losses on a right guy like Greg Kabat.\nSECOND MOVEMENT\u00E2\u0080\u0094WEAKNESSES\nThe weaknes sof the Bird grid squad seem to lie deep in the\nlack of training and experience which the players should have\nbeen receiving while they were at high school. At the present\ntime Vancouver College is virtually the only source of grid\nmaterial which UBC has.\nSolution of the problem may lie with the Physical Education\ndepartment which is training instructors for Vancouver high\nschools. If these instructors can create an interest in grid\nthroughout our high schools there may come a day when the\nBlue and Gold coach will have more than 50 men from which\nto choose his squad.\nBRIGHTER MUSIC\nSweet sounds are coming these days from the English\nRugby department. With Roy Haines, who last year coached\nthe Thunderbirds to sensational wins in every series they played, gradually relinquishing the coaching duties to newcomer\nAlbert Laithwaite, great events are underway^\nOf the two senior campus teams participating at present\nin the Miller cup race, for Vancouver Rugger supremacy,\nVarsity seems scheduled to repeat its last year's record of no\nlosses.\nThe campus rugby fifteens have beaten Vancouver and\nVictoria teams so frequently that this year there has been a\nslight amount of friction apparent between the, rugger boys\nAt the start of the season rumors were flying about the\ncampus squads being restricted from the city league but nothing\ncame of it. Victoria has gone one step farther, however, and\nhave declared UBC ineligible to play for the Rounsfell Cup,\nsymbol of B. C. club champions. That's just one less trophy\nfor the boys, to go after.\nThis leaves the Blue and Gold rugby squads with only the\nMiller Cup (in the bag already), the Tisdall trophy (another\nlocal bit of silverware), the McKechnie Cup for B.C. champions)\nand the World Cup. University of California Golden Bears\nwill be on the campus in February to contest the World Cttp\nin what should be the event of the year-\nCLOSING CHIMES\nRugby would really hit the big. time if a whispered invasion\nby a Yale fifteen comes true ... A similarly whispered tilt with\na world travelling Down-Under squad is considered unlikely\nby campus moguls . . . Shaughnessey's third floor has a distinguished visitor this week as Joe Fairleigh our choice for man\nof the year) is busy recovering from injuries received in the\nWillamette game last Saturday .\nSaturday\nUBC's much talked-of Thunderbirds will be out to put an\nend to all \"new deal in football\" cries Saturday, when they\ntangle at the local stadium with\nWhitman College Missionaries.\nAlthough they are still gunning for\ntheir initial PNC American football\nvictory, the 'Birds will enter Saturdays affair as slight favorites.\nIn the past two seasons the Mis-\nsionaires have but one triumph to\ntheir credit\u00E2\u0080\u0094a 21-13 victory over\nUBC.\nBut Whitman's 1946 win\u00E2\u0080\u0094as those\nof you who witnessed it must remember\u00E2\u0080\u0094was strictly of the fluke\nvariety. A fumble and an intercepted\npass cost the Kabatmen the game last\nyear, and the 'Birds are determined\nnot to make the same mistakes Saturday.\nMore good news is the fact that\nJim Forsythe, the sprinting Whitman\nhalfback who accounted for two of the\nthree Missionary touchdowns last\nyear, is no longer at Whitman.\nPaul Stenner, Whitman's conversion specialist who kicked three for\nthree in the '4\u00C2\u00AB tilt, has alio left\nthe Missionary fold. And these are\nJust two o! the names mjaalnf jfrom\nthe Whitman reater; only 15 c\u00C2\u00AB last\nyear's ^^imm^-MWH^mr!\nstrip.\nThis looks like UBCs big chance\nfor an American fc*0>tU trittma*.\nAnd If the st\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BBde a\u00C2\u00BB fun \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00ABH\u00C2\u00BB\nteam fWen the support it < dMryee\nthere ia no reason why the victory\nshouldn't come our way.\nUBC Soccer Personalities\nCITY SPORT PARKS\nAt the suggestion of one of our readers, we are publishing this information\nin the hope that it might benefit out-of-town students who are unfamiliar\nwith Vancouver. Central starting point chosen was Broadway and Granville,\nand directions published herein will be valid as soon as the B. C. Electric\nresumes operation of their coffins-on-wheels fondly known as streetcars,\nBROCKTON POINT OVAL-Take No. 1 or 8 streetcar down Granville to\nPender, transfer to Stanley Park car and proceed to end of line. From this\npoint, walk East on Park Drive to Duck Pond, then North-East through\nwell-marked trail to stadium.\nDOUGLAS PARK\u00E2\u0080\u0094Board No, 1 car East on Broadway to Oak Street, transfer to No. 17 car going South on Oak, get off at 22nd Ave., walk two blocks\nEast.\nCONNAUGHT PARK-Take No. 13, 14, 15, or 1G car West on Broadway\nto Balsam, walk one block South.\nMEMORIAL SOUTH\u00E2\u0080\u0094Take No. 1 East on Broadway to Main, transfer to\nFraser Street bus going uptown to 41st Ave., walk one block East.\nPOWELL STREET GROUNDS\u00E2\u0080\u0094Take No. 14 North on Granville to Gore\nAve., walk two blocks North.\nNORQUAY\u00E2\u0080\u0094Take No. 1 East on Broadway to Main, transfer to Joyce Road\ncar out Kingsway to 35th Ave.\nROBSON PARK\u00E2\u0080\u0094Take No. 1 East on Broadway to Main, transfer to Fraser\nbus or Joyce Road car out Kingsway to 16th Ave.\nCALLISTER PARK\u00E2\u0080\u0094Take No. 1 or 8 North on Granville to Hastings, transfer to No. 20 car to Kaslo, walk one block South.\nCAPILANO STADIUM\u00E2\u0080\u0094Walk down to 5th and Granville, and turn one\nblock East.\nFORUM\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Take No. 14 East to Hastings and Renfrew.\nKING ED GYM-Take No. 1 East on Broadway to Oak, walk up to 11th Ave.\nJOHN OLIVER GYM-Take No. 1 East on Broadway, transfer to Fraser bus\nSouth to 43rd Ave., walk one block West.\nSo there it is kiddies, break out your compasses and good luck.\nDucats For\nIn Great Demand\nThere .will. h\u00C2\u00BB, a \u00E2\u0096\u00A0, big, crowd at the\nhomecoming, grid game at the- Stadium Saturday if Luke M\u00C2\u00AB>yl\u00C2\u00AB has\nhis way.-Meyla is boaidivg ticket sales\nin a bigjatteinpt to overcome-th* lack\n "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1947_10_23"@en . "10.14288/1.0124299"@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 Daily Ubyssey"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .