"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2016-01-18"@en . "1949-11-22"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0124351/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " BEAT THE ENGINEERS\nAT THEIR OWN GAME\nSUPPORT\nThe March of Dimes\nThe Ubyssey\nBEAT THE ENGINEERS\nAT THEIR OWN GAME\nSUPPORT\nThe March of Dimes\nVOL. XXXII\nVANCOUVER, B. C, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1 19\nNo. 26\nTime For Some Change\n(EDITORIAL)\nWe're tired of having our football teams pushed all over\nVarsity Stadium.\nFor that matter we are tired of seeing all our university\nathletes relegated to the doubtful status of 'expendables.\"\nUbyssey editors have sore pants from sitting on thc fence\nfor years on the important subject of athletic scholarships. We\nare now jumping off the fence.\nThe move comes after serious study by the editors. In this\nand succeeding editorials the whole program of university\nathletics will be held up for examination.\nWe believe that there is a need for team sports. They build\ncharacter and leadership. If we are to have team sport, competition should be on an intercollegiate basis. There is no place\nfor university athletes in leagues made up for tired professionals\nmasquerading as amateurs.\nBut if UBC is to compete on an equal plane in intercollegiate sports its athletes should not be penalized. Athletes are\nmade, not born.\nThe Ubyssey 'feels that the whole ridiculous situation has\nreached an illogical conclusion with the woeful attempts of\nMAD to coerce university athletes into playing for UBC teams.\nIf we want our athletes to wear Blue and Gold they should\nbe given something more than second class recognition. Improved playing conditions, an enlightened faculty attitude and\nfinancial assistance are all necessary.\nThis is not to say that UBC should offer fantastic inducements to athletes in order that they will shed their blood foi\nus rather than old P.U.\nWe think there is a place for an intelligent plan to aid deserving athletes. If his marks are sufficient to justify his\nattending college in the first place there is no reason why his\nfees should not be paid.\nThis especially applies to local athletes who would readily\naccept a scholarship that paid their fees at UBC along with\na chance to mak\u00C2\u00AB good in their home town rather than room,\nboard, books and a weekly salary to play in the east or south.\nUnfortunately funds for such an enterprise are not to be\nfound growing on thc campus maples.\nIn subsequent editorials The Ubyssey will outline its plan\nfor furthering athletics at UBC.\nEngineers Set Sights On $500\nFor Todays March Of Dimes\nRedshirts Hope fo Out Donate\nCampus Two to One in Drive\nBy IRIS SANDERSON\nUBC's community-spirited Engineers say they will raise\ndouble the amount collected by any other faculty in today's\nMarch of Dimes Drive. ,\nThey have set the objective of thc one day effort to aid the\nChildren's Hospital at $500.\nCanvassers started at 8:30 a.m. today and will tour the campus' until\n1:30 p.m. Room 210 of the old Applied\nSeienco building i.s iheir headquarters.\nAdministration Takes\nOver McGill Bookstore\nMONTREAL, (CUP) - As a result of protests from students, publishing houses, and The McGill Daily, campus newspaper, the McGill University bookstore will be formed as a\ndepartment of the university before the next session.\nAll profits resulting from business*/\nwill be used directly for benefit of\nMcGill student body.\nSET UP BOARD\nA managing board will be set up,\nconsisting of the book store manager,\nstudent president, three faculty members and comptroller of the university.\nThe new university book store will\noperate in opposition to several other\ncommercial markets.\nOne Montreal book dealer, who supplies student texts through two outlets said that he was not sure if he\nwould continue operating two stores.\n\"I will take time to appraise the\nsituation and then decide,\" he said.\nDESIRABLE\nMcGill officials decided that the new\nstore should be operated as a university department rather than a student cooperative for two reasons.\n\"First,\" said university comptroller,\n\"the yearly turnover of student executives does not allow the continuity of\nmanagement which is desirable and\ntwo, a student group is not in as good\na position to bargain with chairmen of\ndepartments and publishers over the\ntexts and supplies needed,\"\nThe new book store will carry a full\nsupply of texts, notebooks, paper,\ntechnical equipment, pens and sundries. Other merchandise will be added as soon as possible.\nNominations Due For\nVisual Arts Club\nNominations for president, secretary, treasurer, archivist, PRO, and\nprogram director of the newly formed\nVisual Arts Club must be submitted\nto Professor Hunter Lewis by next\nThursday.\nAll nominations must be signed by\nfive members of tho club and must\nhave the consent of the nominees.\nPUBLICATIONS THANKS go\nto Dr. Roy Daniells, professor\nof English at UBC for a gift\nof dictionary to the \"Ubyssey\nlibrary. With his gift Dr. Daniells enclosed a clipping of a\nUbyssey headline, pointing out\nthat \"assasins\" was spelled\n\"assassins\".\nThis Saturday Date\nOf Frosh Frolic\nThis Saturday will be the date of\nIhe '49 Frosh Frolic announced yesterday by Frosh secretary-treasurer,\nJohn Fraser.\nEntertainment for the informal\ndance will include the music of Keith\nWatson's orchestra and, during intermission, six glamorous dancing girls.\nAll this for IJOe a head or $1 a couple!\nWith students in all years welcome,\na large turnout is expected. Extra\nBCER buses will be running the Uni-\nBIGGEST FEATURE\nBiggest feature of the one-day competition will be a secret attraction to\nbe unveiled in the plot behind the\nAggie building at 12:30 p.m, Ii is\npresented by the Engineers, who have\nchallenged the rest of the campus to\nmatch their collections in aid of\nChildren's Hospital fund.\ni A huge eight foot barometer is\nsh'uated on the north face of the\nEngineering building, so students may\nkeep track of the drive's prog.-ess.\nTerry Lynch, third year electrical\n\ engineering student has donated the\nuse of two PA systems, one of which\ni will tour university grounds at noon.\nJars are being loaned by the cafeteria.\nNURSES HELP\n| Nurses are looking after the area\neast of the Totem, because in an\n; engineer's words 'they have more\nippc.il than we Jo!'' Commerce stu-\n1 7tnls are supervisi1: counting of ihe\nj collections. They hope that final re-\nUbyssey Photo by Tommy Hatcher j suUs wU1 ^ postecl this a(lernoon,\nGETTING HIS FEET Wet last Friday in the Duck Pond is ex- j Undergraduate societies ere resnon-\npubster Harry Castillou as he is initiated into the Big Block is*le for their own individual facul-\n. riii* -nt. -ri i i r\:\u00E2\u0080\u009E\r ties, although all faculties have the\nClub Doing the honors for the club is Phys-Ed mentor Dick . , , . c 01n\nUUUl J-\u00C2\u00BBu\u00C2\u00ABi5 l\"^ \"\"\"u\" \" same headquarters in Ap Sc 210.\nPenn. j Each faculty is expected to tour the\ngrounds around their particular buildings, but engineers say that they wiil\nsend their own canvassers to d>e\narea if they don't.\nPREPARING\nEngineering executive have spent\nCLU Urges Rights Bill\nite Political Nix\nDespi\nRepresentatives of the country's major political parties\nyesterday denounced the proposed Bill of Rights for Canada\nbefore an unsympathetic meeting of UBC branch, Civil Liberties Union. *\nDespite the arguments presented by\nLiberal Frank Lewis, CCFer Joe :\nLotzkar, and Tory Marshall Bray, a\nspanking majority of UBC's CLU'\nionists voted in favor of the Rights\nBill.\nAS RESULT\nCLU proposed the discussion as a\nresult of the recently tabled motion by\nLiberal Senator Roebuck regarding\na written Bill of Rights for Canada.\nLewis based his opposition on\nthe grounds that the form of our\nCanadian Government makes a comprehensive bill of rights an impossibility.\nDivision of legislative powers between provincial and federal governments prevents the enactment of an\nriding\" bill, he said. Further, no\nCanadian parliament can bind its\nsuccessors by such legislation.\nIN CONFLICT\nLotzkar stated, \"The rights of man\ncannot be guaranteed when society\nis constantly in conflict.\"\n'As long as man is nothing but a\nfactor of production, a bill of rights\nwill be meaningless,\" he said.\nGeneral agreement with the stand\ntaken by Lewis was expressed by\nBray. He advocated the understanding\nof general basic principles rather\nthan the '\"putting up on the wall\"\nof a list of written resolutions.\nversity route on thc night of the\nCandidates qualifications are also , dance,\nasked. | Refreshments will be served.\nGRADE FOUR DO POSTERS\nFOR ENGINEERS DRIVE\nEngineers were aided in the publicizing of the March of\nDimes Children's Hospital Campaign by a number of grade\nfour studenLs who have made the posters which were\nposted around tho campus today.\nExcited al lhe chance lo make placards for UBC, they\nhave produced some colorful advertisements containing\nsuch slogans a.s \"Don't Forgot the March of Dimes\" and\n\"March of Dimes Ihe Crippled Children Help.\"\nTheologian Claims\nPsychology Not\nReplacing Religion\nCY WHITE\nleads Dime Drive\nPsychology is so far from replacing\nreligion that they are working together against a common enemy, Dr.\nW. S. Taylor, principal of Union College said at a Student Christian Movement meeting Monday.\n\"Psychologists may have something\nto learn from religious groups also,\njust as religious men can learn from\npsychologists. When I told a psychologist that I was going to be a principal\nof Union College, he said \"Bill, we're- :\t\nin a Hell of a mess, and unless we can the last week preparing for the drive,\nwork together, we are sunk.\" Koy Cowley and Ken Johnston have\n, constructed the barometer and will\nSome psychology abolishes guilt , , . ..mi.- -n u cm ,\\n^ ' , ' \" i look after it. Tubing will be filled\ncomplexes , and some religions afi- . , , \u00E2\u0080\u009E . , . , , ,\n, ' wu'h red k;r engineer s totals, and\ngravate them. It may be that these, , ,, , ,, , ,,.\n, ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E probably green for other faculties,\nreligions are being replaced. i .' , ,\n| The committee has arranged it so that\n\"I think that the Christian Doctrine ; |jqujd will be on hand to be pumped\nof Sin, is rubbish. It says that God mt0 the barometers, with adequate\nknows anything and everything you've oponjngS f01. drainage,\ndone, and you don't need to fear re- Publicity men have been at work\njection. In other words, that God does ,0 sce lhat the c|,.jve goos ovol. tn0\nwhat the therapist does.\n\"Psychology and Christian Theology\nare far from replacing each other, and\nthey must get together,\" he said.\ntop.\nTl'.e set of small posters seen around\nthe campus weer made for the engineers by grade four students.\nLUS Discuss\nProblems Of\nArticling\nStudents Feel\nArticleship Not\nSpent To Advantage\nNeed for a schedule of training to be drawn up for articled\nlaw students was brought up\nMonday noon at a meeting of\n.he Law Undergraduate Society.\nIn a report submitted by the articles committee of the LUS committee, chairman Rod MacDonald stated\nthat the report was submitted at the\nrequest of the Bar Association of\nBritish Columbia.\nCONSENSUS\nThe consensus of opinion among\nmost students was that the time they\nspent in articleship was not spent to\nthe best advantage.\nThe committee felt that the aci'ual\nschedule was not a matter for the\nLUS but a matter for the Provincial\nBar Association to pass opinion on.\nThe report favored a questionaire\nas one method of analysing the existing method of articleship on a\npurely factual basis. A motion that\nthe committee accept questions for\nthis portion of the brief was accepted\nby the student body.\nSUGGESTION\nA suggestion that budding barristers\nact for persons unable to afford\ncounsel at police court was deferred\nfor further discussion as it was felt\nthat such a policy did not come under\nthe jurisdiction of the brief.\nA motion from Rod Young, 1st\nyear law student.', that the report be\naccepted in principle was approved.\nThe student lawyers did not favor\nthe establishment of a minimum wage\nscale for articled students as many\nstudents felt that many law firms\nwould not be able to take articled\nstudents if they were forced to pay\nthem more money.\nSuggestions of the Moot Court\nprocedure were struck out of the\nreport as it was felt that this portion\nhad no direct bearing on the article-\nship question.\nStudent Directory\nOut in Two Weeks\nThe long-awaited Student Directory\nwill be distributed within two weeks\nto students who paid 25 cents subscription charge during Registration\nWeek, officials of the Publications\nBoard announced Monday.\nNames, addresses, and phone numbers of all students will be printed\naccording to information now in the\nhands of the editors. No further\nchanges will be accepted.\nForesters to Have\nSeries of Lectures\nPulp and paper technical and economic problems will be the subject\nof a series of lectures to be given as\na regular part of Forestry 475.\nThe lectures, seven in number,\nwill be delivered by executives of\nthe leading pulp and paper companies\nof British Columbia and will be of\nspecial interest to Forestry and Engineering students.\nThe next subject to he discussed,\non December 2 at 2:110 p.m. in Kng.\n200, will be \"Wood Procurement and\nUtilization by Pul]> and Paper Companies of B.C..\" and the lecturer will\nbe Mr. J. E'. I.iersch, assistant vice-\npresident of the Powell Hiver C'om-\npan> Ltd.\nTween Closses on the Campus\nRod Young Addresses CCF Club\nRod Young, former CCF BEETHOVEN'S Concerto No. -1 for * .f* *\n, r tt , nnn,.,\u00E2\u0080\u009E t)iano and orchestra will be presented A SPECIAL MEETING of the Co-\nmember lor Vancouver Centre, . ' , ,\ntomorrow at 12:,i() p.m. in Mens Club operative Aero Association will be\nwill present his views on par- , R()()m in Bmt,k Hall , Md ,it 12.;]0 p m in lhe Link R()0m\nliament at the regular meeting \"UNITED NATIONS' Growing today, north end of the Armories,\nof the CCF club in New Ellg. Pains\" will be discussed by Colin; # * *\n200 at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow. Fitzgerald, well-known radio person- AUCIIITHCTI'RK CLUB will hold\nThis will be the first public slate- \"lily !,t a moi',in\u00C2\u00AB' ,>r thc United an important meeting in HO H at 12:30\n. ,i , \r i \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Nations today at I2:al) p.m. n m tomorrow\nment that Young has given on his ' ''\"'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 u'nioi iovv.\nimpressions of Parliament. I *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00A3\u00E2\u0080\u00A2> %. ff, %.\n^ IMCOPLU IVTF.KF.STEI) in painting, CAMPUS MOVIFGOFRS will have\nsculpture, or drawing are asked lo ;, chance lo see two shows today\nMONTKF.U, STANDARD will run a eome to a meeting of the Visual Arts -The Adventurer and the Count\" at\nfeature article on ihe UBC trader Cluh in Ans 2111 .->. V'-.'M) p.m. today. 12:.'!0 in tne Auditorium. The second\ncamps m their November 2ti issue. An additional meolina. o\u00E2\u0080\u009E Woodwork, show, \"The Razor's Fd\u00C2\u00BBe \" will be\nWith the four-page story there will Mela! Work. Pot Pottery. Weaving Ihe regular presentation \"of the Uni-\nbe pielures ol students.. Iheir families and Text,lea will l.e held a, Arl., HIS veia-in Film Soe,a|v. Show tunes, will\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"\"' \"\"'\"' \":,il,,r ;\"-''\"\"'\u00C2\u00BB\", reads the\nnews columns\nof the Ubyssey\nreports that a\nco-ed recent Iv\nthrew her bov\nfriqnd's -bocks\ninto the lily\npond. She piomptly wound up in\nthe pond with them.\nThis should be a lesson to all\nthose who advocate the mass destruction of \"undesirable'' books.\n# # V\nA Mr. Harold Winch, of socialist\nfame, recently reported that the\nthi.s. Might prove handy in a\npinch.\n# # *\nWe note wilh some interest that\nthe COTC i.s to be treated to films\nevery week.\nIt is precisely this sort ot time\nwasting makes armies soft.\n#\n#\n//\nM\nCLU's Own Little Party Line\nSilver-tongued, tub-thumping, party line\nhugging politico;; ol all hues of the rainbow,\nroad their party wagons straight inlo thc\nditch Wednesday.\nOur self-made campus-brand politician.-.\njoined hands in a dubious union to buck\nthe proposed bill of rights for Canada before\na meeting of the Civil Liberties Union.\nConfident that all .students must support at\nleast one political party they sallied forth, all\nguns blazing, and lambasted the bill for\nnearly an hour.\nCivil Liberties Union members merely\nshrugged their freedom-loving shoulders and\ndisdainfully voted in favor of the bill.\nTho joker in the pack, of course, i.s that\nCLU has a parly line all of its own. For\nyears it has stormed the hustings in favor\nof a bill of rights.\nWednesday, in a whimsical mood, the\nunion, invited representatives of the three\nmajor parties, knowing full well the politicos\nwould blast the bill and knowing full well\nthe blasts would roll off the backs of all\n(rue CLU'ers like grape shot off armor plate.\nWell, at least we had fun.\nIn This Corner by jim banham\nFor those women who have sadistic tendencies, \"Easy Living,\" now playing in Vancouver, is a must. At the end of the picture,\nhe-man Victor Mature, retiring from the\nfootball field because of an unpronounceable heart disease, smears his wife's lipstick\nslaps her hard across the face several times,\nthen kisses her, tells her he loves her, and\nthus reconciles their marriage. Congenital\nidiots and sadists should like that one.\nAt first, tiie picture looks like it might\nturn into a pretty good football yarn about\nprofessional footballers. After the first few\nscenes the show begins to degenerate into\nanother soap opera on celluloid.\nThe whole thing is complicated by the\nfact that Mature's wife wants to have a\ncareer in interior decorating and enjoy thc\nsleazy company of New York high life. Mature\nwants her to follow him around the country\non his football junkets and enjoy thc simple\nlittle pleasures of Chicago's Pump Room.\nBut Liza, his wife, played by Lizabeth\nScott, takes up with a New York no-good\nwho backs her Liza Inc., prouncecl in tho\npicture Liza Ink, and later lets her drop wilh\na thud. Finally wil'to realizes her position\nand there is the lipstick-smearing, face-slapping scene.\nWith the Los Angeles Rams as his leant\nmates, Mature and lhe picture's producer.;\nbad a good chance lo slmw our of America's\nbest pro lootball (cams in aelion. FoolbnM\ntakes a back seal lor lhi-i fi!m however, res-\nli'k'ling itself lo a lew (raining shots and :t\ncouple of thill ni;.;hl ;;.lines.\nThe only inolivation for chousinc lhe\ntitle of the film is the singing of the song,\n\"Easy Living,\" at a New York penthouse\nparty. It's sung by a girl who sounds like\nBilly Holiday and her singing stands out a.s\none of tho better parts of the picture,\n# * *\nAs a super-charged, sentimental reporter\nwho is willing to have hi.s head blown off for\na good story, Alan Ladcl, in \"Chicago Dead-\nlino\" endeavors to discover the background\nof a beautiful girl he finds dead of T.B. in a\nrooming house.\nArmed to the teeth with an address book\ncontaining more phono numbers than the\nVancouver directory, reporter Ladd runs the\ngamut of Chicago high and low life.\nAt picture's end two seemingly innocent\nparlies have been murdered, Ladd has done\nin the villain, and everybody, including the\naudience, is in a quandry as to just what\nis going ion.\nDonna Reed, who plays the part of thc\ndead woman, just can't seem to rebuff a wolf\nwho makes a pass because, \"she feels sorry\nfoi' them.\" For a girl who seems to get\naround, she is incredibly naive.\nMiss Reed, a rather refreshing brunette,\ni.; in direct contrast to June Havoc, a hard,\ncolli blonde whom Ladd picks up al a wedding\nreception chii'iiii.; his rounds of Chicago.\nAt one point in tho picture, a reporter\nIrieml ol Ladd's confesses he doesn't knew\nu'hat s i;oiu.\", on and remarks, as he litis his\ncLt.a,, \"[Vlaylie I'm not drinking enough.\" The\nwhole pic! ure is just about a.s hazy a-: tlie\nreporter's tipsy mind.\nand all that\nby Les Armour\nprogress of European social democratic countries is 'astounding.\"\nAlways a bit astounding to have\nyour predictions came true, eh\nMr. Winch?\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2V- -Y- H-\nPRESIDENT TRUMAN SAYS\ncapitalists 'must be prepared\nto lake care of the depreciation of\nthe human machine as part of his\nIcilitima!\" business costs.\"\nThis column i.s pleased to be\nregarded as equal, at last, with a\nlinotype machine.\n# # #\n, \"In the last nine months faith\nha.s been sadly lacking in the American .system of private enterprise,\" laments the Atlantic monthly.\nWell, what do you suggest, a good\nold fashioned revival meeting com-\nplete with sawdust trail?\n# tf tf\n\"The prisoner was dismissed under the Criminal Justices Act,\" reports an English provincial weekly.\nAll Justices ought to look into\nLetters\nTo The Editor\ninnou,\nTHE UBYSSEY, *\nI wonder if you would publish the\nfollowing letter which I received from\nmy friend in Europe. Joe was a very\nvaluable friend during my stay in\nParis as he had many connections in\nthe black marketing business and\ngave me valuable assistance in understanding the night life of Paris.\n\"Dear Lucid:\nI wonder if you wouldn't do something about getting me out. to Canada\na.s you promised. Things arc goink\nvery bad for we richniks back in\nSlobovia. As a matter of fact a person\ncan no longer make a living there\nwithout working. Besides that the\nblack marketing business here in\nParis' is getting overcrowded and a\nperson finds it difficult to make a\nfast franc.\nRemember you said that you thought\nI might be able to do a job out in\nCanada. Wail I am raddy. I will shout\nagainst the Communists as loud a.s\nanyone and will tell loud and lurid\ntales of the horrors to which tlie\nrichniks are being subjected in Slobovia. Please hurry.\nYour Pal,\nJoe Richnik.\"\nSo miu see Joe is really in a verv\nhad way and il would In mosl usr-\nI'ul if he- were to be c,i\'en an ISS\nScholarship,\nSincerely,\nLucid Interval,\nANY COMMUNIST BUR-\neaucrats, ,who have lost\nfaith in the ever-changing\nparly line, are prevented from ever\nreturning to normal humanity as\na result of their spiritual self-\nmultilaiion,\" remarks a correspondent to \"Left.\"\n34 YEARS OF SERVICE\nTO THE UNIVERSITY OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA,\nITS FRATERNITIES\nAND SORORITIES.\nTHERE'S A REASON\nHe is probably referring to the\nnervous wrecks created by the\nMoscow edict against tobacco.\ntf tf tf\n\"Eritons are receiving penguin\neggs from Inaccessable Island, a\nremote spot half between Africa\nand South America\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094BUP dispatch.\nThis is believed to shed a new\nlight on the traditionally Ministry\nof Food communique \"we regret\nthe commodity you desire is inaccessable.\"\nSTATIONERY AND\nPRINTING CO. LTD.\nTELEPHONE PA C I F I C O I 7 I\n566 SEYMOUR ST. VANCOUVER, B, C.\nMORE FUN\nIN BED\nFOR\nEVERYONE\nTYPEWRITING\nEssays, Theses, Notes\nManuscripts\nMrs. A. O. Robinson\n4180 W. 11th Ave. ALma 0915R\nThe (light Smoke\nat the Right Price\nfor Young Men\nBED LAMP-RADIO^\nHere'a the smartest bedtime\nstory ever told! Read under\nperfect light that's kind to\nyour eyes\u00E2\u0080\u0094while your favorite\nradio program plays softly in\nyour ears. The Lullaby, styled\nlike a dream in gleaming plastic\ncombines a true-toned quality\nradio with a scientifically\ndesigned no-glare reading light\nCompact; fits any bed; for AC o*\nDC; lamp and radio operate separately or together asdesired. See\nand buy the Lullaby todayl At\nbetter radio dealers everywhere*\nANUFACTURINO CO. ITO. .\u00C2\u00AB\nTORONTO 8, ONTARIO\nToday's Outstanding Value!\nAUSTIN\nlOHi and Alma CE. 8105\nSALES and SERVICE\nm**\u00C2\u00BBmvm' fa'u*mrm.im:m m\nWE ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THE ARRIVAL\nof a shipment of genuine Croydon\nBurberry Coats\nSizes 12 lo 20, including a few tall models. The perfect\nall-weal her casual coat for Vancouver's climate, rain\nor shine.\nMARTY LLOYD\n\"FIRST IN FASHION-FOREMOST IN QUALITY\"\nALma 2:500 4409 W. 10th Ave, Tuesday, November 22, 1949\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nMeetings\nPHILATELIC SOCIETY meets in\nHut L 2 Wednesday noon. New members welcomed.\nBOTANICAL GARDENS SOCIETY\nwill meet on Friday, November 25, in\nAP 102 to hear Mr. R. A. .Bob) Nicholson, horticulturist for the University Endowment Lands, speak in \"Erie-\nacepus Plants.\" The club constitution\nwill be posted on biological notice\nboards tomorrow, for the members'\napproval.\nAT THE JAZZ SOCIETY meeting\nWednesday, November 2. there will\nbe Kid Ory and Boak Johnson (once\nremoved) accompanied by Denis\nCreighton. Do come.\nSLAV CIRCLE\u00E2\u0080\u0094No more meetings\ntill next term. Play rehearsal \"Fortune\nFavors Fools,\" Thursday, November\n24, 3:30 p.m., auditorium.\nVOC OLD MEMBERS meet in Arts\n201 at 12:30 Friday to approve list of\nnew members.\nREGULAR MEETING of Camera\nClub will be in Arts 102 at noon this\nFriday.\nWonted\nRIDE for two 8:30's along Marine\nDrive near New Westminster. Phone\nNW 1969R2.\nRIDE from vicmlty of West 41st\nand Boulevard for 8.30's Monday to\nSaturday. Phone KErr. 1018R.\nDAWSON'S \"Government of Canada\" and French 202 Grammar text\nand any good public finance (Eeo. 320)\nnotes. Phone Tillson, AL. 0754.\nANY raido in working condition.\nPhone Bill AL. 3163. Will pay up to\n$55.\nA RIDE to Kamloops for Xmas\nvacation. Will pay ear expenses. Phone\nBA. 1652.\nRIDE from 37th and Main for 8:30's\nMonday to Saturday FR. 6068 eves.\nCOED wants ride for 8:30's Monday\nto Saturday from 49th and South\nGranville. Phone Pat, KErr. 7295L.\nLEGION\nLETTER\nBy LES LANGLEY\nThe Legion extends its warmest\nthanks and appreciation to those who\ntook .part in the distribution and sale\nof poppies and to those who participated' in the Armistice Day Service.\nStudent veterans are asked to submit the names of fellow students from\nUBC who are patients in the Shaughnessy Military Hospital fur the purpose of the Legion visiting them.\nThere are many students whose\nuniversity training grants under DV^\nwill be expiring before they have completed their courses and who are in\ndoubt or ignorance of the facts relative to an extension ot these grants.\nThe following information is given to\ncorrect croneous impressions and to\nbe a positive guide to the uninformed.\nThe Veterans Rehabilitation Order in\nthe sections applicable to grant provides that the period of payment be\nextended beyond the period of service, provided that:\n(a) the student has, while on grants,\ncompleted one academic year;\n0b) in the year next preceding that\nin which his period of entitlement expires, he has:\n( 1) passed in all his subjects, and.\n(ii) is in the top 25 percent of his\nclass, or has at least a second\nclaws average, and,\n(c) has been recommended by the\nUniversity's Scholarship Committee.\nA pensioner needs only a pass standing to qualify for an extension, rather\nthan needing to be in the top 25 percent or needing a second class average. Subsection (b), as given above,\nis the one under which nearly all\nveterans whose time is running out\nmust qualify.\nOPTOMETRIST\nGORDON TELFORD, M.A.\n410 Birks Bldg. TA. 2913\nEye Examination Visual Training\nDRAUGHTING\nINSTRUMENTS\nFrom $10.00\nT-Squarcs, Protractors, Set Squares\nMECHANICAL ENGINEERS\nAND\nPOLYPHASE SLIDE RULES\nAMES LETTERING\nINSTRUMENTS\nZIPPER RING BOOKS\nComplete with Sheets and Index\nFrom $2.(1!)\nFOUNTAIN PENS\nClarke & Stuart\nCo. Ltd.\nStationers nnd Printers\n550 Seymour St. Vancouver, B.C.\nUbyssey\nMiscellaneous\nNEED HELP IN FRENCH courses\nfor Xmas exams? Coaching at reasonable rates, FA. 8466R.\nEX VICTORIA COLLEGE students;\nbuy a year's subscription to the Martlet, formerly the Microscope. Send\n50 cents and your address to the Martlet, Victoria College.\nESSAY AND THESIS TYPIST-\nMrs. Roy Holmes, KErr. 0891Y.\nTYPING\u00E2\u0080\u0094reasonable rates. For\nfurther information phone Mrs. Isaac,\nCH. 8688 after 5:30.\nNotices\n\"IMPRESSIONS of Australia\" will\nbe the subject of an address to be\ndelivered by Colonel H. T. Logan, of\nthe Classics Department, to the UBC\nHistorical Society on Wednesday, November 23 at 7:30 in the Men's Lounge,\nBrock Hall. All interested students\nare invited to attend.\nUNIVERSITY Symphony rehearsal\nin UBC auditorium every Wednesday,\n6 p.m.\nMARDI GRAS chorus tryouts, Brock\nStage Room Thursday, November 24,\n12:30. Bring shorts. All freshettes,\nindependent, Greeks welcome.\nGEORGE Weaver's class on Socialism will be held this Thursday instead of today.\nAUCTION of ski equipment\u00E2\u0080\u0094VOC\nwill auction off leftover skis and\nequipment Thursday, November 24 at\nnoon in H A 1. '\nClassified\nFor Sale\nTWO NAVAL officers uniforms.\nExcellent condition. Size 38. Call AL,\n1725L.\n1930 CHEV. aluminum roof, heater,\nfoglight. Recent valve grind. Good rubber, $225. Jack Davie, 4000 W. 10th,\nAL. 3459L,\nLARGE 2-room house trailer. Fully\ninsulated. J. C. Stainsby, No. 24, Trailer Camp 2, Acadia Camp. AL. 0038.\nONE SET OF evening, tails, size\n42, excellent condition. Will throw\nin white vest if desired. Phone KE.\n5495Y.\nTUXEDO like new,, size 37, $20.\nOr offer. Call BA. 1985.\nONE MIDNIGHT BLUE dinner coat\none dress coat (tails) and one pair of\ntrousers to match. Size 38, like new,\n?50 cash. Phone MA. 2594.\n1927 Chrysler touring sedan, A-l\ncondition, :?150. Phone FR. 4578.\n1939 FORD 5-passenger convertible,\nleather upholstery, good radio and\nheater. $795. Terms arranged. Call\nJohnny after 2:30 p.m. at North 2500.\n1939 PERFECT-in good condition\nthroughout. Economical transportation. KErr. 0490, 8 a.m. to 7 p.m.\nRoom and Board\nSINGLE ACCOMMODATION, ROOM\nand Board, Fort and Acadia Camps,\nnow available. Married accommodation, four-room self-contained suites,\n?25.50 up. Little Mountain and Lulu\nkland Camps. Apply Housing Office,\nRoom 203A, Physics building.\nLost\nWILL PERSON who took by mistake\nraincoat from Monday History 331 lecture, Room HA 5 jilraho phone AL.\n0168L or see me al 453C West 13th.\nWILL GIRL WHO found parcel .of\nsilverware in the girls' washroom\n(E'rock) on Thursday please turn in\nto Lost and Found. Reward.\nBRIGHT loom in quiet home with\nbreakfast, near UE'C gates. AL. 1291L,\n4785 West 4th.\nBROWN LOOSELEAF, name Doreen\nMontgomery on it. Friday, November\n18th between UBC and Marpole.\nPhone Richmond 1169L1. Urgent.\nSLIDE RULE in leather case in vicinity of Library. Return to Lost and\nFound.\nBLACK SHAEFFER pencil, gold\nband around middle with initials AES\nkeepsake, reward. Phone HA. 1042Y.\nRONSON LIGHTER-initials E W\nlost in vicinity of Orchard huts. Reward. Phone PA. 7593.\nGOLD BUCKLE ring with diamond.\n1 place high value on this ring. It\nwas my only possession of my lost\nfather. AL. 1021Y.\nLIGHT BROWN PURSE-could bc\nmistaken for notebook. No such thing\nas sentimental value, but I would\nlike to have the purse. Phone Shirley,\nAL. 1282.\nSOMEONE is going to miss a coat\nunless whoever took a light brown\ncoat from thc Library on Thursday,\nNovember 10. Turn it in to Lost and\nound, Brock.\nBLUE ZIRCON RING. Left in wash\nbasin in Library. Valuable. Please call\nBetty, AL. 1051M.\nGREEN STETSON, Thursday. Huge\nreward. Charles Magee, AL. 0982R.\nLIGHT FAWN raincoat wilh leather trimmed cuffs lost in HB 2, HM 27,\nI AP '2(22 or machine shop on Monday,\nj November 7th, Finder please phone\nJ AL. 1227M.\nj GIlLY WATERMAN pen, name engraved Sally Woods, AL. 0365.\nYOU'LL BE GLAD T0M0RR0W-\nYOU SMOKED\nPHILIP MORRIS **%\n&Ul{. .i\n'\u00E2\u0096\u00A02%'Jy\nLamp oil or kerosene, the moat valued product derived from petroleum in 1889, was often peddled from\ndoor to door in horse-drawn tank wagons. Gasoline, a dangerous by-product, was a drug on the market for\nmany years. Today lhe search for new oil deposits and the search for still greater efficiency in refining\npetroleum into hundreds of useful products have become the objectives of a vast petroleum industry.\nNickel steels, because of their exceptional strength and toughness, arc practically indispensable in the\nmachinery which drills deep into the earth. In the refineries, Nickel alloys 'have solved numerous\nproblems because they resist acid corrosion and stand up under terrific heat and sub-zero temperatures.\nCanadian Nickel sold Abroad brings in US. Dollars\nSince more than ninety per cent of the\nNickel produced in Canada is sold to the\nUnited States and other countries, it brings\na constant flow of dollars back to Canada.\nIn fact, Canada's Nickel industry is one of\nour chief sources of U.S. dollars so essential\nat the present time to maintain our foreign\ntrade and make available products not\nproduced in this country.\nThese dollars help pay the wages of the\n14,000 Nickel employees, and help provide\nthe dollars which make it possible to pay\nmillions in freight to Canadian railways, to\nbuy timber, steel, coal, machinery and supplies amounting to many millions each year.\nThese millions, flowing into all industries\nthrough the length and breadth of Canada^\nhelp create jobs for Canadians.\n'.X**f<\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0%%*\nCanadian Nic\nkel\nFIRST PRODUCED IN CANADA IN 1889\nscf\n10\n\-J.\nTHE INTERNATIONAL NICKEL COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED, 25 KING STREET WEST, TORONTO Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 22, 1949\nUBC Meet Clippers\nInstead of Monarchs\n* W *v\u00C2\u00BB\n\ /\n\ i**\nv\nSports Editor \u00E2\u0080\u0094 KAY FROST\nV \\nBy HERM FRYDENLUND\nTonight the UBC Thunderbirds hockey squad plays host\nto the powerful Nanaimo Clippers in a Senior \"A\" contest at\nKerrisdale Arena.\nThis will mark the third meeting\nof the Squads to date with each team\npicking up one win. The Clippers took\nthe first one by a 6-4 margin and the\nBirds retaliated with a big 6-5 win.\nThe game with the Hub city crew\nwas arranged when the Kerrisdale\nMonarchaarefused t'o fulfill scheduled\nengagement with the locals. The gist\nof the trouble is that the Monarchs\nrate their services as of more value\nthan the Thunderbirds and as a consequent want 60 per cent of the\nteam share for their- part in thc\nproceedings. This is, to say the least,\nunacceptable to the University, it being contrary to sound economics to\naccept such a proposition.\nTHIRD MEETING\nThe series of games with Nanaimo\nwas arranged independent of the\nMonarchs but with the consent of the\nArena management. This, the third\nmeet'ing of the two outfits, promises\nto be in the tradition established\nover the last few seasons, good, clean,\nhard fought hockey.\nIf the contest tonight attracts a\ngood crowd, as indeed it warrants,\nit will be a mandate to the Athletic\nheads to continue independent of the\nMonarch interest's at least until more\nfavorable terms are arranged. Should\nthe game draw a sparse crowd it will\nforce the locals to play second fiddle\nto the Monarchs.\nICE SAME SQUAD\nFor tonight's contest the locals will\nice the same squad as defeated t'he\nClippers last time out. Ken Torrance\nwill be in goal to gjve Don Adams'\nhand a chance to properly heal. Ken\nhas played sensationally to date and is\na good man to have guarding the\nlacings.\nNelford, Hodgert, McFarlane, and\nWagner will compose the defence,\nand the forward lines are intact. The\nteam has practiced continuously in an\nattempt to be in top shape for tonight's crucial contest.\nThe Islanders have a smart, hustling squad lined up this year with\nseveral newcomers bolstering last\nseason's B, C. champions. Their goalie,\nStu Hendry is hailed as one of the\nmost promising prospects to come\nto the coast in several seasons.\nTickets for tonight's contest are\nnow on sale at the office of the\nGraduate Manager and will be available in the CAF at noon. A special\nstudent price of 50c has been obtained. Game time 8:00 p.m.\n\nVictory Laden Weekend\nFor Thunderbird Cagers\nBy GIL GRAY\nRevenge was sweet to the Birds Friday night in the UBC\ngym when they whipped the highly-touted Seattle Chieftain\nbasketball team by a 59-56 score, then added to their initial\nvictory Saturday night when they slid by Clover Leafs to win\n43-41.\nP/ioto by Do lit/ Burnett\nKID FORWARD LINE of UgC Thunderbird Hockey team who take on Nanaimo Clippers in\nKerrisdale Arena at 8:00 p.m. tonight are blonde Stu Bailey, rightwing, Clare Drake, centre,\nand (Bob Lindsay, leftwing. The kids have been making trouble for opposing dcfensemen since\nthe start of the season.\nRecord Holders Up Against Tough Competition\nUBC Swim Championships Entice\nOld Hands, Preview New Talent\nBy RAY FROST\nOlh reliables from last year's\nuniversity swimming team will\nbe the ones to beat in the University Swim Championships at\n8 p.m. at the Crystal Pool Saturday, November 26.\nBut offering stiff competition\nto the university veterans will be\na handful of newcomers, all well\nknown in swimming circles, but\nnew additions to the UBC roster.\nThe old standbys, Bob Thist'-e,\nwho holds the UBC 50 and 100\nyard breaststroke records, Pete\nLusztig who claims the 50 yard\nbreaststroke crown, and George\nKnight, lone owner of thc 50 yard\nfreestyle record, are sure to be\nsome of the top contenders Saturday.\nKnight, as well as holding the\nabove crown, is co-holder of the\nuniversity 100 yard freestyle, and\nco-holder of the E'.C. Championship 50 yard freestyle.\nOTHER OLD HANDS\nBacking up the old hands will\nbe Don Marshall, backstroke ace,\nFrank Costigan, freestyle sprinter,\nand Jim Hawthorne, valuable utility man and diver.\nThe new arrivals which will give\nthe Varsity team an added boost\nin the spring, are sure to make\nthings tough for the old timers\nSaturday.\nDon Thorn, starry diver, who held\nhis own in the summer British\nEmpire Games Trials, placing .second in thc 10 metre platform and\nfourth in the 3 metre springboard,\nwill be hard to beat,\nEx- Victoria YMCA star is Don\nSmyth, who i.s back in training\nonce again after a couple of years\nlayoff.\nRon Neilson, another Victoria\nboy who features the freestyle\nsprints, wa.s a valuable member of\nthe campus Victoria Y team.\nTickets for the meet are on sale\nin Ole Bakken's office or they\nmay also be bought from team\nmembers. Price is 50 cents.\nFriday wa.s one of those Rood nights\nfor the 'Birds as almost everyone on\nthe club played heads up ball.\nOn the scoring line, Bell with 16\nand Forsyth with 15 really led the\nscoring parade for the 'Birds. On defense, however, it wa.s Forsyth again,\nwho held tlie Chieftain's shooting\nthreat, Earl Spangler, almost scoreless throughout the game.\nAt times. Nev Munro showed signs\nof the fire that marked him as a\nStandout several years ago, by popping\nclear shots in from the short bucket\narea. As usual Munro was the big rebound man for the night with big long\nJawn.\nAnd the reserve strength of the\n'Birds showed quite a bit of promise.\nFast breaking Johnny Southcott got n\ncouple of nice ones Friday on clean\nbreaks down the floor, shouting with\neither hand.\nWillis Louie, second string guard,\nlooked very good both nights on defense, and after a little time with\ntlie 'Birds, he might be one of the\nbig men offensively.\nHowever, in the Saturday night\ngame against the Clover Leafs, the\n'Birds did not have it all their own\nway.\nNeither Forsyth nor Bell seemed\nto be able to make a nickel all night.\nIn fact, the only ones Jawn could\nget wore left handed dunk shots.\nBut the 'Birds were getting most of\nthe rebounds, that is until the last\nquarter when the Clover Leafs started\niheir bid for the lead.\nIn that final quarter the Leafs\nreally turned on the steam and overtook the 'Birds a couple of times, only\nto be pushed back,\nBut the climax of the thrill-packed\ngame came with 43 seconds to go\nwhen Robertson scored, leaving losers\nonly 1 point behind 'Birds, 42-41.\nThen with 15 seconds to go, Ronnie\nWeber of thc Leafs was awarded two\nfree shots.\nAs half the crowd stood on its head,\nWeber fired both shots short of the\nling. Then after a free shot for the\n'Birds that was completed, the 'Birds\nwon 43-41.\nChiefs Look for\nThird Straight\nWin on Thursday\nUniversity's Senior A Chiefs\nwinning two games in a row,\nhave their chance to make it\nthree straight this Thursday\nwhen they play YMCA at the\nExhibition Gardens at 9:00 p.m.\nFirst game of their win streak was\nwith New Westminster Luckies, taking the contest by a 57-51 score. Game\nwent into overtime, but the Chiefs\ncompletely dominated play in the\nextra session to win going away. I\nContinuing their stylish brand of\nplay in their second game when they\ntackled the highly touted Eagletime\ncrew, Chiefs overpowered the opposi- ,\ntion to win by a 40-34 count.\nStarry work by Max Burtram,\nfreshman guard who will be used tomorrow by Braves when they meet\nMount Vernon, kept the team together, '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nscoring 17 points in the Luckies game '\nto lead all scorers.\nft ^ -. * \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0*+\nCampus\nBraves Take On Mt. Vernon\nIn Noon Hour Hoop Battle\nBrave hooper' make their first appearance on the campus\nmaples tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. in the gymnasium when they\npair off with Mount Vernon Junior College in the first game\nof a home and home series.\nBraves, who are one of the major\ncontenders in the local Inter A circuit,\nwill have their hands full since Mount\nVernon turns out crack teams.\nEncounter marks the first of a\npossible series of games with junior\n| colleges south of the border. The\ni\nfollowing tilts, onlv in the dream\ni\n.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0tage, depend on the turnout of tomorrow's game.\nBraves will bring up big Dave\nMitchell and Max Burtram from the\nChiefs to bolster their squad. Burtram, freshman guard of the Chiefs,\nwas the high scorer in their last\ngame and will be a great asset Vo , \ \\nthe Braves,\nPrice of the affair is 10 cents with\nprivilege passes getting in free.\n'Hold on, folks! Handsome Harry is saying\nsomething to his opponent. Let's listen!\"\n{On tlie air.) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 \"Say, you lug! If you'd lick\nDry Scalp with \"Vaseline' Hair Tonic you'd\nhave nice looking hair and get across with\nthe crowd, too.\"\nVaseline HAIRTONIC\ntQade mark\n'VASELINE' IS THE REGISTERED TRADE MARK OF THE CHESEBRQUQH MFQ. CO. CaNB'D.\nWOMEN SKIERS like the tal\nented trio above are needed\nto take part in the university's\nintercollegiate meets this year\nPlans will bc made at a meeting Wednesday.\nWomen Needed for\nSki Teams\nVarsity Soccermen\nCome Thru Again\nVarsity soccer eleven look the laurels Sunday at Callister Park when\nthey chalked up their second win of\nthe season by beating Collingwood\nsquad.\nVarsity were marked as the winners\nfrom the starling whistle to the final.\nNeither team scored in tho first\nhalf although the students threw away\na lot of certainties.\nBill Popowich. Varsity's centre-forward,, opened the scoring in the second half with a classic goal.\nCollingwood retaliated and Bill Leslie evened Ihe scons Newcomer to\nthe locals lineup, Mike Puhach, added\nthe second and winning goal soon\nafter.\nMethods of choosing team members\nand plans for the inter-collegiate\ntournament in February will bo discussed at a meeting for campus women\ninterested in ski racing to be held\nWednesday al 12.30 p.m. in Mill A '1,\nThe university team will require\nfour skiers for the Norlhwesl Meet,\nfor which UBC will be host Ihis year\non Grouse, and three for the Norlh\nAmerican tourney at Banff.\nReturning members of last year's\nsquad, which placed second in Ihi\n1M9 inter-collegiate meet, are Jo\nCastillou. last year cily slalom champ,\nTad Harper and Anne Hatlon, second\nin tlie cily downhill.\nWomen's'Mural\nVVr.DM'.SDAY. NOYMMr.r.ll x\\nFir.i.nnorsF.\nIL':.':it VOC vs A!\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 II \\nII K II; v- Art.- I 1!\nHdVI \"-s Art- III C\nMi- II la IV vs Arl- IV R\nCommerce vs Arl ; III R\nV E ill and IV va Arty 1VC \\nJ\"V *W\u00C2\u00AB W\u00C2\u00ABK\nctf^\n$Sv\u00C2\u00A3*\n "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1949_11_22"@en . "10.14288/1.0124351"@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 .