"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2016-01-18"@en . "1952-03-11"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0124368/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " f I\nJj\n;TT OF\"\nii\u00C2\u00AB.ii i.\nv. ,V\nm\nMAR 1 3 195?\ntHE LIBRARY\nm^nm^i^^m^^^^^y^xiS-M\nThe Ubyssey\nXXXIV\nSCENTS\nVANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1952\nNO. 58\nimN CLASSES\nProvince\nHere Wed\nCHUCK JONES, Vancouver\nCaily Province photographer, will\nspeak on \"Press Photography\" nt\nnoon Wednesday, March 12, In\nArts 208. The meeting is sponsored by the Camera Club. Everybody welcome.\n* \u00C2\u00A5 *\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0IITHOVIN'8 SEVENTH SONATA in C Minor, will be presented by Harry Adaskin ln Hut Ml\nwbon today. Prances Mar will a\"*\ncompany him on the piano.\n\u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00A5 *\nCCF CLUE will present Dprothy\nSteeves speaking on \"Money Poll\n\u00C2\u00ABIea of the CCF In B.C.\" In FG 100\nnoon Wednesday.\n* * \u00C2\u00A5\nMUSICAL SOCIETY will hold\nHe general spring meeting Thursday noon In HM1. All members\nshould attend to elect officers for\nthe coming year.\nH> * \u00C2\u00A5\nVARSITY OUTDOOR CLUE com\nmlttee elections will be held Wed\nnesday noon in Engineering 200.\nAll members are urged to attend.\ni * \u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00A5\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2FECIAL MEETING of the track\nand fiejfl win be held In Hut M\nnoon Friday, March 14. Training\nschedules will be co-ordinated at\nthe meeting.\n\u00C2\u00A5 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2* *\nJAW SOCIETY presents a walking encyclopedia of Jass In Bob\ntoith today at noon in the Stage\nroom of Brock Hell. Mr. Smith,\nwho le prepldont of the Vancou\nrer New Jan Society will dis\n\u00C2\u00ABourM on ib\u00C2\u00AB4fomb*n*t \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00A5 *\ni\nroSIST OLUB will meet ln\nFAQ 100 noon today. Guest fjrtBk\ner L. Manley will discuss '-'The Importance of tbe Pulp and Paper In\ndU9try In British Columbia.\"\n\u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00A5\nFOREST CLUB will hold editions In F& O 202 on Thursday.\nMarch 13. Everyone out.\nm m tt\nTHE SQUARE DANCE demonstration group will meet Wednesday evening at fl p.m. In HO 4.\n\u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00A5\nTHE SCOTTISH COUNTRY\nDance Club will meet Wednesday\nnoon in H04.\n\u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00A5\nIN HONOR of Mr. and Mrs. Slim\nJohnson, the Forest Club presents\nthe \"ForeftWs frolic\" on Friday,\nMarch 21st, 0-1:00, at the Lion's\nGate Hall, 4th Ave. and Trafalgar.\nAbsolutely informal (B.Y.O. F&L).\n99 cents couple, and girls bring\nbox lunch. Everyone welcome.\nV *r v\n..FILMSOC WILL BE showing two\nLaurel and Hardy films entitled\nThicker Than Water and Towed\nin a Hole at a Comedy Film Revival in the auditorium at noon\ntoday for 10 cents.\n**4*\u00C2\u00A3*u*rt\u00C2\u00A3< \u00C2\u00AB< *\u00C2\u00BB.*&**t\nA\nTHE TITLE SAYS \"Primordial Emergencj'but literary editor Pamela Steele still looks\npuaaled. Object of her scrutiny is an abstract painting by D. B. Bliss which the crusading\nartist has h&ng in the publications office.\nOperatic Melodies Featured\nIn UN Program Wednesday\nly CHARLES WATT\nThis Wednesday at noon, tbe\nUBC Glee Club under the direction of Harry Pryco,\nwlTT present a choral \"program\nfeaturing melodies from The\nStudent Prince and Brlgadeon.\n' The program will beglij at\n12:30, in the Auditorium.\nThose students who enjoyed\nthe Mussoc's production of\nThe Student Prince which was\nplayed before a total of over\n4,0fl0 Vancouver music lover's\nlast month, will undoubtedly\nwish to hear some of their fav-\norlte songs and choruses again,\n9f. 9%. jy.\nKel Service and Mllla Andrews will revert to their original roles as the prlncp and\nKathie, to sins the tenor-:\nsinging.\nBoci.ise the program is iro\nof the list in a series spoil\nsored hy the United Nations\n(Huh, 'he Glee Club will devote i ;i..rt of the p>'ig-am lo\nsou,s, w! ch emphasize the cul-\nTi; Ore Club wl I be hear!\nin the interesting American\nFolk Song, Wait for the Wagon.'The origins of this ditty date back to Civil War\ndays and the chorus bundles\ntho tricky mndulutl.ii very likely.\n*p *fi *p\nMarguerite Stanlo\" w'll represent contemporary American\nmusic, with \"I Hate Men. This\nnumber sliould undoubtedly go\nover well with the boys, especially ln view of Margaret's\nspicy performance as this saucy\nGretchen in the Musaoe s recent production.\n\u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00AB \u00C2\u00A5\nThe Scottish students on the\ncampus will no doubt appreciate the. pext t*9 tyutqjrtn:*.:.. I\nHave a Lassie and Ye Banks\nand Braes. The Limeys will\nlove The Pedlar's Song with\nwords from Shakespeare's\nWinter Tales, Tho Basso Pro-\nfundos of the chorus open this\nnumber with deep voices booming In an amusing but sprightly fa-la-la effect. The Olee\nClub will also present Dancing on the Green from Percy\nGrainger's Country Garden.\nMost,of the foregoing program was presented before the\nVancouver Board of Trade at\nthe Hotel Vancouver ' In January.\nUBC OPEN HOUSE VISITORS\nTOPPED 50,000 OBJECTIVE\nUBC reached its goal of 50,000 Open House visitors,\naccording to unofficial reports today.\nFinal figures will be released when the results of the\ntraffic counters stationed at the University gates are totaled.\nIt was estimated that 11,000 people were on the campus\nby 10 a.m.\nAlmost all displays attracted large and interested\ncrowds. For judging, the displays were divided 'into three\ngroups. Winners were: Group I, First Prize, Geography;\nSecond, Classics; Third, Sociology. Group II, First Prize,\nNursing; Second, Physics; Third, Biochemistry. Group III,\nFirst Prize, Forestry; Second, Home Economics; Third,\nDairying.\nPep Meet\nNoon Today\nBilly Davidson Leads\nGigantic Parade Of Talent\nAt noon today the Armouries will be the site of the years\nbiggest and best Pep Meet.\nThis was the optoniistic news re-* * , ;,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0... -\nleased by Kickapoo officials yeB-\nlerduy afternoon.\nLeading the -gigantic parade\nof talent will be the popular\nImpersonator Billy Davidson and\nwell knowns as Vaughn Munroe, Nat King Cole, Frankie\nLane, Perry Como who brought\ndown the roof laat term when\na crowd of nearly a thousand\nkept up a steady shout of\n'\"more.\"\nDanny Marshall, peh young singer, will be no stranger to uny\nservicemen on the campus. She\nspent most of her time on the overseas tour for the army during the\nlast war. Since the war she has\nbeen kept busy touring Canada,\nleaving behind awe struck audiences wherever she appeared.\nCOMEDIAN MAGICIAN\nAlso on the same show Is Rov\nWheeler a combined comedlen-ma-\nglclan who Is guaranteed to keep\nthe audience laughing for hours\nwhile he performs some of his ox-\ntravegent displays of \"slight ol\nhand,\" Roy has just returned from\na tour of Alaska where he appear\neel before thousands of American\nServicemen.\n, The whole show ls under the\ndirection or John Emerson who will\nonce again provide the background\ntn his own distinctive style.\nThe Pep Meet which is being run\nfor the Big Block Ball promises to\nbe hy far the best seen all year\n-and should be wall worth the 10\ncent admission.\nJOB, SCHOLARSHIP\nAPPLICATIONS OPtH\nFinal registration for summer employment wtil be held\nIn HM6 Thursday, March 11\nfrom 12:30 to 1:30 the placement bureau announces.\n\u00C2\u00A5 . \u00C2\u00A5 m\nApplication forme are eflll\navailable fer the ISS seminar ,\nscholarship to be held this\nyear In India, May 31st te\nJuly 2nd with all expensse\npaid. Forme can be obtained\nfrom Hut B-2 behind the Broek.\nNominations for the petition\nof ISS chairman will remain\nopen until \"niureday. Nefltlns*\ntion papers should be handed\nIn tc the ISS office In Hut If.\nMoody Film\nHere Thurs.\nTiny desert flowers les? than\none-fifth of an inch In diameter\nwill be among the out-of-the- ordinary natural phenonmena dis\nplayed In the Moody Institute of\nScience film \"Hidden Treasures\"\nto be shown tn tho Auditorium\nat 12:30 Thursday.\nBecause students completely\nfilled the audltorTnm-ff* tfie last\nshowing the VCF ls again giving\nthose who missed out the first\ntime un opportunity to see lt.\nFifth In a series produced by\nthe Moody Laboratory in California It features Dr. Irwin A. Moon\nas narrato and director.\nThere will be no admission\ncharge.\nSPRING TIA IN BROCK\nThursday is the day for the\nbig Panhellenlc Spring Tea In\nBrock Hall.\nAll freshettes and sophs have\nbeen sent Invitations, arid any\nthird or fourth year girls will\nbe equally welcome.\nAttend 2\nDay Meet\nRepresentatives Irony 89 British Columbia High Schools\ngathered on the campus of tha\nuniversity for a two-day boil*\nference March 7 and 8.\nThe studtntst participated in a\nprrtgrum ofl le(rture\u00C2\u00BB, dteeuaston\ngroups and tours of the campus ahd\ncity.\nDelegates ?ame from as tar east\nas Kaslo, as far north a* Burn*\nLake and as far up coast as Alert\nKay. The billeting committee Under\nDon MeCallum contacted schools.\nParent Teacher groups, University\n-Undents in order to find accomo-\nlations for the 164 who came frota\npoints outside Vancouver.\nDELEGATES BILLETTEO\nPrivate homes In Vancouver opened their doors to 60 of the out-\n)f-town representatives. The others\nstayed with friends and relatives,\nor were blUetted at the Youth\nTraining School on the campus.\nDr. N. A. M. MacKensle, president of the University, welcomed\nthe deleates to the opening of the\nConference. In his address he sires\nsed the need for more university-\ntrained young people in Industry\nand the professions if Canada Is to\nexpand Its economy and strengthen\nits material defense.\nFollowing Dr. MacKensle, Vaughn Lyon, president of tbe AMU,\nwelcomed the delegates on behalf\nof the University student body.\nThe delegates had ample oppor\ntunlty to see the campus on a normal day during their tour Friday\nafternoon. The time they spent at\nOpen House on Saturday was another story.\nAUTHOR OF \"MUCH ADO\"\nEric \"Jabez\" Nicol Revealed As Shakespeare's Ghost Writer\nBy C. NILE deKAY\nThe essence ot scholarship\nIs asking questions; the essence of genius is asking the\nrlght--the fundamental question*. The genius of the Players\nClub (which, we hasten to say\nresides In no one member but\nhovers Impartially over aH)\nprompted them fn trait, \"did\nShakeapaare write \"Much Ado\nAbout Nothing\"? If not, who\ndid?\nBut now we are In median\nrea. To go hack \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Director\nJoy Ccghill and the cast of\nHie Much Ado have bad serious doubts about the authorship of this amazing Play for\nsome lime. As everyone knows,\nShakespeare is the supreme\nKngllsh poet, suitable for the\nyoungest and most innocent\nreaders as well as for retired\ncolonels. But a shocking fact\ncame to light as rehearsals\n' progressed. Some of the lines\nwritten right into the script\nhad a shady meaning. I repeat\nthis play is full of ofr-color\njokes! Moreover, In tlio midst\nof these spurious tidbits we\nfind frequent puns\u00E2\u0080\u0094most punishable puns not at all punny.\n*r *P t*\nShakespeare? Never! The\nsublime Swan of Avon could\nnever have perpetrated anything so outrageous! There\nare things to be said for the\npiny, of course, it is rather amusing in [daces, and is well\nenough constructed. But\nShakespeare? No, rather we\nshould look elsewhere; to llie\nimporahle, Ihe impossible\ntrulli. A name kept recurring\nIn whispers, hackslage. iu the\nwings. Who thought of it.\nfirst? Who did the Genius re\nveal himself to? Never mind\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nhut tiie name was Hpolten often-\ner, louder, till It swelled forth\nin all its polytagonai, metallic\nring - Kric Nicol!\nProve il? Does the revelation of the Genuls need proof?\nNevertheless it can ho proved.\nThe play lias only heen in existence three hundred anil fifty\nyears. .NTT one has yet heen\nbrave enough to cut down Mr.\nMieol aud count his rings, l,ul\nit is said that an expert feller\ncan Judge the ago of a specimen by its glrtli. A measuring\neye on Mr. Nicol at the widest\npari might cause one to infer\nlliiil lie has been In our mirlsl\nfor some time. He has publicly confirmed this. Is thcro\nany reasons to suppose that lie\nwas not slinking around Kll/.u-\nbethao London as in Elizabeth\nan Vancouver today?\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2i* *r m\nIt is easy enough to imagine\nwhat happened., Nicol was a\nyoung Humorist In those days\nwllh Ills reputation to make.\nHe wrote n play. It was his\nfirst play. Scholars have placed\nil after Her Alchemist Lover\n(the name was not changed\nuntil the 20th century) and\nsome think It later than Brass\nTacks, although Brass Tacks\nis pretty late. He showed lt to\nsome professionals because he\nthough It was pretty good.\nJonson sent it hack with a sarcastic laugh, and Marlowe named it Much Ado About Nothing,\nwhich Nicol took I'or a compliment. But even with a tile\nby Marlowe he couldn't seem\nlo gel anybody Interested.\nShakespeare just happened\nto be in Stratford for the\nwriting As You Like It, so\ndon he denied having written\nNicol sneaked down there with\nthe manuscript and got Shakespeare's John Henry on It hy\npretending ti> be circulating u\npetition for government aid to\nLlie theatres. Then he mailed\nll to the Globe; when they saw\nthe Stratford postmark they\ndidn't even bother lo look at\nthe signature.\n* * H-\nTtils made Nicol so bitter lie\ndirtn'l write any more plays for\nthree centuries finfl don't say\nlie never did anything for the\nhuman race. The Globe produced It because Ihey thought it\nwas Shakespeare hut they\nsent llie Bard a sharp note telling liitn to slop fooling around\nwith women if It was going to\naffect his work. So when\nShakespeare came back to Lon-\nsummer with the Dark Lady,\nIt. but the damage was done;\nand the Dark Lady admitted\nNicol had kissed her behind\nthe garden gate; so Nicol shipped as ctiblnboy with Drake\nweti! to North America ai\d\ngave Jt hack to the Indians.\nNow we are aware that aspersions will be cast on this\nso recent rediscovery of a passage In history. But we have\nproof, which we will guard\njealously, and Mr. Nicol cannot burn the evidence. It. is in\nlhe pluJ'-tTie brand of (ha'\nhiii) humor, the unmistakable\n(-tamp. It will be performed at\nlhe University Auditorium on\nMarch l!\u00C2\u00BB to 22. and we urgo\nthat Hie widfence call for\n\"author\" al the end. He ia still\nnearly alive. Page Two\nTHE UBVSSEY\nTuesday, March 11, 1952\nTHE UBYSSEY\nMEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PR883\nAuthorized as second class mail by the Post Ottics. Dept. Ottawa. Strident subscriptions $1.20 per year (included in AM8 fees). Mall subscription I2.0P per year. Single copies five cents. Published throughout the\ndpaiversity year by the Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater\nSociety, University of British Columbia. Editorial opinions expressed\nherein are those of the editorial staff ot tho Ubyssoy, and not necessarly,\nthose of the Alma Mater Society or ot the University.\nOffices ln Brook Hall For display advertising\nPhone ALma 1624 Phone ALma 3253\nEDITOR-IN-CHIEF LES ARMOUR\nExecutive Editor-Allan Goldsmith, Managing Editor\u00E2\u0080\u0094Alex MacGillivray\nNews Editor, V. FredEdwards; City Kditor, Mike Ryan; CUP Editor,\n-IheUa Kearns; Women's Editor, Florence McNeil; Copy Editors, Jean\nStaith; Director of Photography Bruce Jaffray; Senior Editors: Myra\ntween, Elsie Gorfaat, Joe Schleslnger; Editorial Writers: Chuck Coon\nIhd Dot Auerbach.\nLitters to the Editor should be restricted to 150 words. The Ubyssey\nreserves the right to out letters and cannot guarantee to publish all\ntetters rseelved.\nmmmmmmmmmmmm\nnmmmm-mmm--WI^-mm\nEdltet, The JUbyasey\nWijMeif Clarified\nllth Ave., AL 0915R.\nSuccess\nI PEN HOUSE, to all intents and purposes, was a howling '\n\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-mmneueeess.\nA|most all the tens of thousands of visitors went home\nconvinced that they had seen a good show\u00E2\u0080\u0094and everybody\n*^dfH*t heme with a new awareness of tiie university.\nrWe^ave pointed out ithat the impression created may\nnot have been the best possible one\u00E2\u0080\u0094but any defects were\ndu4 to> the assential nature of the show and its organizers de- *\n~se*ve nothing but'credit.\ni To Mr. Feltham and his tireless committee members, to\n' tha hundreds of guides, to. the scores of students who performed lhe un-noticed joe-jobs, we extend our hearty oon-\nvtf\u00C2\u00BBit*riations.\nmmmmmmmmimmmmmmm^mm^mmmm . ' ^^> - ^ -,\t\n4 4o not Soubt tBfat MruArmoq^'y\u00E2\u0084\u00A2^ \"' UBC students. A. o. Robinson,\nI would very much like to thank is sufficiently acquainted with FOOT NOTES AND BIBT.IOGRAP- 41R0 West llth Ave., AL 0915R.\n-the people who have helped to Marxian philosophy, the tactics of hies are set up in proper form by TYPING; NOTES, IAB BOOKS,\nmake the International Display up communism aiHf also the real sit- us. A. 0. Robinson, 4180 W. llth essays and these typed by expert\nn^th\u00C2\u00BBSk^^^^^ as WRING ESftAYS AND THESIS, 3mh ev*8- Miss Bodner;\n*,.--,. -. . . . . '\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .. .*. JDnrllBh and French AL 047CL FOR STUDENTS' CONVENIENCE\n3Ulty*advisor, to Ptarteesor Btaaing to^ hian-floBio,.-.^Kta\u00C2\u00ABa<-:qdeir rii. this *SSJIf!L^^ \u00C2\u00ABl\u00C2\u00BB^.\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BBJ*\u00C2\u00AB.JL .. \u00C2\u00ABr\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB- h*.,,-. .\u00C2\u00AB t\u00C2\u00BBn- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 am\n.. \u00C2\u00AB. a-. - \u00C2\u00AB ' . \u - \u00C2\u00BB.k mtm.JtmL-t^ (n MBM\u00E2\u0080\u009En, tx.a mmm BY EXPERIENCED grad our office hours are from 8 am\n*nd *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Art'<^^^ UfiC bM t0 9 pm. A. 0. Robln80ni 4180 w.\n\u00C2\u00AB*'^\u00E2\u0084\u00A2*^>*^ at.e.i.\u00C2\u00BB\nToM^amUh^nirher^^\nhave been so kind **nd Patten^^^^^,^ (tt{ thinking to the 60_1\u00C2\u00B0\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0with u\u00C2\u00BB. I van Feltham and to Oam-; \u00C2\u00ABaent that he. cannot even notice ,BW\u00C2\u00BBJSE STREET, NO. 7 DAL-\neronAird who listened to all our his;lnqongpulty. .houHle ,-Apts, AL 005BR. Typing,\ntrPttbles. .Lastly to the students \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u009E.\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E , \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB moii .n^u.J^\u00C2\u00ABP#Ws. thesis, mimeo, notes. A\nuwm^. ^.uy w ui\u00C2\u00AB Ptwmim ..Beeausel.am well jao\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BBainted(;WBcteUy< We k our deatnine>\nthemselves who .have brought with .oendWons-beihind.the vjroj,'.^u^gity^e*'-campus rates. *\nalong their ideas and, pwt them Into Curtain. I can* asaure those* readers\nuse,>wNG, 1\n' W^U,KU \u00C2\u00BB\"\"\"* \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\"\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB\"\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ** \u00E2\u0080\u009Eot,merely, oaanoMnda, that- .WW or e.oopies, your essays or\nall thelrnttae to tha^lay. To not, .merely,psapawnda.that. ^^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^\nthe International \u00C2\u00A9lubBe and their The Soviet Ut time at least ae. Jnany men fci, juth \u00C2\u00ABfcve\u00E2\u0080\u009E, AL 0916R.\nUN \u00C2\u00A9lub*. Also to the Rational *\u00E2\u0084\u00A29, \"J^^^J^J?1*^^-J^!?\"?^?5?'',J'JI*,JIK \u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BBEfcIB\u00C2\u00ABiATIB RATE| FOR\ntyping have not changed in the\nsix,years we have been serving\ngroups,thaJapaneee Students, Ba. \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB a, f e^ ^her ^ lto\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00ABpean-asvtal\n.ttonians, Hungarians,,the* .South *ltM \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\u00C2\u00AB*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB \u00C2\u00B0\u00C2\u00AB all^sstern\nAmerican group, the Chinese Var- ftWnle8'\nsity Club; the #oots, the \u00C2\u00A9reek That the armamenta industries\nstudents, the CaechoiloVaklaus and of the Soviet Union are 'being ex-\nother- g*d\u00C2\u00BBP*< that has partaken (n, paneled, continuously &> the. extent\nany ;w\u00C2\u00BBy at all with-our*sdHplay; thet\u00C2\u00ABCioohoalovakia,,*be \u00E2\u0099\u00A6 Sonet's\nwe.oanonly say aoitmpU lhank most -industrialised aateUtte, ha*\nyou for a good job. We arial* that a lower standard of Wvlnff today,\nwe oeuia put all the >m\u00C2\u00ABn\u00C2\u00AB8 4owa>,leveji .jfseara after>.*wan .-. ent, an its forest industries* had\nfinally reached the point where\nmeasures were necessary, to\nperpetuate its timber resour*\nees.\nBefore> 1945, only a few conservationists and visionaries had worried very much about the state of\n.forestry in B.C.-\u00E2\u0080\u0094most people looked beyond the margin of logged\nareas and saw yet further \"inexhaustible\" stands ot tall stately\ntrees.\nBut in 1945, the Sloan Commission on Forestry issued its report,\nin which it showed the status of\nour dwindling reserves of. mature\ntimber. This report - also recommended the establishment of a\n. .faculty of .forestry at the University w.hich, cpuld. better train men\nto,lead the Province toward sound\nforestry , practices than the existing, department.\nAn gradual transition took place\nin forestry, instruction at the, University between 1946. and 1950. In\n1946, a separate course of study\nleading to the B.8.F, Degree was\n* Inaugurated, complementing , the\nexisting * forest engineering course\nand replacing the double-degree\ncourses ln arts and, forestry and\ncommerce and forestry. The teaching staff was Increased to meet the\ndemands of a greatly expanded enrolment, .and teaching facilities\nwere improved. The Provincial\n. Government ccowQ-gWitGd a 9800-\n* i \u00C2\u00ABcre tract of forest to the Univer\nsity to provide a, practical training\nground for foresters and other\ngroups. Finally, the .faculty was\ncreated with.Low ell, Beslay as the\nfirst, dean.\nMANY a\u00C2\u00ABAOl>ATE8\nManyoi thepreseut members of\nthe forestry faoulty are graduates\nof this University* i pthers have\ncome from the .United States and\na ySfcstem .Canada.\n* DeansBeslty tbrings a wealth of\nvaluable experience-from his native Southern States, where better\nforestry is practiced today* than\nanywhere else on this continent.\nThe Dean teaches forest economics\nand finance.\nProfessor F. Malcolmn Knapp\n. senior niembei'3 of the faculty, is\non the University Senate and is\nDirector of the University forest at\nHaney. He gives courses in logging engineering and sawmilllng,\nDoctor George S. Allen, an outstanding sllvlculturalist, teaches\nthis, subject, which is the care and\ntending ot the forest from seedling\nto maturity, and carries on a com-\nprehenslve research programme.\nSPECIALISTS\nDr. R. W. WeHwood is the facul-\nty'is specialist in wood technology,\nwhioh Is the study of wood structure,, identification, preservation,\nand uses. He is, be'tys assisted bv\nMr. Wilson, a newcomer to me\nfaculty,-this year, who balls from\n*. New York State.\nThe science of forest- measurements, or forest mensuration, in-\n. eluding log .scaling, timber cruising, the tree growth studies, ls\ntaught by Professor J. VV. Ker, who\njoined the faculty in 1948.\nDr. B. U. Griffith gives courses\nin forest botany, silvlcs, and forest\nmanagement; the last-mentioned\ncourse ls the one which shows\nthe application ot all forestry\nknowledge to the forest to secure\nthe highest returns without injury\nto its future possibilities.\nProfessor W. L. \",Sltm\" Johnson gives instruction in, surveying\nand the application of aerial photography to forestry. : Unfortunately\nwe are going to lose our beloved\n. \"Sliib\" at the end of this year. We\ni will aU miss him, and wish him the\nbast of luck in his new job.\n.1\nCruiser's Delight\nf\u00C2\u00BB tin cans of flour\n2 scoops ot water (clean water\npreferred)\n1 handful of baking powder\n1 pinch of salt\n4 scoops of fat (boot grease Is an\nexcellent substitute)\nToss Hour and stuff In a dish\npan, heat with fists until well mlx-\nod. Cut to desired size and place\npan ln oven. Build large fire and\nretire. When one-eighth cord of\nPsendo tsuga taxlfolio, moisture\ncoefficient .0043 has been used\nas fuel, biscuits will he done. Remove from oven and place -do not\ndrop\u00E2\u0080\u0094In ;i plate.\nPE CORPS\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0i.wffw/uo' mm\nOpen To Foresters\nThe favorite occupation of foresters is thundering up\nand down the highest, steepest mountains they can find,\npursuing some poor innocent young lad known as a com-\npa^sman, This type of work is known as timber cruising.\nThe cruiser catches the com-$-\npagBnum several times during\nthe day, and before letting him\ngo, forces him to bore a hole\nIn a tree. The cruiser gets\ngreat delight out of this operation, and after lt is completed,\nhe gives his quarry a head-\nstart of one chain-length, hides\nbehind a tree momentarily so\nthe compassraan won't see him\nthrough the abney, and then\nstarts the cfiase 'again.\nTWO PACKS\nAnother popular type of employment, especially with the\nforest engineers, is found in\nlogging camps. This may ln\nvolve laying out logging settings or surveying roads.\nIt is the forester's job to\nignore all his instructions and\nlocate the road with as many\nsharp ciuves and perpendicular grades as possible.\nBy making his roads impassable, the forester creates jobs\nfor other foresters. This is an\nexample of the \"esprit de\ncorps\" common to all green-\nshirts.\nSome foresters work with insects that attack trees. It is\nvogue at present for these forest entomologists to run out\ninto the woods and place trays\nunder tall trees. These trays\nvery soon become full of\u00E2\u0080\u0094ah\u00E2\u0080\u0094\ndropping, mostly from birds,\nForest Club Crfeates\nFaculty Fellowship\nA close liaison exists between forestry students in the\nFaculty of Forestry, and forest engineering students in\nApplied Science. These fields of study overlap to a great\nextent; in fact, many classes are taken together, Perhaps\nthe greatest expression of this bond of common interest is\n.ito.JTflwst.Club. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe Forest Club was organised in 1929 to promote the\ncause of forestry in the Uni-\nverity and throughout B.C. It\nalso aimed at bringing men\nfrom industry and government\nin contact with undergrads;\nand, not the least of Its objectives was to create a fellowship among students interested\nin forestry.\nWELL KOWN SPEAK.ER3\nThe Social Committee, under\nD09 Johnston, sponsors a Fall\nDance, a Spring Banquet, and\nthe \"Slashburn\" ((outdoor\nstag) annually.\nOne of the greatest assets of\nthe organization is the research\nCommittee. Several \"UBC forest Club Research Notes\" have\nbeen widely circulated in Canada and other countries. These\nare the results of undergrad Investigation and are financed\nby the club and by, donations\nfrom industry. At present\nBlake Dickens and Jack Walters are preparing a sizable\nforester's handbook which will\nInclude many tables, measurements, etc, indispenslble to\nfield foresters.\nForestry Wins Again\nForestry won flret-^rJaa for\ntheir Open House difpjiy In\nclass three (ftnq|Ari!.>.'<<\ntheir losing string.- The change\nnearly paid off, especially In the\nsecond half when the Chiefs turn\ned on the heat.\nThe fine playing of the Vbtori.i\ndefensive units and their goallos\nkept the Chiefs at bay. Centre-\nforward Roger Fox missed two\ngood chances, when his screr-reJ\nshots from a scramble bounced i\f\nthe goal-keepers chest.\nThe Chiefs were somewhat moro\nfortunate on SuncTay afternoon as\ntheir game was rained out.\nTuesday, March 11, 1952\nU.B.C. Braves\nBounce Vic\nIn Rugger\nBy BRIAN WHARF\nStealing a little thunder from\ntheir much publicized seniors, the\nThunderblrd's Braves, UBC's representative in the Vancouver see\nend division rugby league, flailed\nthe powerful InvadlngTTTteen TVSfii\nVictoria College 9-0 In the Stadium\non Saturday afternoon.\nOf the five teams from the capital city, the rugby squad was expected to give UBC the most\ntrouble. At present In third placo\nin the strong first division league\nin Victoria the Vikings featured\ntwo members of the -Crimson Tide,\nscrum half Cary Webster and forward Keith MacDonald. Tide meets\nthe Thunderbirds on Saturday In\nthe last game of the McKechnie\nClip competition to decide the\nresting place of the cup emblematic of coas^ rugger supremacy.\nThree quarter hack Don Knlsht\nregistered Brave's first try but the\nconversion attempt by Captain\nack Scott failed. Before the end\nof the first half, however, Scott\natoned for this by making good\nu penalty kick to give the Braved\na (i-0 lead.\nVikings tried desperately In the\nlast canto to equalize the score,\nhut the stout hearted playing of\nthe entire varsity squad ruinel\ntheir hopes. Winger Bob Dickinson completed the scoring by going over for tbe final try to put\nthe issue beyond doubt.\nIt Likes Fou\nLEARN TO DANCE\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 QUICKLY\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 EASILY\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 PRIVATELY\n3 Lessons $5.00-10 Lessons $15.00\nTHE WORLDS\nTTOBACCOS\nmoke\nPHILIP MORRIS\nthe most pleosinq,\nctyaretfoyou can\nsmoke!\nMURAL TENNIS\nUBC Needs Tennis Courts\nBy BRUCE JAFFRAY\nThe biggest farce on the cam\npus .it the present Is the spectacle\nof two tennis courts which try\nto iictcminodate 5500 students.\nThe obvious need for more facilities is seen by the long line-ups\nul' people continually waiting to\nplay. Other universities of equivalent size of snnller have al. Teusf.\nfive or six courts and students\nhave ii tar hotter chance 'lo participate.\nThis spring UBC is sponsoring\nthe Kvergroen Conference Tennis\nTournament. If the university con\nstructs additional courts the fourn-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0inipiit could ho held on our cam-\npas, ir not, the pluyei'S will he\nforced to use public courts which\nare entirely Inadequate.\nCI'.C has not been able to have\nan intramural tennis tournament\nI'or many years I'm* Uie simple reason that it would be impossible to\nrun a tournament on our two\ncourtM. This intramural event Is\nessential aud could be properly run\nil there were additional courts.\nTo add to the present problems\nthe Physical Kducution department\ncan monopolize the two existing\ncourts on almost any week day.\nTeam members have been asK'ed lc)\nvacate tho courts rtiany times while\npracticing.\nThe sll nation should he cor\nreefed immediately. The necessary\nmoney was allocated by the Sen\nate last yenr but was used to complete the gym grounds, (iroutid\nhas been cleared to the east of the"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1952_03_11"@en . "10.14288/1.0124368"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society, 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 .