"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-07-24"@en . "1956-12-05"@en . "Misprinted volume, should be XXXIX."@en . ""@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0124473/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " BRITISH CC'l^ *\u00C2\u00AB*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2* s\nrule, mon-!\nVOLUME XL\nRoyal City\nTrekkers\nNeed Aid\nGreat Trek petitioner gatherers :n New Westminster are\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'jumping the sun\" and need\nmanpower in a hurry.\nNew Westminster Trek director P\u00C2\u00BBon Armitage said Tuesday he would be gathering petitions in the Royal City three\nweeks in advance of the Provincial wide campaign.\nArmitage said he hoped tr\ntumid a \"dashing\" with Vancouver petitioners. Many Roya!\nCity lesklenls work in Van-1\ncouver.\nNew Westminster students interested in gathering petitions\nover the Chir.-'tmas holidays\nshould contact Ron Armita.se at\nLA. 1-7917 or Lindley Kemp at\nLA. 1-1464 before December 15.\nArm :tai;e stressed the cam-\npai'.n would not be of a drawn-\nout, house-to-house nature. \"We\n; t.\" planning a street-corner\nca; .paij.n.\" Armitage said.\nMcGoun Cup\nSemi-Finals\nTomorrow\nCompetition to select four de\nbators to compete in the famou-\nMcGoun Cup debating series be\ngins tomorrow. All interested\nare eligible for the competition.\nFirst round of eliminations\nis scheduled for Thursday and\nFriday. In this competition, the\nfield will be narrowed down to\nsixteen people. Applicants are\nrequired to deliver a five-minute talk on a subject of their\nown choice.\nNext term, the 16 finalists\nwiil compete again; the best\nfour speakers will be selected\nto compete against debaters from\nthe three other Western Universities-' in the McGoun Cup\ncompetition.\nTwo of the UHC finalists will\ntravel to the University of Manitoba for the debate. The other\ntwo will remain at UBC to vie\nv.'i'.i a visiting University of Al-\n' oHa i '.nil,\nFurther information may ' e\n' '''laini'd by contacting Peter\nh'mne at Box ',',:<,. AA1S Oflice.\n\"i- at KK. -i;{;mm.\nSPECIAL INSERT FOR\nNEW GREAT TREK\nInside the paper you will\nti'.'.A a special four-page insert\nd. voted to our New Great\nTr.'k.\nKeep this insert, mail intake it home, show it to\nfriends, mail it to your MLA\nv..th appropriate comments.\n10,000 extra copies are\nhi :ng printed of the insert,\nbut we don't want to waste\nany of them. Make sure that as\nmany people as posible realize\nour problems.\nTHE UBYSSEY\n'tween classes\non page 5\nVANCOUVER, B.C., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1936\nNo. 30\nBEFORE . . .\nBEFORE the great robbery operator Alan Goodacre of\nHamsoc confidently sends message little knowing that soon\nthis valuable transmitter would be purloined by as yet\nunidentified vandals. Giving advice is Marvin Pickering.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nHam Society\nLooted-Loss\nPut At $1,000\nThieves made off with over .$1000 worth of radio transmission equipment when they raided Hamsoc headquarters\nover the weekend.\nThey stole most of Hamsoc's radio equipment, including\na transmitter valued at S300.\nHamsoc president Ed Frazer said yesterday that the ham\nradio system will be off the air indefinitely d.ue to the loss.\nRoyal Canadian Mounted Po- \u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0080\u0094\t\nlice in thc university area stated) A11 of the articles are covered\nthat no arrests have been made! by thcft insurance. The club\nin connection with the smash-; has already filed claims,\nand-grab raid. I Frazer said the thieves took\nHowever, a senior officer add-! the wire cutters out of a tool\ned that a number of suspects j box in order to cut the main\nhave been questioned since the \ wires.\ntheft was discovered Saturday: \"If they h\"d scourged\nmorning. ! the desks and some cf the cup-\nWhen opening the premises | boards they would have found\nabout 10 a.m. Saturday, assistant technical director Wallace\nBrown found that the counters\nand walls were stripped. The\ntransmitters, amplifiers and oilier equipment had been ripped\nfrom their places.\nBrown called police to the\nscene. The thieves had gained\nentrance to the premises, which\nare localed in a club hut at the\nrear of Brock Hall, by forcing\nopen a window latch.\nThey had broken a small hoi-\nin the glass and had manipulated\nthe lock with a screw-driver or\nan other slender instrument.\nWindow i.s situated on the east\nwall of the building. It i.s not\nflood-lighted and is given in- j\nfrequent patrols by police.\nBeside the transmitter, p receiver worth S250 ahd an oscilloscope valued at $100 were\ntaken. Most of the articles were\nbuilt Irom kits by the student\nmembers.\n\"It's not only the loss of the\nequipment which we are suffering from but the many hours\n! of work which was put in to\nbuild the equipment,\" Frazer\nstated.\nA multi-meter, antenna coup-\nj lor and several speakers were\nalso found missing Saturday\nmorning.\nsome of the most valuable equipment in our shop,\" lie ac'rled.\n\"Plans we had en '; :\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 hook for\nmoving into the B'.o k < xtmm.an\nare now shot.\" sam fi a/or.\nHe stated that 1 >ur rooms\nhave been allocated to Ham-\n(Continued on Page 5)\nSee HAM SOCIETY\nCORRECTION\nMr. J a m e s MacFarlan,\npresident of the Campus LPP\nClub was quoted in The Ubyssey as making the statement\n\"We have only to recall the\nexpose of Vancouver's call girl\nracket three years ago to realize that there is little need for\nprofessionalism. Either there\nare too many professionals\nor the advertisers aren't doing\na good enough job.\"\nMr. MacFarlan did not make\nthis statement, and we\nare sorry to have attributed\nthis statement to him. We\nhope that it won't interfere\nwith his border cros.-ing activities\nCampus Socred president\nHoward Johnson made t h e\nabove quoted statement.\nWILY OLD JERRY LECOVIN\nPUSHES UNDERWORLD YET\nSo vim haven't got talent\n. so w\nhat?\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Photos by Jim Mason\nAFTER . . .\nLOOKING vacantly at now-useless receiver, Hamsoc president Ed Frazer ponders fate of his transmitter. Other grieving Hamsocers are Larry Frazer, assistant technical director, and Dave Cheeke, operations director.\nLots of people still sing and dance without talent.\nWily old Jerry Lecovin is holding special seminars in HM\n2 today at noon for just such types.\nSo lie's also casting for the mens' dance line for the\nMardi Gras. So you too can cavort at this annual bash.\nWily old Lecovin says that even those who have experience\nwill not be frowned upon.\nAnd this year's theme is a real gasser\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mardi Gras in\nthe Underworld yet. So show up already. Lecovin needs\nvou.\nThe Special Great Trek Edition PAGE TWO\nT II E U B Y S S E Y\nWednesday. December 5, 1956\nTHE UB YSSEY But Decision Crucial\nAuthorized as second class mail, Post Office Department,\nOttawa.\nMEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS\nStudent subscriptions $1.20 per year (Included in AMS fees). Mall\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ubscriptions $2.00 per year. Single copies five cents. Published\nln Vancouver throughout the University year by the Student\nPublications- Board of the Alma Mater Society, University of\nBritish Columbia. Editorial opinions expressed herein are thoie\nof the editorial staff of the Ubyssey. and not necessarily those of\nthe Alma Mater Society or the University, Letters to the Editor\nahoulQ not be more than 150 words. The Ubyssey reserves the right\nto cut letters, and cannot guarantee publication of all letters\nreceived\nEDITOR-IN-CHIEF\nManaging Editor Pat Russell\nBusiness Manager Harry Yuill\nCUP Editor Marilyn Smith\nPhoto Edilor Fred Schrack\nSENIOR EDITOR THIS ISSUE\nSANDY ROSS\nCity Editor . Jerry Brown\nSports Edilor, Bruce Allardyce\nFeature Editor, R. Kent-Barber\nFile Editor Sue Ross\nOLIE WURM\nReporters and Desk: -- Dave Robertson, Carol Gregory, Barrv\nHale, Peggy Ebbs-Canavan. Bob Strachan, Murray Ritchie, Barrv\nCook, Loraine Rossiter, Hank Hawthorn. Sports': Ian Todd. Ken\nWiebe, Ralph Croizier and Joan Crocker.\nGuest Editorial\nHoles In The Wool\nBy JOHN MUNRO, Arts 1\nThe recent editorial entitled, ''More Facts Please\" was\none of the best examples of sophistry I have read in a long\ntime. I would like to question the writer on some of his facts.\nFirst of all, to what degree does he suppose fascist elements\nexist in Hungary today, and exactly what does he mean by\na \"fascist.\" Horthy, a right wing military dictator, seized\npower when Hungary was in a state of chaos and anarchy\nafter Bela Kun's communist government had fallen in 1919,\nbut the existence of the dictatorship does not necessarily\nmean that the mass of the people were fascist, nor does it\nnecessarily mean that there is a large fascist element in\nHungary today. He implies that Hungary willingly fought\non the side of the Nazis in tne last war; I suggest rather that\nHorthy was coerced by threats of annexation to aid Germans,\nand that the Hungarian people had no say in the matter.\nNext, he insults the Hungarian people by implying that\nAmerican propaganda was the sole cause of the revolt.\nLiving under totalitarian (communist) dictatorship imposed\nby a foreign power is a more powerful incentive to revolt\nthan propaganda, especially considering the fervent nationalism of the eastern European peoples. Does he think that the\nfactory workers who gave their lives were fascist? What does\nhe think of the Workers Council (Labour union leaders) who\nare defiantly rejecting the demands of Kadar? What does\nhe think of the massive resistance of the people to the Russians and their puppet regime? What does he think of the\n100,000 Hungarians who have fled their homeland? Fascists?\nFinally he questions the number of arms in possession\nof the patriots, placing squarely the grave consequences\nof the rebellion upon the West. If news reports are reliable, most of these arms were handed over to them by Hungarian army units, others were captured, and perhaps some\nhad been cached at the end of World War II. He makes the\nobvious suggestion that they were smuggled into Hungary.\nBut how9 The Red Air Force would have certainly prevented air drops. Hungary, an inland state, is bordered by\nfive states, fourof which are communist. Obviously, American arms could not be smuggled in via these countries; that,\ntherefore, leaves only neutral Austria. First of all, Austria\ni.s also an inland state, making it rather difficult to gel arms\ninto Austria. Secondly any arms movements into Austria\nwould be a strict violation of Austrian neutrality, and would\nbo ouickly noticed by Communist intelligence agents; the\nworld would have heard the raucous cries of the Kremlin\nhad this ever occurred. Austria, of course, would never jeopardize her independence by allowing any arms importation.\nFinally, does he think that tho Russian army units are so\ninept, that bonier installations are so lax, that arms could\nbe smuggled in? It might be well to remember that the\nCommunists are not amateurs, and thai Hungary was never\na \"banana republic.\"\nI suggest that Mr. Hodkinson arise from the depths of\nhis smug complacency to have another look at that woo! being\npulled over our eves; it has a lot of holes in it.\nTrekThe Halls With\nToday's edition of the Ubyssey, our fattest, our sassiest\nour final issue for 195(1, is a unique venture in student publications at UBC.\nThe middle four pages of this edition have been devoted\nentirely to accounts of the financial crisis facing this University, and of student efforts to persuade Provincial authorities\nto grant UBC more money. Ten thousand extra copies of this\nfour-page \"Great Trek\" edition will bo run off, and distributee! throughout the Province where they will do the most\ngood; to service clubs, Boards of Trade, country newspaper\neditors, and Provincial Government authorities.\nWe hope this extra run of '.he 'Vile Rag\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094dressed in its\nSunday best for off-campus consumption-\u00E2\u0080\u0094will accomplish\nsomething worthwhile.\nAnd one more thing: we wish you all the best of luck\nin your examinations, and a merry, hairy Christmas.\nApathy Surrounding\nThe Tory Convention\nREPRINTED FROM\nSlanted ?\nEditor.\nThc Ubyssey:\nSince thc Leadership Conference, the Ubyssey has shown\nsome sinus of a change in several respects\u00E2\u0080\u0094changes which\nare the direct result of our\ndiscussions and recommendations.\nNonetheless, the most serious\ncharge\u00E2\u0080\u0094-admitted by the pubster at Elphinstone and in thc\nUbyssey subsequently (see your\nissue of October 11, 1956)\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nhas not been tackled at all\nseriously: the charge that reports are biased and slanted.\nYour recent articles on Fort\nand Acadia camps ''re all too\nclear in tiiis respect, and I am\nMire that the Editor cannot\nplead\u00E2\u0080\u0094-as ho so often docs\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nthat he could not check the\nreports. For no one at this\nUniversity is\u00E2\u0080\u0094can be\u00E2\u0080\u0094 unaware of the situation in the\ncamps.\nIf the Trek is to be aided\nconstructively by the Ubyssey.\nthen such articles as thc ones\nyou have published are most\ndamaging to this cause. Surely\nyour efforts would not be to\ndestroy what we have\u00E2\u0080\u0094admitted that this leaves much to be\ndesired and can be greatly\nimproved\u00E2\u0080\u0094but to lead the way\nin showing how to expand our\nhousing, how to'meet the crisis.\nSimilarly, your \"series\" on\nthe Socreds seems childish. Do\nwe have to have all your dirty\nprivate political washing\nsplashed over a full page of\npaper'.' Granted Mr. Johnson\nwas iomewhat biased in his side\nof the story\u00E2\u0080\u0094 and not quite as\nbadly as vou have been in the\npast\u00E2\u0080\u0094is this justification to\nspend a whole editorial, complete with nauseating adjective.;, to make a few punny\npoints on your side'.' Never yet\nhas Ihe opposite happened, vein\njust assume that your bias is\nabove reproach.\nNor, lo the best of my knowledge, has any letter to the\nUbyssey been given such treatment before. Why was this\nmade and exception? Because\nit happens to be the Socreds\nand you want to say things\nabout them'.'\u00E2\u0080\u0094and mind you,\n1 am no Socred member.\nWhat you have done in other\nsections of the paper\u00E2\u0080\u0094on the\nbasis of Elphinstone \u00E2\u0080\u0094 you\nshould also do to your viewpoint. Cut out I lie el.'' 'ish\nand harmful slanting; and v. ,en\nyou know that a cause can\nsuffer\u00E2\u0080\u0094be serious, be constructive.\nG. FRIEDMAN.\nPhysics.\nA1ISUYA 3KX\nMve Con.-i. r-.'alive\n'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0a nnpmt-\n'.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'. tho Hi-.n\na' \"Iccliuii.\nii.- largely\n; mockery\nnplished\nOn the tenth of this month, the Progn\nparty will meet in Ottawa to make one ()< th,. ,,..\nant Canadian decisions of the decade, 'ihey wi]' sell\nwho is to lead them t.irough at least the next ,h. .im\nThe decision is important because it will\nup to that man to to save Canada from becoming\nof democratic government. If anything is h, be ;,'.\nduring the next five years, we must have a u.'iical change\nin our federal government. We are not being ruled by parliament when a handful of man can push through \irnialjy any\nact or law they wish lo conceive\u00E2\u0080\u0094with no reg:rd to public.\nnewspaper, or parliamentary comment.\nRegardless of party leieais-and who car. difierentiate\nthese days between Canadian political parties ros mtatives of the Vancouver Rowing Club. JAZZSOC presents its own\n\" The victory procession will Big Band in a concert in the aid\nthen travel to downtown Van- of the Hungarian Scholarship\ncouvif, lor a special ceremony 'Fund al noon in the auditorium,\non the Court House steps. Diqui- I Admission, 25c.\n'tween dosses\nJazzSoc Concert for\nHungarian Fund.\ntaries including Mayor Fred\nHume and Premier W. A. C.\nBennett will take part in the\ntribute to the UBC Crews.\nAfter Christmas, the AMS will\nofficially recognize the contribution of the Olympic athletes\nwith a ceremony in Brock Hall'\nat noon, January 10.\nEach member of thc triumph-1\nant crew will receive a memorial gift from the AMS. '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2There'll\nbe something special for coaches\nFrank Read and John Warren,\ntoo.\" MAD President Tom Toyn-1\nbee said Tuesday. I\nIn addition, a memorial tro-1\nphy case will be included in the!\nnew Brock Extension, scheduled i\nfor completion next March. ;\nUCC Plans j\nExecutive i\nTraining\nMain topic of discussion at the:\nfall session of the University I\nClub Council, held Thursday,!\nwas the proposed Executive J\nTraining Programme to com-!\nmence January 23. j\nMichael Booth, faculty rep-;\nresentative for the board of di!\nrectors of the programme, de-'\nfine the scheme as a \"beneficial ;\nbut tentative plan with the gen-'\neral idea of developing leadership and strengthening campus!\nclub unity.\" j\nBnoth outlined the programme\nas consisting of five sessions to ,\nmeet every second Wednesday\ncommencing January 23. The\nmeetings will feature speakers |\nprominent in various aspects of\nleadership as parliamentary pro- j\ncedure. public relations and gen-j\neral membership policy. Follow-1\ning the addresses the represcnta-!\nfives will break up into discus- >\nsion groups. Each club is to send '\nthree delegates.\nCouncil member, Mo McNeil. ]\nconfirmed that the council will,\nallow the installation of coffee I\nand milk vending machines on\nan experimental basis in\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 all club\nrooms. She pointed out. however, that all revenue from the\nmachines would go to the Food\nServicing Department and not\nthe clubs, seeing that there wa*\nthe possibility that the machines\nwould cut in on the department'.-; revenue.\nA motion was also made and\ncarried that UCC accept the faculty proposal to pay expenses\nfar chaperoiu s on all club travelling events.\n* * *\nMUSIC APPRECIATION Club\ntoday at noon Brock Stage Room.\nMore Shostakovich.\n* * *\nHILLEL\u00E2\u0080\u0094Israeli member of\nParliament Mr. B. Locker will\nspeak under Hillel's sponsorship\nin Arts 100.\n* * *\nPRIMARY CLUB meeting in\nEd. Rm. 17.\n* * *\nGERMAN CLUB Big Christmas party today at 8:00 p.m. at\nHelga Bergev's home. 5816\nKingston Rd. University District.\n* * *\nVARSITY SPORTS CAR Club\nwill hold its second organzation-\nal meeting in Eng. 200 featuring two films \"The Monte Carlo\nRally\" and \"The Tulip Rally.\"\n* * *\nCCF CLUB meets today at\nnoon in club room.\nBLDG. REPAIR SALE\nHARRIS TWEED\nTOPCOATS\nSPECIAL\n49-60\nUNITED TAILORS\n549 GRANVILLE STREET\nOpen Friday until 9 p.m.\nCustom Tailored suits\nfor Ladies and Gentlemen\nGowns and Hoods\nDouble breasted suits\nmodernized in thc new\nsingle breasted stylies\nLautsch Tailors\nSPECIAL STUDENT RATES\n*A* Howe St. TA. 4715\nFor Pure Pleasure\n...HAVB A\nffati\np.m. Pdology students are far- ;\ning the same problem.\nAt least one new building h, j\nculture and Forestry. The Agriculture students attend classes\nnow in one small, badly crowded building, while forestry siu-'\ndents f.hare a building with Geography sludenis and overflow\ninto several huls.\nThe Education building constructed last year w ill not house\nthe increased enrollment expected in il the next few years. If\nUBC is to produce competent\nteachers for Ihe children of British Columbia it nuisl have adequate lacililics.\nThe library, the only place\nmost students can study, needs\na new wing. Il is overcrowded\nnov;, and conditions will be seriously aggravated by the expected increase in future enrollment.\nThe university is not asking\nfor frills. It is asking only lo be\ngiven Ihe equipment necessary\nto continue a program of higher\neducation for the citizens of\nBritish Columbia.\nbe able to come to UBC after\nHigh School Graduation.\nThose that arc allowed to enter will find themselves in an\nimpoverished institution \u00E2\u0080\u0094 able\nto provide neither adequate instruction nor adequate lecture\nand laboratory facilities.\nStatistics Show UBC\nMushrooming Growth\nHere is a report from\nI UBC's Committee on Statistics on the expected enrollment:\n'56 (present enrollment) 7623\n'65 (anticipated) 12,800\n1 '7a (anticipated) 23,000\n'85 (anticipated) 33,000\nIf we add the number of\nsludenis expected for the College of Education and our proposed Faculty of Dentistry,\nthe anticipated enrollments\nfor the years mentioned will\nbe l,-).0()0. 26,000 and finally\n.T.OOO in 1985.\nbe knocking on the University's\ndoors by 1960.\nYet UBC is bursting at the\nseams now. Housing and educational facilities are hopelessly overcrowded. Professors are\nunderpaid and moving to private industry. If not remedied\nimmediately the situation will\nsoon become hopeless.\nPredicted enrollment increases\nare the result of two main causes.\nFirst, the increased birth rata\nof the Second World War period\nwill bring a great many more\npeople into the university age\ngroup.\nSecondly, a greater number\nof teenagers want to go to uni-\nversity. And these young people\nwill be needed to fill positions\nin B.C.'s expanding economy.\nThis is why students at UBC\nare bringing to the attention\nof the people of this province\nthe urgent need for more\nfunds\u00E2\u0080\u0094funds to help us fulfill adequately the purposes of\na university.\nUBC IS:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Overcrowded\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Inadequately Financed\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Lacking Dormitories & Residences\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Expected to meet thc challenge of\na rapidly increasing enrollment\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 With an Underpaid Faculty\nThis special edition of The Ubyssey tells how these\nconditions have come about and why they must he remedied if the university is to serve the needs of the people\nof our province. PAGE EIGHT\nTHE UBYSSEY\nAuthorized as second class mail, Post Office Department,\nOttawa.\nMEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS\nStudent subscriptions $1.20 per year (included in AMS lees) Mail\nsubscriptions $2.00 per year. Single copies five cents. Published\nin Vancouver throughout the University year by the Student\nPublications Board of the Alma Mater Society, University of\nBritish Columbia. Editorial opinions expressed herein are those\nof the editorial staff of thc Ubyssey, and not necessarily those of\nthe Alma Mater Society or the University. Letters to the Editor\nshould ool be more than 150 words. The Ubyssey reserves the right\nto cut letters, and cannot guarantee publication of all letters\nreceived.\nEDITOR-IN-CHIEF SANDY ROSS\nManaging Editor Pal Russell City Editor Jerry Brown\nBusiness Manager Harry Yuill Sports Editor Bruce Allardyce\nPUP FHitor Marilvn Smith Feature Edilor R. Kent-Barber\nPhoto Edilor Fred Schrack File Editor Sue Ross\nGreal Trek Edilor ROD SMITH\nReporters and Desk\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dave Robertson. Carol Gregory, Barry\nHale, Peggy EbbsCanavan. Bob Strachan. Murray Ritchie. Barry\nCook. Lorraine Rossiter, Hank Hawthorn. Sports: Ian Todd, Ken\nWiobe. Ralph Crozier and Joan Crocker.\nTHE UBYSSEY\nWednesday, December 5. 1956\nUBC President Reports\nOn Crisis In Universities\nThe Reason Why\nThe current first impression of a fund drive for UBC\nis . . . \"Why?\" Citizens aware of the recent S10 million grant\nfrom the Provincial Government and S4.3 from Ottawa feel\nthat the University i.s perhaps being greedy in immediately\nasking for more.\nWithout considering some salient facts this criticism\nwould be valid. But a comparison of UBC's needs with money\nwe are to receive shows unmistakably that the campaign\nis justified.\nBoth the Federal and Provincial Grants are spread over\na 10 year period. They will help meet rising administrative\nee-ts and operating expenses, hut they will not provide the\nfund.- to con-hue! the building- the univer-;!y de-peraloly\nr.eed-.\nB.C.- expanding economy annualh requires more and\nmore t rained mi n and women to fill p ists in bu.-iiiess, industry\nand the professions. Within the next live years thousands\nof youivj people now in the Elementary and High Schools will\ncome to UBC seeking education and training.\nAt prison! UBC badly need- lo construct eight new\nbui! iiiuls and e:- pr.nd five more. Finch new budding will cost\nai 1\u00C2\u00BB-a-! S2 million. The present Provincial and Federal grants\nsimply will not provide (lie necessary tunc!- in time.\nIt takes approximately three years, from the time that\nnvnev is n.ade available, to desi-.m and eop-trucl a new\nIwiMoi\". To be el'iwt'we a grant m;i-l be made three viva's\nIxloiv any ael'wipatel enrollment increase.\nFend, !o eemirue1 lhe-o imw birluiw.m ma ' be imam\nr vmhil le th'.- ynr \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 !' I 11!.' i-, to m,pe with t!ie predicted eii-\niiilbioi! ot' !'-!.<)(>!) m IP!',!).\n! Mm university- doc- n .1 get the luuil- it n.-k- lor. it '\"as\ntwo , ilria >!iv\"\ It cm olo.-e- i*- iwor- to a lai'\"e nniabei-\no: ,-!,a':oi;i- who w.ll -eel. norm-nor. o-a i; (an; divert it- on-\n( rar a.; U.'ud-. dint no,. w> lo'- mho na.-t \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .-< l; ,a and odoi a''iiv.\niwp-use,.\n'J'lie I'ir-t eout'.-e is far from attractive: the I'lliv ei'-.ly\nlie- an ohliaa! i a to proviile an edne.iia'ii lor rvcry oua'i-\nfied Lb-ib.-'a Colunihi-'ii vaho de-ire- it. To I.nut eprollmeiit\nwonId be to subvert the purpo.-e ()f the Univer.-i! v as a Provincial servic\" insti,-.ition. And the -'-eon.I cour-e i- no heller;\nfor i.i the long run, a secmid-ralo \"diploma mil! education is\nIntle better than none at all.\nT,i mm that II C.'s youm; people arc her most import,ml\nnature] re-ouree ma;, he trite: hut it al-o happen- to be tmie.\nA\\(\ to wiihold the funds tor the de\ elopment oi these vital\nhuman re-ourees would be '.nave lo'lv.\nPro\-inc':al (local nwoiih - both the previous a\"d prc-ert\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 l.-i\e ai'Vi-r \".ejected the vdal llee.i- oi lie I.'n i vers, pa.\nThe pi'c ent nduuni-'.ration, throwm il- 1'.)\">!' capita!\nj.'ran! of S IP.(>(>:),noil dollar- ami il- Endowment band- grant\nof -\'.\".) acre-, has shown that it dom- i\u00C2\u00BB'i uueiad to l\"t oio human re.-oiiree- go to was\". But in the face oi an unprecm-\ndenied econoinie boom and mushrooming enrollment, slid\nnioie. much more, is needed.\nThc student- of UBC are calling, on the Provincial Gov-\nerunu nt to p'-ovide the funds to -apply the brain- behind\n\". ie boom: and they are calling on the people ol B.C. to join\nil i ,n m their eppeal.\nEditor's Nolo: The following\nis an address by Ihe University\nPresident, Dr. Norman A. M.\nMacKenzie, deliverod over\nCBC November 17, on the occasion of t he National Conference of Canadian Universities\nin Ottawa. In it, Ihe President\ndiscusses the grave crisis that\ntoday faces Canadian Universities\u00E2\u0080\u0094including UBC).\nI am here at the Chateau\nLaurier as a member ol' a conference on \"The Crisis in Higher Education in Canada.\" With\nme ire the heads and other\nrepresentatives of all our Universities from St. John's, Newfoundland to Vancouver.\nTim crisis\u00E2\u0080\u0094which I prefer\nto call tht1 \"challenge to the\nUniversities and people of Canada\" grows out of three facts\nor circumstances.\nThe first, the rapid increase\nin cur population due to immigration and more particularly a hifjh birth rate, means\nthat each year the number of\nyoung men and women demanding a university education is\nincreasing rapidly, and by 1956\nour university student population will be more than double\nits present size. This is a fact.\nAt th? same time the international situation and the stac\nof oar own industrial and commercial development is such\nthat we will need\u00E2\u0080\u0094and do need\ntoday\u00E2\u0080\u0094 far more trained and\neducated young men and women than we can possibly pass\nthrough our Universities.\nAt the s.ame time, the general interest in higher education is increasing. There are\na! least '.) tunes as many good\nyoung people with the intellectual capacity tor higher education than 'hero are presently\nin oar L'tiivi r-atic, and it is\nahuo-t certain that in place\n<'!' tile 7 to t) ; it real of tin;\neve {.-.roup 1 ,'!-'2 I now .seeking\nhi'-her education, we will have\nin a tew v mam time ma to la or\n1'! pi r i en' of 1 e.,u swuo a a,\"\narm w\nTo ee \"i this i hall ww< we\n\",. \ a, ,- eriiu;) e; I'nh or. il ie -i\nv. hi \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 '. ml, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 a , a ;. Irem ',\ m-\nailen-.m\" aial \u00C2\u00AB \ -r-t .,\ed: m v\nown ' M,, ;' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2; ver.-:v oi bin\n1 is.i ('ohm, aa lor : v aval.\nhas this V ;a' 7,'i.M - 'ITlla\nl.-e-l ,v - ar we h-\"i !i:t; ,\",, .Inch\nI , i' CIU' .: l \"010,shlo ;,,' i j< ,,!' :,\nu . y tm.,; a,ray a\" : m,,d> ueaie\nn a are. Vh \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 so' I i: e. fim las' anc a i 'Ver hen ' mm, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 arm \\nwithour present income, are\nsmall in the total picture or\nstatement of government expenditures.\nAt present for instance the\nprovincial grants to Universities comprise less than .V.' of\nthe total provincial expenditures, and less than 1-10 of\nthe expenditure on roads.\nThe expenditure of the Federal Government on defence i.s\nvery great\u00E2\u0080\u0094perhaps over 1:,.|\nbillions each year. Roads and\ndeefnre are necessary, and it\nmay he that we\u00E2\u0080\u0094the Universities\u00E2\u0080\u0094are not as important as\neither ol the-:' (though the few\ntens oi millions we will in-ed\nare \"pfvmuts\" compared to tin\nlumdr< ,'s of millions spent on\nthe.v other items). But if tha'\nhe the view of the Canadian\npeople, then they must accept\nas a fact that their children\nwill no net a I nivwsity education and their industries,\nselioo'-.. pr ifessions. businesses,\nfirmed forces, ar.d governments.\nwill not be supplied with the\nneae -sary personnel.\nI really mean that this\ncrisis wo face is too big for\nthe Universities alone and on\ntheir own to handle or deal\nwith, as they have dealt with\nother problems in the past. We\njust can't alone, and on our\nown, cope wiih it. Governments\nand business must coir.e in and\nhelp us, and help us in a ser-\nwould come to nor aid and to\nthe aid of the Arts. Letters,\nHumanities and Social Ccier.ccs,\nin a generous fashion, He '.old\nus thai the Federal grant-- to\nUniversities will be doubled.\nHe also told us that the Canada Council would be e.-ab-\nlished and given fOO million\ndollars to administer\u00E2\u0080\u009450 millions by way of endowment for\nthe Arts, and 50 millions to be\ndistributed among the Universities to help with thiir capital\nneeds For these generous uifts\nwe are grateful beyond words'.\nThese monies will enable us\nto enlarge cur services, to\nstrengthen and improve our\nwork, and generally to prepare\nlo meet our difficult I'm ore\nproblems with courage ar.d a\nrood heart, provided\u00E2\u0080\u0094and this\nis of the utmost import ante\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nour provincial governments and\nother sources of revenue do\nnot assume that their normal\nand proper responsibilities to\nIhe Universities have been discharged, and fail to continue\nand t.i increase the grants trade\nus as these become necessary.\nIf they do this\u00E2\u0080\u0094that i.s refuse or fail to continue t\".cir\nnormal grants and gift.- to Yni-\nversitics and to inerea. e t'.m-e\nin the nennal and u\u00C2\u00BB.n 1 v ay.\nas enrolment increas-. .- >>r -r. horni\n;.u A. }\. IMuIi-emtic\nel World War il\nOn:- -lalf- have [). en -tram\ne! im; wit! i one emergency al tea\nanother ever since !!)!!!>.\nAll this sugeiets that the\nproblems confronting Ihe I'm-\nvi r-a' h s of ('anada are far\nhoyi \u00E2\u0080\u00A2; id tlu ir capacities to -oh c\nor ileal with alone. This I\nknow in he true insular a- the\nt. hi i ciT-i! a s ;, re concerned.\n'''ha . p'-oh'ew,- are eoi be-\n;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 end l!ie i\i: i,a ill\"-- or re-1 nirci ,\nol 11 e |i\u00C2\u00AB , ph'.s and governnien :-\nof l 'a mala ,'liid of her Province a howev \\".\ if t hey take\ntia m serii hi- l.v, P,,v this 1 me in .\nI ir. I loos: of oar pia a liem- -our\nUn i v i hi y pia)'. lews \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 arc fin \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nanci.d one--, ana can he ami\nand .-1 il vi d i i we a re ui van t h\"\nmen e- wi \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 need and must have\n- and arc given thai money\n.seen t a w! e; h ,\nCompp.red wiih other government expenditures, our requirements, though large compared\nthen the ( ontribihim,- , t\nFederal Chwernm.ciil a \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ill\nas v\ i ' I not have he :\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 .n\nfi ir we the I'm ver-'l ..\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 - \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nious arid gwicrous fashion. Otherwise our battle with iivro,-\s-\ninq enrcliTients is lest before\nil really gets started.\n'I his i-. Pie centra,! and most he n> leitir oli' ;>-u\niinuoi'laal nro.ucm that we\n!ia\ e been di-cus-. m. C\ her.\ninclude Mich matters a- the\nu a- of huiiian : i -oura- -a t he\npro'olems in -ecunim stal I': uiii-\n\ er -ii> -a\nihiiiaU)- are loo low il we are solete and rundown :a. hi\nto (. mpele wH!i busincs>. in- ;| sl|.u.,1,. iinni(,.i m:;.. ,,-,\ndud tw , e, iv \"iMiiii'iil ai\"'l iiiiii'i\npa'1', ieular! v .111 i mte-1 State.-\nthe re-pon-1\"! ht.v !'o- t ue t re. in\ning ui' .-dentist.-, ami others.\nloins mi nearer . del i.\nIll that case, there .- n it\nW\" cai i (l: \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 .-a\ e car- \ w\nal present. giving in a- a\nes whie'a inci- ly inadeipiate serv ,a - m\nthan half of those \m el n.\nof our young pi ople. a ..' w i\nim: wit !i sadii\"ss leal n\nwhile our enuntr.v i.dls\nI,.i.i nehit. Pie Pr'iue Minis- tlier ; nd I'arlher behind in\ntor of Canada, the IP ilon. parade of natwus In w\nl,i ills St. 1.unreal, in oerhaps case we will indeed >ec\nt lie a est important add \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0,'--\never LllVi il t i an a che i o e ol\nl' n ! vei'-it v n-nri' euta' e. ma mo\n, a,e\no-t\nale,\nvill\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0oh-\naig\nas\nn g-\ni ,'n-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 to\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0a.-S\nii)\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 { i\nal -\n1', i O\nIC'i\n,ni'\n\"hew ,. rs of wood ami \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 irav\nol water\" 1 a en.' '\namic mil rea 11-1 :c i, ..,:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nmi.-ed that lo- giweriuiii nt north ami .-out! \"Wednesday. December 5. 1956\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPAGE NINL4\"\nFIRST TREK: A LEGEND\n\"I hoar thc provincial government is in the market lor plans for fancy new liquor stores , . .\"\nHuts, Basements\nHouse Students\nBy ISAKK.E HALE\nUBC - hc-ising iaciliiie.s are hopelessly inadequate Im\nout-ct-tav.-'i students win) comprise nearly half of the student\npDj'iiii.i'a 'ii. Oily a third ol these student.-, can he hom-ed by\nthe Lie.ci r./.v . the rest must seek quarters uii-campus.\nThere are li.tiOt) out-of-towi\nE3r\u00C2\u00BBcA-9rrh Ai^lc stl,citMlN ;\" vnc lllis yvHV- :\"\"1\nIXVuivCal LI Hr^lUS -.ludml pepnia'ain is growine.\n-Province in :j:j:::y':i:i;:;z\nMany Ways ',:v, '.' ' '\"'\"l''\"\"\n''\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'I'\"''1;i,n cf ..'-,, ,':, ',.,,1 i i!mi mm la\n'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' '>'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0'l<- learned, by tin tnav.'.'.-iM , b(m\n' ;'\" ' ' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ' iiv e in 11 a'ni: r a ia .>' 'm rr.u im\n'-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'''\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ':'];(..-,. ;, , rraci-. s have '. a mi \"sine'\nI. Men v;hi nn te on1 bab, pi iiua; e.u\" am i', e ': -' le\"\n(\na\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6lv\n,'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 O'.ll\na,\ni; ci i -iduslry, *> \u00E2\u0096\u00A0-a r-e ' bey ai\nn aari 0: \\nfo cm\n'. f>-om:n :\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 nr-v; aow\n*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0. ,. ' a t >'..-, (1 _.\"..! -sr, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.! e' r.\\y\npi'o.ime's \u00E2\u0096\u00A0/ \u00E2\u0096\u00A0* i\" -ri'i'V, mm'\n/. ) I -s '\"-.r-rnch ;\" c-'.am--\n;p ebmj.f >v:w d.ij.iIK1*? J'-la\n1 '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 1 I I!\n' t -\noca \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 a '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 q\nre. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -\u00E2\u0096\u00A0?, ijn i .->-,\ni 11 v.. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ' ri r c1 v J . i'\nt'n.s atoms le 'man\nf\" r careiev and ' aa ca<, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2.\nop;.\", v il'i t\n ' ,-, ....,...'- : an\np- r waste\na'. ,v n.-f a -a a \u00E2\u0080\u00A2' a un \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n'.'ice- i'lc. Y'l even\n(iVt ra: i > .vdinu. l' I 'C\na-. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 mi! > 11 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0'.'.', 'Hi' of ie. i-\n1922 Trekkers\nIdea Borrowed\nFor New Drive '\nA significant milestone in ihe history\nof UBC was the famous ''Great Trek\" ot\n1922.\nIt i.s a similar spirit which is leading\nstudents today to appeal to the people\nof the province to support UBC in its campaign for more money.\nIn 1922 a group of determined students, dissatisfied with the inadequate and\nsqualid conditions of the university, decided to take positive action to awaken public interest.\nThe university was then housed in what\nwas called the \"Fairview Shacks\" near\nthe Vancouver General Hospital.\nStudents planned for months a campaign to present truthfully and forcefully\nihe plight of the university.\nFire was a great hazard, facilities were\nhopelessly inadequate and teacher's salaries were very low. In fact many professors\nhad threatened to resign if nothing was\ndone.\n The .-mashing ilimax to the\n% \" ' di mmistrations came at the end\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 i \"Varsity \\ I'i'k\" e. dh a gigan-\n' c parade winding I hrouim:\n.'oiiwinwn Yau-,oaver, eomplot\n\\ i 1 b ; ancb-. lb ia cs and banners\nThe bene cist ra'nrs t ben boare \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\ned s! reel cars a ad rude to 1 Ot'.\nand S:i-iim:il >.'. bar.' 1 '..cy ia -,m\nIhe Trek\" !a the .-:'; d.-si.uiiiit-\n(d lor eolh '.e beddings over\nten years bid'ore.\nThey marched along a baiter-\nRd horse-trail and on the way\neach person picked up a stone.\nThe;;\\ n a' udent -a\n''\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 '\"'a' '- Wil'i tbaiiii mil -of-:,i\v:i -.to '\nun.'acture r|, ,,;, .,,,-,. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2( .,, a,,,;- ,.]. ,-where\n'\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'' '-,;l cr rm mi an i : :']\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 {. a seller'--.\naai -11\",\na'e a,.e . er 111:'-. i He \"-' 11 i a'l HI\na i ,e 11 all oi\ne\n'ia e ia i; ai m mr i i\n; 11 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 11! : \u00E2\u0096\u00A0- b \", e 1, > e -\nbails a ! ,, r,., , , : , , ,\npav\nic-r i;m\nand sbi-\niipii- fi|i,-i\n'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0e :eime\\nPa (1\nJ e a ! '<\nC ' a a\n. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i . Si i I\na (I 'i a'\n-. 'i i' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2' S ' e\nil. ai lb ('.\nXo blmbeil\n11. . .ea \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n11' I i. .- a ea i a 11 b.\n'mmn si, a a'. ;nn\n\"Oar tnupose is net only to -mall\naid indu-.tries hst hav> no ro- v, an\ns^av'-i ibiT-ip b fj of their cme \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0' \".\"\nbut also to ku midarnrni re?oarer. V,'! en\nwith rompd\"i5i ttuit lu-ive thc ev nc\nfac.ib.bcs.\" T.\",II IJASIN in V\u00C2\u00BB-\ and Acadia camp (e.\ a\rr,i\ hats) is ji;..| e.e,. t -.,,ancle el' the m.a\"-\neiou-ch'i\", i.i these resaienci s, .\bhoiig!i students ro;i!i/e\nthat ehe-siaii ia;., are more liecess.iry than .'..iiiniti ri\"s. iliev\nleel that, unless more durms are built nnniedialely. lower\noul-ol'-lown .stiKienls will he able to attend univershy.\nUBC Appeals To BCs Ci thorn\nWrite, Phone, Speak To Your Mi A\nPrivate citizens c, n aid I'BC'-. \"Second Great Trek\"\nhind appeal by writim; their Ml,A's and members ol the\nPia ivincial (loxeriuneiib\nStudents will he ei real-i me petitions in all parts\noi B.C. over Christmas but st res.-, taat their plea will be\n!,vl ;,\"li \"Miouortaiion better received if accompanied hy letters and po-tearcls\nuiv aiidei'i lo le.is I'm,- ,- , , .\ntrom \-oter.s and ta\pa\ ins.\ni .k^h1-- t a-i; r 1 o under\nThe niarr litters receivinl in \Tii'toiia holme the petition is presented, the taster UBC's needs will he leal-\nized ana provided h-i'.\near- I\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2r n- aim '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0< io- ei'-ai ],\u00E2\u0096\u00A0..-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2; t. i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 mm ma c -orvice ; I'u1'\na l\"l le ill 1, e crev.il -J l'\",C\natbllc.\none\nSardine-liks Life\nShared By Students\nCaiiblioaa ,n l'l)(\"\"s bar-\nr:m',e-bl;e l''orl and Acadia\n('a, i-,^ ;n-,, i, a,,,,- : |H, mini-\nmiini standards nauiired b>\nt' ie W'oi'Um, -a's ('oinpi nsat ion\nI'mai-b pir l.oaeiim Camp facilities.\nStudent'- in ice ramps must\n\"doiihl- ep' for nearly every-\nIhir.q a student serve-/ made\nlast month revenled. Sample\ns'a.tisiic',: scv^n men share\n' each wash ba.iir; 33 men share\nPiich baiiitub: 3'i each laundry\ntub: \"\"2 share eacli telephone.\nFigures cited v/oie obtained\nby dividing numb or of students by number of facilities.\n(''Mil a -11 --:11 a ai I ioard rules\nin., kc -l';'1 i co ail; a .us il lee,a I\nand nii'ti- - ' 11 <\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ei a - ,um n ane'\neons) i'!ict inn eanuis Sluden'\n\"re aici'ce -.\" \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 mii'i ! a I! within\nI bei r pi'i c. ' -1: ai - PAGE TEN\nTHE UBYSSEY\nWednesday, December 5, 1956\nIncome, Expenditures\nReveal UBC's Status\nWhere docs it come from and where does it go? Students\nat UBC, in their appeal to the Province for money for expansion, are asking thc question.\nThe total revnue received hy this university during the\nfiscal year 195-1-5-1 is as follow.;:\nGovernment of Canada\nB. C. Provincial (h.v't.\nStudent Fei -\nUniversity L*h-.b. a. 'o i\nUBC Services :ua.l Rentals\nOther\nGifts, Grants, Endowment.-;\nMiscellaneous\nTotal \t\nS riH0.fi52.30\n2,70n.0f.l).00\n1.-155 5:11.0\u00C2\u00B0)\n08.112.02\n70.SBB.17\n19,441.70\n1,112,050.18\n45,851.85\n6,062,505.91\nExpenditures for the same year were:\nS3.642.679.04\n1.396,684.31\nEducation academic salaries, etc.\nAdministration and Non-academic\nFellowships. Scholarships, Prizes\nand Bursaries 197,611.94\nResearch 601.476.69\nAu: biliary Enterprises 7,744.53\nMiscellaneous 216,318.40\nIt is to he noted here that none of thc money received\nhas been used for expansion. It can be seen by these figures\nthat none could be spared from the tight budget.\nAlso worthy of remark is the fact that under Canada's j\nconstitution, the BNA Act of 1867. education is the respon-1\nsibility of the Provincial Government.\nThe fathers of Confederation felt that provincial govern-j\nmenls could better decide what type of education their people !\nwant and need.\nYet the pit sent provincial government pays only \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 '<>' <\nel UBC's annual expenditure. The government and people ot\nB.C. must ask themselves if their responsibility is hoine, properly j\nWHILE B.C.'s ROOMING economy has\nboosted Provincial revenues and UBC enrollment to record heighls. UBC's share of\nthe Provincial revenue is dropping. Graph\nshow- .'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ky-rocketing enrollment. Will rev-\nc fiae follow suit?\nd.'scriargeu\nPresident Advocates .\nA Central University\nUBC President N. A. M. MacKenzie advocates \"a first-class\nuniversity first\" in answer to proposals for the establishment\no: a system of junior colleges throughout B.C.\nIn a statement made last V-------. \"\"\",.,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\n,,,.,, , \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 tactual size or numbers matter\nmonth, the President omphasiz-\nProvince Will Suffer If\nProfs' Low Wages Continue\ned tile advantages of centralized\nhigher education: \"Professional\n.schools and faculties . . . and the\nexpensive scientific laboratories\n', . . cannot be duplicated without great and expensive cost to\ntre taxpayers.\" he said.\n\"Only Vancouver and Victoria in British Columbia possess\nthe community facilities which\nare so necessary to higher education, both at the cultural and\nprofessional level.\" he said.\nSumiuin.a, up, the President\nstilted. \"I do not believe that the\nSTUDENTS VOICE\nFRESH APPEAL\nWe are appealing to you,\n'no people of B.C. for these\n'bines:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 That U B C b e allocated\n.adequate operating funds\u00E2\u0080\u0094lo\npay our profesors according\nfo their ability and to equip\ncur laboratories.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 That the present $10 million grant be made available\nin FIVE yjars\u00E2\u0080\u0094to complete\nIhe new Arts: building, build\na Medical Science building\n0 square feet. This is\nmade up of lecture and laboratory space.\nUBC has estimated that it\ncan !_ct along on 200 square\nlee tper student.\nUBC has at the present lime\nonly 103 sqaure ft et per stu-\ncm ONE HUNDRED square\nieel le than the absolute\nminimum.\nTEMPORARY\nIn all. ice I'nivi r~d\ is boused in alinoa '..din build'eus. Of\ntbe.se, 20 ar. pare a ie.,b 27 are\n- I'liii-permaneie . a id 1 b,i are\neaood-lrame bu'.s \- ; ieh v. co put\nnp to hold the post-war boom\no; veU nee. The huts are now\nmainly u>r:i lor individual lectures and for laboratory w, rk.\nHeaded by President Norman\nA. N. MacKenzie. there are moi\\u00C2\u00BB\nthan 7(i5 staff members, including professors, assistant prnfes-\n-ors, lei hirers and parl-ti.r.e special U'c'urar.-;. Wednesday, December 5, 1956\nWhen you've exciting things to do\nwear your\nft t\u00C2\u00BB '\nPAGE ELEVEN\nWANTED\nYour old double breasted suit\n. . . to be made into a smart\nnew single breasted inoaeJ\nwith the new trim notch lapel.\nUNITED TAILORS\n549 Granville PA. 4649\nEnjoy a pipe with\n**\nr\nOt\nU\nIf\nm):\nNew for Fall. . . super 70's fine\nBotany, new dressmakers, new\nfull-fashioned collars, new Pettal & ?/1 .\nOrlons, new hi-bulk heavy knits. In \"\nlambswool too, all full-fashioned,\nmothproof, shrinkproof\u00E2\u0080\u0094vibrant Fall\ncolours. At good shops everywhere.\n$6.95 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 $7.95 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 $8.95\nSIR WALTER\nRALEIGH\nMILD\nBURLEY\nTOBACCO\nat its best...\nTODAY\nFRIDAY\nmerry christmas\nsale\nAGGIE SWEATERS\nUBC JACKETS\nPENNANTS\nUBC SCARVES\nBOOSTER BEANIES\nyour\ncolle\nshop\n1111111 '\"^J\ni i k k i >\nSpecial Bargain\nCounter\nA Selection of\nGIFT items for\nboys and their\ngirl friends!\nalso XMAS CARDS\n1 i I I i l i 4\nIIP\n'XV^V., ''-.Va ;X>4-*y, -Va -'vVi'-'iS, .'.\nGirls' Track\nFormed\nTraining now in the UBC\nSiadium track under supervision\nj of Coach Pete Mullins. the new-\n! ly formed women's Track i\'.\i\\ncrew, alth >ii\"!i not in top lorin,\nand the UIjC Braves moved\nThe Police Pipe Band and the\nUBC band, complete with cheerleaders, will be present when\nthe team arrives at the airport.\nA reception for the UBC athletes\nand their guests has been tentatively arranged.\nTomahawks, under coach Dave\nFrost, unset a tough Kats team\n14-D at Balaclava, while Rcd-j\n.-kins tailed again in their struggle to notch their second win,\nbowing to Meralomas 0-0. Bob\nMorford's Papooses played their\nbest game to date, but dropped\na hard-fought game to Ex-Biits.\n6-3.\nTed Hunt and Donn Spence\nstrengthening each .scored two trys for Varsity.\nPaddy Sloan converted\nfor spring track and field com- three time*. Varsity played short\npetitions in which they will be' for part of the game when scrum\nrepresenting thc University of\na re\nFieici Team\nleg muscles and throwing arms I11110\"\nTuxedo Rentals\nWHITE COATS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 TAILS\nMORNING COATS\nDIRECTORS COATS\nSHIRTS- - ACCESSORIES\nE A LEE MAr- 2457\nE. M. kCC623 Howe St.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\" \ x\nW fre in>ua (jeniuA?\nMost people are not, but with training everyone can increase\ntheir reading skill. Speed reading can develop efficient\nreading comprehension and concentration. With speed reading skill you can read and understand business reports and\ncorrespondence with one reading, eliminating time-consuming review.\nA FREE scientific test will show you how speed reading\ncan lighten your reading load.\nWESTERN READING LABORATORY\n939 Hornby TAtlow 3720\nthink how proud you'll be..,\nUNIVERSITY PHARMACY LTD.\n5754 UNIVERSITY BLVD.\nJACK and MILLIE BURCHILL\nAL, 0339\nBritish Columbia for thc first\ntime in the history of women's\nsports.\nFormerly from various athletic clubs in B.C. and Alberta,\nthe girls will now work and\ntrain together under the auspices of the WAD in order to carry\nUBC colours in the coming athletic events, competing against\nthe Vancouver and New Westminster Olympic Clubs, Arctic\nand Western Sports clubs.\nA total of twelve girls have\nturned out for practices so far,\nwith five steady athletes training in hurdling \u00E2\u0080\u0094 outstanding is\nhalf Spence was knocked out.\nGary Sinclair moved in from\nwing three-quarters to play\nscrum half and did a fine job,\nfinishing the game there, although Spence returned.\nVarsity led 10-3 at the half on\ntrys by Hunt and Spence. The\nsecond half was scoreless until\nthe twenty-minute mark, when\nSinclair made a break close to\nthe scrum and sent Hunt away\nfor 40 yards and a try. Sloan\nthen kicked his third convert\nfrom squarely in front ot the\nposts, Spence scored his second\ntry minutes from lull-time when\nHunt broke through but passed\nout of the reach of both his\neasily dispensed with Rowing\ninto tho Bell-Irving Cup linal\nFitba Tied\nFor First\nBy IAN TODD\nUBC's soccer Birds moved\ninto a tie for first place with\nCapilanos in First Division Mainland League play Saturday at\nmuddy South Memorial Park\nwhen they dumped South Hill\n4-1.\nPat Powers who placed third in'centres, where Spence scooped\nthe Olympic trials high-jump.\n| Heather Walker who is next to\n! Vancouver Olympic star Alice\n| Whitty, and who competed in\nI the BEG games, and shot-put\nperformed by Diedre Fitzpat-\nrick.\nThe other two, Betty Best and\nBarb Hart, besides 7 others, are\ntraining in sprints and relays.\nPractices are every Thursday\ni at 4.30, competitions every three\nweeks in the spring and through-\nj out the summer. There was\nsome question as to whether the\ngirls would represent UBC in\nsummer events or would compete for the other Vancouver\nSHEAFFERS\nDot Snorkel pen\nthe ball off the ground and\nscored in the corner. Jerry Mc-\nGavin's kick for goal from the\nsidelines was short.\nBraves ran and passed an outclassed Ex-Tech XV into defeat\nat Balaclava, scoring seven trys\nand converting only once. Dave\nHoward scored his first of two\ntrys, breaking away down the\nsidelines fo rthe 50 yards. Marc\nBell's convert attempt from a\nbad angle was wide. Minutes\nlater. Howard again broke clear\nbut passed inside to forward\nJack Ward, who ran the remaining ten yards to score his second\ntry in nine seasons of rugby.\nBell's kick at goal from in front\nClubs, but now that the women's j of the posts was low. Ian Stew-\nTrack and Field team is defin-[ art, of football fame, scored the\nitely under the WAD constitu- j third try of the game, taking a\ntion, they will compete as a University team.\nSheaffer's White Dot is a\nreminder that no one owns finer\nwriting equipment than yours.\nEven more important is the\nconfidence you feel with each\nword you write. There's a\nSheaffer White Dot Snorkel\nPen at your price. Why\nnot make one yours?\nOnly the retractable filling\ntube touches the Ink.\nThe point itayi clean\nCHANDRA WINS TABU\nTENNIS THREE TO ONE \\nChandra Madho Singh won \\nthe Intramural table tennis tournament for the second year in\na row yesterday when he defeated Wade Radi/.kov.ski three\ngames to one.\nChandra represented Fort\nCamp, which will make it the\nthird year that Camp players'\nhave won the tourney.Hah! Engineers, what have you got to\nsay about that?\n20?b OFF\non every purchase\nTO ALL STUDENTS\nThis offer expires\nNovember 15th\nPOINT GREY\nJEWELLERS\n4435 W. 10th AL. 4336\ncross-kick from Bruce Allardyce\nand scoring between the posts.\nRoll made no mistake on the\nconvert, to make the score 13-0\nat the half.\nSTEWART SCORES '\nBraves opened the scoring in\nthe second half as Ron Stewart\nsurprised the Tech forwards,\nwho were trying to put more\npressure on the UBC backs, by\ncarrying the ball from a lineout\ninstead of passing back to his\nscrum-half. Stewart went ten\nyards to score in the corner, and\nBell could not make good on the\nlong convert.\nAllardyce scored Braves' sixth\ntry of the afternoon, completing\na long running and dribbling\nrush which carried eighty yards..\nBell's convert was barely ]\nwide of the posts, but minutes\nlater he kicked a beautiful pen-,\nalty goal from the identical spot.\nMerlin Hawes tallied the final\nBrave try in the dying seconds,\nand Mike Fox's convert just1\nmissed. j\nMarc Bell, playing his second j\ngame of the afternoon, led Tom-1\nahawks to their victory over]\nKats, scoring three trys. Ed\nPrice also scored a try for the,\nFIRST GOAL\n'Birds first goal came with\nless than 15 minutes gone in the\nfh'st half. Ken Ferrier slipped\nan on-thc-ground pass across the\n.;oal-nioutli from the left corner\nwhich centre forward Colin\nArnot banged home.\nTen minutes later Ferrier was\nin the act again, this time scoring himself, driving home a\ncross from outside right Freddy\nGreen that both Arnot and Ashdown were unable to rea all.\nFERRIER AGAIN\nSouth Hill's lone goal came\nwith ten minutes remaining in\nthe half on a break-away that\ngave goal tender Clive Hughes\nno chance.\nBelter Conditioned\n'Birds again showed their\nsuperior conditioning in the\nsecond half when they ran South\nHill into the ground. The third\ngoal came from the powerful\nleft foot of Bruce Ashdown on a\ndirect free kick from twenty-five\nyards out.\nFOURTH GOAL\nVarsity's fourth and final goall\nwas scored by opportunist Colinl\nj Arnot who banged in the rebound from fullback Sivert|\nEricson's hard shot.\nBest for the 'Birds were left|\nwing Ken Ferrier, centre forward Colin Arnot, centre halfl\nJohn Cervi, and left half Frank]\nIacobucci.\nPenguins Tough\nChfefs met a team that was\njust too much for them to handle\non Sunday, when they went\ndown bv a score of 4 to 0 to\nPenguins. Chiefs played well,\nbut were not up to the superiorl\nteam-work and conditioning of|\nthe Penguins. \"Of course,\nCoach Bruce Ashdown stated,\n\"the Penguins have lots of timc|\nto practice, and do so every day.\nRETRACTION\nContrary to all reports, Capt.,\nBill Smith was allowed to return|\nto UBC with the remainder of|\nTommies, and Roger Kronquist|\nconverted one of Bell's trys.\nAn MAC ruling which prc-B\nvents any UBC teams from playa\ning after December 1 may pre\nvent the Braves from playing\nthe final next week, unless tbt\nmembers vote in favour ot mak\ning an exception.\nBraves opponents will be Met\nalomas Seconds, and the matclj\nwill be played on Sunday b<\ncause of the Shrine game. It il\nthe only scheduled game fol\nUBC teams. Wednesday. December 5, 1956\nTHE UBYS S E Y\nPAGE FIFTEEN\nWestern Vikings Champs;\nJayvees Drop First Game\nFRIDAY\nUBC 6G - Eile-s 61\n' \V?',ievn 83 - Alberni 09\nSATURDAY\nWestern 56 - UBC 40\nAlborni 71 - Eilerr, 57\nBy RALPH CROZIER\n\'\jC Tni.nrierbirds lost their\nTotu.i t'ophy to a po-.vert'ui\nWesiern Washington bask.'tball\nteam Saturday at Memorial\nGym.\nTheir chance of retaining the\nti'le 'hey won last year came t >\nji sudden and disastrous end in\nthe las' te:i mhuites ol the final\ngr.me Saturday afternoon.\nUp till that point it looked like\ntl.a Birds just might repeat. They\nbeat Eilers (iti-fil Friday night\nto advance to the finals against\nWestern Washington Vikings.\n83-69 victors over Alberni.\nThe Birds jumped into a lead\nearly in the game. But, as the\nsolid Western defence stymied\nBirds scoring thrusts and the\nheftier Vikings controlled the\nbackboards. UBC gradually drop,\nlied bi hind.\n.After spotting the Viking.- a\n.'11-24 halftinie lead Birds cam\"\nroaring back in the third (pan lev\nto (ir,.w even and, \ ( ry lire l'w\nwent ahead.\nBut in those last ten niinuW a\nthe Bird offence folded completely. Their shooting went\nsour, their passes went astray,\nand they lost all their poise and\nconfidence. While the helpless\nTnunderbirds floundered, Western poured it on to run up a\nfinal score of 56-40.\nIn retrospect, however, the\nBirds did not look like a championship team in either game.\nSHOOTING POOR\nFriday night Eilers gave them\na tough battle before bowing by\nonly five points. If the Jewelers':\nshooting had not been so poor in:\nthe first half, UBC would probably not have reached the finals.,\nOnly a 1'*' l-time switch in\nstrategy saved the Birds against\nFilers' second half onslaught.1\nUBC went into a no-post offence I\nwhich worked much better\nagain;.' the loose-checking Jewelers.\nAs il was, Ihe game was in\ndoubt until Barry Drummond\nsank two free throws with only;\n15 si'ciaiuls left.\nIn hotb games the Birds frequently seemed disorganized.\nThey weren't hitting from the\noutside and had trouble getting\ne!o-e-in shots.\nThere were some bright spol-,\nin an otherwise rather disappointing performance . The\nt\"a,n continued to hit a very\ngood percenlage of their foul\n-aiot-a Lyall Le\,v came through\nwith a 22-point ciieri against\nFilers and Barry Druniniond was\nwry solid in both game-, lie\nhad Li points against Western\nand 1 1 again-l Filers.\nThis was the Bii ds\" lasl game\nbefore Christmas. Considering\nthe weekend's showing, they\nneed a lot more work belore\nliuy will be ready for the E.er-\ngreen Conference.\nStill they have shown flashes\nof brilliance and, with the return of floor general Ed Wiide,\nshould be much steadier.\nWestern: Kniggs, 4; Radcliff,\n12; Nelson, 10; Reimcr, 8: Potro-\nsik. 16; Thompson, Randall,\nSchott. 4; Martin, 2; Schiele, Ol\ncott, Santini. Total\u00E2\u0080\u009456.\nJayvee hoopsters suffered\ntin ir lir.-t loss of the season\nwhen they dropped a close 63-60,\n\"ontest to Cloverdale Hillsides\nFriday night at Cloverdale.\nThe win boosted Cloverdale\ninto a first place tie with Ja\-\nvoes who have two wins ana a\nloss. Cloverdale has a 2-U won-\n1 lost record.\nCoach Peter Mullins took full\nresponsibility for the Jayvee\nloss. \"My team was weak on\nbasic fundamentals that I should\nhave taught them,\" he said. The:\nUBC team had several opportunities to win but muffed them.\nMullins also released a statement concerning the numerous;\ncomparisons between the Thun-\nderoird squad and the Jayvees\n. by downtown sports writers.\ni \"The Birds have the best team I\nJin the city right now. They!\nwould beat us by 20 points,'' he\n! said.\nj Jayvees are leaving their\n: mark on the league's individual\n[scoring. After the first three\n! games, Ken Winslade is tied for\ntop place with Ray Goodwin of\n: the Eilers with 44 points. SeaFun's Oddy is second with 28\npoints and Ray Gailloux of Jayvees i-' third with 24.\nVarsity Tops\nIn Tourney\nTop UBC badminton talent\nentered in the Vancouver and\nDistrict Badminton Championships held at the Vancouveri\nClub over the weekend and outstanding performer for the University was singles star, Charlotte Warren. She slammed her\nway to the finals of the Women's\nOpen Singles bracket forcing\ntop-seeded veteran Claire Lovett\nto three games before giving way I\nto Lqvctt's experience, in a\nthreatening score of 11-5, 7-11,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 3-11. Warren and Lovett teamed\nup in the Ladies' Open doubles;\nto lose out to the perennial win-1\nners, Lois Reid and Jean Bards-\nley. '\nIan Lammont. UBC's outstanding men's singles player, took the\nmen's A singles crown quite decidedly, by beating out Tom\nMerdith of the Raquet.-; Club\n1.1-:!, 16-17, la-6, and readied;\nUBC Brav.s mane a eiean lh(, lilKlls oI th(, A mix(,d with\nsweep o! their Vancouver Is- partner Shirlev '.UcKelvev, only\nland tour last weekend. Friday t() ]()S0 ,1ri mak,h bv (,1U, p(|in(\nm-hl l'!\"'.v heal Victoria High m an exciting three game mara-\nfrvRvitrmriiri St'i\">\"1 on tip-ins. Chuck Forbes reached the A I\nstrong for 111- opposition goalie. In Si'\"day's contest, the low mixed semis, finally forced out'\nColleen Keilm Ruth Orton and sea, h .'pia the slowness of by Houghland and Lee 8-15.\nBarb Hart, each netting one goal.' i'm gam \"his was partly due 10-15\nTne UBC' No. 1 eleven are sec- to the zone-defence put up by ' In City Badminton League\nond next to Ex Kits in the City Cliemainus and partly to the play. UBC No. 1 shuttle squad\nLeague, which is the only fact that the players were tired squelched the UBC No 3 netters\norganized women's grass hockey, after Saturday's post-game .cole- over the weekend by 12. panics |\nleague in Canada, i bmtions? to 0.\nRef, Clippers\nBeat Icemen\nUBC ice men were handed an\n8-4 beating by Nanaimo Clipoer.s\nand Nanaimo referee, Saturday\nnigiil in the second game of an\nexhibition ,-eries at Nanaimo. -\nThe game was tied ball going\ninto the third period. Jim St ragman, lefl-wingor for the Bird.,,\ngot tangled up wiih a Nanaimo\ndefenceniau and was promp'ly\nhanded a 10-niin ite misconduct\nwhile the Nanaimo player sat\nout for two minutes.\nThen the lireworks staided.\nFiery Bird pucksters started raz-\nr.ing the referees who had been\ncalling poor delusions all night.\nResult'.' Three more misconducts\nand four major penalties before\nthc third period was over.\nCoach Ron Donnelly termed\nthe calls \"home town decisions''\nand \"cheap penalties.\"\nMike Tensley played a brilliant game in the net for UBC.\nHe stopped 21 shots in the first\nperiod, and 16 in each of the\nsecond and third.\nBirds play two more exhibition games against Nanaimo in\nJanuary.\nIn league play. Birds beat\nRCU 4-2 Sunday morning lo take\npossession of first place again.\nDouble Breasted\nTuxedos\nConvi ned into New\nSINGLE BREASTED\nMODELS\nNew Silk Facing\nUNITED TAILORS\n549 Granville PA. 6449\nCROWD waiting under basket includes UBC's McCallum\nleft) and Eilers Ray Goodwin (11). Logan Tait .stands with\nback to camera. Note screaming thousands in stands.\nSPORTS EDITOR\nBy BRUCE ALLARDYCE\nBraves Unbeaten\nIsland Hoop Tour\nGirls Dump\nIn\nWATTS\nand Co. Ltd.\nNew Address\n878 HORNBY ST.\nReady to serve our\ncustomers with n e w\ncostumes and formal\nwear for:\nHOLIDAY\nPARTIES\nRegular Student Rates\nurday and Sunday heat Ci\nmaitnis Kl-411 and aO-iil). cl,lb T.,;imm(lllt ;llld McKelvcy\nTIm' three wins gave Braves led at the beginning of the third\nPITMAN OPTICAL\nLTD.\n9 Specialists in frame\nstyling\n# Prescriptions duplicated\n# Safety lenses\n# Contact lenses\n# Repairs\nGround Floor\nVancouver Block\n734 Granville St.\nMA. 0928 MA. 2948 PAGE SIXTEEN\nT V v T'llYSUFY\nWednesday, December 5, 1956\nInco Metals at work in Canada\nThe development of stainless steel has produced many with Inco Nickel are a good example. They not only steel sinks, using nickel supplied l\\ Inco. has become\nremarkable changes in both the appearance and con- brighten and hoa nut's the kitchen, they make house- a thriving induMrs in Canada, providing employment\nvenience of Canadian homes. Stainless steel sinks made hold tasks far easier. The manufacture ol' stainless for mans Canadians.\nfor half a million Canadian sinks\nStainless stee! sinks made with\nInco Nickel help provide jobs in Canada\nA*\nINCO\n\\nWrite for a free copy of\ndie illustrated booklet\n\"The Romance of Nickel\".\n* Rased on a .survey eoih/uele,/ hy\nCtiiithliini Crow-Section, cm utliliate\na I /lie (ml iu/> Poll.\nTon soars ago. hardly tins homos in Canada had\nstainless stool sinks. Bui a loss Canadian lnuf-es\ isos\ntried thc uess sinks ami thought the> were wonderful\n--wouldn't stain or chip, wore so easy to keep origin\nand clean, and hosi o\' all. glasses and dishes thai\nwore accidentally dropped didn't break as easily.\nThai was the beginning of a new and thriving\nCanadian industry. Today, most o\' the new homes\nbeing built in Canada have Canadian-made stainless\nsteel sinks. Anil pt\te!ieallv all oj these sinks contain\nIneo Nickel.\nOre from the mines near Sudburv. Ontario, is milled,\nsmehed and refined bv Inco here in Canada. Refined\nnickel is sold to other ('.inauian companies to make\nstainless steel. This stainless steel goes to ihe\nCanadian firms that make the sinks. And Canadian\nbuilders install them in the homes.\nThese operations -from the time the ore is mined\nuntil thc finished sink is installed \u00E2\u0080\u0094 provide jobs for\nthousands of Canadian workmen. That's how Inco\nNickel helps promote the growth and development\nof industry in Canada.\nTHE INTERNATIONAL NICKEL COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED\n25 KING STREET WEST, TORONTO\nI'roilitecr cf Inco Mekel, Xiekcl Alloys, ORC Brand Copper, Cohalt, Tellurium, Selenium, Jroi (he and Platinum, Palladium and other Precious Metals."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1956_12_05"@en . "10.14288/1.0124473"@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 .