"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-07-24"@en . "1959-11-27"@en . "Misprinted volume, should be XLII."@en . ""@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0124566/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " NO\n-I FU^\n27\nVOL. LXVH\nTHE UB YSSEY\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0r' VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1959\nNo. 3Q\nUBC Aids Cancer Probe\nStudents Cough Up\nFor Lung Researchers\n\"When shall we three meet again, in Thunder, lightning or in rain?\"\nmascot, to AMS President Peter Meekison and AUS Dognapper.\nasks Thunder, UBC\nLast Minute Dognapping\nFails To Stifle Thunder\nBy FRANK TINDENIGG\nUbyssey Staff Reporter\nIt was exactly noon (that's\n12:30 UBC time).\nFrom every corner of the campus, students eagerly rushed forward to watch the great event\nabout to take place.\nPeter Meekison, the president\nof the student body, was to invest Thunder, the Wonder Dog,\nas mascot of UBC at a gala noon-\nhour ceremony in the lounge of\nthe Brock Hall.\nGreat throngs of students\ncrowded the hall to cheer the\ncunning canine on to victory and\nlasting fame. The president\nmounted the stage with all the\npomp and ' dignity customary\nwith such a position. He proudly began to read his speech:\n\"On this momentous and auspicious occasion, we are gathered here in the sanctity (I hope) of\nthe Brock. The engineers are\nsupposed to invest in us, trust in\nman's best friend, a DOG. This\ncreature has through eons remained faithful to man.\n\"We should not take this action lightly. For this fine specimen of dog flesh will for the balance of the year have free access\nto the luxurious heated Library\nLily (real ones) Pond along with\nsundry others.\n\"This dog was selected from\namong the many other fine candidates to be our true and loyal\nfriend whether or not he smells.\n\"I do now officially invest\nThunder as mascot of this fine\ncampus.\"\nMacKenzie Attends\nCarnegie Conference\nPresident MacKenzie has just returned from a meeting\nof Carnegie Endowment for the Advancement of Teachers.\nDr. MacKenzie attended the\nconference in the capacity of\nchairman of the Board of Directors.\n\"The President also has the\nhonour of being the only Canadian on the board,\" said his secretary.\n; The conference, held in New\nYork on November 17 and 18,\nhad as its main topic of discussion, \"All Universities in International Affairs.\"\nIn addition the delegates were\naddressed by the U.S. Secretary\nof State for Health, Welfare and\nEducation, Arthur Fleming.\nWhile in New York, Dr. MacKenzie attended the Teachers* Insurance and Annuity annual\nmeeting on November 19 and 20.\nThis organization looks after the\npension plans of all American\nand some Canadian universities.\nEn route home, the President\nattended a meeting of the executive council of the Canadian University Foundation.\nThis council, which is attended by representatives from all\nCanadian universities, discussed\nFederal Grants.\nThat is what should have happened.\nInstead the President staggered\nonto the stage and sorrowfully\nadmitted the distressing news\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nTHUNDER HAD BEEN KIDNAPPED!\nHysterical wails and tear-\nsodden lamenting followed. Girls\nsought the support of the distraught but well - controlled\nmales and proceeded to let loose\ntheir emotions.\nEarly that morning a cruel ransom note was found pinned to\nthe Ubyssey's office door.\nIt said:\n\"We have kidnapped Thunder,\nyour would-be mascot, and are\nholding him for the following\nransom:\n\"ONE CAN OF FOOD\u00E2\u0080\u0094to be\ndonated to the AMS Food Drive\nin aid of Central City Mission,\nfor each member of the Ubyssey\nStaff and Student Council.\n\"When you have paid the ransom, we will return Thunder to\nbe installed as UBC mascot for\nthis year.\"\nWithout delay the entire staff\nwas alerted and a widespread\nsearch of the campus began. Not\nwanting to break the newspapers\nage-old tradition, Irene Frazer\nand Elaine Bissett volunteered\nto try their best and apprehend\nthe abductors.\nHowever, the search proved\nfutile.\nAt exactly 2 p.m. Thunder reappeared.\nWho had kidnapped him and\nwhy had they returned him?\nThe people responsible for\nhis heartless abduction were two\nofficers of Associated Women's\n(Continued on Page 3)\nBy NORMAN LANE\n(Ubyssey Staff Reporter)\nResearch workers in UBC's\nDepartment of Pathology today\nappealed to students to aid them\nin a project which may result in\ndevelopment of a. test for lung\ncancer.\nSamples of lung sputum are\nrequired from 100 smokers and\n100 non-smokers on which to\nrun tests.\nResearchers emphasized that\nsaliva would not be acceptable.\nDeep sputum coughed up from\nthe lungs will be required.\nStudents who volunteer for the\ntests will be given a form to fill-\nout and a small vial in which to\nspit whenever they are able to\ndredge some up from the lungs.\nCollection of samples will begin Monday between 9 a.m. and\n5 p.m. in the Department of\nPathology\u00E2\u0080\u0094Hut B3\u00E2\u0080\u0094at the corner of the main mall and University Boulevard.\n\"Collection will continue until enough specimens have been\ngathered,\" said Dr. Charles Culling.\nHe added that people with\ncoughs would have no trouble\ncoughing up about 500= of the\ndesired specimens with one good\nexpectoration.\nThe use of students was suggested by Dr. Taylor, head of the\ndepartment. The research is under the joint direction of Doctors\nPhilip Vassar and Charles Culling.\nThe project is based on UBC\nresearchers' findings that if the\ndrug terramycin is given to a\npatient, it will localize in a cancer tumor where it is collected\nby a type of scavenging cell.\nUnder ultraviolet light these\nscavenging cells fluoresce or\nglow and it is hoped that a diagnostic test for cancer will be\ndeveloped using this method.\nThese researchers have discovered that nanother substance\nwhich causes the cells' to fluoresce in non-cancer cases may be\ncontained in tobacco smoke.\nIf only the samples taken\nfrom smokers fluoresce, it will\nprobably mean that the substance in tobacco smoke remains\nin the lungs long enough for the\nscavenging cells to pick it up\nand this knowledge in itself will\n(Continued on Page 6)\nDR. HAROLD E. TAYLOR\nProfessor and Head of Pathology,\nNew Medical\nLab Opened\nThe official opening of the\nG. F. Strong Laboratory for\nMedical Research is being held\ntoday at UBC's medical school\nbuilding in the Vancouver General Hospital.\nThe laboratory equipment,\nvalued at $61,000, was donated\nto the university by the B.C.\nMedical Research Institute,\nwhich now has become the B.C...\nMedical Research Foundation. .\nDr. Strong, who died in 1957,\nwas one of the founders of the\nBCMRI. He was one of B.C.'s\nleading heart specialists and the\nfirst clinical professor of medicine named to the University's\nmedical faculty, formed in 1951\u00C2\u00BB:\nMiss Barbara Strong, his daughter, will unveil a plaque in the-\nnew laboratory.\nPresident MacKenzie and\nNorman English, chairman of\nthe BCMRF, will speak at the\nceremony.\nBONNER SPEAKS\nAttorney-General Robert Bonner will speak on Bill 43 in\nthe Brock Lounge Wednesday\nat 12:30.\nThere will be a .question\nperiod afterwards.\nUBC RINK TRIUMPHS\nIN TOTEM BONSPIEL\nUBC's Jack Aret rink defeated the Cartmell rink 8-7\nyesterday in Evergreen meet of the Totem bonspiel to move\ninto today's semi-final round undefeated.\nToday's victory over Cartmell's veteran crew was\nachieved in an extra end.\nWednesday Arnet rolled past the Montgomery rink\n10-4 without the final end.\nThe squad from UBC has now won nine matches\nwithout a loss.\nArnet, the skip, is ably backed up by Bob Christie,\nthird; Jack Lures, second; and Terry Miller, lead. PAGE TWO\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, November 27, 1959\nTHE UBYSSEY\nAuthorized as second class mail by Post Office Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS\n.Published three times a week throughout the University year in Vancouver\nby the Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C.\nEditorial opinions expressed are those of the Editorial Board of Tie Ubyssey\nand not necessarily those of the Alma Mater Society or the University of B.C.\nTelephones: Editorial offices, AL. 4404; Locals 12, 13 and 14;\nBusiness offices, AL. 4404; Local 15.\nEditor-in-Chief: R. Kerry White\nv Associate Editor -^-^ .. Elaine Bissett\nj Managing Editor Del Warren\n^ .News Editor-, _ Bob Hendrickson\nC.U.P. Editor Irene Frazer\nClub's Editor Wendy Barr\nFeatures Editor Sandra Scott\nHead Photographer '. Colin Lahdie\nr \" Photography Editor - Roger McAfee\n7 Senior Editor: Farida Sewell\n\"! : Reporters and Desk:\n-r Derek Allen, George Railtoh, Dick Schuler, Diane Greenall,\n: Eviynn Jackson, Vladimir Elias Romanchych, Norman Lane,\n; Pete Cruikshahk, Frank Findehigg, Ed Lavalle\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0j \u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-MEfclT'ORIAL-\n[ This paper brings the publication of the Ubyssey\n{to the close for this term. Our first issue for the New\nYear will appear January 5th.\n; For the past three months the staff of the Ubyssey\n'has been primarily concerned with organization, training,\nv1and reporting as many important campus activities as\npossible. Now that we are reasonably organized and now\nthat our offices have been renovated, we can concentrate\non bringing the calibre of the paper up to a higher standard. The only resolution we make is that we should\nendeavor to reach this standard.\nTo those of you who noticed our many errors we\napologize and give a token of thanks for leniency. We\nalso thank the Students' Council for its cooperation and\napoligize for our leniency. The Administration and the\nBUildiflgs ahd Grounds Department also deserve holly\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 wreaths for the fine work they have done in helping us\n'publish this paper. We wish we could send thanks to the\n'Faculty, but unfortunately they did nothing, as far as\nthe Ubyssey is concerned, to deserve it. We $incerely\nhope this situation will be rectified next term.\nIn conclusion, the Staff and the Editorial Board of\n\"the Ubyssey sends their best wishes for a very merry\nChristmas and a rewarding New Year to all members of\nthis university.\nLETTERS TO THE EDITOR\nThe \"Editor,\nThe Ubyssey.\nDear Sir:\nJohn Northfield is to be congratulated on his skillful parody of the \"fraternity man's\"\nmentality. However, if Mr.\n\"Northfield is opposed to the\n<5reek societies, that is his per-\nSTATEMENT OF TOLlCY\nThe Ubyssey.is at all times\n\"glad to print provocative editorial material as long as it is\nsigned and typewritten. The\n.deadline for such material is\n12:30 p.m. any day.\nOpinions expressed in guest\neditorials, letters to the editor and editorial columns are\nriot necessarily those of the\nUbyssey.\nThe Ubyssey will not publish letters to the editor unless they are signed and typewritten. Pseudonyms will be\nused on occasion, but not unless the author's identity is\nknown to the Ubyssey.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094R. fc. WHITE\nsonal concerns, but I feel he\nmay have seriously injured the\nreputation of the Commerce\nfaculty. Readers may misinterpret his motive, and as a\nresult of his signing himself as\na fourth year student of this\nfaculty, conclude that Commerce undergraduates really\ndo reason on their bovine\nlevel.\nSincerely,\nW. J. Arnason,\nCommerce II.\nThe Editor,\nThe Ulbyssey.\n' Dear Sir:\nI, too, dislike the Greek\nletter societies but have not the\nSwiftian talent of Mr. John\nNorthfield to express my dislike.\nI particularly enjoyed the\nmasterful satire on the arguments of the fraternity apologists in his presentation of the\nconstructive aspects of fraternity activities.\nYour truly,\nD. Sigurgeirson,\nArts III\".\nJh&t gall foA\n\ . . .\nBIRD\nCALLS\nSO EtuniA\ntB/wck diall\n4077 West 13th Ave:\nVancouver 8, B.C.\nThe Editor,\nThe Ubyssey.\nDear Sir:\nIn reply to Mr. Rocchini's\nletter in the Tuesday paper\nconcerning alcohol on campus, >\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nI would like to mention a few\npoints.\nFirst, in comparing the Continent and Canada, in the\nalcoholic sense, student or\notherwise, it must be remembered that there is a difference\nin attitude towards alcohol, as\nwell as other things on either\nside of the Atlantic. Continental Europe drinks for taste,\nsupplementing the meal,\nwhereas Canada and the USA\ntend to guzzle themselves into\ninebriation and an imitation\nhappiness. In other words, we\nare not as mature in outlook\nas our European neighbours,\neither as students or as a\nsociety.\nSecondly, dealing with our\ncampus specifically, when our\nmature students, rooted in the\nBrock Hall Gallery sit with\ntheir feet resting on and innocently gouging the top of a\nrather expensive Danish coffee\ntable, it is a Wonder we trust\nthem with drinking water, let\nalone firewater. The plastic\nwire fences or corrals paralleling our sidewalks and protecting our campus lawns also indicate that we still require\nsome degree of guidance.\nIn short, we are not ready\nfor a beer or a bar.\nYour sincerely,\nNorman Pearson,\nArts III.\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey,\nDear Sir,\nThis necessary reply will\nundoubtedly cause considerable\ndisturbance in the narrow mind\nof our puritan friend, Mr. Ome\nlusik. It indeed anguishes me\nto see his mind being preverted\nby the so-called pornogranhic\npublicity gracing Buchanan's\nblackboards.\nFirstly, the advertisements,\nof which technicolor examples\nwere supplied by our psychology-aware author, are much\nmilder than any to be read on\nthe billboards of down-town\ntheatres. By the time we reach\nuniversity, a few sensation-seeking Words (only for the sake of\npublicizing the film) should not\nresult in a harmful and shocking impression on the average\nstudent's mind.\nSecondly, the statement that\nthe \"alleged intent\" of Cinema\n'16' is to present high quality\nfilms, is true. It is their intention (and I have personally\nheard this from one of the executive members) to bring foreign experimental films of the\nbest quality for viewing on our\ncampus. To date, the films presented have not only been film-\nfestival prize-winners in Europe, but were excellent examples of cinematic achiev-\nments in all respects. Acting,\ndirecting and photography were\nbrilliantly executed in each\ncase.\nCinema '16' has another ingredient that is essential to the\nenjoyment of a film. Namely,\nseeing and hearing the film.\nFilmsoc on the other hand\nseems to completely lack this.\nFilmsoc however does make\ntheir films more interesting and\nchallenging in the following\nways:\n1. Showing the ending before the middle.\n2. Leaving out sections of the\nfilm.\n3.. Omitting the sound.\n4. Stopping the film at the\nmost suspenseful moment.\n5. Playing waltz music as\nnews background.\nThese advantages however add\nzest and humour, as well as\ngiving the audience a chance\nto use their colourful imaginations and to further develop\ntheir psychic powers.\nThese and other interesting\nfacets of an evening in the auditorium have abruptly ended\nmy patronage- of Filmsoc, as\nthey have undoubtedly done to\nnumerous other students.\nTo our narrow-minded Film-\nsoc-Fan, a note to ponder on.\nBefore you set out to condemn\nanything, investigate.first and\ntry to Use that large mess of\njelly in your cranium to its\nfurthest capabilities. , Do rtot\nplease, persecute the quality\nand purpose of these films until\nyou have seen a sample of, as\nyou ignofantly termed them,\n'back-alley' material.\nIn closing, I sincerely hope\nthat Cinema'16' will in the future continue to present such a\nhigh calibre Of films, attract a\nlarger clientele, find financial\nsuccess and give Filmsoc some\nhealthy and much-needed competition.\nCinematically yours,\nFrank Findenigg.\nThe Editor,\nThe Ubyssey,\nDear Sir:\nIn answer to what seems to\nbe an Artsman's dubious attempt to fill your columns\nwith nonsensical controversies,\non silly subjects, I reply.\nNow everyone knows that\nEngineers are the finest men\non earth, so there can be no\ndoubt that Mr. Fast's motives\nWere Of the highest in suggesting that an additional institution should be provided for\nus. However this raises a question as to who would carry on\nthe operation of the University\nin our absence?\nBy George, Mr. Fast, you\nmight have a wee bit of\ntrouble in your quest for the\nultimate truths, i.e. \"Was\nWillie really a poor salesman?,\" if we weren't around.\nThere would be no one to keep\nyour girl friend content while\nyou were pursuing Chaucer, no\none to provide the quarter-a-\ndozen empties to buy a new\nturtleneck cashmere, no one to\ncleanse you annually. Ah, what\na terrible drab life it would\nbe!\nCan you imagine a cafeteria\ndevoid of red sweaters? Nothing but a lot of sombre Arts-\nmen peering into empty coffee\n-cups wondering what IT is\nreally for.\nJJo, Richard, the answer lies\nnot in ridding the campus of\nEngineers\u00E2\u0080\u0094it lies instead in\ntrying, in a kind, intellectual\nway, to understand. We in Engineering really aren't so bad.\nOccasionally we \"even think,\nand when we do to employ all\nyou Artsmen in the profitable\nbusiness you mention. Yes,\nRichard, there is a Santa Claus\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094in fact 1,000 of them.\nInstead of having an electric\nexperience over coffee, why\nnot jog over to the Engineer\ning Building right now? We\nhave a big surprise in store\nfor you At the same time you\nmight permit us a peek, so that\nwe may confirm our theory\nthat the anatomy of an Arts-\nman is slightly different than\nthat of an Engineer.\nYour Sincerely,\nGerry Raggett,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Eng. 1,\nThe Editor,\nThe Ubyssey.\nDear Sir:\nMany persons on this campus seem to think that Carl\nRenix was the person wh\u00C2\u00BB\nstole the painting which were\non exhibition at the Library\nArt Gallery. Mr. Renix, whom\nI have known since early childhood, is a man of impeccable\nmoral standing. In any case, I\ncan personally refute these outrageous accusations. Mr. Rertix\nwas aboard my yacht, the \"Hil-\nmar\", on a cruise through the\nGulf Islands throughout the\nentire weekend when the said\npaintings were stolen.\nYours sincerely,\nJohn B. L. Robertson,\nArts IV.\nThe Editor,\nThe Ubyssey.\nDear Sir:\nThere is a completely falsi\nstory circulating that Carl\nRenix was responsible for the\nrecent theft of paintings from\nthe UBC library. Anyone familiar with Carl's character will\nrecognize this as a vicious lie.\nFurthermore, it would not have\nbeen possible for him to do\nthis, since at the time of the\ntheft he was hunting bear\nwith me north of Kleena-\nKleene (in the Cariboo).\nYours truly,\nPeter Fraser,\nLaw II.\nThe Editor,\nThe Ubyssey.\nDear Sir:\nWe have kidnapped \"Thunder\", your \"would-be-mascot\"\nand are holding him for the\nfollowing ransom: One can of\nfood to be donated to the AMS\nCanned Food Drive in aid of\nCentral City Mission, for each\nmember of The Ubyssey staff\nand Student Council. This ransom must be presented in organized manner on the front\nporch of Brock Hall, Friday,\nNovember 27th, at 12:30. At\nthis time, we will return Thunder to you in order to be installed as UBC mascot for\n1959-60.\n(Signed) Associated Women\nStudents of the\nUniversity of British\nColumbia.\nThe Editor,\nThe Ubyssey.\nDear Sir:\nIt has' been strongly suggested by several usually reliable sources that my good\nfriend Carl Renix stole $40,000\nin art treasure from the UBC\nLibrary. This rumour is quite\nuntrue as Carl was with me\nshopping in Seattle during the\nentire weekend of the 14th of\nNovember and therefore could\nnot possibly have assisted with\nthe theft. -\nYours very truly,\nJohn S. Buttfield,\nLaw II. Friday, November 27, 1959\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPAGE THREE\nPosition Open\nFor Ad Chief\nThe Ubyssey ..needs an Advertising Manager.\nWithout one we cannot put\nout a paper, and the former\nmanager has resigned.\nThis is a lucrative opportunity\nfor someone.\nAd managers get paid on an\nincreasing sliding scale of commissions, starting at 10 percent\nof the net advertising revenue.\nHe will take up his new duties\non Jan. 4, 1960.\nIf you are interested, apply to\nJim Horsman, Co-Ordinator of\nPublications, in the Publications\noffice in the Brock, room 201,\nbetween 12:30 and 1:30, November 27 to 30, or see him before\nDec. 4.\nExperience in the field of advertising is preferred but not\nessential.\nTHUNDER\n(Continued from Page 1)\nStudents, Fran Charkow and\nCherryl White.\nThey cunningry kidnapped the\nheartbroken dog, transported him\nto Mike Davies' car and sped\naway to Stanley Park. There he\nwas allowed to roam at will\nuntil 2 p.m.\nThunder was then officially\ninvested as our mascot and carried away on the shoulders (?)\nof the cheering mob.\nPeter Meekison is pinned to\nAWS President Patti Darling.\nMATZ & WOZNY\n548 Howe Si. MU 3-4715\nSpecial to Students\n$20.00 and up\nPURE WOOL SLACKS\nMotz & Wozny\n548 Howe St. MU 3-4715\nCustom Tailored Suits\nfor Ladies and Gentlemen\nGowns and Hoods\nUniforms\nDouble breasted suits\nmodernized in the new\nsingle breasted styles.\nSpecial Student Rates\nsee the\ngreat new\nA-55\nFOR lyOU AT\nGORDON\nBROS.\n10th and Alma\n\"Education in Britain\" will be\ndiscussed in a lecture of the\nVancouver Institute to be given\nSaturday at 8:15 p.m. in Bu\n106 by Professor Emeritus\nWilliam J. Rose.\nGraduation Class\nElections Postponed\nRaven Delayed\n\"Raven\" regrets to inform\nits many followers that it will\nnot be in flight until the beginning of next term.\nGrad elections have been referred to students' court for decision.\n\"There has been a discrepancy\nas to which faculties had been\ninformed and which had not, as\nto a change in the deadline for\nreceiving nominations,\" Chairman of the Elections Committee,\nRoss Husdon, told the Ubyssey\nThursday.\n\"Elections will not be held\nuntil after the Student Court\nreaches a decision,\" Husdon\nstated.\nThe Election Committee held\na meeting Wednesday which resulted in a change of the nomination deadline, due to the fact\nthat the Faculty of Education\nwas not able to get its nominations in before the previous\ndeadline.\nNo other faculties were notified of the change in time. These\nfaculties felt that the committee\nhad no right to change the deadline. Thus at 12:45 p.m. Thurs-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2V6\nSuits and Sport Jackets\nAuthentic^ meet all your\n'lemands for comfort and\nxl taste. Most notable are\nthe unpadded, completely\n' tural lines. Classic new\nfabrics are one more reason\ncome in now and discover\nAu then tics.\nBob Lee Ltd\nHASTINGS & GRANVILLE\nMU 4-0049\n\u00C2\u00AB\nAS\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A29&\n\u00C2\u00AB8S\nft\u00C2\u00A3^fel4i^i^%^fe^^%l^ll\u00C2\u00A7^S^^I\u00C2\u00A7iSSIS\u00C2\u00A7Slg^^\u00C2\u00BB^.\nBMOC\n*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n*Big Man On Campus\u00E2\u0080\u0094yea man! He\ntreats the gals to Coke. Who can compete\nwith charm like that. So if you're 5'0\"\nand a little underweight, remember\u00E2\u0080\u0094you\ndon't have to be a football hero to be\npopular. Just rely on the good taste of\nCoke. Put in a big supply todayl\nDRLVK\nSIGN Of GOOD TASTE\nday, which was the previous\ndeadline, nominations were\nclosed.\nImmediately after nominations\nclosed, Ross Husdon referred the\nelection to the Students' Court.\n\"We are doubtful if the election will be held before Christmas,\" Husdon said. \"It will depend on how quickly thq Student Court assembles and arrives at a verdict.\"\nIndustrial Design\nTopic Of Talk\nAn address on \"Industrial Design\u00E2\u0080\u0094Art or Business\" will be\ndelivered by Philip Rosenthal,\nChairman of the Board, Rosenthal .China Company, Selb, West\nGermany, in Bu 106, 8:00 p.m.,\nMonday.\nRosenthal is an Oxford graduate in economics and philosophy\nwho is in Vancouver as part of\na tour sponsored by the National Industrial Design Council,\nOttawa.\nM EN\nTWO BARBER SJHOPS\nTO SERVE YOU\ninside the gates\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Brock Hall Extension\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 5734 University Boulevard\nNOW! The World Famous|\nMills Bros.\nAdded:\nJIMMY TROY\n\"Comedy King of the Air\"\nAvoid Disappointment\nReserve Now . . .\nMU 1-8728 - MU 3-8719\n\u00C2\u00A9UPPER CLUB\nSPECIAL STUDENT RATES\nCOMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE\nGLASSES FITTED\n24-Hour Service OPTICAL Repairs\nVANCOUVER BLOCK\nMain Floor\n734 GRANVILLE ST.\nImmediate Appointment\nNEW WESTMINSTER - 675 COLUMBIA STREET\nLA 6-8665\nH. Teweair\n(Science 51) says:\nI think matter Is that which does \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00C2\u00BB\n^hen you step into the future without ' ,\n1 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 good banking connection at,.. Ml unNfj\niflfiif\nSAY 'COKE1 OR 'COCA-COLA'\u00E2\u0080\u0094BOTH TRADE MARKS MEAN THE PRODUCT\nOF COCA-COLA LTD.\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE WORLD'S MST-LOVED SPARKLING DRINK.\nBank of Montreal\n&**\u00C2\u00AB*&& \"piMt Saatfrn Student*\nYour Campus Branch in the Administration Bldg.\nMER^LE C. KIRBY, Manager\na big step on the rood to success is an early banking connection\n ti.i G-S\u00C2\u00BB. Friday, November 27, 1959\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPAGE FOUR\nNoel Coward An Los Olvilados\nLooking Noel Cowardesque\nwith his sunburned brow, dark\nglasses and Bohemian dress\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nthese last assumed probably as\na defense mechanism against\nthe role of Tame Poet in which\nhe is unwillingly cast\u00E2\u0080\u0094George\nBarker strode onto the Auditorium Stage to tell us about a\npoet's life.\nIt is not a life of ease. The\nMuse's constant companion is\nthe Medusa. Once you get\ninto their clutches you can't\ncall your soul your own; from\nbeing miserable for yourself\nyou become miserable for the\nwhole lot of mankind. This\nis the poet's damnation, and a\nrecurrent theme of Barker's\npoetry.\nMany are called but few are\nchosen; and the few are thoroughly chastened. \"A poet is\na man in whose room the great\nstone statues of the Furies\nswing about like pendula suspended by wires; every time he\nlifts his head he may get it\nshattered. The casualties are\nthose who, anxious above all\nto see, did look up; others were\nlucky but only those statues\nknow why. A sensible poet\nwill keep his head down; but\nif he were sensible, he would\nnot be a poet.'\nWith candour, pleasant wit\nand an aphoristic turn, Mr.\nBarker discouraged all but the\nmost foolhardy from the pursuit of the muse. The list of\ncasualties is well known. Who\nwas it crippled Alexander\nPope and George Byron, blinded John Milton, drove Smart\nand Collins and Cowper out of\ntheir minds?\nBut for all of that, there will\ncontinue to be poets, crippled,\nblinded, insane. They are the\nones who are driven to sacrifice themselves and everything\nand everybody else on the\naltars of their own imaginative dedication, to wrest out of\nthe air disclosures of the nature of things \u00E2\u0080\u0094 disclosures\nwhich will only discomfort\nthem by placing reality a little\nmore in their power. To these\ndedicated few the nature of\nthings gives up a few of her\nlesser secrets. Why? with\nthe others she is not afraid to\nbe silent. Because the extravagant offerings of the poets\ndemand some reciprocation;\notherwise poets might kill themselves. Reality wants none of\nher victims to escape.\nMr. Barker called his talk\n\"How to Refuse a Heavenly\nHouse.\" For his text he took\nfour lines from W. B. Yeats:\nThe Intellect of Man is\nforced to choose\nPerfection of the life or of\nthe work,\n. And if he take the second,\nmust refuse\nA heavenly mansion, raging\nin the dark.\nThe poetic hairshirt mantle\nis not just to be worn on Sun\ndays or week-ends. \"The man\nwho spends a lot of time making sure that his nest is tolerably well feathered ought not\nto be surprised if he is never\ntempted to fly.\" Nor is it just\nthe poets who lead disreputable lives who write reputable\npoetry\u00E2\u0080\u0094unfortunately, historical fact does not bear this out.\nIt is a sort of insanity, this\nraging in the dark. \"The poet\nis like a lunatic with intentions; the lunatic is like a poet\nwithout intentions.\" They both\nsee the same figures ' in the\nsame landscape \u00E2\u0080\u0094 figures of\npoetic imagination and of the\nschizoid dichotomy. But it is\nthe peculiar madness of the\npoet that he is in the landscape; he sees relationships between the figures, moral relationships. The lunatic achieves\nhappiness by disavowing any\nmoral involvement in the\nworld; the poet by the reverse\nprocess achieves poetry. Without this sense of moral responsibility poetry is \"the brilliant\ngibberish of a nut,\" said Mr.\nBarker. \"And this profound\nand passionate moral commitment of the poem is often to\nbe achieved only at the expense\nof the individual poet's spirit\nwandering in a waste of impersonal shame; thus the intellect of man is forced to\nchoose perfection of the life\nor of the work.\"\nWhat about the drying well-\nsprings of poetry? How are\nthe mighty fallen, from the\nrich realms of spiritual speculation enjoyed by the Elizabethans. Sex and death endue; Yeats said they are the\nonly subjects for poetry anyway. Certainly there have\nbeen influences of disillusionment and disenchantment at\nwork, and it is not the time\nto be as magnanimous as the\nElizabethans, without being\nunrealistic; but it is not the\ntime, either, to retire to the\nvalleys of our discontent and\nsay with William Faulkner,\n\"There are no longer any\nspiritual issues; there is only\nthe question of when you are\ngoing to be blown up.\" One\nhas to say something when he\nis picking up his Nobel Prize,\nand it is fashionable to pronounce a mighty \"Ugh\" upon\ncivilization; but the poet can\nstill provide .alternatives to\nsuicide. It is surely not the\nrole of the poet to \"stroll\naround the Gardens of the\nWest making petulant remarks\nabout the young scientists who\nhave taken the drains up\nagain.\"\nDoes the hairshirt mantle of\npoetry carry any compensations? Eliot said, \"The writing\nof poetry is a superior form\nof amusement,\" and committed a superior form of pun.\nRobert Graves thought that a\npoet could preserve his artistic integrity quite well by writing novels on week-days and\npoetry on Sundays. But artistic\nintegrity is not a financial\noperation\u00E2\u0080\u0094it is a spiritual\ncondition. They that have it\nhave their reward. \"The integrity of a poet consists in the\nbrightness of his pineal eye as\nhe pursues his purpose, and\nhis purpose is to write poems.\"\nThe hairshirt compensates\nthose to whom wearing a hair-\nshirt is a compensation.\n\"The poetry of a poem is\nlike the space of a stellar system; one is not really learning much about it (although\none is learning a little) by\nobservations of the heavenly\nbodies. The purpose of poetry\nis to provide a home for the\nthings -we can comprehend,\nbut to remain itself a sort of\nastronomical absence, a silence\nwaiting for a voice, a back-\ncloth for ashes. That is why\nit is as easy to remove the\nelement of poetry in a poem\nas it is to remove a suitcase\nfull of the void. Poetry subsists in the relationships of\nthings to one another, rather\nthan in the things themselves.\"\nEinstein said, \"The most\nbeautiful thing left to us in\nthe world is a sense of the mysterious.\" The statement honors\nthe unknown, as a poem\nshould. The sense of the mysterious is left to the poet. That\nis his fatal Clytemnestra, for\nwhich he lost a world, and considered it well lost. The King-\ndom-of-Heaven-on-Earth is not\nfor him.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094E. L. Oldfield.\nCRITICISM A\nEDITOR: MEK]\nBarbaric Fantasy Awes Audience\nBlack and white against dramatic red. Two figures posed.\nWhispering and rustling die\ndown as arms are lifted to\nbegin.\nThe music transforms the theatre and stage to the edge of\nsome barbaric arena where a\nmonstrous fantasy is being performed.\nNikoli and Joanna Grauden,\ncellist and pianist, have begun\ntheir performance.\nThe first selection, Bach's\n\"Sonata in D Major\", was interpreted boldly and richly. Nikoli poured his soul into the\nmoving depths of the Andante.\nThe quicksilver Allegro was a\ngay flight with Joanna. The\nfaster movements were weakly\ninterpreted by Nikoli. In attempting to contend with the\nfurious pace, he seemed to lose\nj purpose and design.\nNext on their repertoire was\nMendelssohn-Bartholdy's \"Sonata Op. 58\". In this the two\nperformers projected their\ndramatic personalities into a\nfiery and passionate interpretation of the Adagio. This was\nreceived with a large ovation.\nAfter the intermission, the\nGraudins returned.with Beethoven's \"Sonata Op. 101 No. 1\".\nHere Joanna's Slavonic nature\nturned gypsy. First her hands\nwfould caress the keys into delightful submission and then\nsend them into a frenzy. The\ncello soared to great heights.\nNear the climax Nikoli became\nso absorbed he let out a barbaric cry, and began to stamp\nhis feet.\n\"Fantasy Pieces Op. 73\" by\nRobert Schumann was played\nwith tender expression. Here\ntheir spell mellowed for a\nwhile in thjs light gay air. In\nthe last movement, their fiery\nspirit returned in full.\nNikoli and Joanna expressed\ncontrolled strength in their inspired presentation of Chopin's\n\"Introduction et Polonaise\nOp. 3\".\nAt the conclusion of their\nconcert the audience was extremely enthusiastic, and the\nperformers were forced to return for two encores. They\nchose excerpts from Brahms.\nThroughout the performance\nthe Graudins showed complete\nconfidence and mastery. They\ncombined wild feeling with\ntraditional style.\nAt last, they brought us back\nfrom their arena of fantasy to\nthe theatre-seat world of reality and Women's Musical Societies. The Graudins are musicians,- there is no doubt about\nit, and we owe a very enjoyable evening to their ability\nand versatility.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Farida Sewell.\nTHE ART OF\nA noted dancer in Eastern\nCanada once said in an interview that she felt she could\n\"never fully understand anyone who did not dance\". This\nstatement, with its horribly\ndelicious implications, typifies\nthe fuzzy thinking of the artist who is in art without knowing why, literally without\nreason, with great emotional\nfolderol and no thought whatsoever.\n\"Art is exciting. All for\nArt\u00E2\u0080\u0094God knows what Art is\nexactly\u00E2\u0080\u0094but all for it anyway, and the world well lost.\nReason well lost, too. Reason\nis nasty, gets in the way of\nour being weak and stupid and\nlovably human.\" I submit\nthat these are prevalent attitudes of most people in the\ntheatre, and that to practice\nthe arts of the theatre thus\nblindly, with no conception of\nthe theatre's utility\u00E2\u0080\u0094or, if you\nwish, no aesthetic ideals\u00E2\u0080\u0094is to\npractice the art of the moron.\nWhy act? There's little\nchance of money or fame, it's\nnot by any means easy, and\nthere are more exciting professions and pastimes. I think\npeople act because they believe\nthat some sort of moral blessing automatically accompanies\nany unscientific study of human behaviour. The mummer\nhates intellectuals with a fierce\nand deep hatred, but he hates\nscientists more, because of the\ndisagreeably objective nature\nof their calling. \"You can't\nstudy human beings like they\nwere guinea pigs!\"\nBasically, all is disorder in\nthe theatre. There are no\ncriteria of success or failure,\nno theoretical foundations on\nwhich to build. The motives\nfor an actor's creation will\nchange from day to day, according to the state of his liver.\nThere are no ideals in the\ntheatre, and very few plans.\nThe work of the average\nmummr can be divided into\ntwo components \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the stage\ncliche and the public, personality. And the latter is usually\nLETTER\nCritic Editor, <\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nThe Ubyssey.\nDear Sir:\nWhen are we going to get a\nCritic who takes his job\nseriously? Doesn't Mr. Bromige realize that The Drama\nis a sacred institution? Enough\nof this simpering frimping of\nneck-piece. Let's have something solid that we intellectuals can sink our teeth into\nwithout coming upon a splinter\nof glass.\nAn astute journalist could\nsum up Mr. Bromige's contributions to this page in one\ndefecatory word. Mr. Bromige\nis irreverent. I am sure that\nNorman Young would back\nme up in this prejudice. I\nsuggest that you confiscate\npseudo-critic Bromige's reading glasses and find someone\nmore suitable to your publication.\nUtterly sincerely,\nAna Phase,\nScience 300.\nevolved from a stage cliche.\nThese cliches extend through\nevery element of a characterization\u00E2\u0080\u0094voice, posture, gesture,\ngait, costume and makeup. The\ncliches work. Audiences recognize them. But then the moron\nindex in most audiences is\naround 99%, so there's little\nuse in looking for aesthetic\njudgment there. Not that I\nwould do away with the audience, believing an audience\nto be intrinsic to any reason-\nNoted Critic Mike Matt\nto his conten\nA VI S I\nThis is more a review of the\ngreat French actor, \" Raimu,\nthan it is of the great French\nfilm, Marius. In attempting\nto sort out my reactions to this\nfilm, one fact emerges above\nall others: that whatever stature it reaches is directly due '\nto its leading actor, Raimu.\nBut \"stature\" sounds like a\ncritical cliche. It doesn't really\napply to this movie (not the\neuphemistic \"motion picture\"\neither) or to Raimu. Both are\ntoo real, too human for such\nirrelevancies. Holly wood's\nchromium passion for revealing only the bright side of life\nis ignored here. That doesn't\nimply any melodramatic -\n\"darkness of the soul\": both\nthe underside and the beauty\nare exhibited with the same\nGallic shrug. \"It's interesting\nto note,\" says the program (and\nit's somehow insanely ludicrous to me) that Marius was\nbanned by the British censor\nuntil 1949.\nAnyway, the movie was\nshown Sunday as the Vancouver Film Society's second presentation of the season, and as\nthe only, 35mm film to be\nshown that is more than six\nyears old. Marius was produced and written in 1932 by\nMarcel Pagnol, who according\nto the program notes, was one\nof the first movie-makers to\nsuccessfully use regional char- ,\nacters and settings.\nThe regional setting is the\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0waterfront section of Marseilles and the location shots,\nwhile rare, are alive. The old THE UBYSSEY\nFriday, November 27, 1959\n9 REVIEWS\nFantasy Or...? Farce!\nNCLAIB\nHE MORON\nconcept of theatre. But\nctor must never be in-\nced by its applause into\ning that the audience's\nare is the measure of his\nss.\nould champion the Stanis-\nI method as the only act-\n;chnique which gives con-\nJtion to every faculty\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nettual, emotional, and\ncal\u00E2\u0080\u0094which the actor uses,\nwork. And I think there\ninister significance in the\n,' as he appears\ntries\nfact that the only recent serious play about an actor\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nOdets' The Country Girl\u00E2\u0080\u0094concerns itself with an actor\nwhose work sums up the contradiction of all that the Stanis-\nlavski method stands for.\nFrank Elgin's acting depended\nupon the sort of bursts of intuition that most contemporary\nactors seem to deify as the\nmost important aspect of their\nwork. But this creative intuition, as seen by'Stanislavski,\nis only one small part of the\nactor's equipment. The rest is\nall training and calculation.\nObviously the calculated effect\nis the one which has the best\nchance of achieving subtlety\nand expressiveness on the\nstage. Granted the relation of\nan artist's conscious to his unconscious in creative effort is\na tricky and involved one, the\nhorror with which actors view\nany suggestion for planned\neffects is a triumph of fearful\nunreason.\nAnd this tendency of the\nmummer to maudlinize his\ncraft is symptomatic of the\ngeneral tendency to praise impulse over calculation and\ncharacter over wisdom. Thus\nthe doctrine that good men\ncannot be made, that the head\ncan't change the heart. The\nevidence is all in the other\ndirection, but men, and mummers most of all men, prefer\nblithering to cogitation. Sentio,\nergo sum.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Michael Matthews.\nWITH RAIMO\nrt's toughness is not ex-\nated nor minimized; it's\nhere, in the shouts of sea-\nstreaming along the quay\nIging sails, or in the heavy\natmosphere of hole-in-\nall waterfront cafes. The\ny is there, too, in the\nsun-bleached whiteness\nthe smoothness of sea\ns nrateay-lda c\nst an early-dawn light-\ne \"regional characters,\"\nially Raimu, alternately\nde from the screen or\naer quietly in dark cor-\nthe impression given is\nthis is no \"slice of life,\"\nhe real thing. The crux\ng story is the relationship\nsen Raimu's son, played\n'ierre Fresnay; his child-\nsweetheart, played by\nle Demazis; and the \"other\nm\" in the triangle: the\ni. \"Remember the time\n/alked on the bridge and\nsaid you couldn't look\nbecause you feared you\nd \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 fall?\" the youth asks\niri. \"I fell the same way\nt ships . . . whenever I\nme I feel myself falling\nrds it.\"\nis main conflict builds to\nnax of devastating irony,\nasing and improvising\nthis theme, are several\nlots; the deep yet often\ndiary relationship be-\nl the son and the father;\nlevotion between the girl\nler mother and the moth-\nnsistenee~.thati the. -girl, be\n\"respectable.\" Several finely\nportrayed lesser characters enrich the theme.\nFrom a dramatic point of\nview, the son, his sweetheart\nand the mother have their\nwx>rk \"cut out for them.\"\nThey act movingly and well\nwithin their scope but for the\nsake of dramatic effectiveness,\nit isn't too wide. The minor\ncharacters and Raimu are allowed full rein. Indeed, with\nRaimu, it seems unlikely he\ncould to any degree be trammelled. He's -not acting in\nfront of the camera, he's living\nin front of it. I hesitate to call\nhim a comic. But he's side-\nsplittingly funny. He couldn't\nbe called a tragedian but his\nmoments of emotion match and\nsurpass those of most of our\n\"great actors.\" In Marius, he\nis the owner-bartender of a\nsmall bar and he certainly\ndoesn't exhibit honesty. (Showing his son how to mix a drink,\nhe says \"add a good third of\nwater.\" Or to his card-playing\ncronies, \"Sure I cheat. But you\ndon't know how I do it so I\nscsore. What's the fun of\nplaying cards with friends if\nyou can't cheat?\" But throughout the film he displays a high\nmoral feeling which obvio,usly\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 outranks any mere human\nrules.\nThis sounds so enthusiastic\nas to be perhaps, misguided,\nso I'll bring in another authori-\n. .ty, one I consider among the\nFor several years, the Players Club has been devoting itself, in its major productions,\nto comedy: last spring, with\ngreat success, a farce \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the\nyear before, with somewihat\nless success, a comedy of manners\u00E2\u0080\u0094two weeks since, with\nno success at all, a lightly\nsatiric fantasy.\nPeter Ustinov's play Romanoff and Juliet concerns the last\npolitically uncommitted nation in the world, the small\nbut vehemently independent\nand proud country of the imagination. It is a lyrical plee,\nin this age of the inmpossible\nInternational Situation, for an\nescape into the dream-kingdom\nof love where threats are but\nshadows, force a thing of\nwords; Where giants become\npygmies and the right is always triumphant. There time\nhas no meaning, and even\ndeath sleeps late. Ustinov\ntakes the Romeo and Juliet\ntheme, changes the two warring families into the two cold-\nwarring nations of Russia and\nthe USA, and shows that where\na dream is given free rein, the\ntwo classic lovers need not\nwind up bloody, broken and\nfruitless.\nThe Players Club missed the\npoint of the play, presented,\nnot a lyrical fantasy united in\nplot and purpose, but a loose\nsuccession of gags arbitrarily\n(and mercifully) terminated by\"\nthe final curtain. In all fairness, the production had its\nmoments of sensitivity, of fantasy and mood-feeling, . of\ngentle surrender to the sweetly moving stream of the play,\nto emphasize its basic failure,\nbut these unfortunately served\nThe fault lies inevitably with\nthe all-important figure of The\nGeneral. Created by. Peter\nUstinov for himslf to portray,\nthis character, sophisticated,\ncynical, world-weary and Wistful at first, gaining in strength\nand purpose from the young\nfated love of the chiraren of\nthe Soviet and American ambassadors, must lead the audience through the dreanvworld\nhe creates for their enjoyment,\nexpound to them, directly and\nindirectly, the lyrical beauties\nof love, bend the plot and all\nthe characters\u00E2\u0080\u0094his characters\nhighest: Henry Miller. In the\nWisdom of the Heat, Miller\nsays he considers Raimu the\n\"most human figure on the\nscreen . . ....\n\"Raimu . . .\" says Miller,\n\"represents something which is\nvitally missing in the cinema\nand he represents it forcefully^\nRaimu sweats, weeps, laughs,\nyells with pain. Raimu flies\ninto a rage, an unholy rage, in\nwhich he is not ashamed to\nstrike his wife or son, if deserving of his wrath. Everything\nhe says and does is human and\nunderstandable, even his\ncrimes. He never tries to be\nmore than he is, or other than\nhe is; he is never ridiculous,\neven when he inspires laughter.\"\nOne final aside, to the Varsity Theatre: If the long run\nof Smiles of a Summer Night\n(the first VFS film of this season) is any indication, Marius\nwould probably be worth trying to obtain. It's too good a\nmovie to be seen by only several hundred people. Besides,\nI'd like to see it again.\n<\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dick Hallgren.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094gently but inexorably into\nthe final happy conclusion. The\nfault, I say, lies with this figure, and the miscasting of\nJohn Sparkes in this role. This\ntalented actor, whose comic\nability was admirably demonstrated in his most successful\nportrayal of Lord Fancourt\nBabberley last spring, was\nsimply not equipped to handle\na part requiring such a very\nhigh 'degree of maturity, of\noverwhelming stage presence.\nWhere was the odd whimsey,\nthe gentle world-weary cynicism, the great undercurrent of\n\"passion and human feeling?\nMissing, all missing. Mr.\nSparkes suggested rather the\nyoung Continental roue, sniggering at his own dirty jokes,\nthan the venerable literary\ndescendant of Chaucer's Pan-\ndarus, the traditional go-\nbetween of ideal lovers. The\nsignificant moments of address\nto the audience were transformed into vulgar gimmicks,\naimed at achieving the momentary embarassed laugh, leaving no deep impression.\nAnd there, in a nutshell, was\nthe irremediable fault of the\nproduction. All personality, all\nsense of character, all beauty\nand feeling, were sacrificed\nmercilessly at the altar of gag-\ngery. A sorry spectacle the\nsad ghost of a play rising from\nthe bloody leavings of the\ndirector's knife. Comedy is\ndead: laughter is all our god.\nGone was all fleshly sophistication from the love scenes of\nRomanoff and Juliet; gone was\nthe comedy arising naturally\nout of character and situation.\nEvery line that might possibly\nyield a laugh was mugged,\ngimmicked, hammed to squeeze\nthe maximum in vocal mani-\ngimmicked, hammed to squeeze\nfestation from the audience,\nand to leave the minimum in\nemotional impact. Weren't\nthose lovers just too too coy\nand funny-funny, just too utterly unlike any lovers ever\nseen on the face of this earth\nsince the dawn of creation?\nWhat the play might and\ncould have been was seen in\ntwo actors, who by their own\nexcellence, put the show as a\nwhole to shame. Of Ken\nKramer, as The Archbishop,\nno greater praise can be given,\nno more need be said than\nthat he portrayed the character of The Archbishop, which\nstands by itself in the play,\nthat of the Russian Ambassador is but one among the company of Russians and Ameri\ncans. Walter Shynkaryk's portrayal of this character was\nsuperb. He alone, of all the\ncharacters in the play handled\nthe lyrical passages as they\nshould be handled: lyrically.\nIt joyed the soul to hear him\non the Russian Revolution and\nthe spirit of man. Two minutes, ten minutes, or half an\nhour, the audience could have\nlistened to him speak alone\nfor as long as he chose to\nspeak; Every subtlety, nuance,\nvariation and transition he\nused as required, maintaining\nall the while a flawless stage\naccent and impeccable theatrical technique But all good\nthings come to an end, and\nThe General re-enters by and\nby to remind us that man is,\nafter all, but a jesting a*pe.\nOf the other actors, Martin\nBartlett as The Spy, Frank\nAbel and Cecil Plotnikoff as\nThe Soldiers were good. The\nrest were generally adequate,\nwith the exception of Les\nWagar, who pushed too hard\nat portraying the American\nAmbassador, and succeeded in\nportraying an actor pushing\ntoo hard at portraying an\nAmerican Ambassador, and\nMaxine Gadd, who strutted,\npostured, screeched, but had\nno conception of the character\nof Marfa that she was supposedly assuming.\nThe show has this further\ndistinction to its credit: it is\nthe first University production\nin several years, excluding\nmusicals, of amateurish calibre.\nBad productions we have frequently, but amateurish ones\nare rare. Actors stumbled\nover lines, had difficulty handling the language. The* final\nmarriage and reconciliation,\nscene was very sticky indeed:\ntiming, blocking, cueing seemed to have progressed no farther than a first rough draft.\nThe play bore all the earmarks\nof the under-rehearsed production. This amateurishness was\npointed up by the very excellent quality of the technical\nsetting: lighting, costumes,\nproperties. Particular credit\nis to be given to the designer\nof the set, and to the properties crew for its work on sound\neffects.\nIt is a sorrow to reflect that,\nfor the sake of this production,\nVancouver audiences were denied the pleasure of seeing\nPeter Ustinov himself perform\nthe play with a professional\nVancouver company.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Denis Howarth. PAGE SIX\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, November 27, 1959\nCONTINUED OPERATION\nOF CINEMA 16 ASSURED\nCinema 16 will definitely continue to operate for the remain-\"\nder of the academic year, said\nDick Drysdale Thursday.\nDrysdale, one of the founders\nof the organization, stated that\nregular showing of European\nand experimental films will continue next term every Thursday\nin Bu 106.\nAlthough admission price had\nto be raised to 50 cents, over\n200 students and faculty attended yesterday's showing of\n\"Wozzek\", a controversial German film, and a ten minute ex\ncerpt of a pre-war Nazi propaganda film.\nCinema 16, a non-profit organization, will operate independently from Filmsoc which confines itself to the showing of\ncommercial films.\n\"The large attendance so far\nproves our success and justifies\nthe existence of Cinema 16,\"\nsaid Drysdale.\nCORRECTION!\nIn a little story on Cubicals,\net al, which the Ubyssey ran\nyesterday, there was the following sentence, \"The first\ncrucifixion will take place at\n8:30 a.m., Dec. 19.\".\nWe were wrong.\nDo not show up for your\nfirst exam on Dec. 19. because\nthat will not be the date of\nyour first exam.\nThe horrid things start on\nDec. 9.\nPlease come.\nDid you hear about the professor who emerged barking from\nBirks' porcelain counter?\u00E2\u0080\u0094The\nDon came up like Thunder out\nof china 'cross The Bay..\nBERN'S\nCAFE I\nFINE FOOD\nFINE SERVICE\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 MELLOW WHIP ICE CREAM\nDrop in to 4544 West 10th Avenue\nOpposite Safeway's Parking Lot\nAMS Information\nBulletin Issued\nHere it is at last.\nThe Student Council is issuing an informative bulletin\nwhich will help all those who\nwish to discuss student fees to\ndo so more intelligently.\nIncluded in this notice will\nbe a comparison with fees of\nother universities, why the fees\nwere\" raised, where they are\nspent, etc.\nIt can be picked up at the\nStudent Council office next\nFriday, December 4.\nBe sure and get yours.\n(Continued from Page 1)\nbe important to the UBC research team.\nAt present it is not known\nwhether the cells fluoresce in\nnon-cancer cases because of the\ndrug or the tobacco smoke, and\nit is hoped that the present project will resolve the problem.\nDr. Culling stated that it was\nnot the nicotine which caused\nthe cells to glow.\nFurther tests may reveal\nwhether living in a large city\nsubstantially affects the incidence of this phenomenon.\nProcessing of the forms which\nstudents will hand in with the\nsamples will reveal a cross-section of the smoking habits of\ncampus students, said Dr. Culling.\nCLASSIFIED\nDrive Needs\nCanned Goods\nAny type of canned food for\nthe AWS Food Drive will be\nsincerely appreciated. The Central City Mission urgently needs\nthis food.\nReceptacles for all contributions have been placed in faculty\nbuildings and all central locations on campus. The Drive ends\nthis Friday.\nFOR SALE \u00E2\u0080\u0094 UBC Sweater,\nbrand new. $25.00 value, will sell\nfor $10.00. Call RE 3-0783 after\n6:00 p.m.\nLOST \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Thursday morning,\nNov. 26, in Language Lab, a\nblack Parker 51 with silver top.\nWould finder please phone Bill,\nFA 1-3972.\nAPPLICATIONS are being received for manager of the Fort\nCamp Canteen. Candidates must\nbe married and have accounting\nexperience in double entry. Contact Lee Plotnikoff, AL 1270-L.\nLOST\u00E2\u0080\u0094Green fountain pen\nwith gold top Monday (23rd)\nnear or in Education Building.\nReward. Phone RE 8-6374.\nSPECIAL $m* - BY MAIL ONLY\nContinental Styling\nGoes to College . . .\nCONTINENTAL\nSLACKS.:.\n16-95\nPair\nSee this new Continental concept\nin campus wear . . . slim, tapered\nslacks with pleatless front, flap\nback pockets and slanted side\npockets. In fine wool worstted.\nIn six exciting shades. Sizes 28-36.\nWear with or without cuffs.\nAlterations Free!\nOn Sale Now at HBC's\nMen's Casual Shop, Main Floor\n0^\nT|tt>jfon#l^jiJ\nOMAR SKE1ET0N\nMODEL ONE FOOT HIGH- Q .\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 FORMERLY SOLD FOR $10\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ANATOMICALLY ACCURATE\n. FULLY ARTICULATED\nFor students, doctors, nurses,\nhospitals, hobbyists and the\nman who'll enjoy a unique conversation-piece in his den\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nhere's a never-to-be-forgotten gift! Educational.\nPraised by med. schools,\ndoctors, scientists. Every\nbone and complete model\nin perfect scale to a 6' man.\nOf unbreakable bone-like\nmaterial. Each part inter*\nI locks and snaps together\nI easily, instructive diagram\n. * \u00C2\u00A3~ and wire stand for table or\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2* mantel included.\nORDER BY MAIL NOW\nSend eaah. check or M.O. Please add 25* for\nsoilage and handling. Guarantied to be ana\nskeleton that won't t>\u00C2\u00AB hidden in the closet\n\u00C2\u00ABr money baek.\nSCIENCE MARKETS P.O. BOX 501 _\nI MONTREAL 1\nEdmonton- Vancouver\n'Specials' A vailable\nCanadian National Railways is arranging for a\nChristmas special lo Edmonton and points East.\nGroups of four or more\npassengers may take advantage of package rates, such\nas $30 for return fare from\nEdmonton to Vancouver.\nThis fare includes everything. Phone Ned Wiginton\nMu. 4-0171 for reservations.\nMarried Accommodation\nin Acadia available for undergraduate students, all years.\nCall at Housing Office\nRm. 205-A, Physics Building\nA. R. BAIRD\nHousing Administrator.\nUniversity Hill United\nChurch\nWorshipping in Union College\nChapel ,\n5990 Chancellor Blvd.\nMinister \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Rev. W. Buckingham\nServices 11:00 a.m. Sunday\nINCORPORATED 2\"? ffl>& t&Ki,\nAre your savings being\n\"NIBBLED\" AWAY?\nThis is hard to prevent\nwhen you write cheques against\nyour Savings Account. Here's\nthe businesslike way to save:\nopen a new Personal Chequing\nAccount for paying bills...keep\nyour Savings Account strictly\nfor saving. Ask about this new\n\"Royal\" Two-Account Plan.\nTHE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA Friday, November 27, 1959\nTHE UB YSSEY\nPAGE SEVEN\nWrestlers\nMeet Here\nTop wrestlers from the lower\nmainland will meet at UBC tomorrow afternoon in the apparatus gymnasium.\nThe all-comers meet gets underway at 2:00 p.m. with Nick\nMohammed, Canadian wrestler\n. in Olympics at Helsinki, referee-\ning the matches.\nWrestlers from Vancouver\nY.M.C.A., Kalerd Sport Centre,\nWestern Sports Centre and\nNorth Vancouver Sports Club\nwill be on hand for the meet.\nTOMORROW\nThe meet tomorrow afternoon\nwill be the last for UBC's wrestlers before they travel south for\n* the first intercollegiate meet.\nDecember 5 UBC meets the\nstrong Washington State schol*\narship team at the University of\nWashington. Next term the UBC\nteam will travel fOr meets in\nKelowna, College of Puget\n, Sound, Pacific Lutheran College\nand University of Alberta.\nSaturday's meet gets under-\n*way at 2:00 pjn. in the gym\napparatus room.\nStudent, president of Women's Athletic Association Marg\nMcLaughlin presents Dean Helen McCrae with scroll emblematic of Honorary Presidency of the W.A.A.\nCo-Editdfs __\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Ann Pickard, ^mie Harder\nReporters __ Mike Hunter, Alan Dafoe, Frea^Fletcher\nDrums Are Roll ing\nFor Rugby Thunderbirds\ners\nOn US Visit\n&\nThe UBC Thunderbird basketball team takes off on a two-\n*game -exhibition swing to the\nState of Washington \"this weekend, before meeting 'Cloverleafs\nin their final 1959 Ihter-city\nleague game.\nThe Birds take on St. Martin's\nCollege, Friday, in Olympia, and\nSeattle Pacific College on Saturday in Seattle. On Tuesday at the\n.Churchill Gym, Jack Pomfret's\nboys clash with Cloverleafs in a\n\"must\" game. The Birds must\nwin this game if they hope to\nreach the playoffs, as they now\nhave only two wins in seven\ngames. Last Saturday, \"Leafs'\ndropped the collegians, 78 to 70.\nTotem Tourney\nThen the annual Totem Tournament takes the spotlight, on\nFriday and Saturday, December\n'4 and 5, at the Memorial Gym.\nThe first games of the new\nyear will be exhibitions with\nAmerican colleges.\nThunderbirds meet College of\nPuget Sound, January 2 in Tacoma, and Central Washington\non the fourth in Ellensburg.\nBecause of the high calibre of\nball played down south, these\n. U.S. exhibitions will provide the\nBirds with valuable experience.\nBraves In Action\nLocally, the. UBC Braves play\nAbbotsford High School, 6:30,\nSaturday night at the main gym.\nAt eight, Alberni Athletics take\non Cloverleafs in a regular Intercity League game.\nAbbotsford placed fourth in\nthe high school tournament last\nyear, have several returnees.\nBraves have added Dal Lansdell\nand Dune Williams to the rooster\nin the last week.\n^ The drums have stopped beating for football and the\nthunder of UBC's front-running rugby 'Birds is making itself\nheard.\nMax Howell's rugged crew hosts the powerful North Shore\nAll-Blacks at TJiBC Stadium tomorrow afternoon\nPlaying in the rough Vancouver First Division, the UBC\n'Birds have won seven games,\ntied one, lost atme, \u00E2\u0082\u00AC*ra lead the\nrace for the Miller Cup'by a half\ngame.\nSpirit and Hustle\nThe 'Birds will have to finish\non spirit and hustle. The Vancouver Kats, in Second place,\nhave ten B.C. All Stars on their\nroster. UBC had two, Neal Henderson, until he sustained a concession, and Captain Gerry McGavin.\nVarsity Men\nLose Hockey\nThe Varsity men's grass hockey team lost a 3-1 decision to\nCardinals at UBC No. 1 Field on\nSaturday afternoon in an A\nDivision encounter. As a result,\nthe Varsity eleven dropped into\na three-way first place tie in A\nDivision standings with North\nShore A and Grasshoppers A,\neach of which won their games.\nAll three squads now have identical 4-1 won-lost records.\nBlues Lose\nAt the same time, on UBC\nNo. 2 Field, the UBC Blues lost\na close 1-0 game to India A.\nIndia scored its single goal in the\ndying minutes of play.\nMeanwhile, the UBC Golds,\nplaying away from their home\ngrounds, were slaughtered 8-2\nby North Shore A.\nOver in B Division, the UBC\nPedagogues defeated the Hawks\n4-0 to gain their first victory of\nthe season.\nHalftime Draw\nThe Peds started rolling in\nthe second 35 minutes after\nbattling their opposition to a 0-0\nhalftime draw. The winner's\nmarksmen were Roger Fox, Don\nCarter, and Alan Dafoe with two\ngoals.\nLast weekend, UBC ^defeated;;\nthe third place Meralbmas B^,\nExcept-for the \"first five minutes'\no* the: game, JDBC played one\nman short ihtheir scriim. Peter\nBugg, \"the sclftim-half* 'fractured\na leg arferi^^riit. 'Mike Chambers mow&^iwt\u00C2\u00A9 the essential\nscrum-faali position,\niNsnaliy Kick\nUBC's points e&ihe on a penalty kick by McGavin and a try\nby five-eighth, Ted firyan. The\n'Loma points came Via a penalty\ngoal.\nCoach Howell singled out\nChambers, who passed to Bryan\nfor the try, John Lecky. Carl\nGustafson, Don Shore, Jonathan\nPhillips and Ted Bryan as the\noutstanding performers.\nSPORTS MENU\n. Intramural Volleyball Finals,\nTuesday, December 1, at 12:30.\nPing Pong Finals Friday, December 4, at 12:30.\nWomen's Grass Hockey\nUBC vs. Alums at Trafalgar\nPark, Saturday.\nVarsity vs. Ex-Brits at Trafalgar Park, Saturday.\nVarsity vs. Tec Lions at Trafalgar Park, Sunday.\nSoccer\nSecond Division\u00E2\u0080\u0094Varsity vs.\nGordon Brothers at Carnarvon\nPark at 2 p.m. Sunday.\nThird Division\u00E2\u0080\u0094Teamsters vs.\nUBC at UBC's Mclnnes Field at\n2 p.m. Sunday.\nMen's Grass Hockey\nNov. 28\u00E2\u0080\u0094A Division\u00E2\u0080\u0094Varsity\nvs. Golds, UBC 2, 2:45. Blues vs.\nWest Coast Rangers, UBC 1, 2:45.\nB Division\u00E2\u0080\u0094UBC Pedagogues\nvs. India B, Hillcrest West, 2:00\np.m. Varsity All-Stars vs. U of\nCalif. (Berkeley) at UBC No. 1\nField, 2:00 p.m. Sunday.\nThunderettes\nTake Second\nUBC Thunderettes jumped into second place in senior\nwomen's basketball standings with an easy 37-17 over lowly\nC-FUN Wednesday night.\nOnly bright point in the game was the 25 points racked up\nby UBC's high-scoring Diane Beach.\nTWO-POINT LEAD\nThe victory put Thunderettes\ntwo points ahead of Hastings,\nProfile\nOn Frank\nALAN DAFOE\n(Ubyssey Feature Reporter)\nAll-round athlete Frank Sealy,\nnOw in his fifth year with the\nVarsity soccer team, Has a long\nand interesting career in sports\nat UBC.\nGREATEST YEAR\nFrank believes that his greatest year in campus soccer was in\n1956-59 when he playeel centre\nhalf, fullback, and acted as general utility man for Varsity. During last season, Sealy demonstrated his versatility to the frustration of opposition* Second\nDivision soccer squads. He climaxed this highly successful\nyear by capturing the outstanding UBC athlete award for 1958-\n59 at the Big Block banquet.\nSOCCER STAR\nTurnirig'ISacV to soccer, Frank's\nmarvelifotis'ball control and expert dribbling ability has to t>e\nseen to be hei'i^viB^.His ^raeeful\n'movements conttad&jly le%> opposition elevens oif 'balance.\nFurmermbre, Wily has ia 'long\nHigh kick wMch males Mim as\nvaluable an islet Mt 'fttlifcack as\nhe is oh the' naif line *6ribrward\nlihe.\nF>$nk Sealy, who hails from\nTrihltfad.'felfeb^e^rlaiiy optimistic about Vafsl\u00E2\u0082\u00ACy*s chances for\nprbmotlbh to the First Divisipn\nin 1960-81. Of the current 1959-\ntJO season, Sealy stated, \"If we\nclick, we shouldn't have any\ntrouble with the rest 6f the league.\" So far, Varsity has clicked\nto the tune of a 4-1 wbn-lost record in regular league play.\n\"A FINE MAN\"\nFrank, who is married, stands\n5 feet 9 inches in height, weighs\n170 pounds, and is 26 years of\nage. He is at present taking a\nfirst year course in medicine.\nIn conclusion, as coach Frank\nKurucs summed up, \"Frank\nSealy is an intelligent student, a\nfine man.\"\nCRICKET TOO\nThis man, the incomparable\nFrank Sealy, who is an ace\ncricketeer and soccer star, is at\npresent captaining his Varsity\nteam-mates towards what could\nbe one of their finest years in\nthe post-World War II UBC soccer era.\nUBC todies Curling\nIn Totemette Bonspiel\nWhile UBC men's curling\nteam is doing big things in lhe\nB.C. Totem Bonspiel, UBC\ngirls' curling club is taking\npart in the Burnaby Ladies'\nTotemette Bonspiel.\nThe team, skipped by Ruth-\nann Senz, and including Diane\nMcNaughton, Laurie Walsh\nand Pal Chaiaway. is taking\npart in fhe bonspiel which\nends this weekend.\nThe bonspiel got underway\nThursday night.\nwho were trounced by pace-setting Richmond the same night.\nThe C-FUN team is still looking for its first win of the season\u00E2\u0080\u0094they have lost five straight.\nThe 25 points dunked by\nDiane Beach helped her maintain\na firm hold of fourth place in the\nindividual scoring race. Hastings'\nBarbara Bengough tops the loop\nwith 77 points.\nDIANE HAS 61\nPrior to Wednesday night's\ncontests, Richmond's Shirley\nTopley was a close second with\n76 points and a teammate, Zoe\nRobinson, was third, with 67\npoints. Diahe's performance on\nWednesday night brings her total\nto 61.\nNumber six in the scoring race\nis UBC's Marilyn Petersen, -with\n34.\nSPORTS\nSHORTS\nsooseeeseeooeeeoeeeeoosa\nGirls' Bowling\nA bowling telegraphic meet\nbetween Canadian Universities\nwill be held December 4. Any\ngirls interested\u00E2\u0080\u0094withgowi bowling scores, please phone WA\n2-5812.\n* * *\nGirls' Volleyball\nUBC: will hostess an informal\nVancouver High School invitational tournament Friday, December 4, beginning at 6:00 p.m.\nih the women's gym. Participating schools include Britannia,\nKitsilano, Lord Byng, Kiilarney,\nTempleton and West Vancouver.\n* * *\nSoccer\nfhe Sunday afternoon Second\nDivision soccer contest between\nVarsity and North Shore United\nwas postponed.\nOh the Island, Third Division\nUBC captured their first win of\nthe soccer season with an exhibition 2-0 triumph over Victoria\nCollege. PAGE EIGHT\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, November 27, 1959\n'tween classes\n\u00C2\u00BB_\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u00A2m\u00E2\u0080\u0094mm\u00E2\u0080\u0094mmmmmm\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCHOIR PLANS\nYULE CONCERT\nUNIVERSITY CHOIR\nUniversity Choir will present\nj\u00C2\u00BB concert of Christmas selections\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Dec, 4 at 12:30 in the Audi-\n\"torium.\n* * *\nSOCRED CLUB\nAttorney General Robert Bon-\n\u00C2\u00BBer speaks on Bill 43 in Brock\nLounge, Wed., 12:30.\n* * *\nDEBATE\nPolitical club members will\ndebate \"Should Canada disarm\nHow?\" Tues., Bu 203, 12:30.\n.., * * *\nPSYCHOLOGY CLUB\nA classified film from Esson-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2alaie will be shown noon today\nin HM 2. Members only. Commentary by Dr. MacKay.\n; * * *\nPRE-SOCIAL WORK SOC\nLast meeting this fall, Mon.,\nIn Bu 217 at 12:30. Field trip\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2n Dec. 5.\n* * *\nCOMMONWEALTH CLUB\nMr. David Brown of the United\nKingdom Information Service,\nwill speak on \"Britain and the\nCommonwealth\" in Bu 202\nTuesday, 12:30.\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nSir Ernest Macmillan Fine Arts\nClub will present a program of\nvocal and instrumental solos at\n8:30 tonight. Admission free.\n* * *\nS.B.S.U,\nSouthern Baptist Student\nUnion will hold a Devotional\nmeeting Friday noon in Bu 227.\nRev. G. Ewert will speak.\n* * *\nNEWMAN CLUB\nTalent night tonight. Annual\nUndergrad - Alumni Communion\nBreakfast will be Sunday. Mass\nat 9:00 a.m. Speaker will be\nHugh Buckley.\n* * *\nVCF\nVarsity Christian Fellowship\npresents Rev. R. Standerwick,\nspeaking on \"Mystery at Bethlehem\" at noon today in Arts\n100.\nLSA.\nThe Lutheran Student's Association will discuss Mixed Marriages on Mon., 12:30, Bu 216.\n* * *'\nRAMBLERS\nGeneral meeting today at 12:30\nin Bu 204. All members please\nattend.\n* * *\nFROSH UNDERGRAD SOC\nImportant council meeting today, not yesterday as previously\nmentioned. Bu 320, 12:30.\n* * *\nVOC\nSki exercises today in Field\nHouse. Bring ticket stubs to\nclubroom by Dec. 1.\n* * *\nALPHA OMEGA SOCIETY\nLast meeting this term noon\ntoday in Bu 216. All Ukrainian\nstudents please attend to hear\na guest speaker.\nOVER 500,000\nUSED AND NEW POCKET BOOKS, MAGAZINES\nBOOKS, COMICS, PRINTS, MAPS AND RECORDS,.\nETC.\nAT CANADA'S LARGEST\nUSED BOOK STORE\nTED FRASER'S BOOK BIN\n1247 Granville Street MU 2-3019\nAt the Bell, a graduate works\nin a professional atmosphere\nwhere he can really develop\nhis capabilities,\n\"For example, after a short\nfamiliarization period\nwhich included visiting\nproject sites and working\nalongside experienced\nengineers, I was soon enabled\nto write specifications for jobs\non my own. While my experience\ngrew, company courses in\nmanagement also helped me along.\n\"Today, in my work as a power equipment engineer, I often have 15 or more\njobs going simultaneously, ranging from a\ndiesel replacement to an automatic powei\nplant installation costing many thousands\nof dollars. And, since this work takes me out of\ntheoffice about 20% of the time, I can enjoy the\nsatisfaction of seeing the results of my work.\n\"I believe the college graduate has every chance\nto increase his knowledge at the Bell, plus proper\nrecognition and opportunity for promotion.\"\nAsk your Placement Officer for our\ncaret') booklets.\nMen and women\nstudents In\nELECTRICAL\nENGINEERING\nYour campus\nwill soon be\nvisited by\nBell Telephone\nEmployment Officers.\n\"Larry\" Janis,\ngraduate in\nengineering of\nilie University of\n\"- iskatchewan in\n1955, likes the\nopportunity for\nadvancement\noffered by\nthe Bell.\nST. ANDREW'S DAY\nNovember 30th\nHoly Communion Service for\nAnglican Students\nMonday at 7:30 a.m.\nIN BUCHANAN 202\nSponsored by the\nANGLICAN ADVISORY COUNCIL AT U.B.C.\nsays\n\"TV or not TV? - ,\nthat's the question.\"\nYou hear a lot about the terrible effect TV is\nhaving on children. I'd like to put in my two\ncents worth for the other side of the question.\nTake the argument ahout TV interfering with such\nactivities as reading. If this is. true, then why do\npublic libraries all over Canada report a sharp\nrise in book withdrawals since the advent of TV?\nAnd where has the sharpest rise occurred? In\nthe children's departments. I hold that TV has\nstimulated children's mental activity, opening\nfabulous new worlds of interest to them.\nAnother thing\u00E2\u0080\u0094TV encourages family unity.\nBeing together is a mighty important thing for\nany family. I suppose that most of us are happiest\nat times like this, when we share our experiences\nwith one another. -\nThat's why it's so important to take every\nmeasure possible to keep your family together\nalways. It's only sensible to make sure you have\nthe proper insurance to implement this aim. The\nNorth American Life & Casualty Family Plan is\nintended to protect the family group. It covers\nfather, mother, and all the children (even those\nyet unborn) with just one reasonable premium.\nInsure the kind of family living that lets you relax\ntogether in confidence. Come in tomorrow and\nfind out all about our Family Plan. See you soon.\nConfidently,\nH. P. SK0GLUND,\nPresidtflt\n...insure confident living\nNorth American\nAd. No. RC-58158R \u00E2\u0080\u0094 3 cols, x 125 lines \u00C2\u00A9\nUFE \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 SICKNESS\nR. D. GARRETT\n619 Burrard Building\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 S9-4\nACCIDENT \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 PJOUP\nProvincial Manager\n- Phone MUtual 3-3301\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2BAiByto *in8tti:\u00C2\u00BBJnKl9<3 aotjjo *so "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1959_11_27"@en . "10.14288/1.0124566"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C."@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 .