"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-07-24"@en . "1954-10-29"@en . "Misprinted volume, should be XXXVII."@en . ""@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0124616/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " THE UBYSSEY\nVol. 27\nVANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1954\nSCENTS\nNo. 16\nFraternity Withdraws From I F C\nAMS MOWS OFFICE\nINTO WOMEN'S GYM\nThe temporary location for\nthe AMS offices is now in\nthe south-west corner of the\nWomen's Gym.\nStudents' Council now occupies the Hillel hut, situated\nbehind Brock Hall. Student\nclubs and activities are advised\nthat they can pick up their\nmail in this office.\nUntil permanent offices can\nagain be arranged, the above\nlocations will not be changed.\nCommittee\nBegins On\nFire Probe\nInvestigation has started into\nthe origin and cause of Monday's disastrous Brock fire, Mr.\nJ. Bagshaw, chairman of the\nPresident's special fire committee announced Thursday.\nWe have alreday definately\nestablished that the fire started\nin the double committee room,\"\nBagshaw said.\nThe investigation committee\nrevealed that three unknown\nmale students were the last to\nleave the committee, room, and\nexpressed a desire to interview\nthem.\n\"We feel that these men may\nbe afraid to come forward,\"\nUniversity Fire Cheif Sherlock\nsaid. \"But we only want to interview them for the record. No\ncharges will be laid against\nthem.\"\nmtt\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u0094 i i n\u00E2\u0080\u0094mnm i '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 --\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0.-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i- ii \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0!,,\nEvicted\nStudents\nHoused\nVacancies have ccurrcd that\nWill take care of the four remaining students of the seven\nwho were asked to vacate the\nYouth Training Center to make\nroom for Dairy Short Course\nstudents.\n\"Two of the students have\nalready found outside accommodation and a third is now living\nat his home in New Westminster,\" stated Mr. A. R. Baird,\nHousing Administrator, Thursday.\nOn October 20, seven students\nreceived letters from the Housing Administration advising\nthem that they would have to\nvacate their rooms at YTC within eight days.\nSince then cancellations have\nmade four more rooms available.\nQueen Candidate\nAsks Frosh Help\nDiane LeFever, Frosh Candidate for Homecoming Queen, has\nasked all Freshmen interested in\nhelping her enhance the float to\ncontact their class reps immediately.\nEACH WONDERING who the'lucky one is going to be the 14 beautiful homecoming queen\ncandidates' line up for judging. The queen w as selected at a tea Thursday but her name\nwill not be announced until Monday. From left to right are: front row: Louise Van Allen,\nWUS; Jean Francis, EUS; Maureen McNeil, VOC; Katie Eisenhut, Pre-Med. Back row:\nleft to right: Marion Hardie, Dance Club; Diane LeFever, Frosh; Mary Shaeffer, CUS;\nMargaret Robertson, French Club; Patti Wilks, Forestry; Zella Kendarick, Aggie; Arlene\nDill, Phrateres; Trixie Sutherland, Home-Ec and Betty Graham, Pharmacy.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Photo by Dick Wyman\nEast-West Tickets On Sale\nMonday, Buy Yours By Nov. 20\nStudent tickets and tickets\nto be sold by students for the\nfirst annual East-West game go\non sale Monday in the AMS\noffice, gymnasium and quad.\n2346 tickets for seats in the\ncovered stands in the East side\nof Empire Stadium, which will\nbe sold to downtowners for $3.25\nwill be offered as unreserved\ntickets in a solid student section for $2.\nIn the event student sales,\nwhich will be finished by November 20, a week before the\ngame, exceed the 2300, another\ncovered section will be reserved.\nForms students will use in\nselling outside tickets to downtown people will aso be available at the AMS and gymnasium.\nEast-West ticket sales committee, chaired by LSE secretry\nIsy Wolfe, has set 18,000 tickets\nas the quota to be sold by students. Instructions for selling\n.ind prize information is printed\non the forms.\nStudents will collect ticket\nmoney from customers, and turn\nin the money and a name list j\nof those customers on a form\nwhich also lists thc name of\nBrock Building Fund\nPressing' \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Underhill\nStudent Council president Dick Underhill stated Thursday that the cost of restoring prock Hall to its original condition will require every penny of the $50,000 goal of the building fund.\n\"There seems to have been\na misunderstanding as to the\namount needed to replace the\nBrock,\" he said.\n\"The insurance will only equal\nthe worth of a ten year old\nbuilding, which we must replace\nwith a new one.\"\nChanges in the building code\nsince the hall was constructed\nUBC Dances\nTax Exempt\nThe recently imposed Provincial Amusement tax will not\naffect student dances as long\nas taxation forms arc filed at\nthe AMS office two weeks in\nwill also make replacement more j advance of the function, AMS\nexpensive. ! business manager It Maunsell\n\"For instance the old hall had announced Thursday,\na cedar roof, a feature which\nis now prohibited,\" he said-\nUnderhill added that the cost\n(Continued on Page 3)\nSee UNDERHILL\n\"Student dances are tax exempt since they are operated on\na non-profit basis,\" he said.\nIt was hinted last week that\nthe dances might be taxed.\nstudent and organization he is\nsupporting-\nForms will be turned into\nthe AMS office or the gymnasium and will be picked up daily\nby a representative of the Round\nTable, the group sponsoring the\nevent.\nTickets will be mailed immediately to the customers.\nWolfe has gathered the committee on the sales, representing nearly every campus organization and has readied his members to .start the \"outside the\ngates\" onslaught first thing Monday.\nEvery fraternity, sorority, LSE\nclub, and most undergraduate\nsocieties have pledged support\nto the game, the first of its\nkind.\nSOMETHING BIG\nA similar plan for a continental college contest was proposed in 1946, but the game fell\nthrough. Wolfe says this will\nbe UBC's second chance to put\nacross something big in Canadian sport.\n\"We cant fail this time,\" he\nsaid.\nMeanwhile, one campus organization has already started on\nthe sales. Phi Delts have claimed 250 tickets sold already \"off\nthe cuff.\"\nCommittee members include\nWolfe, secretary Jean Wilson,\nPep Club president Don Jabour,\nLSE rep. Dick Riopel, USC rep-\nRalph Sultan, Athletic*. News\nrep. John Springer, IFC rep.\nJim Stewart, Panhel reps. Pat\nMcConvil and Carol Abramson,\nand ticket man Syd Polansky.\nHELP FROM ALL QUARTERS\nLambda Chi Alpha\nSevers all Relations\nA campus fraternity severed all connections with the\nInter-Fraternity Council Thursday.\nThe fraternity, Lambda Chi Alpha, issued a statement on\nits withdrawal accusing IFC of merely \"paying lip-service to\nthe cause of fighting discrimination in fraternities.\"\nThe strongly-worded statement\ncondemned the co-ordinating\nbody's \"limited policy\" on discrimination giving that as its\nreason for withdrawal.\nThe statement was released\nafter a formal letter of resignation had been submitted to IFC\nhead Jack Hamilton by Stephens.\nThe paper issued by Lambda\nChi President Vic Stephens said\nIFC's mistake rested in its resi-\ntancy to carry the anti-discrim-\n.ination fight past the legal or\n\"constitutional\" level.\nThis \"limited campaign\" according JLo the statement ignored the remaining moral fight.\nLIP-SERVICE\n\"Many fraternities, Including\nLambda Chi Alpha, have removed the written basis of discrimination,'\" it said, but that stopping there was \"just paying lip-\nservice\" to the antl-discrimina-\nton fight.\n\"We say that lip service ls not\nenough,\" the paper stated.\nStephens, who offered his\nname and address to \"those interested in our plans,\" underlined his chapter's determination\nto \"foster inter-racial brotherhood.\"\nGOING IT ALONE\n\"We disagree with the limited\npolicy of IFC on this question so\nwe are going alone by withdrawing from that organization,\" the\nstatement continued.\n\"We want to build a strong\nchapter and therefore we are\nlooking for young men to help\nus attain our object\u00E2\u0080\u0094inter-racial\nfraternity,\" the statement concluded.\nLambda Chi Alpha was one\nof the two fraternities which\nsucceeded in removing discriminatory clauses at summer conventions.\nAt that time, Stephens attributed their success due largely\nto the pressure and publicity\nforced on them by the press and\nother bodies,\nRAGING FIGHT\nThis is the latest move in a\nfight that has been openly raging for over three years.\nIn 1051 at an AMS General\nMeeting, a motion was passed\ndemanding the removal of discriminatory clauses by fraternities \"within a reasonable time.\"\nAt a fall general meeting two\nyears ago this motion was given\nteeth with the inclusion of a one\nyear time limit.\nAt the spring general meeting\nlast year when the fraternities'\ntime expired and nothing was\ndone, the motion was rescinded.\nShortly after the present \"Investigating Committee\" was set\nup.\n'twssn clotstt\nDr. Rose to Discuss\n'Germany & East'\nUNITED NATIONS CLUS\nmeets today in Arts 100 at 12;3Q.\nDr. Rose of the Department of\nSlavonic Studies speaks on \"Germany and the East.\"\n\u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00A5\nPRE-MED SOCIETY showing\ntwo films on Influenza, today at\n12:30 in Physics 200.\n\u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00A5\nSTUDENT CHRISTIAN Movement presents second talk on\n\"The Place of Man in the Universe,\" Monday in Arts 100 at\n12:30. Dr. K. D. Naegele will\nspeak on \"The Measure of Man.\"\nt|\u00C2\u00BB #|i m*\nUBC regular meeting ia canceled. All members please watch\nthe paper for the next meeting.\n\u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00A5\nGEOGRAPHY CLUB presents\n\"New Zealand\" an Illustrated\ntalk by Dr. Jack Wallace today\nin FG100 at 12:30. Fraser Valley\nfield trip to be organized. Everyone is welcome.\n\u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00A5\nVISUAL ARTS CLUB presents\n\"Images Medievales\" today at\n12.30 in Physics 202.\ntf.ej.lt*\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nAssociation is having their Special Hallowe'en Informal tonight\nat 8:00 in the club hut.\n*r *r l*r\nFROSH DECORATORS are\nneeded to enhance Homecoming\nFloats. Prospective builders and\ndecorators should contact Corn-\nmi tee in hut LI today at noon or\nphone John Helliwell at KE 2868\nbefore Tuesday.\n*r *r *r\nGERMAN 'CLUB will hold a\nmeeting Tuesday, November 2\nat 5433 West 5th street at 7:30\np.in.\n*r T* *r\nJAZZSOC presents Al Delbuc-\nchia Trio, Tuesday, November 2,\nat 12:30 in Hut HM1. All members welcome.\n*r *r *f* l\nNFCUS committee meeting\nTuesday at 3:30 in Phrateres\nroom, Brock Hall.\nCanadians Migrate\nTo United States\nBELLINGHAM\u00E2\u0080\u0094 (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nWestern Washington College's\n\"Collegian reports that Canadians head the list of out-of-\nstate students registered for\nthe Fall semester.\nCanadians in attendance\nnumber 30 with Alaska and\nOregon tied for second place\nwith 18 each.\nAll Campus Supports Roof Raising\nBy PETE PINEO\nSecond step ln UBC's Student Council \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Rebuild tiie\nBrock Fund\" drive has been\nannounced by Council. A monster dance, cabaret style, will\nbe held in the Armouries to\nmorrow night, Saturday, October 30.\nANYTHING GOES\nNo rules of etiquette will\nhold for this- dance, Council\nhas announced. Dress will be\nhard time, or anything else:\nco-eds are asked Lo violate all\ntaboos and offer to go Dutch.\n\"It's up to the girls,\" Terry\nNichol said, \"if they offer to\ngo Dutch, the dance will be\na success.\"\nThree scheduled dances\nhave been cancelled, and a\ndozen campus organizations\nhave donated time and effort\nto put on the benefit dance.\nSympathetic d o vv ntnw n ers\nhave donated cokes, sandwich\nfilling, bread, and free printing service.\nDONATIONS\nDance will cost St.50 for a\nsingle and S.'UH) for a couple.\nIt will start at 8:30 and last\ntill 12, Included in admission\nprice are free .sandwiches,\ncokes, checking and perhaps\ncigarettes.\nCANCELLATIONS\nOriginally the Varsity Air\nForce detachment planned to\nhave a dance in the Armouries\nthat night. But they cancelled\nit in favor of the benefit\ndance. At thc same time, Engineers cancelled their Friday\ndance and Law a Saturday\nball, while several Fraternities and sororities volunteered\nto hold their Ilalowe'en dances\nonly after a stop-off at the\nArmouries. Varsity Outdoor\nClub has tacked 50c onto admission to Iheir Hallowe'en\nparty on Seymour Mountain\nthis weekend, which couldn't\nbe poslpor.ed. Money will go\nto Ihe fund.\n''Supporl of Ihe dance has\ncome from all over the cam\npus\u00E2\u0080\u0094that's what amazes me,\"\nsaid Dick Riopel, commenting\non the united feeling spring\nup on campus after the Brock\ndisaster.\nDr. N. A. M. MacKenzie and\nthe UBC Dens received a surprise in their mail yesterday.\nWritten on their complimentary tickets to the Student\ndance\" for the rebuilding of\nCouncil \"Benefit Dance\" for\nthe rebuilding of Brock hall\nwere the unusual words:\n\"Please reimburse us for the\ncost of the enclosed tickets.\"\nThe reason: Student Council\nfelt that even the faculty\nchiefs would not want to miss\na chance to contribute to tho\nrebuilding of the Brock.\nCAMPAIGN\nBack of the dance is a Council policy to show downtown\nthat the students are really behind this building campaign, a\nCouncil spokesman has informed The Ubyssey.\n\"We feel that when a few\ndollars get in the fund a lot of\ndonations are going to come\nfrom unexpected downtown\nsources. But students have to\nlead the way.\" he continued.\nOver $50,000 is estimated by\nBuildings and Grounds as the\namount needed to fix up the\nBrock as the Students will\nwant it.\nIndependently Newman\nClub and Dance Club originally thought of the Benefit\ndance idea to raise funds. Terry Nichols of Newman and\nCarol Thompson, Dance Club,\nare now co-chairmen.\nTICKETS\nTickets will be on sale Friday in the Quad, Caf and at\nboth Camps. On Saturday they\nwill be sold at thc football\ngame.\nMusic will be supplied by\nBrick Henderson's ten-piece\norchestra.\nEntertainment will include\nVarsity chorus line, skits,\ncomic acts. Page Two\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 29, 1954\nTHE UBYSSEY\nMEMBER, CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS\nAuthorized as second class mail, Post Office Dept., Ottawa.\nMail subscriptions $2.50 per year. Published in Vancouver throughout the university year by the Student Publications Board of the\nAlma Mater Society, University of British Columbia. Editorial\nopinions expressed herein are those of the editorial staff of The\nUbyssey, and not necessarily those of the Alma Mater Society or\nthe University. Business and advertising telephones are Alma 1230\nor Alma 1231.\nEDITOR-IN-CHIEF\u00E2\u0080\u0094PETER SYPNOWICH\nManaging Editor\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ray Logie News Editor Pai Carney\nCUP Editor Bert Gordon Sports Editor\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ken Lamb\nAssociate Editor\u00E2\u0080\u0094Stan Beck Executive Editor\u00E2\u0080\u0094Geoff Conway\nSenior Editor\u00E2\u0080\u0094ROD SMITH\nDesk and Reporters: Jacquie Seale, Brian Guns, Rusty MacKenzie, Louie Leiterman, Bob Johannes, Sylvia Shorthouse, Pat\nRussell, Peter Krosby, Rod Smith.\nSports: Maurice Gibbons, Peter Worthington, Neil MacDonald.,\nCongratulations\ni\nWe congratulate Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity for its\nbold move in withdrawing from Inter-Fraternity Council.\nIFC, the collective spokesman of fraternities on the\ncampus, is in a position to wage a strong campaign against\nracialism.\nBut for years fraternity spokesmen have waged a disinterested campaign against discrimination in their societies.\nIFC's let's-not-get-excited policy in this regard exemplifies\nthe hypocrosy of this brand of \"brotherhood.\"\nLambda Chi Alpha, we feel, has made a wise move.\nDissassociation from the policies of IFC is a good thing to\nhave on one's side.\nThe other aspect of Mr. Stephen's action is that it\nreleases his fraternity from the caprice of one more god.\nFraternities' main excuse for their transgressions in the past\nhas invariably been that of charging compulsion .by some\nauthority or other. A local authority has been eliminated by\nLambda Chi.\nMr. Stephens, whatever his motives in this case, does\nbring to the fore an important fact. That is, the issue that\nis now assuming importance in the anti-discrimination fight\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094moral discrimination.\nIt is true that constitutional racialism is on the wane.\nBut that is only half the fight, and possibly the easiest\nto overcome because the evil is right before our eyes.\nHowever, discrimination functions as any bad habit. It\nis offensive but you can't get rid of it.\nLambda Chi Alpha appears to be prepared to take some\ndefinite action. At any rate they have put themselves\nin a position more conducive to change.\nMr. Stephens has in effect expressed recognition to the\nessence* of this question\u00E2\u0080\u0094you can't have your cake and eat\nit too.\nWhli Jby tjfand\nPolitics\nOne of the subtler beauties of British governmental tradition is its strict adherence to a code of laws and rules,\nwhich are not enforced by written statute but by the tacit\nrecognition that transgression on one point would lead to\nthe destruction of the whole system.\nOne such tradition (and it is a tradition rather than\na rule of law) is that civil servants refrain from participation\nin partisan politics. This political abstinence has not only\neliminated political patronage and ensuing corruption but has\nalso assured us of capable and efficient administrators.\nYet a week ago delegates at the Social Credit convention held in Vancouver passed a motion charging that the\npolitical sympathies of provincial civil servants were showing in overt and conscious inefficiency. Furthermore, it was\nimplied that since the wall had been breached, it would be\nwell to do away with the whole structure.\nThe condemnation of the Social Credit move was unanimous but rather incomplete. The press and the labor movement both classed it as an insult\u00E2\u0080\u0094the former to a significant\nand subscribing segment of its re'adership, the latter to the\nintegrity and honor of Labor. Both groups pointed out that\nthe Social Credit League had not backed up its charges\nwith proof.\nThere the matter rests waiting until Provincial Secretary Wesley Black clears up the government's attitude at\nthe Civil Servants' convention in Nanaimo today.\nBut regardless of whether Mr. Black backs down or\nmanages to prove that 99 percent of civil servants were indeed overtly disloyal, the principle of a non-political civil\nservice has been challenged\u00E2\u0080\u0094not by the motion of censure\nbut by its motivation and implications.\nIf the civil servants proven to be disloyal are fired, they\nwould apparently be replaced by Social Creditors as the only\npeople to be trusted to give the government positive support. Quite apart from the fact that these \"civil servants\"\nwould be turned out with a change of government; quite*apart\nfrom the fact that not even tho best intentioned government\ncould keep-the civil service free from incompetent political\nhacks under such conditions, it would also mean that the\ngovernment could have no source from which to draw impartial expert advice because its political appointees would be\nresponsible not to the government and the people, but to the\nparty caucuses.\nFurthermore, the remaining civil servants would then be\n\"free\" to join political patties. Even if they are not members\nof political parties at present, they do presumably have\nvarying political convictions. It is not hard to see that they\nwould eventually succumb to pressure to join the party in\npower. We wonder whether it would make Social Credit a\nbetter movement if it had these forced turncoats in its ranks,\nThe surprising element about the whole affair is that\nno delegate rose lo question the proceedings.\nThe present furore will die clown. The motion will soon\nbe forgotten. Only one thing will be remembered: the retreat of individual intelligence and common sense in face\nof mass .stupidity covering itself in an aura of self-righteousness.\nCaution\nEditor, The Ubyssey;\nRe: Letter from \"K\" ln a feature Writ by Hand. Oct. 18.\nDear K:\nAs a Mexican who has lived\nmost of his life in the U.S A.,\nI am well acquainted with\nracial discrimination and I am\nwith you entirely, both in\nyour general denunciation of\nit and your attack on it as it\nmanifests itself among the sororities.\nI might mention parenthetically that after extolling the\ntolerance of Canadians to my\nfriends in California this summer, I was greatly distressed to\ncome back to the ugly local\nincidents of racial discrimination.\nHowever, I feel that I must\ncaution you that you are treading on extremely perilous\nground when you threaten, as\nyou do in the fourth from the\nlast paragraph, to blackmail\nwith Communism. Would you\ncqt off your nose to spite your\nface? You say you are \"one\nof many contemporaries who\nhas witnessed the rule of communism. Then you must\nknow that privileges and economic discrimination exist in\nmuch more vicious forms in\nRussia than in any of the \"de-\ndes.\" This should be obvious\nwhen you consider that the\nCommunist Party in Russia\nnumbers a scant three million\nwhereas the total population\nnumbers two million. And if\nanyone thinks that admittance to the Party is an easy\nmatter, let him read Krav-\nchenko. You must also know of\nthe special ration cards given\nto members of the Party\nwhich entitle the bearer to\ngo to special stores whose\nshelves are always crowded\nwith goods that the other\nstores never get. There\"\" is\nfurther distinction within the\nhierarchy of the Party. Have\nyou never heard of, the case of\nthe hungry Negro jazz musician in Moscow with a trunk\nfull of money?\nYou speak of \"the capitalist\nclass that is still thriving on\nthis American continent\" as if\ncapitalism were some sort of\nanachronism or anamoly absolutely incompatible with this\nday and age- In that, you remind me of the fool who criticized Spain for taking her civilization and culture to the\nNew World. What else could\nshe do? The point I am trying\nto make is that the presence\nol capitalism on this continent\nhas a very logical explanation\nand that the system has by no\nmeans exhausted its possibilities. It that isn't true, why\nhas Communist Russia had to\nrevert in a myriad instances to\ncapitalistic techniques? As Montesquieu said the laws of a\ncountry have to be relative to\nits geography, its climate, its\nsize, the temperament of its\npeople etc. and they usually\narc or they get changed; which\nbrings us to the principle of\nadaptability. In the main, Communism suits Russia better\nthan Capitalism, The same can\nbe said for most of Asia, but\nit would not work here because\nour problem is not underproduction but overproduction. So\nplease don't blackmail with\nCommunism. I say \"It can't\nhappen here.\"\nIt is very alarming to see\nyou decry the subtle force employed by the sororities and\nin the next breath threaten to\nuse it yourself although y*u\n\"hate\" it.\nNo, dear Mr. K threats will\nnever gain us our objective.\nI don't purport to know tho\ncomplete answer but I feci\nsure that it lies along the path\nof education and example. By\nthe way, did you know that\nJapanese and Chinese parents\nconsider that it is a disgrace\nto marry an Anglo-Saxon on\nthe grounds that it constitutes\nmongrelization'.'\nPaul M. Arriola,\nDept. of Spanish\nSix Men\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nApathy, that imperishable\ndisease that has been afflicting\nfree men throughout the centuries, is plaguing the students\nat UBC once more, the first\nUSC election, the Frosh election, and the first AMS general\nmeel ing being recent victims.\nMust apathy always be a concomitant of that freedom which\nis taken for granted? No, it\nshould not.\nAlthough our democratic in-\nsitutlons have been founded\nupon principles of free expression, they will not necessarily\nremain democratic unless they\ncontinue receiving the support\nof a free-thinking and free acting majority. Apathy, therefore, must be eradicated.\nOne method involves the employment, by each student, of\nsix men, six honest serving\nmen that Rudyard Kipling kept.\nWHAT, WHY, WHEN, WHERE,\nHOW, and WHO, By keeping\nthese men active, we can be\nstimulated to offer more effective support to the more\nworthy human endeavours.\nWe can set the six men to\nwork right now-\nPRO BONO PUBLICO\nEditor, The Ubyssey;\n1 would, herewith, like to\nassociate myself with the movement which is attempting to\nhave the University Golf\nCourse renamed.\nI have evidence that will\ndemonstrably prove that the\nUniversity Golf Course has\ncreated bad publicity \"DOWNTOWN.\" For example, you wili\nall remember^the immediate\noutcry that arose \"DOWNTOWN\" when a certain person\nwas found on a certain 10th\ngreen of the University Golf\nCourse.-D own with Golf\nCourses!-Down with University\nGolf Courses!--Down with the\nUniversity!-Down with Mayor\nHoude!-Some even went so far\nas to say Down wiht TOWN,\nDOWNTOWN that is.\nThink of the embarrassment\nwe would have been saved if\nthe University Golf Course had\nbeen called by another name-\nany other name. Here are a\nfew examples:\nThe Spuzzum and Cape\nMudge Benevolent Golf Course-\nor\nThe Fair Play Golf Course\nin the interest of good taste,or\nThe Good Taste Golf Course\nin the interest of fair play-or\nThe Fair Taste Golf Course\nin the interest of good play, ad\ninfinitum-\nAll those interested in this\ncause please meel in Brock\nHall and we'll really raze the\nroof.\n(Signed) \"I'll show you\nmy etchings.\"\nCLASSIFIED\nCOACHING\nFRENCH COACHING: MAD-\name Juliette Fraser-Debacq.\nParis Diplomas. 1202 Harwood. j\nPacific 5072 \"or Cherry 7645.\nwww\nWANTED\nRIDE FROM VICINITY OF\nMain and 54th Ave. Call Marge\nFR. 9471.\n* * *\nPLACE IN CAR CHAIN OR\nride for 8:30's, vicinity 33rd\nand Granville. Phone Shirley,\nKE. 6138-R.\nCLARIFICATION\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nMay I point out one slip in\nthe issue of October 28, p. 1,\ncol 3?\n\"Convocation\" should be replaced by \"congregation.\" It\nis unfortunate that universities\nvary in the use of these words\nand so naturally make a confusion. Here in British Columbia \"congregation\" signifies the\nmeeting at which degrees are\nconferred, while \"convocation\"\nis a large body of people\u00E2\u0080\u0094numbering in a list issued by the\nRegistrar in 1948 somewhere\nabout 9000, and practically oil\nof them holding degrees from\nUBC\u00E2\u0080\u0094endowed by the Legislature with certain functions\nrelated to the welfare of our\nUniversity.\nAccording to the University\nAct of 1911 (c. 234, par. 2, 11,\n. 12, 14-19, 21) the first convocation comprised \"all graduates\nof any university in His Majesty's dominions who are actually residing in the province\ntwo years prior to the date fixed for the first meeting of the\nconvocation, and who at least\nsix weeks prior to that date\nregister themselves as members of such convocation as\nhereinafter provided,\" and\n\"twenty-five members to be\nselected by the Lieutenant-Governor in Council . . . Aftgr the\nfirst convocation all convocations shall be composed of the\nChancellor, the Senate, the\nmembers of the first convocation, and all persons who shall\nhave become graduates of the\nUniversity.\" (This was slightly\namended in 1918).\nAccording to par. 21, its functions \"shall be chiefly elective,\nbut it shall be competent for\nthe convocation to consider all\nquestions affecting the well-\nbeing and prosperity of the\nUniversity, and to make representations from time to time on\nsuch questions to the Senate,\nwhich shall consider the same \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nand return to the convocation\nthe conclusions thereon.\"\nIt generally holds its annual\nmeeting about the time of the\nspring congregation.\nO. J. To4d.\nPOINT GREY\nJEWELLERS\nStone cutting and polishing\nCustom-Made Jewellery\n4408 W. 10th (at Trimble)\nAL. 3747M\nSHIRTS 19\nhodi.im LminH.-i rd--Solt ot .Uc-h'\nDnUBLf YOUR MONTY BAi K\nIf A BUTTON MISSING\n$p(rC&,\n5c\nRECORDING\nTAPE\nPlastic 800'\n$2.85\n(Opp. Bay)\nCAMPBELL\nCLEANERS\nAcross from Varsity Theatre\nAL. 2460\nDiscount for Students\nORDER YOUR\nTOTEM\nNOW\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nFrom the AMS Office\nEUROPE\n1955\nSTUDENT TOURS Sail May 28 or June 14 tourist\n_&-C flAVC Ci 19.1 \u00C2\u00A3?ass on S.S. Homeric from\n9Q Um 19 \u00C2\u00A5 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 # I-60 Quebec on special conducted\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2tours limited to Students. A week in London. Holland, including Volendam and Isle of Marken, Brussels, Cologne,\nthe Rhine by steanter. motor tour of the Black Forest,\nLiechtenstein, Austrian Tyrol, Bavarian Castles, Dolomites,\nVenice, Adriatic Coast, tiny Republic of San Marino, Rome,\nthe Hill Towns, Florence, Italian and French Rivieras, French\nAlps, Switzerland, Paris. Motor tour of Scotland, English\nLakes, North Wales, Shakespeare Country, Exmoor, Glorious\nDevon. Returning tourist class on the S.S. Homeric arriving\nQuebec July 26 or August 12. respectively.\nINDEPENDENT\nTRAVEL\nChoose your departure and return dates; include as much or\nas little as you wish in the price\ncategory of your choice\u00E2\u0080\u0094all on a pre-arranged, prepaid\nbasis. An itinerary that is made to order for you.\nAsk For Descriptive Folders\nUniversity Travel CM ltd.\n57 Bloor St. West, Toronto \u00E2\u0080\u0094 WA. 4-1139\nManagement: J. F. & G. H. Lucas\nWhen you pause...make it count...have a Coke\nDRTNK\n(M0&\ncas\n7\n'Cole\" It a rtgistTtd tradt-mark.\nIncludino Federal Taxes\ntf-3-H COCA-COU tT\u00C2\u00BB.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2/ Friday, October 29, 1954\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage Thro*\nPhilosopher Ryle\nUncages Thinking\nBy DANNY GOLDSMITH\nStudents jam-packed FG100 yesterday to hear philosopher\nGilbert Ryle \"emancipate 'thinking* from cages which some\nthinkers, from various motives, have imprisoned'it.\"\nRyle, a professor at Magdalen\n-_\u00E2\u0096\u00A0_\u00E2\u0096\u00A0__*_-_*-\n(tor\nLashes\nAlumni\nPowerful alumni forces and\nnot students are responsible for\nthe continuance of Unfair fraternity discrimination, Mr. Abraham Arnold said Thursday.\nAddressing a meeting ot the\nCivil Liberties Union, Arnold,\neditor of Ihe Jewish Western\nBulletin, quoted the National\nCommittee for Fraternities in\nEducation as substantiation for\nhis statement,\n\"It is strong powerful Alumni pressure that is responsible\nfor the retention of discriminatory clauses,\" he said.\nArnold also struck out at discrimination in some residential\nareas of Vancouver.\n\"There are gentlemen's agreements between many people responsible for buying and selling\nhomes in Vancouver,\" he said.\n\"And many of these stem from\nthe discrimination practised in\nVancouver social clubs.\"\nArnold also discussed employment discrimination on a national scale and stated that the federal government has been the\ngreatest force for good in this\nfield.\n\"The federal program of education and legislation against\ndiscrimination has made Canada\none of the leaders in the battle\nfor equal rights for all citizens,\"\nhe said.\nCommenting on the local situation Arnold stated that UBC\nhad done far more than most\nuniversities in ridding its campus of discriminatory fraternities.\nIn closing Arnold stated there\nis a great need for more legislation in the field of human\nrights. .\n\"We must enact laws if we\nare to succeed in throwing out\nunfair prejudice,\" he said.\nSeats Set\nForComing'\nThe 3000 seats from the BEG\npool, which were proposed to be\nin place by Saturday, October\n23, but which were delayed when\nwater was discovered in the\nground on which they were to\nbe set, will definitely be in place\nby Homecoming Day, November\ne.\nThe Administration, which\nwas approached by the Men's\nAthletic Council to put out an\nestimated $1400 necessary for\nthe gravel required for a firm\nbase for the heavy stands, decided Friday to pay the bill.\nThe gravel was dumped before\nSaturday, but the movement of\nthe stands will not start till the\nmiddle of the week.\nThere is hope the stands' will\nbe ready by October 30, but in\nany event they are promised to\nbe in November 6 for the Homecoming game.\nAMS treasurer Ron Bray said\nMonday the cost would probably\nnot run as high as expected.\nThe workmen discovered Friday that the soil was wetter near\nthe track than towards the back\nand not so much gravel had to\nbe dumped.\nUNDERHILL\n(Continued from Page 1)\nof moving all the organizations\nin the Brock to new quarters\nand maintaining them until the\nnew building is built must also\nbe considered.\n\"This fund raising drive i~\nsomething which requires thc\n> participation and support of every student,\" he said. \"And it\nis something we are going to\nhave to do ourselves.\"\nCollege, Oxford, is \"travelling\naround the world slicking his\nneck out, and giving other people\nthe chance to drop the guillotine.\"\nHe told the Ubyssey that he regretted that he had no philiso-\nphical message. Philisophical\nproblems cannot be reached\npiecemeal, and journalists who\ntry to summarize a philosopher's\narguments for the masses are\nmore optimistic than successful, he said.\nIn the paper that he read\nyesterday, Ryle attacked those\nwho conceive of thinking solely\nin terms of intellectutlism, ratiocination, deduction or theorizing. In thanking the speaker\nDean Chant referred to the way\nRyle had dealt with \"serious\nintllectual problems.\"\nRyle scored psychologists who\nconceived of thinking only as\ngetting answers to questions.\nComposing music, writing poetry, reminiscing, are all thinking, but they don't necessarily\ninvolve questions and answers-\nRyle has no easy path for\nthose who want to do philosophy\nwithout philosophizing. But he\nsuggests that those who want\nto solve philosophical problems\nshould start in by quarreling\nabout them.\nVANCOUVER SYMPHONY\nTO PLAY ON CAMPOS\nVancouver symphony orchestra will make it its second\nappearance on the campus Thursday, November 4 at noon.\nSponsored by the Special Events Committee the symphony, with Irwin Hoffman conducting, will give a two-\nhour performance of works by Brahms, Beethoven and the\nmodern English composer, Benjamin Britten.\nLast year the symphony narrowly missed breaking\neven when it played to an audience of more than 1800\nstudents.\nAdmission is 50c. Tickets are on sale every noon hour\nat the Auditorium box office.\nSEC chainnan Gerry Hodge stressed the need for a\ngood turnout by students.\n\"This is not a rehearsal but a full scale performance,\"\nhe said.\n\"We all want the symphony out here but if we don't\nbreak even this will be the symphony's last appearance\non campus.\"\nMan's Shot Sola\nAll Shoes Reduced\nfor this Special Event\n(DsxoII'a\nSHOE STORE\nCorner 10th Ave. It Granville\nHomecoming\nCelebrations\nStill On\nThe destruction of Brock Hall\nhas made only minor changes\nin the schedule for the colorful annual homecoming celebration.\nThe largest change Is the cancellation of the buffet dinner\noriginally scheduled for Brock\nHall-\nAlumni attending the annual\ncelebration will now register\nin the armory.\nAs a result of the expected\nincrease in activity in the armory, the reception has been\nchanged from the COTC mess to\nthe faculty club.\nThe overflow dance which\nwas to be held in the Brock is\nof course cancelled but officials\nstate that the armory should be\nable to accomodate all those\nattending.\nDE HAAS STUDIO\nALma 8174\n4439 West 10th Ave.\n(down from Sasamat)\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094modern photography\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094better photo-finishing\nNew colour\nmagic for\nyour\n4\nCollection\nGraduation Pics\nDeadline Nov. 6\nThese studios will take graduation photographs till November\n6: Campbell Studios, Arts and\nLaw; Krass Studios, Commerce,\nForestry, Home Economics, Medicine and Pharmacy; D'Arcy Galleries, Agriculture, Architecture,\nEngineering, Physical Education and Nursing Grads.\nFor schoolroom...or some enchanted\nevening...in cashmerc-soft Lambswool.\n100% Super Orion. Full-fashioned,\nexquisitely hand-finished... ghrink-proof\nand moth-proof...by Glenayr.\nAt flood stores\nevei yuhere\nSTUDENT\nSPECIALS\nSales \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Service \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Rentals\nAll Offtce Machines\nMa. 0181 111 W. Pender\nFor All Your Bakery Needs\nsee us at the\nUniversity Boktry\n10th at Sasamat\nAl. 0800\nFRANCES MURPHY\nDANCE SCHOOL\nBAyvlew 3428\nPrivate Instruction\nRhumba \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Tango \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Samba\nFox Trot - Waltz. Jive\nOld Time\nBeginners \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Brush Up\nAdvanced Courses\nIf no answer CEdar (878\nAlma Hall, 3878 W. Broadway\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*-\nstem\nDRAUGHTING\nINSTRUMENT*\nFROM 110.00\nT-SQUARES, PROTRACTORS\nSET SQUARES\nMECHANICAL ENaUniRS\nAND\nPOIYPHA8E SLIDE RULES\nZIPPER RING BOOKS\nComplete with Sheets and\nIndex\nAMES LETTERING\nINSTRUMENTS\nFOUNTAIN PENS\nClarke & Stuart\nCo. Ltd.\nSTATIONERS 8t PAINTERS\n880 Seymour St, Vaneeuver\nUNIVERSITY BOOK STORE\nHn. 9 a.m. - S p.m. Sat. 9 a.m. to Noon\nLoose-Leaf Note Books, Exercise Books and Scribblen,\nGraphic Engineering Paper, Biology Paper, Looso4atf\nRefills, Fountain Pons and Ink and Drawing Instruments\nOwned and Operated by\nTee University of &C\nEATON'S\nColourful Angora Sweaters\nSoft-as-a-snowflake Angora sweaters in\nglowing colours. Pretty next to you . . \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\"Dorothea\" Angora sweaters. Each full\nfashioned and styled to retain shape and\nfit. Each durably mothproofed with\nMitin. Classic short-sleeve pullovers and\nbutton-to-neck cardigans. Kelly, Fire\nRed, Cobalt Blue, Snow White, Frosty\nPink, Ice Blue, and Flamingo.\nSizes 16 'to 20.\nShort Sleeve Pullovers, Each 10.9S\nLong Sleeve Cardigans, Each 14.9S\nEaton's Sportswear \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Second Floor\nTelephone Orders :MArine 7112, WEst 1600\nAlso at Eaton's New Westminster\nNW 4811\nDance the Roof on the Brock Page Four\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 29,1954\nCPS Loggers Might\nNeed Pass Attack\nGerry Stewart's Return\nBuilds Birds Hopes\n' By KEN LAMB\nCollege of Puget Sound Loggers may discover Saturday\ntheir diligent work in developing an aerial offense and defense\nto be used against the Thunderbirds was not all in vain.\nIt could be they will even discover it won't be good enough.\nMOST HEARTENING *\nThis piece of information, one\nof the most heartening Birdwatchers have had for a few\nweeks, comes with the announcement that quarterback Gerry\nStewart has recovered from an\ninjured nose and will be back in\naction for Coryell on Saturday.\nStewart, who is the spark of\nUBC's pass defense, and the\nquad's most successful passer,\nwill be accompanied in his return to the fold with left-half\nGary Williams, out of action\nwith a bad leg last week.\nItAYMENT AT FULLBACK .\nJim Boulding will be out of\ncourse, but his place will be\ntaken by Ross Rayment.\nBirds' attack may find itself\nagain thfs weekend, especially if\nthe ball carriers find some\nblocking. '\nThe line will be the-same as\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2last week, with end Charlie\nJames still out and new lineman\nHugh Stevens added to the tackle\ncorps.\nPlayer of the week, fearless Ken Ross, who tried so.\nhard he even got knocked out,\nwill also be in for the Birds.\nWOT A BALLI\nThe fans too are in for some\nadded benefit. Not only will the\nrevitalized Birds be at their best,\nbut also most of the extra stands\nwill be in place, Homecoming\nqueens will be presented, and the\nUBC band, that purveyor of fan\nstirring music, will be placed in\nthe student section, thereby adding to the general fun fest.\nBring along the whole family\ntoo. They can be whipped by the\nticket takers entire and intact\nfor the price of one buck. The\nwhole family yet.\nONE ONE TROUBLE\nThe only blotch upon the general festivities are the Loggers,\nwho will be exhorted by coach\nJohn Heinrich to go out and flatten the Birds, thereby hoisting\nthemselves into second place.\nHeinrichs brings along a team\nwith an impressive four out of\nfive record, and a 77 to 39\nagainst point record, 33 of the\nagainst points were incurred in\ntheir fateful battle against the\nWhitworth Pirates\nROWERS CALL DANCE\nOff TO AID BROCK\nFollowing the swing of other\ncampus groups, Rowing Club,\nwho were to hold a trip raising fund danct Saturday night,\nhavt decided to call their bash\noff and join in the roof-raising brawl in the armouries.\nAll holders of a 12.50 rowing club ticket can get into\nthe armoury wingding on presentation of their ticket and.an\nextra SOc. .\n----w -- \u00C2\u00AB\nf \u00E2\u0080\u00A2&&,<*** ^v. ,A\nBrave XV Only\nSteady Winners\nBy PETE WORTHINGTON\n\"The Cross-Country-Comet\", Our Petey Harris, excluded,\nthe UBC rugger Braves are at present unique in varsity sport\ning enterprises.\nCREDIT TO TEAM\nCredit for the Braves' success\nbelongs to the team as a whole,\nand the dogged stamina instilled\nby their coach, Dr. Maxle Howell. The team is sparked by\n\"Genial Jawn\" Mulberry at fullback, a relatively new boy to\nfootball, whose booming kicks\nand sterling defensive abilities,\nmay conceivably force him into\na promotion to the Chiefs' squad.\n\"Comers,\" like half-backs Theodora Hunt, Bill IJendall and\n*-\nHockiers\nTo Meet\nCardinals\nVarsity will be entertained\nby the league-leading Cardinals\nSaturday at 2:30 and UBC will\ntake on the, Blackbirds on the\ncampus at the same time, in the\nUBC grasshockey scene.\nLed by the steady play of\nHarry Preston in goal and Johnny Lees on defense, Blackbirds,\nwho tied Varsity last week 2-all\nexpect to drop UBC. But Capt.\nDoug Howie will be leading a\ndangerous set of forwards\nagainst them for UBC'\nGary Gobra, show real possibilities for. the future. Hunt in\nparticular may well develop Into\none of the finer players of the\ncoast.\nForwards like Billyum Esso,\nJack Ward and Roy Perhtrom\nare big reason why the Braves\nhave had but 3 points scored\nagainst them this season- Clive\nNeil, Stuart Wright and Glyn\nFitzgerald have not been idle\neither offensively or defensively,\nand play to the hilt in every\ngame.\nHOWELL PLEASED\nNext Saturday, the 30th, the\nBraves will endeavour to pro-\npigate their record at Douglas\nPark when they clash with Ex-\nBrits at 1:45 p.m.\nThe \"Tommie\" Tomohawks\ntangle with that oddly titled\nteam, the \"Kats\" at 3 p.m. in\nCarnarvon Park. Tommies admire the Braves and will attempt\nto imitate their technique.\nIn Miller Cup play the fast\nand ever improving Chiefs meet\nRowing Club \"A\" at 2:30 in\nBrockton Oval.\nBrave coach Howell, (or coach\nHowell the Brave: swimming\ntoo), is advised to keep his\nwards off the Empire Pool tow\ner. There is neither water nor insurance to protect rugger-ites\nwho venture into this exotic\nestablishment, (roofless).\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094That's the big and tough\nChief rugger scrum you're\nlooking at. The lads are all\nset for their toughest game\nLOOKOUT ROWING CLUB\nof the year against the league\nleading scullers. Note the\npresence of Derek Vallis, the\nmighty forward out at the\nstart of the season with a\nchipped ankle. He'll be playing Saturday. \u00E2\u0080\u0094Ubywey\nphoto by Dick Wynvan.\nVarsity XI\nFor Second\nLooks\nWin\nBy NEIL MACDONALD\nVarsity are expecting their second win when they take\non Royal Oaks at Central Park, this Saturday, while Chiefs\nwould be content with a tie when they play Sunset on the\ncampus, both games going at 2 p.m.\nSCORING BETTERED \"\nInjuries to Mark McDonald\nand Trig Carlson have weakened\nVarsity but John Green, formerly of McGill, will be in the forward line with Jerry Rovers,\nlast year's \"B\" team top scorer.\nThe two are expected to strengthen the weak scoring punch of the\nVarsity boys.\nErnie Kuyt will be playing\nhis first game as a Canadian for\nVarsity this week. Formerly a\nDutchman, Kuyt has now become a Canadian citizen. At\ntimes he has been the only man\non the field for Varsity.\nNAVY HERE THURSDAY\nNext Thursday, November 4,\nVarsity takes on Navy on the\ncampus at noon. It will be another event for homecoming week.\nNavy have a top-notch team and\nshould be in fine shape.\nVarsity will play their only\nWashmgtoa First\nRowers Prepare For Big Things\nBy PETE WORTHINGTON\nUnpublicized, unheralded,\nand to all . intents forgotten,\nthe Varsity Rowing Club is\ntraining with close to fanatic\nintensity.\nEvery day, Saturdays and\nSundays included, the campus\nSpartans are working themselves into top condition, and\ntiming this conditioning so\nthat they hit their peak on\nNovember 10th. On the 10th\nthe results of their build-up\nwill explode in a single burst\nof effort, when they race the\nUniversity of Washington's\nVarsity crew in Seattle.\nJUNIORS MEET\nWhile the Varsity crews\nrace, the UBC JV rowers meet\nthe Juniors of the U- of W.,\nand the U. of Oregon's number one, team, who do not\nfeel that they are of Washington or UBC calibre yet. After\nthese races, rowing conditioning will taper off at UBC until\nafter the Xmas break.\nFrom January to Spring the\nphysical and mental build-up\nwill commence all over again,\nbut this time with a more\nserious goal in view. In May\nVarsity's BEG champions head\nto California where they cross\noars with the top crews of the\nUnited States; Navy, California, Stanford, Washington, and\nso on, who rate with the best\nin the world.\nREAL TEST\nThe U of W test on November 10th will be an indication\nof UBC's ability, for Washington is rated as one of \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 the\nbetter crews in America, and\ntherefore the world.\nNext summer, should Frank\nRead's fetishly conditioned\nathletes fare well against Yank\nopposition, there is the Royal\nHenley in England to\nwin for Canada's honor. In\n1956 the Olympic trials are\nlo be held, subsequently the\nOlympics proper.\nWANTED-A COXSWAIN\nThere is one problem facing\nthe rowers; that of coxswain,\n(cox'n to those in UNTD).\nIf any student who reads this\narticle weighs 115 lbs. or less,\nand fancies a chance to holler\nauthoritatively at eight 200\nlb. oarsmen, he is vitally\nneeded-\nNothing is required of applicants save lungs, so if any\nfit tiie weight qualifications\nIhey are urged to report under the Engineering building\ncanopy to tiie Rowing Club\nany afternoon at 4:30. Either\nthere or contact mgr Don\nLaishley at Acadia Camp\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nunless he has been excommunicated for filled waste-\npaper baskets. Necessary cox'n\ntraining, and tickets to Henley, will be supplied by the\nclub,\nUBC's eight man crew is\nvirtually the same as the BEG\none of last August, and, unless hopes are upset, will be\nthe one which represents Canada in the 1956 Olympics at\nMelbourne, Australia.\nHowever, November 10 at\nU of Washington comes first,\nand the experienced Americans must be forced to play\nsecond fiddle to UBC.\nStadium game on November 20\nwhen they will playoff for the\nRichardson Cup- Their opponent\nhasn't been decided yet.\nProspects are poor for the\nChiefs, who are riddled with\ninjuries and face the fast moving\nSunset team.\nFootball\nJV's Out\nFor No. 2\nJayvee footballers, one of the\nmore winning teams on campus,\nwill be out to protect their perfect record of one win and no\nlosses this Sunday at UBC when\nthey take on a Seattle boys'\nschool team.\nThough boys' school has a\nnasty connotation, this one\ndoesn't come from Vancouver\nIsland and is reported to have\na good football club, having lost\nby a narrow margin to the Vancouver (roarless) Lioncubs..\nDave MacFarlane's Junior\nBirds, still smarting from the\nsuspicion cast on their valour in\nTuesday's (fire sale) Ubyssey,\nwill be after a* complete vindication of their honour and an. impressive record to meet Royal\nRoads with next week.\nPROTECT\nWHILE YOU\nSAVE\nfor ample protection, al low net eeet,\nyour local Mutual Life of Canada representative\nUTUALIIFE\nASSURANCf CO\nOF CANADA\n^yv low Ca "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1954_10_29"@en . "10.14288/1.0124616"@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 .