"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-07-24"@en . "1960-03-11"@en . "Misprinted volume, should be XLII."@en . ""@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0124741/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " A\"? -' 1 V.-'J\nI'iiP''\nV\u00C2\u00A9L. LXVII\nE UBYSSEY\nVANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, MARCH 11, 1960\nNo. 59\nSKIT TODAY\nGodiva's Fortress Crumbled\nBy Awesome Frosh Attack\nAHHHH! the intrinsic joy of being iniquitously baptized\namid Weeping willows in theicampii's bayou-type pools\nfor infatuation with red-clad leeches.\nEditorial Meeting\nA General Editorial Meeting will be held today at noon\nin the Pub office. Open lo\nthose who are willing to work\non the last three issues, thereby being eligible to take pari\nin fhe so-called goon edition.\nCome to discuss the craziest\ntheme ever produced.\nWATER! WATER! w-a-t-e-r? thus echo the futile cries of\ninfinitesimal un-clad fire-rrren (?) as the hydraulic tanks\nare once again being tested for density by hordes of har-\numscarums.\nFee Raise\nin the\nMaking?\nThe Treasurer and the Finance Committee of the Sudents'\nCouncil recommended this week\nthat the members of the AMS\nvote to raise their fees permanently by $2.00 effective September 1961.\nThis suggestion arose out of\na study as to the future use of\nthe $5.00 that went to theDe-\nvelopment Fund and will stop\nwith its last payment in 1961.\nThe committee suggested that\n$1.25 go to Men's Athletics, $.15\nto Women's Athletics and $.60\nto the general fund.\nStudents' Council, contrary to\nthe committee's advice, voted to\nrecommend that the AMS members vote to raise their fees permanently by $5.00, $2.00 to be\ndistributed as the Finance committee recommended and $3.00\nto go into a general building\nfund.\nThe issue of what should become of the $.500 will be discussed at the General Meeting\nnext Wednesday.\nINTEREST RATES LOWER\nIH Credit Union Solves Troubles\nOn campus today there are many who wonder where their\nnext dollar is coming from. In an article in this paper two weeks\nEgo. some of the advantages of the International House Credit\nUnion were listed. ; to'obtain, toan7 in a hurry at a\nLoans are available at a rate low rate: of interest will be ap-\nof interest much lower thah that predated. When a member ap-\n, .,. ..\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' ; \".: > plies for a loan, he will face a\ncharged toy the banks, for ex- f . ' ,\nj loan committee composed of\nstudents, who understand the\nample.\nThe importance of being able | problems encountered by a person who has to live for a whole\nyear on the earnings of a four\nmonth period.\n' When the IHU grows bigger,\nthere will be no limit to the\nApplications are invitee\nfor membership on the Public\nRelations Committee. Any\nstudent wishing to apply, may\nturn in an application, including ay particular qualifications -which may be of interest to the Committee, to\nthe Council Office addressed\nto the Public Relations Officer.\namount of good it will be able\nto do. Already other Credit Unions are assisting IHCU by attempting to find summer erh-\nployment f or - its members.\nIn the years to come the students of UBC will benefit from\nthe IHCU. All students are\nurged to join; if not now, in\nSeptember. The IHCU office. is\nopen Mon., Wed. and Fri. from\n1:00-2:30 p.m. and on Thurs.\nfrom 1:00-4:30.\nFrosh and Engineers are fighting again. In a clash which\nseesawed back and forth the Frosh and Engineers squared off\nyesterday noon.\nDuring the 11:30 to 12:30 period the Engineers arrested Pete\nShephard and Rolf Patterson of\nthe Frosh Council, putting them\ninto stocks along with other\nFrosh who foolishly walked into the EUS building.\nMeanwhile the Frosh began\nto assemble outside the Brock.\nAs they advanced across the Library lawn towards the Engineering building their council\nmembers were tried and placed\nin the Engineers tank. But the\nwater for the tank was misplaced.\nAt 12:37 the : Frosh' stormed\nthe east door of the Engineering\nbuilding. They were driven back\nwith soap-filled fire extinguishers but not before the^ had cap-\n'tween classes\nA.W.S. is sponsoring a lecture and slides in Bu. 204,\ntoday, Friday, March 11 at\nnoon on the topic of Occupational Therapy.\nA pair of glasses and a pencil case with pens and pencils\nin it can be claimed from. Bill\nRogers at the EUS office.\nv *fr v\nAttention, all alcoholics!\nThe terrific Medical Skit will\nbe staged in the Auditorium\nat noon today just for YOU.\n(25c, if you please!)\nMARKETING CLUB\nThe Marketing Club of the\nFaculty of Commerce will hold\na luncheon in the Faculty Club\non March 17. '\nMr. L. Dampier, Assistant\nPublisher with the Sun Publishing Co., and past Vice President\nin charge of marketing for North\nAmerica with Lever Bros., will\nspeak at the luncheon. '\nCommerce students can purchase tickets from Doug Butter-\nworth, Bryan Judge, John Mc-\nDiarmid or any of the executive\nof the club. Tickets should be\nbought by Tuesday noon. !'\n* * *\nV.O.C.\nVarsity Outdoor Club'photographic competitions slide showing in Bio-Sc. today at noon.\n* * *\nPHYSICS SOCIETY\nPhysics Society Journals must\nbe picked up at noon today in\nthe Tea-room, Physics Building.\nBring your membership card.\n* * *\nSQUASH CLUB\nGeneral meeting in Bu. 212\ntoday at noo'n.. All me'inbeis\nplease attend. >\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0:. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 *\"'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' *\nfcHiC. - \ .; \u00E2\u0080\u009E-~\nFriday evening at 8:30 p.m.,\nProfessor Wyler, visiting NATO\nprofessor and head of the Political Science Institute of Oslo,\nwill speak on \"Some Fallacies\nin our thinking on International\nAffairs.\"\n* * *\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nThere will be a short General\nMeeting at noon today to introduce the new executive.\n* * *\nCAMERA CLUB\nGeneral meeting of the spring\nterrri, today at noon in Bu. 203.\n- - (Continued o\u00C2\u00AB> page 3}- - \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\ntured an extinguisher.\nLed by this extinguisher they\nattacked a second time. Repulsed again, they shifted the\nattack to the south' door and\nwere successful in breaking in.\nWhen they hesitated, fearing an \\nEngineers plot they lost this ad- '\nvantage but captured two engineers.\nAt the same time the engineers captured several Frosh and\ngot the water flowing in the\ntank. As a result Frosh filled the\ntank. The engineers were then\ndunked by dozens of Frosh, till-,\nparties of both sides played in\nthe bloody brew.\nMeanwhile Frosh were tossing\nan unidentified engineer into\nthe mud hole. . \u00E2\u0096\u00A0._;.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2,\nNow the Engineers poured out\nof their building. A mass fight\ninvolving hundreds of students\nensued. A first attempt at truce\nfailed. One of the water bags\nthrown from the Engineering\nbuilding hit and shook up an\nelectrical engineer.\nAt 1:15 the battle shifted to\nthe Library lawn; and finally a\ntruce was declared. The captives were released and the engineers began to cleanup their\nbuilding.\nAt 1:30 the Frosh and Engineering councils had coffee together to symbolize their peace.\nThe final results: 2 engineers\ninto the mud hole, 16 engineers\ninto the engineers tank, 6 frosh\nin the tank, one damaged door\nand window, one engineer laid\nout by his own cohorts, and a\nlot of water in the engineering\nhalls.\nAttention All\nArts & Science\nBy next Thursday, the Engineering Undergraduate Society\nmay rule the Alma Mater Society. They have proposed an\namendment which will give them\ntwo votes for every active member in good standing. The amendment goes on to say that in effect\nthe Faculty of Arts and Science\nyill only have half a vote for\nevery member.\nNow this would be ridiculous;\nI can see Lady Godiva riding\naround the campus on her dirty\nwhite horse, raising all kinds of\nhavoc. If the Engineers do get\ncontrol of AMS, the other faculties are going to be over-run\nand will have no say in student\ngovernment.\nIf the Engineers are to be\nstopped in the maneuver,, everyone, but everyone must attend\nthe AMS General Meeting at\n11:30 Wednesday, March 16, in'\nthe Armouries. ALL LECTURES'.\nCANCELLED THAT DAY:. -. PAGE TWO\nTJIj: U.BYSSEY\nFriday, March 11, 1960\nTHE U[B|YSf IJT\nAuthorized as second class mail by Post Off ice peparjment, OtUwa\nMEMBER CANADIANx UNTVESaijl^ PRESS.\nEditor-in-Chief: H. Kerry White\nAssociate Editor\u00E2\u0080\u0094 .. Elaine Bissett\nManaging Editor Del Warren\nNews Editor John Russell\nC.U.P. Editor Irene Frazer\nG^b's Ed|^r Wea^r Barr\nf?eatare\u00C2\u00A7,&s|tor - San<^| Scott\nHead B^togjaphjer ColiijA-andie\nPhotojtfanjry. Mtivi, - Roger.McAf ee\nSENpR E^TORSfcFA'Rtl^, SEWEJLL,, FRANKkfINDENIGG\nReporters and desk: Allen Grave's, Madeline Brons-\ndon,-Peter- Herke, Henry Jones, Ed Lavalle, Diane\nGreenalf, an\u00C2\u00A3 Fran Charkow\" \t\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094, CRUCHFY TH-EM? \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nWilliam. Doirgjas, Home is a clever,, writej. He. has, Jhat\nknack for:, de^pe^t^kcliaxacter, with a few lirifs of dialogue*\nand that ability to skilfully manipulate scenes, which can hold\nan audience's attention for three, acts of a play, otherwise singularly lacking in compelling qualities. That most of Mr. Home's\nways do lack these qualities is a second illustration of hh\ncleverness: he, knews his audience. He writes for ah auditor\nBETTERS TO THE EDITOR\nthe pas^trty y*ar^,.>t least, has.b^e^th^rnan who -could, .afford\ns^t^ .|fulIin^siBa|f! price ox twicetas we$% and tfta\u00C2\u00A3 the^major-\nit^.of;Wa^sihaymg..the.,l|>,r^st. runs, the one\u00C2\u00A3jhai1.is$ wh^^he\nhas suroarted, have beer^ drawing-room romps or soi-disant\n''Problem'' plays offerine. less, ihtefleetUal stimulus than' a\nchild's cross-word puzzle, llie scene Has changed of late, and\nRoyal Court writers of the calibre of Osborne, N.F. Simpson,\nand Doris Lessing have both attracted and'exercised audiences,\nbut the bad old plays continue to dominate the theatre centres\nof the- world; and to be. performed in the provinces even unto\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Vancouver, where,this, week a professional company,The Barnstormers, present one of Mr,. Hosae's plays, \"Now Barabbas\".\ni Ijight comedy, however, is one thing: a frothy entertainment\ndoes no-one any harm; unpretentious tbri^ers wil|salways provide^ mild,catlia^sis,Jor\u00C2\u00ABthe,mapy, But M^ Home's /'problem\"\n]$a& 'Nqw, ^ara^^'^ is rereese>ita(tiye of the. insidious custom of selling your, aijidiejice, short because you know they not\nonfcwoh't, but can't,!count.their charige.-Orir averagejuiditor\nRre%6usly referredj'to has'tbe cbrhmon Anglo-Saxon aihBiva-\nlehee towards meritaj agiHfy\u00E2\u0080\u0094openly-deploring while, siieakily\nadrriiring---and, although* rie himself: refuses to examine any\nprdblern, likes to betfeve that he| has been)'present while others\nrlave done so. \"Saw a damned interestingQrj% the.other ,nighV'\nrie waffles, \"Examined capital punishment and hOmps\"exual,ityv\nr Which, of course, is just what \"New Ba*abb#\",does; not do.\nIt shows us comfortingly individu^Ij inmates brovt^f together by\nreassuringly uniyessal.djriyes; kine&%,cOiftd\u00C2\u00ABnwed man is extremely unpleasant, and it informs u,s.thai men without women will turn to one\naether,foE enwiion.al.vandLsexual comfort; a discovery we find\nsomewhat less than stajctlyag,. But not one sound argument\nagainst capital punishment, or for it, does it advance; no suggestion for the screening of guards, or for one night a week visits\nBy wives or girl-friends'. The ^plausible characters walk and talk\n(albeit sbriietirries like parodies, of Rujjert Brooke, or Colonel\nBlhrip or Old Bill)* for far more jthari half an hour; but, the play\nriever had any Head to cut off. It i,s en^pty of anything in the\nleast thought-prbvbkirig^ Mr Home,h,as; dorie- it again; the.tired\nojd confidence trick, the hanging, of ;a mixture of Tigjrtrcomedy.\narid/ thriller - diller materiaf/oin an alJe\u00C2\u00A3eJi.^s/?ciS pegt hag\nbrought the suckers in; but as long as thijs despicable man\ngfbivs fat by throwing scraps of a social evil to the undiscrim-\ninating pack, any man of conscience, intelligence and integrity\nWill refuse to abet iff any way th^'perfbrmaricepfJhis trash.\nWheri^he playwright is this kind! of master-pimp, those who pro-\ndvfcg his Viol^^wh\"^!^'^!^^ profhvby cashirig-iri on, without attempting to alleviate, the suffering of condemned and\nin^ajce^ajedt ,m&, are asjgujlty, as Home himself, and of the\nsaine crimei '.-..-\nBut the actors? you askv Surely they, dp, not, haye, to consider the play as a whole, but onjy, th^u: roje? The, answer is,\nof course, that only psychopidlfis or igr^aml would attempt\nthis dichotomy. How can one believe in one's part if one can't\nbelieve iri the play? How can one believe in the play if one is\nat all intelligent? Iri the event, to comment on the acting seems\nsuperfluous. Certainly Peter Howarth gives a performance which\niri a better play, might have been moving; certainly Dave Allen,\nRoy Brkison, Anne Grainger, and Frank Crowson show a good\nunderstanding, of character* and the performances of a further\nthifee are tspoilld drily by poor posture. (Roy Cooper, who\nalthough excellent in anger^ stiffens uncomfortably in repose;\nT-ony Buckley, whoyslumpsjtoo much to have ever been a ballet\ndancer, and l^chagj - rvoiteray, whose permanent stoop collapses into a foetal,.crouch when. his. girl leaves, him.) The direction, too* by, Jan.. Thftcne, is tight,; and thei set is Ted Packer's\nsecond successive success at this theatre.BuJ non.pf this mitigates the, olferisiyejness,.of; the. material offered, and I suggest\nth#t all cojacer_pe4.:bei not crucified, but hung,by\u00E2\u0080\u009Ethe heels from\nthe?flies of a degerfg^thmtre, until the^rusfy of blood.to their\nbrain clears their vision. In v addition^ the, producers, who, are\nresponsible not prdy for the\u00E2\u0080\u009Echoice, or play, but also presuiriably\n%J%?^S5Mll^%|S^#^V^P^ \u00C2\u00B0n ^ prpgrjm^oe\n(Roy. Bpnsoft-^m^fly respected; author (where?)\u00E2\u0080\u0094has impressive bac^^iu^d;^^^ i&lc^t. sfepuldijijwhile hanging, be^nstructe^Lby\ns^ l6^%*5^ ^dSr^|#^. & is 4^aW,e. in a mime, riot; that\n%,HJ'a,p%.Qn s%g|t ' fiwp m,scomedy^situations , or{\n\"dangeKous ori^audieiiffes;., but,>that,he be able: to act.\n.,, ;.w!..-. '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0...:.'.';.,:V;^ ^^^l^/lai^J^OMiGE :\nThe Editor;\nThe Ubyssey;\nDear Sir:\nThe Frosh-Engineer rivalry,\nafter reaching its peak yesterday noon^ is now ended and\nhas produced a friendship based\non mutual respect. Because of\nthe, mass Frosh support to\ncounteract my dishonourable\nabduction, we have proved to\nthe campus that Freshmen rank\nequally with their Engineering\nbrothers as one of the most\nmilitant, aggressive, spirited,\nand glorious faculties. Through-\n. out the 'tyeek-of hostilities both\nparties acted with the chivalry\nand honour that governs good-\nnatured rivalry. This was especially evident during my sojourn,.with, the Redshirts. My\nthanks to the brave, unyielding\nand wet cohorts who equalled\nthe, previously unchallenged\ncourageously prowess of the\nEngineers.\nPeter Shepard,\nFreshmen President.\nTo all those innocent and\nself-righteous spectators who\nseemingly enjoyed what they\ncall 'a childish display,' a\nlittle hint\u00E2\u0080\u0094go jump in the ljly\npondrf The long-awaited battle\nbetween the Engineers, and the\nFreshmen took place, yesterday^\nnoon. The Engineers., had b#er^\nsuccessfully 'irrlta'tedl during\nFrosh Week. The b.attle was\ninevitable. .Neithej: sidebaeked .\nout andp neither, side\u00E2\u0080\u009Eregretted\nthe actions taken.\nGrnups of Engineiers undertook Various, methods to find,\nthe<,Eiosh Executive. Only two\nout of six were caught. At\nnoon when the general Frosh\nalar m sounded, huge hordes\nfrom the Brock audi, the. Library, in unison did storm. the\nEngjneers' fortress. The Frosh\nwere, extremely numerous, The\nentrance to the EtTS building\nwas the s.cenj? \u00C2\u00B0f a pitch and\npunch battle. Fire-hoses and red\nshirts could not keep the Frosh\nout. Many gained entrance to ,\nfrustrated Lady Godiva's joint.\nBattles of healthy rivalry followed, inside the building, on\nthe. Main Mall, in the EUS\nhydraulic tanks, at the Totem\nPole pond, Brpck Hall, The\nLibrary and Bus Stop area.\nAfter the Frosh and, Reds had\nsung their respeGtiye, hymns\nthe^war was declared 'finl.'\nsee the\ngreat new\nAfter a social call to the\nEUS office, three FUS officers\nand three EUS members who\nwent to Brock for a friendly\nchat and coffee, were greeted\nby joyous cheers. It had been\na noon-hour of clean, wild, fun\nwithout which the campus\nwould be a stagnant pool of\napathetica.\nYea Frosh!\u00E2\u0080\u0094Yea Engineers!\nFrank Findenigg,\nFreshmen Vice-president.\nThe Editor,\nThe Ubyssey,\nDear Sir:\nP.C. suggests that the petition recently signed by some\nfaculty members does not represent the opinion of the University. Absolutely right, P.C.\nPersonally, I have never met\n\"The University,\" and consequently have no idea what\nopinions he or it holds, nor\nindeed whether he or it is a\ncreature capable of holding\nopinions at all.\nSonie of your readers, however, t-may be interested to\nknow precisely the nature of\nthe petition which was signed\nby more than 350 individual\nmembers of the faculty (including, incidentally, President\nMacKenzie). It runs as follows:\n\"We, the undersigned members of the Faculty of the University of British Columbia,\nconsider it our duty to emphasize : the continuing and iri-\ncreasing danger of nuclear war.\nSuch was would cause inestimable suffering and destroy\nthe present basis of civilization.\nThe major powers are now\ninvolved in an armaments race,\ndespite the proven tendency\nof such competitions to provoke, rather than to prevent\nconflict. To maintain a balance\nof power, East and West threaten each other with instant re\ntaliation, risking the fearful\ndanger of accidental war. These\ndangers are increased, and new\nopportunities for disastrous\naction are created, byt the endeavour of other powers to\nobtain nuclear weapons.\nWe therefore urge the Government of Canada to press, in'\nthe councils of the world, for\nan immediate and permanent\nend to testing and production\nof nuclear weapons, and for\nmeasures to prevent the spread\nof such weapons to countries\nthat do not have them. We are\nconfident that the problems\ninvolved in the establishment\nof the necessary system of international inspection can be\nsolved if there is a sincere desire for agreement.\nWe believe that the achievement of even these limited\ngoals will put a check to the\nincreasing danger of world\nwar, and will at the same time\nconstitute a first step towards\ndisarmament, in which lies our\nonly hope of survival in a nuclear age.\nYours Sincerely,\nR. P. Dore.\n^S^^K\nChartered Flight\nVancouver to\nLondon\nI Eastbound May 7\nj return August 15\nSuper\nh Constellation\n| Carrol Airways,\nI fly,, now \u00E2\u0080\u0094 pay later\nfor information\nwrite or call\nJ DR., BUTLER\nI 4689 Wes^, 12th.*\u00E2\u0096\u00BC\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nVancouver 81\nCA 4-5728\nAlfBilt\n{Architecture 53) says\nmm\nmimfmtm*.': .im\nI t i j |H i( A l> if\nMy blue-print for\nsuccess is a planned savings\nprogramme at... Mlh HftNli\nto 2 mum auuwm\nElffil\nBank- ofJMontreal\nYour Campus Branch in the Adnunistration Bldg.\nMERLE C. KIRBY, Manager\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Mg flap on the road to succsm b an \u00E2\u0080\u00A2arh/ banking conmdfMt , \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nn niiiii mi in gfrBt.,,\nSjj \u00E2\u0096\u00A0,; ^yaS3*rj\u00C2\u00AB3aa5\u00C2\u00BB^\u00C2\u00AB!i!r\nS1S?!5S\" Friday, March 11, 1960\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPAGE THREg\nO\nn\nThe editorial freedom of the\nUbyssey was confirmed by Students' Council action Monday\nnight.\nA motion of censure 'against\nMr. Kerry White, Editor of the\nUbyssey, regarding the editorial\nof February 25th\" was decisively defeated at the Council\nmeeting.\nThe, proponents of the motion,\nChris Davies and Ross Husdon\nof the elections committee, de^\nmanded that White back up\nstatements made in the editorial.\nThey wanted to know his facts\nand sources of information.\nThe majority of the councillors, felt that the editorial had\nbeen in essence correct and that\n\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 motion of- censure was not in\norder. Publications Co-ordinator,\nfttti Horsman, himself a member\nof *he elections committee, said\nthai the editorial was \"a fair\nConmment on the current situation.\" \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe editorial charged the\nCLASSIFIED\nCouncil with discouraging candidates from running in AMS\nelections and with general mismanagement of the elections.\nDavies felt that the accusations were directed expressly\nat the election committee. Others\nfelt that the editorial was somewhat ambiguous, and that it was\ndifficult to tell which charges\nwere aimed specifically at the\ncommittee and which at the\ncouncil in general.\nMany councillors voted against\nthe motion of censure because\nthey feared that having, such a\nmotion on the books would restrict the editorial freedom of\nthe Ubyssey.\nSeveral councillors felt that\nprompter action should have\nbeen taken by the elections com-\nmittee.if they felt that they were\nbeing unjustly condemned. They\nasked why a letter of protest\nhadn't been written to the\nEditor.\nAPARTMENT WANTED \u00E2\u0080\u0094Un-\nfurriished, one bedroom apart-\nBlent in University area, would\nlike to enter around May 1st.\n^permanent, occupancy. Phone\n\u00C2\u00A9lark, RE 3-004? after 5:00 p.m.\nLOST \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Black Parker \"51\"\npen and Eversharp pencil on\nThurs., March 10 in front of\nLibrary.\nUNIVERSITY>student.in need\nef funds. Babysitting any eves.\nSome days. Experienced, capable. Phones, CA 4-4891 anytime.\nHELFj WANTED--MALE\nHousebey - Coiripanionrunder\n, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 30. Experienced desired but\nnot necessary. Cooking, cleaning, etc., for young man in\nWest End apartment. Room,\n- board, small salary. Must be\n. \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 reliable, honest, congenial,\ni permanent and haye good\nlocal references. MU 1-5642.\n; Mornings 'till noon.\nUBC Dermatologist\nTo Set Up Department\nA new department of continuing medicine will be set up on\nthe campus under Dr. Donald H.\nWilliams.\nDr.1 MacKenzie said'the department would start opejcsitiqns on\nJuly 1 as a joint, prograni be-\ntwpe)i the faculty of me^cine,\nan$. the University extension. dW\npagtrjaeat.\nThe first . tasj^ w.ill be to work.\nwit^.,yariouj?f)niedJ\u00C2\u00A3alargj^niza?\ntions so expa^apLdcp-ordinate;\nthe courses .(ayailabie for prac-r\ntising physicianSj\nThe second, would be to improve internship, and residency\ntraining, programs,..\nTheJthircL would he the establishment of a mujti-d\u00C2\u00A3sc.ipline,\ncourse to prepay doctors for advanced degrees jh medicine..\nAWS - WAA\nEXECUTIVES\nThe girls have taken the lead\nagain! The AWS-WAA members\ninterrupted their election meeting yesterday to collect money\nfor the Moroccan students who\nsent in an urgent plea for funds\nto aid their recent earthquake\nvictims.\nNow, back to the elections.\nOver 150 students, out of a total\nfemale population pf about 2800\nturned out to elect next year's\nAWS and WAA executive. This,\nincidently is a good attendance\nas far as their meetings go.\nThe WAA positions filled,\nwere: Vicepresident, Vera Clemens; Secretary, Marg McFarland\nand Treasurer, Marg Peebles,\nThe students will assist previously elected President Sidney\nShakespeare in her executive\nactivities.\nThe AWS election results,\nwere: Vice-president, Lynn Mac\nDonald, a New Westminster girl;,\nBarb Bowles, a Fort Camp resi-.\ndent, Secretary; Commerce gal,\nGail Burt, Treasurer, and Rhonaj\nHooper, one of four candidates,\nPRO.\nDean Helen McCrae was elec-,\nted Honorary President of AWS)\nfor the 1960^61 term.\nVote of thanks extended to\nretiring presidents, Marg Mc-d.\nLachlin of WAA and Patti Darl-J\ning of AWS, I\nLi tera ry Sc h o I a rs hi ps\nThe following is a list of the\nvarious writing awards and\nscholarships still available to\nstudents. Wherever a student is\nsubmitting the same manuscript\nfor more than one award, he\nshould make a duplicate, to be\nsubmitted with a separate covering letter for each award.\nThe CKNW Scbolax&hip,in Television. Available for students in\ntbe graduating,year, and.tenahle\nat Northwestern University in\nthe special summer course in\ntelevision, or at similar institutions for similar courses. Further\ndetails in the calendar,, Applications must be submitted to Dean\nGage before March 15.\nCanada Prizes in Creative Wrii-\ning\u00E2\u0080\u009E Two prizes of fifty dollars\neach will be awarded for the\nbeat original short story, and\nthe best original poem, respectively, written by an undergraduate or graduate student* while\nenrolled in the Uniyersit\u00C2\u00AB. En%-\ntries must be. sutanittaaL to the^\nDepartment of English before\nApril 1.\nThe Bsissenden Seholarship*\nA scholarship of $300 given by\nP. R. Brjssenden, Esa. Q-C, is.\noffered to a student of the Uni\nversity, graduate or undergraduate, who has shown promise\nas a creative writer, and who is\nreturning to the University in\nthe 1960-61 session. Deadline is\nthe last day of lectures, and submissions should be made to Dean\nGage.\nThe KVOS-TV Scholarships,^ A\nscholarship or scholarships J to\nthe value of $200, the gift of\nKVOS-TV, are offered in the\nFaculty of Arts and Science.\nThese scholarships will be\nawarded to students in the fieljd\nof the hurnanities or the social\nsciences, with preference being\ngiven to those who have a special interest in journalism, communication, or related areas gf\nstudy. Submissions to Dean Gage\nbefore the last day of. lectures.\nApplicants..should note that\nthe Television., scholarships are\nwarded very cloudily, and may\nbe interpreted to include journalistic material ithal is adapt*\nab}e to. television.\nUniversity HiUfUnitdd\n: ' ' \u00C2\u00AEi|p*.;\nI Worshipping, in.. Union College\nChapel\n59fl0. Cfcutnceller, Bl?d*\nMinister \u00E2\u0080\u0094Rev, W. Buckingtia.ni\nSerVtee* 1*:o6 a.fli. Sunday\n--'U-.MJ\n0\nFifty-three :a^;;^:mj*A\u00C2\u00AB^\nOF COCA^OtA. .titeMnfciWgH^^\n>'\u00C2\u00AB \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00C2\u00AB!\u00C2\u00BB PAGE FOUR\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, March 11, 1960\nSPORTS\nSHORTS\ni ABOVE ARE SOME members of the UBC Judo Club. Standing at rear is Instructor Bob Fedorick. Back row, left to right:\nAl McLean, George Sakata. Rob Irving, Ron Garner, Eugene\nNeufield. Front row: Kathryn Edwards, Harold Sato, Paul\niy Quan, and Greig Allen.\nUBC Judo Club\nIn Grading Meet\nThe UBC/Judo Club held\nlast Sunday at the Vancouver\nNine members ; of the UBC\nclub received a higher grade.\nAl McLean received a Brown\n^|eit,?trdriyu: -f- ;;::H JM\n: /Receiving Green .Belt grad-\nlih^s. wefe\" George Sakato, 3rd\nj|\u00C2\u00A33^3^j:IrVing^4th Kyu; Ron\n>.ift^ii^f5th Kyu; Eugene Neu-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0jjfi&^fitfoi'. Kyu; Kathryn Ed-.\nJ^^^;3rd Kyu; Harold Sato,\nXS^^feu]\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 :.Paul Quan, 4th Kyu\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2^d:;i\u00C2\u00A7reg Allan, 5th Kyu.\n1 *jud%\u00C2\u00BB classifications include:\nBrown Belt, 1st and 2nd Kyu.\nGreen Belt, 3rd & 4th Kyu.\ntheir first grading Tournament\nJudo Club.\nThe PBC club has 28 members. It is constituted under UCC\nand is under the sponsorship of\ni/l A A. Club activities are allowed for P.E. credit.\nThe club instructor is Bob\nFedoric (2nd Dan, Black Belt)\nwho is a member of the Van;\ncouver Judo Club. ; /\nThe club was formed in October. The organizer and presij;\ndent is Arpad Toth. Other \u00E2\u0080\u00A2riiern-\nbers of the executive are B. Irving, K. Edwards and A. Mcr\nLean.\nSQUASH\nGeneral meeting of all UBC\nSquash Club Members today at\n12:30 in Bu. 212. All members\nplease attend.\n# * *\nGRASS HOCKEY\nVarsity defeated UBC Blues\n2-0 in A division men's hockey\naction Thursday. Nelson For-\nriard and Peter St. John fired\nthe Varsity goals.\nv v t*\nCYCLING \t\nEd Barry of the UBC Cycling\nClub finished first in the annual\nVancouver Bicycle Club five-\nmile T.T. with a time of 11:56.\nStaff: Mike Hunter, Dieter Urban, and Fred, for once!\nCo-Editors: Ann Pickard, Ernie Harder\nGirls' Tourney\nAt UBC Today\nTwelve top girls basketbal lteams are on campus for the annual high school tournament.\nThe tourney started yesterday and will continue today and\ntomorrow in the Women's Gym.\nCompeting are: Powell River (tops in own league), Kimberley\n(10 wins and no losses this season), Mount Newton (second straight\nyear in tourney), Kamloops (first in Central Mainland League),\nMissio (topped league; second time in finals), North Surrey (16\nwins in 20 games; average height: 5'7\"), Salmon Arm (topped\nleague), Oliver (second in Okanagan; carries a six footer), Burnaby\nSouth High (second in Vancouver and District League), Vancouver: West Van High (first in V. and D League) and John Oliver\n(third in V and D league; third time in tournament.\nEach entry will compete with two other teams in a short\nround-robin, with the victors entering the-Winners Play-offs which\nwill decide the first four positions.\nINCORPORATED 2':?. MAV \&70.\nway, one would think it rather\ndeserving if UBC could meet Alberta and thus get closer to the\nCanadian finals.\nThunderettes Give\nRichmond A Scare\nBy DIETER URBAN\nJust as was suspected, the Richmond Merchants overpowered UBC's Thunderettes in the first of five Senior \"A\"\nplay-off games. But it was not without a serious, unsuspecting\nsurprise attack with which the Varsity misses proved to their\nsuperiors that the title is not yet in the bag.\nj The hot onslaught came in the\nthird period, with the Merchants\nahead 18 to 12. By the time the\nbuzzer ealled time the fighting\nVarsity was leading 28 to 22.\nThe crowd suspected a big upset.\nIt was only for a moment that\nUBC looked like a winner. Richmond launched an aggressive\ncounterattack which resulted in\n17 unanswered points and a winning notch added to their 15 undefeated games this season.\nRiehmonds old pros Marj\nWhitehead, Joan Lopez and\nShirley Topley sparked their\nteam's effort.\nUBC's outstanding effort came\n- from Diane-iBeach \"Who landed\n14 points.\nThe loss was a stroke of tough\nluck for the hard-Workihg 'Varsity lasses who needed the confidence of a win for next Wednesday's second encounter.\nThe game will be played in\nWinston Churchill gym.\nMerchant Coach, Gordie McDonald dreads the thought of\nhaving to face the Thunderettes\nfive times as was the case last\nyear. This shows that he does\nnot exclude the possibility of an\nupset.\nAnd actuals, looking- at the\n-*it\u00C2\u00ABa*\u00C2\u00ABH-^i\u00C2\u00BB*.an=. unpxejuiiieed\nName\nSkirts &\nSweaters\nPAIR-UPS IN\nSPRING PASTELS\nSKIRTS\n12.95 -19.95\nSWEATERS\n0.95-12.95\nAs refreshing as a Spring breeze . . . these soft pastel partners. Famous\nHighland Queen all wool worsted skirts styled in all-'round hand-blocked\npleats or sheath-slim for flattery .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 . . and pore botany fuH-fashiohed\ncardigans and pullovers by Lansea . . .dyed to match- each other. .Skirts,,.\nsizes 10-18; sweaters> sizes 36-42. In pale blueV beige, pale green, tan,\npink, greys, yellow, cucumber, white, black, avocado and many morfe.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094HBC's Sweeter Shop, Third Floor\nALMA CABS\nALma 4422\nAffiliated with\nYELLOW CAB CO. LTB.\nMU 1-3311\u00C2\u00AB \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ^\n-'\u00C2\u00AB^ira'--T%\u00C2\u00ABjtag*3PsaE^"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1960_03_11"@en . "10.14288/1.0124741"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : [publisher not identified]"@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 .