"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-07-24"@en . "1936-10-09"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0124961/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Tuesday Meetings\nSENIOR CLASS-Ap. Sc. 100\nPARLIAMENTARY FORUM\nARTS 100\nVol. XIV\nVANCOUVER, B. C, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1936\nNo. 5\nU. B. C. SNAKE PARADERS\nDISRUPT CITY NIGHT LIFE\nDon Parham Receives Serious\nInjury tp Right Hand\nWith one student seriously Injured, several others suffering from cuts and bruises, and a good many Vancouver citizens complaining about damaged property, university authorities are faced with the grim aftermath of the frosh snake\nparade that Invaded the downtown section of the city Tuesday evening.\t\nSERIOUS HAND INJURY\nHis band pushed through a car\nwindow, Don Parham, of second\nyear Science, suffered severe cuts\nabout the wrist that sent him to\nthe hospital. He was on the operating table for two hours and 20\nminutes, doctors making herculean\nefforts to save the hand.\nParham waa hurt when tha parade was at tha corner of Georgia and Howe He waa one of a\ngroup that attempted to atop a\near from breaking through the\nline. Deaplte the serious atate of\nParham's injuries, the paradera\ncontinued on their mad way with\nno eeasation.\nLONGEST PARADE*\nThursday, it was reported that\nthe injured boy was progressing as\nwell as could be expected. He was\nsuffering a great deal of pain, but\nhigh hopes were held that he might\nnot lose the use of the hand.\nThe parade, one of the longest\never held, assembled at Cambie\ngrounds and wound its way through\nthe city for nearly three hours.\nFew who tried to stop the onrush\nescaped without some mark of their\nfolly. Cars were stopped, trolleys\nremoved from street cars, theatres\nentered, beer parlors raided, and\ntraffic generally disrupted.\nINVESTIGATION MAY FOLLOW\nHoodlums who took advantage\nof the confusion on the streets\ndid a great deal of damage on\ntheir own initiative, according to\npolice reports appearing in Wednesday's papers. This situation\nwas considered serious enough to\ncommand the attention of the\nuniversity Senate. An Investigation may be held, following the\nmeeting of this body on Oct. 21.\nIt is not known what action may\nbe taken by the university, but it\nmight be pointed out that unfavorable public opinion caused by such\na disturbance could lead to trouble.\nThe snake parade fiasco will at\nleast serve to bring the question of\ninitiation to a head, it is thought\nin many quarters. Out of the investigation will come, it is believed,\nsome definite statement of policy\nregarding initiation. Although officials are not in a position to be\ninterviewed on the matter, the general expectation is that reaction to\nthe snake parade will have serious\nramifications.\nPLAYERS\nRESULTS\nThose listed were accepted as active members of the Players' Club,\nfollowing the tryouts Tuesday evening. The judges were members of\nthe Advisory Hoard, and Eleanor\nGoodwin Gibson, president of the\nclub.\nKenneth Bennett, obert Clark,\nAlbert Eedy, Robert Hayman, John\nKer, Geoffrey Mackie, Robert Mc-\nDougal, Robert McCormick, C. J.\nMcNeely, Milton Narod, Wm. Nick-\nerson, Dave Morrow, Eric Robertson, Jack Stark, G. Shiles, Lester\nSugarmaii, Jack Zack, Pamela Yell,\nPatricia Bibbs. Stella Bridgman,\nAnne Carter, Adrienne Collins,\nMary Covernton, Kay Curtis, Betsy\nDarnborough, Mary Fitz-James, Hy-\nslop Gray, Lorraine Johnston, Rheta\nLesser, Kay Mann, Jean McLauren,\nMary McLeod, Elizabeth Norle,\nPauline Scott, Kathleen Patterson,\nEvelyn Smith. Edith Spencer.\nHonorable Mention\u00E2\u0080\u0094Reg Wilson,\nGordon Gray, Kay Armstrong, Bun-\nty Butters, Margaret Beattie, Margaret Findlay, Ailsa Braidwood.\nAlberta Has\nAthletic Pass\nSystem\n$5.00 Ticket Is\nGood For 55\nSport Events\nBy LARRY ALEXANDER\nUNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA, Edmonton, Oct. 6 (WIPU)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Students\nwho have already been presented\nwith somewhat of a bargain ln the\nform of the new $5.00 Athletic Ticket which entitles them to admission to some 55 sporting events,\nhave been presented with a further\nbargain by a recent action of the\nStudent's Council. At a meeting\nlast week that body decided to accept Athletic Tickets for season\nadmission at the University Rink.\nSince the Athletic Tickets, which are\noptional,\"cost only $5.00 apiece and\na season ticket at the rink last year\ncost $1.50. It may be seen that this\nrepresents a very considerable saving. The Council took this action\nin the hope of inducing more students to retain their Athletic Tickets. It was pointed out at the meeting that there is some danger of\nincurring a deficit on operation of\nthe rink this year under this system but the Council members decided to take that chance in the\nhope of keeping down the number\nof Athletic Tickets turned in for\nrefunds.\nTROUBLES OVER\nJohn Witbeck, whose troubles\ncease tonight as frosh are denuded of their regalia. Witbeck\nhas had a busy time during initiation period, being on the\ncommittee arranging affairs and\nat the same time a member of\nthe Discipline Committee.\nMEDICAL EXAMINATIONS\nUNIVERSITY HEALTH\n8ERVICE\n1936-37 Session\nAll students entering the University for the first time, and\nall students who have not been\nexamined by the University medical examiner within the last\nfive years, ai'e asked to report\nwith their class timetables to\nthe University Health Service\nfor registration and advice as to\nprocedure.\nMonkey Love On\nThe Campus\nScreaming, \"No! No! A Thousand Times No!\" two female forms\nhurtled from the roof of the Science\nBuilding at an early hour Tuesday\nmorning, rather than meet a fate\nworse than death, while the villian\nof the piece snarled, \"Foiled again!\nCurses!\"\nThe three actors in this dramatic\ntragedy of love and death were\n\"Peggy,\" \"Pauline\" and \".Micky,\"\nthree simian inhabitants of the Bacteriology department zoo. Apparently unhurt by their three-storey\nhop, the two maiden monks continued their Heglra, one disappearing in the direction of the Applied\nScience Building, nnd the other\nseeking the cloistered seclusion of\nthe Union Theological College. Neither has been heard from since.\nThe excitement commenced when\nthe villainous \"Micky' stole into\nthe ladies' boudoir, stroking his sinister mustachios and gloating, \"I\nhave you now, my proud beauties!\nMarry me or . . .\" Blushing in\nsweet confusion, the ladies departed\nthrough the chicken wire door without bothering to open it, and soared\nover the parapet of the roof, their\nrespective honors still stainless.\nInterview in his love nest later\nin the day, the villain glared morosely at the battery of cameras and\nrefused to make any statement to\nthe press until he had seen his lawyer. Meanwhile the Provincial Police and local Fire Hall have been\nnotified of the disappearance of the\nmonkeys, and students are asked to\nkeep an eye open for the bashful\nmonkeys.\nTOTEM STAFF WORKING ON\nLARGER BOOK FOR 1937\nOn the reference desk of the Library there are three University year\nbooks, Selected from colleges in\nCanada and to the South. These\nbooks, generous-sized, richly pictorial, tastefully edited, the Totem\nstaff is displaying as somewhat enlarged models of the Totem that\nthey hope to produce this year.\nLook them over.\nCOMING OP AGE\nFor U.B.C, this is a coming-of-\nage year. One way in which we\ncan record our growing traditions\nand recapture the pleasant zest of a\nbirthday year is by creating a Totem really worthy of our brash but\npromising Alma Mater. Other Canadian universities, equal or smaller\nin size, publish year books that are\nactually artistic accomplishments.\nWith many of these, our undernourished Totem unfortunately cannot rate.\nBut this is another year. With an\nintensity of heart and soul that approximates cardiac condition, the\nTotem staff is planning its 1937 triumph. Enlarged individual pictures\nof upperclassmen in all faculties,\nand, we pray, lowerclassmen too;\na wealth of action shots from stadium, track and gym; pictorial impressions of the social year\u00E2\u0080\u0094par\nties, theatre nights, parades, fights,\ntaverns, club meetings, every side,\nlegal and lurid, of campus activity.\nWAIVER CAMPAIGN\nThese features, plus fraternity\nand sorority pages, personalities\npages, bigger, fresher layouts, will\nbe incorporated in an enlarged Totem of new design and cover.\nOur success depends, of course,\non you. On the prompt co-operation of classes in submitting timetables and adhering with Iron will\nto photograph appointments.\nTuesday we will explain the proposed waiver campaign by which\nwe launch our Totem program. It's\na new, convenient sales method\nwhereby we can judge the prospective success of Totem sales without demanding immediate cash payment.\nMeanwhile \u00E2\u0080\u0094 scan the copies in\nthe Library, think of what you'd\nlike to see ln your own Totem.\nWe're going to try and put it there\nthis year.\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE TOTEM STAFF.\nA. M. S. Meeting Breaks Up\nAs Powlett Harangues Crowd\nEjected Once; Excited Speaker\nReturns To Continue Pass\nSystem Attack\nSpanish Govt.\nIs Upheld By\nForum\nMuch Interest Shown\nat Opening\nMeeting\nOutnumbered two to one in\nthe voting, the affirmative\nside was decisively defeated\nin their attempt to uphold the\nresolution, \"Resolved that in\nthe interests of Spain, the\nFascists are justified in attempting to overthrow the existing government of that\ncountry.\"\nFOUR POINT ATTACK\nAfter a short preliminary address\nby Professor Day, in which he expressed his regret at the loss of several speakers from the Forum, Tom\nMarshall led for the affirmative.\nPivoting his argument around the\ncontroversial phrase, \"the interests\nof Spain,\" Marshall attacked the\ndemoctratlc government on four\npoints. He charged them with seizing power unjustly, with violating\nthe constitution, with instigating a\nreign of terror, and with affronting\nthe educated class by wanton acts\nof confiscation and destruction.\nAl Carlsen, following for the negative, cited the many reforms of\nthe government In controversion to\nMarshall's claims. Speaking with\nmore polish and precision than last\nyear, Carlsen supported his claims\nwith well-authenticated statements,\nas he denounced the reactionary Influences which had opposed all reform and which had brought on the\npresent ruinous war.\nREIGN OF TERROR\n\"In a moment when a duly\nelected, constitutional government was bringing about reforms\nlong needed in Spain,\" he charged,\n\"the army, the privileged classes\nand the church, to salvage their\nown material interests, attacked\nthe government, deliberately unloosing a reign of terror.\"\nXo fewer than eighteen impromptu speeches followed. Of the newcomers. Prof. Day singled out several for praise in his \"post morten\"\ncriticisms. Several of the new\nspeakers were rather upset by some\nill-timed and rather unfortunate\nheckling on the part of the negative\nside, but nearly all had something\nworthwhile to contribute.\nElection of officers will take place\nnext Tuesday noon in Arts 100, at\nwhich time the subject of the next\ndebate will be announced. Prof.\nDay also stated that there will be\nan Imperial debate in December,\nwhen two University students will\noppose a team from Oxford and\nCambridge. Needless to say, this\nis expected to promote great interest in Forum work this season\namong all members. Further Information will be published later.\nAt the conclusion of the Alma Mater meeting on Wednesday a motion\nto delay dlscuaalon of the Pass System to November 4 waa patted by\nthe students. The motion, at drawn up by Jay Gould, waa moved by\nLudlow Beamish and seconded by Len Martin.\nNOTICE TO STUDENTS\nMonday, October 12th, haa\nbeen proclaimed Thanksgiving\nDay. The University will be\nclosed.\nL S. KLINCK,\nPresident.\nWhile nearly a thousand students hooted and\njeered, Armand Powlett, waving his arms and taking\nobvious delight in trying to make himself heard, spoke\nfor twenty minutes at the Alma Mater meeting Wednesday, was forcibly ejected from the stage, returned\nand continued his harangue until the meeting was\nadjourned by mutual consent of Council and the\naudience.\nCalling the Council \"saucy\" and labelling fraternity men as \"lotus eaters of the campus,\" Powlett,\nprobably speaking for a motion designed to shelve the\nPass System, waved his arms and paced across the\nplatform as he caught the spirit of his own enthusiasm.\nAs he drifted further from\nhis subject, and commenced\nto mix up historical, religious\nand political references, Powlett roused his listeners to the\npitch where they demanded\nthat he stop and sit down.\nShouts of \"Shut u p,\"\n\"You're off the track\" and\n\"Throw him out,\" were mixed | quorum present, the annual\nup with fervent appeals from! Alma Mater meting on Wed-\nNEW POLICIES\nOUTLINED\nStadium Plans Will\nBe Presented Soon\nWith only a score over a\nthose in sympathy with the\nspeaker.\nWARNED FOUR TIMES\nFour times Gould rose from\nhis seat and spoke to Powlett,\nquietly asking him to finish\nand let the meeting go on.\nDisregarding the president,\nArmand kept right on, although few could hear him\nabove the din.\nOnce when Gould spoke to him,\nPowlett tald, \"I think everybody\nia enjoying this.\" This caused an\nuproar that brought a broad smile\nto the face of the excited orator.\nThe general trend of the speech\nseemed to be against the Pass System. Armand spoke of the effect\nof the measure on Sciencemen, saying that they would be forced to\ngo to every function that came up.\nHe claimed that such action would\nruin the scholastic standing of the\nstudents and lower the prestige of\nthe university.\nSUPERHUMAN STRUGGLE\nHe dwelt for a few moments on\nthe \"glorious heritage that exists\nin the University Library.\" Above\nthe clamor was heard his accusation that fraternity men were \"lotus eaters of the campus.\"\nAfter nearly a quarter of an\nhour of such talk, all of which\nwas lost in the general commotion, Gould, Vine, Logan and\nCarey surrounded the speaker\nand started to remove him from\nthe stage.\nBut they reckoned without Mr.\nPowlett's feelings on the matter.\nPutting up a superhuman struggle\nPowlett resisted to the extent that\nit took the united efforts of the\nabove mentioned councillors and\nJohn Witbeck to remove him from\nthe scene\u00E2\u0080\u0094temporarily.\nRETURN8 TO STAGE\nRunning up the aisle to the stage,\nPaul Payne took possession of the\nmicrophone and called down the\naudience for not giving Powlett a\nproper hearing. He called the audience \"miserable cowards\" and at-\nnesday heard reports from\nStudent Council and an outline of Council policy for the\nyear to come.\nTHREE INNOVATIONS\nThree new matters are included\nin the policy for this year, these\nbeing approved Wednesday shortly\nbefore the meeting got out of hand.\nThey are:\n1. Continuation, in a quiet way,\nthe upbuilding of the Student\nUnion Building fund which stands\nat about $43,000.\n2. Budgeting for an ample surplus at the end of the year in\norder to make certain no deficit\nwill occur.\n3. Presentation to the students\nearly In the new year plant for\nseveral stadium buildings, and\nplans for financing these structures.\nTreasurer Vine in his lengthy report, stated that last year saw a\ndeficit of $1,106.01 in accounts of\nthe A.M.S.\nGould announced that the S.C.M.\nhad the student co-op boarding\nhouse question in hand and were\ndeveloping plans for greater expansion. No other major business was\ndone,\ntacked Gould for not attempting to\nkeep order in the first place.\nHardly had he started hit attack than Payne wat rudely interrupted by the triumphant return of Powlett, who entered\nthrough a side door and came\nback to the stage With no reference to hit short absence, Armand took up the thread around\nwhere he left off, but aa before,\nnobody heard him.\nThen it was that Gould took the\nfloor, and, as Powlett continued to\nspeak, put the motion regarding the\nPass System. With this approved,\na hasty adjournment concluded\nwhat will go down in U. B. C. history as one of the most exciting\nstudent gatherings of all time.\nThe last words that Powlett uttered were shouted across the footlights as the crowd dispersed from\nthe hall.\n\". . . and remember the bravo\nPresbyterian woman who hurled a\nchair at John Knox!\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094D. R. B. ]\nTwo\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 9, 1936\nEDITOR IN CHIEF\nZOE BROWNE-CLAYTON\nSENIOR EDITORS\nTUESDAY; Kemp Edmonds FRIDAY: Dorwin Baird\nSPORTS EDITOR\nDick Elson\nKen Grant\nASSOCIATE EDITORS\nDorothy Cummings\nFrank Turner\nDave Smith\nASSISTANT EDITORS\nBill Sibley Peggy Higgs\nSTAFF PHOTOGRAPHER\nStewart Calvert\nSubscription Rates for Ubyssey:\nStudent rate, $1.00 per year. Rate for non-students, $1.50 per year\nAdvtrtiting Office\nPacific Publishers, Limited, 311 Province Building, Victory Square, Vancouver, B. C.\nTelephone: TRINITY 1945\nAdvertising Staff Charles H. Munro, Howard D. Fletcher\nAll advertising handled exclusively by Pacific Publishers, Limited.\nHMIIIimilHltH1IIIHIUI)mWllttnHtlHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlMlllltltllllll1tHllltlllllliH*IIIHIIItlllll>ltlrc Theatre\nen Granv.i'e Street\n* * +\nDoe* ycur fa!l su f need a touch cf colon Then what you want is\none of the bright imported scarves from PHOEBE'S. There are Cashmere\nplaids which would delight.any highland heart or the imported wools from\nAustria wh.ch are downily warm and soft on a chilly day\nFor those who prefer silk there are the nubbly silk boucles in all\nshades of the rainbow and the paisley silk scarves which brighten up any\ndress when used for a collar. The scarves cost from 98c up, so won't\nstram any college girl's budget.\nPhoebe is also featuring polka dot Windsor ties Just pop down to\n71 j Dunsmuir Street and take a look at them.\n+ \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\nA knitted suit that looks like hand-woven tweed wth bright\ncolored nubs Doesn't that sound attractive3 All you have to do is to\ngo to the WOOL SHOP at 2207 West 41st Avenue and buy some of their\nsirdar tweedex knitting wool and begm your suit. Or if you prefer, there\ns the S'rdar crochet wool and the sylcrepe which has a continuous loose\nsilk thread and comes in all colors.\nYou can get skirts tailored to order at the Wool Shop. Imagine a\nbrown and gold tweed skirt worn with a sweater knitted m the popular\njungle gold crochet wool sold at the Wool Shop. Hard to resist, isn't it?\n* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\nPersonabt>\u00E2\u0080\u0094that ,s what shoes from RAE-SONS BUDGET SHOP\npossess Each has been given a name of its own. Let lis introduce\ntc a few of these aristocrats.\nThere ,s \"Mingo,' a fascinating strapped suede trimmed wth patent\nCcr calr t p; and heel and having a narrow silk braid running up the\ncentre cf Me strap It comes in black and brown\n\"Royalty\" :s also a patent tr,mmed suede distinguished hy a cross\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0trap \"Boom\" has a stitched strap and tip and comes m b'ack or brown\nTnese three shoes are just perfect for tea dates as we'l as for campus\n/.ear\nThen there are the p.'am kid and suede pumps for those who prefe\nmore conservative styles\nWhy not pa, a vis-1 to Rae-sons budget shop, just up the stairs\nfrom Rae-sons mam floor on Granville Street, and make the acquaintance\nof these pcrsonahfy shoes which all cost just $G cC\n* * *\nFirst hme you've been away from home for so long, isn't it, out-of-\ntown student3 Don't you think it would be nice to send the family a\nsubstitute to help fill your place3 And what better subsiture could you\nhave than a portrait of you pictured by ABER. Why wait till Christmas.\nLet your family see you now. All you have to do is to phone Tr.mty\n<.:'?, and arrange for an appointment\n* * +\nUniversity life is not all play. Unfortunately about half of it seems\nto he studying. Mrs Paton of the LINGERIE SHOP must have realized\nthis when she bought in her new shipment of satin dressing gowns There\nare the popular tailored styles and the more fluffy feminine gowns They\nmay be had m all shades of rose, blue and red and are just perfect for\nstudying m The price is $4 98 and $5 50.\nFor those who find these fall nights chilly there is a wide choice\nof attractive flannel dressing gowns.\nHigh marks come to those who study in comfort, so if you want to\npass well at Christmas you'd better go along ro the Lingerie Shop on\nSouth Granville and invest in a comfortable dressing gown.\nyou\nINITIATION IS\nNOT DEAD ON\nEVERY CAMPUS\nBonfires Popular\nAt University\nOf Alberta\nBy J. D. MACFARLANE\nThe faculty and student\nheads of this university have,\nin the last two weeks, expressed their strong disapproval\nof the present system of initiation. It is to be wondered\nwhy, if such be the case, there\nis no real attempt made to\nprovide an organized and\nworkable substitute for the\nold methods.\nBONFIRES STILL EXIST\nSister universities, both in Canada and the United States, offer\nideas vhlch might help to solve the\n\"riddle of the frosh.\".. Such things\nas bonfires still exist, even ln the\nbest regulated universities, but\nwithout the violence of the dark\nages. An organized effort Is being\nmade towards a spirit of co-operation which has as an integral feature the full hearted welcome and\ndirection Into activities, not the attempted degradation, of new students.\nFor much time past the passing\nof the bonfire has been lamented\ngreatly around this campus. It\nmight be Interesting to know that\nU. of Alberta got together around\na bonfire last week, and, even with\nthe presence of almost 350 freshmen, the traditional riot did not\noccur. Instead, under the leadership of the rooters' club \"the new\narrivals were spurred to loud and\nlofty heights in the art of cheering\nand community singing.\" The affair, which featured th? address of\nthe Dean's representative, was, as\nthe Alberta Gateway puts it, a roaring success. The new cognomen of\nthe Students' Handbook at this university, the \"frosh bible\" offers another note of subtle suggestion.\nADVISORS ASSIGNED\nIn California where a large\nnumber of students mutt be\nlooked after, a system of advisors\nhas been Instituted, with each\nstudent assigned to his own advisor and of whom one may ask\nany question on anything from\n\"why aren't there any frogs in\nthe lily pond\" to what courses\nmay be taken. Only minor Initiation regulations are in force.\nAlready we have the makings of\na system in the various organizations on the campus of which the\nCommittee of Faculty and Students\nunder the direction of Walter\nGage, the Students Handbook and\nthe Information Bureau are examples.\nIt is possible that someone might\nbe inspired to work the idea out.\nAt any rate this is 1936, Lalssez\nFaire was dead and burled long ago\nand cat-calling doesn't go down\nthese days. A gem of truth Is contained in the inspiration that gal-\nATTENTION CO-EDS!\nAn opportunity to gain confidence\nin yourself. The Literary Forum\npresents an opportunity for self-\nexpression in short impromptu\nspeeches before an audience. Dean\nBollert, the Honorary President\nand critic, aids the speakers with\nhelpful suggestions. Noon hour\nmeetings are held twice a month.\nThe first meeting is next Tuesday\nin Arts 105. We extend a welcome\nto all co-eds, especially the freshettes.\nlery sitting sophs coul4 be more\nsuperior by leading than opposing\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094especially where this year's frosh\nare concerned.\nTalking about co-operation and\nwhat not\u00E2\u0080\u0094what happened to the\nSalisbury co-operative project of\nlast year. From Los Angeles\ncomet the echo of \"college It\ndarn expensive\" with an attend*\nant ttory on the tubjeet. In many\nplacet ttudentt themtelvet have\ngot together in amall groupt,\ntharing rooms, making mutual\nmeal arrangtmtntt.\nAt Washington a student co-operative group serves 260 men and\nwomen, offering each member board\nat $16 per month for three hours'\nwork a week. Other universities\nquoted by the University of Cal.\n\"Bruin\" show similar results but\nln the words of the California student paper, \"One fact stands out in\nthe study of student co-operatives\nln colleges throughout the country.\nIt is that in practically every case\nthe initiative has come from the\nstudents themselves and that the\nuniversity administrations have\nbeen mainly helpful in promoting\nthe expansion of groups after they\nhave been organized.\" It is whispered ln my ear that there were no\nstudents willing to sacrifice an\nhour or two a week to get along on\nless.\nFor those lightsome Individuals\nwho like to explore there comes a\nscheme, once again from California, whereby students may avail\nthemselves of vital statistics concerning their classmates. Alphabetized files carrying all necessary\nInformation about students are\nplaced ln public on what Is called\nthe Co-op mezzanine in Kerckhoff\nHall at U.C.L.A.\nAt Dalhousie In Nova Scotia the\nbig bad sophisticated seniors are\nvery particular about their freshettes. It Is reported that here they\nstand outside the Library to look\n'em over but reserve final judgement until \"they have more firsthand dope as to physique, characteristics, mentality and personality\nof the additions.\"\nC.O.T.C, go east boys, go east!\nAt Alberta the girls are going Spanish and trying to get Into the army.\nSergeant-Instructor Evans of that\ncontingent, felt good, masculine\narmy tradition rocking to Its very\nfoundations when a winsome co-ed\nwho would have been an asset to\nany army corps applied for admission to the C.O.T.C. Regulations,\nhowever, could not be denied so the\nmilitaristic female took physical\ntraining.\nWhich takes me to Manitoba\nwhere a psychologist's statement\n\"that the average English girls face\nshows determination\" met with the\nreply that \"many of their eyebrows\nalso show signs of pluck.\"\nHill*'\n[You ahould be able to read fine print like thla 1\nwithout effort nt ordinary reading dlatnnce J\nEvery student should make this test,\nfor if you cannot read these lines,\nyou probably need more light. Eye\nstrain will affect your progress.\nDon't risk it for the sake of a\nbrighter lamp, costing only a fraction of a cent for current for\na whole evening.\nBETTER LIGHT...BETTER SIGHT\nBRITISH COLUMBIA ELECTRIC RAILWAY CO. LTD. Four\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 9, 1936\n&Ajfo &4ff> ^y ^>\nMusic\nDRAMA AND THE DANCE\n|M ^M^ ^y ^^>\nR EG INALD\n *\nPiano\nHOPKINS\nTheory\n\"Interestlnn Course for\niegi inters\"\nCITY STUDIO: 817,GRANVILLE ST.\nSTUDIO: 435 EAST 63rd\nAVENUE\nPHONEi FRASER 1423 R\nL U\nISABEL CAMPBELL\nand\nAssociate Teachers of Pianoforte\nAll Grades Taught\nStudio: 1490 WEST BROADWAY\nPhwii: Bay. 7610 R\u00C2\u00AB. Bay. 6016 X\n&\n..Society\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n<&\nl> VOICE PRODUCTION\nA Special ratM for beginners.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Free auditions by appointment,\nR 3890 HUDSON AVC. Bay. 6300\nl HORTHY\nETHEL FERGUSSON\nF.T.CL, M.M.T.\nOOLD MBDAIiMBT\nVANCOUVER IHOOL OP tXPMMION\nPublic Spttklni Class\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dramatic Art\nCaachlM Play Tru Outs\n603 HASTINGS STREET WUT\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2tyaiour 438\nSiymour 8627\nt^nSSSSBBSSB\nEdythe Lever Hawes\nDramatic Soprano\n3015 WEST SECOND AVE.\nBAY. 3954\nMember of B. C Music Federation\nHELEN CREWfc\nSchool of Dancing\nALL AOBCi\nStudio: ST. JOHN'S HALL. Nanton Avt.\nBallet, Modern, Tap and Ballroom\nBayview 8371 L\n\"Your Favorite Instrument'\nat\nBarney's Music Studio\n679 Granville St. Sey. 5338\nFreshettes Round\nThe Fireside\nSeniors Entertain\non Friday\nArranged by the Phrateres\nexecutive under the sponsorship of W.U.S. the freshettes\nbecame acquainted with senior and junior students when\nabout fifteen hostesses entertained before church on Sunday afternoon.\nRound the fireplace at the\nhome of Ardy Beaumont, ex-\npresident of the Women's Undergraduate Society, a number of newcomers discussed\nprofessors and exchanged\ntravel experiences. Presiding\nat the tea table later in the\nafternoon was Marjorie\nBrown.\nIn order to facilitate conversation\nFronia Snyder pinned names on\nher fourteen guests. After high tea\nin the dining room, the. senior\nguests, who had been chosen from\nthe major organizations on the\ncampus advised freshettes on their\nchoice of activities.\nTea-cup reading was the feature\nat the home of Joy Cameron, when\nthe .dozen guests gathered around\nMary Miller. \"She was really good,\"\nthey insisted. Pouring at the tea\nhour was Joanne Brown, assisted\nby 'Use Lorentzen and Lucille Le-\ntham as servlteurs.\nEnid Williams, president of the\nTriangle Club, entertained a few\nfreshettes on Sunday afternoon, in\ncharge of the dining room were\nMollle Wilson, Clare Williams and\nCarol Menchons.\nOther hostesses were Agnes\nSh'ewan, Madge Neill, Katherlne\nScott, Christine O'Loaue, Anna Mc-\nCanu.\nOriginal Motifs\nAt Sorority\nInformal*\nWith informal parties every\nnight the sorority rushing\nseason reached its height this\nweek.\nMonday evening at the Point\nOrey Oolf Club, Alpha Omlcron PI\nheld a rose banquet for rushees. A\ncontest ln artistic ability at the\ncommencement of the evening led\non to jig-saw puzzling, music and\ndancing.\nAlpha Gamma Delta entertained\ntheir rushees at dinner at the Georgian Club on Friday. The dinner\nwas planned ln a deep sea motif,\nwhich was carried out in seaweed\nand Ash as room decorations.\nThe guests were entertained by\na skit featuring \"Barnacle Bill.\"\nAt the home of a member Delta\nGamma hed a cabaret with a floor\nshow and music on Tuesday evening.\nOn Thursday, Oct. 1, Gamma Phi\nBeta entertained at a buffet supper\nat the Jericho Country Club, later\nenjoying motion pictures at the\nhome of one of the members.\nOn Wednesday evening Alpha Phi\nheld a dinner in the Point Grey\nGolf Club for prospective members.\nAfter dinner members staged a\nfashion show of fifty to twenty\nyears ago.\nElgar School of Music\nPiano, Voici-Production, Singing, Theory\nI'uplls pruparwl (or \u00C2\u00BBU Local Examination*,\nI'ractlcul and Theoretical.\nSliclit-reiidinK anil Bar-training etoes for\nexamination pupils; Music Appreciation\nClasses for Theory Students.\nC. E. FINDLATER,\nL.T.C.I., A.T.C.M., A.T.S.C.\n68 Fairfield Building\nSeymour 6937 Trinity 1956\nFORUM ELECTION\nA meeting to elect officers will be\nheld by the Parliamentary Forum\nTuesday noon ln Arts 100. All Interested are urged to turn out.\nROYAL A8TRONOMICAL\nSOCIETY OP CANAOA\nVancouver Centre\nOn Tuesday, October 13, at 8.15\np.m., in Science 200 the society will\nbe addressed by Dr. Andrew McKellar ot the Dominion Astrophysical Observatory, Victoria, on the\nsubject, \"The Architecture of the\nUniverse.\"\nDr. McKellar Is a graduate of\nUBC. All students are cordially\nInvited to attend.\nPHYSICS CLUB\nThe first meeting of the Physics\nClub will be held on Tuesday, Oct.\nUtth, at 12.20 in Sc. 200. Dr. A.\nMcKellar of the Dominion Astro-\nphysical Observatory will give an\naddress on \"The Determination of\nAtomic Weights by Physical Methods. \" The meeting Is open to everybody, and Freshmen will be welcome.\nOUTDOOR CLUB\nThere will be a meeting of the\nOutdoor Club on Friday, Oct. 9th,\nat 12.15 in Ap. Sc, 2117. Purpose\nof the meeting la a discussion of\nthe fall trip. Members and others\ninttM'OHtod are asked to attend.\nMusical Sociery\nExtends Activities\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Plan Recitals\nThe Musical Society is this year\nextending its activities widely. Following the lead of last year It Is\nsponsoring a number of musical\nrecitals and lectures on the campus. All programs will be given\non Wednesday afternoons at 3.30\nP.m.\nOn Wednesday, November 4, in\nthe Auditorium, at 3.30 p.m., Ira\nSwartz, one of the first pianists ln\nVancouver, and widely known as a\nteacher, will give a piano recital.\nHe will be assisted by Miss Louise\nStlrk, soprano. Admission will be\n15 cents.\nEither ou Wednesday, November\n18, or on Wednesday, November 25,\ndepending upon the dates of the\nChristmas Plays, the Vancouver\nSymphony String Quartet will visit\nthe University.' This quartet is\ncomposed of Allard de Ridder, distinguished conductor of the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, Jean\nde Rlmanoczy, Concertmaster of\nthe same organization and renowned violinist, Joy Calvert and\nFreda Setter. This quarter attracted a large audience at the University last year, being Introduced by\nDean Buchanan as the \"Hart House\nQuartet of the West.\" The admission will be practically nominal.\nAfter Christmas It Is expected\nthat Allard de Ridder will give a\nseries of lectures on music, particularly on song forms. In all probability, he will be assisted by Miss\nElsje de Ridder at the piano and\nby soloists. Last year Mr. de Ridder's lectures had an average attendance of 900 students. The\nseries, which will be open without\ncharge to all students, Is expected\nto be given on consecutive Wednesdays at 3.30 p.m., commencing on\nJanuary 13..\nStudents are reminded that they\nare allowed to attend the last two\nrehearsals for the concerts of the\nVancouver Symphony Orchestra ln\nthe Strand Theatre. Free passes\nmay be obtained from the Musical\nSociety office In the Auditorium.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nW. GAGE.\nJapanese Welcome\nNew Students\nThe Japanese Students' Club welcomed 17 new members Into their\nmidst at a Frosh Reception held In\nthe Golden Room of the Melrose\nTuesday night, Oct. 6.\nThe room, decorated in green,\nprovided a suitably fresh atmosphere for the initiation of the freshmen. Following the initiation the\ncommittee in charge had arranged\na varied program of games and\ndancing to entertain those who\nwere now official members of the\nclass of '40.\nThe committee consisted of KI-\nmlyo Kagetsu, Irene Uchlda, Tommy Shayama, Bill Iwasakl, Albert\nTaklmoto, George Tamakl and Roger Obata. Roger Obata acted as\nmaster of ceremonies for the evening.\nCouncil Backs\nBigger Totem\nGladdened by an extra supply of\nsandwiches which were remains\nfrom the Sunday night firesides,\nStudent's Council went rapidly and\nefficiently through the routine of\ntheir weekly meeting last Monday\nnight.\nThe unusual speed was probably\ndue as much to the president's 8.30\ndate as to lack of business.\nCouncil decided to back the new\nand larger 1937 Totem proposed by\nthe Publications board on condition\nthat 800 caution waiver promises\nto buy were obtained before the\nend of the month.\nThe first class party of the season\nwill be the Arts '39 on October 10.\nThe date of the Science class party\nscheduled for October 27 was advanced to November 11.\nAlma Mater fees from Nurses In\nresidence In the hospital were reduced from 110.00 to the $3.00 necessary for the gymnasium bond.\nFrosh Received\nAt Happyland\nUsual Crowd at\nInformal Party\nA bigger and better Frosh\nReception was the object of\nCouncil this year when they\narranged for the Happyland\ndance floor complete with\nDoug. Raymond and orchestra.\nWith a little more space to\nschottlche and gavotte and a\nknowledge that there was\nfresh air at least accessible a\nlarge crowd of senior men\nand women Were present to\nofficially review the numerous\nfrosh.\nDuring the first half of the evening, unique millinery creations ln\npaddy green perched over neatly\narranged braids with fingernails en\ntone were almost universally chosen by the freshettes. Instead of\nflowers in their hair as noticed during the summer season the newcomers wore clothes pegs.\nA feature of the evening was the\nspecially adapted university music,\narranged and played by the orchestra.\nThe annual ceremony for welcoming the freshmen was held at midnight. First, passing forever out\nof high school through an arch decorated in the colors of the local\nschools and then entering University under the gold and blue, a\nlong procession of newcomers were\nwelcomed as full-fledged members\nof the student body by Council dignitaries.\nAs the accommodation was too\nlimited to handle a large crowd all\nat once, it was arranged that the\ndancers should wander out little by\nlittle for supper.\nFRESHETTE CHOSE GREEN\nJean Pearson, Arts '40 and ex\nKitsilano High, took advantage of\nthe insignia decree and made it\npart of her ensemble. Her dress\nwas of seagreeu, cut on Empire\nstyle with a tltted skirt and puffed\nsleeves.\nVelnia Smyth chose navy blue\ntriple sheer on fitted lines, the tailored neckline of which was softened\nwith a white ruffle.\nEthel Eaton wore a tunic model\nof blue silk crepe set off by con\ntrusting white,\nHazel-Jean Bescoby wore a wine\ntunic iu silk crepe. The line of the\nround yoke was carried out ln a\nflared skirt and fitted sleeves.\nSENIORS' QOWNS\nMargaret Ecker wore a black\ncrepe, leaf patterned dress with a\nflared skirt and leg o' mutton\nsleeves.\nAudrey Horwood, president of the\nWomen's Undergraduate Society,\nchose an Informal print ln blue and\nrust, gathered Into a yoke at the\nneck. The sleeves were of Russian\nstyle, wide to the elbow, and the\nskirt was flared in front.\nPHRATERES\nThe Annual Meeting of Phrateres\nwill he held Friday at noon. Freshettes are invited to attend. Seniors,\nbring your little sisters.\nRETURN STRIP\nIs the request Canadian Rugby\nClub officials are making to those\nmembers who do not intend to\nplay. This should be done as soon\nas possible. The strip room will be\nopen every day from 12.15 till 1\nP.m.\nNOTICE\nSoccer Manager Dave Kato announces that one Junior Manager\nIs needed for the round ball game.\nFreshmen particularly are asked to\napply.\nGym. Display To Be\nRepeated\nAnother performance of the gymnastic display which delighted students Monday noon will be given\nln the auditorium of the Point Grey\nJunior High School, Tuesday, Oct.\n13, at 8.15 p.m.\nModerate prices of 5 and 10 cents\nwill be charged for the unusual\nshow, and university students who\nmissed the other performance are\nurged to take advantage of this second opportunity.\nFASHION\nMARCHES ON\nat Gillardes!\nAlways a Fashion Leader\u00E2\u0080\u0094Gillardes' come to\nthe front with distinctively styled COATS\nand DRESSES\u00E2\u0080\u0094all moderately priced.\nCo-Eds\u00E2\u0080\u0094here's your chance to be dressed in\nthe forward trend. Gillardes feature College\nInspirations!\nGILLARDES\n726 GRANVILLE STREET\nOpposite the Hotel Vancouver\nLadies*\nWear\nBiology Discussion\nClub Plans Year\nThe Biological Discusion Club announces its fall display of books on\nbiological and related subjects,\nwhich will be on show in the reference desk In the library for the\nweek commencing Tuesday, Oct. 13.\nThe collection Includes essays, memoirs and biographies as well as\nmore technical literature.\nThe first meeting of the club for\nthis session will be held on Monday, Oct. 19, at 8 p.m., at the home\nof Or. and Mrs. McLean Fraser, at\n4585 West Sixth Avenue. All students who have had Biology I or\nsome equivalent course and who\nplan to continue the study of Biology are cordially Invited to attend.\nMeetings are held biweekly ln\nthe evenings and papers on subjects of general interest are read\nby both graduates and undergraduates of the third and fourth years.\nPapers are also given by outside\nspeakers.\nAll students who intend to come\nto the meeting are requested to Inform the secretary on or before\nFriday, Oct. 16.\nFor further Information those Interested may apply to the President, Hugh MacKay, or to the Secretary, Janet Balllie, at Applied\nScience 217,\nPLAYERS' CLUB FORMAL\nWith the new members chosen\nand the work of organization almost\ncomplete, the aristocratic Players'\nClub are making arrangements for\ntheir annual formal reception. It\nis rumored that the hostess this\nyear will be Trudean Spencer and\nthe' date Is Friday the sixteenth.\n'39 CLASS PARTY\nThe new executive of Arts '39\nare determined that their class\nparty will be \"the class party of the\nyear.\"\nThe Commodore has been reserved as \"the place\" and if all\ngoes well Oct. 29 will be \"the date.\"\nMUSICAL SOCIETY FORMAL\nMembers of the Musical Society\nare hoping that plans for new membership will be completed soon, as\nthey are anxtous to arrange for\ntheir fall formal party. This function will be held ln about two\nweeks.\nsWftWftftWWWWWWVMflWWtfS^WVWWWW^WW\nM\nJust Published ...\nINSTANT ABC 8 FOR 8UGGE88\nPrice, $1.00 Postpaid\nSTUDENTS1 The books which help you most are 'hose v.h ch make >-ou think1\nYou'll find this >our (jest .campus trend' ON SALE AT ALL BOOK STORES\nKENNETH ROSS\n646 Seymour Street Seymour 4214\nCOSSACKS\nARE COMING\nPhone\nTrinity\n6304\nBEFORE IT IS TOO\nLATE-OR BETTER\nSTILL\u00E2\u0080\u0094COME TO\n570 SEYMOUR ST.\nFamous Artists Series...\nDon Cossacks November 3\nKayla Mitstl, Violinist November.23\nNimiira-Kay, Dancers March 1\nMyra Hau, Pianist March\nThere are still a few good seats\nleft for the series\nPrices: $5.25 and $3.70 for 4 Concerts\nNew Dean To Speak\nHear Thursday\nThe new dean of Applied Science,\nDr. Finlayson, will address students\nfor the first time at the opening\nmeeting of the University Engineer\ning Society to be held Thursday,\nOct. 15. in Applied Science 100 at\n12.25.\nThe meeting wil be attended by\ndowntown engineers and members\nof the Association of Professional\nEngineers. At this meeting, which\nhas been postponed from Thursday,\nOct. 8 he will meet the sciencemen.\nIndividual Tickets for each concert:\n$2.00, $1.50, $1.00 and 75c\u00E2\u0080\u0094Plus Tax\nWESTERN MUSIC CONCERT BUREAU\n570 Seymour Street Trinity 6304\nROYAL PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS\n$45 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 $65\nDe Luxe New Quiet Model \u00E2\u0080\u0094 $75\nTypewriters of all makes\nfor sale or rent.\nByrnes Hume Typewriters\nLimited\n592 SEYMOUR STREET SEYMOUR 6639 Friday, October 9, 1936\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFive\nTO THE GRADUATING CLASS\nThe Totem staff this year Is considering the possibility of\nincorporating individual photos of every member In every olaea\nin the University.\nTo allow for thla possible number of piotures being taken on\nthe campus, It is absolutely imperative that we have the photoa\nof the Senior Claaa by the 31st of thla month.\nWe know the claaa of '37 ia a busting, spirited group who have\nconsistently ahown Initiative and oo-operatlon. Please give the\nTotem the benefit of your co-operation\u00E2\u0080\u0094FILL OUT THE TIMETABLE BELOW: CUT IT OUT AND DROP IT IN THE PUB.\nOFFICE MAIL BOX AS QUICKLY A8 POSSIBLE.\nName\nHours Free through the week (write them in spaces provided.)\nMonday Tuesday Wedneaday Thursday Friday Saturday\nAfternoon\nMorning\nTOBA STUDENT DODGES\nBOMBS IN SPAIN\nCarlton Ross Ltivts Lectures For\nJob As News Cameraman\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0y H. K. WHITE\nUNIVERSITY OP MANITOBA,\nOct. 6 (W.I.P.U,)\u00E2\u0080\u0094High above the\nmachine gun and cannon fire ot\nrebel-loyalist clashes on Spain's war\ntorn fields, a lone aviator piles his\ndangerous course between the Pyrenees and the Mediterranean Sea\nCoast. He Is W. Carlton Ross, a\nyouth not yet past 25, the only motion picture cameraman and news\nreporter daring to fly in Spain,\nwhose small fragile Moth plane outwits hostile anti-aircraft guns while\nits operator attempts to' record\nphotographically the history-making events below. Many times death\nhas marked young Carl for its own.\nHis engine has aputtered and\nstalled over Toledo, while artillery from oppoalng batteries\nbarked out at him. Confronted\nby government planes who mistook him for a rebel, he was\nobliged to utilise his entire repertoire of aerial atunta to shake\nthem off. That was near Madrid.\nAt Alcazar he had to make a\nforced landing and a few seconds\nlater found it necessary to hold a\nvery Impromptu and inspired address to a few persistent Latins\nwho were attempting to stand him\nup against a wall.\nSmall wonder then that Carl Ross\nis rather homesick for his home\ntown, Winnipeg. How often does he\nreview in his mind's eye, while\nturning the crank of his camera, his\nSt. John's College days, the prophe-\ncy of a college instructor that he\nwould never really accomplish anything of Importance? Winging his\nway over the valleys and hills of\na foreign land does he think back\nof those hotly contested rugby tilts\non the St. John's College backyard,\nthose reckless solo rushes down the\nIce at the North End Olympic Stadium?\nDown at Wesley College a newspaper story concerning Ross has\nbeen posted on the third floor bulletin board with the following note\nattached: \"W. Carleton Ross, Wesley, 1930-31-32.\" They remember\nhim well, his former Instructors\nand acquaintances. Peering over\nthis Manitoban correspondent's\nshoulder at the write-up, Mr. R.\nNell, the caretaker, allowed a long\ndrawn \"Whewwww\" to escape. \"Do\nyou remember him well,\" the reported asked Mr. Neil. The latter's\npursed Ups stretched Into a wide\nsmile. \"Do I,\" he replied. \"He was\none of the wildest young cahoots\nwe've had here in many a day.\"\n\"Do you mean that he skipped\nmany lectures while he was here?\"\nthe scribe, fairly astonished, queried. \"Many?,\" was the quick reply. \"What that fellow could dodge\nperiods better than he's dodging\nbombs right now.\"\nWishing to verify this startling\ninformation, the reporter sought\nout Prof. A. L. Phelps and asked\nhim point blank what sort of a chap\nCarleton actually was. Prof. Phelps\nanswered point blank that if it was\nfor the press the answer was that\nW. Carleton Ross was \"a good,\nstrong, fly-away sort of a person.\" Dean Anderson suggested\nthat Carl's academic record was\nnot \"a true criterion of his scholastic ability.\" He was a reckless,\nexcitement-craving person, whose\nmain interests didn't happen to be\nin school work.\"\nHigh above the clouds playing\nhide and seek with the enemy\nplanes, Carl Ross may be thinking\nhack to his college life at St. John's\nand at Wesley. A life that is now\nlar away from him.\nAnniversary of\nI. R. C.\nClub Was Founded\nSix Years Ago\n1936-37 will mark the sixth anniversary of the founding of the International Relations Club at the\nUniversity of British Columbia. The\nclub Is not unique, but merely a\nunit of a widespread organization.\nThere are 751 clubs altogether, of\nwhich 595 are in the United States\nand the balance In Alaska, Puerto\nRico, Hawaii, the United Kingdom\nand Dominions, the Far East, Iran,\nIraq, Syria, Palestine, Egypt, and\nCentral and South America. The\npurpose of these societies, which\nare sponsored by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,\nis well expressed in the. words of\nDr. Butler, President of the Endowment, who says that It la not necessarily \"to support any single view\nus to how best to treat the conditions which now prevail throughout\nthe world,\" but \". . . to fix the attention of students on those underlying principles of international\nconduct, of'international law, and\nof international organization which\nmust be agreed upon and applied If\npeaceful civilization is to continue.\"\nWhether or not western civilization is entering a period of internationalism may be open to dispute;\nbut all those who heard Mr. Steward's address at the last meeting of\nthe club on March 18, and all those\nwho take even the faintest Interest\nin foreign affairs, must realize that,\ndespised or welcomed, internationalism is the oply salvation for our\npresent and future difficulties. And\nas Dr. Butler states ln the above\nquotation, it was for the purpose of\nfocussing students' minds on that\npoint that the International Relations Clubs were founded. So far,\nthe units have had a very favorable\nreception from the student bodies\nof their respective localities; and\nMr. A. Charters, the vice-president\nof the U. B. C. Club, who visited\nthe annual conference of all northwest clubs at Pullman, Washington,\nlast spring, found the atmosphere\nof the meeting very keen Indeed.\nClub membership is limited to\n25; but since there are at present\nseveral vacancies through graduation, etc., any students wishing to\njoin are requested to send in their\napplications to the International\nRelations Club, Arts Men's Letter\nRack. The taking of several history courses Is not necessarily a\nprerequisite for membership. All\nstudents who applied late last term\nare requested to do so once more,\nas the secretary Is informed that\nowing to the confusion attending\nthe break-up of the Academic Year,\nseveral applications did not reach\nhim. Cards notifying members of\nplace and date of meetings will be\nsent out soon.\nNINE GOOD\nFRESHMAN\nRULES\nA List of Frosh\nRules to End\nAll Lists\n(From the McGill Daily)\nMr. Freshman, you need more\nadvice. Somebody has to tell you\nhow to get along in the college\nworld. It might as well be this\nwriter, a respectable, dues-paying\nFreshman of many years standing.\n1. Act \"wise,\" Pretend you know\nit all. Never admit your Ignorance.\nIn the classroom as well as in the\nbull session act as if you've always\nknown it all, you still know It all\nand you will always know it all. If\nyou hear a phrase like \"categorial\nImperative\" or \"lnterpenetration of\nopposites\" or \"marginal utility,\"\nnod your head wisely, and If you\nmust speak, say 'to be sure.\" Not\nuntil you've encountered William\nCornell Casey will you be able to\nend all discussions with \"it's just a\ngrindesthetlc sequence.\" Never say\n\"I don't know.\" Only professors\nand graduate students say \"I don't\nknow.\"\n2. Learn the language. Now\nthat you're In college you ean\nforget all you learned about subjects and predleates. Bone up en\ncollage lingo. Don't say \"girl,\"\nsay \"broad,\" and If you must be\npolite, say \"babe.\" Call Philosophy \"Phil,\" and Gymnasium\n\"Jim.\" That's the way to talk.\n3. Develop a pose. Acquire the\nIdiosyncratic touch. But not for\nmuch. Dont stand out too much in\na crowd. Develop some harmless\n..form of lunacy. Oo nuts about\n\"swing.\" Read poetry by candlelight. Learn to twirl a lariat. If\nyou didn't bring along a battered\nhat and a dirty pair of white shoes,\nsend home for them. If you only\nhave a clean pair of shoes, get them\ndirty quick. Be careful to look sloppy. Acquire some characteristic\nwhich isn't too, too utter, but just\ndistinctive enough for people to remember you by.\n4. Get a good slop on once in a\nwhile. And it you can't take it\n(fake it). Let your Imagination\nrun wild the morning after with\nthe bigness of the night before. If\nyou're good at making yourself sallow-faced, so much the better.\n5. Know the big-shots. Cultivate the acquaintance of captains, editors and politicians. Off\nthe campus, if you know the star\nstrip-teaser at Mlnsky's or the\nbartender at Leon and Eddie's,\nyou're made. It's always good\nto be in the know.\n6. Be a good sport. Follow the\nleader. If the Junior next door suggests a few Innocent pranks like\ndropping water bags on the pedestrians below, say \"Sure, let's.\" Or\nIf he suddenly is inspired to flood\nthe dormitories with a fire hose,\ndon't come out against the proposition. As a sophisticated Frosh\nyou should aid him and abet him,\nbut remember, it's usually the aiders and abettors who get it in the\nneck. The Junior who prompted\nUNIVERSITY\nBOOK STORE\nHOURS, 9 am. to 5 p.m\nLOOSE - LEAF NOTE BOOKS, EXERCISE\nSaturdays, 9 a.m. to I p.m.\nBOOKS AND SCRIBBLERS\nAT REDUCED PRICES\nGraphi.: Engineering Paper, Biology Paper, Loose-leaf\nRefills, Fountain Pens and Ink, and Drawing Instruments\nALL YOUR\nBOOK SUPPLIES\nSOLD HERE\nS-m-o-o-t-h, mild\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nand throat-easy\nBuckingham\nCIGAR ETTIS\nyou will probably wind up at Oxford on a scholarship.\n7. As a general policy, cut your\nclasses once a week. It's all In the\nbooks. But don't open them before\nChristmas. There's a prevailing\nsuperstition on the Campus that if\nyou go to class and read your books\nyou might learn something.\n8. Develop the \"tohell-with-it\"\nattitude. The Spaniards can settle\ntheir own problems. The Italians\ncan settle their own problems. The\nRussians can settle their own problems. The Republicans, Democrats,\nSocialists, Townsendites, Communists, Coughllnites and Mormons can\nsettle their own problems. To hell\nwith them. You've got a C.C. exam\nto pass next January and a poker\ndebt to meet within a fortnight.\n9. And If you do all these things,\nlittle man, and do them well\u00E2\u0080\u0094you'll\nturn out to be a model 1940 Campus\npunk.\nNOTICE TO I.R.C. MIMiIRS\nThe.International Relations Club\nwill hold Its first meeting of the\nseason at the home of Mr. F. H.\nSoward, 1476 Tolmie Street, on October 14, at 8.00 p.m. The speaker\nwill be Dr. Angus; his subject,\n\"Impressions of Europe.\" Dr. Angus spent last summer travelling\nin Europe, and his keen appreciation of social and economic factors\ngives his observations a particular\ninterest.\nWRITERS WANTED\nBecause of the larger also of\nthe Friday Ubyssey, the polioy\nof publishing feature artielea has\nbeen Inaugurated. As ean be\nseen, much of this material has\nbeen of necessity reprinted from\nother college papers.\nArticles, poems, and Itema of\nintereat written by U. B. C. students will be weloomed by the\npublications office. Aoeordlng to\nthe English Department, there\nIs plenty of potential writing\ntalent on the oampus. Why\nshouldn't sueh writers contribute to the Ubyssey? We will\nweleome any material that is\nsubmitted.\nRHODES PAMPHLET\nThe Rhodes Scholarship Selection\nCommittee has left with the Registrar two copies ot a pamphlet\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"What the American Rhodes Scholar gets from Oxford.\" Students\nwho are interested may borrow\nthese by applying at the Registrar's\nOffice.\nSTANLEY W. MATHEWS,\nRegistrar.\nLOST\nIn Arts Building, Mother of Pearl\nSheaffer fountain pen. Name John\nStark is on barrel. Please return\nto Mr. Home's office.\nDRY, LIKE IN DESERT\nCondolences to Paddy Colthurst,\nwho found It so dry In Sooke this\nsummer that he saw four trees\nchasing his dog up a hill.\nA WONDERFUL DANCE FLOOR\nIring your party ,and enjoy this\nmost beautiful spot ... the\ngrape vinery, which it decorated\nwith Japanese lanternt, is something unusual in beauty.\nA wonderful open fire every\nevening . . . available for private parties, social meetings,\nand dances . . . phone Point\nGrey 39.\nJUBILEE PARK\nSOUTH MARINE ORIVf\nDirtclh t*Hu4\nTin Vlvtnity\nTHIS ADVERTISEMENT, WHICH APPEARED IN THE\nLAST ISSUE OF THE UBYSSEY, RECEIVED SUCH\nFAVORABLE COMMENT THAT IT IS AGAIN PUBLISHED\nIN THE INTERESTS OF THE ADVERTISERS REPRESENTED\nIN THIS NEWSPAPER\nBLIND FLYING IS SAFER\nTHAN BLIND BUYING\nWHEN an aviator, soaring high abovt tha clouds, is flying blind, tha radio\nbaam that seianca has davalopad for him, guidas him lika a talking magnet,\nsafaly through.\nSo it is with advertising, particularly tha advertisers in Tha UBYSSEY.\nThrough its columns ara found Vancouver's most representative advertisers\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nthose who offer VALUE to the readers of The UBYSSEY. Those readers are\nU. B. C. Students, Parents, Grads, Faculty and Friends.\nToday, The UBYSSEY is a newspaper which in the attractiveness of its\neditorial design and in the excellence of its advertising content is unsurpassed\nby any single issue ever previously published. Why? The answer is manifest\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nbecause you have advertisers! Reciprocate\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nPATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS\n<\nNumber 2 in a series of adiertisements released by PACIFIC\nPUBLISHERS LIMITED in the interests of their Clients\u00E2\u0080\u0094the\nadvertisers in The UBYSSEY.\n> LINE SHAKEUP FOR VARSITY-RANGER SOCCER BA7TLE\nSix\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 9, 1936\nLIONS FAVORED IN GRID CLASH\nSport Snaps\nby\nFrank Turner\nby\nFRANK TURNER\nEXCESS ENERGY\nFreshmen are queer creatures, at\nleast that's one man's opinion.\nAside from being decked out in tas-\nBled green bonnets, and taking a\nvery active part in inane horseplay,\ntheir surplus energy apparently\nvanishes ln the misty ozone.\nOpportunities await thsm in\nevery field of University extracurricular activities, but either\nfrom a deplorable lack of Intereat\nIn their new Alma Mammy, or\nfrom unaccountable ahy backwardness\u00E2\u0080\u0094at a suppoaedly mature age too\u00E2\u0080\u0094theee new U. B. C.\nundergrade fall to become enthused over such rosy prospects.\nA scant few do decide to take a\nfling at the varloua programa\nopen to them, but the majority\ncontent themselves with attending lecturea, trouplng to the library, lounging in the oaf, and aim-\nleaaly wandering around the campus.\nIn Campus Sport, there is perhaps more chance for greenies than\nin any other line of endeavor\u00E2\u0080\u0094no,\nI'm not prejudiced. Right up from\nMinor teams to the five Major\nteams, positions are waiting to be\nfilled. Junior managers and players\nare crying needs \u00E2\u0080\u0094 how about it,\nFrosh ?\nFITTING TRIBUTE\nA great tribute was paid last\nSaturday afternoon to one of the\nfinest men ever to attend the University of British Columbia\u00E2\u0080\u0094the\nlate Bobby Gaul. Bobby impressed all thoee who knew him\u00E2\u0080\u0094hia\nkindly, understanding manner\nnever failing to make friends\nwherever he went. Aa well aa\nbeing a true gentleman, and a\nbriliant acholar, he waa an outstanding athlete. Making the first\nRugby team In his second year,\nhe played courageously under the\nhandicap of almost continuous\nIllness, finally being choaen captain In his last year. As a fitting\nremembrance to hia sportsmanship which was exemplified In alt\nthat he undertook, one minute's\nsilence was kept before the etart\nof the U. B. C.-Ocasionals game,\nand will be kept in years to come\nbefore the first game between the\nUniversity and ex \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 University\nteams.\nGOLD TRIUMPHS\nOur million-dollar stadium has\nfinally\u00E2\u0080\u0094or at least partially\u00E2\u0080\u0094repaid the efforts, and the moneys\nspent by the student body. Streams\nof gold flowed to absorb the pools\nof water which formed on the green\nmoss of the playing field\u00E2\u0080\u0094with no\napparent success\u00E2\u0080\u0094until Saturday.\nBut Saturday, the Oold triumphed\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094the soggy morass of yesteryear is\nnow no more. In other words, the\ncostly drainage system which Is\nyearly changed, is now performing\nUs duty. At the end of the two\ngames played on Saturday\u00E2\u0080\u0094played\nIn a steady downpour\u00E2\u0080\u0094mud, muck,\nand mire were as scarce on the\nstadium field as you'd like your\nmother's aunt to be some broad\nmoonlight night.\nTDITBITS\nTaking a leajf out of Footballers'\nbooks, our Senior Melon tossers\nare rolling out of bed with forced\ngrins these mornings to practice\nthe basket-heaving art under the\nwatchful eye of Doc Montgomery,\nDoc Burke's charges are all set to\nclimb back into the Big Four fight\ntomorro wafternoon at Bob Brown's\nplayground\u00E2\u0080\u0094for once, they claim,\nThunderbirds will eat Lions. . .\nHumor \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Frank Willams, Meralo-\nma's Fullback, smearing brother\nTom in the second division tilt between 'lomas and Varsity on Saturday. . . . Harry Pearson, and BUI\nLen, both members of last year's\nUBC. champion ruggers, are finding it tough playing against the\nBlue and Gold boys.\nBURKE PINS HOPE ON\nSPEEDY BACKFIELD\nParkinson Will Be Quarterback-\nSeason Opens Tomorrow\nWith two years of unsuccessful experimenting in American football behind him, Doc Burke's 1936 crop of Canadian\ngridders return tomorrow to meet the North Shore Lions,\nconquerors of 'Lomas, last year's champs, in the season's\nopener for Varsity.\nDespite the reported strength of\nthe Lions, the greatly-improved\nbunch of pigskinners are primed\nfor Saturday's tilt. Doc. Burke is\ndetermined to ring up a record for\nthe mantle, and with plenty of top-\nnotchers in the line-up, he's a fifty-\nfifty bet to clean-up. Bob Twiss,\npower-plant of former games, is\nbacking up the line, and two Frosh,\nEvan ap Roberts, and Tom Williams, track stars as well as gridders, are potential backfield stars.\n\"PARKY\" AT QUARTER\nBob Parklnaon calls the signals,\nand llne-aeeplng \"Osmosis\" Orr\nwill anap the pill. Captain Bar\nney Boe, Bill Hodgson, big\n\"Hank\" Stradlottl, Ken McRae,\nJack Wark, and Lorie McHugh\ncomplete the Hat of blocking\nbruisers up front. Marcel Qui-\nguet, a tricky greenle, will get a\nahow at Plying Wing.\nMost of the boys have had a bit\nof trouble getting back into Canadian football form after a year of\nAmerican, but, on the other hand,\nthe tricks they learned from our\ncousins' ball-playing should prove\nmighty useful. The return to the\nCanuck code has necessitated a\nlarge amount of experiment, and\nthe boys are still a trifle rough in\ntheir grooves, but a bit more oil\nwill probably eliminate this friction, and put them on a smooth-\nrunning basis.\nPlaying Noth Shore Lions is going to be a tough proposition, even\nwith a large number of U. B. C.\nsupporters on hand to instill that\nCollege fight into the boys. According to the potential \"Lion-\nbearders,\" the more spectators, the\nmore score for Alma Mammy's\nentry.\nWith a heavy line, and a heavy\ndefense and fast ball-carriers, there\nis about an even chance this first\nexperiment will work.\nTHE LINEUP\nOrr, center; Hodgson, left guard;\nBoe, right guard; Stradlottl, left\ntackle; McRae (Mclvor), right\ntackle; Wark, le*t end; McHugh,\nright end; Guiguet, flying wing;\nParkinson, quarter; Twiss, right\nhalf; ap Roberts, left half; Williams, full. Spares, Lowe, Light-\nstone, Clark, Burnett, McDowell,\nStraight, Runkle, Grey, Lewis.\n\"Joe\" Pringle, captain and player of last year's \"Pringle Rookies\"-\u00E2\u0080\u0094Senior A melon tossers to\nyou\u00E2\u0080\u0094is once more trekking\naround the campus, this year\npursuing another couple of letters to acid to his name Picked\non the mythical All-Star team\nlast season, he'll probabK continue his starring antics on the\nbasketball floor this semester.\nShuttle Artists Set\nOnce again the badminton fiends\nhave sallied forth, racquet in hand,\nto pursue the wily shuttle. About\nforty players turned out on Monday\nlast, among whom were a goodly\nnumber of promising newcomers.\nIt Is expected that the club's already excellent standard will be\nraised appreciably.\nThe officers chosen at a meeting\nlast Thursday are Margot Martin,\npresident; Helen Westby, vice-\npresident, and Stan Haden, secretary-treasurer.\nThe club plans, this year, to enter\na team In the city \"B\" league, with,\nthey hope, gratifying results.\nMembership fees for the year are\n$2.00 a term, or $3.00 for two terms,\npayable at Mr. Horn's office. New\nmembers will be gladly accepted.\nThe meetings have been set for\nMondays and Thursdays at 7.15 p.m.\nwith refreshments being served\nevery other Thursday. The members are reminded that the American tournament scheduled for Monday next has been postponed until\nthe following Monday, October 19,\nwhen all members are asked to\nturn out.\nSwingsters Start\nSoon\nGolf Tourney Set\nFor Friday\nOnce again the \"dlvotees\" of the\nlittle, dimpled pill are getting set\nfor a swing session on the wide,\nopen spaces of the University Golf\nCourse. Such oldsters as Ward\nAllen and Gordie Livingstone feel\nin the mood to hand the newcomers\na lesson, hut the boys may get a\nshock, if rumor proves correct.\nSome of the freshmen are said to\nbe great guns on the tees and\ngreens, so that there may be many\na rare old battle of the brassies.\nLast year's captain, Ted Charlton,\nand Pete Sharpe, are not here this\nseason, and thus Varsity is deprived of its two top men. Commerce\nhere couldn't hold them any longer,\nand now the world of business has\nclaimed them as its own. From\nnow on, Ted and Pete will have to\ndo their swinging when the boss is\naway, or when his daughter needs\na partner. (Perhaps Commerce\nisn't a bad course.) But it certainly has split up a fine team, and the\nwhole club regrets the loss.\nStill, the golf swingsters will try\nto keep up the high standard set\nby this renowned pair, and the resultant scores should be something\nto hang up in the study.\nRowers Are Busy\nAccording to a statement from\nthe rowing club, a tall meeting\nwith the crews of Washington and\nOregon State may take place this\nyear.\nIn order to prepare themselves\nfor this ambitious program practices are being held every Saturday afternoon at Coal Harbour.\nIn this connection Coach Brand\nstates that a definite practice crew\nwill be formed on Saturday.\nSOCCER ON\nSATURDAY\nVarsitv Confident of Win\nOver Rangers\nWith the same players but ln a\nbrand new lineup the Varsity soccermen go confidently out to meet\nthe Rangers tomorrow at Kerrisdale park.\nThis team ahakeup followed the\nextra practlee called Tuesday for\nthe purpoae of finding out why\nthe 0-0 loss to the Twigg Island\noccurred last week.\nThe new lineup, club officials report, Is designed so as to fit in with\nthe capabilities of the various players.\nCROLL FULLBACK\nCroll, formerly at fullback, now\ndefends the net; the freshmen, Mahood and Foster, who were outside\nand inside rights respectively, are\nnow inside right and center, still\nteamed and expected to do a great\ndeal more damage than previously;\nMcBurney, ex-right half, now covers Inside left, to complete the\nchange.\nMoodle, right back; Sutherland,\nleft back; Ruah, right half;\nQuayle, center half; \"Blah\" Thurber, left half; Chapman, outaide\nright; and Cheayer, outaide left,\nall retain their old slots, the ones\nin which they feel most at home.\nThis lineup has already proved\nmore manoeuverable and more\nsmooth-working.\nFRRESHMEN GOOD\nMahood and Foster, two freshmen, work ho well together that\nCoach Hitchins has decided to keep\nthem next each other regularly as\na double threat. These two keep\nat it steadily, and can be seen getting in a workout nearly every day,\nwith results that will prove astounding, to opponents especially.\nMoodie, last year'a Juniors captain, is showing up very well,\naccording to Manager Dave Kato,\nwhile Thurber shows better form\nthan ever. Alt these boys will be\non display Saturday at 3 o'clock,\nready to wipe out the slight slipup of laat week. The opposing\nteam is the Rangera, a strong aggregation from the Inter-City\nLeague of 1935-36.\nJUNIORS TO PLAY\nThe Juniors also have a game\nSaturday, unscheduled at the time\nof writing. These lads are in the\n2nd Division, G.V.A.A., and are doing their best to make a fine showing. We wish them all the best of\nluck, especially the freshmen. Cuo-\nsin, centre, and Ferguson, as well\nas Jack Logan, halfback. These\nthree are showing promise, and\nhave good chances of making the\nSeniors next year.\nAlaska-Varsity Ice\nScries Mooted\nThe much-mooted series with the\nFairbanks, Alaska hockey team\nmay be arranged if Varsity's icemen can assure the Northerners of\nan appreciable gate.\nAlthough no Information has been\ndivulged as regards the merits of\nthe Arctic Circle puckchasers, It is\nbelieved that they are a fast-playing, colorful aggregation.\nVarsity, too, will field a hard\nfighting skating mob this year, for\nmost of last year's squad has returned and will be in fine fettle\nfor future frays, Clarence Taylor,\nBig Block winner of last year, will\nreturn, and Jim Usher, Ron Andrews, Framp Price, Paul Trussel,\nMaury Lambert, Ralph Cudmore,\nFrank Perry and Jack McKenzie,\nall of last year's lineup will again\nappear on the Ice.\nArrangements have been made\nwith Guy Patrick for the boys to\npractise at an early-morning or\nlate-evening hour, and a general\nmeeting will be held soon to decide\non a definite time for practice.\n.nd I\"\nSWEET\nCAPORALS\n(uptivxiTi\n\"The purest form in which tobacco can be smoked.-^ancet\nFOOTBALL\nStudent tickets for tomorrow's\ngame will be on sale in the quad\nbox office today and tomorrow.\nVarsity vs. North Shore. Price,\n25 cents.\nI GET MY CLOTHES and\nFURNISHINGS\nfrom\nCHAS. CLAMAN\n315 WEST HASTINGS\nSFORT CARD\nFOOTBALL!\nVaraity vs. North Shore, Athletio\nPark, 2.46.\nSOCCER:\nVaraity va. Rangera, Kerriadale\nPark, 2.30.\nRUGBY:\nVaraity vs. Rowing Club, Brockton Point, 2.00.\n' Co/. 9151\nSTAR CABS *\nManager: Bob Strain, '33\np^HION-eSAH\nThe FASHION-CRAFT Label adds\nDistinction\nto your wardrobe.\nIt means AN INVESTMENT IN GOOD APPEARANCE.\nRICHARDSON-JARMAN LTD.\nSEY. 8179\n(Clothiers snd Haberdashers)\n523 GRANVILLE\nLetson fir Burpee Ltd.\n172 ALEXANDER STREET\nPHONE DOUG. 5501\nMake\nMcLennan, McFeely & Prior, Ltd.\nRetail Store\u00E2\u0080\u0094556 Seymour St.\nYour Headquarters For\nALL SPORTS\nRequisites\nPhone: DOUGLAS 21\n, WE CANNOT SELL ALL THE GAS-\nSO WE ONLY SELL THE BEST!\nTrimble Service Garage\n10th Avenue and Sasamat ELL 1551\n\"WASTE TIME IS LOST TIME\"\nWe pick up and deliver your car\nwhile you are at your classes. Friday, October 9, 1936\nTHE UBYSSEY\n.Seven\nEllis To Play Full-back As Dobbie Switches Line\nSAVE AT WALSH'S $ SAVE AT WALSH'S $ SAVE\ni\n3\nU.B.C. CAR OWNERS\nYou can sure save money on all your\nAUTO PARTS at\nWALSH'S AUTO WRECKING CO.\n1272 GRANVILLE STREET SEYMOUR 7297\nCOME IN AND LOOK AROUND\nSAVE AT WALSH'S $ SAVE AT WALSH'S $ SAVE\nFor Your Fraternity\nand Sorority Dances buy\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2BORLAND'S ICE CREAM\n1520\u00E2\u0080\u00946th Ave. Watt lay. 1524\nC.O.T.C Now Uses\nNew Armories\n\"Lett . . . left . . . lett . . . left\n. . . Ho!\" roae the mighty parade-\nground voice ot Quartermaster-Sergeant-Instructor A. A. Smith above\nthe din ot trampling teet, thumped-\ndown rifle butts and the plaintive\nbleats ot newly joined recruits on\nTuesday night. The U. B. C. contingent of the Canadian Officers'\nTraining Corps was holding Its first\ndrill and Instruction parade of the\nseason In the brand new Seaforth\nArmories.\nThe budding \"Second Loots\"\ngreeted with joy their elevation\nfrom the cluttered premises of the\nmechanical lab and the dingy halls\nof the Beatty Street Drill Hall of\nyears gone by, to the spic and span\nnew floor on Cedar Street.\nThis year an exceptional number\nof recruits have Joined the Corps,\nand a record enlistment Is in sight.\nIn addition, the \"B\" certificate\nclass, seeking the qualifying papers\nfor captain's rank, is starting out\nwith more than a dozen attending.\nLectures for the \"A\" and \"B\" classes commenced this week.\nAt the conclusion of Tuesday's\nparade, the members of the Contingent held a meeting to outline a\nsocial program for the unit. With\nLieutenant A. D. Greenwood presiding, they elected a committee to decide on the form the program will\ntake, which will probably be a series of dinners or Informal dances\nof some sort each month.\nShooting on the Blair Rifle Range\nfor members will commence this\nmonth, and the gentle rookies are\nbeing rapidly instructed whtch end\nof their Lee-Enflelds they should\npoint toward the target \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and at\nnothing else,\nf SportraitS !\n\ Frank \"Vic\" Perry J\nSASAMAT BARBER\nSHOP\nLadies' and Gentlemen's\nHaircutting\n4473\u00E2\u0080\u009410th AVE. WEST\nWe took you tn your\ninfancy . . . Let us take\nyou now, in the year of\nyour majority!\nBRIDGMAN'S Studio f\nAlmadene Cleaners\nWe Call and Deliver\nPHONE BAY. 2689\n3667 Broadway West\nLloyd Detwiller\n1917 is a memorable date in the\nhistory of the world for that was\nthe time of the birth of Lloyd \"Det\"\nDetwiller. The Americans first entered the war on that date, too, but\nthat, ln the sight of posterity is\ncomparatively unimportant.\nYes, It was in 1917, in a little\nhamlet in Saskatchewan that \"Det\"\nfirst saw the light of day, and it\nwas on that day that he first decided to become a Scienceman. It\nwas not until 1936, however, that\nhe really saw the light, for this\nyear \"Det\" \u00E2\u0080\u0094 curly-haired, saxophone \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 tootling, orchestra - leading\nhoop star \"Det,\" Scienceman de\nluxe, deserts his faculty for a career In Commerce.\nLloyd played on Varsity's Senior\nA basketball squad last year\u00E2\u0080\u0094a recruit who made good. He tore 'em\ndown to pint size In his position as\nguard, and was a consistent point-\ngetter when up-front. Won a Big\nBlock ln his freshman year and\nmodestly says he didn't deserve it.\nSome ot \"Det's\" pals klddingly remark that he's probably right at\nthat.\n\"Det\" recently squad-carred back\nfrom a summertime truck-driving\ncareer at Barkervllle, but he has\nnow settled back Into the complac*\nency of normal living by rising at\nthe ungodly hour of 5.30 ln the\nmorning to do r die for dear ole'\nAlma M\u00E2\u0080\u009E Yea, Detwiller!\n(classified\nadvertising\nGARAGE FOR RENT\n4586 West 8th Avenue. Point\nGrey )46 L.\nFOUND\nSilver bracelet. Zipper-like\nchain wristband On silver plate\nis a coat of arms. Three roses,\nthree stars, a scroll beneath and\nsurmounted by a tiny owl. Ap~\nply Pacific Publishers, Ltd., ) 11\nProvince Bldg. Trinity 1945.\nCo-Ed Basketball\nThe Province girls' basketball\nteam is feeling sad indeed these\ndays. Last year they lost Isabel\nCampbell, a good point-getter to us,\nand this year, their prize young\nguard, Ruth Wilson, has joined the\nBlue and Gold ranks.\nTo add further to their dejection\nthe benevolent Province-ites have\nunwillingly provided an assistant\nfor the co-eds\u00E2\u0080\u0094a male from the\nSenioar A team. This latter good\ndeed came about because a doctor\ndecided that young, good-looking\nIan McLeod, of basketball fame,\nshould stop strenuous play, but\nstated he would be allowed to\ncoach.\nThus, Mr. McLeod came here to\nhelp Doc Montgomery, and consequently there is a very large turnout of girls for our teams. This\nturn-out means more competition,\nand playing, hence causes plenty\nof moaning by the newspaper\nlassies.\nBut the Province team is not the\nonly one in broken bits, for the\nSpencer, and Blue Ribbon squads\nhave also found themselves without\nmany of last year's stars,\nVARSITY ROWERS CLASH\nIN SATURDAY RUGBY TILT\nEllis Will Play in Fullback Spot\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLine-up Released Thursday\nBy ALAN MORLEY\nA three-quarter line with a ripple and a flash, responsive, fast,\nsure, daring, perfectly co-ordinated\nand furiously determined.\nThat is what Captain A. G. Dobbie, coach of the Thunderbird English rugby men is looking for (as\nwhat coach Isn't) for Saturday's\ngame against the Rowing Club at\nBrockton Point. The interesting\npart is, though, that he may have\nfound it.\nIn the line-up released Thursday\nby Captain Carey, of the first team,\nthe backfield has distinct possibilities that way.\nEllis is shifted to fullback on the\nstrength of his performance against\nthe Occasionals last week. If he\ncan hold the anchor position safely,\nVarsity's chances are distinctly\ngood.\nIn front of him the shock troops\nof the three-quarter line will be\nStrat Leggatt, Johnny Bird, Lumsden and Wilson, all tried and true\nmen of many season's Work for the\nBlue and Gold, except Lumsden,\nwho is a find promoted from the\nsecond team. Coach Dobbie thinks\nhe is a distinct possibility. Bird,\nstar fullback of last season, performed well in his new position last\nSaturday.\nMore difficult was the choosing\nof the forwards, with several good\nmen offering from the second team.\nHobson won the only spare berth,\nand the pack will be J. Andrews,\nMadeley, Hobson, Pyle, Harmer,\nMaguire, Watson and Swan.\nIt is hoped that they will be able\nto compete on equal terms with the\nheavy Rowers.\nCarey, of course, is scrum-half,\nwith Willoughby in the five-eighths\nposition.\nThe second team, which meets\nNew Westminster at Douglas East,\nlines up as follows:\nFullback, Whitelaw; three-quarters, Trussel, Andrews, Ellis, College; halves, Mackie, Whittle; forwards, Robertson, Stewart, Housser, McCammon, Billings, Ark-\nright, Leckie-Ewing, Tupper. Ellis\nwill captain the team, with Housser leading the pack.\nThe thirds, opposing West Vancouver at Douglas West, has Butters as fullback; Smith, Drabble,\nRoss and Maitland in the thme-\nquarter-llne; Day-Smith and Grlffln\nas halves; E. Robertson, Roberta,\nJ. Campbell, Knox, Bardsley, Gross,\nMorrison and J. Pyle for forwards.\nSmith is the captain.\nLivingstone Is Chosen\nGolf Prexy\nSucceeeding Ted Charlton, Gor\ndon Livingstone, well-known city\ngolfer and quarter finalist ln the\nB. C. Amateur, was elected president of the student golfers at a\nmeeting held Tuesday.\nWard Allan, Shaughneaay Golf\nClub'a junior ohamplon, waa chosen to aaalat Livingstone In tha\neapaelty of Secretary.\nFurther buainaaa of tha meeting waa dlaeuaalon of plana for\ntha annual Varaity golf tournay\nand an Inter-oolleglate atriea with\nunlveraltlea In tha Pacific Northwest.\nDespite the tact that the golfers\nhave only three of last year's men\nreturning, they were considerably\nstrengthened by the addition to club\nmembership of such men as Jack\nStark, Curley McDowell, Doug\ndross and Bob Wilson, finalist in\nthe 1934 Varsity tournament.\nDr. Wilbur S. Watson\nDENTIST\nRESIDENCE OFFICE:\n4494 Wast 9th Avenue\n3.00 to 8.00 p.m.\nTalaphone: Point Gray 652\nSask.-Alta. Clash\nIn Grid Battle\nHuskies Win\nClose Contest\nA perfect movie finish was ruled\nout by a conference of officials to\nleave the Saskatchewan Huskies\nvictors by 5 to 3 over the Alberta\nGolden Bears, in a wide-open, cleanly played game at the opening of\nthe University Stadium last Saturday afternoon, before a 2000 strong\ncrowd. The Albertan passer attempted to pass on a fake end run.\nIt was blocked by Morrison and hit\nWilson, becoming a \"free\" ball.\nMorrison picked it up and ran it\nover the touchllne. Colb McEown,\nreferee, admitted not seeing the\nball at the time, but head linesman Clarence Cook claimed that it\ntouched the ground before Morrison got It, making the play an Incomplete pads, and the touch which\nhad brought the crowd up on the\nseats an Invalid play.\nALBIRTAN8 HAVE EDQI\nProm tha beginning ef tha\ngame It was obvloua that tha Al-\nbartana had ths sdgs ovsr ths\nHusklss In )hs kicking department, and wars also their supsr-\nlora In running baek kloka. Woy-\nwltka and Wllaon never failed to\ntake ths ball baek tan or twslvs\nyarda. Bast fsatura of tha Husky\nplaying waa their bucking. Tha\nline could alwaya find a hols or\nmake a hole and the ball-carrier\nhit hard and oftsn. Few paasss\nwars attempted and none completed, though three were intercepted, two by Alberta and one\nby Sask. The game waa an exceptionally clean one, penaltiea\nbeing given only for Interfsrence\nand offsides.\nTracksters Prepping\nThree afternoons a week spike-\nfooted college undergrads fly over\nthe cinders of the Varsity oval under trackmaster \"Maury\" Van Vliet.\nThese track sessions are held in\npreparation for the coming fall\nmeets, the first one one the books\nbeing the Frosh-Varsity slated for\nOctober 23rd, followed in a week's\ntime by the annual Varslty-Inter-\nHigh clash, and the Arts '30 Road\nRace.\nCaptained thla year by husky\nJim McCammon, holder of the U.\nB.C. recorda in both 8hot and\nJavelin heaving eventa, the cln-\nder-pathera are figuring on a\npolnt-aweeping aeaaon. Not only\nhave they gathered In a bunch of\npromising Froah atara, but thia\nyear they have aotually Instilled\naome of that mythical College\nSpirit into their workouta.\nLooking over the tracksters' roll\ncall we find several names of former High School stars. Heading\nthe list are four greenhorns who\nhav ebeen showing spiked heels to\nHigh School opponents consistently\nfor the past few years\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tom Williams, Evan Ap Roberts, Vance\nMcComber and Jim Brown.\nWhen not playing the grid game,\nTom can usually be seen prancing\naround the track, prepping for his\ntwo favorite distances, the 220 and\n440-yard sprints. Jim Brown is the\nother speedster in the quartette, his\nraces including the 100-yard dash.\nAp Roberts is the only hurdler to\nappear on the campus for many\nmoons, but his versatility enables\nhim to be an expert shot putter,\nand javelin-heaver to boot. A\ncrack half miler completes the Al\nprospects in the person of Vance\nMcComber.\nCorrespondence\nEditor of Ubyssey.\nDear Sir:\nPursuant to the resolution passed\nat Wednesday's A.M.S. meeting,\nthere will be another meeting, November 4, to discuss and take ac-\ntion*on the \"Student Pass System.\"\nMay I express my personal regret\nto the students that their time was\nso unfortunately wasted at Wednesday's meeting.\nYours sincerely,\nJOHN G. OOULD,\nPresident, A.M.S.\nDOES DECIDING where and\nwhat to buy things bother you?\nJust glance over THE UBYSSEY\nadvertisements. Tbe business\nfirms and merchants represented\nfirms and merchants represented\ntn THE UBYSSEY can easily\nand completely satisfy your\nevery need. You will find it\nconvenient and profitable to do\nso. Each firm represented it\nprominent in its particular field.\nDINE\t\nagain at\nThe GABLES Inn\nB\u00C2\u00ABsids University Hill Post Office\nCLEANING - MISSING -\nALTERATIONS and SIMMS\nF. L ANSCOMBE\nNets New Address!\n4433\u00E2\u0080\u009410th AVE. WEST\nELL. 1540\nI Public Stenographer *\nt Neat, Accurate Work t\nt At Popular Lending Library $\n$4489 W. 10th AVENUE P. G. 67$\na***********************\nTHE VANCOUVER\nSCHOOL OF ART\nCorner Cambie and Dunsmuir\nDAY and EVENING COURSES\nTelephone Trinity 2651\nFor Prospectus or Information\nniiniil\nYoung Men's\nClothing\nSpecialists\nSUITS and OVERCOATS\nStock or Made-to-Measure\n$2250,\nand up\nSet mi for your Tuxtdo\nDEEM \u00C2\u00BBd LONG\n498 SEYMOUR, at PENDER\nTrinity 2212\nSHOP AT THE\nMARGUERITE SHOP !\nWe are always prepared with a\nfull stock of high-grade hosiery,\nlingerie and afternoon dresses.\nYou can always be sure of quality and style for less money.\nWatch Oar Window Mt \\nMARGUERITE SHOPPE\n3754 WEST 10TH AVENUI\nBay. 7972\nI\nI\n<\u00C2\u00AB!>\nWIEMAN FUR CO.\nWe can remodel your old fur\ngarment into 1936-37 style, or\ntake it in trade on new furs.\n3783 W. 10th Ave. Bay. 2179\nf\n1\nVANCOUVER SUPPLY\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nI I\nWHOLESALE GROCERS\ni\nJ\nBARCELONA\nY Beauty Salon\na\nu\n4)\ne\n10th Avenue , ,\n3799 West (\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.-=\u00C2\u00A3SBBfe*.,\n' -a3jajal*\u00C2\u00BB6fM\u00C2\u00BBr\"5irtKijB\u00C2\u00BBi^5jf. *-^r^i^a\u00C2\u00BB^*Js-'* \"-\nVANCOUVER'S FINEST BRIDLE\nPATHS AND TRAILS\u00E2\u0080\u0094AWAIT\nYOUR LEISURE HOURS\nStarting at 33rd\u00E2\u0080\u0094down to Marine\u00E2\u0080\u0094Through the frail to Im-\n^^ penal treet\u00E2\u0080\u0094then about 300 yards before going into the long ^A_\n^pV trail through the University Area\u00E2\u0080\u0094Up the farm lands\u00E2\u0080\u0094through ^^\nto 60th Avenue\u00E2\u0080\u0094Down to 10th Avenue\nMay We Have You as Our Guests?\nPOINT GREY RIDING ACADEMY\n4100 West 33rd Avenue Kerr. 2074\nft TOTEfll UiORTHV Of OUR KLfflA fflATEft\nA new \"TOTEM\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094year book of our activities\u00E2\u0080\u0094is proposed by your Publications Board. Larger, thicker, more\nbeautifully bound, full of pictures of our University life,\nthe new \"TOTEM\" is truly worthy of our Alma Mater.\nAll we need is YOUR support \u00E2\u0080\u00941,000 caution money\nWaivers for $1.50. Make this new book possible\u00E2\u0080\u0094come\nand sign your Waiver now.\nPublications Office \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 - Auditorium Building Eight\nTHE UIYSSEY\nFriday, October 9, 1936\nSPEAKER TELLS\nOF INCREASING\nFASCIST TREND\nDr. Visser T. Hooft\nAddresses Noon\nMeeting\n\"The world of today, wltb Its\nscience and philosophy, has completely broken apart the mediaeval\nUniversity and has left its modern\ncounterpart no integration or unity\nwhatsoever. Students in the University have had no Integral philosophy of life. As a result, when\nmen like Mussolini and Hitler offered them a comprehensive Ideal,\nstudents eagerly joined the ranks\nof Fascism.\"\nSTANDPOINT OP STUDENT\nSuch was the relation of Fascism\nto the University as seen by Dr.\nVlsser T'Hooft of Holland, when he\naddressed an audience that completely filled Arts 100 Tuesday\nnoon.\nSpeaking on \"The Menace of Fascism\" the distinguished visitor, who\nfrom much first-hand observation\nknows his subject thoroughly, approached the topic from the standpoint of the etudent. He showed\nhow,,In the confusion and drifting\nthat followed the war, students\nwere not able to find a satisfactory\nand integrating philosophy in the\nUniversity, and how they turned\nto.Fascism, which offered them all\nthey asked.\n\"Fascism has integrated etudent life. It haa given atudenta a\ntotalitarian philosophy\u00E2\u0080\u0094a philosophy which haa the courage to\nenter every aapeet of life. It\ndoea not claim to be merely a\naoolal, or political, or philosophical view of life: It embodies\nDENIES INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS\nAfter warning hia audience\nagainst the danger of taking Fascism too superficially, the speaker\nturned to attack it, denouncing It\nchiefly for taking away the right\nof the individual to seek the truth.\n\"Instead of serving Truth, the Fascist interprets it to suit his own\nends. It is a concept of truth\nwhich strikes at the root of all\nthat is best ln the University.\"\nDr, T'Hooft then attacked Fascism from the standpoint of Chris\ntianity. He declared that a new\ngod had been set up\u00E2\u0080\u0094the nation\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nto whom complete and final loyalty\nmust be given, and which defined\n\"good\" only as \"that which served\nthe nation.\"\n\"How can we flght Fascism? An-\nti Fascism is not enough, for Fascism is such a positive force that\nonly something more positive can\ncombat it. We must find a new integrating or Fascism will win.\"\n\"Personally, I believe that only\na totalitarian Christianity is strong\nenough to triumph. There is yet a\nway out for the world \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and the\nUniversities\u00E2\u0080\u0094from the challenges\nof the mass movements, but it Is\nat a high cost, It is simply to take\nour Christianity seriously,\"\nDean Buchanan Introduced the\nspeaker, and George Nicholson, S.\nCM. President, moved the vote ot\nthanks at the conclusion of the address.\nAber To Take\nTotem Photos\nAber Studios, Totem photographers for the 1937 volume, will begin |\ntheir work on the campus promptly j\nat 1.30 Tuesday afternoon. Tuesday's Ubyssey will announce the i\nwhereabouts of the campus studio\nwhere Mr. Aber will be located for\nthe coming seven weeks.\nSample folders of the type to be\nincluded with the one dollar Totem\nphotograph are on display at the\nfoot of the Caf stairs. This attractive folder, for which Mr. Aber has\nexclusive rights in the city, will be\ngiven every student whose picture\nis taken for the Totem.\nThe first schedule of photo appointments appear below. Students\nare urged fervidly to be prompt and\nunfailing in appearing for their appointments. Please note below:\nTuesday afternoon: 1.20: Paddy\nColthurst, Rosemary Bawden, D. A.\nDarling, Margaret Hughes, Kiyoko\nYoshlda, W, N. English.\n2.30: Dick Elson, Audrey Hamilton, Kenneth Grant, Shuichl Kusa-\nka, Walter Barss.\n3.30: Mabel Pearce, Hugh Ham-\nersley, Lloyd Hobden, H. F. Alexander, M.E.\nAnnouncement of the campus studio will be made in Tuesday's Ubyssey.\nSeniors To Revive\nAge-Old Gown\nControversy\nArts '37 Executive\nPlans to Bring\nUp Matter\nBy KEN GRANT\nDracula and Faust will have\nnothing on the Senior Class\nIn the way of sinister dignity\nIf the conspiracy to bring\nback gowns for upperclassmen succeeds at the Arts '37\nclass meeting next Tuesday.\nThe suggestion has been\nmade before on several occasions' but this time It is rumored that a large minority\nof the class are behind the\nidea and expect to push it\nthrough without much opposition, since the meeting will\nbe held in the Applied Science\n100, which is considered outside the cruising radius of the\naverage reactionary Artsman.\nWEAR AND TEAR\nThe motives behind this new\ndrive for gowns are not known, but\nit Is thought likely that the suggestion comes from some of the less\nimpressive looking Seniors who\nsuffer from inferiority complexes\nin the presence of husky, noisy\nFrosh. The old alibi about saving\nwear and tear on clothes will probably be mentioned at the meeting,\nbut that Is as much a part of the\ngown tradition as the actual garment and will probably be listened\nto with great reverence by all.\nThe sight of black gowns billowing down gloomy corridors\nand acroaa the windy quad will\nlend a sombre monastic note to\nthe Univereity, which ought to\nraiae the scholastic standard con-\naiderably, it la felt by those who\nworry about auch things.\nMeanwhile, several Seniors are\npracticing some of the fundamental principles, of gown wearing in\nthe Council office, such as the state- j\nly descent of staircases, the awesome entrance of lecture rooms\n(done by clutching the folds closely\nto the throat with the left hand,\nelbow leading, and holding the note-1\nbook close to the body in the right, j\nand walking with a noiseless glide), !\nand the nonchalant shrug perfected\nby Council members at A.M.S. meetings, which means, \"I am ready to\nlisten now. Kindly commence.\"\nThe possibilities along these lines\nare unlimited, the experimenters\nstate, and arrangements may be.\nmade with the Players' Club to se\ncure expert lecturers to help Seniors through the first self-conscious\ndays.\niiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinimtm\naurownd\nthe campus\nby darby j\nITiitiniiiiiniiiiiimiiiiiHiuiiwmmtl\nCORRESPONDENCE\nThe Editor, Ubyssey.\nDear Sir:\nA meeting of the boarders in Salisbury Lodge was held on October\n1. A president and committee were\nelected as follows:\nPresident, Allan P. Fawley; house\ncommittee, Howard Alexander, Ted\nJackson, George Turner; recreational committee. Maurice Lambert,\nBill Tater, Bernard Neary.\nAttention was drawn to some of\nthe publicity that Salisbury Lodge j\nhad received In the Sept. 29th Ubyssey and the Sun of September 30. j\nThe meeting Instructed me to write '\nto you and let you know that they\nwere not pleased with your state- \\nmerit that the food at Salisbury j\nwas \"good and fairly plentiful\" and |\nto inform you that the food here ,\nis both good and very plentiful. If\nyou have any doubts In this respect,\ndrop in and have a meal with us\nto see for yourself. The house is\nfull to capacity, almost to overflowing, but everyone Is well looked after and there have been no complaints regarding accommodation.\nSalisbury Lodge is still under\nprivate management even though\nthe boarders draw up their own\nregulations regarding discipline,\netc. Mrs. Hassall, the proprietress,\noffered to co-operate with the S.C.\nM. and agreed to provide good\nboard at reasonable rates If the S.\nCM. would assist her to obtain a\nrequired number of student boarders. She also agreed to permit\nthese boarders to be self-governing\nso far as discipline and conduct\nwere concerned. She has carried\nout her part of the agreement and\nit is only fair that we help correct\nsome of the current rumors regarding the management of Salisbury\nLodge.\nI trust that you will assist us in\nthis effort.\nYours very truly,\nG. A. TURNER.\nA large paper seems to be bringing back columnists and others who\ndelight in writing to fill space. The\ncrab has re-established himself on\nPage 2 every Friday, while the\n\"Student Prince,' whoever he may\nbe, Is invading the Tuesday issue.\nThe current crop of frosh has\nbeen the topic of enough patter in\nthe Ubyssey already, but allow me\na last word. Freshmen must be\ngetting a grand idea as to the quality of university students. What\nwith riots in the quad, bad manners\nat pep meetings, and tragic happenings at A.M.S. meetings and\nsnake parades, the Impression that\nthe children are receiving must be\npretty bad.\nLet me point out but one thing;\nthere was no trouble on the campus\nuntil the brats of 1940 appeared on\nthe scene. Other classes have been\nfoolish, but they have used a little\ndiscretion. What we have now\nseems to be the pure \"depression\nyouth,\" careless, carefree, and absolutely devoid of responsibility.\nWith that done, let us now go to\nthe snake parade.\nSLIME MARCHES ON\nWhile it Is not considered quite\nproper for any upperclassman to\nlend his stamp of approval to a\nfreshman activity, one has to admit that the snake parade offered\nplenty of excitement.\nOur party, when it started out at\n7.45 Tuesday night consisted of: 1\neditor in-chief, 1 Totem editor, 1\ncameraman, 1 ordinary student, 1\ngirl friend and a columnist.\nIt didn't take long\" to lose most\nof the party, although the columnist, as is usual with such, kept\nalong with the two ladies. The Totem editor and the cameraman, evidently longing for excitement, stopped to take in \"Anthony Adverse.\"\nThe ordinary student couldn't resist the call of the mob and joined\nup with the paraders, becoming vertebrae No. 357 of the snake.\n\"These Three\" continued on our\nway. observing much on the route,\nNo connected memories come back\nfrom that night of speed and noise,\nbut a general impression that Vancouver had gone insane seems to\ntick in the mind.\nOdds and ends ... a prominent\npepster on the stage of the Royal,\nstanding in front of the screen on\nwhich was showing the antics of\nWheeler and Woolsey ... a seasoned old news vendor at Hastings\nand Richards who looked at the\nparade and remarked with a grin.\n\"Them's the student gang.\" ... a\nrecent, oh so very recent A. M. S.\npresident and his lady companion\nsipping beer in the Georgia as the\ngang passed through . . . the detailed instructions given to the parade leaders by certain ex-varsity\nstudents who seemed to be running\nthe affair . . . the boos that the\nBeacon got when the doors were\nbarred . . . and the surprise when\nthe boys arrived at the rear stage\ndoor and got in anyway ... the surprisingly few who dropped by the\nwayside in the shows . , . and the\nditto for the \"refreshment parlors.\"\nThe awful few minutes spent in\na drug store while first aid was\nrendered to the boy who injured\nhis hand . . . and the presence of\nmind displayed by a pepster who\nhandled the emergency situation.\nStu Keate looking at the line and\nthen dashing to the Beacon to warn\nhis pal, Leon Errol, that the British were coming . . . the little\nJapanese girl that insisted on tag\nging one of the press party , . . and\nthe noticeable absence of any student officials. (Gould was seen\nwalking north on Granville Street,\nat Davie, about 10.50.)\nArts School Fills\nReal Need\nNew Institution Offers a\nVaried Course\nFilling a long-felt want in Vai\ncouver for a school that teaches\nart of both a practical and saleable\nnature, the Canadian Institute of\nAssociated Arts now offers courses\nIn Advertising, Story Illustration,\nMural Pair ting, Photography, Cartooning, Wood Carving and Animal\nDrawing.\nAdvertising end Commercial Design, in the form of Layout for advertisements in newspapers and\nmagazines; Copy writing, or the preparation of the written material for\nads; and Commercial Design including lettering, creation of monograms, letterheads, greeting cards,\nbook and catalogue covers, freehand perspective, etc., will be\nhandled by Rex C. Mills, B.A. (Brit.\nCol. 1925). Mr. Mills received his\nearly art training in Minneapolis\nand later in London, England, During the^ast five years he has had\npublicity experience with Union\nSteamships, Ltd., besides having\nwork accepted by Addison, Lewis\n& Associates, of Minneapolis.\nWater Colour and Life Class\nleading to Mural Painting are under tne direction ot Mrs. Kate\nSmith Hoole, instructress for eignt\nyears at the Vancouver Scnool ot\nDecorative and Applied Art ,now\nknown us the Vancouver school of\nArt. Mrs. Hoole has exhibited in\nLoudon, England; Tokyo, Japan;\nisational Gallery, Ottawa; R. C. A.,\nMontreal; Society of Uraphic Artists, Toronto; Institute ot Artists,\nSeattle, and the Vancouver Arl\nUullery.\nLife Class, leading to Story 111-\nlustration and Portrait Painting,\nwill be conducted by Clark Steven-\nsou. Mr. Stevenson studied at the\nCalifornia Institute ot Fine Arts,\nsun Francisco, aud also at the\nUrand Central School of Art, New\n\ork City. There he was awarded\nthe bronze medal for Portrait\nPainting, while in Vancouver, in\n11*35, he received the Beatrice\nStone Hedal for Black and White\nut the local Art Gallery,\nThe Crafts department will be\nsupervised by .Miss Maisie Robertson, (Dip. V.S.D.A.A.; scholarship\nawards third and fourth years). She\nhas been most successful in the\nwood carving of animals\u00E2\u0080\u0094a remunerative and attractive specialty.\nMiss Irene Sanderson, who has\nbeen most successful in children's\nwork, will be in charge of the\nChildren's Saturday Morning Section. .Miss Sanderson took postgraduate work at the Vancouver\nArt School, and was on the staff\nof the Children's Gallery Classes\nfor three years.\nCartooning is under the able\nguidance of Mr. E. R. McTaggart,\n\"E. R. M.\" of the Vancouver \"Daily\nProvince,'' where he has successfully free-lanced for the past five\nyears.\nGeneral, Amateur and Photography Classes are being held by Mr.\nW. H, Best. F.R.S.A.. A.R.P.S. Mr.\nBest is a well-known contributor of\ntechnical articles to photographic\njournals In England, Canada and\nthe United States. The courses\ncover the most practical fields of\nthis art, in landscape, portraiture\nand commercial photography.\nTOTEM STAFF\nTotem organization meeting, Publications office, 3.30 p.m. today.\nStaff and parties interested please\nattend.\nTHE ADVERTISERS REPRESENTED IN THE UBYSSEY\nmake possible tbe size of your\nstudent newspaper. They will\nappreciate your patronage.\nSOPH PARTY\nThe exact plans for the Arts '39\nClass Party cannot he disclosed Just\nyet as the date and place are to be\napproved by council. It is almost\ncertain, however, that the Campus\nheadllner will be held about the end\nof the month. The arrangements\nfor the party are practically complete but the major problem of collecting fees remains. It is up to\nthe Sophs to seek out executive\nmembers and pay their dollar. Help\nput the party over. The Fee-Campaign starts Monday, Oct. 12. Men!\nphone your queens now!\ni\u00E2\u0080\u0094WILLIS PIANOS\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCanada's Best\nTHE\nBOWES MUSIC HOUSE LTD.\n951 Granville Straet Douglas 999\nFILM SOCIETY ELECTS\nOn October 22nd, at noon, the\nnewly-organized U. B. C. Film Society will have a showing in the\nAuditorium of a French and German picture for its members. This\nwill be the first in a series of films\nto be presented on the campus\nthrough the co-operation of the National Film Society. These will be\npictures of educational and cultural\ninterest, previously presented by\nthe Vancouver branch of the society.\nAt the organization meeting on\nTuesday, Leslie Allen, the newly-\nelected president, explained that\nonly members of the club may see\nthe film, because they are only admitted to Canada for private showing. An initial membership will be\ncharged of 15 cents, which will entitle the holder to at least two\nshowings.\nSupporting Mr. Allen on the executive are: Lloyd Hobden, Vice-\nPresident; Secretary treasurer, Helen Parker, and a committee composed of Don Munro, Allen Walsh,\nMary Moxon, and Graham Darling.\nIt is hoped to install permanent\nsound equipment on the University\nstage, and to bring at regular intervals such pictures as otherwise\nwould be inaccessible.\n/^T^T\n\"\ IMPORTED FRENCH WOOLS\n( "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1936_10_09"@en . "10.14288/1.0124961"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Publications Board of the University of British Columbia"@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from The Ubyssey: http://ubyssey.ca/"@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives"@en . "University of British Columbia"@en . "The Ubyssey"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .