"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2016-01-18"@en . "1948-10-13"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0125105/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " The Daily Ukyssey\nVOL. XXXI\nVANCOUVER, B.C., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1948\nNo. 13\nPhoto By Bob Steiner\nHAVE YOU SEEN THIS MAN? Missing is the campus' most\nhistoric landmark, the Thunderbird totem now gone missing\nfor over a year. He is the property of Prof. Hunter Lewis. Age\nand Christian names are not known. In spite of his fierce demeanor, Professor Lewis says, the man is not dangerous, and\nhis owner would much appreciate his finders leading him\nhome quietly.\nCampus Talent Sparks\nNew URS Radio Revue\nVarsity talent is on the air, under thc auspices of University\nRadio Society.\n : <$>\nWURF Confab:\na\nRadsoc Host To\nAmerican Teams\nWillamette football team and delegates to the Western Universities\nRadio Federation Conference will be\nhonored at a UBC Radio Society\ndance Saturday.\n. George Barnes, president of the\nUniversity Radio Society is to be\nchairman of the Western University\nRadio Federation Conference.\nDelegates, who arrive by air, Friday night, will confer all day Saturday. Saturday at 7:00 p.m. Radsoc\nwill entertain for the visitors at a\nbanquet in the Brock. After the banquet, the conferees will be honor\nguests at t'he Radsoc football dance.\nPresidents of the Western Canada\nradio societies who are representing their universities at the conference are Bette Lynn, University of\nAlberta; Michael Thompson, U of\nManitoba; Bob Bates, U of Saskatchewan.\nDancing will be from 9 to 12 in. the\nmain lounge of the Brock Hall to the\nmusic of Al McMillan's orchestra.\nTickets are $1.25 a couple, 75 cents\nstag.\nBud Smaller, a CKMO comedian,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0will emcee the dance and present a\nshort skit on football.\nRefreshments will bc served.\nTentatively titled \"Varsity Review\"\nthe \"follies\" show has its opening\nbroadcast Tuesday October 26 on\nCKNW at 9:30 p.m. The program will\nbe transcribed in the Brock Lounge\nat noon on the Wednesday previous\ndo its presentation and is open to all\nUBC students.\nUnder the guiding hand of Tino\nGen's URS Musical Director, \"Varsity\nReview\" hopes to present singers,\ninstrumentalists and actors. Writers\nof skits of less than five minutes\nbroadcast time can be provided with\nactors by Radsoc.\nFeature of thc first show, which is\nto be transcribed Wednesday, October\n20, is the University Radio Society\nchoral group conducted by Trevor\nDawson.\nThe winner on each programc will\nappear on a final broadcast. First\nprize is $150, second $100, third $50.\nJudges are yet to be decided.\nPress Rapped By\nUN Group Speaker\nThe world's hope for a better future\nlies in the specialized \"welfare* agencies of UN, Mrs. W. L. Stevens, secretary of Vancouver United Nations Association, told.a club meeting Tuesday.\nExamples of these arb the World\nHealth Organization and thc Food and\nAgriculture Organizations.\nIn outlining the workings and problems of UN, Mrs. Stevens rapped\ntho \".screaming press.\" The press was,\nshe charged, spreading \"false ideas\nand impressions\" about the body.\nDVA PAY BONANZA\nSET FOR THIS WEEK\nA $250,000 pay parade will distribute first DVA handouts of the term Thursday and Friday.\nApproximately 3500 ex-servicemen on the campus will\nshare in the bonanza.\nFirst to receive ihe veteran allotments will bc students\nWith names from A to M who will oel. cheques from the\nArmories Thursday from 9:M0 to 4:30. Other students will\npick up cheques Friday from 9:110 (o 3.\nSCM Weeps\nOver Loss Of\nAMS Grant\nCouncil Cuts Off\nReligious Groups\nStudent Council's decision to\ncut off their financial aid was\nreceived with mixed reactions\nby campus religious groups on\nTuesday.\nCouncil moved to snip off religious\nclub's hold on AMS purse strings\nMonday night. Moved followed passage of a resolut'ion at last week's\ngeneral meeting to the effect that\nonly clubs \"serving the general interest of all students\" should receive\ngrants.\nStudent Christian Movement officials were indignant at the action\ntake by Council. However, Hillel\nFoundation and tho Newman Club\nexpressed Indifference.\nSCM WRONGED\nTreasurer Milton Wylie of the SCM\nsaid he felt his organization had been\nwronged, \"We feel that we are being\ndeprived of something that we very\nrightfully deserve on the basis of our\ngeneral contribution i'o the student\nbody as a whole,\" he said.\nThe SCM budget of over $7,000 is\nthe largest on the campus, Wylie said.\nWhile most of this is raise by voluntary contributions the AMS grant\nwas a sum on which the club could\ndefinitely count1, he added.\nHe pointed ou\u00C2\u00AB that the SCM is an\ninterdenominational group with major club status. Although it has enly\n250 members the wide variety of services provided were of value to the\netire student body, he maintained.\nTOO LATE\nSCM officials had expected they\nwould be able to present their case\nbefore council or some other official\nbody before action was taken, Wylie\nsaid.\nFrank Thompson, Newman Club\npresident stated his group had \"severed financial relationship with th\u00C2\u00A3\nAMS\" before last week's meeting.*\n\"We thought we were better off that\nway,\" he said. \"Last year we wound\nup with a surplus.\"\nThompson said he felt political club\nshould definitely not receive grants\nas they \"on'f provide any religious or\nsocial functions.\"\nThc loss of financial aid doesn't\nworry the Hillel Foundation either,\naccording to treasurer Al Goldsmith.\nGoldsmith pointed out that since\nthe group enrolled the greater proportion of Jewish students on the\ncampus, the fees collected were ample\nfor running expenses. \"We have never received a large grant from Students' Council because we haven't\nneede it,\" he said.\nFunds Probe Sittings\nOpen In Camera Today\nBrousson lays Charges Of\n\"False\" Reporting On Debt Case\nSittings of the AMS committee to investigate \"diversion\"\nof War Memorial Gym funds will begin behind locked doors\ntoday.\nAttraction Mutual:\nCauses \"Concern\"\nMissing Funds\n\"Worry\" Admin\nAdministration is \"concerned\"\nabout \"diversion\" of War Memorial\nGym funds, acting president Dean\nF. M. Clement commented Tuesday.\n\"The question of over spending is\npurely the .concern of Student Council,\" he said, \"but the administration\nis vitally concernned over the delay\ni construction of the War Memorial\nGym resultant from the mis-spending\nof the funds allopated to it.\n\"I heartily agree that misappropriation is much too harsh a term for\nthe action but the gym fimds should\nnever have been spent\" he added.\nNimrod Help Asked\nIn UBC Bird Study\nB.C. hunters have been asked to\nhelp UBC help the provincial Game\nCommission in wildfowl conservation.\nHunters whose bag of birds contains\none with a met'al band fastened to\nits leg, should flatten the band and\nesnd it to Dr. I. McTaggart Cowan,\nDepartment of Zoology, with information on where the bird was shot.\nThe banding program instituted\nihis year by the Provincial Game\nCommission and UBC Department of\nZoology is designed to yield information on wildfowls travelling habits and ultimatefates. This is one of\nthe major drawbacks to research on\nlocal birds.\nUnder the direction of Dr. Cowan,\n:t group of Zoologists this summer\nbanded mose than. 1100 young clucks\nand geese and their parents. Each of\nof the birds bears a narrow metal\nstrip marked with a number and address of the U. S. Biological Survey.\nLarge scale banding was carried\nout this year in'Alaska and on Prairie\nProvinces.\nGrad Electrocuted\nIn GE Laboratory\nA UBC graduate was accidentally\nelectrocuted in the Toronto laboratory of the Canadian General\nElectric, Monday.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 He was Jack Morrison, Applied\nScience Graduate of '47 and a member\nof Sigma Phi Delta.\nDuring World War II he served with\nthe RC'NVR as a lieutenant,\n- He was 27.\nGOOD AT JIGSAWS?\nTRY THE AERO\nCLUB'S NEW PLANE\nCan you put a IJnk trainer together?\nIf so, the UBC flying club would\nwelcome your services as their\nnewly acquired* complete Link\n/trainer is sitting useless in the\nNorth end of thc Armories until\nsome trusty ex-airforcc type gives\nthem a hand.\nThey might even give the guy a\nfree ride\u00E2\u0080\u0094in the Link of course.\nFall Assembly\nHonours Eight\n*.\nThe twenty-second Autumn Congregation of UBC will honor seven\nprominent Canadians and one Am-\nmcrican with degrees.\nThe Canadians arc; Mr, Ira Dilworth, General Supervisor of the\nCBC Intermit ion crvicc; Colonel\nFrancis Fairey, Minister of Education; Mr. Alexander Lord, Principal\nof Vanneouver Normal School; Mr.\nJohn Benet de Long, former Inspector of Schools in B.C.; Miss Jessie\nFisher Goron, former principal of\nCrofton House School for Girls; Mr.\nW. S. Wallace, Librarian of the University of Toronto; and Dr. 'William\nKaye Lamb, Librarian of UBC\nThe one American, Dr. Luther\nEvans,.is the Librarian of Congress.\nThe twenty-second Autumn Congregation will be held in the University\nArmories on Wednesday, October 27\nal 2:30 p.m.\nTo prevent serious overcrowding\nin the Armories the university will\nissue a limited number of invitations\ni'o close relations of the graduating\nstudents. In order to receive cards of\nadmission guests must reply to the\ninvitation.\ni\nt\nCommerce Women\nPostpone- Tea\nCommerce Women's tea planned\nfor Thursday, has been postponed\nuntil October 21, -3:45 p.m. in the\nBrock Dining Room,\nCommissioner\nTo Speak Here\nSir Alexander Cluttcrbuck, British\nHigh Commissioner to Canada, and\nProfessor E. M, Tjlyard. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 leading\nBritish authority on Milton and Mas\nI'er of Jesus College, Cambridge, will\naddress audiences at UBC on October 13 and 14.\nProfessor Tilyard's topic will be\n\"The Place of the Humanities in the\nUniversities.\" He has had a long and\ndistinguished career both, as an educator and a soldier and his books\non Milton and other English literature topics are well known.\nHo will speak in the University\naudii'orium .'it 3:00 p.m. on October\n13.\nSir Alexander will speak in the\nauditorium at 1.2:30 p.m. on October\n14, He h<* been High Commissioner\nto Canada since 19'tfi.\ninventory or ealing practices a n d\nhealth habits is an importanl follow-\nup to the medical examination.\nDecision to hold sessions iji camera\nwas made as a move t'o bar reporters.\nDave Brousson, students' Council\npresident, has charged newspapers\nwith printing \"false reports on the\nproceedings.\n\"The press has consistently spread\nfalse and exaggerated information\nabout the case,\" he told The Daily\nUbyssey Tuesday.\nREPORT TO AMS\nCommittee is empowered t'o make\na full report on the matteiyvhich will\nbe presented to a general meeting of\nthe Alma Mater Society for action in\nthree or four weeks.\nCommittee has right to call any\nAMS member or ex-member to testify and to employ legal advice and\nchartered accountants in its investigations', AMS president Dave Brous-\nso said.\nWIDE RANGE\nCommittee will be composed of\nPaul Plant, AMS treasurer, Dave\nWilliams, Undergraduate Society\nCommittee Chairman, Terry Watt,\nCommerce Undergraduate Society\nPresident, George, Kelly, CUS treasurer, Bill Roach and George Turner,\nthird year Law Students, Herb Adams\nEngineering Undergraduate Society\nSecretary, and Isabelle Cameron,\nStudent CCF Club Secretary..\nCommittee, Brousson stressed \"has\nbeen chosen to provide as wide a\nrange of tudents and abilities as possible.\"\nPolitically the committee is neither\nright nor left'wing and no important\nstudent group is without representation,\" he said. *\nSinger Charms\nStudents; Loves\nUBC Audience\nA sparse but spellbound audience\nheard Herta Glaz, Metropolitaln Opera\nstar in the Auditorium Tuesday.\nThis was the raven-haired contralto's first appearance on her tour of\nwestern universities. UBC is the first\nCanadian campus at which she has\nsang.\nUBC, she told The Daily Ubyssey\ngave her one of the finest receptions\nof her career. The audience, she said\nwas \"most appreciative.\" s\nShe declined to comment On the\npossible non-opening of the Metro*\npolitan Opera. \"The opera is my only\nwork and 1 have never given any\nthought to doing anything else,\" she\nsaid.\nMummers To Begin\nXmas Play Casting\nA trio of one-act plays will be pre*\neented by the UBC Players Club for\nthe Christmas performance' this year.\nPresident Jim Argue announces that\ncasting will take place Tuesday, October 12.\nNoel Coward's smartly-paced \"Red\nPeppers\" will ce directed by Gerry\nWilliamson. Stephen Vincent Benet's\n\"The Devil and Daniel Webster\" will\nbe Handled by John Sayer, and Wally\nMarsh will direct Phillip Johnson's\n\"Dark Brown.\"\n*w\nBlood Drive Ends Today;\nAppeal For 800 Donors\nAn urgent call for 800 donors to the blood campaign rings\nacross the campus, today.\nThe UBC blood drive closes today,\nand so far it is 800 pints short of its\nquota,\nIn the inter-faculty \"blood\" competition, nurses Undergraduate Society is still leading the field with\nover 149 percent of their quota signed\nup, twice as much as any other group.\nNext come physical Education students, with about 73 percent and Aggie with 60 percent.\nEngineers, who swore to beat out.\nall other faculties especially Artsmen,\nhave as yet, not released any figures.\nTheir official tally is therefore zero.\nA secret prize is being offered to\nthe top donations group. Unofficial\nsources say the campaign committee\nis toying with tho idea of giving back\na pint of blood as a prize.\nLast year, UBC students gave 8\npercent of blood donated in thc entire province.\nQuota Registered Pcrcecntngc\nArts\nAggie\nPhys. Ed.\nLaw\nHome Ec.\nCommerce\nNurses\nTeachers\nPharmacy\n940\n129\n34\n112\n,50\nH4\n24\nIM5\n47\n485\n78\n25\n52\n17\n4!)\n35\n10\n7\n51\n(10\n73\n48\n32\n34\n145\n31\n14\nrnknb\n100%\nI Quota*\nCASTLE, NOT HAMLET\nFILM HERO]!- SEDGEWICK\nOlivicr's version of \"Hamlet\" ia not in thc true Shakespearian tradition according to Dr. G. G. Sedgewick of the\nDepartment of English.\nSedgewick told his English class recently that Hamlet is a \"magnificent film\" but the hero is ''the castle, not\nHamlet.\"\n'By all means sec (lie film,'' he advised but remember\nllial. it \"is about as much like Shakespeare as I am like\nSt. Peter.\" Page 2\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\n\Vednesdny, October 13, 1948\nThe Daily Ubyssey\nMember Canadian University Press\n\" ' ' -' AtithoTizrd as Second Class Mail, Post Office Dept., Ottawa. Mail Subscriptions\u00E2\u0080\u0094$2.50 Der year\nt*\u00C2\u00ABWUllCd throughout the univeisity year by the Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society ef the\nUniversity of B'lilish Columbia.\n;{,:{.%. ,\nEditorial opinions expressed herein are those of the edit trial staff of The Daily Ubyssey and not necessarily mose\nof the Alma Mater Saelcty nor of thc Univer.sity.\n* # * . A A ,\nOffices In Brock Hall. Phone ALma 1624 For display advertising phone ALma 3253\nEDTTOK-IN-ClirEF .... RON HAGGAKT\nMANAGING EDITOR .... VAL SEAKS\nGENERAL STAFF:; News Editor, Bob Cave, Chuck Mar hull; Features Editor, Ray Baines; Photography Director,\nEllanor Hall; Sports Editor, Jack Waterman; Worn. ' i-Vii'\u00E2\u0080\u0094 ! \"m Frnneis\.\n, . , C% Editor Tins Is/mc - LAURA HAAHTI , u. .,,.\nAssociate Edltcrs - EOUG MURRAY AMAIN and LES ARMOUR\nimes ror\ni\nThe following editorial from Tlie Gateway, sMic/c?it\nn^iptBaper, at ,!Pfie University of Alberta jji-csctUs an\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6uterftt^VO insight into parallel problems jacad by\nMlC and other Canadian universities.\nStudents' Council has been pampeHng our\ndCKtens of struggling clubs long enough. It's\ntime Jtyfit .'.Council took some action.\nIncreased Varsity enrolment during the\npest ,lhre(e or four years has fostered the\ngrowth of more campus organizations than\n\"lite Gateway cares to enumerate.\nliven though our campus does seem to have\ngctye cltib-crazy, The Gateway cheerfully ad-\nmite that a number of active clubs to give\nstudents an outlet for expression, and an\nt^tJortunity to get together, is a good tjiing.\nBut a good thing can go too far, and it has\ngone entirely too far at U. of A,\nWe could say that things have gone so far\nthey are approaching a danger point.\nIt is all well and good to have an agriculture\nchit, or a pharmacy club, or a political science\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2cWb, or eveen a pre-Med-Dent club, but when\nso many of these organization arc fighting lo\nkeep up membership, the value of our over-\n.loaded ertra-curricular system becomes quest-\ntomable. -..,,*\nGateway probably bears more of this\n,$aan anything else on thc campus, with\nss the, exception of the Students' Union\nbudget vyhjch sttbsidizzes, so many of these or-\nganlzations. Every approaching deadline of\neach edition of The Gateway brings several\norganizations asking, ordering, wheedling for\nii^big spread'' on such-an-such an event. When\nthe 'wbig spread\" becomes five or six lines un\nihe bimonthly forum of the Students' Society\nIWWorld I*reseervation From Interplanetary\nInvasion, because of crowded Gateway space,\nthere is an attitude which includes anger, insult, suspicion of a Communist press, and muttering of assination of the editor. ,\n, . \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 r\nBut the entire unwieldy extra-curricular\nsystem at this University is best exemplified\nby the class dance situaion.\nThese booming years and he growth and\nexpansion of campus organizations have resulted in a fantastic number of formal dances,\nwith many groups holding their own formals\nas a saccharine addition to their year's program of activity.\nThe result has been a steady splitting ,of\nthe campus into separate groups that have\nlcs3 and less to do with each other.\nThe four class dances, Junior Prom, Frosh,\n'Soph, and Senior, have been about the only\nd'l-ce'mpus functions at which 1,000 or so\npeople coulcl yet together, meet their friends'\nfriends, and have a reasonably good time, _\nNow by decree of the Students' Council, thc\nJunior, Frosh; and Soph dances are to become one Undergrad Dance ,a function whi.ch\nwill probably be.hopelessly overcrowded, and\nwhich i'aib, miserably to correct the underlying problem.\nIf Council won't face that problem, then the\nmany extra-curricular o.rganidations. should.\nThey can do their University a great service by undertaking inter-student relation\nand social that might knit the campus into\nprograms, sponsoring functions educational\nOne University, instead of letting it remain a\nspravuing, semi-governed Students' Union\nthat .some declaim and so many treat with\nindifference.\nAUNTY'S AT\nDOOR\n(A charge ol 10 cents is made /or\nall Signboard notices, with the exception oj Found and Meeting announcements.)\nFound \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nFQUND IN PRIVATE CAR. BLUE\npen. on Oct 7th. Fhcr.c BA 4793. Mr.\nFielding. ,\nPERRINS WRITER GUIDE AND\nindex. KE 19G3-M.\nAccommodation\nCOZY SUITE SUITABLE FOR TWp\nsludents, consisting of quiet study,\nroom with fireplace and bedroom\nwith twin beds. ?35 per month per\nstrrdent including breakfast. ALma\n1562-Y .\nSTUDENT TO SHARE LARGE\nfront room. Private heme. Quiet. Car\nride mornings. Breakfast' optional.\nCE 5879.\nPersonal\nESSAYS, THESIS, AND LAB Reports rxpertly type!. Plce.se phone\nPA 4701 and ask frr Nitei.\nLost\nletters to the editor\n(Ttoc Daily Ubyssey endeavours to P\n.pfhti all,letters received from stud cuts,\nfont,. must reserve the right to edit\n(hose exceeding 2C0 words,)\nIMPROVING ON AUTHORS\nDear Sir:\n interesting, I thought',\nBe I turned to thc first of a series of\narticles by D. H. Lawrence. Now D.\nH. ifl.a .man who would arouse con-\ntrpvwsy, ; evene'with me. I pounced\non the line .'\"Whereas men are fools\"\nWorth underlining? You bet\t\nBat no. Someone has read this book\nib#fej9c r.Bie. Njot only ,do I'hey know\nWtW> W8i fools, but also they (and I\ntake ,tbis person ,to be female) have\ncarefwlly Tjnderliaed the sentence be-\nfcrc me. But that* is not all. She (and\nI have no, doubt,-< now as to the sex\nof the underlines) has scribbled an\nunintelligible affirmation which\nseems to my \"certainly\" or else \"consistently,\"\nI am., incensed. I bring out my India\nllik and L search the book frantically\nfbreScsmething that will toll mc men\nfife not fools. No'mere woman is going to outunderllne me.\nAtnlast \". . . women must' play up\nto mah's ..pattern.\" Better than noth-1\nI just heard i\nmark i hues iifc a i.l\nfold down the corn\nWhatever you do. rl\nmarl; \u00E2\u0080\u0094it might slri\narid we MU\"T take\nrary bocks.\n: harp way to\ny h ><>\n'' th'-; paio.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 a Incle-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 bir.din-!\n( ur lib-\n' TINOV WITH BLOOD\nDear Sir: \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThis letter is addressed, regretfully\nenough, to tlios'e who, for different,\nreasons (ill health excluded) have\nnot offered their blocd in tho current\nRed Cross drive. Up i'o date cf writing Oct, 11, only two faculties have\ntopped 53 percent of their epiota.\nIt might be interesting to point out\nthai net everywhere has the Red\nCross been able to secure the ncees-\nsary co-operation of the medical societies in order to provie'e this free\nblood service. Some American state\nmedical societies suspclted the whole\nthing; it mucked of\u00E2\u0080\u0094-wcl!--hrmrh\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nhrmp\u00E2\u0080\u0094well, Vo put it lunlly, kmmun-\nism.\nHere in B.C. there was no >>pposi-\nBlced Transfusion Service of tl e P.vel\ntion frcm ony source-\u00E2\u0080\u0094hut apathy. 1'\nhave a friend, a technician in thc\nCross who told me that they wc 'c\nsponsc.\nvery worried over the poor publi;: volt seems to me that this I'hing can\nudcii's. As a men ber of thc Men's Unfg;t.unalc it is when.the univce ity\nYon Athletic Directorate in charge of ath- ir; inadequately represented bepe.uisc\nIctie eligibility and as thc UBC Faeul- <. Raps tonkin, a team through h\-\nt.v R.c| rcsentativo to the Pad,ic North- eligibility, but thc .best way (or stu-\nv.'i:;. Intercollegiate Othletic Confer- deent.s to show their i'eilercst and al-\nence, I have undertaken to sot forth legiimeo is by keeping up with tlieir\nthese' requirements briefly below so aeadopic work and thus remaining\nthat, in addition to \"knowing how to eligible to play,\nread,'' all may be able to understand. | Th's, I think answers all the points\nI LEGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS\nl. Definite academic standards must\nbo reached before any student may\nrepresent the university in any activity,\n2. For most activities, those eligibility standards are qdecided upon jby\nthe students themqsolves through their\nStudents' Council and are enforced ORCHIDS\nby that body. '-dDea%r Sir: , ;,\n3. For participation in Conference i wiSh etoinshrdlu tp qomplim.mT\nathletic activities, thc eligibility tc~ the UbysseY STa90ff on an eXc211ant\nquirements are a)id down by the Com job of proof a'.eadin& in this year&s\ni'erenee and must be eadhered to by daiLY uBysseyyy.\nlily\nand if the last,sentence of the Ubyssey\narticle is, correct\u00E2\u0080\u0094namely \"they all\nknow lunv to read\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094no one would bc\n,'puzzled\" when thc axe *falls.\nYours Truly,\nDr. F. Dickson,\nDept. cf Biology and Botany.\nall members.\n4. The gist of the PNIOC eligibility\nrequirements (which apply, to football,\ntrack and tennis) is as follows:\n<;0 O participant must be a b<]>ua\nfiJo reg stored undergraduate student.\n(b) he must be registered for a\nminimum of 12 units of work.\nVcr'.'lexed,\nIhg I think. Even this, however, is be compared to the necessity of hav-\ntilidorlined before-I get there. I re-do ing a Vital Civil Liberies Union\nthe job ln heavy, smeary ink fcr fu-' you never know when you will need\nlitre readers, My female friend by cither.\nthe way, managed ,i'o produce a leg- | As one who has given 13 times. I\nfb'c \"Why?\" beside this statement, am in a position to assure ens a;vl\nAPPRECIATION\nDear Sir:\n' In response to the batter if Ler.i:\nLipson published in your issue of\n7lh Oct. concerning criticisms voiced\n(< ) He must have successfully pass- aUho AMS meeting this week directed\ncd in a minimum of 9 units during at his own and other of your contri-\nthe previous session. butor's columns, I take .this opportun-\n(.1) Ke must have passed in at ity of expressing on behalf of Legion\nleast four times as many units as he Eranch 72, our cordial appreciation of\nLeon's wcrk so far this year, and the\nhope that ho will bo encouraged by\nONE ORGANIC CHEMISTRY TEXT,\nGatterman. Phone Bob at KE 0138-R.\nWOULD HECTOIt PtOBERSHAW\nplease phone DE 0CJ2 re persenal lcV-\ntcl'2.\n8 CENTS. A PAGE TYPES YOUR.\nessay, Ihcsis, notes or reports. Phone\nKE 3776,\nIN CAFETERIA, SMALL BROWN,\nchange ,pur.se containing ccnsiderable\nsum cf rnpnc^, street car and bus\ntioHclS' Urgently needed. Reward. HA.\n2909-L.\nA, TEXT BOOK \"TISSUES OF.THt;\nBody\" .lost September 30. Reward.\nFR 8148.\nLOST IN LIBRARY OR VICINITY,\nlight tan wallet, contains credentials\nand approx. $5.00 Owner is Claudine\nRichmond. Please return to Lest and\nFound.\nANYONE FINDING A BLUE WAT-\nermrn's fountain pen lost in the Ar-\nmourios on Club Registration Day\nplease call Anne at AL 2999-R.\nWILL PERSON, WHO PICKED UP\nJohn Isc, SP-C 200 text in HL-2 please\nreturn to Lost and Found,\nBUSCII FILM PACK ADAPTER.\nPlease phone FA 8693-L or leave at\nLost and Fcund. Reward.\nf.' .IT JN APPLIED SCIENCE BUILD\ning loo!-:or rorm, maroon s'ecve'.e.es\n:w-t'i\ Please phone Run at FA\nla ,'-M or re'urn it to Lsst and\nFi en d.\nSLIDE RULE. IN AREA OF PJ-IYS-\nics Bu'ldlngs. G. Pugh. PA 3811.\nTHURSDAY MORNING, SILVER\nIndie's lighter with gold initials G.V.\nII. Finder plcaee rclurn. Phone BA\n5127-M.\nBIQLOGY .OF -..FISHES ON THE\nPacific Coast. Return to G. Thcmas\nMA 5586.\nFor Sale\nThis >is a book where there is much\nto read .between the linos ;f only\nthere weren't so many linos ah-aaily.\nNow and then I come to a V.I.!1.\n(Very Important Pat sage) which is\nmarked in irtk. Reading is so much\neasier with v'licse aids. By the end of\nthe book, I am reading only underlined parts. I have complete faitli in\nmy anonymous underline!- guide. Obviously Mr. Lawrence must have\nwasted much time and space in his\nwriting, because at. time-, ii'.e h lr\na page receives unrlcrlin'n';.\nFrom now en 1 slvill c nsc'e-itl' iiy-\nly mrrk, smudge, sear, scratch a'sd\nscone any library books which con\"\ninto my possession. I know it will\nmake reading for other s.'.idents more\ninterc.'-ting. I premise you I shall Into keep my underlining unbiased.\nunprejudiced and unesca; ab'e.\nYours truly,\n.). 11. Al'a-i.\nIl,al eoai \\"(s\nI, thci'e's nothing to iu\nYours truly\nA ntcre Fem; 'o\ntltlMCATfON\nhas failures in his record\nI (c) On outstanding Supplemental\ncounts as a failure but may be removed on passing the examination.\n(f) Upon transfer from another Uni-\niveisity at which he has participated,.\nj a .student i.s ineligible to represent his\nthis and other tributes to the job\nho has dene so that he may carry on\nte good work,\nj During the past, three .years the\nstudent veterans on .the campus have\n*' \"\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"\"\"\"\" up one season in each sport.\nl)('\"1' \"'\": As pointed out, these elast require-\nIn .-, recent, issue c f Tlie Daily Uby- men Is arc laud down by the Confer-\n.sey, there appeared a column from ' (.,Kv, Neither the Physical Education fjopartmcnl-, nor the universitv\nnew university until, he has passed '0\u00C2\u00B0kcd to- tfic Lcgjon for news \u00C2\u00ABnd\njdvice on matters of interest to them-\nselves. Tho Legion has relied largely\non Tho Ubyssey for the publicity essential to the provision of the service\nWill your\noicture\nbe in\nIhe 1949 Totem?\nGraduating students of any\n.faculty can still, have pho.to-\ngrapkj talfui in the photog-\nraphy studio behind Brock\nHall. First, sign the list on\nthe Quad notice board.\n1947 VELOCETTE MOTORCYCLS)\nlike new, 6,000 miles, $450. Phone KE\n2909-L after 5:00 p.m.\n1928 CHEV COACH EXCELLENT\ncondition. New paint job tijd new\nupholstering, $225. Phcnc Ed. at FA\n8130-L.\nBULQVA WATCH JN PERFECT\ntunning order, $15. Phone N.W. 817-\nM2.\nCASE AND BERGSMA^K QEOG*\nraphy 102 text. Phone KE 0797-L.\nMANTLE RADI0^10 V AC,OR DC,\nHarvey, room 12 Hut 28 Acadia camp.\nROAD-ARROW, , CYQl\u00C2\u00A3 ., MOTOJl,\nwill fit ajny bicycle. 2% H.P., 35 m.p.h.\nPhone FA C837-L.\nPOWER BIKE, EXCELLENJ, CONr\nditicn. 130 miles to gal, 35 m.p.h. $145.\n(new $240) Owner now has ,car. BA\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A08925-Y. 6-9 p.m. Ask fcr Martin.\nPOLYPHASE. DUPLEX SLIDE RULE\n510. Phone AL 1886L.\n'' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 , iff\n1934 HARLEY 74 GQpp, RUBBEft,\nmotor, priced for quick sale $25$,\nSee, C. Bakon^ Law Library or pho\nBA 3264-R.\nMiscellaneous I\n; i 1\" I i\ I '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nWANTED A RIDE FROM CAPILINO\nHighlands every morning for 8;|0\nlectures. Phone MA 9806. :,l\nRIDE FOR 8:30'3 MONDAY TO SAT-\nurday from Cornwall and Maple\n.\"'CE 3.192. Kay. 'i\nSIDE FOR 8;30'S DAILY URGENT>-\nly required from vicinity of Arbutijs\n.ind 16th. Phone Dave or George at\nBA 2245-Y. j\n1-DAY\nSERVjfcE\nOn Shirts\nExpertly laattndcred\n4390 W. 10th Ave.\nthe pen of on\", Michael Wottman, and\na, letter fron an annoymous writer,\nwho signs himself \"Puzzler!.\"\nThese two epistles have point, in\ner-aimon inasmuch m each deal-; veilh\nIhe o-ubjoot. of eligibllily lo play fool-\nI ;dl, and eeach shows lack ol' know-\nlodgo or appro-jlation on the suhjeoct\non the part of the .-Tite-i-i.\nLlncoe such statements are .grossly\ne:'sl.a(lii'R ;:n\nh.-ii-m lo spf it upo nlhio eampus, it is\n1,-li that a el irll'ication of tliia niucli-\nX \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -e- cd ,>-ubje-| i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 no'-csaieii'V. Instead\ni :-a.king vae\- ei-.vinus replies to these\ni ,i -.-talonieiils I feci that a clear out-\n1 a. ;-i 'a.-J ii\", cliniliilily 11 -quir '-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 h u'd I n- aha a\ ailable eo\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'.'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 that, matter, has anything to say\neoaec ning theiin. Elibibility rooords\nai\" i-..'rt!'.cd officially by the Reg's-\ntr-ir and iv, ineiijiihh; player may re-\nt 11 .-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'.\".-.I. tlie university in any g-tmo.\nCon 'erence (\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 otherwise.\nIi must be borne in mind that to\n:'..'d.v is the prirrary reason for at-\n:r-:;cl-i:i( e at a university. An inoligi-\n'-.. -..er-vn i not. burred from an act-\nivity in <-i-alor to alleev him more time\na .-liidv, fo.- no one cam adpust. this\nai'.; ' b--( the slurlcnt himself. It is be-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0''\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 I- h--s c'em.-fistroted by his\na. . I tl-,,.1 he is unable to reach tho\n: - a ' aa iilcaiie standing to pc'iuit\ni . to pa: i iciii.ite.\nwe attempt to pi'ovicle for votoran.i\nand will continue to depend on your\ne i-opcration for several years to cr\u00C2\u00ABne,\nWe regard Leon's inclu.-.-'on ef ,-\nveteran's1.paragraph in his column a-\nan lesveUont means ,of ew-itlnuiny the\ni' le between our branch \u00C2\u00ABnd sttia,;.'!!.\nvele -an.\". We value his care in con \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nea-iting us for his facts, and his ability in. pi'orenting them accurate';,' in\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 pleasing style. We 1 oliove thai\nI (i it-'-- (olunm represents tlie kind if\ni< i leoal .\"'ii whi h is well worth tie-\nii' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0; :(\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'.- v tei| far |'-e i-r ifirel a no :l <\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n0 c\nM \"tec\nUb\nt\na leuly,\n. Prc.sld\nhe Legi.\n-nt\nRegister Now !\nCAMPUS BOOTHS\n/ILL BE OPEN FROM\n10.30\"AM to\n2.30 I'M\nBLOOD DONORS CLINIC\nIII \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00A7\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 III CRO'Si Wednesday, October 13, 1948\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nTdWlsorial Expert Says\nSfrdents Good Subjects\nPtg\u00C2\u00AB t\nMien at UBC are as particular as-\nc if the custqmer gets what he\nwantjs, he is almost always pleased\nwith the result.\nThe affable, philosophical .Brock\nbarber,, finds students a happy lot.\n\"Unlikq older people,\" he says,\n\"students don't have grudges against\nlite.\"\nAincng his campus clientele, Dyko\nfinds the ence popular crew cut is\ndying out.\nOnly one close-clipping operation\nhas been .performed this term,\"Most\nmen, wiJJi brush-cuts are letting them\ngrow out.\n; (A notable, exception to this change\nis Ian. MacKenzie, Junior Member Vo\nStik)y suppltMuenting ihe natural scalp\noils, Keeps your hair soft, lustrous,\nquickly respourive to brush or comb.\nThe laipe^l selling hair preparation\nin the luiild. o\">f, and 9a^. ( t.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0r '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 iXhX-?\";i Xin .at\nteelinelfflfTOtC\nAuditions for announcing positions\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0in the\u00E2\u0080\u009EUniver$ity .Radio Society will\nbe held Wednnewliy \u00C2\u00BBd Friday of\nthis week between 12:30 annd 2:30.\nAccording to head announcer Terry\nGardner who is conducting the auditions, this is \"positively the last\n.-chance for tryouts.'' ,\nTrial? for other departments arc to\nbe held in the near future.\nThere are still a few openings in\nthe Radsoc publicity department:\nUNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCH-\nestra rehearsal, There will be a general rehearsal of the orchestra in the\nAuditorium at 5:30 on Wed. Oct'. 13.\nWarm suppers will be available.\nGLEE CLUB REHEARSAL TUES.\nOct, 12 at 12:30. New members welcome.\nMAMOOKS ATTENTION. MEET-\ning for all -new irrerribers Tues. noon\nin the Brock basement clubroom. All\npeople who are interested in selling\ntickets, decorating for campus functions, learning to .paint or operate\nSilk screens are welcome.\nTHE MUSIC APPRECIATIQ^ CLUB\nwill present the Rachmaninoff. Symphony. No. 2 in E, opus 27, for iheir\nreccrded noon hour concert on Wed,\nin, the double committee room of the\nBrock Hal}. All interested are cordially invited to attend.\nSpecial To The Daily Ubyssey\nOTTAWA, Oct. 13 - If there arp\nany senior citizens, Conservative\ner non-Conservawve, who still believe that young people are not\ninterested in politics, |hey must\nhave been sleeping soundly earlier this month. , ,\nCertainly they were not in at-\nthe Studen t Progressive-Conserv-\ntendanco at i!he dinner given by\native Federation in Ottawa, two\nnights before the Conservative\nconvention got under way.\nThis reporter sail wedged in at\na head table which boasted such\ndignitaries as ,the Hon. John Bracken, retiring Progressive-Conservative leader; T. McDonnell,\nnational party chairman, and the\nfour rjnen who were contesting the\nleadership of t^o Conservative\n'party; Hon. George Drew, Ontario\nPremier, John Diefenbaker, M.P.,\nDonald Fleming, M.P., and Garfield Case, M.P.\nA \"tin can\" is actually a steel one,\nsays the American Can Company,\npointing out that steel constitutes\nless, than one percent of the total\nmetal in the average container.\nLetter To Editor\nStudent Charges Fellows\n'Mammy In Hamlet'\nChairman of the meeting was a\n22-year old university student,\nwho called the mscting to order,\nintroduced tlie head table guests,\nand called upon the speakers cf\nthe evening.\nMr. Bracken, Mr. Drew, Mr.\nMcDonnell, Mr. Diefenbaker and\nMr. Case and this reporter were\nnet called upon to s;:cak. In fact,\nsaid Mr. Cairman, we were there\nnot to speak, but to listen. And wc\ndid.\nFcr the next two hours and ten\nminutes, the leaders and poiential\nleaders of the Tories sat glued to\ntheir chairs, while speaker after\nspeaker from every rogressive-\nConservative Club in every Canadian university folded his napkin,\ngot up on his feet, and told thc\nparty leaders what young men and\nwomen thought the partyshould\nbe. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nAnd when the delegate from\nDalhousie University, fixing thc\nhead table guests with a menacing stare growled \"enough of this\ndouble talk,\" Messrs, Bracken,\nMcDcnncIl, Drew, Diefenbaker.\nFleming and Case said not a word.\nThey seemed to like it. As for\nthis reporter, he jusV sSt and\nstared.\nAnd when every university in\nCanada had been hoard from, the\n22-year old chairman stood up,\nsmiled a cocl smile, summed up\nall that had been said, congratulated the retiring leader on having\nhad enough sense to encourage\nparticipation by younger men in\nparty affairs, icld the contestants\nfor Mr. Bracken's office that he\nknew they would have enough\nsrense to do the same; and adjourned the meeting.\nAnd a million dollars, worth of\npolitical talent in the form of\nProgressive-Conservative leaders,\nfollowed by this reporter, were\nexcused to attend other functions.\nAnd when they left the room, not\none of them had said a word.\nTho university delegates had\nsaid it all for them.\nT\nDear Sir:\nCertain members of the student\naudience at the Monday a'tornoon\nperformance of Hamlet at tho Park\nTheatre managed to advertise their\nimmaturity and ignorance with the\ngreatest of ease. The introductory\nnuslc 4o Hamlet, specially composed\nby William Walton was quite in-\ntudtble owing to a continuous echav-\ner on tlie part of the majority of\nhe student audience.\nHalf way through the music a\nstudent in thc rear of the theatre\nshouted out, \"This is a swell Show,\"\nnd he was rewarded.,with an agree-..\nncnt of applause. I had hoped that no\nnc would laugh at the oft repeated,\nlines, \"Thorc is something rotten in,\nthe state of Denmark,\" but of course\nsomeone in the front rows had to display his loud laughter. Ophelia's\ndeath by drowning caused a great\ndeal of laughter on the part of a great\nmany students as did Ophelia's mad-,\nness.\nSeme pa:ut brushes, used for making a superfine lino, ccmist of a\nsingle bristle:\u00E2\u0080\u0094that one being a single\nrat whisker.\nHamlet's kissing of his mother\nseemed to amuse quite a number of\nthe students while a, student; immediately ibehtad me showed his enthusiasm for the final duel scene by,\ncalling out, \"Go on Haromy, give him\nthe .gears!\" The famous nunnery\nscene was greeted with hearty laughter on the part of several much amused students while the sight of\nOphelia or the Queen weeping was\nequally amusing to certain sections\nof the audience.\nJt wo? hare} to.believe thai' it was a\nsupposedly educated student audience\nwho attended the first matinee performance of Hamlet if we arc to take\nthe reaction* of certain members as\na criterion. It was also hard, to believe that Studetnts deliberately\ndrowned out the ten minutes of introductory music by their noisy\nchatter. When are some UBC students\ngoing to grow up.\nYours truly.\n\"KORONGO\"\nGive Your Blood Today\nStocks Are Dangerously Low\nSomeone May Die'Tomorrow'!\nAs many as twenty s-tccl balls,\nsays SK'F industries, are now used\nin artificial limb joints to gain\nsmoother articulation and greatei\ncomfort for the wearer.\nG^r\u00C2\u00A3duates\nHave you had your Totem\nj 11>' ; f. i i\npicture taken yet?\nTotem editors\na ', '\" 'I.If I\nassert that no late pictures will\nbe taken or accepted. Photo-\n;' :', I (.!\" ' ' I \u00E2\u0096\u00A0' i < \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ' a\ngraphy huts are located behind\nthe Brock, and a nominal fee\nof $ 1.50 will be charged.\n000 \"Well, they said you\nhad rooms to rent\".\nWhen it comes to finding a place to\nstay, Egbert is finding out that \"things are\ntough all over\" . . . all because of too\nmuch dematid and no supply \u00E2\u0080\u0094 exactly\nthe way things can get with Egbert'!\npocket-book.\nThat's why he's decided to start accumulating a reserve at \"MY BANK\". Why not\ntry Egbert's recipe and start cooking with\ngas. Open your B of M account today \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nbe another, start accumulatin' brother.\nBank of Montreal\n\ WORKING WITH CANADIANS\n(vIN EVER* WAIK O F J II F E I S I N C 6, I \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 I #\nYour Bank On The Campus \u00E2\u0080\u0094 In Thc Auditorium Building\nMerle C. Kirby, Officer-in-charge ,\u00C2\u00AB|\nTRADE MARK\nSpecializing iri\nPrinting\nFOR\nFRATERNITIES\nAND\nSORORITIES\njf^i- tj* 'UJf' El l3r fcf\"\nOCjilFCrVCj\nStiitMKicry and Printing Co.\n5fiG Scvmour St.\nIT M YS\nTO ROLL YOUR OWN WITH\n'\u00C2\u00AB<%\nm* mwm\nCigarette Tobacco\nMILD, SWEET, BRIGHT VIRGINIA iftaM\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nWednesday, October 13, 1948\nEditorial\nComment\nBy CHUCK MARSHALL\nWhen UBC's American football\nteam goes into action against Willamette next Saturday, there may\nor may not be two more temporary converts from English rugby\nin the starting line-up.\nIf more than one of these grid-\nIron novices gets on the field for\nany length of time we will be\ngreatly surprised but students\nshould know why so many of their\nbest ruggermen are staying away\nin droves from the English game\nin order to don the strange equipment of football and fumble desperately through bewildering prac\ntices with patient long-suffering\nDon Wilson.\nWhen austerity\nhit the campus\nthis fall, it put\nv'he bite on, the\nMAD to the tune\nof $3,000 and the\n, gaze of director-\n| ate , members\ni\nsearching desperately for some\nmeans to staunch the gaping hole\nin their coffer, fell on the football\nteam.\nStudents had supported the relatively unsuccessful Thunderbirds\nin a somewhat half hearted manner for the first two sesons but\nmore often that not stadium receipts had showed a profit.\nPerhaps, thought the men of\nMAD, if we could muster a winning team students wouldn't mind\ncoming to games and the our\nmoney worries would be over.\nTheir hopes, if any, were short\nlived however, for as the opening\nof the grid season drew closer it\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2became Increasingly apparent that\ndespite their eager new coach the\n'Birds were not shaping up into a\nwinning group.\nThe apathy of students, to the\ngame was brought about when a\nmere sixty persons turned out for\nthe team which would carry up to\n30 players.\nTalent Hungry\nThis, combined with losses\nthrough ineligibility and t'he more\nnatural cause of graduation, made\nit clear that the talent-hungry\n'Birds might be in for their worst\nseason so far.\nBad news travelled fast and the\nMAD came to realize that in its\nhour of real need, the undermanned football squal would, in all\nprobability, be unable to play the\nkind of game which would attract\nthe indifferent student body.\nFaced with the situation of no\nwinning grid team and consequently no funds to support all of\nthe lesser athletics which cannot\nstand on their own feet, MAD set\nout to prop up the faltering Thunderbirds.\nUnknown to coach Don Wilson,\nan underground cry of help went\nout among tho athletes of the\ncampus.\n\"Drop everything your doing,\"\nit said, \"and come and help thc\nfootball team. If we can't raise\nfunds, sports all over the university will have to be cut down.\"\nThe response was noble but\ncostly.\nThe Old and Maimed\nInjured gridmen returned to\npractices before aches were fully\nrecovered while others supposedly retired permanently from their\ngame, for injuries flexed a tenjder\nshoulder and went to pick up their\nstrip.\nThe greatest unmber of reinforcements came, however, from\nthe ranks of the English rugby\nsquads. Always there had been a\nfew who played both games but\ntheir numbers had not been large\nenough to weaken the rugger\ngroups.\nNow it was different. Players\nwere deserting the games they\nknew so well to take up the unfamiliar role of grid man and rugby coach Albert Laithwaite was\nleft scratching his balding head in\namazement.\nJust how good a rugger player\nwith a week of football training\nwill be to i'he Thunderbirds. has\nyet to be determined. Certainly\ntheir loss to the English game\nwhich they play so well will be\nWildcat Invaders\nFRONT LINE BULWARKS of the visiting Willamette College\nWildcats when they visit here Saturday will be centre Chuck\nPatterson (left) and tackle Bill Kuka'hiko. Both were members\nof last year's Willamette team which captured the conference\nfootball crown. v *H\nSPORTS EDITOR \u00E2\u0080\u0094 CHUCK MARSHALL\nEditor This Issue - DAVE CROSS\nLate Goal Gives Varsity\nTie In Saturday Soccer\nLittle Howie Oborne came through with a neat goal in\nthe late stages of Saturday's soccer game, to five his Varsity\nmates a 2-2 even break with Collingwood in a Vancouver and\nDistrict league fixture on the campus.\nOborne's socre climaxed a sterling $- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u0094-\nperformance by the hard working in- star who has done a masterful job of\nside left, and pulled 'the game out of\nRugby Squads Split\nMiller Cup Openers\nCoach Al Laithwaite'is rugger squads broke even on Saturday in the opening games of the 1948 Miller Cup series.\nWhile the Varsity was trouncing South Burnaby 14-3 at\nCentral Park, UBC was absorbing a 34-8 pounding from Meralomas at Brockton Oval.\nDespite the loss of several of their<\u00C2\u00A3\nmainstays to the footballing Thun-\nthe fire after Collingwood had taken\nthe lead on t'he very first play in the\nsecond half.\nEAKLY LEAD\nJack Cowan gave Varsity an early\nlead five minutes after the game got\nunderway, sinking a penalty shot for\nhis third such score of the season.\nThe Collies knotted the count a few\nminutes later, and seemed to be home\nfree when Oborne came to the rescue.\nCowan, the veteran fullback, was\nonce again a tower of strength for the\nstudents, breaking up play after play\nand feeding long passes to the forwards. In fact, the inability of the front\nline to cash in on his perfect centers\nprobably cost Varsity a win.\nLOOSE BALL\nOborne's tying goal came just after\nCowan had jumped into the Varsity\ngoal to boot out a Collingwood drive\nthat had beaten netminder Gil Blair.\nWhile the Collies were arguing the\npoint, the Varsity forwards swept\ndown the field and after a short\nscramble Howie snapped up a loose\nball and rifled it into an unguarded\ncorner of the goal.\nGil Blair saved thc game for Varsity in the dying moments by stretching an arm out of nowhere to deflect a shot that was really labelled.\nBig Don Gleib, the blond freshman\nterrific.\nThe Reason Why\nSo students, when you go thc\nfootball game on Saturday, if you\ncan tear yourself away from other\nthings, and you see players that\nyou recognize from the scrum and\nthree-quarter line trying things\nthat make them look like fumbling beginners, you'll know why.\nAnd then if you hear reports of\nUBC's rugger squads, formerly the\nmost consistent winners in this\ncity's history starting to lose\ngames, then you'll know why also.\nFor tho third or fourth time this\nyear thc sports page of the Daily\nUbyssey has a new editor.\nPress of studies or sickness have\nbeen the cause of the others leaving the page but the present editor since he never studies anyway\nand can't afford to be sick, hopes\nto b around for a while.\nfilling Ivan Car's shoes at center\nforward was forced out of action for\nthe last few minutes with a smashed\nnose. Gleig was sandwiched between\ntwo Collingwood defenders and received a terrific jolt, but no lasting\ndamage was done.\nThunderbirds Prep\nFor Tussle\nWith Willamette\nRested and repaired after a\ntwo-week vacation from competition UBC's Thunderbirds\nwill be out looking for their\nfirst football victory of the 1948\nseason this Saturday.\nThey meet last year's conference\nchampions, Willamette University in\nthe Stadium at 2.00 p.m. And thc\nchances are that when the fin:\nwhistle blows the 'Birds will sti\nnot have won a game this season.\nPossibly one of the strongest teams\nto come out of Salem in many a\nyear, coach Jerry Little's Bearcats\nhave already pulled off a major upset this year. In their opening game\nthe Cats knocked over Portland University, a club rated as \"almost Coast\nConference Calibre.\"\nBut the 'Birds will be a greatly\nimproved squad that took a 40-1\npasting from Western Washington\ntwo weeks ago.\nIn the interval, Dougie Reid, star\not last year's team, cleared up his\nstatus.and drew strip. Switched from\nquarter to the half back slot, Reid\nlooks in practice to the answer to\nDon Wilson's prayers for someone to\npack the ball for that sure few yards\nwhen they are needed.\nTwo more bright spots on the UBC\nfirmament are the return of Don Nesbit and Dick Mitchell from the injured lists.\nMitchell, who picked up a bad\nknee in the season opener against\nPacific, should help to replenish the\nunderstocked supply of fullbacks.\nNesbit used sparingly against the\nVikings, is possibly one of the best\nkickers in the conference.\ndcrbirds, the Varsity squad turned\nin a sparkling performance.\nBREAKAWAY\nBurnaby scored first, shortly after\nthe opening gun, but failed to conver'\nA few minutes later Russ Latham\nbroke away for thc students to tie M>\nup at three all. : Vft^tfft,\nRuby Winter, newcomer, to the\nVarsity team, plunged over just before half time to make the score 6-3.\nThe second half Varsity held South\nBurnaby scoreless while Marshal\nSmith led his smooth working scrum\nto crash for the third try.\nFINAL TALLY\nThen in the closing minutes of the\ngame speedy wingman Jack Nelson\ndashed over for the final tally.\nThe UBC team fared badly in comparison to their team mates. With thc.\ncream of the crop going into the\nVarsity squad, the second crew was\nforced to scrape up a squad from the\nremainder.\nIn the opening miuntes of the game\nMeralomas blinded the students with\ntheir razzle-dazzle performance. Before five minutes had gone by thc\nscore stood 8-0,\n-OTS OF SPIRIT\nThe UBC squad though poorly organized was not lacking in spirit,\nand after holding the Meralomas for\nthe major part of. the first half, Bill\nBewell flashed over for the first UBC\ntally which was converted.\nShortly after the Meraloma three\nline got in action again and plunged\nover t'o make the half time score 13-5.\nUBC TIRES\nThe second half opened well with\nWalt Ewing breaking away to make\nit 13-8, but after that the tiring UBC\nsquad was a puppet in the hands of\ntheir opponents.\n'Lomas flashed over again and\nagain with the students trying to hold\nIhem back in vain, At the final gun\nthe score stood 34-8.\nNOTICES\nSoccer Practice\nThere will be soccer practices on\nWednesday and Thursday at' 2:30 on\nthe south west field. Everybody out.\n\$m *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\t\nIntramural Meeting\njntramural meeting Friday October\n15 in hut G-3. Everyone out. Crosscountry, Golf and tug of war entries\nwill be received. Touch football regulations will be distributed. Payment\nof Intramural fees.\n~ y.o.c.\nGeneral meeting for old\nmembers Thursday, October\nAgriculture 100, at 12:30.\nV.O.C.\n14, in\nPublic Stenography\nManuscripts, Mimeographing\nTyping, Theses\nCATHERINE STEWART\nKErr. 1407R\nParty Decor., Personal Matches,\nStationery, Serviettes Imprinted\nMARION YOUNG\nCEdar 4833 MArine 9208\nHockey Notice\nThe first hockey practice of the\nseason will be held on Wednesday\nOct. 13 at 7:00 p.m. in the Vancouver\nForum, (No, 14 car to Renfrew and\nHostings) All new and last year'a\nplayers are asked to turn out,\nSee For\nYourself\nNext time your car needs\nattention, come around and\nsec the unique facilities here\nat Ducck's. Our newly completed service and repair\nshops set new standards of\nefficiency unsurpassed any-\nwhere. A quick look will\nreveal these great new\ndevelopments \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the service\nyou get explains them.\nSmart, Practical\nNAVY BLUE BLAZERS\nENGLISH GREY WORSTED SLACKS\nAll sizes in stock or carefully tailored to\nyour individual style and measurements.\nRichards & Smith\nDT< f\" Limited\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2577 HOWE ST. PA. 8724\n\"The shop for men that are going places\"\nTouch Football\n(South 1 and 2 located at Orchard on Mall)\nThursday, October 15 1. Phi Delts vs Pharmacy South 1\n2. Kats vs Isl Eng. South 2\nFriday, October 15 1. 3rd Eng. vs Mu. Phi South 1\n2. Chi Sigma Chi vs Phi Kappa Sigma South 2\nPeter S. Mathewson\nSERVICE SUPERVISOR\n(J00 Royal Bank Building\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nTelephone\nPAc. 5.'J2l\nWest 16I9-L-1\nSUN LIFE OF CANADA\n10 KHO*\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nwhat a\nlimited payment policy\noffers me?\nSuch a policy enables you to get your premiums paid up during your best earning years .. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nor before a certain age. This type of policy is\nalso preferred by many because of the large\nsavings funds they build up, against which\npolicyholders may borrow in case of emergency,\nor use to provide retirement income. You have\na\u00C2\u00ABwide choice as to the number of premiums you\nwish to pay. After the premium term is completed the policy still continues to pay dividends and the savings fund continues to grow.\nA Mutual life of Canada representative will\nbe glad to show you how a Limited Payment\nPolicy will fit your needs ... or if another type\nis more appropriate, he will advise you accordingly.\nOnly personal consultation with a Mutual\nLife representative can arrive at the correct\nsolution. Why not call the Mutual Life man\ntoday? Since 1869 the Mutual Life of Canada\nhas been providing low-cost insurance to meet\nthe needs of thrifty Canadians in every walk\nof life.\nTHE\nMUTUAL IIFE\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0flHHOI CANADA \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nHEAD OFFICE WATERLOO, ONTARIO"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1948_10_13"@en . "10.14288/1.0125105"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society 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 Daily Ubyssey"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .