"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-07-24"@en . "1954-11-16"@en . "Misprinted volume, should be XXXVII."@en . ""@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0125217/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " THE UBYSSEY\nVol.27\nVANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1954\nSCENTS\nNo. 21\nToronto Plays In East-West\nGame On Campus Saturday\nTHESPIANS ENCORE\nFOR BROCK ROOF\nIn answer to overwhelming\npublic demand and also to\nhelp roof the Brock, the Player's Club will again present\nSheridan's play \"The Critic\"\nFriday noon in the auditorium.\nThe play, one of the series\nof \"Pall Plays\" presented by\nthe Player's Club, was very\nwell received ln it's initial\nshowing last Wednesday.\nLevC '90QKS\nTo Fill Duty\nVacancies\nNominations from the floor\nwill be accepted Thursday for\nthe recently vacated positions\nof Vice President and Public\nRelations Officer of the Literary\nand Scientific Executive.\nRetiring for reason of 'pressure from other duties,\" former\nexecutive members Pat Carney,\nGerry Hodge and Isy Wolfe\nhave left LSE President Dick\nRiopei in immediate need of\nnew council members.\n. Miss Carney cannot continue\nworking on the committee because of heir heavy journalistic\nduties as News Editor of the\nUbyssey.\nOwy, Hodge, as Special\nEv#i\ts Committee Chairman and\nIsy Wolfe currently .parking\nthe East-West Game Plans, are\nunable to five further of their\ntime to LSE.\nOther items on Thursday's\nLSE agenda are arrangements\nfor club program activities during University Week and discussion on a proposed \"Variety\nNight'' programme to be performed downtown in. aid of the\nBrock Roof.\nIB-JACKED JACKET\nVRGENDLY NEEDED\nSomeone borrowed M r.\nMaunsell's Jacket from the\nAMS office. Due to the cold\nweather Mr. Maunsell needs\nthis Jacket. Therefore he asks\nthe person who borrowed it to\nreturn the same. No questions\nasked.\nTHE YOUNG LADY above, whose name is Diana Lam, is tickling a calf named Birdinand, who, judging by the smile on Miss Lam's face, (right) is in turn tickling Miss\nLam's calf. Needless to say, Don Jabour and his Pep Club are responsible for all this\ntomfoolery. \u00E2\u0080\u0094Photo by Joe Quan\nNew Arts Building Heads\nFaculty Priority\nList\nConstruction of a new Art\u00C2\u00BB'(\nBuilding was given priority I\nby Dean and Deputy to the Presi- j\ndent Geoffry C. Andrew in an j\noutline to presented to the pro- j\nvincial'government last week. j\nDean Andrew described the j\npresent Arts building as one of i\nthe oldest buildings on the campus. He considered it \"completely inadequate\" for a univeristy\nenrollment of 5,800 students.\nAlso included in the priority\nlist was a medical sciences centre, student residences and permanent buildings for the facul-\nRiopel To Succeed\nLongstaffe As Prober\nStudent Council Monday night appointed Dick Riopel to\nsucceed Ron Longstaffe as second one of the two Council members on the Committee to Investigate Discrimination in Fraternities.\nThe motion was presented by Longsaffe himself and seconded by Committee Chairman Jim Killeen.\nDebate To Feature\nNFCUS President\nStudent Councill Will sponsor a noon debate on the National Federation of Canadian University Students, Wednesday\nin Physics 200, featuring Doug Burns NFCUS President.\nAMS president Dick Underhill, Treasurer Ron Bray and\nJohn Spencer, Law 2, will round\nout the panel of speakers.\nBurns arrived in Vancouver\nMonday night trom tiie University ot Alberta.\nLast year he was Student\nCouncil president at Alberta.\nAt that time he also served as\nWestern Vice-President of NFCUS.\nBurns spoke at Monday's\nCouncil meeting and will appear\nat a Faculty Club tea this afternoon.\nBurns was elected full-time\nPresident of the Federation at\nlast month's NFCUS conference\nin Toronto.\nHe is making u national tour\nof Canadian Uiversities and will\nleave Thursday lor tiie East.\nBoulevard\nBottlenecks\nBeware\nDrivers stopping to discharge\npassengers along University Boulevard or the Center Mall in the\nmorning have been asked to\ndiscontinue doing so by Mr. R.\nM. Bagshaw, Comptroller.\n\"Accidents have only been\nnarrowly avoided several times\nbecause of this practice,\" said\nMrs. Bagshaw. \"More than 1500\ncars come out to UBC every\nmorning, most of them between\n8:00 and 8:30.\"\nDuring this rush hour, the\nComptroller's Office will be forced to hand out tickets to those\nwho do not cooperate iu this\nrespect from now on.\nI Since the beginning of the\n| fall term, students have received\n1503 tickets for various offences.\nLongstaffe resigned from the\nCommittee last month after a\nthree-week debate over his activities on the Committee.\nCivil Liberties Unon wheh\nwere instrumental in prompting\nLongstaffe's Resignation will receive a letter notifying them of\nthe appointment.\nDanny Goldsmith is the other\nCouncil Committee member. The\nCommittee will meet Wednesday\nnoon in the board room, Brock\nHall.\n*rp 9p vfe\nTreasurer Ron Bray in a financial statement Monday night\ndescribed Gerry Hodge's Special Events Committee as being\nin \"poor shape.\"\nThe Committee which has\nbrought poet W. H. Auden and\nthe Vancouver Symphony to\nUBC this term suffered a $600\nlos.s in the latter presentation.\nAlthough UBC's Fine Arts\nCommittee had previously\nagreed to cover half ol any loss\nSpecial Events might suffer,\nBray considered the setback\nserious enough to warrant a\nmeeting with Hodge,\nThe Treasurer in nis report\nd e scribed the Publications\nBoard as being in good financial shape.\nWith the solicithif; of its own\nads, \"the Ubyssey Was our big\nge\t gamble,\" he said.\ni ties of Commerce, Agriculture\n| and Social Work.\nI Also last week, President MacKenzie replied to student criticism of UBC's housing facil-\n' Hies.\nA public statement issued by\n\ the president said, \"students who\n', criticize the housing here are\nforgetting it is merely emergency accommodation which is\nhuts.\"\n\"It has never been thought of\nas permanent housng,\" the statement added.\nPresident MacKenzie said with\nthe exception of the $750,000\nWomen's Dorms financed by the\nprovincial government UBC's\nhousing has been provided \"without any assistance from either\ngovernment or private sources.\"\n\"We are pulling ourselves up\nby our bootstraps,\" he said.\nPresident MacKenzie pointed\nout the addition of more huts\nthis year had provided accommodation for forty more single\nstudents and 11 more families.\nHe claimed UBC provides\nhousing for 1000 single students\nand 207 families.\nExistence of a \"long\" waiting\nlist shows in spite of the limitations we are still meeting a\nneed,\" he said.\nWendy Seeks\nSkill Gimmick\nLooking into all possibilities\nfor fund-raising, Wendy Sutton,\nBrock \"raise the roof committee\nchairman, said Monday that a\n\"raffle is out of the question.\"\nRecent contact with the\nMayors Office revealed that all\n, raffles offering prizes of any-\ni thing over $50 were illegal. The\nprize offered by tiie University\nj Committee had been set at the\nj price of one year's free tuition.\nMiss Sutton is presently investigating prospects for some type\nof skill contest. She said that\nIhe committee is searching for\na method of challenging student's\nskill \"slightly more difficult\nthan a bean guessing game.\"\nThe tuition prize will still be offered.\nQueens Refuses Trip;\nStadium Is Flooded\nBy STANLEY BECK\nToronto Varsity Blues will face UBC Thunderbirds this\nSaturday at 2 p.m. in UBC Stadium in the first East-West Intercollegiate football championship. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nA history-making erformancc\nby the Toronto squad last Saturday necessitated complete\nchange in plans for the game\noriginally scheduled for November 27 in Empire Stadium.\nBy beating Queens 11-9 before 26,000 fans on Saturday\nToronto created a three-way tie\nfor first place in the Senior Intercollegiate League.\n'tw\u00C2\u00ABtn clotttt\nTRIPLE TIE\nBy a flip of the coin Toronto\ngained a buy into the League\nfinal on the 27th. Western Ontario and Queens will meet in the\nsudden-death semi-final this Saturday.\nThe loser of the semi-final\nwas to have played UBC on the\n27th in Empire Stadium.\nHowever, Queens informed\nDean Whit Mathews early yesterday morning that if they lose the\nsemi-final they will not come to\nVancouver. Dean Mathews immediately contacted Toronto who\nagreed to fly here for this Saturday's game.\nWhen everything appeared\nsettled someone took a look at\nEmpire Stadium field and found\nit to be a pool of water. So the\ngame has been switched to UBC\nStadium.\nMORE SEATS\ninstead of shooting for a crowc\"\nof 30,000 the Beat the East Com-\nmitee intends to fill UBC Stadium with 8000 fans. The Stadium presently seats 6200 but\nthe Parks Board may agree to\nfurnish 1500 bleacher seats.\nTicket prices will remain the\nsame and students can still purchase $3.25 tickets for $2. A\nstudent ticket blitz will take\nplace Wednesday and the downtown blitz will go ahead as planned on Friday.\nThe Toronto team will arrive\nin town Thursday in time for\ndinner and will be billeted in\nfraternity houses on the campus.\nThe Pep Club is planning a reception for the team at the airport.\nPoliticos\nTo Tangle\nCampus political clubs will\nclash Thursday when Paliamen-\ntary Forum will sponsor a debate between tile five national\nparties.\nLiberals, Social Credit, CCF,\nConservative and LPP campus\nleaders will state policy and\nplatform during the debate, a\nprelude to the regular Mock\nParliament scheduled to begin\nnext week when LPP will form\nthe opposition party in a Social\nCredit Government.\nSpokesmen for Parliament ex\nplained the presentation of Mock\nParliament was delayed follow\ning the Brock fire.\nDebate will be held in Arts\n100 at noon.\nHoward Green To\nPresent Tory Story\nCONSERVATIVE CLUB will\nsponsor Howard Green, MP from\nVancouverf, if,\nECONOMICS SOCIETY will\nmeet Wed., Nov. 17 at &.00 p.m.\nat Suite 29, 5611 Agronomy Rd.\nAcadia Camp. Dr. Reischer will\nspeak on \"Aspects of American\nForeign Economic policy.\"\n9f*> *p 9f*\nMUSSOC will hold a formal\n\"Black Gold\" Saturday, November 20 at 8:30 at the Stanley\nPark Sports Pavilion.\n*V *T* *F\nMUSSOC session on Wednesday, 1:30 in Armories 208 will\nfeature light opera and symphony music. A good turn-out\nwill mean bigger and better\nplans.\n*r V *r\nWEST POINT GREY PRES-\nbyterian Church welcomes all\nstudents wishing to attend a\nspecial evening service following\na buffet supper next Sunday at\n6 p.m. Contact John Longley\nat ALma 0554 before Thursday\nevening.\n*r *r **r\nPRE-LAW SOCIETY will sponsor Mr. Mussallem speaking on\n\"Juvenile Delinquency\" noon\nThursday in Physics 200.\n*r V V\nFINE ARTS COMMITTEE will\nsponsor Dr. Hallamove speaking\non \"the writings of Thomas\nMann' noon today in Arts 206.\nPep Club Executive Mike\nJefferiet today issued a plea\nfor students\u00E2\u0080\u0094and\u00E2\u0080\u0094cars to\nform a welcoming committee\nfor the Toronto football team\nat the airport Friday afternoon.\nThose students with cars\navailable ara asked to leaV*\ntheir names at tha AMS office\nas soon ai poasible.\nTICKET TREK GOES FRIDA Y, BUT\nLECTURES STAY FOREVER\nFriday afternoon classes will probably not be cancelled for the East-West game ticket-selling blitz as previously reported. .\nA letter requesting the cancellation was sent to the\nPresident's office by East-West ticket chairman, Isy Wolfe\nFriday.\nThe administration announced Monday 'that the issue\nmust be referred to the Faculty Council and it is doubtful that anything can be done on such short notice. Page Two\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 16, 1954\nTHE UBYSSEY\nMEMBER, CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS\nAuthorized as second class mail, Post Office Dept., Ottawa.\nMall subscriptions $2.50 per year. Published In Vancouver throughout the university year by the Student Publications Board of the\nAlma Mater Society, University of British Columbia. Editorial\nopinions expressed herein are those of the editorial staff of The\nUbyssey, and not necessarily those of the Alma Mater Society or\nthe University. Business and advertising telephones are ALma 1230\nor Alma 1231.\nEDITOR-IN-CHIEF\u00E2\u0080\u0094PETER SYPNOWICH\nManaging Editor\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ray Logie News Editor Pat Carney\nCUP Editor\u00E2\u0080\u0094PETE PATERSON Sports Editor\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ken Lapb\nAssociate Editor\u00E2\u0080\u0094Stan Beck Executive Editor\u00E2\u0080\u0094Qeoff Conway\nSenior Editor this issue\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sandy Ross\nReporters dnd Desk: Louie Leiterman, Jim Carney, Marie\nStephens, Pat Russell, Nancy Seed, Bob Johannes. Brian Guns,\nEd Parker.\nSports: Neil McDonald, Peter Worthington, Maurice Gibbons.\nDemagoguesAreTough\nThose who think that Senator Joseph McCarthy died\nwhen the democratics won senate control in the recent U.S.\nCongressional Elections are indulging in some wishful thinking. Demagogues don't die that easily.\nThe late Senator Huey Long received setback after setback during his career, and yet he was well on his way to\nbecoming a serious contender for the presidency when he was\njpurdered. Huey was made the nation's butt of ridicule on at\nleast one occasion-something McCarthy has never had to\nendure.\nApd Joe has a greater gimmick than ever possessed by\nHuey Long or any demogogue: The bogey of Communism in\nthe \"security\" conscious United States.\nJoe's loss of the Chairmanship of te Senate Investigating\nCommittee wasn't as disastrous to his power as everyone\nlikes to think. Already, a sign of his latent strength has\nappeared in the present wavering of the Watkin's Committee.\nIt will not be too surprising if McCarthy is never given a vote\nof censure by the U.S. Senate.\nWe might as well gird our loins for future battles with\nthe Senator from Wisconsin: He'll be with us for some time\nto come.\nOur Choice\nWe ask Dean Andrew what should come first-faculty\nbuildings or student residences?\nWe say housing.\nIt is unfortunate that UBC students are put in a position\naf having to*\"choose\" between two necessary improvements.\nAt the risk of being naive we maintain that UBC should get\nboth buildings and houses.\nThe phoice rests on a look at the future. This university\nwill someday have an enrollment of 10,000 and upwards. It\nis inconceivable that the present housing situation at UBC is\ncompatable with this.\nBut further than this we feel it is better to live in\ndecent conditions and study in squalor than let the opposite\noccur.\nPresident MacKenzie in a public statement admits to\nbuying more huts. When we advocate housing we don't mean\n\"temporary aecommodation\"--we mean permanent student\nresidences.\nIf construction does not'start immediately on decent and\nlarger student housing students of ten years hence will\nbe pitching tents.\nLast year The Ubyssey in a special edition illustrated\nthe squalid living conditions forced on UBC students. We are\nnot insane enough to ask for bigger and better pig sties.\nWe humbly inquire\u00E2\u0080\u0094how temporary is temporary?\nGUEST EDITORIAL\nSell Tickets and UB\nThe best opportunity for UBC to sell itself to the public ,\nhas arisen in the coming East-West game against University\nof Toronto. Although this game has been sprung on us a\nweek earlier than expected, we still have a chance to make\nthis event one of the biggest athletic events ever to- hit\nthis town.\nIf this undertaking can be a success, this town of ours\nwill finally realize that we at UBC are not the lethargic\ndeadbeats we are thought to be. But we might never change\ntheir opinion of us, simply because UBC students will not\nsell tickets. \t\nAll we were asked to do was to sell three tickets each.\nOne to ourselves, one to our parents, and one to a friend or\nrelative. Surely this was not an unreasonable request, and\nyet UBC students don't seem to think enough of their school\nto do even a small, almost effortless job in order to further\ndowntown prestige.\nAssuredly, our main job is not to better our downtown\nrelations. But there are a lot of people who have put a lot\nof time and energy into the preparation for the game. Their\nhope is that the East-West Game will be an overwhelming\nsuccess for all concerned\u00E2\u0080\u0094students, spectators, and workers.\nIt would be a shame if everything fell through just for lack\nof spectators on Saturday.\nTherefore in order to minimize tho work, we ourselves\nhave to do, Isy Wolfe's Ticket Committee is coming to us\ntomorrow to ask us to buy a studeni. ticket to the game.\nFriday may be a little harder for each of us. We will have\nto go all the way downtown and perhaps speak to strangers\nand ask them to buy a ticket. But after we have sold two\nof them, we will be able to go home and rest on our laurels.\nWe are faced with a task that involves a minimum\namount, of effort, and a maximum amount of opportunity to\ndemonstrate our loyalty to our University.\nWill we do it?\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094DON JABOUR, Pep Club Chairman\nWjuI Ay dband classified\nBy PETER SYPNOWICH\nI will tell you about My Promotion, the one that makes my\nmemory curl with silly laughter every time \ recall it.\nI started my first work on a\nmetropolitan newspaper two\nsummers ago, and it was a venture surrounded by glamour.\nHigh school essays are behind\nme, I though as I walked into\nthe city room the first day.\nNow I can buy a hat.\nI was unconcerned when my\nfirst assignment consisted of\nwriting meeting notices. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 I\nknew the airport and smoke-\nfilled room assignments would\ncome later.\nCame the second day.\nThe city editor explained my\nnew task: I was to hang\naround the press room of the\nopposition newspaper, and\nwrite down the times their presses started for each edition,\nthen bring them back to my\ncity desk as soon as possible.\nI was shocked; I knew copy\nboys had been doing this spying in the past. Was this to be\nmy fate? Freeing copy boys for\nmore important tasks? My eyes\nwere wet as I left the office.\nBut I was determined to\nshow I had the stuff to make\ngood. This job will probably\nonly last today\u00E2\u0080\u0094anyway, I said\nto myself . . . weakly.\nAt first, I approached the\nopposition press room timidly.\nThen an Idea struck me. If I\nwalked in boldly and started\nwriting notes, they'd immediately throw me out, My editor\nwould have to send someone\nelse.\nBut apart from puzzled glances, I, received no rebuffs. In\ndesperation, I walked over and\nstarted plucking off each edition as it came off the presses.\nStill no reaction.\nSo I went back to my office\nthe first day having fulfilled my instructions to the letter\nand then some. An^ my city\neditor was both puzzled and delighted.\n\"How did you ever manage\nto get the papers?\" he asked.\n\"Just took them,\" I replied.\nBeaming, he said: \"Damn\ngood. Go back tomorrow.\"\nIt continued for more than a\nweek.\nI would come to work, fresh\nand eager in my grey flannel\nsuit, and leave with my nostrils\nblackened from the invisible\ndust of printer's ink, my hair\nstiff with the stuff, and my\nwhite shirt cursed with tattle-\ntale grey\nNothing is dirtier than the\npress room.\nI tried to keep my movements secret from the copy\nboys, but they eventually found\nout. I have yet to find anything\nmore devastating than the\namused glance of a supercilious\ncopy boy.\nAnd the workers in the press\nroom were still unconcerned at\nmy presence. It began to look\nas though I would continue to\nbe a junior-grade spy indefinitely.\nBut one morning a worker\nsidled over to me as I stood\njotting my notes, and conversationally asked: \"Down from\nPowell River, eh?\"\nI stared at him, my brain\nwhirring. Powell River . . .\npaper . . . newsprint . . . presses\u00E2\u0080\u0094why, the man thought I\nwas some sort of executive or\nefficiency expert down to\ncheck my product's reaction to\nnewspaper presses! No wonder\nI had been unmolested!\nIt was. inconceivable. I\ncouldn't lie. \"Er, ah . . . no, not\nquite,\" I mumbled.\nHis eyes narrowed. \"Then . .\n?\" he queried, one eyebrow\ncocking' dangerously. \"Oh, just\ndown from upstairs,\" I said unconcernedly, waving in y\nthumb upwards.\nHis head turned doubtfully,\nand lie looked at me out of the\ncorner of his eyes as he moved\naway.\nNext day, I was only two\nsteps inside the press room\nwhen the foreman, an unbelievably tall man, appeared in\nfront of me from nowhere.\n\"What do you want'.'\" he demanded.\n\"Oh, just watching your\npresses,\" I grinned weakly,\n\"They sorta interest me,\" I add-\nSocio list\nEditor, The Ubyssey;\nThe Ubyssey has recently\npublished an article dealing\nwith some signs advertising the\nWestern Socialist. I am one of\nthe persons who was involved\nin the placing of these signs.\nYou mention that The Western Socialist is $860 in debt\nand speculate on this being\nthe reason for the paper being\nboosted on the campus. It may\nbe that the issue that found its\nway to the offices of The Ubyssey was an old copy because\nsince that time the WS has\nreceived donations of over $800.\nWhile the paper is still in\ndebt, the real reason for its\nbeing advertised on the campus was to arouse student interest in the magazine that\nchallenges conformity and provokes thought.\nI am grateful for Mr. Loosmore for feeling that \"to release the name of the individual would be unfair\"\nwas not aware of having had \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00ABlnAn \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u009E . \u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E ., u\nthe pleasure of Mr. Loosmore's \u00C2\u00BB17S'\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00B0J ?'\u00C2\u00B0ck Hal1 **?! h*v\u00E2\u0080\u009Ee\nrepeated their request that students who were in the Double\nCommittee Room of the Brock\nthe afternoon of the fire make\nEvery paper carries \"news\"\neven if it is only a very small\npercent. Consequently, some\narticles should rightfully be\nclassed as \"news stories.\"\nTherefore, The Ubyssey should\nhave no 'denials of \"news\nstories\" which are the truth.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Student\nCLU\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nThe Civil Liberties Union\nrequests all those students who\nrecently sent in their names\nand membership fees to leave\nalso their addresses and phone\nnumbers at Box 7, AMS office.\nThe LSE requires a card\ngiving this information for each\nmember of an LSE club. The\nCivil Liberties Union appreciates your support of their\nrecent attempts to remove racial discrimination.\nFreda Messerschmitt.\nTHE FIRE\nUniversity Fire Committee,\nj who are still attempting to discover the cause of the recent\nacquaintance\nYours truly,\nMysterious Socialist..\ni. P'w THe^e8tern S0Ciall8t them7eWerknown,V\"the'7ire\ns a bi-monthly paper appear- chlef Th Mld no actlon wouW\ntag six time* a year. (Perhaps be taken against gtudents com.\nthrough a misprint your article ing forward.\nhad said \"four times yearly\").\u00C2\u00AB, \u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u0094 ,\nM.S.\nFOR SALE\nA RALEIGH BICYCLE WITH\n26\" wheel and 3-speed. Apply\nAcadia Camp, Hut 27, Rm. 14.\n* * \u00C2\u00BB\nROOM AND BREAKFAST\nfor male student at UBC'Cfates.\nSeparate phone line; kitchen\nand laundry facilities. Telephone AL. 0947-R, except from\n2 to 4. p.m. x\n* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\nWANTED .,\nONE SMALL USED PIANO,\ninexpensive, for rumpus room\nuse. Phone Alan. KE. 1312.\n* * *\nWILL THE STUDENT WHO\nfound and returned my briefcase get in touch with me. Earl\nBirney, English Dept.\n* * *\nTYPING AND MIMEOGRAPH-\ning electric typewriter. Carbon\npaper and ribbons generously\nused. Accurate work. Mrs. F.\nM. Gow, 4456 West 10th Ave.\nAL. 3682.\n* * *\n3 ROOM SUITE, MARRIED\ncouple, university students. No\nchildren, Dec. 10 occupancy.\nKE. 5911-L.\n*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 * *\nLOST\nA LIGHT BROWN BRIEF\ncase. Reward. Phone John Mc-\nGoran, AL. 1561.\nOn Truth\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\n\"The humble appeal to the\nlight,which lightens their\ndarkness.\"\nThe students of this University should not ignore the actual nature of The Ubyssey. The\nmain concern of the paper is in\nreporting and discussing matters which directly concern the\nstudents. Any article should be\ncut down to its actual importance. Being the only paper on\nthe campus, The Ubyssey can\nafford to be accurate and reasonable. It should give a reflection to the reader of his environment. In every paper there is\na sense of personal responsibility. Apparently, the discretion\nof one individual is not sufficient as to what should and what\nshould not be censored A paper\nshould tell the truth; but, are'\nthe students capable of. receiving the truth? Who is to judge,\nas to what is printed whether\nthe material is true or false1?\nAny part of the staff of The\nUbyssey who is careless witli\nthe truth should not hold a position on that staff.\ned, hoping to impress him as a\nmere man in the street.-\n\"Get the hell out,\" he said\nflatly.\nMy city editor laughed for a\nsolid five minutes when I told\nhim my tale. \"They thought he\nwas a Powell River executive,\"\nhe kept gasping through tears\nat his assistant.\nThat was the end of my spying.\nMy next assignment was covering a meeting of the British\nEmpire Games Committee.\nAfter all, I had been mistaken\nfor a Powell River executive.\nv// AkMsiKUNC.\n;'\u00E2\u0080\u009Ew';....7;;/r\" \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 awfrong\n1522 W. Broadway CE. 1611\n2263 W. 41st at Yew St.\nHev\u00C2\u00AB You Loundfy Problems?\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 This is the Place to Solve Them\nVARSITY LAUNDERIT6\nIRONER SERVICE a SPECIALTY\nAcross from Varsity Theatre\nALma 2210\nthis fall be right Is style\nGRANDSTANDERS'\nIt's really wonderful what a new pair of campus-inspired\nRitchies will do for your suit, your appearance and your\npersonality! The leathers for Ritchie \"Grandstanders\"\nare specially selected for Fall wear. Your feet deservi\na pair! Most styles from $10.95 to $18.95.\n^tlCnte- shoes for men\nTHE JOHN RITCHIE COMPANY LIMITED, QUEBEC, P.O.\n$oin VARSITY JEWELLERS\n Sitter SaftWjA Club\nPHONE ALMA 1511\n4479 WEST 10TH AVE.\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nOur SILVER SAVINGS CLUB will enable you and approximately forty other\nlucky ladies to enjoy the silverware of their dreams. Look at those exciting details!\n1. Club members make low weekly\npayments for forty weeks on the services\nof their choice.\n2. One of the SILVER SAVINGS\nCLUB members will receive her set absolutely free.\n\\. Every club member will receive an\nextra piece of silver for her set as a gift\nfrom us.\n4. There is also a further exeiling opportunity for every club member to win\nadditional pieces of her service.\nChoose your silverware from these timeless .patterns: Wild Rose, Prelude, Enchantment, Pine Tree, Joan ol* Arc, Northern Lights, Royal Danish.\nWe would like to explain the full details to you. Won't you stop\nin and see us this week? Tuesday, November 16, 1954\nTHE tJBYSSBY\nPipPI***\nMcGugan\nAirs Views\nCampus LPP chieftain. Archie\nMcGugan, spoke to a student\naudience Monday in a noon-\nhour lecture sponsored by the\nStudent Christian Movement.\nThis is the first speaking appearance made by McGugan\nsince he organized the campus\nLPP Club last year.\nPresenting the Marxian viewpoint on \"Man's Place in the Universe,\" McGugan said that\nhis appearance as a student in\nthe lecture series, which until\nnow has included only faculty\nmembers, was the result of the\nUniversity's \"d i s c r i m inatory\"\npolicy of refusing to hire professors with communist ideals.\nThe doctrine of Materialism,\nln which man is master of his\nown fule as opposed to Idealism\nin which man is guided by a Divine power was cited by the\nspeaker to be the basis of communist theory.\n\"Pessimism has nothing to do\nwith Communist theory,\" he\nsaid. \"We believe In progress by\n'leaps and bounds', and not\nthrough a process of gradual\nchange.\"\n\"This transition from theory\nto practice by revolutionary\nmeans >1b- one of the chief factors which distinguishes Communism from all other political\nsystems, and is the reason for\nCommunism's practical success\nin the world today,\" he said.\nMr. McGugan further suggested that Capitalism has outlived\nits usefulness in modern society,\nand that over-production under\nthis system would lead either to\ndepression or increased war production, Common ownership under a socialistic system would, he\nfelt, solve the problems now facing capitalism.\n\"The time has come,\" he warned, \"to free ourselves from the\nrestrictions\" and old 'ties of class'\nsociety and to progress to a higher plane of development.\"\nEMPLOYMENT COMMITTEE\nGrant Hepburn was appointed\nby Student Council Monday\nnight as Chairman of this year's\nStudent's Employment Service\nCommittee.\nThe Committee acts as a lia-\nson body between the students\nand the University Employment\nService, presenting the student\npoint of view.\nCollege Shop\nTo Stage\nFire Sale\nThe UBC College will stage\na monstrous fire sale Wednesday to Friday this week, featuring big bargains for small\nstudent pocketbooks.\nDiscounts from 25 to 50%\nwill be offered on smoke and\nwater damaged goods.\nV-neck and cardigan sweaters,\nT-shirts, sweatpants, shorts,\nsocks, ski caps, stationery, sundries such as shaving cream,\nchocolates, second-hand books,\nUBC sheet music and records,\nwill all be available in the northeast corner of Brock Hall from\n11:30 to 1:30.\nCollege Shop manager John\nHanson announced Monday a\nnew shipment of faculty pins\nhas arrived.\nPROFILE\nDr. Redd: Piscatorial Prof\nA shock of grey hair, a\ncherubic face complete with\npipe, and a great love for\neighteenth century literature\nare three of the most outstanding features of Professor\nStanley Read of the English\nDepartment.\nWith seven universites behind him, Professor Read came\nto UBC in 1946. He was immediately impressed with the\n!\nDelta Sigma Pi\nSwells Ranks\nWomen's Honorary Sorority,\nDelta Sigma Pi announced the\nnames of seven women students\nselected for membership this\nyear. *\nThe co-eds are selected for\ntheir outstanding contribution to\nthe University in the fields of\nleadership, scholarship and service.\nDelta Sigma Pi has given recognition to: Peggy Andreen,\nBarbara Blackmore, Fay Fingarson, Maureen Sankey, Mar-\nney Stevenson, Ann Sutherland\nand Marguerite Wiebe.\n. A reception for the Formal\nInitiation will be held in the\nHillel House on November 25\nat 8:00 p.m. Included in the\nceremony will be addresses by\nthe Faculty advisers.\nPROFESSOR STANLEY READ\ntremendous growth and excitement on thercatapus, especially\nduring the days of the veterans.\nAlways one with a pun or\njoke, he loves to tell his favorite anecdote of this era.\nIt seems he was teaching English 200 in the Auditorium at\n11:30 to a class that ranged\nfrom 350-500 students.\nStriding into the hall one\nday he was astonished to find\npeople literally hanging from\nthe rafters. Not until he re-\nVibrant Vibist Here\nFor Jazzsoc Concert\nBy JIM CARNEY\nOne of Canada's Most brilliant vibraphonists will be featured in a truly cool concert Wedneday noon, as the UBC Jazz\nSociety presents the Ray Lowden Quintet in the club's second\nlive auditorium session of the season.\nA long time favorite in Van-\nMusicians\nWanted For\nSymphony\nUBC's Symphony Orchestra is\nplanning its 1953 concert season,\nand has several openings for\nnew members.\nNorma Collingwood, past president of the symphony invites\nanyone who can play a musical\ninstrument to join the group.\nThe presentation of a major\nchoral work, produced in conjunction with the UBC Extension Chorus is scheduled for the\nspring season.\nA tour of Vancouver high\nschools in cooperation with the\nVancouver School Board is also\nplanned for the coming season.\nRehearsals are held every\nMonday night at 7:30 in the\nband hut behind the Brock.\ncouver's \"pulsative music\"\ncircles, the versatile Lowden will\nbe blowing both vibes and trumpet.\nRay has developed an exceptional technique with the mallets, and this combined with his\nswinging, and oftentimes fast\nand intricate ideas, often produces tremendous performances.\nLance Harrison, who has appeared on campus numerous\ntimes, will be blowing that big\ntenor of his, and driving the\ngroup will be the rythm section\nof Bud Henderson on piano,\nErnie Blunt, guitar, and Bill\nWightman (Jimmy's younger\nand easterner brother) on drums.\nPep Club Head Don Jabour\ntoday announced that he has\nbecome the father of a bouncing\nnine-pound baby boy. \"It happened last Wednesday night,\"\nlie said as he passed out cigars,\n\"But I'm foggy on the details.\"\nSee Klee For A Nominal Fee\nHn^fmJt\n\"THIN WOMAN\" BY PAUL KLEE\nEighty paintings from the Guggenheim\n*| collection of Art are being shown at Vancouver Art Gallery.\nThe display opens today and will run to\nDecember 12.\nThis is the fifth in a Gallery series dell signed to cover the different \"periods\" of\nArt.\nThe collection includes works demonstrating the historic development \"towards abstraction.\nArtists represented include Chagall, Klee,\nLegre, Matisse, and Picasso along with various others.\nStudents will be admitted for 25 cents.\nGallery hours are Tuesday through Friday,\n10 a.m. to 10 p.m., Saturday and Sunday 2 to\n5 p.m.\nJames Johnson Sweeney, director of the\nGuggenheim Collection, will lecture in the\nGallery November 19.\nmembered that the Inkspots\nwere scheduled for 12:30\ncould he explain this sudden\ninterest in his English 200\ncourse.\nMr. Reiad was born in Hock\nIsland, Quebec at the beginning of the century. He received both his M.A. and B.A\ndegrees from MeOill. While\nth'bre, Professor Read was editor-in-chief and president of\nthe McGill Daily. Newspaper\nwork never appealed to him\nas a life-long career because\nof its \"nose to the grindstone\"\nquality which quite opposed\na long lazy streak.\nHe was recipient of the\nDean Moyse Travelling Scholarship which enabled him to \"\ndo post-graduate work at the\nFrench universities of Grenoble and Lille.\nFurther post-grad work\nbrought him to Chicago where\nhe studied arid taught at the\nUniversity of Chicago and Da\nPauw University.\nAny time he can spare from\nhis Eighteenth Century Bible\nand Bibliography courses Mr.\nRead devotes to photography.\nCandid shots of his little boy,\nGeorge, who is'\"nearly as\nangelic as he looks,\" has been\nhis favorite topic for the last\nfour years. He has occasionally exhibited at Photographic\nSalons, mostly in Chicago.\nProfessor Read is an active\nmember ol the Harry Haw\nthorn Foundation for the Propagation and Dissemination of\nthe Techniques and Ethics of\nFly-Flshlng. This club is a\nlittle known but highly organized university foundation\nwhich has actually been ratified\nby the Board of Governors,\nbnly since coming to B.C. has\nfishing consumed so much of\nMr. Read's time.\nRather Pepysian himself,\nProfessor Read has made his\nEighteenth Century course one\nof the liveliest in the English\nDepartment. Students are continually treated to illustrations\nand editions of this period\n-from his vast library of over\n1500 books.\nHe saw service in Qre|r\nBritain, Belgium, Holland drift\nGermany as a Selector 6T\nPersonnel Offices 4M 1W\nto 1946. His rank discharge\nwas major.\nMr. Read hai been helpful\nto McGoun Cup debator* and\nto the Parliamentary l\mim.\nHe is also on thr I-baKr\" of\nTrustees for the International\nHouse.\ne%\nCAMPiEtl\nCLEANERS\nAcross from Vanity TheaW\nAL. 24AW\nDiscount ft* ftfllM*\n-ttfia\n<$>_\nDEAN'S\nFine Foods\n\u00C2\u00AB\nMellow Whip\nIce Cream\nloth' & Sasamat\nALma 2596\nI'i1 i f\nSASAMAT GABS\nAlma 2400\nALMA'S COMMUNITY TAX*\n24-Hour Service 10th aft* TtffibW\nmwm\nA\nSeiu'tM W graduate J\nForeign Service Officer?\nare required for the\nDepartment of External Affair?\nA career in diplomatic, consular, information and at*\nministrative work is available to Graduate! and Senioffc\n(appointment following graduation), who are below 81\nyears of age and who have resided in Canada for at lttikt\n10 years. This is a career opportunity, with good salavjr,\ngood promotional opportunities, interesting work, ptnstotl\nplan, hospital and medical plan.\nA written examination will be held on Seturdafc,\nNOVEMBER 20, 1954, at Hut M7, University of BrHtth\n! Columbia, Vancouver, B.C.\ni Complete details may be obtained at your University\nI Placement Office or from the Civil Service Commission,\nj Ottawa. Look at the Poster on your bulletin board.\nemm%\ntNCO*PORAT\u00C2\u00A3D 2ff MAY 16 7Q.\nYou'll Find Years\nof Warm Comfort\nin one of these\nHand Knit IncftatY\nSweaters\n$2750\nTO *c\n$32so\n$2.50 EXTRA F0# \\nZIPPER CLOSINGS\nPure raw wool has been knit by the Cowichan Indians into rugged sweater*\nthat will last you through seasons of outdoor activities. They're warm,\nroomy, and water-repellant\u00E2\u0080\u0094ideal for an outdoor person. And they're\nattractive as well\u00E2\u0080\u0094they feature smart designs in natural grey, black and\nwhite. Here is the answer for anyone, man or woman, who needs a warm,\ndependable top sweater.\n-HBC MEN'S SWEATERS,\nMAIN FLOOR H|t Four\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 16,1954\nBirdsToMeet Power\nLaden Blues At UBC\nGame Saved From Sure\nDrowning By 3-Way-Tie\nBy KEN LAMB\nA three-way tie in the Eastern Intercollegiate League, the\nfirst that has ever happened there, has thrown more than one\nmonkey wrench into the plans for the East-West college final\nFor those of you who read\nnothing but the sport page, and\nhaven't read the front, the\nchanges are these:\nNOW NOV. 20th\nTime is moved from November\n27 to 20, team will be Toronto\nVarsity Blues, and place will be\nUBC stadium, with an increased\nseating capacity of 9000, courtesy of the Parks Board.\nThe change in venue from the\nStadium to UBC means there\nwill be no 30,000 crowd, which\nin turn means one K. B. Lamb\nhas been let out of a commitment to eat his hat.\nSecondly, the spectacle will\nnow become a football game and\nnot a water polo contest, Something it would have been had it\nbeen played in the Hastings\nStreet mud bath.\nWOT A PARTY\nThirdly, students may now get\nas Jolly well stinko as they\nplease, for we will be in our\nhomegrounds, and not in the\nalien territory of the thug ridden City of Vancouver.\nThe chance that brought the\nBlues out here was indeed kind\nto the ticket sales. There is many\nan old Varsity grad in the city,\nanxious to get his chance of a\nlifetime to try to prove Eastern\nfootball spirit is more incensed\nthan ours. K\u00E2\u0080\u009E *\n x\t\nThere is also a chance that the\nBirds will meet the powerful\nBlues with some surprises to off*\nset the odds advantages the Toronto team will carry into the\ngame. The eligibility is holding\na special meeting to decide on\nthe standings of the football\nplayers.\nHELP, MAYBE\nThe game will be played under CRU rules featuring a strict\nCanadian game except for down-\nfield blocking. The word from\nthe East is that the Blues will\ntake kindly to this for they claim\nit is much easier for a Canadian\nclub to adapt itself to the American code than vice versa.\nAnd they love that unlimited\nblocking.\nNobody is selling Birds short,\nbut Jim Boulding is the only\nsure returnee from the injury\nlist. Omar Nyhaug, Kevin O'Connell and Gordy Elliot are indefinite starters, while Ross\nRayemnt is out for sure.\nPray for rain, fans, because\nthe Blues passing yardage, equally effective with both quarters,\nBill Stevenson and Harry Wil*\nson, reads like a Canasta score.\nIn a game against McGill, the\npair tossed for 387 yards.\nKeep selling those tickets.\nCOLUMNS UNLIMITED\nt\nSpectators Are\nAlright, But ...\nAt 2:30 p.m. on the 20th of November at UBC Stadium\nan optimistically-predicted 10,000 fans will cheer the opening\nkick-off of the East-West collegiate football spectacle.\nUBC will represent the west; University of Toronto will represent the east. And our Thunderbirds will be favored to lose;\nlike chickens against chicken-hawks.\nThe most partial of fanatical campus-followers, or those disciples afflicted with galloping British Columbitus, could not truly\nconceive of the 'Birds as 'favorites.\" For one thing, we are not\n\"deep\" enough, as the saying goes.\nThe first string players are capable, strong and willing. A\nkey man is injured, and his position is filled by one who is less\nable, less strong, though desperately willing. Our reserves are\n\"hava-no.\"\nLACK OF DEPTH COULD BEAT US\nThe east\u00E2\u0080\u0094and remember this game is being advertised as a\n\"SPECTACLE\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094will be \"deep\" in players. Depth is the keynote\nof the Toronto squad\u00E2\u0080\u0094and they are going to be \"up\" to \"Beat\nthe West!\" Odds in favor of the east will be about 4 to 1, if present\nconditions prevail.\nNo one ever has\u00E2\u0080\u0094or rather ever should\u00E2\u0080\u0094question the Thunderbirds' gameness or grit. They, like the affectionate 19th century\nheroine, \"give their all\" every Saturday. But to what ends?\nFor 30 of 60 playing minutes of a game, they fight fiercely\nover their heads to keep the score close. In the second half they\nare smeared. A reason? ... No depth.\nAgainst Evergreen Conference competition we are handicapped by our lack of athletic scholarships and subsidation policies.\nWe ask no favors, and are given none by our Yankee foes. Nonetheless, by attempting to compete under such conditions, it is\nsimilar to racing Citation against Native Dancer\u00E2\u0080\u0094one jockeyed by\nEddie Arcaro, the other by Doug Hepburn.\nNow everyone\u00E2\u0080\u0094east and west\u00E2\u0080\u0094wants to see a good game on\nthe 20th. This is not a conference match; it is a publicity game\nto enhance football prestige.\nIT COULD MEAN A GREY CUP\nAn exciting exhibition may well lead to the bringing of a\nGrey Cup contest to Vancouver. A hopeless drubbing by UBC\nwill not win fans. And it CAN be avoided.\nOn campus\u00E2\u0080\u0094studying\u00E2\u0080\u0094are two individuals who could double\nVarsity's power for this off-the-record tilt. Jack Hutchinson and\nGerry Palmer both played for B.C. Lions this year, and both should\nbe in physical condition to play for UBC.\nGranted, the principle of using \"pros\" is wrong; definitely\nwrong. However, in this case they are bona-fide students, and\nwould be invaluable aid to the GAME of football\u00E2\u0080\u0094not just to\nthe Birds\u00E2\u0080\u0094if permitted to play for Varsity.\nIt would make for an infinitely better game on the big day,\nthough UBC still would be the darkest of dark underdogs.\nThis match too, could be the hinge deciding the direction\nfootball will take at UBC.\nIf those thousands of spectators receive a football treat, they\nwill be back for more next season. The converse is even more\npainfully true. Hutchinson and Palmer could turn a famine into\na feast, so how about rules being stretched to permit these two\nto wear the Blue and Gold for just this once. Remember . . .\nBEAT TIIE EAST!\nRAIN KNOCKS OUT\n3 WEEKEND GAMES\ne\n\"Into life a little rain mu^t\nfall,\" was a well quoted phrase\non the campus as two grass-\nhockey games and one rugger\ngame ware handed a rain-\ncheck by old man weather\nthis weekend.\n.S$S[irZZ*m:*?'\"''\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"VK:t-f \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 X; \u00E2\u0080\u00A2;/.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 t\nBUZ HUDSON, who jumped out\nof the uniform he's wearing\ninto baskeball strip, contributed\nhis usual hard playing over the\nweekend to aid Pomfret's Birds\nto a home split.\nRugger XV s Win\nBoth Muddy Tilts\nThe monsoonic downpours of last Saturday failed miserably to dampen UBC's rugger enthusiasm or prowess, as\nChiefs downed James Bay 12L3, and Braves humbled Kats by\nan identical 12-3 count. *\t\nFor the first portion of the\ngame James Bay held well, and\ntrailed only\u00C2\u00BB3-0 at half time. A\nneat penalty kick by Bill Whyte,\nfrom an angled 20 yards, 5 minutes before the half ended, was\nthe only scoring of the period.\nWRIGHT POWERFUL\nMost of the play Jockeyed\nabout in midfield, with very\nlittle to chdose between the\ntwo squads. A nose-nursing Ross\nWright played an exceptionally\nstrong running game, and at\ntimes overpowered the Victorian tacklers.\nVARSITY IDLE\nChiefs Beat\nHouseholds\nIn Revenge\nBy NEIL MACDONALD\nChiefs rebounded into the win\ncolumn bver the weekend with a\n6 to 4 victory over Households\nin a game which saw them get\nrevenge for their 3 to 2 defeat\nat the hands of the Households\nearlier this season.\nSCHILLING TWICE\nJargen Schilling, centre-half,\nled the forwards with two goals;\nwhile Monty Little, left half,\nled the backs with two, both\non pan a Ity shots. Right halfback Brian Biart and Outside\nright Lloyd Edwards, each pumped home one apiece to round\noujt the Chief's scoring. Edward's\ngoal came on a neat corner\nkick.\nThe field was extremely wet\nand slippery and caused the defence to weaken at times. The\nregular goaltender for the Chiefs\nfailed to make the game so\nAlan Jagdas filled in between\nthe posts and played well\nenough to hold off the Household forwards long enough for\nthe win.\nDuring the intermission the\nJames Bay boys repaired to the\ndressing room for their rest,\nwhile Varsity remained on the\nswamp, listened to coach Albert\nLaithwait's advice, and shiver-\nfects of the rest period blossomed in the second half.\nONE BURST\nJames Bay, in a burst of Stadium warmth, tied the score at\n3-3 on a beautiful penalty kick\nby Pynn. The Vancouver mist\nsoon cooled them off however,\nand the hardened Varsity XV,\nled by the scrum drives of Derek\nVallis and Jim MacNicol, roared to the attack.\nBob Bartlett started a lateral\npassing run which culminated\nin Al Laird scoring an unconverted try over the right corner,\nto raise Varsity's lead to 6-3.\n\"Donny\" (showing signs of\nmissing his \"Johnny\" for this\ngame) Spence, pop-kicked to the\nVictoria backs. He raced down\nto dribble the muffed Victoria\ncatch, to the enemy goal line,\nwhere Al Richardson swan-dived\non the ball to score for Varsity.\nWhyte's conversion attempt failed, and UBC led 9-3.\nDerek Vallis passed to Dick\nOwen, who scored the final\npoints of the game, which ended\n12-3.\nBRAVES AGAIN\nIn the Bell-Irving series a\nwar-painted Varsity Braves massacred Kats 12-3. Bob Sinclair\nTeeder Hunt, \"Mad\" Tom Anthony and Glynn Fitzgerald\ncounted unconverted coups for\nthe Braves. Hunt played his\nusual fine game, while the\nwhole team rose to the wet\noccasion and scalped the Kats\nall the way. Braves are still the\n\"lossless wonders of Varsity.\"\nOn November Ilth (rainy remembrance), in Victoria, Varsity Thunderbirds, (Chiefs on\nSaturday), smashed Crimson\nTide 16-3 in the opening match\nof the McKechnie Cup rounds.\nVancouver reps also defeated\nNorthwest, to tie for Cup leadership.\nand had to sit out the Saturday\nnight game.\nBirds meet their first American competition this weekend\nwhen the St. Martin's Rangers\ncome to town.\nffXMlT\nSports Editor\u00E2\u0080\u0094KEN LAMB\nBirds Beat Eilers\nIn Weekend Hoop\nVancouver basketball fans failed to sally forth into the\ndriving rain Friday and Sunday nights and as a consequence\nmisled four tight and well-played games billed in a Pacific\nNorthwest Tournament. &~ ; \u00E2\u0084\u00A2~ ~* ~~ \" J\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E , ,, .,,_,_ Ernie Nyhaug, Buz Hudson and\nHad they come to join the G Taylor thou|h lm|e WM\nfew hundred who did, they 8uffering from internal ailments\nwould have seen Jack Pomfret's Thunderbirds open their\nreal season with a split take,\nbeating out the Vancouver Eilers\n61-50 in the first game and\ndropping a 69-62 count to the\npowerful Seattle Buchans.\nSURPRISE\nGenial Jack came up with\na surprise Saturday when he\nsent out his team fefter the\ncheckered-shorts breadmen. The\nunderdog Birds, who a lot of\npeople would like to call inferior\nto the Cloverleafs, loser by 12\npoints Friday to the same Seattle\nclub, led of kept even till the\nfinal quarter.\nPomfret came up with a hard\ndriving guard named Eddy Wild,\nwho racked up 13 points as he\nand fellow guard Herb Forward\nwere the chief instruments in\ndefeating the jewelers, and then\nplayed a terrific game Saturday to pick up another 11 markers.\n27 FOR McLEOD\nBig John McLeod, who disappointed Friday night with\nonly 6 points, was the best man\non the floor against Seattle, as\nhe swiped the lion's share of the\nrebounds and potted 27 points.\nHad he played as well Friday,\nthe Birds would have left the\nEilers well behind.\nThe games also featured the\nreturn from the football field of\nFor StudcntsAnp Stmt Onlv,\nTO-DAY\n8i48, liOO, till\nyCoHjfeAA\"\n. . A Sin Confessed.\nA Shame Coneealed\n. . Love ... with the brand\nof Hitcheck burned Inl\nAUDITORIUM 35c\nThis ad worth \u00E2\u0080\u00A2% dlwounl\non university activities orders\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2t\nWEST POINT PRINTERS\n& STATIONERS\n\"Programs a Specialty\"\nALma 1245 4114 W. 10th\nEngineers, Alpha Delts\nDominate Intramurals\nWith December drawing near, Intramural first term activities are drawing to their climax with Engineers and Alpha\nDelta dominating the scene so far, but anything can happen\nwhen the finals come next week.\nIn second division volleyball,* \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \t\nAggie B plays Beta B with Al-\ngroup five, Sigma Chi play Com-\npha Delia getting the bye. In\nmerce B in the finals; while in pionship\ngroup seven, Forestry B takes\non Engineering B with another\nyet to be determined team getting the bye.\nThe badminton finals go Wecl-\nDelta) plays Csepe (Engineers)\nin the semi-finals with the winners playing off for the cham-\nWEATHER HITS SOCCER\nBad weather has slowed the\nsoccer front down but Engineers\nwin over Fiji and Kappa Sig's\nnesday night, November 17, at:wi\" over Fort Camp put them\n7, with Engineers playing Zetes ] b()lh \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 the semi-finals,\nin the doubles. Engineers beat i Engineers play the winner of\nD.U. while Zetes took Alpha'the Phi Delta-Commerce game,\nDelts to get in the finals. j while Kapa Sig will take on the\nAt 7:30 p.m. in the singles, i D.U.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Alpha Delta winner. Soc-\nPearson (Fort Camp) plays Whit-1 cer finals will go next week,\nworth (Beta) and Sam is (Alpha ! weather permitting.\nDIRECT FROM GERMANY\nNovelty Gifts, Fancy Work, Pure Lambs Wool Sweatersets,\nJersey Knit Suits and Dresses by Bleyle; Knitting Wools\nHOMECRAFT IMPORTERS\n2348 West 4th Ave. Ph. CHerry 2814\nATTENTION\nSTUDENTS!\nHere is your opportunity to own a\nGenuine Waterman's Pencil\nat Vz price or less!\nA JOHNSON \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 KENNEDY CO. SHOAL OPflR\nYou'll be proud to own one ef these fine\nmechanical pencils, made to five lone dependable service. Beautiful designs In models\nfor both ladies and men. Guaranteed flrtt-\nquality, each pencil contain! an ample supply\nof extra leads and it gift-boxed.\nOnly because this well known manufacturer\nis discontinuing these few models can Johnson-Kennedy Co. offer such attractive savings.\nCHOOSE FROM THESE THRU QRQUPS\nNo. 1, '2.49 ea.\nRegular prlcet up ts $S.1I M\u00C2\u00ABh\nNo. 2, '1.79 ea.\nRegular price* up le $3.M Mik\nNo. 3, '1.29 ea.\nRegular prices up to $_.*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 oath\nCOLOURS WClUOfc\nBLUI \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 BLACK \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 BROWN - ORIY - RIO - AMUR\nIDEAL FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS\nNO RISK\nGUARANTEE)\nII not completely\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2alUflod, return\nwithin 7 dayi\nfer lull refund.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED \u00E2\u0080\u0094 MAIL YOUR 0*01* NOW \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nJOHNSON-KENNEDY CO., MAU ORDER DIPT.\n1551 BISHOP ST., MONTREAL, P.O.\nI enclete money order/cath for $ .),*,. IM4 \u00E2\u0080\u009E, i|\u00E2\u0080\u009E i^.,*.\nIng genuine Waterman pencils pattpald <*-,\nPLEASE PRINT PLAINLY\u00E2\u0080\u0094 GIVE 2ND CHOICE OP COLOUR\nOroup No. Men's er ladiet' Model\nlet Caleur Choice\n2nd Colour Choice\n\"\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Name.\n! A-dret\nI City\t\n.. Prov.\nBeat The East - November 20"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1954_11_16"@en . "10.14288/1.0125217"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society, University of British Columbia"@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from The Ubyssey: http://ubyssey.ca/"@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives"@en . "University of British Columbia"@en . "The Ubyssey"@en . "Text"@en .