"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-07-24"@en . "1959-10-30"@en . "Misprinted volume, should be XLII."@en . ""@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0125329/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " UBYSSEY\nBUZZER\nBUZZ\nyOL. LXVII\nVANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1959\nNo. 19\nDebates Rage At UBC\nForum\nDecision\n*-\nThe Student's Forum Discussion decided that capitalism\nis compatible with democracy.\nA vote taken at the end of\nan hour of discussion defeated\nthe resolution, \"A Capitalistic\nEconomic System is Incompatible with the Democratic\nIdeal.\"\nThe Forum, held every Thursday in Bu 104, was chaired by\nLorenne Gordon, with Victor\nAnderson defending the resolution and Peter Penz opposing it.\nAnderson spoke first for five\nttkinutes, and was followed by\nPenz.\nEach was allowed a three minute rebuttal period at the end\nOf an hour of discussion.\nENCYCLOPEDIA CITED\nIn his opening speech, Anderson quoted the Encyclopedia:\nBrittannica's definitions of democracy and capitalism, where-\n' by the first is \". . .the equality\nof individuals and their equal\nright to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness\", and the second becomes, \"production by\nprivate initiative for private profit\".\nHe maintained that these two\n'concepts are completely incompatible and discordant.\nHe pointed out that the slave\nand opium trades of the past\nfew centuries were examples of\nprivate initiative for private\ngain.\nTo support his contention that\nthe same capitalistic principles\nthat operated in the past were\npresent today, he gave several\nexamples.\nSTEEL STRIKE\nSHOWS STRIFE\nOne of these was the situation\nwith regard to the strike of US\nSteel workers, which, said Anderson, proves that the capitalist\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 installing automated machinery for efficiency and thus for\ngreater profit \u00E2\u0080\u0094 does not care\nwhat happens to the men who\nWill be thrown out of work and\nleft without means to support\ntheir wives and children.\nIn conclusion, Anderson said\nthat rich capitalists had a detrimental influence on democratic\nelections.\nHis example was the nomination of General Eisenhower as\nthe Republican Presidential candidate.\n\"Ike was not the most popular candidate at the convention,\"\nhe stated, and went on to say\nthat it was the influence of\ncredit controlling bankers and\nttieir economic pressure that\n\nPANEL AGREES >\nCANADA AHEAD\nCanada's lack of aggressive nationalism may put her one\nstep ahead of other nations on the way to an international'\nrecord.\nThis statement was made yesterday by UBC Law student;\nRuth Kidd, at the NFCUS panel discussion entitled \"There is.!\nno such thing as a Canadian\".\nThe panel, consisting of Miss3>\nKidd, Professor Waters of the\nAMS TREASURER DAVID EDGAR must be the original\ninvisible man. During his two years on student council he\nhas escaped the traditional ducking in the pool. Fate caught\nup with him this week in the form of burly Engineers. One\nwet Edgar. - \u00E2\u0080\u0094photo by McAfee.\nelected Eisenhower on the first\nballot.'\n\"This shows,\" he concluded,\n\"that capitalism is incompatible\nwith the Democratic Ideal.\"\n\"The general, objective definition for capitalism is a system\nby which the guidance of the\neconomic process is entrusted to\nthe businessman,\" said Peter\nPenz in reply.\nHe agreed with Anderson's\ndefinition of democracy, and\nadded that it implied representation by population and not by\nwealth.\n\"Capitalism does not mean exploitation of employees,\" he\nstated.\n\"Employers need to pay their\nworkers well enough that the\nworker can buy the goods produced by the capitalistic system,\nSee FORUM DECIDES\n(Continued on Page 3)\nWell Known Folksingers\nPerlorm At UBC Today\nFolksingers Ewan McColl and\nPeggy Seeger appear in Brock\nLounge at 12:30 today.\nBoth well-known artists, McColl, of Scottish descent, has an\nextensive repertoire of folksongs\nand ballads of that country.\nHe is author of several anthologies of folksongs, and has worked as scriptwriter for British television and radio.\nMiss Seeger, an American, has\ntravelled in Europe where she\nappeared on both television and\nradio.\nShe serves as accompanist to\nMcColl in concerts as well as on\nrecordings.\nThe event is sponsored by the\nSpecial Events and Fine Arts\nCommittees.\nEnglish Department, German\nexchange student, Hartwich\nSchults, and Law student, Bill\nWright, was firmly convinced\nthat there is such a thing as a\nCanadian.\n\"We have mature nationalism,\" said Professor Waters. We\ndon't want flag waving, rambunctious, aggressive, nationalism.\"\nEuropeans' have considered\nnationalism bad in the past because of the conflicts it has\ncaused.\nCanada is working in the\nreverse to present .; European\nideas by desiring to , build up\nnationalism, said exchange student, Schults.\nSchults said that before coming to Canada he had a distinct\nvision of them as bush people.\nWright said that Canadianism\nis not subject to definition, but\nto an emotion.\n\"Citizenship is only an accident of birth,\" he stated.\nAs Canadians, we have the\nfeeling that we belong to something and will defend our nation if it is under attack, he\nsaid.\nForeigners think of Canada*\nas a country which will give j\naid%and not think of what the#/\nwill do for Canada, said Wright,,\nWe should be ourselves an&jj.\nothers will respect us for ilfc\ncontinued Wright.\nProfessor Waters suggested^\nthat Canadians tend to resist\nthings. They want to feel \u00C2\u00BB$$\u00C2\u00A3\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\nferent. .;'.!, *\nHe says he doesn't jhinkf w0\nare'going in. the same place as;:\nthe United States,, or we|woul<4^\nhave joined themi long ago.\nMiss Kidd, who spoke against*\nCanadianism said that we have\nno distinguishing racial characteristics or national dress.\nIn response to this Waters\nsaid that no new countries have\nnational costumes, the U.S. tot\nexample.\nOne singular characteristic is\nour distinctive speech, continued;\nWaters.\nIn any English-speaking country we are not picked out as a\nnative.\nThe only reason an Englishman or Australian would confuse a Canadian with an American is because they are so unfamiliar with Canadians, said\nthe professor.\nCinema 16 Halted\nLast chance to buy 4\"OTEM\nft FOUR DOLLARS is TO-\n\u00C2\u00A9AY, FRIDAY.\n-! Get it at the AMS OFFICE\nor the COLLEGE SHOP.\n*7u>eeH ClttAAeA\nDANCE CLUB'S\nFIRST FLING\nTODAY\nDANCE CLUR\nDance club will hold its first\ndance 'q|. the year Friday, October 30, St to 12 p.m. Members\n15c; non-members 25c. Wear a\nmask.\nFall mixer Friday, 8:30 to 12\np.m. in the Brock. Admission\nsoc:\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nDance this evening at 8:30.\nMembers 10c; non-members 15c.\nWear a costume or a mask.\n* * *\nNEWMAN CLUB\nThe Newman Club is holding\na Talent Night this evening at\n8:30 in St. Mark's College.\nMembers and non-members invited.\n* * *\nPSYCHOLOGY CLUB\nParty will be held this eve-\n(Coniinued on Page 8)\nSee 'TWEEN CLASSES\nCinema 16 will not be allowed to show films under Special\nEvents.\nCouncil on Monday turned\ndown the motion to allow the\nnew film organization to show\nforeign, language and experimental films on the Special\nEvents program.\nCouncil's position was that two\nfilm organizations were unnecessary because of too much duplication in films and because of\nclashes in booking.\nFilmsoc's program for next\nyear is almost exactly a duplication of the planned Cinema 16\nfilms, stated Barb Bennett, vice-\npresident of Filmsoc.\nThe chief controversial issue\nat Council on Monday was Cinema 16's proposed showing of the\nAmerican film, Anna Christie.\nFilmsoc objected to the showing of the American film. -\nThe position taken was that\nFilmsoc and Cinema 16 could\nco-operate add perhaps form one\norganization, with Cinema 16\nshowing only foreign films.\nDick Drysdale and John Mercer, the organizers of Cinema 16,\nare of the opinion their organization could not detract from\nFilmsoc as the Filmsoc program\nconsisted mainly of Hollywood\nfilms.\nDrysdale pressed for a completely autonomous organization\nat the Council meeting. i\nBarb Bennett stated: \"We\nfeel, and thjs has the backing\nof the AMS, that having two-\nfilm organizations' on this campus is undesirable. Therefore,\nCinema 16 was asked to work\nwithin Filmsoc, and this was\nrejected by Cinema 16 themselves.\n\"Another plan to incorporate\nthem with the Special Events\nCommittee was rejected by\nchairman Mike \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Warren of this\ncommittee. We can see no other\nsolution, then, other than dissolution of Cinema 16 as a campus organization.\"\n\"Cinema 16 will continue without AMS control or support,'*\nstated Drysdale. \,\nHelp Wantecl\nUbyssey and Publications neej$i\na student for part time work o\u00C2\u00A3,\nMonday, Wednesday and Thurjjp\nday afternoons. Anyone who ha\u00C2\u00A3<\na car, please contact Jim Horse*,\nman in Brock 201. Salary is $50,\nper month just for running ep\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nrands.\n \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 : *.\nRE AD THE BUZZARD See Pages Four and Five PAGE TWO\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 30, 195&\nTHE UBYSSEY letters to the editor\nAuthorized as second class mail by Post Office Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS\nPublished three times a week throughout the University year in Vancouver\nby the Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C.\nEditorial opinions expressed are those of the Editorial Board of The Ubyssey\n'\" and not necessarily those of the Alma Mater Society or the University of B.C.\nTelephones: Editorial offices, AL. 4404; Locals 12, 13 ana 14;\nBusiness offices, AL. 4404; Local 15.\nEdiior-in-Chief: R. Kerry White\nAssociate Editor \u00E2\u0080\u009E Elaine Bissett\nActing News Editor Bob Hendrickson\nC.U.P. Editor Irene Frazer\n' Club's Editor Wendy Barr\nFeatures Editor Sandra Scott\nHead Photographer Colin Landie\n\"\" Senior Editor .. Farida Sewell\nReporters and Desk:\n\" Derek Allen, Diane Greenall, Sandy Crowne, Ed Lavalle,\nAllen Graves, Pete Cruikshank, Edison Inouye, Eveline\nJackson, Edelgard Petzelt, Jerry Pirie.\nOh Oder* .\nThe unpleasant aroma which has emanated from the club's\ndivision of the Alma Mater Society for some time, appears to\n,'be getting stronger.\nThe usual exclusive atmosphere of many clubs is becoming\n5 more pronounced; the majority of our service clubs are on the\n* Verge of collapse; splinter groups are forming and breaking\n*^offf iri seme organizations; and every day we hear more bitter\nsquabbles about office space, etc.\n'' Many of those students who eagerly signed their names\n\"] and paid their dues on Club's Day are finding it very difficult\n* to' break into tightly formed cliques and many others are dis-\n. xour&ged by the uselessness of the club they joined. \"Come to\n\"UBC, if there's a blub we haven't got, it isn't worth having!\"\nAnd because we have so many clubs, campus service organizations such as Mamooks, Radsock, and the Ubyssey find it\n-next to impossible to obtain staffs. This also'stems from an\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 inherent laziness in most students. A possible solution to this\n* and related problems would be to disband the less useful clubs\nso that more support could be given to the worthy.\nLast week the entire structure was rocked by two rather\n- disturbing incidents: the formation of a splinter group within\nFilmsoc and a loud protest against the Panhellenic association\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"which'has office space in the Brock Extension.\nThe first of these incidents brought to light a seeming lack\n. of decisiveness on the part of the Student's Council. A group\n'within Filmsoc tried to obtain club status so that they could\n\"Concentrate on procuring intellectual foreign films for. the\n\"Students. They wanted autonomy because they felt Filmsoc\n-^as not providing this type of entertainment and because they\n*>d\u00C2\u00ABsired a free hand to select the films. They realized that the\nstudent body would have to be educated before their films\n>Tro.'ulcl become popular (although the suceess of their first two\nfilms seemed to belie this), but they sincerely believed the\ntask was worth the effort. While most council members were\nhi* favor of the idea, they hemmed and hawed and finally\n-\"turned their thumbs down on the project.\n1 The second incident started when Ramblers, the Intra\nmural club, tried to have the newly formed Sailing club moved\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 from the Ramblers' club room into one presently occupied by\nPanhellenic and the Inter-Fraternity Council, which are not\n\"under the jurisdiction of the AMS.\n&Qahush\nin\n1*ERSONAL PRODUCTS LIMITED, AND ORTHO\nPHARMACEUTICAL (CANADA) LTD.,\nmembers of the Johnson & Johnson world-wide family of\ncompanies, are engaged in the reorganization and expansion of their marketing organizations (sales and merchandising). New territories areibeing created and the number\nof field supervisory positions are being increased.\nIf, after reading their booklets concerning these\ncompanies (available in the Placement Office),\nyou wish to request an interview with their representative, you should ask for their personal\nhistory record which you will complete and bring\nto the interview.\nINTERVIEWING WILL BE ON MONDAY EVENING,\nNOVEMBER 2nd, at the Hotel Vancouver, with Mr.\n\"Harold C. Cash. Advise the Placement Office that you\nwish an interview and you will be given a specific time\non the5 above mentioned date.\naoccooooooocoe\nMt)RE DISCRIMINATION\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey.\nDear Sir:\nI wish to ado* my protest to\nthe growing feeling of revulsion that has resulted from the\nunwarranted expulsion of a\nstudent at a large eastern university. The senate at this university at a secret meeting\nexpelled a student for his political belief on the subject of\ndiscrimination. They felt his\nviews were contrary to the best\ninterests of that university.\nMy fervent hope is that such\na situation will not be allowed\nto happen at the University of\nBritish Columbia.\nI am sure that the freedom\nof political ideals is a democratic and God given right and'\nwill therefore be supported by\nevery student on this campus.\nWe must never allow a majority . viewpoint to suppress\nthe rights of a minority by\nreason of beliefs that they profess to uphold.\nOnly the might of collective\nstudent action can uphold the\nright.\nYours sincerely,\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094JOHN R. CLIFF.\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey.\nDear Sir:\nPerhaps I have too high an\nestimation of the effects of a\nuniversity education. It is\nquite possible that some persons can refine and train one\nportion of their minds while\nstill remaining child-like in\nother respects.\nI refer specifically to the\naverage university student's\ntastes in music. A few years\nago, to the irreparable detriment of our society, rock 'n'\nroll was born. Until now,\ndesire for such non-music was\nlimited on our campus, the\nstudents not having been indoctrinated at a sufficiently\nearly age to make it acceptable\nto them. But our new students\nthis year, and in years to come,\nhave been and are still being\nexposed to The Beat during\ntheir highly formative 'teen\nyears.\nThe time has come to take\na stand, for the effects of this\nprocess are beginning to show.\nRock 'n' Roll has appeared on\ncampus, radiating its insipid\nmonotone message from the\nvery speakers of our own\nUniversity radio network.\nGranted, there is little of it,\nsparsely, distributed amongst\nother jazz, popular, and classical selections. But it is nevertheless there, and it will\nspread, weed-like, with the annual influx of freshmen whose\nmusical appreciation has been\nseduced and polluted. Last\nyear, there was no rock 'n' roll.\nThis year there is. In addition,\nthe amount of time given over\nto popular and jazz tunes has\nincreased considerably, at the\nexpense of the classics, with a\ntrend toward louder and\nbrasher pop and jazz forms.\nOne further caveat;, the number of Radsoc's outlets is increasing quite rapidly, and\nanyone who has experienced,\nas I have, a furtive flight each\nyear from the speakers which\nappear in places where he was\npreviously accustomed t o\nstudy, knows the inability of\nthe human mind to concentrate, against a background qf\nloud harsh music, on anything\nrequiring more attention than\na comic-book. ;\nNo one, you say, should at-T\ntemsjt to^fflGy %i \"the^BroWt\nlounge, or the art gallery?\nBut they do, and these stalwarts are to be commended for\ntheir powers of concentration.\nMany, less endowed, would\njoin them I am sure if the\nmusic were more subdued.\nI have said that the time has\ncome to take a stand. You\nmay ask, and rightly so, what\nthat stand is to be, for so far\nI have offered no constructive\ncriticism, merely criticism.\nPersonally, I would advocate\na programme consisting of\n100% classics. Of course this\nis selfish and impractical. But\neven if there is to be no classics, at least let there be a\nfurtherance of quiet, unobstru-\nsive selections, and I beg of\nyou, send me no more rushing\nfor the open air to escape some\nhog-caller's attempts _ to express his id through music.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Allan Graves.\nEditor,\nThe UbySsey.\nDear Sir:\nThe presentation by Filmsoc\nof \"Henry V\" climaxed for\nme an ever-increasing disappointment in Filmsoc's capabilities. A film acknowledged\nto be one of the best of its kind\nwas ruined by the disarranged\nActs, almost unintelligible\nsound, constant jading of the\npicture and poor focusing.\nThis opinion seems justly\nemphasized by the letter to the\neditor from a third year education student, yet the action\ntaken by the students council\ndenying Cinema 16 the privilege of operating under\nspecial events in order to protect Filmsoc appears to show\ncomplete lack of justification.\nI dispute Filmsoc's ability to\nprese.nt a film in a standard on\na par with the University to\nwhich it acts as a representative, and expect a published\nexplanation of its attempts so\nfar this year.\nI think the Student's Council should re-examine its decision against Cinema 16 in the\nlight of the article \"the Five-\nThirty Club\" (Ubyssey Oct.\n29), and of the letters com\nplaining against Filmsoc.\nYours sincerely,\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Patrick Wheater, Arts II.\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey.\nDear Sir:\nAs one who enjoyed very\nmuch the Frederic Wood production of Little Eyolf, I was\nsurprised to see your drama\ncritic's generally unfavorable\nreview. If not champagne, it\nwas very good wine indeed\nand compared well in my\nmind, with several good professional productions of Ibsen\n(in New York and Cambridge)\nthat I have seen.\nI believe that all associated\nwith the production are to be\ncommended for bringing first-\nrate theatre to the University\ncampus.\nSincerely yours,\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Jacob Wigod.\nDEMOCRATIC\nDISAGREEMENT\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey.\nDear Sir:\n, In reply to the letter of \"Intelligent Imagination\" concerning the forcing of Fraternities\nand Sororities off campus, I\nmust state my disagreement.\nI imagine Mr. Imagination's\nimagination of Greek Letter Societies is clouded by his complete ignorance of certain pertinent facts.\nHe suggests democratic reforms such as, quote, \"forcing\nall fraternities and sororities to\ngive up their chapter charters,\"\nwith the alternative of requiring fraternities to give up their\nhouses. Is force a part of democracy?\n\"Discrimination\" is simply\nthe right to choose one's personal friends. \"Intelligent Imagination\" apparently is using\nhis right to discriminate against\nGreeks as HIS personal friends.\nFinally, Mr. Imagination\nshould be informed that as yet, ,\nthere are no Fraternity Houses\non the campus.\nSincerely,\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094E. KILL AM\nArts II\nI960 fracfuateJ\nCANADA'S LARGEST EMPLOYER\nFEDERAL PUBLIC SERVICE\nneeds\nCIVIL - ELECTRICAL - MECHANICAL\nENGINEERS\nAn interesting and rewarding career may await you in\nthe Federal Government if you are graduating in Civil,\nElectrical or Mechanical Engineering in 1960. New graduates in these fields will be employed at various Canadian\ncentres on vital and challenging projects involving applied\nresearch, design, development, construction & production.\nSTARTING SALARY IS $4740\nallowances will be made for those completing relevant post-graduate training.\nCANDIDATES MUST WRITE A GENERAL\nOBJECTIVE TEST AT 9:00 A.M. ON\nSATURDAY, NOVEMBER 14.\nDetails regarding the examination, application forms and\ninformation circulars and folders are available from\nUNIVERSITY PLACEMENT OFFICE\nOR\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 CML.-SERVICE COMMISSION friday, October 30, 1959\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPAGE THREE\nO'Neil Proclaims\nPolitics A Must\nBy ED LAVALLE\nUbyssey Staff Reporter\n\"Labour must take off it's\nrose-coloured glasses if it is to\nachieve its aims and objectives.\"\nThis statement was made by\nPat O'Neil, secretary-treasurer\nof the B.C. Federation of La\nbour, at a campus meeting\nsponsored by the UBC-CCF.\nO'Neil said that trade unions\nhave felt sucessful when they\nreceived five and ten cents at\nthe bargaining table.\n\"Now labour realizes that only\nthrough political action can the\naims and objectives of the trade\nunion movement be achieved.''\nHe stated that the aims of\ntrade unions are -not as narrow\nas some people would have the\npublic believe; but that the\nmovement is interested in homes\nfor the aged, hospital insurance,\nand many other things.\nHe elaborated by explaining\nthat many of these things and\nothers were discussed at the\nrecent BCFL Convention.\nO'Neil said that labour ntis\nalways actively supported and\nasked for social welfare measures and went on to attack\ngroups such as the Chamber of\nCommerce, the Manufacturers'\nAssociation and the Board of\nTrade for \"opposing\" such\naction.\n\"This is the hypocrisy of the\nsituation,\" O'Neil stated after\ntelling his audience that these\nsame groups advocated curbs on\nthe trade union movement.\nOn the CLC's support of the\nCo - operative Commonwealth\nFederation, O'Neil mentioned\nthat the aims and objectives of\nthe trade union movement\nparalleled those of the CCF.\nHe supported his statement\nby drawing comparisons with\nthe Province of Saskatchewan.\nO'Neil said that Saskatchewan's labour legislation was\n\"the finest on the North American continent.\"\nHe pointed out that the basic\nminimum wage for male and\nfemale was $30 in Saskatchewan while it was only $18 in\nB.C.\nOn education O'Neil said:\n\"We don't believe it should be\na privilege, but a right.'\nO'Neil felt that assistance\nshould be rendered particularly\nto the student outside of the\nVancouver District who has\ntransportation and living expenses as well as tuition fees.\nO'Neil rapped the combines\nand corporations which he accused of price-fixing.\nHe stated that the fines which\nt esulted from convictions\nagainst large corporations were\nnowhere near the amount of\nprofit these firms had made\nfrom their years of illegal activities.\nHe rapped the reversal of\nposition that created a situation\nwhere \"instead of protecting the\npublic from corporations . . ;.\ncorporations are protected at\nthe expense of the public.\"\nHe noted that a union's conviction in court led to the imposition of very heavy fines\nagainst it.\nHe attacked the indiscriminate use of injunctions and cited\nthe case of the Ironworkers\nUnion which was brought to\ncourt this summer.\nIn an answer to a query on\nthe future political policy of\nthe trade union movement\nRomanoff And Juliet\nBy Peter Ustinov\nRomanoff and Juliet, to be\npresented by the Players' Club,\nis a whimsical comedy, utilizing\nthe basic situation of Romeo and\nJuliet to satirize the absurdity\nof present day politics. It is set\nin a country only found on the\nbest maps, coloured there a dys-\npectic mint green, blurred at the\nedges so that you can almost\nhear the printer saying \"damn\",\nor so its General President describes it. Constantly occupied\nand as constantly liberated it is\nnow besieged by the Eastern and\nWestern blocs from opposite embassies across the city ssuare.\nBut already the subtle defences\nof the country are at work. Juliet\nMoulsworth, daughter of the\nAmerican ambassador, has fallen\nin love with Igor Romanoff, son\nof the Russian ambassador. The\nGeneral, a benign despot, takes\non the role of Cupid. Ian Thorne\nwill direct the following cast:\n1st. Soldier, Frank Able; 2nd\nSoldier, Cecil Plotnikoff; General, John Sparkes; Juliet Moulsworth, Penny Gaston; Igor Romanoff, Barnabas Baker; Hooper\nMoulsworth, Les Wager; Beulah\nMoulsworth, Lloy Courts; Vadrin\nRomanoff, Walter Shynkaryk;\nEvdokia Romanoff, Elizabeth\nKaiser; Marfa, Maxine Gadd;\nFreddie, Michael Matthews; The\nSpy, Martin Bartlett; The Archbishop, Ken Kramer.\nFORUM DECIDES\n(Continued from Page 1)\nlabour legislation in B.C. and in ^CLC), he said that the unions\na new labour party of labourers\nwould support the formation of.\nand farmers, believing that the\nfarmers and unionists were\nreconcilable.\nO'Neil lamented that employers led the public to believe\nthat unionists like James Hoffa\nand Dave Beck, whose actions\ndistressed him, were an example\nof the labour movement as a\nwhole.\nHe stated that he was prepared to compare the honesty\nand integrity of the twenty-\nthousand permanent employees\nof the trade union movement\nwith those of any organization\nin the world.\nWhen asked if he was considering becoming a candidate\nin the next provincial election,\nO'Neil said, \"No.\"\nNEW SERIES\nPLANNED\nA lecture entitled \"The Reformation Becomes a Movement\"\nwas held Wednesday by Gamma\nDelta, the Association of Lutheran Students.\nThe lecture, given by the Rev.\nC. Guebert, was the last of a\nseries of five covering the Reformation, with special emphasis\non the life and work of Martin\nLuther.\nA new series Will be held, in\nBu 227, as follows:\nNov. 10\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"I Believe\u00E2\u0080\u0094the Nature and Significance of Faith\".\nEev. F. Gabert.\nNov. 18\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"One God in Trinity\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u0094How can this be?\" Vicar Roger\nHumann.\nNov. 25\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"The Safety Margin\nin Social Drinking\". Rev. E.\nTreit.\nDec. 2\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"The Christmas Story\nAccording to Luke 2\". Rev. H.\nFox.\nAggie Dunked\nAggie supremacy remained\nunchallenged Thursday noon\nwhen EUS President Bill Roden-\nchuck was given his annual\ncleansing in the Lily Pond. ,\nRodenchuck was dunked by\nthe Aggies in payment for the\nAggie-Engineering Blood Drive\nrace.\nThe president of the losing\nfaculty was to be thrown in the\npond.\nfor employees make up the market from which the employer\ngleens his profit,\" he said.\nThe depression of 1930 was a\nmiscalculation of the business\nmen, said Penz, but they learned\nthis lesson from it: they must\npay their employees sufficiently.\nHe concluded, saying that \"we\ndo not need a, system of the\nstrictest organization . . . leaving no liberty for the individual.\"\n\"The necessary balance of supply and demand guarantees the\ndemocratic ideal,\" he said.\nThe Forum was then thrown\nopen to questions from the floor\naddressed to the chair.\nDemocratic institutions have\ncome about not because of capitalism, but in spite of it, said a\nfaculty member speaking from\nthe floor.\nAnother listener disagreed,\nsaying that only in a capitalistic\nsociety could these institutions\nbe fought for. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nAnother speaker cited Cordova\nStreet as a product of capitalism\nand asked if the people frequenting it were engaged in the\npursuit of life, liberty and the\npursuit of happiness, especially\nthe pursuit of happiness.\nThe Forum also considered the\ndifference between monopolistic\ncapitalism and straight, non-\nmonopolistic capitalism.\nThe example cited in this respect was the Krupp monopoly\nin both Nazi and post-war Germany. .\nOne speaker held that this\neconomic empire, which was so\nhelpful to the Hitler regime, was\nresponsible for the deaths of 26\nmillion people.\nThe monopoly was destroyed\nafter the war, but it has rebuilt\nlarger than ever and is now instrumental in the economic and\nindustrial regrowth of West Ger\nmany, commented a speaker.\nAnderson, speaking first in rebuttal, said it was \"the nature\nof capitalism to become monopolistic\" as large companies strive\nfor efficiency.\n\"I question that there are any\nreally truly democratic institutions in our society. I would like\nto hear some names.\"\nIn his rebuttal speech, Penz\nstated, \"Anderson's argument\nthat socialism is better than capitalism does not mean that democracy and capitalism are incompatible.\"\nHe concluded, quoting an example from the German Volkswagen plants where the workers\nwere given shares of stock in\nthe company. A check two days\nlater showed that 80 % of the\nmen had sold their stocky\nThis means that the workers\ndo not want to have a part in the\nmanagement of the industries\nthey work for, he said. They\nreject the responsibility, he added.\nIn the vote that followed, the\nresolution as it stood was easily\ndefeated.\nThe next Student Forum .\u00E2\u0080\u0094\ntopic: Resolved That Religion\nServes a Useful Purpose in North\nAcerican Society\u00E2\u0080\u0094will be held\nnext Thursday, in Bu 104.\nVolkswagen Owners\nTrained Volkswagen\nMechanic on Duty at\nUniversity Shell\n10ih and Discovery\nMarried Accommodation\nin Acadia available for under-\ngraduaie students, all years. ~\nCall at Housing Office\nRm. 205-A, Physics Building\nA. R. BAIRD\nHousing Administrator.\nUniversity Hill United\nChurch\nWorshipping iii Union Coltege\nChapel\n5990 Chancellor Blvd.\nMinister \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Rev. W. Buckingham\nServices 11:00 a.m. Sunday\nNOW PLAYING\nTHE GOOFERS\nHILARIOUS MUSICAL COMEDY SHOW STOPPERS\"\nRes. MU 1-8728 - MU 3-9719 Shows: 9:30 and 12:30\nALSO\nBAGDAD EXOTIQUE\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 * *' '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nDance to\nDAVE ROBBINS\nand His Orchestra\nCAVE\ndrive the\n' smart new\nA-55\nFOR\nI960\nAT\nGORDON\nBROS.\n10th and Alma \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nTHE PERFECT ONE COLOUR\nLOOK IS NOW YOURS!\nproblem!\nNo \"just-off\" colours but\nguaranteed colour harmony I So, for tea at\nthe Dean's or cokes at the corner it's\nthe new Kitten matching skirt and\nsweater in heather-mix lambswool\nsoft as a handful of Scottish mist\n... in subtly muted colours.\nTHE SWEATER: Wing-neck,\nbracelet-sleeved pullover, sizes\n34 to 40, price $10.95.\nTHE SKIRT: slim and half-lined,\nsizes 8 to 20, price $17.95.\nLook for the namef@UU(s\n733Q THE UBYSS1\n\"A BROCHURE FOR PROSPECTIVE STUDENTS\nTHE CAMPUS\nThe University of British Columbia, founded in\n1890, is beautifully situated in Vancouver's Point Grey\narea. First housed at Fairview,, construction work started\nat the permanent university site in 1914. Since then, notable additions to the university's facilities have been\nmade under the direction of the architects, Thompson\nBerwick and Pratt.\nTheir plans include the use of B.C. building materials with an architectural style best suited to U.B.C.'s\nnatural surroundings.\nTHOMPSON, BERWICK, BL1 M) PRATI\nTHE RESIDENCES\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ' Student enrolment has grown steadily since the\nfirst convocation of the university. The excess of servicemen after the Second World War resulted in a great\nstrain on accommodations, but the university is now\nwell prepared to house its students. Foresight on the part\nof university planners, with the help of B.C. Government\ngrants and the industrialists of the province have enabled U.B.C. to keep pace with the growth of student\nenrollment.\nHEAD AND FEET IN THE AIR\nTHE STUDENTS\nEverywhere on the campus, debates and discussions\nare carried on with enthusiasm. Students congregate in\ngroups, both large and small, quietly or anxiously talking over problems . . . world crises, campus situations,\npolitics, religion. Debates upon literature, art, music . . .\nall are mused over the university trade mark, the cup\nof coffee.\nIt is obvious to the observer that this is a seat of\nhigher learning where minds are engrossed in expanding their store of knowledge.\nYOU MEAN THAT THIN ONE? Y BUZZARD\nf THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\"\nTHE LIBRARY\nThe centre of knowledge of any university is the\nLibrary, and U.B.C.'s Library, like other important institutions on the campus has kept pace with the ever increasing quest for knowledge.\nSituated in the centre of campus activity, surrounded by well-kept gardens, the library is an imposing\nedifice. Within its stone walls students from every corner\nof the campus use numerous books for quiet study.\nThe student knows that the library is the one place\non the campus where his every need is looked after and\nwhere there is a minimum of waste-time.\nTWO MONTHS' LOAN TO FACULTY\nTHE FACULTY\nTo keep scholastic standards as high as those of\nprevious years, a constant campaign is ever in force to\nattract to the university educators of outstanding calibre.\nGood publiciy for this campaign are the well-known graduates of the university; for example, Attorney-General\nRobert Bonner ancf B.C. Power Commissioner Dr. Gordon\nShrum, both now serving the provincial government.\nU.B.C. is fast becoming the leading intellectual\ncentre in Canada, and will continue in this as long as\nnotable academics are being drawn .to her halls.\nAU REVOIR\nTHE FUTURE\nBecause of the sympathetic understanding between\nthe Chancellor of the University arid the provincial government, great things are expected of UBC in the future.\nTraining the future leaders of the province is a responsibility the university is ready to assume, if ensured of\nequitable increases in fees.\nMutually compatible in their ideology, the Social\nCredit Cabinet and the University Senate will endeavor\nto keep active the 19th century principles of laissez-faire\nfor the years to come.\nMIGHT IS RIGHT PAGE SIX\nTHEUBYSSEY\nFriday, October 30, 1959\nCo-Editors Ernie Harder, Ann Pickard\nStaff\nMike Hunter, Fred Fletcher, Alan Dafoe\nSPORTS SHORTS\nSOCCER\nVarsity will play host to Al-\npen Club \"A\" in a Second Division soccer contest scheduled for\nMclnnes Field at 2 o'clock on\nSunday\nUBC will meet the Dutch\niLions at Gordon Park in a Third\nDivision soccer game at 2 p.m.\n\u00C2\u00A9n Sunday.\nMEN\nTWO BARBER SHOPS\nTO SERVE YOU\ninside the gates\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Brock Hall Extension\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 5734 University Boulevard\nBOWLING\nIntramural bowling starts\nNovember 2.\nTENNIS FINALS\nIntramural tennis finals will\nbe held today at .noon at the\ntennis courts behind the gym.\nArts are scheduled to meet Education in the final.\nPING PONG\nIntramural table tennis starts\nMonday.\nSQUASH\nThe squash team plays in the\nInvitational Tournament i n\nSeattle this weekend. Team\nmembers Scott, Hermont, Campbell, Irving, Pinchin, and Rae\nwill compete.\nR P. SKOGLUND.,rVesfdenf\nsays\n\"Man watches the stars\nwhile standing in mud\"\nEver since Adam, man has been forced to do\nendless battle with the hazards of his own environment. And for just as long, every round has\nended in a draw.\nSure, we gloat with pride when our newspapers\ntell us that a new man-made satellite has been\nput into orbit around the earth, or that a handsome,\ngold-plated rocket has been shot 70,000 miles\ninto outer space. But turn the page, and our\ndreams of grandeur crumble io dust.\nHere in our own hemisphere- a volcano erupts\nand demolishes a Caribbean village; a tidal wave\nengulfs a whole town in Louisiana, while put on\na misty Atlantic shipping lane a so-called uhsink-\nable ship goes down with all hands when it\ncollides with an unexpected iceberg.\nfa everyday life, the wise man will take his own\nprivate precautions against disaster. NALAC's\nlife, sickness and accident, and income - protecting insurance are the best guarantees against\ntiie hazards of the future. Call our office soon,\nand learn how you can insure confident living\u00E2\u0080\u0094\ntoday and tomorrow.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2..insure confident living\nNorth American\nJack Pomfret . . . Bird Coach\nThunderettes\nLose To Hastings\nThunderettes lost their second\nouting, 42-35, to the newly-\nformed Hastings team Wednesday.\nUBC's full court press failed\nto halt Hastings talented centre,\nBarb Bengough. Barb was top\nscorer for the evening. She\nhas scored 47 points in two\ngames.\nDIANE LEADS SCORING\nDiane Beech and Jill Symons\nled Thunderette scoring. UBC's\npassing and checking was exceptionally good.\nNext week Thunderettes take\non last-place C-FUN, Wednesday at 8:30 at Winston Churchill\ngym.\nPomfret's Birds\nVisit Alberni As\nCoach Jack Pomfret's Thunderbirds open a gruelling season\nin Alberni against the defending champion Athletics tomorrow\nnight.\nThe young and relatively inexperienced Birds are this year\nentered in the Inter-City (Senior A) league, and the WCIAU.\nThey play 12 games in each\nof those leagues, and are also\nsigned up for some six or seven\nexhibitions.\nYOUNG SQUAD\nThe team's average age is 20,\nand there is some doubt as to\nwhether they can survive in\nthe senior league, which has incorporated some of the \"rougher\" NBA rules.\nBut despite this theory, the\nBirds should be a threat. Barry\nDrummond, Norris Martin and\nWayne Osborne aren't exactly\nthe smallest players in the\nleague. The Birds have lots of\nheight to throw around, too.\nOSBORNE LATE\nOsborne won't be around\nuntil after the football team is\nfinished the season. But with\nMartin and Drummond supplying the aggressiveness and\nweight under the basket, and\nthe outside shooting of Ken\nWinslade, the team should show\nwell.\nAn impressive list of newcomers will bolster Pomfret's\nbench. Leading the way are\nDpve Way, a rugged six-five\nforward, and husky John Pearce\nfrom MjcMastef.\nOther rookies include all-star\nPW high-schoolers Bill Berna-\ndino, Mike Potkanjak and another Osborne, younger brother\nDave.\nRETURNEES\nReturnees from last year are\nhustling Ed Pederson, Dave\nTreleavan, Dune McCallum, Ed\nGushue, and six-six Keith Hartley.\nPomfret has some needed\nhelp this year, with the addition of Reid Mitchell to the\ncoaching staff. Mitchell last\nyear led the upstart West Van\nhigh team into the semis of the\nB.C. tournament.\nBarry Drummond . . . Returns\njHMjt SICKNESS sj>\nACCIDENT \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 CROUr\nR. D, GARRETT - Provincial Manager\n619 Burrai d Bldg. Phone MU 3-3301\nP8\u00C2\u00BB.|\u00C2\u00AB]\nv-^ViS > *r*\u00C2\u00A3&T4i\nLESSON 111 . . .\nHOW TO ASSUME\ni GENTLEMANLY\ni DISTINCTION\nHere is a finely tailored\nshirt of fine white broadcloth, imported from Holland (new note). Has %\ni sleeves with contour cuffs\nand stitched convertible\ncollar. Two initials are done\nwithout extra cost, any ad-\n- ditional one is 30c.\n'i This is shirtwaist - only\n6 98\nBlouse Counter, Main Floor Friday, October 30, 1959\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPAGE SEVEN\nWestern Challenges 'Birds\nBellingham Fans\nAccompany Team\nBy MIKE HUNTER\nUEC Thunderbirds host Western Washington Vikings, in\nwhat should be one of the closest games in UBC stadium.\nThunderbirds have been victorious in five out of six games\nthis season.\nGame time is 2:00 p.m.\nSeveral busloads of Viking's*-\nfans are expected to accompany\nthe football team to UBC for\nthe game tomorrow.\nCOMPETE WITH LIONS\nThe UBC - Western Washington football game Saturday will\ntoe competing for fans with the\nB.C. Lions.\nThe athletic office Tuesday\nwired WFC comtmissioner Sidney Halter, protesting the scheduling of the .Lions-Edmonton\nplayoff game on the same day\nand time as the Thunderbird\ncontest.\nRunners Fly\nTo Saskatoon\nUBC cross country team\nleaves today for Saskatoon\nwhere they compete for the\nWCIAU championship, and the\nright to travel to Toronto for\nCanadian collegiate competition\nNovember 14.\nMembers of the UBC team,\ncoached by Peter Muffins, who\nwill fly to Saskatoon include\nDoug Van Ness, Tom Fell, Jim\njMjcKay,. Don Longstaff and>\nGordy Johnson.\nTO TORONTO\nMullins will also take with\nhim names of representative\ntrack stars of UBC; compare\nthem with prairie stars, to determine, western representation at\nToronto next, month.\n-Matz\" &\"Wozny\n548 Howe St. MU 3-4715\nCustom Tailored Suits\nfor Ladies and Gentlemen\nGowns and Hoods\nUniforms\nDouble breasted suits\nmodernized in the new\nsingle breasted styles.\nSpecial Student Rates\nHalter replied that \"prior\ncommitments (television, etc.)\nwould not allow the game to be\nchanged. League policy states\nthat all playoff games be played\nin the afternoon, anyway.\"\nCHANGE DATE\nUBC's attempts to have the\ngame played Thursday at noon\nwere dashed when it was found\nseveral players were writing\nmid-term exams. The game\ncan not be held earlier Saturday, since time must be allowed\nto accommodate many students\ntravelling from Bellingham.\nAnd can not be played at night\nbecause the stadium doesn't\nhave lights.\n\"INCONSIDERATE\"\nP.R.O. Ben Cox said it was\n\"inconsiderate\" of the WFC.\n\"They are trying to help minor\nfootball, and a few thousand\ndollars loss is an awful lot of\nmoney to us.\" UBC is expected\nto lose almost $2000 on the\ngame. Western is guaranteed\n$1000.\nUndefeated Jayvees\nHost Seattle Sunday\nUBC's undefeated Jayvees\nwill host Seattle Cavaliers\nSunday afternoon on the field\nbehind the men's gym.\nJayvees racked up their\nseventh straight victory last\nweekend when they shut out\nVictoria Vampires, 39-0.\nGame time Sunday afternoon is 2:00 p.m.\nLeland Wolf . . . Viking Tackle\nUBC Lifters\nCompete Sun.\nUBC will be competing in the\nB.C. weightlifting championships this Sunday.\nThe event will take place at\n,2 p.m. in the Hollywood Theatre, 3000 West Broadway.\nUBC will have five lifters in\nthe competition.\nRichard Murakama (132-lb.\nclass), Darcy' TJevine (148 lbs.),\nWayne Cannon \"$tnd Roy Bar-\nnett (165 lbs.), will be trying\nthe three Olympic lifts.\nFOR RECOllDS\nWes Woo will compete in the\nbench press.\nMiddleweight Cannon will be\ntrying to break teammate Woo's\n1956 Canadian Juvenile clean\nand jerk and snatch records.\nDarcy Devine, a lightweight,\nwill try to repeat his performance of 1957 when he was\nnamed best lifter of the year.\nMurakami will take a crack\nat topping the B.C. featherweight clean and jerk record.\nHe also has a chance to break\nthe total lift record.\nHang the\nCoach!\nIN\nFEDERAL PUBLIC SERVICE\nFOR\nCivil ServiceXomiQisston filters\nJUNIOR ADMINISTRATIVE\nOFFICES\nECONOMISTS AND\nSTATISTICIANS\nDOMINION CUSTOMS\nAPPRAISERS\nTRADE AND COMMERCE\nOFFICERS\nFOREIGN SERVICE\nOFFICECRS\nfor Citizenship and Immigration. Externa Affairs,\nTrade and Commerce.\nARCHIVISTS\nFINANCCE OFFICERS\nThese posts offer interesting work, numerous opportunities for advancement and generous fringe benefits.\nStorting Salaries - $4140 and $4200\nUnder-graduates in their final year of study are\ninvited to apply but appointment will be subject\nto graduation. Students from all faculties are\neligible to compete.\nWritten Examination, Saturday, Nov. 14\nDetails :regarding the examination, application forms and\ndescriptive folders now available from\nUNIVERSITY PLACEMENT OFFICE\n..- . \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 OR\nCIVILSERVICE COMMISSION, OTTAWA\nIf you write, to Ottawa^ please specify the classes in\nwhich you are interested arid quote competition 60-2650.\nFollowing The Birds\nBy ERNIE HARDER\nBelieve it or not, East Hastings Street isn't the only scene\nof football action tomorrow afternoon.\nWestern Washington's touted crew of gridders line up\nagainst Frank Gnup's WCIAU champions in UBC stadium at\n2:00 p.m.\ni\nAn Historical Occasion.\nFor several reasons, including the fact that various publicity organizations have billed the other attraction as an historical, gala affair, chances are our wealthier counterparts\ndowntown will outdraw us.\nOur meeting tomorrow was scheduled before the richest\nfootball firm in the country ever dreamed of chasing Jackie\nParker in a playoff contest.\nCould Lose $2,000\nThis university's athletic offices tell us we stand a good\nchance of losing $2,000 because of the clash in games.\nBefore team manager Joe Dang hands out one helmet tomorrow, we'll be minus $1,000\u00E2\u0080\u0094guarantee to Western.\nWe asked Sidney Halter for some money as compensation. *\nHe wired us a sympathetic \"no\".\nUnconcerned About UBC\nWe asked Harry springs for some aid. He's not concerned\nwhether we have enough onlookers to eliminate stadium echoes.\nHis chief concern is how to make the turnstiles click more\n.nan 40,000 times at the Exhibition grounds before 2:00 p.m. '\nPersonnel wise we>e responsible for some of the efficiency\nwhich Mr. Spring has received from his production staff as\nof late.\nChange Their Mind?\nAnd, of course, after printers' ink pronounces our team as\none of the top college teams in the country midway through\nnext montli, Frank Gnup will have some friendly visitors to\nhis nest.\nPast experience reveals that B.C.'s professional football\nteam is concerned about the welfare of this university's, football scheme.\nPerhaps they'll change their minds about helping us financially, in respect to tomorrow's game. That is, if they outdrew\nus\u00E2\u0080\u0094and they win! We hope they do.\nIt's a puzzlement:\nWhen, you're old enough to go to college,\nyou're old enough to1 go out with girls. When \t\nyou're old enough to go out with girls, who\nneeds college? Oh well, there's always Coke.\nSAY \"COKE' OR \u00E2\u0080\u00A2COCA-COW\u00E2\u0080\u0094 BOTH TRADE-MARKS MEAN THE PRODUCT \u00E2\u0080\u00A2>\nOf COCA-COLA ITD.\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE WORLD'S BEST-IOVED SPARKLING DBNK. PAGE EIGHT\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 30, 1959\n'TWEEN CLASSES\n(Continued from Page 1)\n3Ping in the clubroom, hut-M2,\nat 8:45 p.m. Dancing and refreshments. Members and guests\n-welcome.\n* * *\nCAMERA CLUB\nMeeting today at 12:30 in Bu\n203. Hoi Tsau will demonstrate\nPortrait Techniques.\n* ' * *\nRAMBLERS\nGeneral meeting today at\n12:30 in Bu 204. All members\nplease attend.\n* * *\nGEOGRAPHY CLUB\nThere will be a general meeting 12:30-today in F.G. 208. All\ninterested in geography students, please attend.\n* * *\nPSYCHOLOGY CLUB\nPsychology club present Mental Health Co-ordinator Peter,\nspeaking on \"Psychology in the\nSchools,\" today at noon in Hut\n-J^a, rooms 22.\n:FRO\u00C2\u00ABSH UNDERGRADUATE\n'fQCIETY\n', The Fresh Council meeting is\n\" scheduled for noon today in Bu\n820. Also one will be held 12:30\nTuesday in Bu 3^0.\n' \u00E2\u0080\u009E.-.'.. .*...*. * -\nfADMINTON CLUB\n'- Tiie gadminton club meets\nTuesday and Thursday at 8:30\nin the Memorial Gym, and Sunday at 2:00 in the Women's\nGym; New members are welcome.\n* * *\nALLIANCE FRANCAISE\nThe French club will hold a\nmeeting at noon today in Bu\n214.\n* * * '\nVCF\nVCF present Dr. John Ross\nspeaking on \"The Truth Will\nMake You Free,\" today at noon\nin Bu 106.\n* * *\nSOUTHERN BAPTIST\nSTUDENT UNION\nThere will be a devotional\nasieeting today at noon in Bu\n227. Bring your lunch.\n* * *\nyfRITER'S WORKSHOP\nThere will be a meeting Monday, Nov. 2, at 1973 West 3rd.\nManuscripts may be picked up\nin Hut Mil either today or\nMonday.\nCOMMONWEALTH CLUB\nThe Commonwealth Club presents films on the 1958 British\nEntire Games, and Bannister's\nfour-minute mile in Bu 102 at\n12:30 today.\n* * *\nAD AND SALES CLUB\nThere will be a general meeting T*uesday, noon in Bu 225 to\narrange coming events. All\nmembers are asked to come and\nassist.\n* * \u00C2\u00BB\nLSA\nThe Lutheran Students' Association presents Pastor Peterson\ndiscussing \"The Doctrine of\nSin,\" on Monday at 12:30 in\nBu 216.\n# * *\nROD AND GUN CLUB\nThere will be a meeting Tuesday in Bu 202 to discuss trap-\nshooting and the fishing derby.\nEveryone who attends will be\nput on a list for the club newsletter.\n* ' m \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nHAMSOC\nThose interested in radio\ntheory are reminded of the class\nto be held Monday at 12:30 in\nPhysics 301.\nCLASSIFIED\nAttention: Former Math 308\nstudents. One copy Higher Algebra by Weise. Will pay price of\nnew textbook for one in good\ncondition. Al Beadell, phone\" RE\n8-5010 between 5 and 7 p.m.\nWUS Offers Students\nJapanese Scholarship\nWUS is offering a scholarship\nto any Canadian student for a\nuniversity of his own choice in\nJapan, beginning April, 1960.\nInterested students should contact Rod Dobell in Brock Extension 166 before October 31.\nTHE SKI SEASON\nIS HERE\nOutfit yourself now while the\nselection is at its best.\nCall at\nArlberg Ski Hut\n608 Robson al Seymour\nMU 5-9411\nListen for Ski Report\nThursday, CKWX, 6:15 p.m.\nEarl \u00C2\u00A3 Riser\nI plough a straight furrow\nfn my finances with a\nPersonal Chequing Account\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E...\u00E2\u0084\u00A2ir\nmtmumametm\nBank of Montreal\nYour. Campus Branch in the Administration Bldg.\nMERLE C. K.IRBY. Manager\na big step on the road to success is an early banking connection\n us-aa\nThe \"Carlton\" has often been\ncited by CUP judges for editorial content, but it has never\nWon the Southam trophy.\nJournalist College Loses\nEntire Newspaper Staff\nOTTAWA (CUP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Carlton University\u00E2\u0080\u0094the only university\nin Canada to grant a degree in journalism \u00E2\u0080\u0094 has found itself\nwithout a college newspaper.\nFor reasons of lack of experi-*-\nence, the \"Carlton's\" entire editorial staff has resigned.\n\"One person resigned, then\neveryone resigned,\" said a member of the college staff.\nThe students are already doing their best to get the paper\nreorganized.\nApproximately 32 students\nhave signed a list for recruits.\nAlthough Carleton has a journalism school, journalism students take no official part in\nproducing the college paper.\nIt is understood that the paper\nis having difficulties in securing\nthe advertising necessary to support the paper.\nSHOULD WE BUZZ\nOR BE BUZZED?\nDid you like the buzzard?\nOr would you like us to pull\nthe cord?\nComments would be appreciated as well as suggestions for\nsimilar buzzes in the future.\nDon't be a buzzard and give\nus a buzz.\nOVER 500,000\nUSED AND NEW POCKET BOOKS, MAGAZINES\nBOOKS, COMICS, PRINTS, MAPS AND RECORDS,\nETC.\nAT CANADA'S LARGEST\nUSED BOOK STORE\nTED FRASER'S BOOK BEND\n1247 Granville Street MU 2-3019\nI\n^V*^1-\nContinental Styling\nGoes to College . .\nCONTINENTAL\nSIACKS...\nPair\n16-95\nSee this new Continental concept\nin campus wear . . . slim, tapered\nslacks with pleatless front, flap\nback pockets and slanted side\npockets. In fine wool worstted.\nIn six exciting shades. Sizes 28-36.\nWear with or without cuffs.\nAlterations Free!\nOn Sale Now at HBC's\nMen's Casual Shop, Main Floor\nINCORPORATED ^^1W t&\"X\n_l\nBIHD CALLS - 50c\nALMA CABS\nALma 4422\nAffiliated with\nYELLOW CAB CO. LTD.\nMU 1-3311\nAuthorised as second class mail by Post Office Department, Ottawa."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1959_10_30"@en . "10.14288/1.0125329"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C."@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 .