"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-07-24"@en . "1947-10-21"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0125392/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " The Daily Ubyssey\nVol. XXX\nVANCOUVER, B. C, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1947\nNo. lfi\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ubyssey photo by Mickey Jones\nIT'S A LONG WALK to the gates after a long day of lectures and these three students seem to\nbe trying to avoid it. With the transportation tie-up they were not alone, as most students rely\non the BCER to get them to and from the University. Their mute plea was not in vain either\nfor immediately after this picture was taken an obliging motorist stopped to give them a ride.\nWill To Learn Overcomes\nLack Of Transportation\n-$>\nNFCUS Head\nTo Address\nStudents\nMaurice Sauve, national\npresident of the National Federation of Canadian University\nStudents, will address the student body today at 12:30 in the\nAuditorium.\nAll student functions have\nbeen cancelled by the AMS to\npermit full attendance at the\nMeeting.\n1200 Contribute\nTo Jabez Memorial\nMarked by over 1200 individual contributions, the Jabez Memorial campaign was brought to a close Saturday with a total of $61.81 pennies,\nnickles and climes.\nAs no quota was set at any time .\nby the sponsors of the collection, I\nit is pointed out that the fund was j\n\"over the top\" from the time the\nfirst nickel was received.\n\"Splendid\" was the word sponsors\nhad to the reaction of the student\nbody to the campaign.\nErection of the memorial to Jabez,\nretired Ubyssey columnist, will begin next' spring. Official unveiling of\nthe memorial is promised for February 14, St. Valentine's Day.\nCollision Claims\nLife Of Engineer\nOtto Solheim, 2nd year Applied\nScience student, died in Vancouver\nGeneral Hospital Friday following a\ntraffic accidant Thursday afternoon\nwhen his motor scooter collided with\nan automobile at Fifteenth ar.d Sofia.\nNinetten year old, Solheim was\nVancouver's 38th traffic victim of\n1947.\nAn inquest will be held in coronor's\ncourt Wednesday.\nA MODEST PROPOSAL\nGrant Livingstone has written a letter.\nIn the letter there are a few points which are not entirely\nclear, and in (the interest of justice we shall attempt to clarify\nthem.\nFirst, a little background- The Daily Ubyssey is anxious\nto bring to the student body, coverage of the meetings of its\nstudent council. The plan is unique in that the Ubyssey's of\npast years have never attempted to secure reports of the\ndebates and discussions that precede the passage of motions.\nThe actual minutes and quotations from council members\nobtained in interviews after the meetings have been the only\ncoverage provided.\nThis is not enough. The student body must be told the\nwhole story.\nThis year the editorial board of The Daily Ubyssey has\ngone on record as deploring the situation and has decided to\ndo something about it. We contend that since the councillors\nare elected representatives, the student body should be\ninformed of the dispositions and beliefs of the individual\nmembers; as is the case with both the House of Commons and\nthe City Council.\nSince council meetings are not constitutionally closed\nmeetings there is no legal justification for denying us this\nright.\nCarrying on with what we have already begun in this\nconnection, two reporters covered Monday night's meeting.\nThe editor-in-chief, has always been a member ex-officio of\nthe council and has always attended the meetings. He is there\nas representative of the publications board and as a council\nmember, not as a reporter-\nThe Daily Ubyssey stated these opinions more than a\nweek ago in an editorial entitled \"SH-H-H-H-H-\" which came\ndirectly after Livingstone had pronounced a ruling of the\nchair barring the editor-in-chief from printing any coverage\nof the second discussion of the old \"Greek Letter societies\nin the caf\" chestnut.\nFeeling that the cloistered privacy of the council cham-\n(Continued on Page 3)\nNearly Complete Attendance\nAt Monday Lectures\nTransportation problems proved no match to the lust for\nlearned Monday morning when a \"normal\" turnout filled lecture rooms despite the transportation tie-up following ti\u00C2\u00BB\nB.C. Electric walkout.\nStudents arrived in jammed autos, f*\non motorcycles, and bicycles\u00E2\u0080\u0094some\ntrudging the three miles from the\nUniversity gates on foot.\nTHUMBS VOGUE\nStudent drivers answered the extended thumbs of hundreds of students who lined all the main approaches to the campus.\nAutumnQuarterly\nDeadline Today\nContributions for the autumn edition of the Thunderbird, UBC's growing campus magazine, should be submitted today, Editor John Wardroper\nreminded students Monday.\nSelections of material for the edition scheduled for November 13 will\nstart immediately, so that late contributions will have little chance of\npublicatiion, no matter how good they\nare.\nContributions of short stories,\narticles, humor, cartoons and poetry\nshould be left in the Thunderbird office, north basement of Brock Mall.\nIn several cases students were\nobserved clinging to running board*\nand fenders as the record traffic\nflood struck the university highroad.\nUNION COMPLAINS\nMeanwhile the BCER street railway-\nmen's union declared that \"all those\naccepting rides are \"unfair to organized labor\". Most students overlooked this ruling in their rush te\nmake their 9:30's.\nAt least two intrepid co-eds ware\nreported to have rollerskated from\nTenth avenue and Sasamat street\n\"A lot of fun but we wouldn't like\nto do it every day,\" they panted at\nthey rollered down the main malL\nPICKET BARNS\nUnion pickets appeared at the University Bus Line barn at Tenth and\nTrimble early Monday morning to\nensure that none of the non-union\nstudent drivers reported for work.\nObservers predicted that the student\ndrivers would comply with the union\nruling.\nAll campus parking lots were filled\nto the limit and police officers were\nhard pressed to maintain order.\nAs far as is known no instructor*\nwere absent on account of the strike\nand lecture attendance was reported\nas \"normal.\"\nPhoto by Bob Steiner\nMAURICE SAUVE\nSauve, who arrived in Vancouver\nyesterday by plane from San Francisco, is beginning a tour of Western\nCanadian universities.\nA University of Montreal undergraduate, Sauve was elected president of the National Federation of\nCanadian University Students last\nDecember at the annual conference.\nLast night ,in order to get a cross\nsection of student government on\nthe campus he attended the Student\nCouncil dinner and meeting. This\nmorning he will tour the city with\nMarshall Bauder, chairman of the\nNFCUS committee at UBC .\nFollowing a short tour of the\ncampus in the afternoon, Sauve will\nmeet student leaders, including LSE\nand USC executives, at a reception\nin the Brock lounge.\nTheatre Chain May Stop\nReduced Student Rates\nSpecial student rates in Famous Players Theatres may be\ncancelled because of a snake parade of Engineers through a\ndowntown theatre Thursday night, officials of the movie chain\nwarned Monday.\nFootlights and other equipment <\u00C2\u00A7>-\nwere damaged when sciencemen followed after-banquet precedent by\nparading down Granville Street.\n\"If the staffs had not been warned\nin time to avoid panic, there might\nhave been grave consequences,\" said\nE. C. Doctor, manager of the Capitol\ntheatre.\nHARD FEELINGS\nHe said the heads of the theatres\nhold no hard feelings toward the\nstudents as a body, but felt that\nunless individuals conducted themselves in a better fashion, the 30 cent\nadmission privilege would have to be\nwithdrawn and the 60 cent price\ncharged for students as well as\notners.\n\"We would be sorry to do this, but\nif it is necessary as a means of curbing such a practice we will have to\ntake action,'' he said.\nSOCIAL WORKERS\nAID CHEST DRIVE\nThe Comunity Chest campaign gat\na shot of the college spirit Saturday\nwhen the University of British Columbia social work class went canvassing for the fund.\nNot content with conventional\nmethods the students used a sound\ntruck to make ^e rounds of their\ndistrict.\nUnder the leadership of WUf\nCalnan, the class raised $455, an a-\nmount almost $120 more than was\nrealized in the same area last year.\nThe district receiving the college\ntreatment ran from Nanaimo Road\nto Boundary Road and from Venables\nto Broadway.\nLivingstone Explains Council Stand On Censorship\nDear Sir:\nI hope you'll pardon the delay\nin replying to your \"Sh-h-h-h-\"\neditorial of a week ago. The constitutional point you raise certainly deserves an answer, and the\nopportunity may serve to clear up\na few mis-impressions.\nSince you \"concede that a certain degree of censorship is to the\npublic advantage, and mutual\ngood,\" the only issues at stake\nare: what degree, and who shall\nexercise it. Council members agree with me that tlie only degree\nof ensorship required is that which\nwould ensure nn accurate reflection\nof the whole discussion, and preclude the possibility of single remarks, perhaps made casually of\nin the heat of discussion on a\ncontentious topic, being sensationalized out of their true and original significance in debate.\nAs in tho case in point, the headline \"Council 'Deplores Greek\nSnobbery' in Caf\" was inaccurate\nand misleading. The story which\nfollowed did nothing to correct,\nrather it strengthened, the mis-\nimpression cafteria for- strictly\nsocial purposes during rush-hours,\"\nand although lacking direct jurisdiction sought to apply two remedies. The first was to tactfully\napproach the IFC and Pan-Hellenic as the major groups involved\nto forego this customary privilege\nthemselves. The second was to\nrefer the matter to the administration. The latter has now been\ndone, but the first remedy became\nimpossible wfnen that headline\nprecluded the tactful approach.\nThe net result: nothing accomplished, and bad feeling created by\nunnecessary misunderstanding. As\nyou say some censorship is necessary.\nCouncil's published minutes, being what council does, or the\n\"complete story\" word for word\nof the debates, being what individual councillors said, are the only\nabsolutely true reflections possible. The first is inadequate,\nwhich is why you sit on Council\nand the rest of us are subject to\ninterview. The second is impractical, which is why some censorship is necessary.\nThe question which remains,\nthen, is who is to exercise the censorship. You say \"the Ubyssey\ncan make its own decisions.\" As\nrepresented by yourself as a member of council, and in ordinary\nmatters, I agree with this position.\nI do, however, feel that in extraordinary cases, responsibility for\n.such decisions must be assumed\nby the council itself (or its chairman), as the superior body.\nThat is the pracitical situation\nin so far as a formal constitutional\nstatement is concerned I think the\nsituation is this: You are quite\ncorrect in stating that neither\nAMS constitution nor code provides for closed meetings of the\nCouncil. It must also be stated,\nhowever, that neither do they\nprovide against them. Some rule,\nbased on established procedure,\nwould therefore seem ncessary. In\nmy opinion neither Parliament\nwhere debates are fully open, nor\nthe Cabinet, whore they are fully\nclosed, provides a satisfactory apology for our Student Council, It\nis somewhat of. both. A close analogy i\u00C2\u00A7, however, to be found in\nthe city council, where debates of\ncouncil as such are open, but in\ncommittee they may be and usually\nare closed.\nI am of course', subject to challenge, but basing my position on\nthis analogy as a precedent, I feel\nI am on firm ground in applying\nsuch a ruling as I do, to the procedure of Student Council. My\nprevious ruling was not in accordance with this principle, as I will\nreadily confess, and was, as you\npointed out unconstitutional; I'm\nlearning too.\nSubject to the above, I should\nlike to say that I heartily agree\nwith and congratulate you on\nyour editorial, particularly as to\nindividual representative responsibility and the Daily Ubyssey's\nduty to ensure it. I would point\nout, however, that carrying that\nidea unnecessarily far would cost\nStudents' Council its pleasant informality.\nSome reassurance may be in order on one point. Neither the\nDaily Ubyssey nor the members\nof the AMS need feel any attempt\nby this Council to employ the\nUbsysey as a council propaganda\ntool. As you so rightly point out\nan indepedent, if it thinks necessary, critical press is indispensible\nto good government. At the same\ntime let neither of us forget that\nwe are both constituted to serve\nthe same objectives: the interests\nof UBC students. We differ chiefly in that your authority is truth,\nand ours is the will of the student\nbody. If we both serve those\nrespective masters faithfully, we\nwill not be far apart, and we shall\naccomplish much.\nFinally, lest my \"case in point\"\nor this letter as a whole should\nleave any false impression in its\nturn, may I, on behalf of the\nStudents' Council congratulate you,\nyour editorial board, and the Publications Board as a whole, on the\nsplendid job you have accomplished already this year.\nThe smooth and completely successful step to daily status, tinder\nphysical difficulties of which few\nstudents are aware, despite some\ninevitable mistakes, the very high\nlevel journalism which is earning\npraise and readers throughout the\nCampus and from veteran newsmen\nin the city, the remarkable improvement in UBC student spirit\nthis year, and especially (from our\npoint of view) the turnout to the\nAMS meeting and other event*\nsuch as the Bellingham Invasion\nare ample evidence of a good jot\nwell started.\nI only hope we do as well in our\nfield, and that we may be able\ntogether to turn in a real year\nof achievement for the student\nbody and UBC,\nGRANT B. LIVINGSTONE;\nPresident,\nAlma Mater Societf\nP.S. Your figure of speech \"behind\nlocked doors.\"\nWould you point out that the\neditor-in-chief has not been excluded from any council discussion, yet? Your figure-of-speech\n\"locked doors\" has led to som\u00C2\u00AB\nmisunderstanding on this point\nG.B.L.\nED NOTE (re P.S,\nNot physically ejected but mira-\nled, which is identical in so far a*\nour coverage Is concerned. Tlie\nfigure is justified. PAGE Z\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nTuesday, October 21, 1947\nThe Daily Ubyssey\nMember Canadian University Press\n, Authorized as Second Class Mail,, Post Office Dept., Ottawa. Mail Subscriptions \u00E2\u0080\u0094$2.50 per year\nPublished throughout the university year by the Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society of the\nUniversity of British Columbia\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nEditorial opinions expressed herein are those of the editorial staff of The Daily Ubyssey and not necessarily\nthose of the Alma Mater Society nor of the University,\nLETTERS TO THE EDITOR\nOffices in Brock Hall. Phone: ALma 1624\nFor display advertising phone KErrisdale 1811\nEDITOR-IN-CHIEF .... DONALD FERGUSON\nMANAGING EDITOR .... LAURIE DYER\nGENERAL STAFF: Cop, Editor, Ron Haggart; News Editor, Tore Larssen; Features Editor, Geotge Robertson,\nPhotography Director, Bob Cave; Sports Editor, Chick Turner.\nCITY EDITOR THIS ISSUE - JACK WASSERMAN\nPICK 'EM UP\nIf you drive a car you have a responsibility to your fellow students.\nDuring the present transportation crises\nthe percentage of students attending lectures\nma ywell depend on how far they must commute every morning. If lecture attendance\nbe judged as a necessary prerequisite for\npassing examinations these urban students\nare laboring under a distinct disadvantage.\nThe unions declaration that car pools are\nunfair to the striking Railwaymen must be\noutweighed in this instance by the gross unfairness fro mstudents writing examinations\nafter an enforced absence from lectures-\nSurely the Street Railwaymen will under-\nstand this.\nAs long as the municipal authorities are\npowerless to relieve the situation it is up to\neach individual student. Pick up as many\nstudents as your car will legally hold, phone\nyour neighbours and offer your services; in\nshort do your part.\nSmall Mercies\nBy MARIO PRIZEK.\nTwo or three weeks ago, with all the\nprobably mistaken zeal of a reformer, the\npresent writer took upon himself the task of\nattacking the quality or reviewing in Canadian dailies and weeklies. His letter to the editor of the Vancouver Sun was not printed;\nbut his zeal has remained unabated.\nThe reviewing of artistic events has deteriorated into the grouping and regrouping\nof a set of tired cliches, which tend to be\nmore revealing of the reviewer's personality\n(e.g.: his or her personal \"Likes\" and \"Dislikes\"), than of the quality of the works of\nart under review- Criteria, if at all extant,\nare arbitrary.\nThe problem is of importance not only\nto the practicing Canadian artist, but also\nto the non-artistic Canadian who is sincerely\nconcerned with the development of a strong\nculture in his own country. Failure to face\nit has been one of the most important factors\nin retarding the development of Canadian\nculture, for a culture is built upon a \"tradition\", and the \"sense of tradition\" has its\nroots in sound standards of analysis and/or\ncriticism. Roughly put, \"tradition\" is an analytical sense of the past, which creates an\nawareness of direction for the present and the\nfuture.\nTHE QUESTION\nSound reviewing and criticism of a work\nof art must begin with the question, \"What\nis THIS ARTIST trying to do, or say?\" It\nis only when an answer to this question has\nbeen reached that the reviewer can proceed\nto a consideration of the artist's success or\nfailure. This is the test of a critic's objectivity.\nNinety percent of bad critical practice\nstems from a failure to ask this first question.\nThe bad critic, either consciously or unconsciously, rewords the first question to\nread, \"What do I want this work of art to\nsay or do?\" Once this false foundation has\nbeen laid, chaos sets in\u00E2\u0080\u0094 a mouse is criticized\nbecause it is not an elephant; a peacock is\ndamned because it doesn't sing, etc., ad\nnauseam.\nIt is only after the questions of the artist's\naims, and his success in fulfilling these aims,\nhave been answered, that the sound critic will\nturn to the question of Value.\nCBC TRAGEDY\nTwo weeks ago the CBC was courageous\nenough to present a radio adaptation of the\n\"Antigone\" of Sophocles- The obvious intent\nwas to entertain a modern radio audience\nwith the \"better than usual\" fare of Greek\ntragedy. Such an adaptation would necessarily\npresent a large number of problems. The most\nobvious one is the difference in mediums\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nradio drama is an audible art, while Greek\ntragedy, as written, achieves its total effect\nby visual as well as audible means; further,\nthe important \"ritual\" element of the greek\ndrama would naturally escape the larger,\nuntutored portion of the modern audience;\nand lastly, the piece must be fitted into the\nProcrustes bed of a radio schedule. All these\ndifficulties considered, how successful was\nthe CBC in presenting Greek tragedy on the\nair?\nThe present writer feels that the success\nwas very limited by the nature of the difficulties involved\u00E2\u0080\u0094there were obvious faults\nin both the writing and the acting. The chief\ncriticism is with the characterization of Creon.\nHere both the writing and the acting were at\nfault, although the present reviewer saw most\nof the misrepresentation as the fault pf the\nactor. The Creon of Sophocles play is not a\n\"villain\", but a sincerely convinced \"stickler\nfor form\". Unfortunately, (especially in the\ncouncil-chamber scene) the radio actor presented Creon as a power mad \"villain\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094it\nwas not until the last half of the presentation\nthat Creon was given the necessary dignity\nand sincerity.\nMISSED SIGNIFICANCE\nIn Sophocles' play a hint of Haemon's\ncoming rejection of his father is given to the\naudience, immediately prior to Creon's praise\nof obedient sons, thus rendering the whole of\nCreon's speech ironical, and the eventual\nrejection of the father by the son doubly\npoignant. Here the adaptor was at fault in\nomitting the hint, and thus missing the true\nsignificance of the turn of events.\nSpace forbids statement and elaboration\nof a number o fother similar criticisms, eg.,\nthe extension of the action far beyond the\nlimits set by Sophocles\u00E2\u0080\u0094the Greek play terminates a short thirty or so lines after the\nannouncement of Eurydice's death, thus\nrendering the denouement very precipitous.\nThe radio adaptor (possibly because of the\nschedule) saw fit to extend the talking long\nafter the actual play was finished. Further,\nthe lengthy monologue put into Creon's\nmouth at the end of the radio presentation\nwas an anachronism, when placed beside the\nconcept of godhead held by Sophocles.\nThis criticism is not intended as a damnation of a wonderful effort on the part of the\nCBC. The present writer thoroughly enjoyed\nthe presentation, but as superb melodrama,\nnot as Greek tragedy.\nP.S.: We also wish the adaptor had not\ninterlarded his adaptation or \"rendering\" so\nthoroughly with bits and pieces of Shakes-\npear, Plato and Aristotle.\nSIGNBOARD\nMORE INVASION\nDear Sir:\nThere are, I feel, some very important points which you overlooked\nin your coverage of the Bellingham\ninvasion.\nFirstly, this was the first real show\nof school spirit in the past decade.\nThe half-time incident occured because UBC supporters wanted to\nshow what our university could do.\nFurther, I feel that any criticism of\nthe support given the team oi the\ncheerleaders is a perversion of fact.\nSecondly, the most important incident of the whole affair was the spontaneous display of Canadian nationalism when UBC students stood up and\nsang \"O Canada\" at the opening of\nthe game. It is the first such show\nI have seen at the university, in the\nservices, or before.\nThirdly, although the team did not\nwin the game, they displayed more\n\"guts per pound\" than any team I\nhave ever seen fielded. Given a little\nmore experience, they will take all\ncomers.\nPersonally, I was proud to be a\nCanadian, I was proud to be a UBC\nstudent and I was proud to support\nour team.\nI might suggest Mr. Editor, that if\nthe staff of the Daily Ubyssey would\nquit looking for things about the\nsciencemen, the council, and every\nother organization or event, to criticize, they might see some of the underlying and significant events which\nare ocuring every day.\nRay P. Dewar\nED. NOTE:\nTlie Editorial Board of the Daily\nUbyssey wish to extend to Mr. Ray P.\nDewar, a cordial invitation to accept\nthe position of editor in charge of\nuncovering and writing up \"some of\nthe underlying and significant events\nwhich are occurbig every day.\"\nGREEKS AGAIN\nDear Sir:\nAll this recent fuss over fraternity\nand sorority tables\u00E2\u0080\u0094climaxed by the\ncouncil excluding the press from its\ndeliberations on the subject\u00E2\u0080\u0094has\nmoved me to rise and characterize\nthe whole business as sheer and utter\nnonsense. Council has precious little\nlo do if it thinks that the situation\nthey describe is so serious as to\nwarrant action by the administration,\nand that the problem carries such a\nthreat to the good government of\nUBC that the discussions of it must\nneeds be secret.\nI happen to be a member of a\nfraternity. I'll grant that there are\nabuses of the fraternity and sorority\ntables. I agree that it would be an\nexcellent idea to launch a campaign\nto induce these groups to share then-\ntables. I dare to think, though, that\na man would get fewer \"sly looks\"\nat a fraternity table than a woman\nwould get at a sorority table, and\nthat most of the current criticism\nseems from the lesser ability of women\nto mix with their own sex than is the\ncase with men.\nBut be that as it may, the fact is\nthat the Caf simply hasn't enough\nseats to offer either Greeks or non-\nGreeks. To argue that putting some\nas yet undefined restrictions on the\nuse of the tables by the fraternities\nand sororities would increase the\nseating capacity is to reason that increasing the capacity of campus rest-\nrooms would necessarily improve the\nhealth of the student population. It\nis patently foolish to obtain the desired object by the suggested means.\nIt seems a little strange that Council in its purported Olympian\u00E2\u0080\u0094but\nnot Grecian!\u00E2\u0080\u0094wisdom cannot appreciate that friends, either congregating\nunder some banner or not, will fill\nspace and thereby deny it to others;\nit seems odd for Council to suppose\nit can place enforceable limitations\nupon friendships, thereby providing\nspace for relative strangers.\n\"Agora\"\nMEETINGS\nATTENTION GIRL GUIDE CLUB\nImportant meeting, Tuesday, October\n21 at 12:30 in Arts 203. Bring your\nlunch and your ideas.\nTHERE WIIX BE A MEETING OF\nall Jokers in A.S. 202 at 12:30 Wed.\nOct. 22 to discuss 'Smitian Day'\nUBC JAZZ SOCIETY'S REGULAR\nweekly meeting will be held on\nTuesday, at 12:30 in the Club Room\nbehind the Brock.\nNEXT REGULAR MEETING OF\ntlie United Nations Society will be\nheld in Hut M9, Tuesday, November\n4. Club Elections will be held Friday\nNovember 6, same place, same time,\n12:30. Only registered and paid up\nmembers will be eligible to nominate\nor vote. Fee of 25 cents can be paid\nany time up to October 31 at the\nAlma Mater Society offices. Prospective members are asked to register before that time. In order that\nthe executive may notify national\noffices.\nNOTICES\nFILMS TONIGHT Tues. October 21\nUBC Film Society presents \"Cover-\ngii-1\" Auditorium 7:30. Technicolor.\nAdmission 20 cents. Improved sound.\nTHE LEGION MEMBERSHIP Committee requests volunteers to help\nwith membership cards, any time\nduring the day, Tuesday, Oct. 21,\nTRANSPORTATION FROM UBC TO\nKerrisdale available Mon. Wed. Fri.\nat 3:30 p.m. Phone KE 0126R, N. Monroe.\nFISH STORY\nDear Sir:\nIn all the reports of the eviction\nof the Jokers Club and their obstre-\nperousness there has been an absence\nof knowledge concerning the case\nfor the Fish and Game Club.\nOur club was similarly evicted by\nthe Varsity Christian Felowship although not by their design. Hearing\nthat the Jokers were defunct, we\napplied for the use of their room.\nPermission was granted.\nOur claim was made on a basis of\nour membership (148) and our needs.\nFly tying, our major function, requires considerable table space, as\ndoes making up rods. We also need\nstorage space for our equipment.\nIn the light of these facts, Grant\nLivingstone's decision to allow us\nthe requested space does not appear\nto deserve the condemnation given it.\nGlyn Edwards,\nTreas. Fish and Game Club\nSWIMING POOL\nDear Sir:\nI was very pleased to see a letter\nin this column recently, concerning\na swimming pool on the campus. Be\nassured the writer spoke for a great\nmany students who are interested in\nswimming as a competitive sport and\nas a recreation.\nYour appended note stating that the\npool was to be given secondarypriori-\nty to the main gymnasium, however,\narroused misgivings. We already have\na gymnasium on the campus and have\nhad for many years, but from the\ntime the university first moved to its\npresent site, we have never had a\nswimming pool. Admitted, the gym\nfacilities are inadequate, but they\nare infinitely better than the swimming facilities. Even the smalest EST\nof U.S. schools have pools Victoria\nCollege has a pool.\nIn view of these facts, I think that\nthe pool should receive a priority at\nleast equal to the main gym.\nYours sincerely,\nGeorge Knight.\nFeting\nTHERE WILL BE A MEETING FOR\nall first year Arts women in Ag. 100\nWednesday, October 22 at 12:30 p.m.\nWUS representaties will be elected.\nTot\nTHAT SUCCISSFUL\nWell- (ftoonted\n5 drops in the morning\n...hair groomed for the day!\nHere's the sure, easy way to make your\nhair behave. Just put a few drops of\n\"Vaseline\" Hair Tonic on it in the morning before brushing or combing. Then it's\ngroomed to look right and stay right all\nthrough the day. That's because \"Vaseline\"\nHair Tonic works with nature\u00E2\u0080\u0094not against\nit. It supplements the natural scalp oils\nwhich give your hair its life and lustre . . .\ncontains no alcohol or other drying ingredients.\nGet your bottle of \"Vaseline\" Hair Tonic\nat any toilet goods counter\u00E2\u0080\u0094-55j* and 95f<.\nUse It, toe, for a BITTER SHAMPOO\nRub \"Vaseline\" Hair Tonic generously onto\nthe scalp, then wash your hair in the usual\nway. Result: invigorated scalp\u00E2\u0080\u0094no loose\ndandruff\u00E2\u0080\u0094 really clean hair. .Finally, 5 drops\nof \"V.iseliiu \" Hair Tonic before brushing,\nfoi that- well gioomed look all day long.\nChose brough Manufacturing Co. Com'd\nSKI CENTRE\nEarly Arrivals in Equipment\nJANTZEN TOTEM SWEATER\n$9.50\nW'OMENS RUBBER HIKING\nBOOTS\n$2.49\nMENS HIKING BOOTS\n$2.95 and $4.50\nU.S. ARMY SKI GOGGLES\n95c\nSki Boots at 1946 Prices\nwill be $16.00 later\nindies & mens sizes $12.50\nSteel Edges attached to skis $6.50\nSeason Guarantee\n48 HOUR\nSERVICE\nON\nSHIRTS\n..Perfectly Laundered\nS ^-50c\nSPOTLESS\n4390 W 10\nMake That Party a Success\nENGAGE HAROLD KING\nAND IBS SEVEN JACKS ORCHESTRA\nVANCOUVER,S VERY FINEST\nHear them Saturdays at the\nNAVY LEAGUE AUDITORIUM\nDUNSMUIR AND BEATTY OPP. BUS DEPOT\nFOR RATES \u00E2\u0080\u0094 PHONE KERR. 1533-L Tuesday, October 21, 1947\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nPAGE 3\nfood for thought .\nBy HAROLD DEAN\nIt's getting so expensive to eat\nthese days that some people are\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0wondering if it's really necessary.\nHowever, with the present stage of\nphysiological development there\nseems to be no immediate hope that\nthe human body can survive on\nsuch still cheap commodities as air,\nbut will have to continue the old\nfashion pursuit of food-getting.\nLIVING COST UP\nTake a look at the official cost of\nliving indexes. In 1944 when our Educational grant for veterans was established the index stood at 118.9. In\nAugust 1947, it stood at 136.6, which\nis an increase of 17.7 points. Under\nthe old cost of living bonus system\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2the government figured it took 25c a\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0week for each point the cost of living\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2went up. This would amount o $4.42\na week increase per person since 1944\nor approximately $18.00 a month. This\nofficial index is considered by all to\nbe extremely conservative as there\nare many things it does not take into\nconsideration.\nThe unofficial index compiled by\nthe Toronto Welfare Council, which\nis the Community Chest organization\nin Toronto give figures which are the\nbare minimum to cover health and\nself-respect for a man and wife. This\nfigure, which includes neither tobacco,\ntea, nor coffee amounts to $113.64 a\nmonth. This was in May and since\nthat time price have gone up considerably. Since t May, for instance,\nbutter alone has gone up 22V\u00C2\u00A3c a lb.\nThe increase in butter alone per\ncouple, allowing a pound a week\nwould amount to a dollar a month.\nThis gives some indication of how\nincreasingly inadequate are our grants\nof $60 a month for single persons and\n$80 a month for a married couple.\nMarried students with children are\nof course still harder pressed.\nWHAT PROSPECTS?\nWhat are the prospects that face\nour University veterans? These are\nthe men and women of the highest\ncalibre of Canadian youth, who wanted a chance to develop and use their\ntalents and abilities. After going\nthrough from 3-5 years of war they\nare going through from 3-5 years of\nuniversity on extremely stinted financial support. When and if they\ngraduate they shall step out into the\nworld with their savings all gone,\ninto fields that have never been more\nhighly competitive. Nobody would\nmind hardships if they could be assured of a secure future, which we\nare not.\nUniversity students are no better\nstudents when they are extremely\nworried over their financial means.\nIt is unfair to veterans who have\nsacrificed the best years of their lives\nin the service of their country to\nforce them to live in sub-standard\nconditions to get an education, which\nis for the benefit of everyone, as well\nas for themselves.\nIt is difficult to estimate how many\nveterans have left university for\nfinancial reasons. Those that quit give\na variety of reasons, one of their\nreasons being the financial reason..\nUndoubtedly, many who quit give no\nreason at all and others who quit are\ntoo proud to admit their financial embarrassment. Dr. Black of the DVA\nsays that possibly 50 people have\nquit in the last year from purely\nfinancial reasons. Undoubtedly many\npeople in the coming year, in the\nlight of soaring prices and rising\nrents will be faced with the necessity\nof leaving University and seeking a\njob before their university course has\nbeen completed. To these people a\npartially completed university course\nwill be of limited value and at the\nsame time they will have lost their\nrehabilitation credits, which would\nhave been of real value.\nVETS BEST TREATED\nIt has been argued we veterans who\ngo to University get the best treatment of all veterans. I have heard it\nsaid in the Legion that our course is\nworth $4,000. One thing that must be\nconsidered is our lack of earning\npower whilst we are at University,\nMany students if they had not come\nto University would have steadily improved their positions in the business\nworld and would not have spent their\nsavings in the course of ordinary\nliving as they have done as students.\nVeterans other than students will have\nhad from 3-5 years to establish themselves in jobs and in business by the\nlime that University veterans graduate. A University degree is by no\nmeans a guarantee of success in a financial way. At any rate if we do win\nincreases in our grants, it is no detriment for other veterans from doing\nlikewise, but if will undoubtedly provide them with a lead.\nA MODEST PROPOSAL\n(Continued from Page 1)\nbers was at stake, Mr. L. has written a reply to the above\nmentioned editorial (see page 1). Of Mr. L's letter two things\nare sure: it was neatly typed and it was long (nearly 1000\nwords).\nThe difficulty is that he has neither denied nor allowed\nthe permission we are seeking.\nAs for his \"case in point\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094the caf tables\u00E2\u0080\u0094we feel that\nalready far too much space has been wasted on something\nabout which nothing ever will nor can be done. The issue\nwas brought up in his letter a little red-herring-wise, we\nfeel.\nWe are getting just a little tired of parroting over and\nover that what the Daily Ubyssey said in this regard was\ntaken directly from what council members or Frank Underhill said. If we upset council action on the matter (a point\nof which we are not convinced) it is the fault of the members\nwho made the offending statements-\nWe agree with Mr. L. that the council should bear a\nstrong likeness to the city council. We point out, however,\nthat all the downtown sheets assign reporters to the meetings\nof the city fathers just as we intend to assign reporters to\nthe meetings of Mr. L.'s august group.\nThe difficulty here is as Mr. L. points out that the council\nmay lose some of its \"pleasant informality.\" Too bad. We\nare sure that most will agree that this would be all to the\ngood- Members would be responsible and would be forced\nto consider their statements a* do any other legislators,\nrather than delaying council meetings until close to midnight\nwith successions of ill-considered nattering.\nLet there be no mistake . . . We do not wish to be\nunreasonable about it. We do not feel the unwieldliness of\nconstant committee meeting is at all necessary, as implied.\nWe recognize that certain contentious matters would be better\nomitted in the name of the mutual benefit of the majority.\nWe understand this fully and wherever there is a logical\nreason for omitting an item, we would comply. After all, we\nare not entirely malignant. We, too, have an allegiance to\nthe old school.\nFrankly, we do not feel that there should be any difficulty over this matter whatever- If experience proves otherwise we shall certainly make an adjustment.\nIn the meantime we intend to send our reporters to\ncouncil meetings every Monday night and shall publish in\nthe Wednesday editions accurate factual reports of those\ndebates which we believe to be of, and in, public interest.\nWe don't think Mr. L. will see fit to intervene. We hope\nnot\nTribune Editor Says No\nFree Press In Canada\nThere is no free press in Canada in the opinion of Tom\nMcEwan, editor of the Pacific Tribune-\nAddressing a meeting of the student LPP club Monday,\nVIr. McEwen attacked Southam, Sifton, Hearst, MacCormick\nind other \"press barons\".\n\"Our press is directly controlled^-\nby press monopolies and indirectly\nby 'big business' advertisers,\" he\nsaid.\nHe charged that the big press\nagencies had misrepresented the United Nations proceedings. \"The big\nagencies have orders to present the\nnews so as to paint the Soviet Union\nas a war-monger,\" Mr. McEwen\ncharged.\nBOY TO GIRL RATIO\nDROPS AT QUEENS\nKINGSTON - (CUP) - Registration at Queen's University has reached an all-time high, according to\nfigures recently released by the Registrar's office.\nA total of 3,134 students had signed\nup for lectures by October 1, an increase of more than 100 over this\ntime last year.\nOne vital statistic shows that the\nratio of 4.6 men to every woman was\na decrease from the previous year\nwhen there were six men for every\ngirl in attendance.\nUS Students Form\nNational Group\n(CUP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Following th exmple set\nin Canada, American university students have banded to gether to form\na national union.\nNearly 700 undergraduates from 361\nAmerican universities met recently\nin Mdison, Wisconsin to pool their\nideas and as a result of the meeting\nan organization similar to the National Federation of Canadian University\nStudents, the National Student Association was formed.\nAccording to its sponsors the group\nwill specifically refrain from becoming involved in political affairs, sectarian religious considerations or any\nother matters not directly connected\nwith student activities.\nSong and Yell Competition\nSparks Revival Campaign\nSponsorship of a \"song and yell contest\" is the latest move\nby the Arts Undergraduate Society in a campaign to liven\nspirit in the faculty.\nPrizes of $25 for the best original\nsong and $10 for the best yell are\nbeing offered as an incentive to student writers.\nAll entries are to be submitted to\nAMS competition chairman in the\nAMS office by December 15.\nThe committee rules that the songs\nand yells are to be distinctively Arts\nand must reflect UBC spirit.\nEntrants must be udergraduates\nin arts; authorship will be recognized\nand the judges' decision will be final.\nSIGNBOARD\nLOST\nON TRAIN FROM BELLINGHAM\nlast Sat. identification folder containing Registration card, driver license,\netc. Finder please turn in to AMS\noffice.\nI LOVE MY AIRFORCE RAINCOAT\nIt has my name on the label, name\nyour own reward. Phone Norm Klenman, AL 0281L.\nON TRIP TO BELLINGHAM, Brown\nGaberdine top coat, tailored at Tip\nTop and with owner's name inside.\nPhone FA. 2672Y.\nPROBLEMS IN ADVERTISING\nTaken from HG 3; 10:30 a.m. Sat. to\nOct. 18 Reward Pnone HAst. 5732-M\nHal.\nPAIR OF EYE GLASSES. Findei\nplease phone KErr. 0877R. I can't see\nWOULD THE CHAP WHO Borrowed\nmy jack to change his flat tire last\nweek please phone Fred Francis at\nKerrisdale 5375Y.\nWATERMAN'S GOLD AND BLACP\nPen Fri. P.M. Oct. 17 between Arts\nBuilding and Parking Lot. Phone\nAL 0228-L.\nBROWN LEATHER WALLET, with\nhand-tooled outside pattern. Contains\narmy discn. card, library card, and\npersonal papers. Phone KE 3055R or\nleave at AMS office.\nTAN RAINCOAT ABOUT A WEEK\nago. Would finder please phone KE\n3282L and ask for Peter.\nFOUND\nMAN'S WRIST WATCH in front of\nSnack Bar at 2 p.m. on Wednesday,\nOctober 15. AMS office.\nFOUNTAIN PEN, in Auditorium.\nOctober 17. Phone BA 0769R.\nMAN'S WATCH in front of new\nPhysics building about one week ago.\nApply P325. Will these students come\nto P325 to claim lost books. Kenneth\nH. Dean and T. S. Clark.\nNOTICE\nWOULD THE FOLLOWING GIRLS\nplease report to Dean Mawdsley's\noffice immediately: Lilian Lyne, third\nyear Arts, Margaret Wright, third\nyear Arts.\nSKIER'S\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Splitkein Skiis\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Metal Poles\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Navy Parkas\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Norwegian and Swiss Waxes\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Saf-Ski Bindings\nSTEEL EDGES EXPERTLY\nINSTALLED\nGeorge Sayce\nSPORTING GOODS\n4151 W. 10th\nAL 1414\nTotem Snaps\n600 Students\nApproximately 600 students have\nbeen photographed to date for Totem\n'48. Of this number, about half are\nfreshmen.\nCurrently being taken are upper\nyear Arts students, including Home\nEC, Commerce, and Physical Education. Most graduates in these groups\nare taking advantage of the special\nproof offer arranged with the photographer, J. C. Walberer.\nPROOFS FOR GRADUATES\nAs explained by the yearbook's editors, graduates have the privilege of\nseeing their proofs and choosing for\nthemselves which one is to appear in\nTotem'48. There is an extra charge of\n50 cents for this service.\nIn an effort to raise the total,\narrangements have been made so that\nfirst year students may still get their\npictures taken. However, if there is\na rush in the studio, they will have to\nwait until all upper year students\nhave been accomodated.\nFELT CRAFT\nSpecializing In\nUNIVERSITY-SPORT AND\nCLUB CRESTS\n2055 WEST 42nd\nKErr. 0626\nDRAUGHTING\nINSTRUMENTS\nFrom $10.00\nT-Squares, Protractors, Set Squares\nMECHANICAL ENGINEERS\nAND\nPOLYPHASE SLIDE RULES\nAMES LETTERING\nINSTRUMENTS\nZIPPER RING BOOKS\nComplete wit. Sheets and Index\nFrom $2.69\nFOUNTAIN PENS\nClarke & Stuart\nCo. Ltd.\nStationers and Printers\n550 Seymour St. Vancouver, B.C.\nVERY SATISFYING\nVERY NOURISHING\nPeter S. Mathewson\n803 Royal Bank Building\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nTelephone\nPA 5321\nBAy 7208 R\nSUN LIFEIOF CANADA\nFriendly moment... have a Coke\n/ /'a V - <\n1/ Hi. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ...A \u00C2\u00BB *5\"-:al.' '\nAsk for it either way , . . both\ntrademarks mean the same thing. COCA COLA\nVAN. Students Post Win, Loss\nIn Week-end Rugger Tilts\nBlue and Gold ruggermen split a twin bill Saturday as the\nchampion Varsity fifteen steamrolled over Meralomas 9-0, and\nUBC dropped a rugged battle to Vancouver Rowing Club 9-3.\nAt Brockton Bowl the letterman-*\t\nPAGE 4\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nTuesday, October 21, 1947\npacked Varsity crew blanked 'Lomas\nwith two trys and a well booted\npenalty kick. Russ Lathan and Johnny Wheeler made the plunges over\nthe muddy line, while the educated\ntoe of Barrie Morris got hold of the\nslippery oval and split the posts for\nthe other three points.\nOut on the campus undefeated UBC\nran into the highly rated and also undefeated Rowing Club. In spite of\nthe soggy flield both sides managed\nto handle the ball fairly well. Harry\nKabush made a good kick, for the\nBlue and Gold's only score of the\nafternoon, but the Rowing Club came\nthrough with a total of 9 points to\nmake the first UBC defeat' rather decisive,\nBasketball Strip\nTo Tod Salesmen\nLuke Moyls, .graduate manager of\nathletics, not exactly famous for his\nbenevolent nature, came out with\nthe announcement of the year yesterday when he stated that ten complete basketball uniforms will be a-\nwarded to the intramural organization selling the most tickets for Saturday's Thunderbird-Missionary football match.\n\"Because of the street-car strike,\nwe must rely upon UBC students to\nfill the stands,\" stated Luke. \"This\ncompetition should not only insure a\nlarge turnout ^but will also afford\nintra-mural outfits an excellent opportunity to obtain some first class\nbasketball strip.\"\nRepresentatives of all 'mural groups\nare asked to attend a meeting tomorrow at 12:30 in hut G-3.\nBooster passes, on sale unt'il Saturday, will be honored at the game.\nStudent admission will be fifty cent.-.\nJokers To Stage\n \u00C2\u00AB\nPep Meet Friday\nBoss Jokerman, Dick Ellis, surrendered several very tasty tid-bits\nyesterady concerning the festivities\nin connection with this weekend's\ngrid-grind.\nAlways good for something new,\nthis time the Jokers plan to use the\ngym instead of the armories. Why,\nthey decline to say, but Dick looked\nvery smug in telling the press that\n\"there are reasons\". So, on Friday\nat 12:30, it will be worth your while\nto trot over to the Gym and take in\nthe show, if comments from authoritative sources are to be paid any\nattention.\nIn honor of \"Homecoming Week\"\na Homecoming skit is scheduled for\nhalf-time in Saturday's game. Again\nno clues as to the plan of action were\nrevealed, but. it's the Jokers officiating, which can mean anything.\nSOCCER MEN LOSE\nTO LEGION SQUAD\nPrevailing weai'bcr conditions over\nthe weekend, coupled with the fact\nthat the street car strike was imminent, prevented Varsity's soccer artists from making the trip to Powell\nRiver. UBC, however, braved the\nelements to come out on the short end\nof a 1-0 score with South Burnaby\nLegion at Oppcnheimer Park, Saturday.\nPlaying in a torrent of rain, the\nUBC-Burnaby fracus developed into\na contest of kicking power, with\nspeedy passing plays held to minimum.\nPEP PROMOTERS\nORGANIZE NEW\nBOOSTER CLUB\nUBC's successful invason of Bellingham has inspired its promoters to\nform a permanent committee in expectation of similar events. Last\nThursday, the \"invasions\" headquarters staff met in the first-aid room (nee)\nsignificance) for the first meeting of\nthe new organization, to be called the\nJoint Pep Committee.\nThe Mamooks will still be the\nnucleus, but will be assisted by\nthe commitee, which will coordinate\nthe Pub, Radsoc, Jokers, and other\ncampus clubs in the staging of tradition-shattering rallies and pepmeets. It was unanimously decided\nthat the committe will not be a controlling body, but will act only in an\nadvisory capacity.\nr^, ftrr\u00C2\u00A3\nCHICK TURNER, Sports Editor\nASSOCIATES\u00E2\u0080\u0094Hal Murphy, Al Hunter, Dick Blockberger\nREPORTERS THIS ISSUE-Bruce Saunders, Gil Gray, Sheila McCawley,\nJack Melville.\nFEMME HOOP SETUP\nTEAM MANAGER\nArts 1 Isabel McKinnon .\nArts 2 '. Shirley Ellison ....\nArts 3 Nora Moffat\t\nArts 4 Yvonne French ...\nP.E. 2 Doreen Campbell\nP.E. 3 Nora McDermott\nAggie Barbara Coles\nHome Ec Edna Smith\t\nT.T Gretta Schwartz ....\nCommerce Mary Duncan .\nNurses Ruth Stephens ...\nPHONE\n. Ke 1061Y\n.... La. 0825\n... Ma. 8773\n. Ke. 3116Y\nBa. 8259M\nDe. 1519F\n.... Al- 0343\nBa. 6837M\nBa. 7614M\nAl. 2159L\n Ba. 8184\nFairleigh Badly Injured\nAs Birds Go Under 33-0\nGreg Kabat and his UBC Thunderbirds are home for a\nthree-game American football stand today, following a 33-0\npasting administered by the Willamette Bearcats at Salem's\nSweetland Field, Saturday.\nAlthougt it was the fourth straight >*> \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u0094- . .\n'47 loss for the 'Birds and didn't help ; UBC victory next s\u00C2\u00ABturday are none\ntheir Northwest Conference standing\none bit, it was the staggering toll of\nThunderbird injuries that really made\nthe game* a disaster.\nFAIRLEIGH SMASHED\nNumber one casualty is Joe Fair-\nJeigh, full-time quarterback. Hit\nfrom both sides in the third quarter\n\"Little Joe\" left the fray on a\nstretcher. Hospital X-rays showed a\nbroken vertebra and cracked pelvis-\nenough to keep Joe in a cast for\ntwo weeks and out of action for the\nremainder of the season,\nAdd this to the fact that Herb\nCapozzi further injured his already-\nweak ankle, Bobby Brewer suffered\na leg cut, Jack Caplette sustained a\ndislocated jaw and Dmitri Goloubef\ncame off after one tackle with a\nrepeat shoulder ailment and you have\na rough idea of why hopes for a\ntoo bright.\nSLOW START\nThe game itself was a familiar\nstory; once started the 'Birds are\ncomparable to any squad in the\nconference, but, as per usual, it took\nthem too long to get started.\nAs a matter of fact it took the\nKabatmen the whole of the first half\nto become acclimatized Saturday, and\nby then the Bearcats were ahead by\n26 points. Once in working order,\nhowever, the Thunderbird machine\nfunctioned smoothly and in the second half held the PNC champs to a\nsolitary touchdown.\nNET TOURNEY UNDERWAY\nAll entries for the men's singles\nand doubles tourney are asked to see\nthe draw sheet' posted in the field\nhouse for their matches.\nPEP CLUB MEETING\nThe executive of the Joint Pep Committee requests the attendance of\neithr the President or a representa-\ntiv of the following clubs at a meeting today at 12:30 in the Students'\nCouncil room:\nMamooks, Radsoc, Jokers, Newman\nClub, SCM, Phrateres, Pub, Varsity\nBand, Pipe Band.\nFEMME HOOP SCHEDULE\nFollowing i.s tlie Girl's Intramural\nBasketball schedule: Oct. 21, 12:30\nArts IA vs. Arts 2; 1:30 Home Ec B\nvs. Nurses. Oct. 22, 12:30 PE 2 vs, Arts\n4; 1:30 Arts IB vs. Arts 3. Oct. 23,\n12:30 Arts 2 vs. T.T.; 1:30 Aggie vs.\nCommerce,\nIW\nmm\n'iPk\nTHE COAL MINER\n'J&>\njitifaM\n?KEL W\non each other ^ftatiT\nT\u00C2\u00BBe\nSr-fi\nTV\"\n[i/^0B\n^%&.\n36 railway cars of coal and coke are consumed\ndaily by the mighty nickel smelting furnaces\nnear Sudbury, Ontario.\nLarge quantities of Canadian Nickel from these\nsame plants find their way into the rugged\nequipment used to mine and transport coal.\nNickel steel makes coal cutters, drills, mine cars,\ncrushers and shafting lighter and stronger.\nNickel cast iron prolongs the life of crusher rolls,\nsand pumps and other equipment subject to\ngri nding wear.\nSo the coal used by the Nickel industry creates\nemployment for coal miners; the Nickel used in\nthe coal mines creates employment for Nickel\nworkers. Each and every industry in this country\ncreates employment in otner industries. Nol-JT-:^\nmatter how we earn a living, we are all one Je-'f/ti'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \"\nfamily, each depending on the others.\nCanadian Nickel\n\" The i<\n^\u00E2\u0096\u00A0AW*1/\"\n: book f\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nttiitt'd,:-\nfree on\nattyuiti\n\"l,HU( Of\n.tlv tUus.\n;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0/\u00E2\u0096\u00A0/ bcunt\nfi't/itiif to\ninttrttftik\n*y\n. ^\n.ag?\u00C2\u00BBfe\n\u00C2\u00AB%8?\nssya\nl\ $*\n'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0&\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\n'm\\n^ah\nfx 0^M^'W:i$M\n\" !\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-;? \u00E2\u0096\u00A0:.:'.. 'VU 'iife'V . .*. -i \"a\nralM\nm\nSB ^*?-.?-=\nws\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \"Vfuyw ? +\nAf-,\n#fe^\n<*\"\n*s?,v\n^\nv?.\n-.T.iS8KV\nfe\n$i\nie3*i\n*Arf\n'A\niH?\u00C2\u00ABa\nPv\n^\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*v\n***>\njjys\n3-wEi\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0?/-'FZ\\nk^f^'Mf^St-\n?t.e\ns*i\n03\nqK\\n*V\n*\nAe\n>ie\n\oP\nt*e\nn>\n^c \*&\ntfic\nyc\\n* Co\u00C2\u00B0\u00C2\u00B0^otce*\nfce\n$o*\u00C2\u00BBf\nTHE INTERNATIONAL NICKEL COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED, 25 KING STREET W., TORONTO"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1947_10_21"@en . "10.14288/1.0125392"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society of the University of British Columbia"@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from The Ubyssey: http://ubyssey.ca/"@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives"@en . "University of British Columbia"@en . "The Daily Ubyssey"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .