"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-05"@en . "1962-03-01"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0125563/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " T -\nTHE UBYSSEY\n'ol. XLIV\nVANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1962\nNo. 62\nAMS asks gov't\nfor jobs, money\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Photo by Ted Boss\nFINISHING OFF a little practice meal is John Motiuk, Arts 4,\nafter hearing of two Mount Allison University students who\nclaim to have eaten eight steaks, 18 pieces of pie, eight\npints of. mi|k and nine bottles of Coke at one sitting.\nRCMP may enter\nriot investigations\nBy SHARON McKINNON\nThe Royal Canadian Mounted\nolice may be asked to investi-\nate the Feb. 15 riot.\nFirst vice-president Eric Rick-\nr told student council Monday\nlat the discipline committee is\neceiving little co-o p e r a t i o n\nrom students in investigating\nie incidents at the Engineering\nuilding.\nfORE FORCE\n\"They are empowered to ob-\nain evidence in a manner which\n;e cannot,\" Ricker said Tues-\nay, \"and they may be able to\npprehend and take action\ngainst those students who were\nesponsible for the major property damages.\n\"Since the damages in recent\nncidents were of an extensive\nature, totalling some $600, and\nince the actions of the students\nnvolved were extremely irre-\nponsible, there is a distinct pos-\nibility the RCMP will be called\na to investigate if we are un-\nble to get more evidence than\ns- presently available,\" he said.\nJARE INVESTIGATION\nUnder investigation are the\nhaving of president Terry\nJuest's head; the marking of\nnembers of the Frosh council's\noreheads with silver nitrate;\nand the Feb. 15 riot at the Engineering building, during which\na car was pushed through the\ndoors of the building, fire hoses\nwere damaged and other damage\noccurred to the building and to\nclothing of students involved.\nMeeting\nto discuss\nNFCUS\nStudents will decide at the\"\nSpring General Meeting if the\nNational Federation of Canadian\nUniversity Students should receive further monetary support\nfrom the Alma Mater Society\nthis year.\nStudent council Monday\npassed a motion that consideration of the ten cent per student\nvoluntary increase requested by\nNFCUS be tabled until the general meeting, Mar. 15.\nMOTION TABLED\nA motion to pay the increase\nwas tabled at council four weeks\nago when it appeared that funds\nwere not available.\nThe voluntary grant to\nNFCUS would amount to approximately $1,200.\nThe mandatory grant from\nthe Alma Mater Society, which\nhas already been paid, is approximately $3,900.\n\"To grant this increase sincerely we must take the question to the general meeting,\"\nRicker said. \"I honestly don't\nthink the students want it paid.\"\nSTUDENT VEHICLE\nCouncil president Al Cornwall\nsaid Tuesday NFCUS is the\nvehicle by- which students can\nmake significant contributions to\nnot only education but to Canadian life.\n\"Anyone who is so naive as\nnot to recognize the values i.i\nNFCUS has not as yet derived\nthe full benefit of their exposure to \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 a university environment,\" Cornwall said.\nSecond Vice-president-eleetj>\nEd Lavalle said the general\nmeeting would give NFCUS the\nopportunity for a much needed\ncampus evaluation.\nAlso requests sales tax\nexemption on text books\nA student brief calling for more scholarships, more jobs\nand a sales tax exemption on text books was presented to\nthe provincial government in Victoria Wednesday.\nThe brief was presented to\nEducation Minister Les Peterson and other cabinet ministers\nat a special dinner after the\nWednesday legislative session.\nOUTLINES NEEDS\nA brief outlining student\nneeds is presented to the government each year.\nThe brief said that 700 more\nscholarships should be given\nunder the government's \"money\nfor marks\" project.\nThe university enrolment was\n10,500 when the scheme was set\nup, the report said, and on a'\npercentage basis with a present\nenrolment of 13,500 students,\n2,700 scholarships should be\ngiven to keep pace with university growth.\nNEEDS JOBS\nThe brief called on the government to create 500-1,000 summer student jobs by setting up\na program of provincial park\ndevelopment.\nThe report said park development will probably attract more\ntourists to the province.\nThe students would clear\ncamping and picnic sites and\ncut out nature trails such as\nthose at Manning Park and those\nplanned for Shuswap Park.\nThe report said the student\njobs should be given to those\nwho need them.\nIt urged the government to\ndrop its five per cent sales tax\non text books.\nONLY TWO HAVE TAX\n\"As food and children's clothr\ning are vital to the physical development of the people of this\nprovince, so books are essential\nto the education of these people,\"\nthe report said.\nIt said only B.C. and Newfoundland have a tax on books.\nSome of the other provinces except all books from their sales\ntaxes, the brief said.\nEven the federal government\nhas abolished its tax on books,\nthe report said.\n\"For a society which professes a great and continuing\nconcern for the development of\nits resources to place a tax upon\nbooks is to cripple the potential\nof the greatest, of those resources.\nMAXIMUM OPPORTUNITY\n\"Every citizen of this province should be given the maximum opportunity and incentive\nto learn and study.\n\"To tax the sale of books is\nto deny this full opportunity.\"\nThe report was submitted on\nbehalf of the AMS by president\nAl Cornwall, first vice-president\nEric Ricker, second vice-president Pat Glenn, Science president Bill Munro and Education\npresident Stan Yee.\n3 presidential seats\ngo by acclamation\nThree of four third-slate positions have been filled by acclamation.\nNew president of the University Clubs Committee is Graham\nOlney. Barbara Bengough is\npresident of the Women's Athletic Association, and Gordon\nOlafson has been- acclaimed-pres-\nident of the Men's Athletic Association.\nA campus-wide election to fill\nthe one remaining position, president of Associated Women\nStudents, will be held Friday.\nJoanne Atkinson and Judy\nBlake are the two candidates.\nFair sex unfair?\nSorority scandal\nMa led invitations refused at door\nBy MIKE GRENBY\n\"It's rank discrimination.\"\nThis was the charge made by\nthree prospective sorority\nrushees when they were refused\nadmission to the Panhellenic\nTea in Brock Lounge Wednesday afternoon.\nThe three, \"Misses\" Imre Kiss,\nLynn Spraggs and Leslie Grober-\nman; all in first-year engineering, received letters inviting\nthem to attend the tea.\n\"The purpose of this tea is\nto give you an opportunity to\nlearn about sororities and to\nmeet sorority women . . . We\nwant to meet YOU,\" said the letter.\n\"We broke pressing engagements to come here,\" said Lynn.\n\"Since the letter said to come\nin campus clothes, we came as\n-Photo by Ted Ross\nNO TEA FOR THEM\nwe were, in slacks,\" Leslie said.\n\"They wouldn't let us in, and\ntold us to go and put on skirts.\"\nThe three went away, changed\ninto skirts and sweaters and\ntame back.\n\"But we were turned away\nngain,\" Imre said.\n\"We showed them our invita-\nt ons but they just kept saying\nI'm sorry,' and held the door\nc losed.\"\nA female bystander said she\nthought the three ought to be\nadmitted but the sorority member standing guard refused to\nt elent.\n\"We were very disappointed\nand deeply hurt,\" said Lynn\nafterwards. \"It's the second time\nthis kind of thing has happened.\n\"We were invited to rush last\nfall and when we went to apply\nwe were curtly turned down.\" Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nWinner of the Southam Trophy\nAuthorized as second class mail by the Post Office Department.\nOttawa, and for payment of postage in cash.\nMEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS,\nPublished three times weekly throughout the University year in\nVancouver by the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C. Editorial\nopinions expressed are those of the Editor of The Ubyssey and not\nnecessarily those of the Alma Mater Society or the University of B.C.\nTelephone CA 4-3242. Locals: Editor\u00E2\u0080\u009425; News\u00E2\u0080\u009423; Photography\u00E2\u0080\u009424.\nEditor-in-chief: Roger McAfee\nManaging Editor Denis Stanley\nAssociate Editor - - - - Ann Pickard\nNews Editor - - - - Fred Fletcher\nCity Editor - Keith Bradbury\nCUP Editor --------- Maureen Covell\nPhotography Editor --------Don Hume\nSenior Editor - - - Sharon Rodney\nSports Editor - - - M.ike Hunter\nPhotography Manager ------ Byron Hender\nCritics Editor --------- David Bromige\nEditorial Research - Bob Hendrickson, Ian _ameron\nSTAFF THIS ISSUE\nREPORTERS: Mike Grenby, Sharon McKinnon, Peter\nPenz, Pat Horrobin, Mike Horsey, Lynn McDonald,\nRichard Simeon.\nSPORTS: George Railton, Glenn Schultz.\nTECHNICAL: Gail Kendall, Pauline Fisher, Bob McDonald.\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, March 1, 1962\nBrilliant but fiction\nMonday night council passed the buck again. This time\ninstead of running for the cover of the table (i.e. tabling the\nmotion) it ruled that a decision on the ten per cent per student\nvoluntary;levy for the National Federation of Canadian University Students come from the spring general meeting.\n> Four weeks ago council ruled to give NFCUS the money,\nif it was available, at the end of the four-week period. The\nmoney was available but it wasn't given. The treasurer said\nthat the projected margin was at least $3,000.\nCouncil first vice-president Eric Ricker said the previous\ndecision was made after a very stirring speech by NFCUS\nnational president Walter MacLean. He said that to be honest\nabout this grant council' should let the general meeting decide.\nThe first vice-president then proceeded to give one of\nhis better oratorical performances.\nHe stated that UBC got nothing from NFCUS because\nof its peripheral location. Later he said NFCUS was controlled by the Eastern Universities who had the benefit of\neasier communications.\nMr. Ricker seems to have spent so much time on the\noratory that he clean forgot about the facts.\nUBC gets as much from NFCUS as any other Canadian\nuniversity. UBC students are allowed to deduct their fees\nfrom their income tax, as are the other Canadian University\nstudents. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0,.*\nUBC students can participate in the newly-organized\nNFCUS travel arrangements which will save them almost 50\nper cent on a flight to Europe. Total saving to Canadian\nstudents as a whole is $33,000.\nUBC students will also be able to deduct the cost of books\nfrom their income taxes when this new project comes through,\nshortly.\nUBC students have the opportunity of participating in\nNF'CUS-sponosored literary and photographic contests. Here\nwe might add that a UBC student has always been able to\nplace in one of the categories cf at least the photo contest and\ntwo years ago the majority of the photo prizes came to Point\nGrey.\nUBC students, until this year, have always had a NFCUS\ndiscount card which gave every student a ten per cent discount on merchandise purchased at many Vancouver stores.\nThe discount card will be back again next year, we hear.\nMr. Ricker's statement that NFCUS % controlled by the\nEastern Universities and that UBC has no say in its pokey\nis just rubbish.\nUBC has always had an instrumental part in forming\nNFCUS policy. Many NFCUS innovations have come from\nthe local NFCUS committees. Two years ago, UBC started\na petition against the executions in Hungary, NFCUS picked\nup the idea, and the result was a national petition. This yebr\nthe Dag Hammarskjold Fund idea originated at UBC and\nwas picked up by NFCUS.\nAlso this year, an investigation into the state of the\nCanadian Indian in the Canadian Educational system sprung\nfrom the campus Native Canadian organization, and is now\nunder study across the country under the auspices of NFCUS.\nNo, Mr. Ricker, you'll have to come up with some facts\nto back up that brilliant, if somewhat fictional, oratory.\nAWRIGHT MAC\nPLATES EXPIRED YESTERDAY\n_.^\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2eM- a\u00C2\u00A3 ;.\n>-mzftz?\". x, ^mxmmmmmmmmmmmmm\nLetters to the Editor\nGiggling hinders\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey,\nDear Sir:\nWe would like to comment\non the attitude of the student\nbody towards visitors on our\ncampus, namely delegates to\nthe high school conference held\nFriday last. We were guides for\nthis very worthwhile project\nof acquainting high school students with the varied aspects\nof university life.\nWe were hindered and abused throughout, the day by various students of the university,\nia particular the button^down,\nmonied, brock-set and their\ngiggling sorority-type girl\nfriends. Conduct of this type is\ndeplorable and unbefitting university students.\nYours truly,\nFRED SWANSON,\nPETE WATERS.\n'Naive questions'\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey,\nDear Sir:\nDr. Johnson, the dean of\nwomen, and a local gynecologist gave up, an hour and a half\nof their time last Sunday evening to talk on \"Chastity and\nAbortion\" to the 300 women of\nthe permanent residences. The\ndetailed discussion of these important questions\u00E2\u0080\u0094on topics of\nwhich all university students\nshould be aware\u00E2\u0080\u0094is a welcome\nmove.\nThe small attendance of 30\nstudents may have been due to\nthe lack of interest or due to\nthe fact that the women felt\nthat they had sufficient knowledge of the subjects under discussion. However, from some of\nthe naive questions asked by\nthe small group present, it\nwould appear that the women\nhad a complete lack of knowledge of the true physical and\npsychological conception of\nsex.\nIt is my opinion that talks\nof this nature should, in time,\nbe discussed with both sexes\nin attendance so that the cor\nrect information may be given\nto both sides.\nDuscussions of this nature\ncould ultimately lead to a consulting committee being formed for the express purpose of\nguiding students to an understanding of the most frustrating\nneed of our modern society.\nYours truly,\nC. N. BULL,\nKootenay House.\nMore than lights dull\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey,\nDear Sir:\nDo you think we could nave\nsome lights in Bu. 100? From a\ntotal of 25, nine are above the\nlecturer \u00E2\u0080\u0094 eight in operation.\nThe remaining 16 have a performance ration of 50 percent.\nAside from the somewhat\ndull character of lectures received in this dungeon, the additional lack of physical illumination is very conducive to\nan hour of sleep rather than an\nhour of concentration and/or\nnote-taking.\nCould this situation be\nbrought to the attention of B\n& G?\nYours truly,\nIN THE DARK.\nP.S.: This also applies to Bu.\n104 and Engineering 201\nwhere the illumination is absolutely deplorable. These are\nprobably not the only examples\nof extreme darkness.\n'Uninformed'\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey,\nDear Sir:\nHaving read the defence of\none Holden Caulfield's article,\nMardi Gras and Rolf Harris, in\nFriday's edition of The Ubyssey, I have reached the conclusion that the faction in (or as\nthe editor puts it, \"segment of\")\nthe campus population which\nexpresses this view are, and I\nquote from the 'defence', \"sensitive 17-year-old(s) . . . who\n(are) depressed by (their) society.\" So \"sensitive\" or perhaps\n\"uninformed\" is a better term,\nthat the \"literary sensitivity\"\nwhich they feel Holden Caulfield shows is not once considered by them to be merely a\nmeans of covering up the literary ability which he obviously\ndoes not possess, I am certain\nthat one with far greater literary talents than mine could\nhave administered to the extremely anonymous Mr. Caulfield the verbal drubbing\nwhich he so richly deserves.\nTo express a strongly-felt\nopinion is one thing. To couch\nit in an admittedly plagiarized\nstyle is quite another.\nWhy did the otherwise admittedly anonymous writer revert to the use of J. D. Salinger's style when, if we believe\nMiss Southam, he could, with\nhis \"high calibre\" and \"penetrating approach,\" have written in any other? That it was\nfunny is not doubted; it was\nso funny, in fact, that I \"damn\nnear puked.\" I am not asking\nfor an apology to the sororities and fraternities for the\nslanderous article, for such it\nwas.\nI am, instead, requesting an\nimmediate apology to the general student body for submitting it to such trite, overworked and mundane phraseology.\nI might also suggest that the\n\"uninformed 17-year-olds\" persuade \"Holden Caulfield\" to\ndisclose his real name, in the\nhopes that we will all be saved\nthe time to read other n o n-\nliterary articles by the same\nperson.\nYours Truly,\nJAMES A. BRIGHAM\nArts III.\nLetter policy\nThe Ubyssey prints letters\nto the editor on any topic of\ninterest to students. We ask\nthai they be within 150 words\nif possible.\nLetters should be turned in\nto The Ubyssey office, north\nBrock basement, or mailed to\nthe Editor. The Ubyssey. Brock\nHall. University of British Columbia.\nWe, of course, reserve the\nright to edit. Thursday, March 1, 1962\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nIDEAS\nat large\n*\u00E2\u0080\u0094Misguided coperer\u00E2\u0080\u0094'\nBy FRED FLETCHER\nMy colleague, Bob Hendrickson, who usually fills his column CUP CAPERS with items\nplagiarized from other publications, made a departure from\nhis norm Feb. 20. \"For the sake\nor argument,\" he devoted about\nseven inches of muddled comment (not plagiarized) to a\ntopic that applies to UBC.\n' The gist of this argument\nwas that since students must\njoin the AMS to attend UBC,\nand since UBC already has\nminimum academic standards,\nanyone registered as a student\nshould be eligible to run for\nstudent office.\n* * *\nPlagiarist Hendrickson has\noverlooked a key point here:\nUBC's standards are very minimum indeed and it is the administration's avowed policy to\nallow almost anyone who can\nt>ay the fees to attend UBC and\nto weed out the academic dodos\nin first and second year.\nThis means that, if the university is to discriminate on\nthe grounds of academic accomplishment, as almost everyone\nWill agree a university should,\nthen this must be done internally.\nAgain, it is not the University's policy to turn away those\nwho have failed without a second or even third chance. Surely those who are having their\nsecond or even third try at\npassing are: (a) incompetent to\nhold a position of responsibility\nat an academic institution; and,\nib) should be devoting their\ntime to study \u00E2\u0080\u0094 not student\nactivities.\nRobber Robert baeks up his\nplea for no eligibility rules with\nthe allegation that there are\nno such rules in the \"outside\nworld. He's wrong again. Most\n'civic, provincial and federal\nelections require some sort of\nproof of responsibility.\nMoney or property or an election bond often supply this\nproof. And perhaps this is fitting in a society where money\nis the measure of success. At\na university, academic accomplishment is the measure of\nsuccess \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and, I submit \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the\nproper proof of responsibility.\nHendrickson also asserts that\n\"eligibility rules show a lack\nof confidence in UBC students\nto choose fit and responsible\nleaders.\" * * * '\nThis remark would have val\nidity only if: (a) students had\naccess to the academic records\nof the candidates; and, (b) students were given a chance to\nmeasure ability on some more\nvalid basis than a few classroom speeches and a week of\nposters and banners.\n- Now, eligibility rules, to be\nvalid, must be enacted by the\nstudent body at a general meeting or by referendum.\n* * *\nSurely, Mr. Hendrickson, you\nwouldn't quarrel with the right\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 of the students to set minimum\nstandards for candidates for\ntheir offices.\nSurely, this is a reasonable\nstep: to set down rules which\neliminate candidates who are\nundesirable on some such obvious grounds from even getting as far as the ballot.\nFor the sake or argument,\nBob, old boy, we suggest you\nstick to the plagiari-Trig:\n'Naive' - Ricker\nSophisticated - Glenn\nCouncil endorses CAPRI campaign\nStudent council Monday\npassed a motion endorsing a\nfund raising campaign for the\nCanadian Peace Research Institute.\nThe motion, which came to\ncouncil last week in the National Federation of Canadian\nUniversity Students committee\nminutes was passed after council heard student and provincial representatives of CAPRI.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nMrs. Vaughn Lyon of the provincial CAPRI committee said\nCAPRI was requesting student\ncouncil endorsation because\nthe program CAPRI intends to\nfollow is of a nature that\nshould appeal to people in the\nuniversity community and because young people should support this effort for world\npeace.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nSpeaking on behalf of CAPRI, Peter Light requested\ncouncil permission to hold a\nroom-to-room canvass for\nfunds, to hold meetings of volunteers and speakers on campus, and to distribute leaflets\nfor publicity for the organization.\nCouncil passed a motion urging CAPRI to form a campus\ngroup, directing its request for\npermission to distribute literature to the co-ordinator of activities and informing the\ngroup that permission for a\nroom-to-room canvass must be\nobtained from university president Dr. Norman MacKenzie\nor the Board of Governors.\nSpeaking against council endorsement of CAPRI, first vice-\npresident Eric Ricker charged\nthat the group were \"politically naive.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nSecond vice-president Pat\nGlenn said that this was no\nreason for the council not to\nsupport it.\n\"They are tackling a difficult problem in a sophisticated\nand astute manner and I urge\nthis council to take a positive\napproach to the group,\" Glenn\nsaid.\n\"We owe it to these people\nand to ourselves to give them\na chance,\" he added.\nSecretary Lynn McDonald\nspoke against council endorsement of CAPRI, stating that\ncouncil should merely facilitate the fund raising campaign\nand let the students choose for\nthemselves whether or not\nthey wish to support it.\n\"Whether you support CAPRI or not is a purely personal\ndecision,\" she said, \"and each\nstudent should be allowed to\nchoose for himself.\"\nThe motion for council endorsement of CAPRI passed\n11-7.\nDuring Education Week\nTwenty-eight top scholars honored\nA lecture by one of America's leading educators and a\nceremony to honor top students will highlight Canadian\nEducation Week Mar. 3 to 10\non the campus.\nDr. Ralph W. Tyler, director of the Centre for Advanced\nStudy in the Behavioural Sciences at Palo Alto, California\nwill deliver the Hewitt Bos-\ntock lecture at 8:15 p.m. Saturday in the Armory.\nDr. Tyler will speak on\n\"Schools for an International\nWorld.\" The UBC lectures\ncommittee has offered a $75\nprize for the best essay writ-\n' ten by a student on the lecture topic.\nThe Alma Mater Society\nwill honor 28 of the univer-\nity's top students at a reception in International House\nat 4 p.m. Thurs., Mar. 8. Honorary awards will be presented\nto the students \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 at - the cere-\n112th and Alma\nTUXEDO\nRENTALS\nSpecial\nUniversity\nStudent Rate\nonly\n$3.00\nat\nTUXEDO\n6*3 HOWIE STREET\nMUtite! 1-1643\nDiscount\nImported Car Farts and\nAccessories\n'Overseas Auto Parts/\nBE 1-7686\nRALPH TYLER\n. speaks Saturday\nThe students are: Physical\nEducation, Nancy Bartlett,\nAlan Yarr; Commerce, Alfred\nClerihue, Gerald Wheatley;\nLaw, Willis O'Leary, John\nSwan; Forestry, Lome Brace,\nJohn Worrall; Architecture,\nRonald Waikey, Jim Stras-\nman; Medicine, John Boone,\nJohn Lawder; Engineering;\nPaul Chan, Mervyn Olson;\nEducation, Mrs. Barbara Kil-\nlough, Sandra Frisby; Agriculture, Gordon Dornell, Geoff\nGrant; Home Economics, Ber-\nnice Cail, Maretta Borton;\nPharmacy, Nina Koaovich,\nRudy Klassen; Nursing, Elsie\nShpikttla, Mrs. Peggy English;\nArts, Terry Wdles; Science,\nStephen Pbnd.\n\"CAN KENNEDY CLEAR UP\n*THE STATE DEPARTMENT\n9\nJ.F.K; once tossed a long-\nwinded State Department\nreport right in the waste-\nbasket. . It was his reaction \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nto the department's endless red\ntape. !n this week's Post, you'll\nlearn how the State Department is\nbogged down by paper pushing and\ncommittees. What^ennedy is doing to s__\u00C2\u00BB_\u00C2\u00BBie the- operation.\nAndwhy we tnsSdw feefc the situation is just about hopeless.\nThe Saturday Evening\nMARCH 3. 180? tSSUE NOW ON SALS v Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, March 1, 19X5\nStudent criticizes\nUniversity principal\nTORONTO (CUP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Principal of the University of Toronto's Victoria College was\nseverely criticized by one of the\nparticipants in the Student Conference on Creative Writing in\nCanada held here last weekend.\nIrving Layton, \"Canada's D.\nH. Lawrence\", laced Dr. Northop\nFrye in a panel on the Young\nWriter and the Canadian Cultural Milieu.\n'CANNOT WRITE'\nLayton charged that Frye, co-\ndirector of the conference,\n\"could not write a single line\nof poetry or a short story if his\nlife depended upon it.\" Quoting\nIrish playwright, Brendan Beh-\nan, Layton continued with \"Frye\nis like a eunuch in a harem \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nhe sees the trick done every\nnight, but can't do it himself.\"\nLayton lashed out vitriolically\nat other academic critics in general for teaching without creating.\nIn his opening address to the\nconference, Dr. Frye said, \"The\nwriter who writes for himself is\nan honest man; the writer who\nwrites for the public is a professional man; the man who writes\nfor the critic is a damn fool.\"\nINVASION\nOther panelists condemned\ncritics vehemently. \"Literary\npygmies have invaded the world\nof critics,\" Robertson Davies\nasserted. \"You don't mind if a\nSI.OCAN TJMSXST LTD.\n2533 King-sway\nSpecializing in corsages and wedding bouquets. 10% off to all\nUniversity students. Call HE\n4-1614.\ncritic of stature cuts you up,\"\n\"But,\" Yves Theriault continued,\n\"when Pygmies start sticking\nknives into you, you are really\noffended. They have no store of\nexperience to judge from,\" he\nsaid.\nFriday's session on publishing\nin Canada heard an address by\nMcClelland and Stuart Company\nPresident, Jack McClelland, and\na panel with McClelland,\nJacques Hebert, Marsh Jeanner-\net, Robert Weaver and Robert\nPulford.\nJeanneret said U.S. restrictions on the importation of Canadian books as harming the Canadian publishing industry since\nU.S. books are allowed free\nentry, and thus have an unfair\nadvantage in competition.\nCollege shop opens\nmanager applications\nThe College Shop committee\nwants applications for the position of College Shop manager.\nApplications close Monday at\n3 p.m. Persons interested should\nsee the Alma Mater Society\nsecretary or the present College\nShop manager.\nUniversity over-stressed\nin high schools-Richte,\nRENT A GOWN\n25%\nOFF\nFor\nUBC\nLovely\nselection for\nBrides,\nAttendants,\nFormal Wear\nPur Stoles,\nWhite Fox,\nDinner Jackets\nMARIE BRUCKER SALON\nDesigners and Dressmakers\nExpert Alterations\nEvenings by Appointment\n4683 Kingsway HE 1-1160\nR. H. MACDONALD\n. . . CUP honorary head\nCUP names Macdonald\nhonorary president\nOTTAWA (CUP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094R. H. Macdonald, executive editor of the\nWestern Producer, has been\nelected Honorary President of\nCanadian University Press. The\nnew president was elected by\nreferendum which was held by\nmail.\nMacdonald is a graduate of\nthe University of Saskatchewan.\nVarsity Fabrics\n4437 W. 10th Ave CA 4-0842\nYard Goods, McCall Patterns\nSewing Supplies\nOpen Friday 'til 9\nBy MIKE GRENBY\nA UBC economics professor\nhas condemned high schools as\ntrying to produce future millionaires.\n\"The schools are over-emphasizing university preparation,\"\nDr. J. J. Richter said in an interview Wednesday.\n\"Too many students are expected to follow the university\nentrance program which is\neventually supposed to place\nthem in the upper socio-economic bracket.\"\nDr. Richter said this procedure is unnatural and is contrary\nto normal economic distribution\nof labor.\n\"Over 80 per cent of high\nschool students are pushed to\nfollow the university entrance\nprogram but only 17 per cent\nsuccessfully complete univers\nily,\" he said.\nFor the remainder, much o\ntheir education has been wasted\nhe said.\n\"What they have learned i\ndoubtless of some value, bu\ntheir high school time conic\nhave been far better spent ii\ntaking courses more suited ti\ntheir interests and abilities,\" Dr\nRichter said.\nHe blamed a lack of technica\ntraining centres and apprentice\nship programs in Canada foi\nthe unfavorable balance of em\nployment among highly-skillec\nCanadian and immigrant labor\ners.\n\"The average highly-skillec\nimmigrant worker has a bettei\njob and wage than his Canadiar\ncounterpart,\" said Dr. Richter\n11\nTHE SNACKERY\"\n3 LOCATIONS\n3075 Granville - RE 3-5813\n4423 W. 10th Ave. CA 4-0833\n5075 Kingsway - HE 1-8818\nFREE HOT & FAST PIZZA\nDELIVERY\n\"THE REEF\na\nPoint Roberts, Washington, U.S.A.\nDINING & DANCING\nFeaturing \"the Fabulous Ian Smith Trio\"\nFRI., SAT. & SUN.\nOPEN YEAR ROUND\n10 Miles South of Deas Island Tunnel\nLarge Parties by Reservation Only: Dial 945-2233\u00E2\u0080\u0094945-2579\nNo minors allowed on premises\nProof of age must be available\n/In JtHrttatich\nis extended to members of\nthe 1962 graduating class in\nARTS, COMMERCE or ENGINEERING\nto investigate a career in\nCHARTERED ACCOUNTANCY\nby contacting\nMcintosh, McVicar, Dinsley & Co.\n1075 Melville Street\nTo arrange an appointment, please telephone\nMrs. Teal at MUtual 4-8221.\n4th Annual Ski Sale\nVALUES UP TO 50% OFF\nMETAL SKIS\nALLAIS 60 $135.00 Now $101.00\nKASTLE reg. $119.50 Now $85.00\nSTOKLIE reg. $112.50 Now $79.50\nGRESVIG reg. $99.50 Now $75.00\nWOODS\nKASTLE reg. $87.50 Now $57.50\nROSSYNAL ALLAIS reg. $85.00 Now $47.50\nROSSYNAL COMBI reg. $79.50 Now $52.00\nROSSYNAL SOUPLE\n reg. $65.00 Now $47.50\nDYNAMIC COMBI reg. $79.50 Now $55.00\nDYNAMIC MONfTEUR\n reg. $65.00 Now $45.00\nARLBERG GOLD MEDALLIST\n reg. $72.50 Now $45.00\nMANY MORE TERRIFIC VALUES IN SKIS\nLadies' and Men's Sweaters up to 50% Savings\nSki Boots - Men's and Ladies' - 20% off\nLoads of Children's Ski Gear - 50% off\nSki Slacks - 20% off\nADDITIONAL VALUES f\nLADIES !\nReversible Wool Tapestry and Quilted Nylon Jackets.\nPoplin Jackets. Value to Plains and Reversibles.\n$42.50 Now $25.00 Values to $35.00. Now $22.50\nQuilted Nylon Jackets. Ladies' Racing Jacket.\nFull zipper. Full length zipper. Full\nUp to $24.95 .... Now $17.50 price $34.95 ___ Now $25.00\nMEN!\nQuilted \"White Stag\" Men's Parkas. Up to $29.95. $20.00\nEuropean Quilted Parkas. Regular $42.95 _ __ Now $30.00\nEuropean Quilted Racing Jackets. Reg. $41.50. Now $25.00\nArlberg (Ski M) Sporting Goods\n608 Robson \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Ample Parking on Seymour MU 5-9411 Thursday, March 1, 1962\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nMontreal college\ncalls new election\nMONTREAL (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 New\nelections have been called at Sir\nGeorge Williams University following dissolution of the Model\nParliament Saturday.\nParliament was dissolved by\nthe minority Liberal govern-\nPUTTING THE STRESS on Science Week activities is Barry Williams, Science 2. Included in\nevents scheduled by the SUS this week is the Nuclear Twist dance Friday night. Tickets are\navailable from the Alma Mater Society office and Science Undergraduate Society.\nAlumni Regional Scholarships double\nfor high school students this year\nHigh school students. throughout the province are benefiting\nfrom the most successful Alumni\nAnnual Giving campaign in the\nhistory of the university.\nAlumni Association officials\nhave announced that the number of alumni regional scholarships given will be almost doubled, from 22 to 42 each year.\nIn past years, the awards have\nenabled many of the province's\ninterior's finest scholars to attend UBC. The new plan ensures that at least one scholarship will now be available in\neach district of the province.\nThe $300 Alumni award is a\nmuch coveted one. Selection of\nBlake, Atkinson run\nfor AWS president\nJudy Blake\nI believe that the AWS should\nhave an important place in campus activities. My previous experience with Arts council, AMS\ncommittees, and AWS will be of\ngreat assistance to me if I am\nelected.\nI believe that AWS as the\nco-ordinating body for women's\nactivities, should take a more\nactive part in Frosh orientation\nin order to familiarize new coeds with the organization.\nAs AWS president I will do\nmy best to accomplish this.\nJoanne Atkinson\nAWS has many potentialities\nwhich I believe have not been\nfully recognized. Firstly, it is\nessential that it continue to be\na responsible \"voice of women\"\non campus. Secondly, its activities should be broadened and\nmade more worthwhile to create greater interest. Specifically,\nAWS should insure that women's\nfacilities in the new student\nunion building be larger and\nimproved. In guiding these aspirations the president must be\nexperienced, qualified, enthusiastic, and imaginative. Ycrur\nvote would help me prove to\nyou that I have these qualifications.\nthe winners will continue to be\nmade on the recommendation of\nthe alumni committee in the\narea.\nIn addition to the scholarships, the alumni allocated over\n$8,000 to the president's fund,\nand gave increased grants to\ncampus athletics, the library,\nVictoria College, and other objectives.\nAlan Eyre, 1961 campaign\nchairman, stated that the total\ncampaign receipts to Dec. SI\nwere $30,378. However, still\nfurther donations have since arrived at association offices.\nMussoc play\nheld over for\nfirst time\nFor the first time in 33 years\na University musical production\nis being held over.\nMusical Society's production\nof \"Once Upon a Mattress\" will\nbe held over for one performance Friday night.\nMussoc president Peter Her-\nmant said: \"So many people\nwere turned away Saturday and\nso many requests for a repeat\ncame in that we had to schedule\nanother performance.\"\nThe show cost $4,500 to\nstage, and has brought in about\nthat much in receipts.\nVancouver critics termed the\nshow \"a tremendous success.\" \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nTickets for the Friday performance are on sale at the Alma\nMater Society office and Famous\nArtists downtown for $1.50,\n$2.00 and $2.50.\nColeman arts choice\nMike Coleman, Arts 2, has\nbeen elected president of t h e\nArts Undergraduate society.\nMarilyn McMeans, Arts 1, is the\nnew AUS secretary.\nIncumbent Arts president\nMike Sharzer said that only 300\nstudents cast ballots in Wednesday's election. He gave poor\npublicity in The Ubyssey and a\nquiet campaign as the reasons\nfor the low turnout.\nment when it appeared likely the\nvote on the Speech from the\nThrone would defeat them. New\nelections were called for Mar. 7.\nThe opposition parties, the\nNew Democrats and the Progressive Conservatives, protested\nthe move and held a \"rump\"\nparliament after the Liberals\nwalked out of the chamber.\nThe Liberals retired to t h e\nvisitor's gallery for the remainder of the session. They san g\nsongs and created a minor disturbance in the gallery. When\nattempts to eject them were\nmade, a scuffle broke out.\nAnonymous literature began\ncirculating on the campus following the dissolution of parliament,, charging the Liberals\nwith cowardice, two-facedness,\nand having acted in a manner\nof which even Lester Pearson\nwould be ashamed.\nThe mimeographed leaflets\nwere believed to be NDP-orig-\ninated, and it was reported that\nthe NDP would face severe disciplinary action if these reports\nproved correct. The leaflets are\nalleged to be libelous, and, in\naddition, were circulated without permission.\nThe Liberals held 22 seats in\nthis parliament. Progressive\nConservatives had 14 and the\nNew Democrats 13.\nTUXEDO\nRENTAL & SALES\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 1O0O Garment* to\nChoose from\nm Full Dress\nm Morning' Coata\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Director's Coata\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 White and Bin*\nCoats\n\u00C2\u00AB> Shirts ft\nAccessories\n10% UBC Discount\nE. A. Lee Ltd.\nOne Store Only!\n623 Howe St.\nMl) 3-2457\nHOW DO YOU RATE AS 4\n?\nApplications are now being received for positions\non Brock Management Committee for 1962-1963. This\ncommittee is in charge of the administration of the Brock\nManagement Fund and Brock Hall.\nApplicants are requested to state background in\nstudent affairs. Applications are to be handed in to the\nA.M.S. Office, Box 131, attention of Bernie Papke.\nApplications close March 5th, 1962.\nFor further information concerning this position\nplease contact Bernie Papke, Co-ordinator-elect, A.M.S.\noffice.\nIs being a mother your full- /\ntime job? Then you're no\nbetter than a cave woman,\nsays Margaret Mead. In this \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nweeks Saturday Evening Post, she\ntells why the average housewife\nis a flop as'a woman. Shows how\nsmart mothers are encouraged to\nbe Dumb Doras. Tells why we\nshould stop picking on career girls\nand spinsters. And advises women\nhow to get out of their rut.\nThe Saturday Evening\nMARCH 3. 1B82 ISSUE NOW ON SALE ,\nCampus Barber\nShop\nMonday - Friday 8:30 - 5:00\nSaturday 8:30 - 12:00\nLOCATED IN\nBROCK EXTENSION\nfflHIBP\n^^^^^* | ^^^^H | IB | ^H^B | ^aaaaa^B\nThursday, March 8\nVancouver Symphony Concert\n12:30 - 2:30\u00E2\u0080\u0094BROCK LOUNGE\nFriday, March 9\nMARGARET CARSON HUBBARD\n\"As Africans See Africa\"\n12:30\u00E2\u0080\u0094BROCK LOUNGE\nAlexander & Axelson Appliances Ltd.\nANNOUNCE\nOPENING SPECIAL\nAT OUR NEW ADDRESS\n4558 WEST TOrh AVENUE\n3-Day Sale - \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 All Records 25% Off\nJ Page 6\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, March 1, 1962\nSays History professor\nCanada taking middle-power lead\nBy PETER PENZ\nCanada's proposal for a\ncease-fire during the Suez conflict greatly enhanced her\nmiddle-power status, history\nprofessor John Conway said.\nDr. Conway, speaking at a\nUnited Nations Club seminar\non Canada's Role in the United Nations, said that Canada\nhas pressed for a greater role\nfor the middle, powers.\nHe pointed out that Canada\nhas been slow to accept the\nresponsibilities but nevertheless willingly contributed to\nthe Korean War in 1950.\n* * *\nDr. Conway concluded by\nasking the question: \"Will\nCanada find herself able to\ngive constructive ideas and\ncourageous leadership to the\nUnited Nations or was it only\na flash in the pan?\"\nDr. John Wood, of the university extension department,\npointed out that Canada's role\nas an influential middle power\ninevitably leads to increasing\ninternational i n v o 1 v ement,\nwhich is often resisted by\nthose who, illogically, want\nmore influence for Canada\nwith less involvement.\n* * *\nThus, we have the present\ndisputes about Canada's participation in NATO, NORAD,\ncustoms and trade alliances\nand the consideration of Canadian meinbership in the OAS,\nhe said.\nDr. Wood asked if Canada\nis bold enough in her approaches to domestic as well\nas international problems.\nHe mentioned the European\nCommon Market as a novel\nmodel of planned capitalism,\nand Israel as an experiment in\nvoluntary collective living.\n* * *\nIn the international field, he\nsuggested that Canada should\ncontribute above all in the\nform of technical aid to the\nunderdeveloped countries, giving aerial photography as an\noutstanding example.\nIn a debate on Canadian\nacquisition of nuclear weapons, speakers Mrs. Dorothy\nBeck and Dick Arkley claimed\nthat the nuclear deterrent\ncannot be increased, since it\nis all-destructive already.\nThey said Canada's acquisition of nuclear weapons would\nmerely expand the nuclear\nclub.\nThis, they maintained, was\na grave peril, because the\ndanger of nuclear war would\nbe greatly increased by such\nan expansion.\n* * *\nOpposed to this stand was\nstudent Tom D'Aquino, who\nmaintained that Canadians\nCornerte Beauty\nSalon\nSpecial Prices for UBC\n\"Individual Attention\" by\nMale and Female Stylists.\nOPEN FRI TILL NINE\n4531 W. 10 CA 4-7440\nReflecting your\nown good taste is\nthis stunning new\nKitten short-sleeved\n\"Twenty-One\"\nOrion cardigan with\nperfectly matching\nOrion Wevenit fully\nseat-lined skirt!\nMany, many new\nstyles and colours\nin this wonderful\nfibre. Sweater, 34-42\n...$S.98, skirt, 8-20\n...$14.98. At better\nfashion\nstores everywhere.\nGLENAYR\nit is not a genuine KITTEN!\nmust not compromise their\nway of life and that, according to expert opinion, nuclear\npower on either side was not\nyet absolute and a clear victory could actually be achieved. In order to negotiate an\neffective disarmament program, Canada must be in a\nstrong military position, he\nsaid.\nJohn Grant, a service officer, supported D'Aquino's arguments with military facts\nupon which he based his conclusion that Canadian troops\nin Europe must have nuclear\ntactical weapons in order to\ncope with the Russian superiority in conventional weapons.\nOnly this would make the\ndeterrent effective, he said.\nThe seminar participants rejected the proposal that Canada should accept nuclear\nweapons.\nDR.\nJOHN CONWAY\n. Canada leads\nSix winners await\nNFCUS verdict\nUBC winners in the National\nFederation of Canadian University Students literary contest\nwere announced by the Department of English.\nThe UBC winners will be forwarded to the national NFCUS\noffice for judging.\nThe winners are: short stories,\nRobert L. Hogg, Gladys Hind-\nmarch and Daphne Buckle.\nPoems: Lionel Kerns. Frank\nDavey and David Dawson.\nThe judges decided the essay\nentries did not reach a standard\nsufficiently high, therefore none\nwere chosen.\nEntries can be reclaimed from\nthe NFCUS office in Brock extension.\nRental Service\nTUXEDOS\nBlack.Suits, Formals,\nCostumes, Make-up\nSpecial Student Rates\nNew York\nCostume Salon\n4397 W. 10th CA 4-0034\nNear UBC Gates\nFort\nSTUDYING\nCamp! 1\nTOO HARD? I\nKEEP ASPIRIN WITH YOU\nAT ALL TIMES\n-\nASPIRINS!\nUNIVERSITY PHARMACY\nLTD.\n5754 U\nniversity Boulevard .\nCA. 4-3202\nIWUM AmuuicH HO. PMkiw Meeirie Sfcwrt \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Taj* Bwoftfcrc\u00C2\u00BBKs!ofin\u00C2\u00BB EjuJpmmt \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 hlirammunkalim Sydmt \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Souirf Systaw \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 &r !Wfc\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00ABW8\u00C2\u00ABi\nNew.. .Philips Battery Tape Recorder\nSmall Wonder -with a Big Voice\nHere's a Teally new recorder that goes\nwhere the fun is and brings it back\nalive. It records and plays back anywhere, anytime because its all-transistor\ncircuit, is powered by\nPush a button and you're in record or\nplayback position ... in the car, at the\nski lodge, in the concert hall or the jara\nloft. See and hear the Continental '10$\nnow at your Philips.\ncircuit is powered oy , . , , 41 . . -. _ \"\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB \u00C2\u00AB*\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 J\"\"1 * \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB*\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB.\n'lashttfht batteries. BXld it S Only *144.yO tape recorder dealer. Thursday, March I, 1962\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 7\n\u00C2\u00A3pwttifht\nBy OWEN RICKER\nThe Gateway\nDoes Canada want big-time\ncollege sports?\nFrank Clair, coach of Ottawa\nRough Riders has suggested in\nWeekend Magazine that more\nCanadian football players\nwould be produced if high\nschool coaches (and presumably this could be carried over\nto college ones) were paid for\ntheir services. Then, he argues,\ncompetent men would have incentive to seek coaching positions and to put more effort\ninto the work once they had\nsecured the job.\n~k -k k\nLet us examine the result on\na college level, using football\nas an example. A hired coach,\nbe it in professional, intercollegiate, or high school ranks, is\np&id to do a job. That is, he is\nexpected to win football games.\n;lt is sad, but true, that when\nit; loses, the coach is blamed,\naijd, more often than not, canned.\nIn an attempt to win football games, three things are involved: finding good players,\npersuading them to attend your\nuniversity, and teaching them\nhow to play winning football.\nThe first of these involves\na scouting system \u00E2\u0080\u0094 either full\ntime (paid, of course), or some\ntype of monetary reward to\nhigh school coaches for sending players your way.\nThe second is solved by Clair.\nHe suggests athletic scholarships are a good thing. He\nclaims academic standards for\nsuch awards have been stiffened in many schools. The cost,\naccording to the Ottawa coach,\nwould be more than met by\ngate receipts.\n* * *\nTwo problems arise here.\nFirsjt, consciously or otherwise,\nthe scholarship player is expected to produce and live up\nto his scholarship. Second,\nsomeone has to encourage fan\nsupport to get the gate receipts.\nAnother paid position appears.\nIn order to teach winning\nfootball, a . win*\u00C2\u00AB'-eJse attitude\nmust be engendered in the players, lest the coach lose his job.\nPractice is apeauired\u00E2\u0080\u0094lots of it.\nThis detracts fisom study time.\nAll of which..brings us to the\n\" function of athletics at an institution of higher learning. It\nseems to this corner that athletic competition has an important function for both the\nparticipant and the spectator;\nhowever, it must not jet out of\nproportion when compared to\nthe academic aspect.\n* ' * *\nBut what has Clair created?\nIt would follow that football\nnow becomes all-important \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nfrom the point of view of the\ncoach, to win and save his job;\nfrom the point of view of the\nplayers, to earn their scholarships, and frem the point of\nview of the administration, to\nsell football tickets in order to\npay the first two groups.\nWAA elections open\nNominations for Vice - President, Secretary and Treasurer\non the Women's Athletic Association close on Monday, March\n5, at 4 p.m.\nNominations should be signed\nby 10 women and given to Miss\nArlene Syverson, Returning Officer, Women's Athletic Association Office, Women's Gym.\nElection of officers will be at\nthe annual WAA general meeting Thursday, March 8.\nBut what ever became of Free Parking?\nUBC athletes extend monopoly\nBack east, they have monopoly marathons between colleges. They play them with\ncards, paper money, and a\nmulti-colored board.\nOut west, there's a monopoly marathon going on in the\nWestern Canadian Intercollegiate Athletic Union, and the\nUniversity of B.C., is way\nout in front.\nAt the WCIAU championships which ended Tuesday,\nUBC athletes won four more\nchampionships \u00E2\u0080\u0094 in curling,\nspeed swimming, badminton,\nand fencing.\nUBC teams have already\nwon football, swimming, bas\nketball, golf, and mens and\nwomen's tennis championships. .\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\"*\nThe men's volleyball and\nwrestling teams travel to the\nPrairies this weekend in\nsearch of two more titles.\nThe men's fencing team won\nits championship, while the\nwomen were a close third. But\nin the combined standings,\nUBC had 12 points, compared\nto the University of Saskatchewan's ten and nine for Alberta.\nPeter Roller won all \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 five\nof his matches to lead UBC.\nJack Arnet's curlers defeated Doug Grant of Alberta 9-4\nin the finals to win the curling championship for the\nthird straight year. All three\nyears, it has been Arnet's rink\nwhich has defeated the Prairies, supposedly the hotbed of\ncurling.\nUBC was undefeated in the\nround-robin event. Arnet earlier defeated the UAC rink\n10-7.\nThe women's speed swimmers won eight races, setting\nleague records in four of them,\nwhile walking away in that\nsport.\nUBC's Susan Elliott swam\nthe 100-yard freestyle in 59.4\nseconds, more than seven full\nseconds better than the old\nmark. She also won the 50-\nyard butterfly in record time.\nAlice Genge set records in\nthe 50 freestyle and the 100\nindividual medley.\nIn badminton, UBC again\ntopped the combined men's\nand women's standings with\n16 points, four better than\nsecond-place Manitoba.\nUBC's Bruce Rollock won\nthe men's singles and teamed\nup with Linda Keil to win the\nmixed doubles. Keith Tolman\nand Gord Wansley won the\nMen's doubles.\nUBC women's teams were\nsecond to Alberta in both the\nvolleyball and synchronized\nswimming events.\nBears take\n13 point\nrugby lead\nBy GLENN SCHULTZ |\nThe university of California\nGolden Bears took their second\nstraight upset victory in the\nWorld Cup rugby series Mon- i\nday, defeating UBC Thunder-]\nbirds 16-9\nThe Birds went to Berkley as\nsolid favorites to take both\ngames of the two-game series.\nSaturday, Birds were beaten\n9-3. The final two games of the\nseries will be played Mar. 29\nand 31 at UBC.\nMonday's game was highlighted by rough and aggressive\nAmerican football-type play\nwhich surprised the UBC 15.\nAfter taking a 9-0 lead, the\nBirds fell victim to tre - Bears\nwho scored 16 unanswered\npoints.\nBLACK SCORES\nUBC opened the scoring at\nthe seven minute mark when\nPeter Black completed a 16-yard\npassing' rush for three points.\nThe convert was missed. Five\nminutes later, Birds' Neal Henderson booted a 20-yard penalty\nkick for a 6-0 lead.\nUC1A Wednesday defeated the\n'Birds 6-3 in L.A.\nThe Birds looked like defending champions after eight minutes in the second half when\nFred Sturrock added another\nthree points to UBC's score.\nAgain, the convert was missed.\nThen the roof fell in on the\nBirds. Fred Tummler scored\nCal's first try. A few minutes\nlater, Rudy Carvalhal picked up\na Cal rump kick and rambled 16\nyards for a try to reduce UBC's\nlead to 9-6.\nBEARS PRESS\nBeat's kept on pressing and\nwith seven minutes remaining,\nTom Burke fell on a UBC fumble over the goal line. Along\nwith Brian Reid's conversion\nthe Bears took an 11-9 lead.\nIn the remaining minutes of\nthe game Pete Olson's four yard\ndash consolidated the win for\nthe Bears.\nThe two wins gave the Bears\na 13-point lead going into the\nthird game of the series at UBC\nstadium, March 29.\nTWO INJURED\nUBC players were placed on\nthe injury list after Monday's\ngame. Fullback Bruce McCal-\nlum received a broken jaw\nwhile Fred Sturrock had to be\ntaken to hospital after being\nshaken up.\n\"CHESTY\" WALKER\n. . . headlines banquet\nWalker heads\n'62 athletic\nawards dinner\nHarold \"Chesty\" Walker\nwill be the guest speaker at\nthe annual Big Block Club\nawards banquet Wednesday at\nthe Bayshore Inn.\nWalker, backfield coach of\nthe University of Washington\nfootball team, has been nicknamed \"the winningest coach\nin Texas.\"\nHis high school teams won\n173 games while losing only\n24 before he came to the Huskies in 1957.\n* *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\nThe annual banquet features the presentation of athletic awards and the announcement of the winner of the\nBobby Gaul trophy, given to\nthe university's outstanding\nathlete of the year.\nBasketball all-star Ken\nWinslade won the award last\nyear.\nMore than 100 athletes are\nexpected to be honored with\nblocks and pins.\n*P *r* rp\nThe banquet is open to the\npublic. Tickets can be obtained for $4 from managers,\nteam captains, or from the\nathletic office in Memorial\ngym.\nBirds think Hamber's\ntheir cup of hockey\nBy GORGE BAILTON\nThe UBC Thunderbird hockey\nteam makes its bid for the Ham-\nber Cup in a two-game series\nwith the Alberta Golden Bears\nthis weekend.\nBirds, who have improved\ngreatly since the start of the\nseason, play Alberta Friday\nnight in Chilliwack and Saturday night in the North Shore\nWinter Club. Both games begin\nat 8 p.m.\nSTRONG DEFENCE\nUBC coach Father David\nBauer has built the team around\na strong defensive unit. Birds\ndon't seem able to mount a sustained offensive but are capable\nof holding their own in their end\nof the ice.\nBirds strength lies in the fore-\nchecking of the first string forward line of Peter Kelly, Bob\nParker and Mike Smith.\nBirds were defeated twice on\nthe prairies by the Golden Bears.\nThey lost the first game 13-2,\nbut after a line-up shuffle lost\nonly 4-2 the second night.\nThe Bears are leading the\nWestern Intercollegiate Le-gtie\nand a win this weekend will assure them of the championship.\nAWARDED ANNUALLY\nThe Hamber Cup is awarded\nto the annual winner of a two-\ngame total-point series between\nUBC and U. of A.\nUBC won the Cup in the first\nseries in 1950 but have never\nbeen near it since then. Alberta\nwon last year's two-game series\n23-6.\nBirds' Tom Skupa will miss\nFriday's game in favor of Mus-\nsoc's performance of \"Once upon\na Mattress,\" in which he is a\nchorus member.\nWAS MY BUSINESS\nHis alias: \"Dr. Moriarty.\" His job:\ndreaming up fiendish plots for U.S.\nspies. After 20 years of silence,\nStanley Lovell reveals the true\nstory of hjs adventures in the\nO.S.S. In this week's Post, he tells\nabout the \"Hedy Lamarr\"~a device that panicked a roomful of\ngenerals. About a devilish weapon\nfor wrecking Nazi supply trains.\nAnd about a \"mistake\" that might\nhave blown up the White House.\nThe Saturday-Evening\n. UAftCH 3'.5\u00C2\u00AB&.18\u00C2\u00BBU^ NOWCN^tAlE.v\nFOR\nTHAT\nSMART\nLOOK\nIN\nGLASSES\nLOOK\nTO\nPtesclibtioH Optical\nWe use genuine CORECTAL lenses\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 clear from edge to edge \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"Ask Your Doctor\"\nContact Lenses \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Zenith Hearing Aids\nSpecial Discounts to Students Page 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, March 1, 1962\nJween classes\nMattress bounces back\nMUSSOC\n\"Once Upon a Mattress\" held\nover Friday evening at 8:15 in\nUBC Auditorium. Tickets at\nAMS and door.\nk k k\nRED CROSS CLUB\nMr. W. B. Johnson will give a\nlecture entitled \"African Odyssey\" and show his own film on\nthe Sudan and Congo, noon today in Bu. 100.\n* * *\nFOLK SONG SOC\nPresents Barry Hall and his\nbanjo in Bu. 106 at noon. Members free, others 10 cents.\n* * *\nSCM\nLecture by W. B. Glenesk on\n\"The Experience of Estrangement\" as it pertains to Tennesee\nWilliam's \"Streetcar Named Desire\" F&G 100 noon today.\n* * *\nALLIANCE RRANCAISE\nElections of officers noon today in regular place.\n* * *\nWRITER'S WORKSHOP\nMeeting tonight 3591 W. 11\nMSS in Bu. 171,-\nPositions ^>pen dri\nBrock committee\n* Applications are now being\nreceived for positions on the\nBrock Management Committee\nfor 1962-63. Nine positions are\navailable. Reply on or before\nFriday, March 2, to Bernie\nPapke, co-ordinator of activities-\nelect, Box 131, Brock Hall, stating name, phone, address, faculty, year, reason for applying\nand pertinent experience.\nGfflfSCANBEGOODPlTQHERS\n-SrWS WHfTEY FORD ;i -S&\nLast year, Whitey Ford won 25\ngafflesftr the Yankees. Yet he still\ninsists itstesn't take brains to be\na whirring pitcher. In this week's\nPost,' Wfcrtey tetts why one Dodger\npitcher with plenty of-brains never\nmade the grade. Tells how he handles M Kaline, Rocky Colavito, Jim\nGentile and otter top sluggers.\nAnd says why the beanball isn't as\ndangerous as if s cracked up to be.\nThe Saturday Evening\n^ irwr\\ni\u00C2\u00ABAIICH 3. I9ej ISSUE NOW OU t\u00C2\u00BBt*_i]\nUPPER\nTENTH\nBARBERS\n4574 W. 10th AVE.\nOne Block Past the Gates\nFeaturing European Trained\nBarbers\n(LEARN RUSSIAN\nRecorded language course on\nfour 10\" 33 1/3 rpm. Complete set $10.95 includes\nmanual and Polapova textbook.\nOutline History of the U.S.S.R. with maps from antiquity\nto the present, $3.00 Mail orders accepted on these items.\nWrite for a free copy of the\nBulletin describing the activities of the Association.\nCanada-USSR Association\n46 Avenue Road, Toronto 5\nNDP\nFilm of student demonstration\nagainst House of Unamerican\nActivities in San Francisco. \"Operation Abolition\" Eyewitness\nDr. Lyman will describe actual\nevents. Thurs. noon in Auditorium. Adm. 25 cents.\nk k k\nSPOETS CAR CLUB\nFeature film, \"The Racers\" to\nbe shown today at noon in Chem\n250.\n* \u00E2\u0096\u00A0* IRTISH\nA poetry reading by TISH\npoets in Bu. 104 at noon today.\nk k k\nVCF\nAnnual general meeting with\nelection of officers noon today\nin Arts 100. All members ovit.\nk k k\nCAMERA CLUB\nTwo color slide shows from\nBen-Hout Tout Salon Exhibition\nFriday noon and evening in Bu.\n100.\n* * *\nJR. CHEM. CLUB\nDr. Stweart speaks on \"Aspects of Modern Physical Organic Chemistry\" noon tomorrow in Chem. 250.\nHAMSOC\nLectures continue this noon in\nBu. 219.\nk X *\nLEGION CUP DEBATE\nFriday the New Democratic\nParty vs Phi Gamma Delta in\nBuchanan 2238 and Psi Upsilon\nvs Alpha Gamma Delta in Bu-\n205.\n* * *\nNISEI VARSITY\nGeneral meeting and election\nof officers for next year. Noon\ntoday in Bu. 205.\n$33,000 grant given\nfor paper research\nA two-year grant of $33,000\nhas been awarded to Dr. G. G. S.\nDutton, associate professor of\nchemistry at the university, by\nthe Institute of Paper Chemistry, Appleton, Wisconsin.\nThe award, known as a pioneering research grant, will enable a team headed by Dr. Dutton to continue an investigation\ninto the chemical composition of\nwood as it affects the making of\npaper and rayon.\nOpen political meetings\nbanned at U of Arizona\nALBPQUERQUE, New Mexico (CUP/UPS)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Students at the University of Arizona have been forbidden to\nhold public political meetings. The executive vice-president of the university made the ruling.\nStudents were encouraged to discuss political issues,\nbut were not to allow the public or the press, including\nthe student newspaper, The Wildcat, to attend such meetings.\nThe ruling was based on a 1956 Board of Regents' ruling. No reason was given as to why student political meetings should not be public knowledge.\nGIRLS!\nNeed a Coat?\nThe\nHighland\nHouse\nWinter Coats from 72.50 to 230.00\nShow AMS Card for up to 40% off\n114 Oakridge Shopping Centre\nAM 1-2646\nWITH\nCANADIAN CHEMICAL\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nThis advertisement will be of most interest to graduates in chemistry,\nchemical, mechanical and electrical engineering and engineering physics.\nWhat interests you most about a career? Opportunity\nshould. Opportunity not only for advancement, but\nopportunity for professional growth through varied\nand interesting experience. We fina^ feefevfii ia diversified experiences-and, luckily, we can offer it in our fully\nintegrated operation. We find it's best for you (makes\nlife more interesting and provides greater opportunity)\nand best for us (we end up with senior people who are\nfully experienced in our business). Now, let's have a\ncrack at answering some of your questions.\nWhat do we do? Canadian Chemical Company produces\nbasic organic chemicals, cellulose acetate flake and\nacetate yarns, fibres and staple.\nWhere do we do it? At Edmonton. We have three plants\non a 430 acre site. The first produces chemicals-\nalcohol, ester and ketone solvents, acetic acid, glycols,\npentaerythritol, formaldehyde and other organics. The\nsecond produces cellulose acetate flake. The third, acetate and Arnel yarns and fibres.\nSales offices are located in Montreal, Toronto and\nVancouver.\nWhat is our future? Very bright. (It just happens to be\ntrue.) We think \"of ourselves as a young, progressive,\nfast-growing Canadian firm with World-wide affiliations. The record bears this out. So does the operation\nof our Edmonton plant. And the fact that our engineering department is one of the largest and most diversified\nin Canada.\nOur raw materials are basic Canadian natural resources:\npetroleum by-products from Alberta and cellulose from\nthe forests of British Columbia. Our markets are worldwide, and through our affiliates we have a strong alliance With companies in the textile, chemical and\nplastics industries.\nWhat would you do? As a qualified chemist or engineer\nyou could be working onproduct development, research,\nprocess engineering, plant design, construction or some\naspect of production. This is exciting work in many\ncompletely new fields. As a chemist or chemical engineer\nyou could choose also a career in sales or technical service.\nWhat else should you know about us? Lots more. You\ncan get more information and literature by writing to.\nDepartment \"A\" at 1600 Dorchester Blvd. West,\nMontreal 25, Quebec. Or to the Personnel Department,\nCanadian Chemical Company, Limited, P.O. Box 99,\nEdmonton, Alberta.\nCANADIAN CHEMICAL COMPANY, LIMITED\nMONTREAL \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 TORONTO \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 EDMONTON \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 VANCOUVER\nG*.\n9J&\u00E2\u0082\u00AC00C\u00E2\u0082\u00AC&\n\u00C2\u00AE\nPETROCHEMICALS"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1962_03_01"@en . "10.14288/1.0125563"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : 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 . ""@en .