"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-05"@en . "1962-01-04"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0125564/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " we us vssey\ncoy Ed n't\nbe\ndone\nVol. XUV\nVANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, JANUARY 4, 1962\nNew Year, 1962\nUBYSSEY WINS TOP\nNEWSPAPER AWARD\nEditor elected\nCUP president\nThe Ubyssey has been named the best university paper\nin annual Canadian University Press awards.\nFor the first time in its 43-\nette of McMaster University, and\nthe Georgian of Sir George Williams University.\nLe Droit Trophy for general\nexcellence among French language papers was awarded to Le\nCarabin, published at Laval Uni:\nversity.\nThe Bracken Trophy for editorial excellence was also awarded to Le Carabin, with the Mani-\ntoban, of the University of Manitoba second.\nThe Dr. N. A. M. MacKenzie\nTrophy for feature writing was\nawarded to the Gateway.\n'f*\"fi#i''\nAT LAST-AFTER 43 YEARS\nFOUR OF THE UBC's so-called brainstrust gloat over the Southern trophy for general excellence won by the paper for the first time in its 43-year history. Left to right, they are: Denis\nStanley, managing editor; Fred Fletcher, news editor and former editor-in-chief; Keith Bradbury, city editor; Roger McAfee, present editor-in-chief.\nAdministration uses $100,000 gift\nas part of own winter arena grant\nBy PAT HORROBIN\nSenator H. M. Molson and his\nbrother Thomas of the Molson\nbrewing company have donated\n$100,000 towards the construction of a winter sports arena at\nUBC.\nBut, according to administration officials, the grant will\nmake no difference to the total\nvalue of the arena, which has\nbeen set at $500,000.\nThe $100,000 will merely be\nused as part of the administration's pledge, The Ubyssey learned Wednesday.\nWhen announced in mid-December of last year, the private\ngift was assumed to be a no-\nstrings addition to the $250,000\nalready pledged by the University and the equal sum promised\nby the student body. This would\nhave brought the fund up to\n$600,000.\nHowever, Dean E. D. Mac-\nPhee said: \"The $100,000 was\nmerely earmarked in respect of\nthe wishes of the donor.\" The\nMolson money does not represent, for the arena, any tangible\nincrease, Dean MacPhee admitted. The university began plans\na year ago with the $500,000\npromised and with \"no inkling\nof the Senator's gift\".\nBut Phillips, athletic director,\nappeared taken aback when the\nrumour of the sizeable arena-\nfund cut was continued by The\nUbyssey. He said it was out of\nhis hands, being purely a matter\nof finance. I\nEarlier P h il 1 i p s, the new I\narena's activities director, had I\ndeclined to say personally if it!\nwas possible to get a first-class\nbuilding with the then-assumed\n$600,000 fund.\n\"The architects say it is,\" he\noffered as answer.\nThe only thing certain about\nthe arena today is the money\nsaid to be coming its way.\nNo plans will be forwarded\nto student council for Monday's\nmeeting as hoped for. \"Dean\nMatthews (pharmacy) is back\nContinued on page 3\nSee 'SPORTS ARENA'\nyear history the paper was\nawarded the Southam Trophy\nlor \"general excellence\" in English language papers publishing\ntwo or more issues per week.\nThe Ubyssey will share the\ntrophy with the Varsity of the\nUniversity of Toronto, which\ntied for first place in the judging.\nJudges were B: T. Richardson,\nof the Toronto Telegram and\nAndrew Snaddon, of the Calgary\nHerald.\nTOP MARKS\nIn scoring for the award, the\nUbyssey received top marks for\npage layout and sports reporti-\ning. One judge gave the paper\ntop marks for its news reporting.\nThe Ubyssey came close to\nwinning the trophy in 1953 when\ntwo of three judges chose the\npaper as best in Canada, but a\nmailing mix-up resulted in the\nthird judge not scoring the\npaper.\nSaid editor Roger McAfee:'\n\"Despite the interference we\nhave had on occasion from gov:\nernmental bodies, we have been\nable to formulate a sound newspaper policy.\"\nSECONDS TIE\nThe University of Alberta's!\nGateway and Ryerson Institute's\nRyersonian tied tor second, in\nSoutham judging, and the University of Western Ontario's\nGazette placed third.\nAnother two-way tie developed\nin competition for the Jacques\nBureau Trophy for excellence\namong English language papers-\nissued less than twice weekly.\nThe winners were the Silhou-\nELECTED NATIONAL president\nof Canadian University Press\nwas Roger McAfee, editor-in-\nchief of The Ubyssey- Story,\nwith news of other officers\nelected at last week's national conference, is on page 3.\nSee ROGER McAFEE.\nFor MacKenzie residence\nFort Camp protests playing field loss\nFort Camp doesn't want to\nsacrifice its playing field for\nretiring president Dr. Norman MacKenzie's residence.\nAnd the committee of residence dons and faculty advisors agree that the residence should be built elsewhere.\nA spokesman for Fort Camp\nCouncil said, \"If the residence\nis built there, every time we\nkick a convert, \"we'll have\nto enter the president's garden\nfor tea before we retrieve the\nball.\"\nA permanent home on campus for retired presidents was\nthe idea^of Dr. Leon Koerner\nwho heard of a similar plan at\nPrinceton University.\nThe playing field where it\nis planned the residence will\nbe built is situated north of the\nHome Management house on\nMarine Drive.\nThe building of the house,\npreviously a campus secret,\nSee picture, page 4\nwas to have started during the\nChristmas holidays.\nThis would have established\n\"possession rights\" on the\nplaying field with as little publicity as possible.\nHowever, late last term,\nbuilding stakes were discovered by Fort Camp residents\nwho notified Fort Camp Council.\nThe council started an investigation.\nPrior to the discovery, Housing Director, John Harr, and\nthe Information Office denied\nknowledge of the project.\nCouncillors said they fail to\nsee that the loss of their playing field is necesssary.\n\"The nearest playing field\nis behind the stadium, ten to\nfifteen minutes from camp,\"\nsaid one Fort Camp spokesman.\n\"The loss of our playing field\nmay result in an excess of\npanty-raids in the spring.\"\nThe building of the house\nwill be financed by the Leon\nand Thea Koerner Foundation.\nStakes for a second building,\nrumoured to be a \"Chancellory\", have been found in the\ncommon block area.\nNeither Buildings and\nGrounds nor the Information\nOffice will comment on the\nreason for the new stakes. Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, January 4, 1962-\nTHE UBYSSEY\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 SoeieLy. University of H.C. Editorial\nopinions expressed are those of the Editor of The Ubyssey and not\nnecessarily those of the Alma Hater Society or the University of 15.U.\nEdiior-in-Chie\u00C2\u00A3: Roger McAfee\nManaging Editor Denis Stanley\nAssociate Editor Ann Pickard\nNews Editor Fred Fletcher\nCity Editor Keith Bradbury\nCUP Editor . . . . . . . . Bob Hendrickson\nPhotography Editor Don Hume\nSenior Editor Sharon Rodney\nSports Editor Mike Hunter\nPhotography Manager Byron Hender\nCritics Editor David Bromige\nSTAFF THIS ISSUE\nLayout: Bob McDonald\nREPORTERS: Chris Fahrni, George Railton, Pat Hor-\nrobin, Joy Holding, Krishna Sahay, Richard Simeon,\nBob Cannon, Don Malins, Ian Cameron.\nSPORTS: Deskman, Bill Willson; and Glenn Shultz, Ron\nKydd, Bert MacKinnon.\nTECHNICAL: Maureen Covell, Don Hume.\nKeeping with policy\nIn keeping with Ubyssey policy of giving credit where\nit is due, the editor-in-chief of The Ubyssey would like to\nthank the editors and staffers who made our victory in this\nyear's Southam Trophy Competition possible.\nFor more than two years we have been working to bring\nthis campus the best newspaper possible. In some ways we\nhave failed, but in most ways we feel we have succeeded. The\nwinning of the Southam Trophy for general newspaper excellence is, we feel, a vote of confidence in what we have been\ntrying to do. This vote comes from some of Canada's most\nsuccessful and competent newspaper men \u00E2\u0080\u0094 men who know\nwhat they are talking about.\nWe have been lacking in certain areas of our coverage.\nFeature material has been scanty and some editorials have\nlacked the polish and research, they could have had. However, we always looked on our jobs as dispensing news and\nhav6 treatid H *s the most important aspect of our operation.\nUnlftriufiitfeiyV sf>ace does not permit us to print all the news,\nbut we have dene our best.\nOar thanks to th*> following staff members:\nEDITORS PHOTO\nDenis Stanley George Fielder\nFreTf ftetehe* Barry Joe\nKeifli Bradbury Le* Pal\nMike Hunter Ted Ross\nAnn Pickard Bob Flick\nSharon Rodney Mary Thomson\nDon Huttie Lynne Nixon\nBob Hendrickson Adrian Tanner\nByron Hender Cliff Arrowsmith\nDave Bromige \u00C2\u00A3im Kope\nTom Symans\nNEWS Clint Pulley\nKen Warren TECHNICAL\nPatHorrobin Bob McDonald\nGeorge Railton Fred Jones\nJoy Holding Maureen Covell\nMike Grenby Brenda Van Snellenberg\nBob Cannon Pauline Fisher\nKrishna Sahay Kitty Watt\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E., \u00E2\u0080\u009E Beatrice Wong\nMike Horsey Donna Morris\nEric Wilson , Chuck Bishop\nSharon McKintiOn Nancy Roberts\nIan Cameron SPORTS\nNicky Phillips Bill Wilson\nJudy Richardson Chris Fahrni\nDoug Sheffield Glenn Schultz\nMarg Gow *** MacKinnon\n~T. i rvn j. R\u00C2\u00B0n Kydd\nNick Gilbert ^\nDon Malins C.U.P.\nTim Padmore Ruth Tate\n_,. , , 0. Ian Brown\nRichard Simeon Brian Turnbull\nPeter Penz Gail Neff\nPat Hopkins CRITICS\nTommy Dyck Bm ^^\nJack Ornstem Peter Morris\nLloyd Drake George Bowering\nJanet RameyN Mike Matthews\nJoan Callow THE PRINTERS\nRampant apathy\nBy JOE MUCH\n(Reprinted from Salem, Oregon\nCapital-Journal, November 6,\n1961.)\nJoe Much is Sports Editor\nof the Capital-Journal, and was\nin Vancouver covering the football game between the Willamette University Bearcats and\nihe UBC Thunderbirds.\n\"College sports, they say, are\nlagging pitifully in the race for\nspace in California journals. A\nsurfeit of professional productions has been the bane of collegiate impresarios the length\nand breadth of the Golden State\nthese days.\nBut, take it from me, they\ndon't know what apathy can\nbe until they've seen the Canadian Press at work.\nTake the case of the University of British Columbia, for example. Here is an institution of\n13,000 undergraduates and\nsome 700 \" pedagogues. It conducts a vigorous varied and entertaining athletic programme\nranging from grass hockey to\ncurling to fair country football.\nThe UBC Thunderbirds, obliged to master the intricacies\nof both Canadian and American\nstyle football in order to fill a\nschedule, had just mopped up\nthe Western Canada Conference\non the occasion of Willamett's\nvisit last S a t u r d ay. Coach\nFrank Gnup's hardy lads had\nwon four, lost two games to\nstateside squads, and tied one.\nThey operated an imaginative offense described by Gnup\nas \"halfway between a slingshot and a shotgun\", and numbered some highly adept athletes in their number.\nWhat's more, every last one\nof the Thunderbirds is a native\nCanuck in contrast to Dominion\npro teams laced almost exclusively with Yankee sinew.\nAnd Vancouver press could\nhardly care less.\nODE TO A BARE FOOT\nOn the day before the UBC-\nWilliamette contest, Vancouver's afternoon journal tucked\naway its advance story at the\nbottom of the second sports\npage. Substantially more space\nand display was devoted to an\nupcoming Monday game of so-\ncalled junior football, a sort of\nsemi-professional thing, involving a local team known as the\nMeralomas.\nOn game day, the morning\npaper filled nearly three sports\npages before finding room to\nmention the afternoon's collegiate offering.\nIn both cases, stories were\nhinged on the relatively insignificant intelligence that WU's\nTommy Lee kicked \"converts\"\nsans shoes. The impression was\nleft that were Lee afflicted\nwith a knotted shoelace, the\ngame wouldn't be worth watching.\nParenthetically, the tough-\ntoed Hawaiian did not disappoint. He guided five of six\ntries through the sticks and successfully warded off frostbite.\nCAMPUS SPECTACULAR\nLet it be said for the Canadians that they can be just as\ncasual about their college football as the local press. They\nstayed home in droves. A city\nof some half-million souls produced fewer than 1,000 customers for the contest.\nMany of them wandered\naway once UBC had established\nitself as a likely loser.\nThose who remained behaved\nmuch in the manner of small\nchildren at a Saturday morning moyie. They roundly booed\nthe Bearcats, who emerged\nfrom their cubicle after intermission as established villains\nof the piece. And they lionized\nthe officials, who apprehended\nand punished our n'er-do-wells\nwith astonishing frequency.\nNor did the university itself\nregard this extra-curricular and\ninter-American reationship as\nanything meriting exclusivity.\nIn fact, on the same several\nacres in the middle of an extensive campus, four other contests were competing vigorously and simultaneously for attention.\nFrom a vantage point in the\npress box, one could watch\nsnatches of a \"rugger match to\nthe east, a soccer game to the\nnorth and two grass hockey\nscrambles to the west. It was\nJACK ORNSTEIN\nI've rung the new year in\nby pulling a cord to ring the\nbell to summon my nurse in\nthe hospital. And I've smoked\nand reflected my way through\nseveral other new year's eves\nin such places as: the Winnipeg\npeg YMCA\u00E2\u0080\u0094alone: the kitchen\nat home\u00E2\u0080\u0094dateless: the den at\nhome \u00E2\u0080\u0094 pie-eyed and dateless:\nunpacking at home\u00E2\u0080\u0094dateless,\nun-pie-eyed and alone . . . God!\nBut this new year's eve was\ngoing to be different. I was determined to get a date and go\nto a party and get pie-eyed and\nkiss in the new year. So here's\nwhat happened.\nI'd heard that A and B (a\nmarried couple \u00E2\u0080\u0094 initials\nchanged to avoid a lawsuit)\nwere going to have an open (a\nwide open) party. Being civilized I thought it only proper\nto ask the host if he'd mind if\nmyself and date came to his\n'open' party. I backed away\nblushing and bowing as he 1)\nfailed to recognize me, 2) informed me that \"it's only a\nsmall gathering of FRIENDS\"\nand 3) looked through, behind\nand above me but not at me\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nor so it seemed.\nWell, there are lots of parties\non New Year's Eve so I gave it\nup with a shrug of the shoulder. I made the mistake, how\never, of telling Lafty (who always needs a shave) about the\nabove little incident.\nNow Lafty is a great guy and\nhe thinks I am too so HE goes\nto A and B and tells them I'm\na great guy and they should\nwelcome me. He wastes no\ntime in phoning me and assuring me that everything's all\nfixed up and I should go to A\nand B's new year's party and\nI'd be welcome and Happy\nNew Year Jack in case I\nshouldn't see you, etc. etc.\nComes new year's eve. Susan, my lucky date, and I and\nSeagrams and Adams (we doubled) plow into A and B's and\nlo and behold . . . the party IS\nonly a small gathering of\nfriends ... so I mumble inanities about Lafty (that idiot!)\netc., I try to open the door behind me with my left hipbone\nand I feel like one of those pennies that's been run over by a\ntrain ... a big black one.\nBut this story has a happy\nending. Judy (who lives above\nA and B) opened those wonderful arms of hers and we all welcomed the new year with Italian folk songs and a delicious\npizza, and a kiss.\nAnyone knowing the whereabouts of a yolt named Lafty\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nHappy New Year!\nsomething of a sports spectacular with a traveling audience.\nIt can be report-ed here, however, that if newspapers are\nuniformly nonchalant about\nUBC football, the game has\nbeen discovered by the great\nCyclopean monster. This contest was filmed by television\ncameras for replay Sunday\nafternoon for parlor fans.\nIt would require more research than permitted in a\nweekend visit to root out the-\nreasons for press and public\napathy to college football. Certainly Vancouver and Canada\ngenerally are not unmoved by\nthe fall spectacle,\nProfessional teams of Yankee\nflavor are bobbing along sol-\nvently. Other sports are flour-'\nishing north of the border before a vivacious populace. The\npress is otherwise alive and diligent in its pursuit of sports\ncoverage.\nThe point here is merely that\nCalifornia collegiates can take ->\nheart. After all, they're not\nbucking rugger, grass hockey,\njunior football and curling.\nLetters\n'Trapped'\nEditor, *\"\nThe Ubyssey,\nDear Sir:\nOn this, the first day of the\n'62 final term, I would like to\ntake the opportunity of wishing\nall students who were caught -\nin the radar trap this morning\non Marine Drive, a very Happy\nNew Year.\n$25 shorter,\nD. A. CAMERON\nGutter-tramp\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey,\nDear Sir:\nIf the person who has been\nwriting lewd comments on the\nwalls of the Brock would make\nhimself known to me, I would\ntake great pleasure in making\nsure that he is unable to do it\nagain. If he does not have the\nguts, then I would appreciate it\nif he would stop acting like the\ngutter-tramp he must be.\nR. F.\nTraffic hazard\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey,\nDear Sir:\nThe University Gates at 10th\nand Blanca are a traffic hazard.\nCars travelling East on University Boulevard cannot see vehicles entering 10th from either\nside of Blanca. Likewise cars\ncoming off Blanca in either direction cannot see vehicles travelling eastward on University\nBoulevard.\nI realize that this is a touchy\npoblem considering the sentiment and history attached to\nthe gates. But no matter what\nsentiment may be attached to\nthese landmarks it is not worth\nendangering the lives of students and citizens of the area.\nSince the speed limit has been\nincreased to 35 m.p.h. on the\nBoulevard it further increases\nthe possiblity of accidents oc-\ncuring at this particular intersection because of the gates.\nI do not propose destruction\nof these historical markers but\nappropriate signs or signals providing for greater safety of the\nmotorist.\nGERRY KOER .Thursday, January 4, 1962\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nFrom Page 1\nSports arena grant\neast and it's impossible,\" said\nPhillips.\nThe architect's plans have already been returned to be redrawn for their first time.\n\"We may send them back four\nor five times,\" said MacPhee,\ndean of administrative and financial affairs. \"There are a lot\nof committees to go through \u00E2\u0080\u0094\na maze of committees.\"\nThe plot set aside for the arena\nis still undecided. Right next to\nthe stadium is preferred but,\nsaid Phillips, a steep slope is\nthere that would have to be built\nup. \"The architects recommend it\nbeing right by the gymnasium.\nIt's flat there.\"\nPhillips would like to see\nsauash and handball courts in\naddition to the ice rink and eight\ncurling sheets.\n\"But,\" he said, \"the width of\nthe building would have to be\nraised.\" \"A n d so would the\nprice,\" he added, sadly.\nThinking of the one-half of a\nbadly cramped rugger and soccer field to be taken away by the\nQueen's Journal\nprints open letter\nKINGSTON (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The\neditors of the Queen's Journal\nhave proposed that students\nshould consult with the university administration and give\ntheir assessment of professors.\nThey also asKed the Queen's\nadministration to consider having three terms in every year,\nso that students and staff could\nstagger their vacations and keep\nthe university's facilities in use\nall year.\nThe proposals were contained\nin a front-page editorial in the\nform of an open letter to the\nPrincipal.\nThe letter was a response to\nthe address given by Dr. James\nA. Corry on the occasion of his\ninstallation as Principal of\nQueen's.\nTaking up Dr. Corry's argument that the student must have\na standpoint from, which to take\nhis bearings, the Journal called\non professors to make clear their\nopinions on their subjects.\n\"This is the only method\nwhich can encourage students to\nhave opinions of their own,\" the\neditorial said. ''The cult of\nagnosticism, of the completely\nopen mind, tends to assimilate\nmind to an electronic memory-\nblank.\"\n] new arena, he was doleful. \"I\n! could cry,\" he mourned.\ni Albert L a i t h w a i te, rugby\nI coach, was less sentimental and\nI more practical.. \"The rugger sit-\n| uation has been critical for some\ntime, anyway. And now we have\nthe promise of one cow barn\nand a field at the Woolfson\ngrounds and another field past\nthe cow sheds.\n\"Besides,\" he said critically,\n\"the rugger field we have now\nleaks.\"\nWhenever it rains, Laithwaite's\nrugger and soccer squads have\nto evacuate. ^'Our first rugby\ngame comes up this Saturday\nand we can't practice anywhere.\" Better to cover the old\nfield with ice and gain some new\nwell-drained ones in exchange.\nUN recruits teachers\nThe United Nations training\ncenter at the University has announced that the external aid\noffice of. Canada's federal government are recruiting 100 Canadian teachers to serve in Asia\nand Africa beginning in September, 1962.\nThe principal need is for\nteachers of education (teacher\ntrainers) in mathematics and the\nsciences and for classroom\nteachers in the same subjects, for\nvocational and trade subjects,\nand for French and English as\na foreign language.\nThose selected will be paid\ntheir Canadian salary plus a post\nallowance and a bonus for each\nyear of service.\nCLASSIFIED\nWANTED \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Mixed West Van\ncarpool urgently needs driver,\nliving between 10th and 26th.\nPhone Gary at WA 2-2809.\nWANTED\u00E2\u0080\u0094A member for girls'\ncarpool who could drive one\nday a week, living around\n25th and Arbutus to 25th and\nGranville. Phone Jane, RE.\n8-7867.\nPOINT GREY\nJEWELLERS\n25% REDUCTION\nOn all Merchandise For\nUBC Students\n(S\"how Student Card)\n4435 W.lOthAve. CA 8-8718\nBIRD CALLS\nStudents with receipts must pick up their\ncopy from A.M.S. office by December 4,\n1961.\nRyerson protests\nSoutham Trophy award\nThe Ryerson, student publication of Toronto's Ryerson\nInstitute of Technology and\nhost of this year's National\nC.U.P. Conference, has protested what it calls \"trie confusion in the selection of winners\nfor the Southam Trophy.\"\nIn a letter which is apparently being sent to all C.U.P.\nmembers. The Ryersonian is\nasking for support in having\na referendum put to member\npapers, which, if passed, would\nnullify the results of this year's\nSoutham competition.\nThree UBC students\nto attend seminar\nThree UBC students are among\nthe 40 Canadian students who\nwill attend the thirteenth international seminar of World University Service Committee in\nPoland next summer.\nThey are John Currie, Arts 3,\nWendy Moir, and Bill Neilson,\nboth Law 1.\nThe group will attend orientation seminars in Montreal in\nJune then proceed by ship to\nHolland.\nThey will visit Warsaw and\nCracow and participate in a two\nweek seminar at the universities\nof Wroclaw and Poznan.\nDiscussion groups will be lead\nby Polish and Canadian faculty\nmembers.\nRoger McAfee CUP\nnational president\nRoger McAfee, editor-in-chief\nof the Ubyssey was elected National president of Canadian University Press at a Conference in\nToronto Dec. 26-29.\n\"McAfee, who has held positions as photography editor,\nmanaging editor and editor-in-\nchief, will manage the national\noffice in Ottawa for the 1961-62\nterm.\nThe national president acts as\nan executive director for the\npress union and supplies member\npapers with news releases on\nactivities at other university\ncampuses.\nDave Hill, managing editor of\nthe Queen's Journal, Kingston,\nnominated McAfee for the position. The Fulcrum, Ottawa, nominated Frank Mazari of University of Toronto to contend the\npost, but he later declined because of \"previous * committments.\"\nMazari will serve as National\nSecretary next year. Denis de\nBelieval, Editor-in-chief of Le\nCarabin, is the new National\nvice-president.\nTUXEDO\nRENTAL & SALES\n* 1O0O Garments to\nChoose from\n.* Full Dress\nm Morning- Coats\ns) Director's Coats\n* White and Blue\nCoats\na> shirts &\nAccessories\n* 10% UBC Discount\nE. A. Lee Ltd.\nOne Store Only!\n633.Howe St. Mil 3-2457\nUbyssey's Fred Fletcher, news\neditor, was elected to the post of\nWestern Regional vice-president.\nPresident of the Western Region\nis Heather Robertson of the Man-\nitoban, University of Manitoba,\nWinnipeg.\nOther Regional Officers are:\nAtlantic president, Jeannie\nCronin, Mount St. Bernard College, Antigonish, N.S.; vice-president, Ann Greer, Argosy Weekly. Mount Allison, Sackville,\nN.B.\nQuebec president, Michael\nSeiner, McGill Daily, Montreal;\nvice-president to be elected.\nOntario president, Robert\nCrown, Queen's Journal, Kingston; vice-president, Sheri Craig,\nGazette, University of Western\nOntario, London.\nARGHH!\nThe next official holiday, Good\nFriday, is more than three and\none-half months away. It falls\non April 20, nine days after the\nfinal exams have started.\nRental Service\nTUXEDOS\nSpecial Student Rates\nNew York\nCostume Salon\n4397 W. 10th Ave. CA 4-0034\nBlack Suits, Formals,\nCostumes, Make-up\nNear UBC Gates\nEmployment Opp ortunities\nwith\nMobil Oil of\" Canada, Lid\nOn\nJanuary 10, 11 and 12\nCOMPANY REPRESENTATIVES Will INTERVIEW\nGRADUATE, SENIOR AND JUNIOR YEAR STUDENT*\nINTERESTED IN CAREERS IN\nGeology\nGeophysical Engineering1\nPetroleum and Production Engineering.\nthere are openings for regular employment In all\ncategories and for summer employment in\nGeological and Geophysical Engineering.\nInterviews are being scheduled through the Personnel Office, West Mall\nMobil Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, January 4, 1962\nUBC lands\ndevelopment\nproposed\nBy CHRIS FAHRNI\nThe UBC Endowment Lands\nmay house a multi-million dollar residential development.\nThree groups, including Webb\nand Knapp (Canada) Ltd., the\nbuilders of the Brentwood Shopping Centre, are formulating\nplans for the development.\nE. R. Loftus, assistant vice-\npresident of Webb and Knapp,\nrefused to discuss the matter\nwith The Ubyssey. \"Any statement will have to come from\nLands and Forests Minister Ray\nWilliston,\" he said.\nPREVIOUS REPORT\nThe development would be in\nthe form of a townsite. A report,\nprepared in 1956 by Dr. David\nB. Turner, foresaw the development of a $20 million extensive\nresidential area.\nIt was to contain over 3,000\nsingle-home lots, 34 apartment\nblocks, five churches, four elementary schools, a 109-acre industrial area, a golf course and\npark land.\nThe Endowment Lands are\ncontrolled by the Department of\nLands, not by the university.\n\"The only connection any development will have with the\nuniversity is a mutual use of\ncertain roads and services,\"\nDean E. D. McPhee, dean of Administrative Affairs said.\nLEASES ADVOCATED\nWilliston has said that any\n\" development plans must be in\naccordance with the 1956 Turner report, which advocated the\ndisposal of land in 99-year\nleases.\nIt was estimated these leases\nwould bring the university between $2.5 million and $3 million a year in revenue.\n\"The university has not been\nthinking of these finances, and\nany discussion of them would\nhave to be negotiated between\nthe board of governors and the\nprovincial government,\" Dean\nMcPhee said.\n\"But the university would perhaps receive the payments as a'\nsubstitute for a provincial\ngrant,\" he said.\n\"The university has received\nno money from the Endowment\nLands so far,\"\nThe Endowment Land area is\n1,400 acres.\n\"We have 1 000 acres here at\nthe university,\" Dean McPhee\nsaid. \"What's put up on the\noutside of our land, we can only trust others to use good judgment.\"\nInterest increases in\noverseas aid service\nBy Canadian University Press\nOTTAWA \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Interest in service overseas appears to be growing among Canadian students\nand the main focus for this interest is the Canadian University\nService Overseas program.\nFormed last June at the National Conference of Canadian\nUniversities and Colleges annual\nmeeting in Montreal, CUSO was\nactually on planning boards before that time.\nBasically, CUSO is a means\nwhereby Canadian graduates\nwork in a foreign country helping to develop its potential and\ndeveloping their own potential\nas mature citizens.\nBENEFITS LONG RANGE\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nFor the student interested in\nan immediate well-paying job,\nCUSO is not the means to prosperity, but its long range benefits are immense. There are four\nwage plans, the conditions of\nwhich are dependent on the\ncountry of service and the posi-\nApplicants for CUSO positions\nmust be over 21 years of age. Canadian citizens by birth or naturalization, and be witling to serve\noverseas for at least two years.\nCandidates should preferably\nhave an honors degree.\n\"In addition to intellectual\nability,\" explained the spokesman, \"candidates must possess\nemotional maturity, initiative,\nresourcefulness, and be able to\nadapt themselves to new, unfamiliar and sometimes difficult environments. They must be willing to regard their overseas assignments as primarily a learning experience, and have the capacity to conduct themselves with\nhumility, understanding and restraint.\"\nMcGill to host\nbridge tourney\ni'hoto b\ Teil Kos\nTWO FORT CAMPERS assaulting stakes marking out construction area for a new home for retiring president Dr.\nNorman MacKenzie in what is now a playing field for Fort\nCamp, Objectors are*Ian Cameron, Arts I; Mike Hill, Ed. IV.\nWoman editor raises coin\non Manitoba campus\nWINNIPEG (CUP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094The right\nof an editor to express personal\nopinion in an editorial was upheld last week by the executive\nof the Manitoba Students' Union\nfollowing a dispute when the\nuniversity paper printed an editorial in favor of the NDP two\ndays prior to the model parliament election.\nThe editorial brought cries of\nrage from university Conservatives and members of both the\ncampus Liberals and Conservatives charged the editorial was\nslanted, inaccurate and ill-timed.\nIn addition, the photography\nstaff of the paper resigned because the editorial did not coincide with their political views.\nThey indicated they would stay\naway \"until The Manitoban sees\nfit to publish an apology.\"\nHowever, Manitoban editor\nHeather Robertson claimed that\neditorial policy is in the hands\nof the editor, and does \"not\nrepresent the views of staff\nU\nrr\nTHESNACKERY\n3 LOCATIONS\n3075 Granville - RE 3-5813\n4423 W. 10th Ave. CA 4-0833\n5075 Kingsway - HE 1-8818\nFREE HOT & FAST PIZZA\nDELIVERY\nMONTREAL (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The\ntion held. All of the plans pro- j Canadian intercollegiate Bridge\nvide enough on which to live\nwhile away from Canada and\npay for the cost of transportation.\nAs it stands now, Canadian\npersonnel are to be sent overseas only in response to requests\nfrom the governments of countries who have expressed a desire for them and can make effective use of their services.\nA CUSO spokesman explained\nj that in all cases, Canadians will\nwork as equals. and partners\nwith their colleague? in the country to which they are sent. \"They\nI will go, not as experts or in\n, teams, but as individuals who\nj will work at junior levels under\ni the direction of the local author\nity to which they are assigned\nand whom they will be expected\nmembers or our photographers,\nor our cartoonists.\"\nThe UMSU executive agreed, ^ .it , .,.,.,\nbut declared that the editor had to serve wlth humiHty, loyalty\nthis right, \"providing that it is and devotlon\"\nmade clear that he or she is not MATURITY NECESSARY\nattempting to speak on behalf At present the main demand is\nof all The Manitoban staff or on for teachers, engineers, doctors,\nbehalf of the Students' Union.\" and social workers in such cpun-\nIt also deplored the timing of the tries as Sarawak, North Borneo,\neditorial and the \"editorializing Singapore, Indonesia, Malaya,\nin certain recent news articles.\" India and Pakistan.\nTournament will be held at McGill University in March.\nAll Canadian universities have\nbeen invited to send as many\nteams as possible.\nThere will be two sessions of\n30 boards each in events for\nteams of four. Master points will\nbe awarded in the tournament.\nA registration fee of $1 will\nbe charged. Interested players\nshould write to J. F. Gurtin/\nRoom 502, chemistry building,\nExtension dept.\noffers new courses\nThe extension department will\nbegin 45 new night school\ncourses this month.\nCourses include a lecture series entitled, \"A Re-evaluation of\nthe Nuclear Age,\" courses in\nphilosophy, literature, music,\nand a six-week series on the\nCommon Market, and a Physical\nFitness program.\n(J&ifii^meer sbddt mmed \u00C2\u00A5aifej,\nCoustmeted abridge of great beca^j.\nBut a reelfa yomig wm\nJhwe Ms ear on\nJoum, came car,\nton, came Meuity\nPenny-wise and dollar-wise,\nThe student who would like to rise, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nWill use this saving stratagem\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nA hit each week in the B of M!\nW BANH'\nit'. .m-jeit cm/onus\nII Bank of Montreal5\n11. . <^*\u00C2\u00AB*\u00C2\u00AB&w \"r&ttt &a*& jo* Student*\n\"^The Bank wheire Students' accounts are warmly welcomed Thursday, January 4, 1962\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nChristmas grim in East Berlin\nBy BRUCE FRASER\nUbyssey Correspondent\n(Eraser and five other ex-\nUBC forestry students are\ntouring Europe. Fraser graduated last year. He is writing\na series of articles far the\nUbyssey).\nBERLIN \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Sitting in the\nwarm living room of a friendly German household it is difficult to remember exactly the\nchill that gripped both mind\nand body in East Berlin.\nTwo days ago my five companions and I passed through\n\"Check Point Chariie\" into the\nGerman Democratic Republic\nWe stepped rather carefully\nbetween the armed guards,\nwound our way past the tank\n, traps, and then through the\nnow famous six foot thick wall\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 sepafatng the two Germanys.\nOur passports were taken\n' from us and we were checked\n' for East German money in a\nstuffy little room crowded with\n. officials.\nIn a few moments our\" passports were returned and we\nwere allowed to wander into\nthe East Zone.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nOn both sides of the border\nare many old bombed-out\nbuildings that lend the area a\nnote of desolation. This atmosphere, which begins in the\nWest Zone only as one approaches the border, was maintained well into the East Zone\nand never really lost throughout our visit.\nWe proceeded straight down\nFriedrlchstraSse to'dne of the\nbanks authorized to give for-\nv eign exchange.\nDirty and without decoration except for a picture of\nLenin, it . was depressing for\nstaff and customers alike. The\n\"workers\" reflected their sur\nroundings in appearance and\nin spirit.\nIn rows behind cluttered\ntables girls slouched in oulky\nsweaters and heavy slacks. Nowhere was there the professional smoothness and organized elegance found in most\nCanadian banks. The exchange\nwas carried out readily enough\nalthough several forms were\nrequired for each transaction.\nWith legal money in our\npockets we headed for a restaurant where we had an all\ntoo usual cheap and rather\npasty meal.\nThe only thing different\nfrom its western equivalent at\nour low budget prices was the\ncoffee which, I heard rumored, doubled as tank fuel! The\n\"decadent capitalistic\" custom\nof tipping was not in evidence\nalthough the waiter did ask if\nwe had any cigarettes.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nPrevented from approaching\nthe Brandenburg Gate we diverted our attention to a\nbuilding housing a display of\n\"Contenmporary Art\" by four\nuniversity prof essors \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 from the\ncommunist bloc countries.\nWe paid the 12% cents entry to see a propaganda display more vicious and twisted\nthan any our imaginations\ncould have produced.\nIn extremely clever caricature and on violently hostile\nposters the western world exploited and killed the world's\npoor and weak. Britain, America,- and Nazi Germany walked\nhand in\" hand over innocents\nfrom German peasants to the\nAmerican Negro!\nTO six Canadian students\nsteeped in our own brands of\npropaganda and with our freer\naccess to history the colassal\nEXAMS!\nSTUDYING TOO HARD?\n1\nKEEP ASPIRIN WITH YOU\nAT ALL TIMES\nUNIVERSITY PHARMACY LTD.\n5754 University Boulevard CA. 4-3202\n1400 - Summer Positions -1400\nFor\nUniversity Students\nWith The\nPublic Service of Canada\n$245 to $305 a Month\nFor Under-Graduates\nUp to $515 a Month\nFor Graduatae Students\nPlus travel allowances to and from\npositions and, where applicable,\nsubsistence in the field.\nMost positions are for students with a background in\nEngineering or Science, notably Forestry, Geology\nand Agriculture, but some will be drawn from other\nfaculties as well.\nDetails and Application Forms available at\nUNIVERSITY PLACEMENT OFFICE\nor\nCIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION OFFICES\nClosing date for application, January 31\nuntruths displayed were painfully obvious.\nWhat, however, did the 40\nyoung school children think,\nthe 14-year-old East Germans\nwhose visits coincided with\nours? They were too young to\nremember; teachers don't dare\nsay too much; yet they were\nexposed to these virulent slogans and emotional appears\nand left for themselves to draw\nconclusions about their western neighbours.\nBy comparison with these\ntactics how crude the concrete\nwall seemed and how trivial\nthe armed guards. Before we\nleft the display we casually\nmentioned to the woman at the\nticket counter that the exhibits\nwere all propaganda, not art.\nShe looked uncomfortable,\nglanced sideways, and replied,\n\"I know, but I'm not allowed\nto say anything.\"\nThere were few signs of\nChristmas in East Berlin and\nthose were pitiful indeed.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nOne office table held a few\nsprigs of evergreen and strips\nof tinsel or the occasional\ntrucker had a miniature tree\noh his dashboard, but the colored lights and the festive air\nwere completely missing. No\nstreets were decorated here\nand no one piped carols onto\nthe sidewalks from their place\nof business.\nThere was on overt rejoicing\nhere\u00E2\u0080\u0094it was against the rules!\nThe West Berliners did not forget their alienated neighbors\nthough, for on high buildings\nand on raised construction\ncrane booms stood decorated\ntrees which threw their light\nfar into the East Zone.\nTheir Christmas message of\nsympathy glowed a 24 hour\ndefiance of the Godless regime across the wall.\nWe had come to Berlin expecting the spectacular and the\ndangerous. We joked about\nending up in Siberia and we\nsecretly hoped for a flare-up at\nthe border which we might\nobserve.\nIt was not a violent face that\nCommunism presented to us\nbut its dread and crushing spiritual poverty, its fear and restriction, its essence not its\n-methods. It was our first real\ncontact with a totalitarian state\nand our fragmentary notions\nof life without freedom matured in the few hours of our exposure.\nThe oppression mirrored in\nthe faces of the citizens of East\nBerlin spoke far louder than\nevents could do to. chill our\nmemories.\nSchlich Memorial Award nets\nUBC forestry graduate $24\nA UBC forestry graduate\nhas been selected by the Canadian Institute of Forestry\nas the 1961 recipient of the\nannual Schlich Memorial Fund\naward.\nHe is Robert A. M. McFar-\nlane, son of Mr. and Mrs.\nHugh McFarlane, 1355 Renfrew, Vancouver. McFarlane,\nwho received his bachelor of\nscience in forestry degree\nfrom UBC this year, is currently in Pakistan on a resource survey for develop\nment of a pulp mill by the\nengineering firm of Forestal\nInternational' Ltd.\nInterest from the fund is distributed annually thorugh forestry schools on Canada, the\nUnited Kingdom and the\nUnited States. This year the\nforestry faculty at UBC was\ndesignated as the school to\nmake the award.\nThe award, which is based\non scholastic achievement, this\nyear amounts to $24 and is\nintended to be used for the\npurchase of books.\nST. TIMOTHY LUTHERAN CHURCH\nON CAMPUS WORSHIP\nHUTi.4 - EAST MALL\n11:00 a.m. every Sunday\nEyerydi-iie Wejcorhe\nJANUARY CLEARANCE\nat the\nCOLLEGE SHOP\n15 Only UBC Jackets\nwere 15.95 ......now 11.50\nsizes 10-42's; 5-44's\n8 only Men's Gym Shorts\nwere 1.65 now 1.50\nThunderbird Decals 10c\n50 only Sweater Crests\nwere 1.55 now 1.30\n100 only 'Strickly for the\nBirds\" bumper strips 25c\n2 only Women's Education\nCardigans\nwere 12.95 r now 9,99\nScrolls \u00E2\u0080\u0094 13 Home Ec; 4 Medicine\n10 Aggie; 1 Science; 3 Pharmacy\n2 Nursing; 4 Pre-Med ..only 39c\n1 only Men's Arts Pullover\nsize 44 was 13.75 now 12.00\n7 only Assorted Masks\nwere 5.00 ...now 3.00\n4 only Centennial Plaques\nwere 3.00 ...now 1.50\n20 only Thunderbirds\nwere 2.50 ... now 1.50\n40 only UBC Key Chains\nwere 1.50 ...now 1.10\nSAVE 20% to 50%\nBrock Extension\nOFF REGULAR PRICES\n11:30 - 2:30 ........ .. :. Mon. - Fri. Page 6\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, January 4, 1962\nLibrary expansion hurt\nby dollar devaluation\nDevaluation of the Canadian\ndollar is hampering expansion\nof the University's library, according to acting librarian Dr.\nSam Rothstein.\nDr. Rothstein makes this observation in the annual report\nof the UBC librarian to the University senate.\nCanadian libraries once enjoyed an advantage of about five\nper cent in the purchase of books\noutside Canada, he says. With\nthe devaluation of the dollar,\npurchasers are now at a disadvantage of nearly five per cent,\nhe says.\n\"The net result,\" Dr. Rothstein says, \"is that we are now\npaying almost ten per cent more\nfor imported books.\"\nLIBRARY GROWS\n. Despite this the book store at\nthe UBC library reached 500,000\nvolumes in the past year, the\nreport states. A total of 37,556\nvolume's were added to the library collection during the year\nending August 31, 1961, as compared to 32,951 in the preceding year.\nThese increases warrant no\nsmugness, Dr. Rothstein writes,\nand the UBC library will be\ntruly adequate only when it provides in large measure the materials needed for advanced\nstudy by its own faculty, and\ndistinguished only when its resources attract scholars from\nother institutions.\nFUNDS STATIC\nFunds available to the librarj\nfor the purchase of books held\npretty well static, the report\nstates, and more input is regular\nly needed to produce the sam<\noutput in a period of constantly\nrising book prices.\nTurning to the matter of staff,\nDr. Rothstein says beginning\nprofessional salaries, once as\ngood as any in Canada, have fallen behind those of Alberta and\nToronto. The UBC library has\nnever been able to fill its complement of professional positions\nand four were vacant in the past\nyear.\nDivision heads with long experience are now paid less than\nmany high school teachers, Dr.\nRothstein states, and he recommends that salaries for this key\ngroup should be reviewed and\nbrought into line with their responsibilities.\nNuclear disarmament ok d\nat U. of Western Ontario\n\" LONDON (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Student\nCouncil of the University of\nWestern Ontario has ratified the\nconstitution of Combined Universities Campaign for Nuclear\nDisarmament Club on the campus.\nThe action ended a long debate on the legitimacy of the\nCUCND, which included discussion of free love and crackpots.\nPaulette Silver, speaking for\nCUCND, said ratification of the\nconstitution was merely recognition of the right of students to\nexpress their views on a topic\ncurrently vital to the nation.\nStudent Mike Vaughan said it\nwas time some radical ideas\nstarted circulating on campus\nbut Tom Allen, publications\ncommissioner, said some radical\nthoughts should not be connected with the univerity.\nUSC president Mike Hamilton\nsaid that voting down the constitution would be preventing\nfreedom of thought.\nCouncil approved the club's\nconstitution by a vote of 15 to 5.\nUPPER\nTENTH\nBARBERS\n4574 W. 10th AVE.\nOne Block Past the Gates\nFeaturing European Trained\nBarbers\nFRATERNITY\nSPRING\nRUSHING\nREGISTER NOW!\nA. M.S. OFFICE\n10 o.m. to 4 p.m.\nSilhouette chief quits\nover Pub's interference\nHAMILTON (CUP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Editor-in-Chief of the Silhouette,\nMcMaster campus newspaper, has resigned because of a series\nof actions by the chairman of the Board of Publications.\nDavid Hitchcock charged that\nthe actions were \"in direct contradiction to the present constitution of the Board of Publications.\"\nnot to publish news copy on\ni \"certain subjects.\"\n| Mr. Hitchcock went on to say\nI that these were \"in direct con-\n1 tradiction to the present consti-\nIn his letter of resignation, j tution of the Board of Publica-\nHitchcock charged that the! tions. It is an arbitrary decision\nchairman Robert M'cGowan, had carried out wthout the approval,\nNEW ASSISTANT director of\nthe Alumni Association is\nGordon A- Thorn, a UBC commerce graduate. He succeeds\nTim Hollick-Kenyon, recently\nmade director. -\nIS. of Toronto tops\ntelephone talkathon\nTORONTO (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 A world\ntelephone \"talkathon\" record of\none week has been set by University College of the University of Toronto.\nMale students on one phone\nand female students on another,\nkept up the conversation for\nseven days to break the record\nof five days set earlier by the\nUniversity of Illinois.\nThe men at first feared a lack\nof topics and installed copies of\n\"Canadian Poetry,\" \"How to\nBuild a Better Vocaulary\" and\nthe complete works of Ann Landers composed of such classics\nas \"How To Be Well Liked Before You Marry,\" \"Is it Sex or\nLove?\" and \"Help for the Alcoholic,\" in their phone booth.\nwithout the consultation, without even the intention of consultation of the BOP, the responsible authority on the running of\nall student publications.\"\n\"If you continue such a\narbitrarily and without the approval of the board taken action\nconcerning not only the Silhouette, but also the Marmor (the\nyearbook) and the Muse (the literary magazine).\nHe stated that the chairman j course,\" he concluded, \"the func-\nhad removed names from the\ncirculation list, given orders on\nthe page size and number of\npages for the Marmon without\nthe approval of the editor concerned, provided for one Muse\ntion of the editors is going to\nsuffer drastic change. Surely,\nsuch a change must be decided\nby the appropriate authority,\nnamely the Board of Publications with the approval of Stu-\nin the budget instead of two and dents Council, not by the whims\nattempted to force the Silhouette . of one man.\"\nCareer Opportunities for Graduates\nin Agriculture\nPRODUCTION AND MARKETING BRANCH\nDEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE\nVarious Centres\nStarting Salaries - $4740 or $4920\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Livestock and Poultry Officers\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Plant Protection Officers\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Inspectors, Plant Products\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Production and Marketing Trainees\nA descriptive folder and Information Circular 62-24, describing in detail these position are available at your\nUniversity Placement Office or from the Civil Service\nCommission, Ottawa.\nWhat's doing\nin Aluminum\nSMELTING?\nMore\u00E2\u0080\u0094much more\u00E2\u0080\u0094than meets the eye: the technology\nof producing aluminum in our smelters is constantly\nchanging. Talented engineers experiment with and develop\nnew processes and design new technical controls. They are\nresponsible for the transforming, plant distribution and\nrectification of electricity; the electrolysis of alumina by\nthe Hall & Heroult process; the production of carbon\nelectrodes and the casting of aluminum and its alloys.\nIn addition they may be involved in project, maintenance\nand industrial engineering. Indeed\u00E2\u0080\u0094there's a lot doing in\nthe five aluminum smelters we operate across Canada:\nAt Arvida, Quebec: 373,000 tons installed capacity of aluminum\ningot per year.\nAt Isle Maligne, Quebec: 115,000 tons installed capacity of\naluminum ingot per year.\nAt Shawinigan, Quebec: 70,000 tons installed capacity of aluminum ingot per year.\nAt Beauharnois, Quebec: 38,000 tons installed capacity of aluminum ingot per year.\nAt Kitimat, B.C.: 192,000 tons installed capacity of aluminum\ningot per year,\nijyou are interested in becoming part of the Alcan team, write to:\nALUMINUM COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED\nSTAFF PERSONNEL DIVISION, P.O. BOX 6090, MONTREAL 3, P.O.\nor talk to our representative when he visits vour enmnux\nThe following booklets and information sheets are available on request:\nPresenting Alcan to the University Graduate. / The Role of the Physical\nMetallurgist in Alcan and its Associated Companies. / The Role of the\nChemical and Extractive Metallurgist in Alcan and its Associated\nCompanies. / The Role of the Mechanical Engineer in Alcan and its\nAssociated Companies. / The Role of the Chemist in Alcan and its\nAssociated Companies. ' Thursday, Janudry 4, 1962\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 7\nAH Stars\ntopheavy\nwith Birds\nWestern Collegiate football\nchampions UBC Thunderbirds\ncontinued their domination of\nthe league to the 1961 all-star\nteam.\nThunderbirds placed 11 men\non the team, picked by newsmen\nand broadcasters from the home\ntowns of the three teams in the\nleague.\nThe backfield was led by UBC\nquarterback Barry Carkner who\ntopped the league in passing and\npunting. Backing up Carkner\nwere the league's leading rusher Dale West of Saskatchewan,\nUBC's Peter Black and Alberta's\nKen Neilson and Ted Frechette.\nThe front wall was anchored\nbv Bird captains, center Ray\nTowers, and tackle Jim Beck,\nboth seasoned veterans.\nAlso up front to add strength\ntc the line were Fred Sturrock\n; at guard and end Dave Barker,\nboth Birds. Alberta added two\nplayers to the line, Ron Marten-\niuk at guard and Maury Van\nVleit at end. The last slot was\nfilled by Saskatchewan tackle\nLome Dillanbough.\nBirds also dominated the defensive squad placing five men\non the team. The brother combination of Roy and Al Bianco was\ngiven top rating along with\nether Bird standouts Bruce Mc-\nCallum, Dave Lee, and Roy Shat-\nzko.\nOther players who received\nthe honour included Ken Tids-\nbury, Mike Regu.'h, and Don\nBrock of Saskatchewan; and Jim\n. Christoff, Bill Zuk, Bill Sowa\nand Harry Fedun of Alberta.\nMtCALLUM, TERMS\nTwo more hoopsters quit\nBy RON KYDD\nUBC Thunderbirds, already\nsuffering from lack of experience, lost two more veteran\nplayers over the holidays.\nDune McCallum and Ed Ter-\nris have quit the team.\nMcCallum, a first-string\nguard last year, has been having a lot of trouble finding\nthe hoop this season. Dune,\nwho sported a 49.5 per cent\nfield goal average in 60-61 got\ndisgusted and turned in his\nstrip after the team's U.S. trip.\nTerr is, who played with the\nJayvees last year, felt he might\nget a little more playing time\nwith the Harlem Nocturnes of\nthe city Senior A league.\nTerris will join five other\nUBC students who have chosen\nto play in the Senior A league\nrather than for the 'Birds.\n* * it,\nKeith Hartley, Mike Potkon-\njak, Bill McDonald, Gordon\nBetcher, and Ron Parker all\nleft this year to join the New\nWestminster Bakers.\nMcCallum has apparently\nnot yet decided what his basketball future will be. Both\nMcCallum and Terris are in\nfifth year education.\nFORMER UBC crew captain\nJohn Lecky, in England on a\nscholarship, may row for\nCambridge in famed Oxford-\nCambridge boat race in April.\nTrotter spectacle\nback Jan. 19-20\nThe world-famed Harlem Globetrotters return to\nUBC Jan. 19-20 with enough\ncast for a mob scene in Ben\nHur.\nAccompanying the Globetrotters pill be Cab Calloway and his orchestra and\nv t h e Honolulu Surfriders\nbasketball team, which will\nmeet a local team each night\nfor the two-night stand.\n'Trotters face a senior city\nleague team Jan. 19 with the\nThunderbirds tackling the,\nSurfriders. The local teams\nswitch plaees for the Jan. 20\ngame.\nlAJblfA&SUf\nSPORT\nMIKE HUNTER, Editor\nBirds soar in '64\nThunderbird gridders will\nmove into big time competition\nin 1964 and '65.\nBirds will play a home-and-\nhome series with Montana State\nof Missoula, Mont., which plays\nin the Rocky Mountain Conference. V\nMontana State played such\nteams as New Mexico, Idaho,\nUtah State, and Brigham Young\nthis fall.\nBirds earlier this year turned\ndown a similar series with Idaho\nState for financial reasons, Idaho\nwanted a $6,500 guarantee.\nRugby Birds\nto fly south?\nBy GLENN SCHULTZ\nUBC's rugby Birds are looking into the future and the\nU.S. for their rugby competition.\nUBC coach Albert Laithwaite\nThunderbirds also lost two\nbasketball games over the\nChristmas holidays, both to the\nUniversity of Puget Sound.\nLast Friday the Birds were\nclobbered 77-52, while Thursday they lost by a much more\nrespectable 62-53 margin.\nThe taller, heavier, Loggers\njust wore the 'Birds into the\nfloor.\n* * *\nThis weekend UBC meets\ntough Seattle Pacific College\nteam twice in Seattle.\nUBC coach Jack Pomfret\nsaid he hopes the younger\nplayers on the team will have\nthe confidence necessary to\ngive Seattle a hard fight.\nU of T approached\nThe University of Toronto basketball team is 'interested in\nplaying an exhibition series with\nUBC in Vancouver next fall.\nAthletic department officials\nhope to lure Toronto for the\n1962 Totem Tournament in December.\nsays there is talk of a proposal\nfor a Pacific Coast College rugby\nhookup from B.C. to California\nin the near future.\nPossible teams would come\nfrom UBC, Western Washington,\nOregon State, UCLA, USC, Stanford, and California and Victoria.\nLaithwaite however, feels that\nthe World Cup competi tion\nshould remain between UBC and\nCalifornia apart from the proposed league because it is an established tradition.\nU.S. EXHIBITIONS\nThe Birds' rugger schedule for\n1962 already includes many exhibition games with U.S. teams.\nThey play Western Washington\nCollege, Oregon State, UCLA,\nand California this spring.\nThe games with California\nwill feature the World Cup competition played at Berkley on\nFeb. 24 and 26, and here on\nMarch 29 and 31.\nAnother feature this term is a\nrugger game with New Zealand\nUniversity here March 22. The\nNew Zealanders will be comprised of some of the All Blacks\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094one of the best rugger teams\nfin New Zealand.\ni McKECHNIE GAME\nAlso on the girds schedule is\nI a game with the Vancouver Reps\nfor the McKechnie Cup on Feb.\n3 here at the stadium. They also\nplay Victoria March 10 at Victoria. A return match is slated\nfor March 17.\nThe Victoria games will be\nCup games only it UBC beats\nthe Reps. Otherwise they will\nbe played as exhibition games.\nThe Birds will start off the\nnew year playing local clubs.\nFirst game will be against North\nShore this Saturday at UBC stadium.\nThe next two will slate CYO\npn the 13th and the Kats the\nfollowing weekend. Both games\nwill be played at the stadium.\nJOHN COOK was standout\nfor Birds, scoring the tying\nand winning points against\nAlberni in the Totem Tournament. Cook is a six-four rookie from Gladstone High.\nNorthern Electric\noffers\nReplaces Stuart\nBauer takes hockey reins\nWhen the University of B.C.\nThunderbird hockey team resumes training this month it\nwill have a new coach.\nRev. David Bauer of St.\nMark's College will take over\nthe team from Al Stuart, the\nVancouver school teacher who\ncoached the 'Birds in 1960 and\nduring the first part of this\nyear.\n* * *\nFather .Bauer came to UBC's\nSt. Mark's College this summer from St. Michael's College\nin Toronto, where he last year\ncoached St. Mikes to the Memorial Cup.\nHe was not expected to take\nover the coaching reins from\nStuart until next season, when\nthe new winter sports arena\nis due to be completed.\nAthletic department offic\nials have released no official\nstatement on the reason for\nthe change.\nUBC's first league games are\nJan. 12 and 13 against the Uni-.\nversity of Saskatchewan in\nSaskatoon.\n* * *\nFather Bauer grew up in\nthe Kitchener-Waterloo area,\na hot-bed of hockey, where he\nplayed in the city league. He\nthen moved into junior hockey,\nplaying left wing and centre\nfor the Oshawa Generals when\nthey won the Memorial Cup\nin 1945.\nHe was on the negotiation\nlist for the Boston Bruins, the\nteam on which his brother Bobby Bauer became a big star.\n* * *\nFather Bauer managed the\nSt. Michael's team for several\nyears, and last year coached\nthem to the Memorial Cup,\nwhen they defeated the jEd-\nmontbn Oil Kings four games\nto two^ in Edmonton.\nSome of the players produced\nby St, Mikes during his time\ninclude Gerry McNamara, Red\nKelly, Tim Horton, Frank Ma-\nhavlich, Dave Keon, Bill Din-\neen, Reg Fleming, and Fleming Mackell.\nThunderbirds play eight Intercollegiate League games\nagainst the Universities of Alberta and Saskatchewan. Their\nexhibition schedule includes\ngames with Gonzaga University, Summerland, and Intermediate teams in New Westminster, . Powell River, Nan-\naimo and Victoria.\nISPlfflP\nMM\n19\nfor GRADUATES in -\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ELECTRICAL AND MECHANICAL ENGINEERING\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ENGINEERING PHYSICS\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 HONOURS MATHEMATICS AND PHYSICS\nNorthern Electric, as a major manufacturer of\n. Communications Equipment and Wire and\nCable, offers opportunities in the fields of:\nMANUFACTURING - PLANT ENGINEERING\nDESIGN - COMMUNICATIONS\nSYSTEMS ENGINEERING\nRESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Most assignments are in the Montreal area,\nalthough openings are available in Ottawa,\nBelleville and London, Ontario. Transportation allowance is paid.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Excellent salary schedules and a formal evaluation program providing ample opportunity\nfor individual advancement are combined with\ngenerous employee benefits and good working\nconditions to make employment with the\nNorthern Electric Company worthy of your\ninvestigation,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 CAMPUS IMTERVOEWS\nWeek of January 8th\nFor further information and interview appoint*\nment, please contact your Placement Officer.\nNortherrr Electric\nCOMPANY LIMITED Page 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, January 4, 1962\nflews from abroad:\nU n i versifies ric her\nOTTAWA (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Grants to\nCanadian Universities from the\nCanada Council totalling $656,-\n763 were authorized from the\nCapital Grants Fund to five institutions of higher learning.\nIn accordance with the terms\nof the Canada Council Act. these\ngrants cover up to 50 per cent\nof building facilities in the arts,\nhumanities, and social sciences.\nAcadia University r e ce ived\n$52,912 for a women's residence; j\nUniversity of Alberta, for an |\nsddition to the Banff School of I\nFine Arts received $100,000: j\nHuron College, for a wing eon-1\ntaining lecture rooms, was grant-f\ned $88,870; for construction of\u00E2\u0096\u00A0;\nresidence, library and lecture j\nrooms at St. Therese College, the 1\nUniversity of Montreal was i\nawarded $400,000; and United \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nCollege, Winnipeg, received $14,-!\n981 for a residence. j\nGrants of $5,000 each were\nawarded to the Institute of Med- j\niaeval Studies of the University!\nof Montreal and to the University of Western Ontario to help\nthem to expand their library col- i\nlection of mediaeval works.\n* * * !\nMONTREAL (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The j\npreferential voting system for \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nMcGill's Students' E x e c u tive '\nCouncil elections has been abol- j\nished. !\nThe SEC voted unanimously to j\nscrap the method upon the rec-!\nommendation of Electoral Offi- j\ncer Alan Golden. j\ni It had been used only once\n' for the presidential election of\n'March, I960. The voter was\nasked to place the number \"1\"\nopposite the name of his first\nchoice, and if he wished to make\na second choice, the number\"2\"\nopposite his second choice.\nGolden reported that of slightly over 2,000 votes cast, 409 had\nto be declared invalid because\nstudents did not understand the\nsystem and marked their choice\nwith an i-X\".\n^r * *\nNEW YORK. N.Y. (CUP-UPS)\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 The Columbia university student newspaper, The Daily Spec-:\ntator. has become an independent membership corporation in\n1962, the editors have announced. The move is intended to\nfree the paper from th\u00C2\u00A3 financial\ndependence on the university.\nThe paper formerly distributed free, is now being sold at $5\na subscription for campus residents. Copies are available for\nfive cents each at vending stands\non or near the campus.\nNew graduate degrees\noffered tor next year\nNotice of Hearing\nTake notice that the Student Court will sit on Friday.\nJan. 5, 1S62. at 12:30 p.m.. in\nthe Brock Stage Room to hear\ncharges against Maurice Anderson and Neal Beaumont of\nc o n d uci unbecoming a student.\n'TWEEN CLASSES\nCOLUMBIA RIVER development problems will be discussed by economics professor A. D. Scott at Vancouver\nInstitute lecture Saturday,\n8:15 p.m., Bu. 106.\nThe offering of three new degrees in the faculty of graduate\nstudies has been approved by the\nUniversity senate, president Dr.\nN.A.M. MacKenzie announced\ntoday.\nBeginning in the next academic year the department of geography will offer a program\nleading to the doctor of philosophy (Ph.D) degree, the faculty\nof law will offer the master of\nlaws (LL.M) degree and the department of psychiatry will institute a program leading to the\nmaster of science (M.Sc) in psychiatry.\nDr. J. L. Robinson, head of\ngeography department, said UBC\nwould be the first western Canadian university to offer the\nPh.D degree in geography.\nWork will be offered in three\nspecialized areas\u00E2\u0080\u0094rlhe geography\nof western Canada with emphasis on B.C. and systematic and\neconomic geography.\nDean G.I?. Curtis, head of the\nfaculty of law, said that as part\nof the program leading to the\nLL.M. students would have the\nopportunity of specializing in\nthree areas \u00E2\u0080\u0094 natural resources\nlaw, international legal studies\nand labour law.\nThe new program leading to\nthe master of science in psychiatry degree will have a dual purpose, according to Dr. James Ty-\nhurst, head of the department of\npsychiatry.\nThe program will train nonmedical graduates for psychiatric\nresearch in the increasingly-important area of mental health\nand will provide the opportunity\nfor medical graduates to specialize in the field of psychiatry.\nSpecial Prices for UBC\nCornette Beauty\nSalon\n\"Individual Attention\" by\nMale and Female Styfists.\nOPEN FR! TILL NINE\n4532 W. 10 CA 4-7440\nWinch.to speak Friday\nNEW DEMOCRATIC PARTY\nNew Democrats present Harold Winch, MP, speaking on \"Canada and NATO\". Friday, Noon\nin the Brock Lounge.\n* * *\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nAND UH CLUB\nInquiry into Moral Rearmament Film and speakers. Upper\nLounge of IH Sunday 8 p.m.\n* * *\nNEW DEMOCRATIC PARTY\nNew Democrats present a WW\nII propaganda film, plus 2\naward-winning shorts. Thursday\nNoon BU 106\u00E2\u0080\u0094Adm. 25c.\n* * *\nHAS\n, The first 1962 meeting of The\nVancouver branch of Royal Astronomical Society will take\nplace Tuesday at 8:00 p.m. in\nPhysics 200.\nARCHAEOLOGY CLUB\nFriday Noon \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Film \"Village\nin the Dust\" in Bu. .205.\nTIAIE: 27 wetks 1.97; I year 3.87\n2 years $7.00\nLIFE: 21 weeks, 1.91; 1 year 4.00\n2 years 7.00\nMacLeans, 1 year 1.50\nSaturday Night, 1 year \u00C2\u00A3.00\nWrite: Student i-erlodicarA-gency\nP.O. Box 717, Adelaide P.O.,\nToronto 1, Ontario\nPan American Petroleum Corporation\nCALGARY, ALBERTA\nOffers Careers In\nEXPLORATION GEOPHYSICS: For students majoring in\nEngineering, Honors Geology, Physics, and Mathematics.\nGeological\nGEOLOGY: For students majoring in Geology or Geological Engineering-\nCompany representatives will visit the campus to interview graduating,\npost-graduate and undergraduate students on Monday and Tuesday,\nJanuary 8 and 9, 1962\nInterested persoris are asked to inquire at the University Placement\nOffice for further particulars.\nCampus Barber\nShoo\nMonday - Friday 8:30 - 5:00\nSaturday 8:30 - T2:00\nLOCATED IN\nBROCK EXTENSION\nVarsity Fabrics\n4497 W. lOlh Ave CA 4-0*42\nYard Goods, MeCail Pattern*\nSewing Supplies\nOpen Friday 'til 9\n1962 and 1963 ENGINEERING or\nHONOR CHEMISTRY CLASSES\nTHE PROCTOR & GAMBLE COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED\nHAMILTON, ONTARIO POINTE CLAIRE, QUEBEC\nhas openings for permanent employment for graduating men\nand\nopenings for summer employment for those in Class of '63\nin\nPRODUCT RESEARCH\nPROCESS DEVELOPMENT\nPRODUCTION SUPERVISION\nQUALITY CONTROL\nPROJECT ENGINEERING\nMAINTENANCE ENGINEERING\nPACKAGING DEVELOPMENT\nINDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING\nCompany representatives will be present for campus\nINTERVIEWS: January 9,10,11,12\nPersonal interviews may be arranged through your Placement Office"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1962_01_04"@en . "10.14288/1.0125564"@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 .