"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2016-01-18"@en . "1954-02-05"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0125592/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " TV P\nn Mm\nYSSEY\nVOLUME XXXVI\nVANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5,1954\nPrice 5c; No. 37\nAccusations Highlight Nominations\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Photo by John Robertson\n\"NOTHING TO IT,\" says Maureen Kennedy 2nd yeaiwArts,\nas Miss Jessie Bartel takes Maureen's contribution to the\nInter-collegiate Blood Drive. Maureen was the 10,000th\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 student to donate blood to competitive UBC blood drive.\nCampus Co-ed Learns\nDonating Blood Simple\nBy PAT CARNEY\nMaureen Kennedy is an average all-rounded second year Arts\nstudent* The Ubyssey decided that her reactions to her first blood\ndrive would be typical of hundreds of other shrinking co-eds and\nApplied Sciencemen.\nMAUREEN PROPOSITIONED\nSo Maureen was propositioned, overruled and escorted to\nthe Armouries.\nWhen she entered the clinic, poor Maureen was scared stiff.\nNervously-sipping her coke, she pictured herself staggering out\nof the clinic, ricdled with hypodermic rtecdlcs and drained of\nher red corpuscles.\nMAUREEN'S BLOOD HEALTHY\nShe dragged herself to the desk, shut her eyes, and shot(her\nhand in the general direction of the nurse.\nNo, she had never given blood before, said Maureen wincing\nas the nurse skillfully pricked her finger.\nShe never intended to again, she glared at her merciless\nUbyisey cohorts.\nAfter performing mysterious tricks with Maureen's sample\nof blood, the nurse said happily thai it was perfectly healthy, and\nthat the Clinic would be only too happy to accept it.\nMaureen saw her last avenue of escape blocked. She dolefully denied having had jaundice, malaria or any other horrid\nsounding disease, and was handed over to the next nurse.\nMAUREEN'S SCARED\nWhen the next typewriter had extracted her name, age and\nfaculty, Maureen passed irrto tho clutches of iwo sweet young\nco-eds who wanted to know what clubs she belonged to.\nBy this time she was ready for the nice soft bed a nurse\noffered her. After swabbing her arm vigorously and wrapping\nwhat looked like a deflated inner tube around her arn/, the nurse\ngave her a wooden stick to play v/ith.\nThen another veiled vision approa'ched her wielding the\ndreaded needle and bottle.\nMaureen shuddered. She looked wildly around for help,\nbut Spike Tofte, Drive chairman, was busy holding some freshette's\nhand on the other side of the Armouries,\nMAUREEN IS SURPRISED\nMuttering sweet nothings in her car, the nurse busied herself with Maureen's arm. Prepared for thc worst, Maureen was\nastonished when the only thing she felt was one irritating prick.\nWhen the bottle was filled, Maureen was taped up and transferred to another bed. Forty winks later another nurse approached.\n\"You can go now, clear, and thanks for coming,\" she said, pro-\npolling Maureen toward the coke and coffee counter.\nDrinking her coke, Maureen reviewed the whole business of\ndonating blood. It certainly wasn't a painful experience, and she\ndidn't have any after effects, like dizziness or nausea. It\nwasn't at all what she had thought it would be.\nAs she was leaving a nurse warned her not to smoke foi\nanother hmir, and asked her how she was feeling.\n\"The greatest,\" said Maureen.\nCCF'er Denies Pamphlet\nCharges, Hits Other Clubs\nCCF Club President Erl Zilke Thursday denied allegations\n(hat his club had illegally distributed pamphlets on the campus.\nZilke admitted circulating pamphlets criticizing the Social\nCredit government, but he also claimed that his club had obtained \"permanent\" permission*\nlo do so from last session's Stu- Liberal, Tory and Socred\ndent Council. clubs\" ! susoect theY have dis\"\nCOURT ASSEMBLY tributed some tracts, too.\"\nZilke's denial followed Wed- /ilko s;,id lus duh had obU,ii1'\nnesdav's announcement Hut a rd I\"'\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\"**'\"\" \u00C2\u00BB'''\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Student\ntemporary student court nm;ht Ruined three- sessions ago, and\nCOMMERCE LEADS FORESTRY\nIN BLOOD DRIVE CONTEST\nTOTAL POINTS 726\nCommerce 32%\nForestry 28%\nApplied Science 20 %\nAgriculture 19%\nPharmacy 18%\nPhysical Education ._ 13*%\nNursing 11%\nArts 11%\nHome Economics 9%\nArchitecture 9%\nLaw . 4%\nGraduate Studies 4%\nTeacher Training 0.%\nAMS To Pay $1200\nFlying Club Debt\nThe Alma Mater Society has been presented by the Bank\nof Montreal with a bill for $1200 in debts accumulated by a\nnow-defunct campus flying club.\nThe Aero Club, which was'active on campus three years\nago, in flight training for students, apparently borrowed an\nunknown amount ef money from*\nthe bank, which was reduced to\nFour Way Fight For\nPresidential Post\nBy MICHAEL AMES\nUbyssey Election Reporter\nLast-second nomination of Dick Underhill for AMS' president Thursday was formally protested as being \"one-and-\na-half minutes late\" by .an opposing candidate's campaign\nmanagers.\nSupporters of presidential candidate Albert Plant handod\na written protest to Jim McNish, $-\n$1200 by the sale of two aircraft\nand one Link trainer.\nTROUBLE LIES\nAccording to AMS treasurer\nAllan Goldsmith, the trouble lies\nin the fact that the AMS guaranteed this note of an organization\nover which it had no control, and\nis now faced with the responsibility of exerting its guarantee.\nThe AMS treasurer said further that the only person who\nknows where the money went\nwas the first president of the\nclub Jim Harty, now thought to\nbe somewhere in Texas.\nMISSING PERSONS\nLegal advisors to the AMS \"ay\nthat it would cost too much\nmoney to trace the ex-president\napd even then there would be\ninsufficient evidence available\nto take any action against him.\nTo ward off any danger of this\nhappening again, treasurer Goldsmith said he will ask all organizations which do not have their\nauditing and budgeting handled\nby the AMS to do so.\nTWO LEFT\nAt present there are only two\norganizations on campus whoso\nbudgeting and auditing dp not\ncome under the AMS; the Varsity Outdoor Club and the Newman club. Goldsmith is now entering into discussions with these\ntwo groups.\nRights Bill\nBy Panel\nStudents heard some old-\nfashioned \"politicking\" Thursday during a panel discussion\nbetween B.C.'s top five politicians, sixth in the Columbia\nBi-Centennial series.\nKnife-edged bantering and\njoking found its way into serious\ndiscussion, as the politicos split\nover the need for a Canadian\nBill of Rights.'\nBONNER VS. LAING\nSocial Credit Attorney-General Rpbert Bonner said he still\nremained to be 'convinced that\nCanada needed a Bill of Rlght3,\nwhile Liberal leader Arthur\nLaing maintained that the British North America Act was sufficient as a \"Bill of Rights\", calling it the \"guiding light for Canadian politics.\"\nTory leader Deane Finlayson's\nstand was that a Bill of Rights isjbe decided at the polls February\nneeded to make sure the state io, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m\ndocs not become more Powei'ful! transferable VOTE\nelection committee chairman,\nhalf an hour after the 4 p.m.\nnomination deadline. '\n- The supporters, Des Eadie and\nOave Anfield, charged Underhill\nwas one and a half'minutes late\nin submitting his nomination for\nAMS president.\nCHRONOLOGICAL CHAOS\nThey said they were Judging\nthe time by the AMS clock in\nthe Brock Hall offices, while McNish said according to his own\nwrist watch Underbill's nomination was on time \"by 20 seconds.\"\nMcNish disqualified the protest. He said the AMS clock was\ntwo minutes fast by CBU time,\nand his own watch only three\nseconds out.\nMonte McKay, third Applied\nScience, was elected by acclamation as chairman of undergraduate societies' committee.\nDONNYBROOK\nFour students are lined up for\nthe presidential battle, and two\nwill fight it out for the secretarial post.\nWendy Sutton, third Arts, Dick\nUnderhill, second Law, Clive Ny-\nlander, second Law, and Albert\nPlant, third Commerce, will contest the president's seat. *\nHelen Donnelly, third Arts,\nhonors English, and Faye Fingarson, third Arts, will fignt for the\nsecretary's position.\nCandidates will speak at a\ngeneral meeting in the Armouries Monday noon, at Camp Ac*\ndia, 6:15 p.m., and at Fort Camp\n8 p.m., all the same day.\nThis first slate of officers will\n'twiin cloiMt\nthan the individual.\nStudents will cast their single\nneeded \"to expose the hypocrites\nwho preach brotherhood on Sunday and be pretty tough with\ntheir brothers on Monday.\"\nArtist\nEdman\nCynics Claim\nSensual Says\nArts are the life blood of civilization, Dr. Irwin Edman\ntold members of the Vancouver Art Gallery Monday night.\nSpeaking on \"The Arts and Man\" the Columbia University\nphilosopher said that western civilization has split into two\ncamps\u00E2\u0080\u0094those who are bored by\u00C2\u00AB\nart and those who are sensitive\nto it.\nARTISTS REVOLUTIONARY?\n\"Those who are bored regard the arts with suspicion and\nimpatience,\" declared Dr. Edman. \"They consider art trivial,\nespecially in times of war and\neconomic crises.\".\nBecause tne artist appeals\nfrankly to the senses, he :s\nj thought to be sensuous, or scn-\nisual or, at the extreme, effemin-\n: ate,\" Edman said. As a \"critique\n! of established ways of thinking,\"\n[ the artist is suspected of being\nI revolutionary and feared as dan-\nj gerous.\n'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \"Art devotees exaggerate as\n. much as the critics,\" he continued. \"They feel that art appreciation is a mystical experience that\nonly the particulary sensitive\ncan enjoy.\"\nArnold Webster, CCF leader,; trans{erable votes into ballot\ncharged that a Bill of Rights is j boxes a| firock Hall Qufld L,b.\nrary, General Hospital, Bus\nStop, Engineering building, and\nBiological Sciences building.\nA special ballot box will be set\nup at Vancouver General hospital, and will be open 11:30 a.m.\nto 1:30 p.m. and 3:30 to 4:30\np.m. on election day.\nTo vote, students must present\ntheir AMS cards to be punched.\nUBC Co-ed\nWins NFCUS\nArt Contest\nA UBC student, Heather\nSpears, has won first prize in\nthe NFCUS art contest.\nHer entry was ta portrait;\nit took top honors in the oils\nclass.\nHeather is a second year Arts\nstudent. She has been drawing\nand painting for many years.\nLast year she attended Vancouver Art School on a scholarship.\nShe was completely flabbergasted by the news. \"I don't\nknow what the prize is or anything about it, but it sure is\nwonderful!\" she said.\nDR. IRWIN EDMAN\nFaculty Panel To\nDiscuss Science\nLSE sponsors \"Can Scientists\nTalk?\" today at noon in $h\u00C2\u00AB Auditorium. Dr. Gordon Shrum\nwill speak on the \"''Problem of\nCommunication Between Scientists and Laymen.\" Dr. J. B.\nWarren will discuss \"Secrecy in\nScience\" and Dr. J. B. Brown\non \"Science and the Iron Curtain.\" This is the last of the\nBi-centennial series-.\nAMS presidential, Secretarial,\nand undergraduate societies committee candidates will apeak at\na general' meeting to be held\nin the Armouries' Monday noon.\nCandidates will speak at Acadia Camp dining room 6:15\np.m. Monday and at Fort Camp\ndining room 8 p.m.\nACADIA'S CAMPTOWN\nSTRUTTER'S BALL will be hild\nin Brock Hall tonight from 9-1^\np.m. Admission is 50c for boys,\n25c for girls. Everyone and his\ndog welcome. Informal dreea.\nUN CLUB presents Dr. Anderson, apeakin g on \"Food for\nThought Only?\" today in Arts\n100.\nLPP CLUB presents Mr. J. S.\nWallace, contemporary poet,\nwho will read and comment on\npoems from his recent book \"All\nMy Brothers\" on Monday, at\n12:30 in,F & G 100.\nCHINESE VARSITY CLUB\npresents S. D. Leung of the Chinese Consulate speaking on\n\"Free China Today,\" in. Physics\n201, Monday noon. All those\ninterested are invited to attend.\nVAR8ITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP are sponsoring a series of noon meetings in Physics\n200, Monday, Tuesday, a\u00C2\u00ABd Wed- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nnesday of next week. Reverend\nM. Nicholson will be speaking\non \"The Knowledge ^ of God,\"\nfurther developing the position\nhe took in Tuesday's Bi-centennial panel.\nPHARMACY UNDERGRADUATE SOCIETY are holding a\nBasketball Bounce Saturday in\nBrock Hall Dancing is from\n9 to 12 to the music of Brick\nHenderson's Orchestra, featuring Juliette. Admission 50c for\nwomen and 75c for men.\nFROSH UNDERGRADUATE\nSOCIETY are meeting in Arts\n104 today at noon. The society\nis also looking for freshettes to\nplay for the Frosh basketball\nteam. Contact your class representative for further information.\nALL- PHRATERES MEETING\nwill be held today at 12:30 in\nPhysics 200. Sweetheart candidates will be introduced and\nbowling prizes given out.\nCAMERA CLUB will show\nla series of slides on \"Night Pho-\nFree Love Society! IZTm. '\u00C2\u00B0day at n\u00C2\u00B0\u00C2\u00B0n in Li\"\nPRE LAW SOCIETY are\nmeeting every week now, on\nhad renewed their license the\nfollowing session, hut were in-\n!>c assembled to try tin- polpMal\ncl'ih il' Student Council'-, new in-\nvestignling committee succeeded \"\"'m(',1 llu\"'\"' Permission was t^r-\nin l.iymn charges. nnnen,.\n\"In any case,\" said Zilke, \"if\nwe're guilty, then so arc tho\n\"Consequently, we didn't re-\nppl\ tiii-. year,\" lie said.\nProirie Fever?\nSASKATOON \u00E2\u0080\u0094 (CUP' \u00E2\u0080\u0094 - , . .,\nThe Social Credit government jACTIV\u00C2\u00A9 At AlDertd\nof the U. of Saskachewan passed EDMONTON - (CUP' - Sev- Fridays in Arts 106 at noon.\n,DAILY BEAUTY i tne following resolutions at a enty-flve students at the Uni-!\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 To reconcile these-two hostilerecent Mock Parliament session: ; versity of Alberta have formed I LEGION CUP organizational\ncamps, Dr. Edman .suggested5 Canadian beer should be fluor-; a Society for the Furtherance I meetings will be held today at\nseveral practical values of art. inatecl. 0f Free Love to show that free;noon in the Law Building. All\nIn addition, he said that man1 The Women's Canadian Tern- *ovo ,s the answer to the moral !clubs or individuals interested\nought to recognize artistic beau- perance Union should be out- problems of the day. jin entering the competition arc\nly in his daily life. lawed. The president of the society l: u,'gcd to attend as this is the\n\"In the philosopher's view, the Switzerland should '\nEXPERT TYPING. PICKUP\nand delivery service. Sundays.\nFR. 9501. (65)\nAVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY.\nTwo bright upstairs rooms, with\nbath, suitable for two or three\nstudents. Partial board may\nbe arranged. Address: 4448\nW 6th Ave. Phone AL. 1751-Y\n(37)\nTHE VANCOUVER TOURIST\nAssociation requires several\nintelligent, pleasant and attractive young ladies for Summer\nemployment at tourist information centres in Vancouver. A\nknowledge of the city and province will be helpful. Training\nto comence immediately on\nalternative Saturdays. Please\nreply in own handwriting to:\nPublicity Commisioner, 59 6\nWest Georgia Street, Vancouver 2, B. C. (37)\nBRIGHT WARM ROOM AND\nfull board, available now. Will\nalso solve your accomodation\nfor next year. Mrs. H. M. Webber. 4518- 13th Ave. West.\nAl. 0168-Y. 08)\nVARIETY SHOW AT ALMA\nHall, Broadway and Alma.\n\"You can't beat fun,\" Fb. 9 and\n10, 8:00 p.m. Price $1.00. Students 50c. Ticketts at door.\nCh. 1120 or see I. R. Seymour\n3rd yr. Law. (38'\nWANTED PASSENGERS FOR\n8:30's from vicinity English Bay\narea or anywhere along route.\nCharlie, Pa. 4796.\nRIDE WANTED \u00E2\u0080\u0094 FROM Vicinity of Boundary and Marine\nDrive. Phone, Doug., Fr. 0851,\nLOST: BLUE SIIAEFER PEN\n(liteiime guarantee) and blue\nShaoffor Eever.sharp. Contact\nW. A, Dodd. Fort Camp, Reward. (37)\nFULL BOARD AND ROOM.\nLaundry for boy, $60.00. Al.\n1004-1,, 4422 W. 13th. (157)\nSTUDENTS! Would YOU like to tour Europe this\nrammer? You can do so this year on one of the MANY\ntears available! These are designed to fit YOUR TIME\nAND POCKETBOOXI\nFor example, an all inclusive 30-day tour covering England, Belgium, Holland. Germany. Switserland, Italy end\nFrance can be taken iter the low price of $1000 New York\nto New York. This is only an example of one of the many\nexcellent tours available. * '\n9 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION AND ITINER1ES\nCONTACT JOHN HARRISON AT CE. 5844 ANY EVENING\nBETWEEN 5 AND 7 P.M.\n-,.\Jf% f.m-f^y*. ?\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*--\u00E2\u0096\u00A0> \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 . \t\nAn Opportunity\nYou Cannot Miss\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Professional Business Training\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bachelor of Commerce Degree\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Admission to the Institute of\nChartered Accountants\nA programme offering ALL THREE i.s open to you.\nThc Institute of Chartered Accountants of B.C. and the\nUniversity of B.C. have authorized a combined course that\nallows you to qualify for a Bachelor of Commerce degree\nand admission to thc Institute of Chartered Accountants AT\nTHE SAME TIME.\nThis unique programme provides simultaneous ACADEMIC and BUSINESS training, and will be of particular\ninterest to students now completing FIRST YEAR ARTS.\nFor Further Details: Attend a Meeting at 1:00 p.m.,\nFebruary 5, Room 9, Commerce Hut Gl.\nThc Institute of Chartered Accountants\nof British Columbia*\nATTENTION\nMEMBERS of the GRADUATING CLASS\nREPRESENTATIVES OF\nThe Procter & Gamble\nCompany\nof CANADA LTD.\nwill be at the Personnel Office of the University of British\nColumbia on February 8th, 1954, to interview men who are\ninterested in discussing the opportunities offered by a career\nin sales management.\nFor men who show promise of being able to assume\nthe responsibilities of administration and leadership, the\nCompany offers opportunities for interesting and highly successful careers. Promotions aro made from within the company and are based solely on initiative, ability and performance.\nThose selected will begin their association with the\ncompany as salesmen. Intensive training in the fundamentals of selling and sales promotion is offered and .qualification for promotion to managerial responsibility can be rapid.\nInterviews may also be arranged for any men interested in advertising finance, office management and purchasing.\nMen interested in exploring the opportunities here\npresented should visit the Personnel Office, M-7, where de-,\ncsriptive literature can be examined and appointments fou\ninterviews arranged. Friday, February 5,1954\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*>.\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPige Three\n^ *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2* $ *\n1 ** .*.\nSeconders' Statements\n^&tA ffjl\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Photo by John Robertson\nPUNCHING PILLS for practice is literally what pharmacy\nstudent Jim Wing is doing. He is operating the granulator\nin his pharmacy manufacturing lab, a necessary part of\nhis training before he, can punch pills for patients.\nPills Perpetually Pile;\nPharmacist's Labor Lost\nByBILLSTAVDAL\nThe pill has come a long way since the days when it was\nrolled by hand in the rear of the local drugstore.\nIn the manufacturing room of the Pharmacy department,\nsituated in the basement of the Biology building, approximately\n$1500 worth of equipment is de-r r\" ~T~7, _\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nvoted entirely to the manufac carned on under Perfectly ster'\nture of pills and tablets on a hos-1 lle condltlons\npital scale,\nUnder the direction of Dr. A.\nW. Matthews, senior pharmacy\nstudents, engage in all stages of\nDUNKERS\nRegular checks are made on a\ntorsion balance to ensure uniform weight of the pills, and'In\ntibret'pfoductionTfVo'm'm^xingl8^^011,- ^ey are tested for rate\nthe raw ingredients to testing\nthe finished product.\nGRAINS GAIN'\nBasic materials are first mixed in a machine suspiciously like\nan undersize cement mixer.\nWhen properly taixed, an adbe-\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB!\nsired diameter or thickness.\nFlavoring and coloring, if desired, are added in a machine\nwhich is definitely a pygmy concrete mixer.\n, The whole process, despite the j\nsuspicious looking apparatus, is\nPharmacists take time off\nfrom pill pushing Saturday to\nsponsor a basketball bounce.\nDance will be held in Brock\nHall Saturday night following the UBC-Seattle Pacific\nbaskeball game.\nEATON S t^ZytM 7&wtV^-'//;'..\n/ A'm^'v,'.*/, >\ni ,< j: \ \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-' 4 ' // .\n/\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 s< : -.V ./\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0rl S\nV . -'. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0--\n\V\nBut he has the right formula for\nbudget problems\u00E2\u0080\u0094steady saving\nat\ntQ i \u00C2\u00A5111101 (iHAQiMH\nFflfiil\nBank of Montreal .\nYour Bank on the Campus . . .\nIn the Auditorium Building\nMERLE C. KIRBY, Manager\n\u00C2\u00BB\nWORKING; WITH CANADIANS IN EVERY WAIK OP LIE. SINCE 1IW\n\\nV.\nCoeds are Pretty in\nNewsmaking Corduroy Coats\nProud beauties ride the busses clothed\ncomfortably in vivid corduroy . . .\nblossom like Spring Posies On the\nCampus . . . laugh at the rain . . .\nsmile with the sun. Their well-chosen\nensembles are weather-wise and\nSpring-coloured, Saucy cap . . .\nslim coat (belted or hot) . . . tall\numbrella with sleek, slender shaft.\nAll for just 33*00.\nSizes 12 to 20.\n, Palest French Violet . . .\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 chalk-toned Coral . . . vivid\nPeacock Blue and Rich Cream.\nUmbrella cover, coat lining\nand cap lining match.\nEATON'S Raincoats \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Second Floor Page Four\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, February 5, 1054\nBirds Are Ready For\nCouple Of Victories\n -4- * _ ,\nPomfret's Men To Host\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Photo by Joe Quan\nGERRY STEWART receives the congratulations of Dr.\n'Gordon Burke for winning the Inspirational Award while\ncoach Don Coryell looks on approvingly. Previous winners\nof the award were Dave MacFarlane and Bob Hindmarch.\nMaybe ? ? Athletic\nScholarships ? ? ? ?\nThe UBC administration cautiously put out a feeler for\noutside-sponsored athletic scholarships at the annual football\n* banquet in Brock hall Wednesday night.\nDean of Arts and Science S. N. $\t\nF. Chant told ISO spectators that\nfrom the administration's point\nof view scholarships can be established which have participation in athletics as one of the\nqualifications.\nThe Dean, a former member\nof the Toronto football team,\nsaid that the, faculty had no ob-\npections to such scholarships\nPROVIDED that the university's\nstandards are maintained.\nChant told the interested football players, students, downtown\ncoaches, sportswriters and alum- lcad in the Hardy CuP series\nni that the university would over tho University of Saskat-\nnever give up its right to insist\nAlberta\nPreps For\nHamber Cup\nEDMONTON \u00E2\u0080\u0094 (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nUniversity of Alberta Golden\nBears emerged from a penalty\ninifested, hard-fought weekend\ndoubleheadcr with a two game\nchewan.\nthat all students on scholarships\nThe Golden Bears racked up\nmaintain a certain standard. tho h'8hly favoured.Huskies 5-3\nHe made It clear, however.; and 41 on Frlday and Saturday\nthat funds for any such proposed at Varsity rink,\nathletic scholarships would have nQUGH AFFAIR\nto be financed from outside the Tne Bears underdogs but alert\nuniversity.\nChant, an all-round athlete\nand leading scholar at Univer-\nopportunists, outhustled the\nHuskies both nights in an affair that had 31 penalties, in-\nsity of Toronto, \"a long time .... \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 j _\n\",, , ' .. ,, , eluding six majors and one mis\nago , supported football coach\nDon Coryell in asking that all\nmembers of the 1953 team do\ntheir utmost to remain eligible\nfor next season.\nAfter Coryell and line coach\nconduct penalty, plus a regular\n\"team match\" for the benefit of\nany wrestling fans that were\npresent.\nThe donnybrook that threaten-\nMitchell\n'Scalped'\nBy Team\nIf you ever wondered why\na hardy looking soul as Dick\nMitchell should be losing his\nhair the answer is now -quite\nevident. Dick coaches the Varsity hockey team and what has\nhappened to him is enough to\nmake Doug Hepburn go bald.\nWhen the season opened Dick\nhad only one opportunity to see\nhis prospective charges in practise. On the eve of the first\ngame Dick knew neither his\nstarting lineup nor if he had a\nhockey team.\nLOST IN OVERTIME\nWell the boys did their best\nfor Dick but they lost their first\ntwo games in overtime periods.\nNeedless to say this didn't help\nthe condition of Mr. Mitchell's\nscalp.\nWith a couple of weeks of\npractice under their skates the\npucksters started to roll and before long they were battling the\n'Kerries for first place. ' Then\ncame the Xmas layoff and, what\nis worse, the Xmas exams.\nXMAS EXAMS BAD\nWhat the Xmas exams did\nto the hockey team and to Dick's\ncranium an iceberg did to the\nTitanic. No leas than four of\nthe outsanding' players on the\nteam, Brian Leppard, Ray Ing,\nHugh McCullouoh and $ob Lbv-\nett were declared ineligible be-\ncause of marks.\nThe team has proceded to drop\nfrom first place to fourth place\nin the league standings. .With\nonly two games left to play it\ndoesn't look as if the Birds are\ngoing to win the title this year.\nHAMBER CUP\nWhat coach Mitchell is gunning for now is the Hamber\nCup. Last year we lost the\nmuch coveted cup to the University of Alberta. This year the\nAlbertans will be here on February 22 and 23 to try and keep\nthe cup for another year.\nCoach Mitchell feels that UBC\nhas a real chance of winning\nthis year but he will make no\ni definite predictions. All games\nwill be played in the Kerrisdale\nArena and Dick and the team\nhope to see it filled with UBC\nrooters. Remembe.r save Feb-\nuary 22 and 23 for the Hamber\nCup.\nUBC-Alberto\nHockey, Feb. 22-23\nLutheran And Seattle\nBy STAN BECK\nJack Pomfret's dream of glory may finally come true this\nweekend. There is a good chance that Thunderbirds can come\nI up with a couple of victories when they host Pacific Lutheran\nCollege on Friday night and Seattle Pacific Saturday night.\nBirds Conference record-one\nwin and five losses -^ is certainly not impressive but as\nusual the figures do not tell\nthe whole story .\nTwo of the teams losses were\nby three points or less and with\na few breaks in the right places\nt^ey could have very easily had\nbetter than a 500 average.\nDEFENSIVE CLUB\nIn PLC the Birds meet one\nof the toughest defensive ball-\nclubs in America. In coach Pomfret's own words, \"They Just\ndon't check you, they over-\ncheck you.\"\nPLC coach Marv Harshman\nhas always taught his teams to\nplay the type of ball that has\nmade Oklahoma A & M famous.\nThat is a slow, deliberate and\nspoiling brand of basketball. For\nGirls Back\nBasketball\nJamboree\nexample, against Central Washington, the Lutes shot only 57\ntimes but they sank 23 of those\nshots.\nHAVE TO CROWD\nPomfret feels that if Birds\ncrowd the Lutes enough they\nhave a good chance of coming\nup with a victory.\nPLC has a 4-3 won-lost mark\nbut are always a slow starting\nteam- In the last three years\nalthough they have not won\nthe Conference title they have\nalways won the playoffs.\nIn their last game the Lutes\ntoppled\" previously undefeated\nCollege of Puget Sound 85-84.\nSHORT TEAM\nThe Lutes are led by six\nfeet, feur incK Phil Nordquist\nwho incidentally is the tallest\nplayer on the team. Phil will\nreceive a lot of help from veterans Garnet Lund and Bob\nRoss, both six feet, three inches\ntall.\nSaturday night's game against\nSeattle Pacific is not a regular\nConference tilt. Seattle is in\nthe Conference this year strictly on a 'trial basis' and all games\nwith her do not count in the\nstandings.\nBirds should have no trouble\nwith Seattle who they beat twice\nin exhibition games last year by\n65-59 end 60-56 scores. Pacific\nhave a nine and 17 won-lost\nrecord so far this year.\nBoth games start at 8:00 .\nDRAUGHTING\nINSTRUMENTS\nFROM $10.00\nT-SQUARES, PROTRACTORS\nSET SQUARES\nMECHANICAL ENGINEERS\nAND\nPOIYPHASE SLIDE RULES\nZIPPER RING BOOKS\nComplete with Sheets and\nIndex\nAMES LETTERING\nINSTRUMENTS\nFOUNTAIN PENS\nClarke & Stuart\nCo. Ltd.\nSTATIONERS It PRINTERS\n550 Seymour St., Vancouver\nThe world's\nfinest tobaccos\nBasketball is back in a big\nway in women's sports. The\ngirls have arranged a gigantic\nbasketball Jambdree to be held\non the campus February 27\nand 28. Six universities from\nthe U.S. and Canada are expected to attend.\nRegistration of the teams will\ntake place Friday, February\n26 and the games will commence\nSaturday. Each team will\nplay three games \u00E2\u0080\u0094 two\nSaturday and one Sunday morning. All the games will be held\nin the War Memorial Gym.\nSaturday the visitors will\nbe guests at a banquet to be held j vjVtoria\nin the Brock Dining room and\nafter dinner they will attend the\nThunderbird basketball game.\nTeams planning to enter are _. . , , .\n..... \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E,,,. l The club has abandoned its i\nthe University of Washington, \u00E2\u0080\u009E _ , \u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 , . .. I\n \u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E . J: former plans to circulate peti-\nCLU Cancels\nPetition\nCivil Liberties Union will not\ncirculate a petition protesting\nMayor Claude Harrison's alleged proposal of\n\"book burning\" said President\nMarncy Stevenson Thursday.\nDick Mitchell introduced their! ed to break out all through Fri-\nteam, the popular freshman \ day's rough-and tumble affair\ncoach from University of Wash- [ finally came about in the dying\nington, via Hawaii, said that: seconds of the game when a\nUBC could win a lot of games scuffle behind the Saskatchewan\nnext fall if all his players came I goal was a signal for everyone\nback . j to square off for the big melee.\nOnly four will graduate this; As a result, four majors were\nyear. Coryell also disclosed finally handed out by the lax\nthat one-time UBC star Dave' officials and McKay of the Hus-\nMcFarlane would coach a UBC j kies was badly cut about the\nJayvee team next season. I face.\nOFFICIALS TOUGH\nOn Saturday night the officials\nclamped down on the spirited\npucksters by calling 16 penalties, six of which came in the\nfirst period.\nAfter the weekend performance of crafty coach Don Smith\nand his proteges it looks like\nthe Bears are a good bet to\nWashington, College of Puget\nCentral Washington, Western\nSound, Whitworth and Victoria\nCollege.\nThe women's ski team will attend the meet to be held in\nPullman, Washington, February 19, 20 and 21. Coach Roy\nMcCawan will take Ann Marie\nLeuchte, Shirley Morgan, Yvonne Legace and Sheila Turnbull\nto the^meet.\n*P *r *r\nArchery manager, Joy Evel-\neigh, is calling for girls interested in the sport to get in touch\nwith her \"at Emerald 1801. Archers are needed to compete in the\nTelegraphic Meets and in the\nmeet against the Evergreen\nArchery Club. Even if you have\nseen a bow and arrow\ncop the Hardy cup when the\ngreen and gold visit Saskatoon j never\non the weekend of Feb. 12 for the Butts and Bows Club would\nthe remainder of the best of five I be glad to see you so how about\nseries. Igetting in touch with Joy?\nBirds Dig Out From Snow To\nFace Two Top Fifteens In N.A,\nBy GEOFF CONWAY\nThe month-long enforced\nlayoff of the Varsity rugby\nfifteen, as brought about by\nIhe snowy white mantle cloak-\ninn the playing pitches, has\nbrought a perplexed frown\nto the lace of Albert Laithwaite \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 mentor of the squad.\nStar.l in.o,' February 13,\nand extending' into April, begins a period which will see\nAlbert's boys facing two of the\nbest fifteens in North America and one of the best, in the\nworld in a total of seven contests.\nFINAL GAMES\nAlso during this time the\n'Birds must stage a defence of\nthe McKechnie Cup, emblematic of Provincial run'iy suprein-\nacv, which thev have held for\nyears\nand play their final\nThe idea being naturally Pictures of New Zealand's\ngames in the Miller Cup series\nfor the city championship.\nThus far Varsity has not rolled up a particularly impressive record this season, having\nlost their final six contests before starting the new year with\na lopsided win over one of the\nweaker entrants in the city\nleague.\nThen the weatherman stopped in to prevent an extension\nof this winning? streak.\nEXHIBITION MATCH\nAs a result Albert has posted a list of 38 probables that\nmight possibly make a trip\nlo California lo defend the\nWorld Cup against the University of California and to play\nan exhibition match against\nKCLA.\nthat anyone who can complete\nthe prescribed course of\n\"abominable\" excercises, while\nalso running a .number of\nlaps around the field, deserves\nto make the \"sun-tan trip.\nFORMIDABLE OPPONENTS\nHowever only 21 or 22 players will be taken on the week\nlong \"excursion\" to play the\nthree games, so there has also\nbeen posted successive flowery\ndescriptions of the formidable\nopponents that Varsity will\nhave to meet in the next\nmonth.\nThe New Zealand All\nBlacks, who will meet UBC\non March 11 in the Stadium,\nhave occupied a good portion\nof the space.\nimmense forwards, who haul\naround an average of 205\npounds \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and have been picked primarily for \"speed,\" are\nenough to deter many.\nThe stories also include information on the All Black's\nfabulous fullback \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Scott \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nwho can kick equally well\nwith or without his boots on.\nWhen an English reporter\nquestioned this statement, and\nbacked up his doubts with a\nsmall wager, Scott promptly\nremoved his boots and lined\na fifty yard kick between the\nuprights. This is quite a feat\nwhen one realizes that there\nare only two or three hooters\nin B.C. who can accomplish\nthis f'eal with any consistency\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 with boots,\ntions, Mrs. Stevenson said. \"I\nthink if we criticized him any\nmore we would be flogging a\ndead horse,\" she explained.\nthe most pleasing\ncigarette\nyou can smoke!\nWhen yk paase...m$ke it (i|unf^hay^4 Coke\n\"Cok\u00C2\u00AB\" Ii a r\u00C2\u00ABgl\u00C2\u00ABter\u00C2\u00ABd trade-mark.\ntixlvdiitg fi'Jciul Taxet\nCOCA-COLA LTD."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1954_02_05"@en . "10.14288/1.0125592"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society, University of British Columbia"@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from The Ubyssey: http://ubyssey.ca/"@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives"@en . "University of British Columbia"@en . "The Ubyssey"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .