4
BRIT .- . i G O Po 0 1 _ VOLUME XXXV . VANCOUVER, B .C ., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1952 PRICE 5c ; No. 1 7 Pharmacy And Law Judge d Best By Nicol And' Mathe r 'Over four blacks of colorful floats and paper-decked con - celebrations to down- PARTY UNIQU E "The Chinese Communist Part y is unique In the history of revolu- tionary parties," he said, "It i s the only revolutionary party tha t has . hall a territorial basis for It s operations and a private, loya l army to carry out Its policies . These two factors mainly accoun t for the rise of the Communis t Party In China," added Dr . Ho . Without the support of the petite ants, who supplied the territoria l basis, the party could never hav e grown so successfully , "The Chinese Communist Part y is fundameatally a party of agrari - an reformers and as sucli was ofte n A few minutes before t he foot . at variance with the Kremlin . Bu t ball game, Schlesinger and a Yew ;CANADA BEAUTIFUL after the successful completion o f of the Pub staff drew up behind the Long March, begun in 1934, th e . the Brock, tti'hile walking to the ; Man nermg To , stadium, he was ,lumped upon taut ; Vancouver Best H S a He s sanctio ned the pellet' re newed b y Kremlin adtuitted its mistake an d puelied into a car . lie was taken Mao-tse Tuna " DIrect Play to the engineering buildin g , where "I knew Canada was beautiful,"' ambition, At the time he entere d i after it long struggle, the redshirts said Eu g ene Bedw . ISS Itud e nt the Belgrade University was so LAND REFOR M A medieval kingdom, a mys- 8tt('ce " d " in tieing him hand and fro ;u Trieste, 'but I never guessed overcrowetl that only partisanar Because western observers hav e ltt)W beautiful until I made thel I been able . during the peat fe w terious queen and a milk-white I trio train Ilulll'ax to v anoollyer . ,,' allowed to enter the most popular y ea r s, to know more of the goings unicorn will be the features of FOR PARADE died of all Canada, he would im ' olties ' H e co n s iders the retina on In Red China informed anthorl - "The Pliyer Queen" one of 'The '''i)"""t excuse tar ,"gi"g choose Vancouver to live iil--hnt ties ut t'ltts for studying ahystes! ties accept the fact that the Coin - the three fall plays to be pre- the editor In the '10i"ocomi"g Pa . neturalia, wonderful and he jumped at the :amulet halt reform Pollee (shine , aide was the dismantling of th e seated by Players' Club Eugene's parents are Russians chance to enter that department . ; though leaving the fiscal burde n . vnonePr float on PrivaY night . who left their native land in 1920 If immigration authorities are' of each individual to the state es - The truck used for the float could to settle in Yugoslavia . There the amendable to reason and his own sentially unchanged, bus "brough t not be used on Saturday, and in Iwo sous were born . Then In 1950a ability stands the test, Eugene ; about profound psychological re v place it, the F,tty proposed sl ale Yugoslavian government be• hopes to proceed to a Ph, D, and ()hake in the mind of the averag e build a comedy float 'around the een to make things difficult for ; a career in research , captive pubster . nun-sitIons and the Butt :ova re. ; It isn't all books and laboratorie s Because of the struggle Schele 'mead to Trieste as refugees, I . In this 'ss student's Ilfe --he "e s had put up prior to the gable WiIS the rel'nge ealllp that Fit-SPOI'tS such as tennis, table tell - during the first half, the gene beg ;ua to acquire his present nis and volleyball . And then h e lilolegY 100 . Everyone welcome . Philip Keatley who was Droll .' "float" was not, ready for the regd . excellent command of English and gets hack to books for recreation , dent of the Players' ;Club last year ; lar parade at half lime, and It was later he worked for a year In the chiefly hooks on scienc e DR . BILL POWELS of Crease will direct veteran thespfuns In 1101 nutii tell rllillllles liner the American waive of th e Clinic and the Provincial MentallihIs recenily .,chosen onp.acter . 'ecand Illar had started that six 0)1111,11 of Churches . iloseilal, Essondule . will he the this ; will puzzle them at 1'atgitlferS, WOrn out F ;n~ ;cnc Is ti student i n guest speaker' of the SCM in Arts Scotland Yard," it quote from "Two ,trotn their tussle with the wiry re,jug P11y-1(s of the Faculty or Eugene's ghillie and there is el workers are SUIOCt to hldoctrina- lee 1)11 Wednesday, Nov . 5 at 12 :30 ( ;fitlemen of Hobo" signs up this editor, pulled an undecorated horse Si 'oleic, Ile stuiliod civil Mrs . Eugene waiting anxiously ink lien and 'and soni c PAIL His lied(' will be "Christianity third play, Players' Clue members Honer look) lho field whit Sollies, oiluinorin . ; ilk Holgrathc as built) ; 1'ugo,11t‘ia to hoar the outcome, ol' lho n )tel chhw-e militia hav e and Mental Health .' said . ineer securely bound and gagged the hearea he could get to his, Cloud luck, both of you . fallen into diagrace . " Like Ik e M 0 WYVEPIN MAGAZINE MEETIN G for . the Odltor$l board and all wh o are interested in writing and car- tooning, Tuesday et 12 :30 In th e Men's Club Room in the Brook . VARSITY TENNIS CLUB meet - ins . 'w*ewattif i ttygotb eer .6. 1 ;ou p .m . In the field hods . . Profession- al coachitia will be available for be- ginners . Bring your own racque t and tennis balls, Don't forget fee s are now payable . All interested please attend . PS 4 d MAMOOKS meeting Wednesday , Nov . 4 at 12 :30 In Double Commit tee Room, Brock . ' A SQUARE DANCE DEMONSTRA• thing not to belong to the Unite d TION GROUP, Wednesday night, 1 States," said the Toronto profes - 6 o'clock, Hut 04, , New membersl sea "They have paid that pric e if you like square danc . ' at every critical point in their his . out and have some tort' .'' But, he suggested, Can a Mane don't realize that fact be- cause our history "Is taught with out understanding.", NOT AMERICAN S 4 t ' STUDENT LIBERAL CLU B meeting in 'Alen's Club Room a t 3 :30 on Wednesday to continue die- cuselons of party platform , if 44 FRENCH CANADIAN SINGER S will meet in Hut 04 on Friday a t 12 :30 for singing practice . Ne w members are cordially Invited . Only one prerequisite needed, a lust for singing . INDIA STUDENTS ASSOCIA- TION meeting will be held o n Tuesday, November 4 in Arts e08 , All members please attend , DANCE CLUB folk (lancing ha s been changed to Tuesday noo n hour In FIG 4 . All people Intereste d in folk ditneiiia and have had pre- vious exeprfence eve asked to tur n out today it noou . Regular hal l room session in jive Wedueada y end Thursday , BIOLOGY CLUB wil l illustrated talk Written by W e 11 . Yeats, "Th e Player Queen" will he directed by Peter elannoring who is know fo r his work In the Totem Theatre . g el Stravinsky music will serve as a on duck handing :lmckground for "The lmmortals," l by Glen Smith and Alec WOW on ! the famed , fIrehird story from Inge 1 Thursday, November lit 12 .30 in Slavic folklore . an d come . ta g fun. 4 CCF CLUB preqpnts a film, "W e Have Got You 6overed," dealin g with car insurance, on Wednesday , Nov . 5 in FG 100 at 12 :30 p .m . I t will be followed by, .a discussion ; HIGH SCHOOL CONFERENC E committee meeting on Wednesda y at 12 :30 in the Council Room of th e Anyone interested is wel - This Wee k DR . KRONER 1111 conclude hi e series of lectures on "Culture an d Faith" on Tuesday and Thursday at 12 :30 in Agee 100 . Brock , welcome . 'TW$EN CLASSE S Concludin g Loctur~S ,Hel d By DOT AVERBACH What's wrong with Canadian history? "Not enough bloo d about !A," an eminent historian told a capacity audience o f students, staff, andvisitors irs Arts 100, Saturday, , a "We haven't had a political ex ecution in this country for abou t 100 years", said Dr. A . R . M . Low- er, Professor of Canadian History at Queen's University and one o f the foremost Canadian historians on this continent . The fact that "Canadians hav e been sheltered " childien tends t o give a certain) mild atmosphere t o mir history . We have not had to o many- stern tests to fade or grea t declaim' to make," he said, a s first speaker on the 5-man, 1-wom- an panel of historians , that face d a responsive audience• on Saturda y morning . With Prof. Lower were fiv e other speakers . Dr. George Brown , of the University of Toronto, Dr . Walter Sage, Prof . F, H . Smart , Dr . Gilbert Tuok g r, and Dr . Marg- aret Ormsby. Berman Foods, Exchange Student s Features Of mt 'i House Dinne r , Barmbeck rollfleisch, kolatschen, rotkonl and man y other foods foreign to the Canadian tongue will be serve d at the German dinner to be given by International House i n Acadia Camp Sunday night . . Featured speakers at the German dinner will b e German exchange students Ulrich Stipke and Irmgar d Spieler . Tickets will be sold in the quad Wednesday and wil l / be available in the AMS office . Price for students is 67c . Outiiders, $1 .25 . Dinner will be served in Acadia Dinin g Hall at 6 p.m ! History Not Blood y Pr~fiSsor Tells U s coma on present NO "W . , ''aa s Dr . Brown annealed that on e of the primary faults of Metery i n general lies with public interest, o r the lack of it . "We are not paying eno u g h at tention to it," he said . The em- phasis now is on the Immediat e Brown . "Canadians are an eminentl y sensible people," said Dr . Lower , and when we begin to be inter- ested in our history there will no t be much wrong with it," adde d Dr . Brown . The second phase of this year's drab battle between th e engineers and the Ubyssey bogged down in a quagmire o f lethargy last Saturday when a proposed kidnapping of edito r Joe Schlesinger was foiled . ' After being held In, custody . by in a cage on top . over ten redehlrts for two hours' RESCUE D Five Pub Board members, watch - early 9 t d o bi 9chle ga Ing the game from the north end! A lending Vancouver newspape r "We are not Americans, but timer es4apod th rough a 10th Ave . of the tine, laced after the trailer ! reported Monday night that "a t North Americans," he added . grocery store and came back to to rescue their chief and succeed - Canada's growth to nationhood Brock' Hall to enlist the aid of the ; wapi ti the f ramew ork of the Em . Pelt shaft' In beating off an expected' ed in stopping it completely i n tront„ of the east stands . Ore prepared her for international engineer assault on the Pub 0f ric " A wild free-for-all, swollen b y co-operation, the panel agreed, ' in the " tern "' many spectators who Caine dow n "With the world getting rid of HE MANE, from the stands to give aid t o the concept of national sovereign - ty the tag ends of colonialism linl He run out the fire door at the both sides, resulte d in a resound - , Canada) turn out to be the begin- hells , of the Iirock and sped out the ; in g defeat for the redshirts and e east mull In his Hillman , purs u ed few cuts and bruises for the valian t dugs of Internationalism, said Dr . by eight engineers in a - goupeg .up Pu bste r s . :Mercury. A h'gh speed race around 'sch l es in ge r w as free d t'om th e the campus ended ep with the cage, and except for an impressiv e cleaning bill for his muddied ! celebrations, where they looke d clo t hes , was none th e worse for "like big horse shoes ." (Ed . note his experience . ! someone has a good imagination) . ee se_ _ _ onto the field In a bear cage . Enraged ubsters rushed to hi s dn a' ng Fal rescue and : :: ; s ; and contemporary . We ignore theI pp i i lost the footbal l historical process leading to pres . some 2i . O students climaxed th e eat events," he charged . I I d~ celebrations with a monster danc e "Canadians have to pay some . Ubyssey editor hidden behind th e Anglican Theological College wit h his car broken down . Colourful . Parade Mark s omecoming Festivities . ---Uhy .ass y Photo by Hux Lovel y QVY CO .ED PAT TAYLOR wars chosen by. students gggggesiming'feittivittes as 1952 Oeen . Pat .was the Commerce entry, and was crowned at the danc e Saturialy night . thoug h Worhliiol necessarily in his own field . Y11i ;O'dilVilt ' , loss %A ill Ile Call - Elgin- ado's grain if all goes well wit h PHARMACY AND LA W The Pharmacy flodt featured a lovely evening-gowned co-ed unde r a huge plastic shell, representin g a "pill", and included instructlon e how to take sap pill . The Magna Carta formed th e appropriate theme for the La w float, with mail-clad figures an d waving banners adding color , Many old cars and students dress- ed in mullein clothing represente d the original "Great Trek" of 1922 . The same floats paraded the sta diem at half time during the foot - bull game Saturday . The twelv e queen candidates were driven be - fore the crowd of over 4,000 In fou r convertibles. .AWARD PRESENTE D Judge Lord was presented wit h the "(event Trekker" award, ' a replica of the famed cairn, by AM S presidentRaghbir Bast . Slapthany iltudent eelebrant a sprayed the stands with fire hoses , while blood-crazy Engineers drag- ged editor-in-chief Joe Schlesinge r -- - Somethin g Missing A t UBC Monda y lewd 41) toilet seats have been re leveed to various buildings on th e UBC campus . " The paper was obviously misin- formed . Monday found student s still "doing without," and up to ' press time no attempt had bee n made to return said essentials . The paper goes on to say tha t eye witnesses claimed the seat s hung from bushes along the UB C Boulevard during Homecomin g in the Armouries Saturday night . vertibles advertised UBC's Homecomin g town Vancouverites Friday. The parade, which travelled east ' on Pander to Richards, up Richard s to Georgia, and west along Georgi a attracted crowds of observers, We e favorable comments from old grad s and . Impartial citizens alike . Newapaperites Eric Nicol an d Barry Mather judged the Phftrm- acy and Law entries as the beat , and awarded those faculties firs t prize jointly, peasant . " Dr, Ho went oil to explain th e e holo .hoarted welcome given th e Communists In 194S-49 by the in- telligentsia us a result or their die , ;IppOilItIllellt with the Nationalis t government . "lint that honeymoo n l's now over ; people are being de - privet' or basic civil liberties," b e added . lntellect0als us well a s Arts 1/ndorgrdmte s Meet At Noon Tetchy ' The reconstituted A r t 4 Undergraduate Society will hold a general meeting a t 12 :30 today In Arts 204 . The reformed society is de - voting itself to the presenta- tion of distinguished artist s in a series of Wednesda y noon-hour performances . ' The purpose of today' s meeting is to ratify the new constitution and to elect a new executive . Candidates for positions o f president, vice-president i n charge of special _events, sec- retary, treasurer, and public- ity committee chairman mus t submit nominations signed by' two supporters . Communis m Natural Says Dr . ' H o Communist China ii not th e "child of the Kremlin," Dr . Ping-ti Ho told an audience in Arts 100 Friday at noon . "Communism In China today Is a product of the typically Chines e environment in which It was bent in 1921," he added . Over 100 students filled . the roo m to hear Dr .,Ho discuss the rim o f Communism in China and its in- fluence on the social and econom- ic society in that land . I

Berman Foods, Exchange Students Colourful Parade Marks ... · ltt)W beautiful until I made thel I been able. during the peat few terious queen and a milk-white I trio train Ilulll'ax

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    1

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Berman Foods, Exchange Students Colourful Parade Marks ... · ltt)W beautiful until I made thel I been able. during the peat few terious queen and a milk-white I trio train Ilulll'ax

BRIT .- .

i

GO

Po 0 1

_

VOLUME XXXV

. VANCOUVER, B .C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1952

PRICE 5c; No. 17

Pharmacy And Law Judged

Best By Nicol And' Mather

'Over four blacks of colorful floats and paper-decked con -

celebrations to down-

PARTY UNIQU E

"The Chinese Communist Part yis unique In the history of revolu-

tionary parties," he said, "It isthe only revolutionary party tha thas . hall a territorial basis for It s

operations and a private, loyal

army to carry out Its policies .These two factors mainly accountfor the rise of the Communis tParty In China," added Dr. Ho .Without the support of the petite

ants, who supplied the territoria lbasis, the party could never havegrown so successfully ,

"The Chinese Communist Part yis fundameatally a party of agrari -

an reformers and as sucli was ofte nA few minutes before t he foot .

at variance with the Kremlin . Butball game, Schlesinger and a Yew ;CANADA BEAUTIFUL

after the successful completion o fof the Pub staff drew up behind

the Long March, begun in 1934, the.

the Brock, tti'hile walking to the ;

Man nermg To , stadium, he was ,lumped upon taut; Vancouver Best

HSa He

s sanctioned the pellet' renewed by

Kremlin adtuitted its mistake an d

puelied into a car . lie was takenMao-tse Tuna"

DIrect Play

to the engineering buildin g, where "I knew Canada was beautiful,"' ambition, At the time he entere di after it long struggle, the redshirts said Eu gene Bedw . ISS Itudent the Belgrade University was so LAND REFOR M

A medieval kingdom, a mys- 8tt('ce"d" in tieing him hand and fro ;u Trieste, 'but I never guessed overcrowetl that only partisanar Because western observers hav eltt)W beautiful until I made thel

I been able . during the peat fe wterious queen and a milk-white

I trio train Ilulll'ax to vanoollyer . ,,' allowed to enter the most popular y ea rs, to know more of the goings•unicorn will be the features of FOR PARADE died of all Canada, he would im ' olties ' H e con s iders the retina on In Red China informed anthorl -"The Pliyer Queen" one of

'The '''i)"""t excuse tar ,"gi"g choose Vancouver to live iil--hnt ties ut t'ltts for studying ahystes! ties accept the fact that the Coin -

the three fall plays to be pre- the editor In the '10i"ocomi"g Pa . neturalia,

wonderful and he jumped at the :amulet halt reform Pollee

(shine ,aide was the dismantling of th e

seated by Players' Club

Eugene's parents are Russians chance to enter that department . ; though leaving the fiscal burde n.

vnonePr float on PrivaY night . who left their native land in 1920 If immigration authorities are' of each individual to the state es -The truck used for the float could to settle in Yugoslavia

. There the amendable to reason and his own sentially unchanged, bus "brough tnot be used on Saturday, and in Iwo sous were born . Then In 1950a ability stands the test, Eugene ; about profound psychological revplace it, the F,tty proposed sl ale Yugoslavian government be• hopes to proceed to a Ph, D, and ()hake in the mind of the averag ebuild a comedy float 'around the een to make things difficult for ; a career in research ,captive pubster . nun-sitIons and the Butt:ova re. ;

It isn't all books and laboratorie sBecause of the struggle Schele 'mead to Trieste as refugees, I .

In this 'ss student's Ilfe --he "e shad put up prior to the gable WiIS

the rel'nge ealllp that Fit-SPOI'tS such as tennis, table tell -during the first half, the gene beg;ua to acquire his present nis and volleyball . And then h e

lilolegY 100 . Everyone welcome .

Philip Keatley who was Droll .' "float" was not, ready for the regd . excellent command of English and gets hack to books for recreation ,dent of the Players' ;Club last year ; lar parade at half lime, and It was later he worked for a year In the chiefly hooks on scienc e

DR . BILL POWELS of Crease will direct veteran thespfuns In 1101 nutii tell rllillllles liner the American waive of th eClinic and the Provincial MentallihIs recenily .,chosen onp.acter .

'ecand Illar had started that six 0)1111,11 of Churches .iloseilal, Essondule . will he the

this; will puzzle them at

1'atgitlferS, WOrn out

F ;n~;cnc Is ti student i n

guest speaker' of the SCM in Arts Scotland Yard," it quote from "Two ,trotn their tussle with the wiry re,jug P11y-1(s of the Faculty or Eugene's ghillie and there is el workers are SUIOCt to hldoctrina-lee 1)11 Wednesday, Nov . 5 at 12 :30 ( ;fitlemen of Hobo" signs up this editor, pulled an undecorated horse Si 'oleic, Ile stuiliod civil Mrs . Eugene waiting anxiously ink lien and 'and sonicPAIL His lied(' will be "Christianity third play, Players' Clue members Honer look) lho field whit Sollies, oiluinorin . ; ilk Holgrathc as built) ; 1'ugo,11t‘ia to hoar the outcome, ol' lho n )tel chhw-e militia haveand Mental Health .'

said .

ineer securely bound and gagged the hearea he could get to his, Cloud luck, both of you .

fallen into diagrace . "

Like

Ike

M

0 WYVEPIN MAGAZINE MEETIN G

for . the Odltor$l board and all who

are interested in writing and car-

tooning, Tuesday et 12 :30 In the

Men's Club Room in the Brook .

VARSITY TENNIS CLUB meet -

ins. 'w*ewattifittygotbeer .6. 1 ;oup.m . In the field hods.. Profession-

al coachitia will be available for be-

ginners . Bring your own racque t

and tennis balls, Don't forget fee s

are now payable. All interested

please attend .

PS 4dMAMOOKS meeting Wednesday ,

Nov . 4 at 12 :30 In Double Commit •

tee Room, Brock .

'ASQUARE DANCE DEMONSTRA• thing not to belong to the Unite d

TION GROUP, Wednesday night, 1 States," said the Toronto profes-

6 o'clock, Hut 04, ,New membersl sea "They have paid that pric e

if you like square danc . ' at every critical point in their his .

out and have some tort' .'' But, he suggested, Can aMane don't realize that fact be-cause our history "Is taught with •

out understanding.",

NOT AMERICAN S

4t

'STUDENT LIBERAL CLU B

meeting in 'Alen's Club Room a t

3 :30 on Wednesday to continue die-

cuselons of party platform ,

if

44

FRENCH CANADIAN SINGER Swill meet in Hut 04 on Friday a t

12 :30 for singing practice . New

members are cordially Invited .

Only one prerequisite needed, a

lust for singing .

INDIA STUDENTS ASSOCIA-

TION meeting will be held o n

Tuesday, November 4 in Arts e08 ,

All members please attend ,

DANCE CLUB folk (lancing ha s

been changed to Tuesday noo n

hour In FIG 4 . All people Intereste d

in folk ditneiiia and have had pre-

vious exeprfence eve asked to tur n

out today it noou . Regular hal l

room session in jive Wedueada y

end Thursday ,

BIOLOGY CLUB wil lillustrated talk

Written by We 11 . Yeats, "The

Player Queen" will he directed byPeter elannoring who is know fo r

his work In the Totem Theatre .

gel Stravinsky music will serve as a

on duck handing :lmckground for "The lmmortals," l

by Glen Smith and Alec WOW on!the famed , fIrehird story from Inge 1

Thursday, November

lit 12 .30 in Slavic folklore .

and

come.

tagfun.

4CCF CLUB preqpnts a film, "W e

Have Got You 6overed," dealing

with car insurance, on Wednesday ,

Nov. 5 in FG 100 at 12 :30 p .m. It

will be followed by, .a discussion ;

HIGH SCHOOL CONFERENCEcommittee meeting on Wednesda y

at 12 :30 in the Council Room of th e

Anyone interested is wel -

This WeekDR. KRONER 1111 conclude hi e

series of lectures on "Culture and

Faith" on Tuesday and Thursday

at 12 :30 in Agee 100 .

Brock ,

welcome .

'TW$EN CLASSE S

Concludin gLoctur~S ,Hel d

By DOT AVERBACHWhat's wrong with Canadian history? "Not enough bloo d

about !A," an eminent historian told a capacity audience o fstudents, staff, andvisitors irs Arts 100, Saturday, ,

a "We haven't had a political ex•

ecution in this country for abou t

100 years", said Dr. A. R. M. Low-

er, Professor of Canadian History

at Queen's University and one of

the foremost Canadian historians

on this continent .The fact that "Canadians have

been sheltered "childien tends t o

give a certain) mild atmosphere t o

mir history. We have not had too

many- stern tests to fade or grea t

declaim' to make," he said, as

first speaker on the 5-man, 1-wom-

an panel of historians ,that face d

a responsive audience• on Saturda ymorning .

With Prof. Lower were five

other speakers . Dr. George Brown,

of the University of Toronto, Dr .Walter Sage, Prof . F, H. Smart ,Dr . Gilbert Tuok gr, and Dr. Marg-

aret Ormsby.

Berman Foods, Exchange StudentsFeatures Of mt 'i House Dinner

,Barmbeck rollfleisch, kolatschen, rotkonl and manyother foods foreign to the Canadian tongue will be serve dat the German dinner to be given by International House i nAcadia Camp Sunday night .. Featured speakers at the German dinner will b eGerman exchange students Ulrich Stipke and Irmgar dSpieler .

Tickets will be sold in the quad Wednesday and will/

be available in the AMS office . Price for students is 67c .Outiiders, $1 .25. Dinner will be served in Acadia DiningHall at 6 p.m!

History Not BloodyPr~fiSsor Tells U s

coma on

present

NO "W. ,

''aa sDr. Brown annealed that on e

of the primary faults of Metery i n

general lies with public interest, orthe lack of it .

"We are not paying enough at•

tention to it," he said . The em-phasis now is on the Immediate

Brown .

"Canadians are an eminentl ysensible people," said Dr. Lower ,

and when we begin to be inter-ested in our history there will no tbe much wrong with it," adde dDr. Brown .

The second phase of this year's drab battle between th e

engineers and the Ubyssey bogged down in a quagmire of

lethargy last Saturday when a proposed kidnapping of editor

Joe Schlesinger was foiled .

'After being held In, custody . by in a cage on top .

over ten redehlrts for two hours' RESCUE DFive Pub Board members, watch -

early 9 t d

o bi

9chlegaIng the game from the north end! A lending Vancouver newspape r

"We are not Americans, but timer es4apod through a10th

Ave . of the tine, laced after the trailer ! reported Monday night that "a tNorth Americans," he added .

grocery store and cameback to to rescue their chief and succeed -

Canada's growth to nationhood Brock' Hall to enlist the aid of the ;

wapi ti the framework of the Em . Pelt shaft' In beating off an expected' ed in stopping it completely i ntront„ of the east stands .

Ore prepared her for international engineer assault on thePub

0fric" A wild free-for-all, swollen b yco-operation, the panel agreed,

' in the "tern"'

many spectators who Caine dow n"With the world getting rid of HE MANE,

from the stands to give aid tothe concept of national sovereign-ty the tag ends of colonialism linl He run out the fire door at the

both sides, resulted in a resound -,

Canada) turn out to be the begin-hells , of the Iirock and sped out the ; in g defeat for the redshirts and e

east mull In his Hillman , pursued few cuts and bruises for the valian tdugs of Internationalism, said Dr . by eight engineers in a -goupeg .up Pubste r s .

:Mercury. A h'gh speed race around 'schles inger was free d t'om thethe campus ended ep with the cage, and except for an impressiv e

cleaning bill for his muddied ! celebrations, where they looke dclo t hes , was none th e worse for "like big horse shoes ." (Ed. note—his experience .

! someone has a good imagination) .ee

se_ _ _

onto the field In a bear cage .Enraged ubsters rushed to hi s

dn a'

ng Fal

rescue and

: ::;s;and contemporary. We ignore theI

ppi

i

lost the footbal lhistorical process leading to pres .

some 2i . O students climaxed th eeat events," he charged .

I Id~

celebrations with a monster danc e"Canadians have to pay some .

Ubyssey editor hidden behind th e

Anglican Theological College wit h

his car broken down .

Colourful . Parade Marksomecoming Festivities .

---Uhy .ass y Photo by Hux Lovely

QVY CO.ED PAT TAYLOR wars chosen by. studentsgggggesiming'feittivittes as 1952 Oeen . Pat .was

the Commerce entry, and was crowned at the danc eSaturialy night .

thoug hWorhliiol necessarily in his own field .

Y11i;O'dilVilt ' ,

loss

%A ill

Ile

Call -Elgin- ado's grain if all goes well wit h

PHARMACY AND LA WThe Pharmacy flodt featured a

lovely evening-gowned co-ed unde ra huge plastic shell, representinga "pill", and included instructlon ehow to take sap pill .

The Magna Carta formed th eappropriate theme for the La wfloat, with mail-clad figures an dwaving banners adding color ,Many old cars and students dress-

ed in mullein clothing represente dthe original "Great Trek" of 1922 .

The same floats paraded the sta •

diem at half time during the foot -bull game Saturday . The twelve

queen candidates were driven be -

fore the crowd of over 4,000 In fourconvertibles.

.AWARD PRESENTE D

Judge Lord was presented withthe "(event Trekker" award, 'areplica of the famed cairn, by AM SpresidentRaghbir Bast .

Slapthany iltudent eelebrantasprayed the stands with fire hoses ,while blood-crazy Engineers drag-

ged editor-in-chief Joe Schlesinge r

-- -

Something

Missing At

UBC Monday

lewd 41) toilet seats have been re •

leveed to various buildings on th eUBC campus . "

The paper was obviously misin-

formed . Monday found student s

still "doing without," and up to '

press time no attempt had bee nmade to return said essentials .

The paper goes on to say tha teye witnesses claimed the seat s

hung from bushes along the UB CBoulevard during Homecomin g

in the Armouries Saturday night .

vertibles advertised UBC's Homecomin gtown Vancouverites Friday.

The parade, which travelled east '

on Pander to Richards, up Richard s

to Georgia, and west along Georgi aattracted crowds of observers, We e

favorable comments from old grad sand. Impartial citizens alike .

Newapaperites Eric Nicol andBarry Mather judged the Phftrm-

acy and Law entries as the beat ,and awarded those faculties firs tprize jointly,

peasant . "Dr, Ho went oil to explain th e

e holo.hoarted welcome given th eCommunists In 194S-49 by the in-

telligentsia us a result or their die,;IppOilItIllellt with the Nationalistgovernment . "lint that honeymoo n

l's now over ; people are being de -privet' or basic civil liberties," b eadded . lntellect0als us well a s

Arts 1/ndorgrdmtes

Meet At Noon Tetchy '

The reconstituted A r t 4

Undergraduate Society will

hold a general meeting a t

12:30 today In Arts 204 .

The reformed society is de-

voting itself to the presenta-

tion of distinguished artists

in a series of Wednesday

noon-hour performances.

'

The purpose of today's

meeting is to ratify the new

constitution and to elect a

new executive .

Candidates for positions o f

president, vice-president i n

charge of special _events, sec-

retary, treasurer, and public-

ity committee chairman must

submit nominations signed

by' two supporters.

Communism

Natural

Says Dr. ' Ho

Communist China ii not th e

"child of the Kremlin," Dr .

Ping-ti Ho told an audience in

Arts 100 Friday at noon."Communism In China today Is a

product of the typically Chines e

environment in which It was bent

in 1921," he added .

Over 100 students filled.the roomto hear Dr .,Ho discuss the rim o fCommunism in China and its in-

fluence on the social and econom-

ic society in that land .

I

Page 2: Berman Foods, Exchange Students Colourful Parade Marks ... · ltt)W beautiful until I made thel I been able. during the peat few terious queen and a milk-white I trio train Ilulll'ax

PAGE TWO

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, November 4, 195 2

SHE UBYSSE YMEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS

Authorised us second class )cull by the ('eat Otflee Peet ., Ottawa. Rtudeat sebser4 ps

$L20 per year (Included In AMS fees), Mail suhacript4one a2:00 per year . Single eoptsefive cents . Published throughout the Uiteeratty you by the Student Publications Martior the Alma Mater Solcety, University of patetis'b Cad unite laditortat opt$oae espressedherein are those of the editorial staff of tare IGbyssey, and not necessarily those of thi sAlma Muter Society or of the University .

Offices to Brook Hail

For display advertisingPhone ALma 1624

Phone Alma 8258EDITOR -IN-CHIEF JOE SCHLESINGE R

Senior Editor — Shells Kearns

Assistant — Marion Nova k

Executive Editor Gerry !Kidd

Msnagir%p Editor Elsie Gerba tCity Editor, Myra Green ; News Editor, Ron Seam's ; Women's Editor, Palo McNeil ;Literary Editor, Galt E1kfngtan ; CUt' (Editor, Patsy Byrne,; Editorial Assistant, Vaugha nl,yon ; Staff Pltateertt ahar, flux Lovely ; also tolled, Pete Ptaeo, Mike Ames, Tom Shorter . 'Letters to the Editor should be restricted to 150 words . The Ubyssey reserves theright to cut letters and cannot guarantee to publish all letters received.

Homecoming Success?Homecoming weekend is over . That it was

a partial success despite the bungling of th eHomecoming Committee is a gratifying

vertibles were supposed to represent . Therewas not a single sign on the cars carrying theQueen candidates, nor was the car carryingthroe beblazered student councillors markediii any way .

Furthermore, the very fact that the Queencandidates had to be crowded together showsup quite plainly the lack of initiative on thepart of the Committee .

Next time we venture downtown in a masspublicity parade, let us make sure its not

just a "let ' s go, boys" affair .

thought .Quite apart from the lack of publicity co -

ordination in the weeks and days precedingHomecoming, and the fiasco of USC's inter-vention in the choice of Queen candidstAs,the Committee also failed in organizing it spart of the downtown parade .

The individual floats were a great success ,but who among the bystanders knew what th ebevy of smiling girls crowded into three eon-

OPEN LETTER TO VANCOUVER SU N

CBS Televisio nYour 'news reports' on the CBC are so

riddled with half-truths, inaccuracies and 'logical fallacies that one letter can commen ton a few only ,

By unscrupulous organization of your ma-terial . you apparently tried to mislead you rreaders. For example, on the front page ofthe Oct, 29 issue, you say : "An on-the-spotsurvey of Canadian television shows : 1 . Thefederal `government is accused of wanting t opt'ect a copper curtain, . . . to deflect U.S.TV signals ." Not until the next day did yo utell us who made the 'accusation'—and letus find out that it was not an accusation a tdisinterested observer said "I know wha ta1i, You report : J. E. Cooke (anything but aDr. McCann would like to do . . and-thatis to erect a copper barrier . . to deflect TVsignals from the U.S," Unscrupulous organ-

' ization, deliberate misquoting or unforgivablestupidity? If the last, surely Webster shoul dbe fired?

Your editorial of Oct, 30 finishes with th ecompletely, illogical conclusion that "it woul dinvoke no extension of tl s same principle i fthe government established its own publish-ing house with authority over all other pub-lishing houses and the right to determin ewhat books Canadians shall read . " The cir-curnstances of radio and publishing are dif-ferent; by international agreement we ar eallowed a Jew wavelengths only ; we can pub-lish as many books as we like .

Under a heading CBC Shines in Drama yo uprint a 46-line paragraph :, 1½ lines on th etopic and 44 1/2 on miscellaneous and irrele-vant material. Why not devote the sameamount of space to the excellencies of theCBC as you do to its supposed defects? '

In your editorial of Nov . 1, you use anargument by faulty analogy . There is noconnection between the CRC 's , control of

radio and Mussolini 's control of the railways.We have free elections .

The worst aspect of your smear campaign ,however, is your failure to publish a reportof the speech by Mr. Seldom, a noted authorit yon U.S, radio and television, to the Nationa lRadio Awards dinner. In view of the spaceyou devoted to the CAC this week, surelyyou could have published his speech? H esaid, among other things and as closely as Ican remember: "American radio does notsatisfy many people . . . In American TV

there is practically no sustained effort to mee tthe requirements of any minority group, letus say of anything less than 37 per cent of thepublic . Canada has a greater chance of satis-fying the public under its system. It is inthose statements that we find the reps sinof commercial radio : it is so constituted tha tit cannot cater to minority groups—and mostpeople belong to a minority group in one o ftheir interests, be it stamp-collecting, cham-ber music, the U .N., ballet, or compost heaps .

Furthermore, let's hear no more of thisnonsense about taxpayers ' money being usedto set up CBC TV, Where does commercialradio get its money?—From us, to the tun eof $45 (roughly) per head per year . And theminority groups who get no service fro mcommercial radio still have to support it -whenever they buy an advertised product .In other words, the CBC is more democrati cin its financing as well as in its programing .

You might take not of Chief Justice Rin-I' r'et 's column on Friday : "There is no neces-sity for the Vancouver Sun to be published :and if it cannot do it without being inaccurate .it should cease publication ." (I didn't notic ethat comment in the Sun, by the way) .

.R. J. BAKER ,

2nd Year Graduate Studies .

LETTERS TO EDITOR

4 4 4

Once upon a time (Vila morn -ing to Pre exact) a voter (a voter

a citizen of the United States t o

he more specific) went to thepolls to elect a president ,

of the United States to be more

specific) went to the polls t o

elect a president.

Ho had not planned to vote ,

but his wife (a member of the

i)anghters of the American Rev-olution) had egged him on to d o

his civic duty, He would have

resisted his wife, but he rina4l ygave in to the exhortations of hi s

son (an enthusiastic Boy Scout) ,

his boss (National associatio n

of Manufacturers, the Rotaries ,

Elks, Shriners, American Legion

and a few dozen other equall y

Patriotic organizstioneI, the nd •

dvertisements or a few assorte d

steel and automobile companies ,

and his minister, who put It t o

hint as his Christian duty .

Asked how he would vote, h e

steno(' but gave us some relevan t

statistics about himaolf ,

ifs had, he declared, mor e

white shirts than colored . H e

got on quite well with hi s

ru"ther-hu-la W . but haled the gut s

of hie senator uad congreeeman,

♦ 4 4

Reaabliean and 'Democratic re .spertively. His ear was worth the

slim of his salary for one month

plus his son 's earnings as a news -boy for the same period, multi -

plied by seven, He owed finance

companies as nnu+h as his house

would be worth If two rooms

were taken out, Apart from hisfive shares In International Steel ,

he owned a half share In his

cousin's ('arm, which he obtaine d

alter he paid off a $100 mortgage

at the start of the depression .

During the depression at th e

age or 21 he weighed 132 lbs ., and

after having put up the $100 fo r

the mortgage frequented five

soup kitchens within an area o f

two square miles (he did no t

have the street—car fare to visi t

nine other soup kitchens situated

within a seven-mile radius from

his center of operations) ,

after Pearl Harbor he enlisted

in the army. He got his goo d

conduct medal after four years a t

the AI'(, in San Francisco ,

He also told us that he was

for farm price support but fo r

less government Interference In

egrieslimal problems. Ile likedthe way Acheson dressed, an d

thought harry S . was a "good

lee just like one of the buy's in

Lite club,"

‘ee~tieeJ

iIo declared emphatically tha the was free of all prejudice s

Once upon a time (this morn •leg to be exact) a voter (a citize nagainst Negroes and that boththe Negro families resident I nhis hometown were nice an d"knew their places" .

Ile maintained he had neve r"fund It better" but thought h ecould he better off if prices wen tclown and the Wage Stabilizatio n

' Hoard 'went and drowned Itself" .He also boasted that he hate d

communists "as flinch as the nex tman" . Next -on lee "hate list "were women smoking in th estr eet, Wall Street bankers wit hbig cigars, MacArthur ("yo ushould have seen some of th eletters the boys sent from th ePacific during the war"), th eCIO, the 1<K Klan and American sfor Democratic Action .

lie said he loved baseball, doge ,kids, and "of course ah love smah wife too . "

Flow did he vote ?At ten o'clock he was 47 pe r

cent for Eisenhower, 42 per cen tfor Stevenson and the rest of hi mwiry undecided with a definit eswing towards Adlai after hismorning coffee break .

Anyway, how the hell shoul dwe know .

DEAR W$, ,N40tor, Tea (WeemsPeer 'Sir :

Regarding (lob Loosmore an dliilsbv gas" ,

Ah . Bet, t thought that youwere really wonderful in you rarticle and I have taken you reuegaptions to heart .

I've made a good start becausei am already enrolled in engineer -ing and they really train us inrational material thinking, I'mcol taking twytl ing on authorityeither. Do you now thee' we'v ealready proved all sorts of law sIn our labs . Presently, t#ougb,a ' in sot too cMI'tele about thevalidity of the law of noneerve-tio n o f energy , which i s one ofthose so-called Universa l laws•I've lust drawn Up puss for aperpetua l Metto n saeehIns whichI Meow elm work . Maybe youcan hell) pee pot it sp. Theowell really show those author-Wes ,

8easetiams Bob, I wosOr Itthere is any lettuce to the roorldfor es matertalttlte . OMl Whatam 1 some I omit that hadwoe. lesttcs. We know that youcrsrs't see, Met', shell or • tmiailastuce, Eves our Oolao esi u •tars ere aaalasis because Makeisn't roUseetIve . It castpossibly nisi maws aothlaaexists Matadi material waft

Maybe 'rot not befog chard-table to an, Bob, Bat cherlty Isthe love of men for the sake , otoat But taus dosstt't s'asUy eate tacrd neither doer God, ThnetereI (outdn't possibly n eo #bti •tuts to pea that dlae`tt't stlst .

Here i On taping to ;yen shirtideas sad , ceNealke that ANAeven esist, na Seery tar tat piat lup so mach *see intern autlitali.

Imll eterWty yota'e,Ignatius 1', Asset's, 3M.

Editor, The Ubyesey,Dear fftr :

I beg leave to comment upo nas fishes called "The IFiabyEye" whit* apelsuIM to LestThursday' . UUbya sey, A .14 e alhave I sews as witty Ned esters,an enemata' at ae ssIve a pos tdote

Limitations of space tonne meto &wens pay ressarks to ~otoesmall facet of this excellentl ywritten article—that which ridi -cules the argument fr om 'Vinto nunder strew," 'The awt ,Ar de -scribes this phenomenon as fad •lows : "'Since theta ode agoatheists In foxholes,' atheism I sfalse. In other words, 'wishin gwill make It so' . "

At one time I conaldered a svalid such it dismissal of a c•om •rr101n argument of religious apolo •getic ; but no longer so . Chris-tianity is a faith intended fo rpersons 'under stress"—and w eare all In that position, if onl ywe knew The non-atheist i nthe foxhole symbolizes each ofus .

Ho is alone, and powerless i nthe face of an•arruty of Impefsona 4force which threatens to snuf fout his life at any instant . What ,at such a moment, Is the meanin gand purpose of his existence ,Whore are the ideals for whichhe has yearned, the goals fo rwhich he has striven, the causesfor which he has fought? The ycannot sustain him . The pros-pect that chills him is not th emere ending of his life, hut th ethreat of its ultimate meaning-lessness. .

This same threat hangs overall of ,us. In comfortable, 'nor'•oral' circumstances we are ableto "keep busy' and hide it from'ourselves ; but when suddendeath Is obviously Imminent, wecannot ,escape It, In such a tim eof "st'eas" the individual see sthe reality of his 'plight and turn sto the only possible source o fmeaning—to God .

Perhaps this is only to graspat a straw, Perhaps there is n oindividual life . Each must decidethis for himself . But let us notdelude ourselves : such value an dmeaning is impossible apart fro mworship of God .

Let me imagine myself adweller in the godless world o fthe materialist . How shall I live?Certainly I shall not prattle abou t'freedom', as does the author o f"Tire Finney Eye ." What mean •lug can it have? The only rele -%ant freedom is my freedom—toprmnote the interests of myself Ito the mtiximnm possible degre eTo the end of my self-aggrandize .nrent I dedicate all the energy ,skill and talent 1 can muster .um dissuaded by no Nett an dsoupy sentimentality, no Ideal-istic patter about love, friend -ship, service to humanity, o rtruth. There is only one vali dobject of love—myself . A friend

Is a person to be end . The Om -1toe at hNaipsplty is to serve me ,to as great an extant as I hav ethe wit and power to persuade it .Truth is iwlsateves• t)ettet is to m ya4lvpnta4ge and a aufficteiUt num -ber of gullible dupes can be per -suaded to swallow . I am th eultimate, the only source ofmeaning tar my life .

You may hate me for this . Butyou cannot say I am wrong . I na godless world, right and wron ghave do weaning, except asterms of commendation for one sallies and abuse for ones enemies ,respectively ,

Such is the world with whichwe are faced if the religious manIn the Inhale is wrong . Yau ma ybuy it it you choose ; this writeris nable to ao so . The implica .hops of materialism make hi mlook upon it with a most fish yeye.

CHUCK RIPI,EY, CenaSec,, •Student 'Christian Move

-anent, 1(7rnd, Student inTheology) Union College .

SOCIAL CREDITEditor, The Ubyssey ,Dear Sir :

With reference to the letter o fSocial Creditor A. Roy Trimble ,I would entirely concur with hisstatements on Mr, Waleson an dLyon and the moral poverty o fthe Liberal party which the yrepresent .

Mr. Trimble, however, state sthat the issue en June 14 wa sgood government or bad govern •meat . It was not as simple asthat . True, any party which ca nremove the legacy of patronag eand maladministration will d oBritish Columbia a good turn.But the Issues go deeper tha nthat .

This advertisement, basedon an actual letter, i spresented here by

THE BANKS SERVIN G

YOUR COMMUNITY

A speech by James Gardiner ,federal minister of Agriculturereported last week, quotes himns saying that we have in ou rwarehouses a surplus of 204 mil -lion bushels of wheat from las tyear and we are currently har-vesting a crop of 700 millionbushels . Gardiner then says "heregrets we have no trade agree -ment with Britain to enable u sto dispose of this wheat." inother words, we have on ou rbands close to a billion bushelsof wheat and no market !

in the same newspaper, a storystated that Canadian automobil emanufacturers had decreed tha tno British cars would be'-show nat the national auto show . Theauto Industry is succeeding (wit hthe help of tariffs imposed by Mr .Gardiner's government) to shu tout English autos. Such is th eAlice In Wonderland economic sof capitalism .

Reformism isn't enough . Thefundamentals are diseased an dsurgery is necessary .

Jean McNeely,

36 YEARS OF SERVIC ETO THE UNIVERSITY O F

BRITISH COLUMBIA,ITS FRATERNITIESAND SORORITIES .

THERE'S A REASON

STATIONIRY AN DPRINTING CO. ITS.

1086 Oeyrnour St . Vancouver, {,C,e

"A very valuable

. citizen "

When a bank manager was transferre drecently a group of citizens wrote th ebank in tribute to his sense o fpublic service :

"During the time he was here, we foundhim to be a very valuable'citizen . Healways took a deep interest in ou rcommunity, so we feel we have lost avaluable asset. However, we feel sure tha this replacement will be made witha man of similar calibre."

A bank man, by the very nature of hiswork, becomes part of the life aroundhim. During his training in variou sbranches, and as he takes on growin gresponsibilities, he learns more and mor eabout people and how his bank can helpthem. And he brings to his communit yhis personal readiness to serve inany way he can .

e

Page 3: Berman Foods, Exchange Students Colourful Parade Marks ... · ltt)W beautiful until I made thel I been able. during the peat few terious queen and a milk-white I trio train Ilulll'ax

Tuesday, November 4, 1952

THE U B Y S S E Y

PAGE THREE

Gloomy Day For Sports,All Lose -Even Rugger

YI/1 4 y IIRSTIBRAVES VKIOR1

Battling against the breaks, th e

referee and the other team, an

awesome • combination agains t

which no team Itas found a sue s

cessful combination, UBC's tugger •

ing Thunderbids went down to

their first defeat In four starts

at the hands of North Shore In-

dians on Saturday afternoon .

The ref, sporting a beautiful ne w

whistle, which he blew loudly an d

long at every opportunity, suc-

ceeded in making Saturday's fea-

tured Miller Cup, rugger tilt some -

thing like a penalty-studded bask -0411 game. After the penalty kick

total had zoomed Into double fig •

urea w,e lost count but two.thirds

of the uwsrds went against the

Birds .

Missing ace kicker Bob Mortor d

Birds came off second best in the

kicking practice . All Blacks cored

their three points which wer e

enough to give theme victory vi a

the penalty kick way .

The Braves, UBC's senior en •

trunk In A,s}I Awing Cup play, were

the only campus crew to win ove r

the weekend . Braves walloped

(towing Club seconds 20. 3 .

The Tomahawks lost their gam e

by, default while the Redskins wer e

Whipped 6,3 by Meralome seconds .

Grwk Tuff BirdPromfret Not ,Worried

Coach "Genial" Jack Porn-fret, much maligned coach ofthe Varsity hoop squad, lookedpretty pleased yesterday afterthe showing his boys put upagainst the powerful Gradsteam Saturday night in thegym.

The Gratin bolstered by suc h

starts of bygone days us "(looker "

Wright, 33, Bob Osborn, 34, Ol e

Baalcen, Hunk Henderson, Harry

I)runkllu and Buddy. Mcbeod an d

ably led by Nev Munro with 1 4

and Hill Bell with 11 of the best ,

(told a nlue•point bulge when th e

final whistle blew to take thei r

third Homecoming victory ,

However, the balding Bird men-

tor was pleased with the showin g

of Iris lads, particularly with vet•

swan guard Dan 7aharko and rook-

ie John Mcleod who potted 12 and

11 points respectively . Gary Taylor

and Ernie Nyhaug else showe d

well and with some work the third s

slw,uld be able to better last year' s

record,

By HUTCH' Everybody lost last weekend . The Thunderbirds played

their best game of the season against College of Puget Sound ,and with some bad breaks, lost 24-0 ; the rugger Chiefs played

their worst game so far and fell to the North Shore All-Black s

3-0; and the basketball team in their first test of the year weretaken into camp by the Old Boys 68.59 ,

--~ -It was

teams '

opinions have the Thunderbirds1

Coach Andersen will have to

dig -fought so hard as a team and search hard to find a capablenal caller and hall handler to re •place him .

Back at his old stand at left hal fAs most fans will agree, the was George Pull, our candidat e

score did not indicate the play at for all conference honors, and th etwo of the Loggers ' ed.'s were old than of UBC foothailing (at th edefinitely of the flukey variety, ripe age of 22) played himself a

especially the one which occurrad whale of a game both on offenc e

dame Of Year-Loses 24-0Football Team Plays Best

played so well only to have th e

breaks go against them .

loss not fo r

n Sad

when powers knocked a Btortini

pass down on the two only to hav e

Ai mike pick it off his boot tops and

go over for the major .The definite loss of ace quarter .

(tack tardy F'lemous for the sea -

son with a shoulder separation ,struck a demoralizing blow to theJellymen and with Western Wash •

ington coming up the hot ane coldpasser will he missed .

Theough we have bla gted Gordyin the paper this season we do fee l

story, the football j ' that the lanky boy was an asset

two years, in my to the UBC grid machine and that

and defence.

Also worthy of particular men-

tion Is that Damon and Pythiascombination of i3ob Brady and Dan-

ny Lasosky, who operate in theforward wail like two berser k

tanks, and Bill Hornet who, hate-pered with a badly wrenched knee ,

caught pseses aud was a brick wal lon the defence, really bitting wit h

his tackles from the line-banker s

slot .

The club was really not in the

first quarter and held the power-ful Tacomans to a draw but started

to tire as the game progressed and

the deep reserves of the American sbegan to tell, The last half wasn' teven an equal contest, but you mustgive the boys credit, they neve rgave up .

Not at all disappointed after th egame Jelly summed 'it when Ile )

said, "We just didn't have th ebench ."

RE MILDER .anada's Mildest Cigarefts

SOCCER TEAM LOSES

-CAA T SCORE GOALSVarsity, playing one of it ' s

best games of the season, drop-ped a heartbreaking encounte rto the outplayed Dominio nHotel eleven 4-3 at Sout hMemorial Park .

Not once during the second halt'

did the hostel keepers cross the

centre stripe hut the blue and gol dforwards, though laboring like tie s

jtuts, lacked the polish around th enet slid missed many scoring op-portunities .

The defence of Charlie and Rei d

sparked the Thunderbirds as theytrailed 4 . 1 at the end of the firs thalf an din the second stanza ths

team started to roll but couldn' tevereome the great deficit ,

I'It(',

the

university

secondtesta ,MtiII larks couple n1' goa lscene : ; I '"rar :u'ds aud lost to Lia oBirds, :!•L

"Sure, son! There's nickel aU throug hthe house. The heating elements in ourtoaster, iron, range and percolator ar emade of' nickel-chromium wv irc, Our

knives and forks are made of silver -

plated nickel silver . There 's nickel i nthe electric clock and thermostat .There's a lot of nickel in our car too ." CANADIAN

"Thal must take a lot of nickel! "

"It Elms! International Nickel alone pro-duces over '250 million pounds a )car ,Last year Iuco spent '23 million dollars s othat they could produce 'more nickel. It'sa good thing we don't have to buy nicke lfrom other countries—because right now a.lot of it is needed for equipment for ou rdefense,"

"The Ronao/ 1 of Nickel ",t '12 p .+ v ,

li,' pert! Jar wt It,t«r f to ,wl,dn 'I t, e .,t,r(,

1

t

Page 4: Berman Foods, Exchange Students Colourful Parade Marks ... · ltt)W beautiful until I made thel I been able. during the peat few terious queen and a milk-white I trio train Ilulll'ax

PAGE FOUR

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, November 4, 195 2

Letter to RoMiss Flo McNeil ,

Women's Editor, Uhyssey ,

Dear Miss McNeil ,

I dare you to publish thisy lette r

on your Women`s Page. During m y

past rive years on the campus, i

have learned one thing — that I

dislike co-eds . To my mind, they

and the library are the most re .

pulslve objects on the campus . el

have now decided 'that the tim e

has come to put forward my view s

on UBC women with the hope tha t

they will think them over and pe n

Imps act accordingly .

i have tour main objections t o

our coeds .

1 . They are frustrated .A. female from bi r th, has withi n

herself strong and vital tendencie s

towards and instincts for marriag e

and motherhood, liven UBC wome nretain there's, but they also have

built up in their minds a desir e

for independence, which in Itsel tcentred-1cts the dependent ideal o f

marriage and motherhood .

.

Thus we have the picture of the

dealings they have set up a mora l

"code' within a moral code . Henc e

It is considered positively Indecen tfora co-ed to smoke on the street ,to express the. opinion that sh e

dislikes a sorority sister, or to g o.out with a boy shorter than 5'2" .In short, by being inhibited, the y

have taken all the fun out or thei r

own lives and the lives of the men

choice, and a big one, au to wha t

you can do, Secretarial or ac '

counting work might interest you ,

or perhaps library work which he

Includes looking after all the rec-

ords that come into the station .

Then again you might choose to

advantages for the most pleasant

and tend to the publicizing angle o f

promoting the station and its ad-

vertisements .But by far the most challenging

job for women in radio lies in the

Your~ for simpler and more fem.

inine women .

Eddie B, Harp ,

Graduate Studies .

undertook his musical education I n

'the USA. While there he won th e

Mason and Hamlin Grand Pian o

Prize, Later he toured extensively

in Australia . There he gave recit •

als and appeared in orchestra s

tinder such distinguished conduct .

ors as Sir Malcom Sargent and Si r

Ernest MacMillan .

Malcolm Tait, n native of Van -

coeval. , studied under the note d

cellist and teacher, Derso Mahalek .

Later he was awarded a scholar •

ship for study under the well-knownHungarian cellist, (labor Rejto . Re •

cently Mr. Tait has been with th e

('IIC and at present is a membe r

of the Vancouver Symphony Orch-estra .

The program will start at 12 :3 0

tomorrow in tine auditorium ., Ad .

Piketon, 15 cents, The AUS als o

wishes to announce that the fol .lowing artiste will appear " beforeChristmas :

Mhrray Adaskin, November 20 ,

Ursula Malkin, November 20 .Marie Rodker, December i ,

By DAVID PRIC E

0. Henry's first ironic tale, "The

Cop and the Anthem," is a brillian tvehicle for the diverse talents o f

Charles Laughton, David Wayn eand a certain Marilyn Munroe .'I'Imere are good moments in th eother four stories but none o f

them comes up to the high stand-

ard of excellence set by "The ('o pand the Antlienm ." Number Twp —"The Clarion ('all"--a routin estory. was given the treatment i t

deserved .

In number 3, "The Last Leaf . '

Anne Baxter has to suffer, along

with the audience,' intent physica land psychological torment . This

dreary sequence is given a vigor-

ous shot in the arm by rcegoryRetort in the role of a warm-heart-

ed Greenwich village artist ,

Fred Allen and Oscar Levan tfind themselves in "The Ransomof Red Chief," the fourth serving

of O. Henry. The gently humorou s

dialogue is hardly suited to th esnap wit and quick ad lib of Fred

Allen and, without a piano, Osca r

The well known "Gift vof th eMagi" is the final offering in whic h

there are two terribly situate per-

formanees by Jeanne Crain an d

turn out. T, esday at 12 :30 or Wed-',Farley Granger,

'

nesday at 6 :00 p.m. at Hut G4,

The directors of "0. Henry' s

Everybody welcome, see you there,' Full House" (and there were five

COMMERCE PRESENTS

F061'BALL DANCE

Be sure to plan on an evenin g

or dancing alter next Saturday's

football game .

Commerce Undergraduate So-

ciety is sponsoring the "bigges t

ever" dance to be held in the

Brock, And when Commerceme n

decide to hold an affair, you ca n

bo surb they'll make it a goo d

one. So to all of you who know

a good investment, plan to come

to the Football Dance . . . in the

Brock on Saturday, ,Dancing '

starts at 8 : 341

Hula GMs

Leis Seen

At Forma!

"Aloha oe" we're off to the

land of ukeleles, grass skirts

and leis, '

Phrateres annual fall formal thi s

year goes to Hawaii for inspiration .

Brock Hall will be converted into

a tropical paradise, and there'll be

a chorus of native girls, wearing

sarongs and swinging a mean hipto the strumming of a mandQlln

for equivalent) . Guaranteed fun

for everyone at "Aloha Matilda"

Tickets go on sale everyday in the

Phrateres room, Price is two dol'

lays a couple, and it's well worth

it.Patrons for the dance are Dr,

and Mrs . . A. M. Mackenzie, Mr.

and Mr's, G. Kennedy, Dean

Mawdsley, Mr . and Mrs. R. Penn,

Al Heardts orchestra will play.Date—November 10 .

New Queen

"Excited "

"I was jpst so excited . . . They

had warned me, but I didn't believ e

them .,,"Pretty, brown-haired Pat Taylor,

Homecoming Queen for 1952, mil .

ed excitedly as she spoke .

"It was a wonderful surprise, 1

just wish all the girls could hav e

won .Pat, who Is in 4th Year Coin.

coerce, was chosen at the footbal l

game on Saturday. To all her

friends at Vprsity, she is knownas a friendly and lovable person ,and we are not as surpriesed a s

Pat that she received the crown .

Pat is In Delta Gamma Sorority ;

and a prospective VOC member .She comes from Magee High and

is fond of athletics If "they're no t

too strenuous."

Congratulations to lucky quee nPat, site deserves the honor.

of them) have obviously tried ver yhard to impress . In some instance s

they have succeeded admirably .

With this film Hollywood hasblazed a fairly impressive trail .-Maybe when they try again th epioneer raggedness will be a littl eless visible .

Scotchand Soda

it

frustrated

by PLO MONEI L

Thoughts of a Queen Candidate ,

who was sort of forced into it

l was blissfully unsuspecting ,

when I walked into the Brock cor-

tee shop last Wednesday, and

tound the Hlgher.Uppers of, th e

Publications Board deep. in con .

Terence .

But when the editor offered t o

buy me coffee, the executive edito r

helped me off with my coat, an d

the managing editor inquired wile .

'tousle, attel' my health, a . taint

cloud of suspicion began to for m

in my mind. Besides, they wer e

smiling—I knew something was up ,

the Higher-Uppers of the Publica-

tions Board don't often smile.

There was no point in bein g

fir m—they were firmer .

"But, gee, I'm not the type—be-

sides, I have a tbeling my grea t

aunt in Chilliwack is going to wan t

me to come out and see her tbl a

weekend ." •

.1 was fighting a losing battle . . .

for the honor of the Pub tall along

I was under the impression we

had no honor), I must go throug h

with It . . , i must be a candidat e

for Homecoming Queen!"From then on it was a nightmare ,

contuston, noise, bustle . The Pub-

lications Board got curled awa y

every so often

. I protested .

"But, honest. I really don't look

good In a towel, can't you jus t

take a picture of my face? "

. Off to get a convertible, poste r

materials, paint brushes, and P lc .

Lure . . . dash, dash;' no time tor

lunch .

"Look kitteuls, please, new, a

faint smile—meow . . . "

' How oes one look kittenish with

aching Test, stomach groaning, and

a fog where there should b e

thoughts?

Horrible shock when I saw the

finished pies . . ,

"Do I really look like this?"

"Sorry* we ' ll have to print

anyway . "

Off again, dash, dash, we must

make posters now. Gotta get th e

publicity rollin' .And then the parade—that was

the climax . Oh how i pitied Queen

Elizabeth, General Eisenhower —

anybody who had to do this sort

of thing very often . After a while

it all becomes s, big blur . . , the

facee, curious, smiling, bored ,

frowning . , . become one big blur .

"Keep smiling, there's a girl . "

The silly thoughts that g o

through your head . . , Wonder i t

uty face will freeze like this, and

I'll have to keep grinning like an

idiot? ever appreciated blissful l

nonentity before, wouldn't It b e

wonderful just to be sitting 'a t

home listening to soothing music ,

looks good now . Most of all I'd

or, yes, studying, `even studying

dike to be hiking up a mountain

trail covered with crispy autumn

leaves . . . just hiking, all by my-

self, with no time limit, and lazy .

pleasant thoughts drifting around

in my head. Hermits must be th e

happiest people in the world .

Then, the ' football game, face s

a bit friendlier, certainly more fa-

miliar. Keep smiling .Wonderful feeling you get whe n

yo uepot people you know . . ,

There's the sports staff, Potherin g -'hum and the boys , . , and the

Newman Club, dozens of them, i t

seems, sitting together and yell •

lug like mad. One nice aspect o f

it, anyway — Decided I loved them

all madly . . . makes you fee lhumble .

Awfully nice of the kids to wor k

as hard as they have. Must than k

theta for all the posters andevery . l who sur round them on the cantpus .

thing . Keep smiling. This is silly . !, 3. They think they know al l

I go to school with these people' about life .

i sit beside them In class rooms. Ilttring my long stay on the

What am I dOing here? I should campus, I have met all too man y

be in the stands, too . Must have women wjuo have . prided them.

a bit ofsocialism in me some . ;

on their ability to hold thei rselves

where

liquor as well as any man, cus s

And I'm expected to go to a as well as any man, and can tel l

dance — dance? Lord, If I ca nstand I'll be doing good .

Made it though, funny what yo u

can do with will power and a goodpartner. I didn't get there on time ,

'but that was just an unfortunatehappening , , . And one thought

Oar spotlhgt focuses on Kay

Kay is an active member of Gam-

kept vibrating in my mind . . , IT'S' Stewart, president of the Women's ma Phi Beta Sorority, She claim s

AI .I . OVER!

Undergreduute Society for our first Crofton House as her Alma ?dieter, '

I sink back Into happy, glorIou ;, i\ "lava !!f time week .

and at Illgh School was active i n

wonderful obscurity . The world

This Kelowna-born lass is under- school events .

looks better than it ever did, and tektite a dil'flcult role as Proxy

Kay and her executive are pla nI'm becoming a real optimist . I'd for the organization that co-nrdin- t,ing big timings tor V(iS this year . !never realized just how lucky i ales women's nctivit .ies on theltt .tts has already sponsored their Iwas . . . Decided i have no ambi- campus .

Hut

responsibility

is annual Itig-Little sister Banquet ,tiuu to become anything . i just teethe new to Kee . Last yetlr she and Hhlinx, the Pyjama fatty . 'want to sleep for a week or two .

served as vice-president of the l'I'hey anticipate a Fashion show ,A closing thought as I drift off, metallization, and did an excellent ( ,o-Ed ?)once artd 'Talent show ill ,

directed to the Publications Board, juh, us chairman nl' several cut°the near future ,-termer love bath no woman than niittees, unluhlc the Hie-Little Sis -

to go through a Queen Contest fur ter Itwuluet at the bt innieg ut

\1'lth energetic Kay at the helm : ,

an organization ."

the year .

WUS should have a great year.

female pursuing her tal l

handsome football player, captur-ing hint, then dropping hint be .

cause "'she doesn't want to tie d

down." The obvious results of this

And for all of you have yearnedso!„t of conduct are 'unhappy situa-, to learnt how to swing your part .bons all the way around, . I net, alleande left and dosi-do ,

2 . They are Inhibited,here's your chance. The Squar e

We note that in all their social Dance ('hub, under the directio n

dirty stories better than any man .

In other words, they have swappe d

their superior feminine ways' fo r

interior masculine traits .

To my mind, these four extr eme-

ly annoying characteristics of co-

eds tar outshine any persona l

beauty that any of them may have

(hut usually haven't) . It is my hopethat by writing you an open letter ,

which just might be published a t

least some of the co-eds on th e

campus, will at least have a ligh t

by which' to mend their ways .

WOMAN OF THE WEEK .

Presenting WUS Prexy

STUDENTS REPRESENTING the Great Trek of 1922 paraded through downtown streets

Friday in the first such demonstration in' some years. Crowds ok interested spectators

lined the sidewalks and peered from office building windows.

301. and d6DILL , ihiz. C 0 E D S FLO McNEIL WOMEN'S EDITOR

Radio Offers Positions For Women"

Variety. Ind Excitment Stressed,

Iy MAUREEN ROACH

For those of you with no expert continuity department where yo u

Here's the info ., girls, on what I ence, your first will be probably write commercials and programs .

your chances are for a career till as a switchboard operator . As dull And- another thing, girls, if yqu

radio. Nearly half the staff of any ,is it sounds it has its tremendous are good in this particular field ,

radio station is female in content . advanta ges, for the most pleasant you can demand almost 'any pa y

Does that sound encouraging? Well, voiced ones get on the air soon- you want . Sound good ? ?

here's more .

est . .

Here on the campus the Radi o

— -

From here on in you have a Society le a terrific trainin gground for potential radio workers .

Besides teaching you a bit of ever y

angle in radio, it also offers basic

instructions and practical experi-

ence' one night a week at CKWX .

What more could you ask for ?

And as a final word, here to som e

more good news . The president o f

Radsoc, In expresssing the senti-

ments of the radio industry says :

"It is a proven feet that women

are sharper, more alert and moreimaginative In radio work."

In My View

Following the popular mixim, 'anything you can'do i can do bet•

ter, Hollywood now has attempte d

to outquartette the British . A quin-tet of O. Henry's short stories ta enow reached the screen affection .ately labelled "0 Renry's Ful lHouse . "

Instead of Somerset Maugha m

we find his American contempor-

ary John Steinbeck filling in the

pauses between the tales . What' s

more, a dozen "big name stars "are scattered generously through -

out at a ratio of about two and ahalf per play. In spite of this on e

of the five comes off extremelywell ,

Looking For' Variety?

Try

Folk

Dancing

Even if you have two left feet, you 'll enjoy folk dancin g

with the Dance Club .

The group meets every 'Tuesday

-

- - -- -

at 12 :30 in the Dance ('tub's lent, of Betty Smith, president, meet s

G1. The folk dancing Is under the every Wednesday evening In He t

direction of Clint Unwin, a well-, (l . Don't worry if you've ale/ey e

known local dancer, who has won, test awkward If pushed into a

prizes 'on waltz and square dance square dance . You'll learn all the

teams .

steps, right from the beginning .

Clint stresses that you don't ; And you'll lose all your Inhibitloin s

have to know how to dance to when you whirl around to the tun e

come out and learn Scottish, Swed•,of "Turkey in the Straw . "

isle Hawaiian dances, You'll have

And if you wish, you can joi nlots of fun learning these dances

the Demonstration Group . They'reand make a new group of friends,

really a fine gang, demonstratin g

all over the city at communit y

centres, dance halls, etc . The grou p

has -won the Pacific Northwes t

(rand Championship for thre e

years now. So, if you get good

enough at It, you're Invited to joi n

the demonstration group . But eve n

if you just turn out for the fun of Levant seems utterly lost,

square dancing, it's worth it .

So, if you're ever wonderin g

what to do for novel entertainment

Artists Perform

To-day At Noon

Tomorrow, the AUS special events committee presents tw o

noted artists, Marshall Sumner, pianist, and Malcolm Tail, a

well-known cellist The recital will take place in the auditorium

at noon-hour . The visiting musicians ,will perform three

sonatas by Delius, Sammartinni and Shostakovich respectively .

Marshall Sumner, Australian byre

birth, a Canadian by adoption ,

IIIIIIIIlIlI,II liii 111111111 I II I

Bich dark chocolate

with roasts almonds

'

IIIIIIII

IIIIIIII~if ,

a

L