8
I; VOL. LXVII E UP YSSE Y VANCOUVER, B .C ., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 195 9 AMBASSADOR GUILLAUME GEORGES-PICOT, head of the French United Nations delegation, addressing student s in the Brock Lounge, Thursday . He defended French Alger- ian policy. —Photo by Roger McAfe e "Financing Bad " Charges Lain g he maintained, must com e before those of money in ou r government 's philosophies, an d we who stay in BC will have t o face, before long, problem s arising out of our government' s "monkeying with our money . " "No government" he contin- ued, "should boom a boom, fo r a bust is only an overstoke d boom . " That these conditions exist , not only in B .C . but in all o f Canada, is due to the lack o f emphasis placed by governmen t today on human decency an d liberty, he said . Along with th e furthering of collectivism an d socialism to gain economic effi- ciency, he stated, there mus t be the advancement of the in- dividual's rights and interests . Our government must act up - on a philosophy, "to equate per - sonal liberty to the collectiv- ism we want," said Laing, no t upon a desire to make ten vote s today and maybe fifteen to - morrow . The fault lies with the people , he continued, for their apath y towards their government's phi - losophies, policies, and perform- ances . As a direct result of this pub- lic disinterest in BC, our gov- ernment has resorted to publi c relations organizations to reach the voters . The message now being dis- seminated, when stripped of it s fineries, is this : "There's noth- ing to replace Bennett, except that terrible Mr . Strachan you'll have us, or worse " Laing also criticized the CC F party for its present pol,icies . He said they have made "a ter- rible mistake by inviting th e unions to join them in creatin g a labor party . ' The CCF leaders should real- ize, he said, that Canadian labo r is not socialist, but radicall y capitalistic . It is interested pri- marily in making more an d more and in gaining a large r hunk of the pie for itself rathe r than in furthering the interests Who Dunk s Who ? The president of the Forestr y undergrad society, Don Munro , escaped a dunking in the lil y pond yesterday . He was rescued and take n away in a waiting car during a five minute free-for-all betwee n the Forestry and Agricultura l students on the library lawn . As a result of the fall bloo d drive, the Aggies supposedly ha d the privilege of throwing Munr o into the lily pond . The Aggies bled to 135 per - cent of their quota, while th e forestry students only reache d 90 percent of their quota . About twenty-five members o f each faculty took part in th e struggle . Freshmen Leader s To Meet On Friday s Are the Frosh organized a t last ? English reps are urged t o get out and make the seem- ingly impossible, possible . Today, and every Frida y at noon, Council meeting s will be held in Bu . 320 . Th e Frosh will be trying to mak e their mark on campus . This can only he accomplished b y all Reps attending Counci l meetings and voicing Fresh opinion. Come! French Expulsio n Could Hurt Wes t By DIANE GREENALL "The expulsion of the French from Algeria could cause a serious contraction of Western influence in the world. " Ambassador Guillaume Georges-Picot, head of the Frenc h U.N . delegation, made this statement at a student address o n Thursday . "Their expulsion could be compared to the Indians askin g the Americans to return home . `"Many of the 1,200,000 Frenc h in Algeria have lived there for generations, " he continued . "The army in Algeria wa s a state of frustration," sai d George-Picot . "They felt that any success in Algeria coul d not be followed up because o f the lack of responsibility of th e government at home . " The army feels it owes pro- tection to all people of Algeri a who were loyal to the French during the last war . "How can the army abando n people who have fought sid e by side with the French?" said the Ambassador . "People who want French government should not be pu t under foreign rule," stated Picot . "French sympathizers in Al- geria turned to de Gaulle whe n it was felt that attempts were being made to internationaliz e the Algerian problem . The y also felt the premier was goin g to negotiate with the enemy, " he said . "The French at home wer e tired of constant changes i n government," stated Picot . GOVERNMENT UNSTABL E "The civil servants were frus- trated by problems they could - not solve because of the un- stable government," he contin- ued . "De Gaulle was considere d the only man capable of solv- ing Algeria's problem becaus e he had the sympathies of Al - fBLUESHIRTS BATTLE FORESTERS as the Aggies try to claim their "bleeding" prizethrowing the Forestry president into the Library pond . No one got wet but there was stil l plenty of excitement . —Photo by Roger McAfe e 'tween Classe s Auditions Fo r Playboy Toda y PLAYERS' CLU B Auditions will be held for a play-reading of "Playboy of th e Western World" in the audi- torium Blue Room at noon toda y and from 10 :30 a .m . to 12 :3 0 p .m . Saturday on the auditoriu m stage . The auditions are ope n to anyone interested . * * * V . O . C. The Short and Long Hike fo r new members is this weekend . The bus leaves U$C bus stop a t 6 :30 p .m ., Saturday . See Quad . Bus Stop, of Clubroom notic e boards . * * * FROSH ENGLISH REP S Frosh council meets noon to- day in Bu 320 . * * * JAll SOCIET Y "Early Duke Ellington—192 8 to 1930" will be the theme of a record concert noon today in th e clubroom . * * * INTERNATIONAL CLU B Films : "Mr . Roberts" and "Re- birth of a Nation" . Members 10c , Nonmembers 25c . Friday 8 :3 0 p .m . * * * SOCIAL CREDI T Presents Hon . Ken Kierna n with slides on Northern Devel- opment . Bu 100 today at noon . (continued on page 8) dependent from the politica l parties at home," said Picot . "The army was the only o ganization in the country with a unity of purpose," he stated . This gave the government th e choice of a "military coup', o r a Popular Front Governmen t in the hands of the Commun- ists, according to Picot . As an alternative the governs ment appealed to General d e Gaulle . He was not"anxious to com e out of retirement but he agree d to draw- up a new constitutio n if he was called by all nationa l parties and given full power . LARGE MAJORIT Y The General requested per . mission to present the constitu- tion directly to the people . The results were 31 millio n votes for, and six and a-hal f million votes against, the refer . endum . The new constitution gives added power to the Executiv e as in the British and US gov - ernments . ernments . By this means the y hope to gain some stability . The principles of the cons titution remain as they alway s have throughout French his - tory, belief in the rights of man and government of the peopl e for the people, by the people . Picot concluded . gerian rulers . He was also in- By ALLEN GRAVE S The effects of Bennett ' s " sordid financial affairs" and " des- peration financing " will be felt before long . Art Laing, former leader of the B .C . Liberal party, gav e this warning in a speech yesterday noon . The interests of banking,0 of the small industrialist, wh o is losing out to the big busines s boys" . Mr . Laing gave the timbe r industry as a good example o f this controlling of the marke t in BC . In summary he stressed th e need for participation of th e people in their government' s affairs, and the need for a government with a humanize d philosophy .

E UP YSSEY · before those of money in our government's philosophies, and we who stay in BC will have to face, before long, problems arising out of our government's "monkeying with

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I;

VOL. LXVII

E UP YSSEYVANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1959

AMBASSADOR GUILLAUME GEORGES-PICOT, head

of the French United Nations delegation, addressing student sin the Brock Lounge, Thursday. He defended French Alger-ian policy.

—Photo by Roger McAfee

"Financing Bad"Charges Laing

he maintained, must com ebefore those of money in ourgovernment 's philosophies, andwe who stay in BC will have t oface, before long, problem sarising out of our government' s"monkeying with our money . "

"No government" he contin-ued, "should boom a boom, fora bust is only an overstokedboom . "That these conditions exist ,

not only in B.C. but in all ofCanada, is due to the lack ofemphasis placed by governmenttoday on human decency an dliberty, he said . Along with thefurthering of collectivism an dsocialism to gain economic effi-ciency, he stated, there mus tbe the advancement of the in-dividual's rights and interests .

Our government must act up-on a philosophy, "to equate per-sonal liberty to the collectiv-ism we want," said Laing, notupon a desire to make ten vote stoday and maybe fifteen to-morrow .

The fault lies with the people ,he continued, for their apathy

towards their government's phi -losophies, policies, and perform-

ances .As a direct result of this pub-

lic disinterest in BC, our gov-ernment has resorted to publi crelations organizations to reachthe voters .

The message now being dis-seminated, when stripped of it sfineries, is this : "There's noth-ing to replace Bennett, exceptthat terrible Mr . Strachan —you'll have us, or worse "

Laing also criticized the CCFparty for its present pol,icies .He said they have made "a ter-rible mistake by inviting theunions to join them in creatin ga labor party . '

The CCF leaders should real-ize, he said, that Canadian labo r

is not socialist, but radicallycapitalistic . It is interested pri-marily in making more andmore and in gaining a largerhunk of the pie for itself ratherthan in furthering the interests

Who Dunks

Who?The president of the Forestry

undergrad society, Don Munro ,escaped a dunking in the lil ypond yesterday .

He was rescued and take naway in a waiting car during afive minute free-for-all betwee nthe Forestry and Agriculturalstudents on the library lawn .

As a result of the fall bloo ddrive, the Aggies supposedly ha dthe privilege of throwing Munrointo the lily pond .

The Aggies bled to 135 per -cent of their quota, while th eforestry students only reached90 percent of their quota .

About twenty-five members ofeach faculty took part in thestruggle .

Freshmen LeadersTo Meet On Fridays

Are the Frosh organized a tlast ?

English reps are urged toget out and make the seem-ingly impossible, possible .

Today, and every Frida yat noon, Council meeting swill be held in Bu . 320. TheFrosh will be trying to maketheir mark on campus . Thiscan only he accomplished byall Reps attending Counci lmeetings and voicing Freshopinion.

Come!

French Expulsio nCould Hurt West

By DIANE GREENALL

"The expulsion of the French from Algeria could cause aserious contraction of Western influence in the world."

Ambassador Guillaume Georges-Picot, head of the Frenc hU.N. delegation, made this statement at a student address onThursday .

"Their expulsion could be compared to the Indians askin gthe Americans to return home . `"Many of the 1,200,000 Frenchin Algeria have lived there for generations, " he continued .

"The army in Algeria wasa state of frustration," saidGeorge-Picot . "They felt thatany success in Algeria couldnot be followed up because ofthe lack of responsibility of th egovernment at home . "

The army feels it owes pro-tection to all people of Algeriawho were loyal to the Frenchduring the last war.

"How can the army abandonpeople who have fought sid eby side with the French?" saidthe Ambassador .

"People who want Frenchgovernment should not be pu tunder foreign rule," statedPicot .

"French sympathizers in Al-geria turned to de Gaulle whenit was felt that attempts werebeing made to internationalizethe Algerian problem. Theyalso felt the premier was goingto negotiate with the enemy, "he said .

"The French at home weretired of constant changes i ngovernment," stated Picot .

GOVERNMENT UNSTABL E"The civil servants were frus-

trated by problems they could-not solve because of the un-stable government," he contin-ued .

"De Gaulle was considere dthe only man capable of solv-ing Algeria's problem becaus ehe had the sympathies of Al-

fBLUESHIRTS BATTLE FORESTERS as the Aggies try to claim their "bleeding" prize—throwing the Forestry president into the Library pond. No one got wet but there was stil lplenty of excitement .

—Photo by Roger McAfee

'tween Classe sAuditions Fo rPlayboy TodayPLAYERS' CLU B

Auditions will be held for aplay-reading of "Playboy of theWestern World" in the audi-torium Blue Room at noon toda yand from 10:30 a .m. to 12:30p.m. Saturday on the auditoriumstage. The auditions are opento anyone interested .

* * *

V. O. C.The Short and Long Hike fo r

new members is this weekend .The bus leaves U$C bus stop a t6 :30 p .m., Saturday . See Quad .Bus Stop, of Clubroom notic eboards .

* * *

FROSH ENGLISH REPSFrosh council meets noon to-

day in Bu 320 .* * *

JAll SOCIET Y"Early Duke Ellington—192 8

to 1930" will be the theme of arecord concert noon today in theclubroom .

* * *

INTERNATIONAL CLU BFilms: "Mr. Roberts" and "Re-

birth of a Nation" . Members 10c ,Nonmembers 25c. Friday 8 :3 0p .m .

* * *

SOCIAL CREDI TPresents Hon. Ken Kiernan

with slides on Northern Devel-opment . Bu 100 today at noon .

(continued on page 8)

dependent from the politicalparties at home," said Picot.

"The army was the only oganization in the country witha unity of purpose," he stated.

This gave the government thechoice of a "military coup', ora Popular Front Governmentin the hands of the Commun-ists, according to Picot .

As an alternative the governsment appealed to General deGaulle .

He was not"anxious to comeout of retirement but he agreedto draw- up a new constitutionif he was called by all nationalparties and given full power.LARGE MAJORIT Y

The General requested per.mission to present the constitu-tion directly to the people .

The results were 31 millio nvotes for, and six and a-halfmillion votes against, the refer.endum .

The new constitution givesadded power to the Executiveas in the British and US gov-ernments .ernments . By this means theyhope to gain some stability .

The principles of the cons•titution remain as they alwayshave throughout French his-tory, belief in the rights of manand government of the peoplefor the people, by the people.Picot concluded .

gerian rulers . He was also in-

By ALLEN GRAVESThe effects of Bennett ' s "sordid financial affairs" and "des-

peration financing" will be felt before long .Art Laing, former leader of the B .C. Liberal party, gav e

this warning in a speech yesterday noon.The interests of banking,0 of the small industrialist, who

is losing out to the big busines sboys" .

Mr. Laing gave the timberindustry as a good example ofthis controlling of the marketin BC .

In summary he stressed theneed for participation of th epeople in their government' saffairs, and the need for agovernment with a humanize dphilosophy .

PAGE TWO

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, October 22, 1959

Why Russia is Ahead in PropagandaTHE qO .-

YAuthorized as second class mail by Post Office Department, Ottawa

MEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRES S

Telephones : Editorial offices, AL . 4404; Locals 12, 13 and 14 ;Business offices, AL . 4404; Local 15 .

Editor-in-Chief: R. Kerry Whit e

Associate Editor Elaine Bissett

Managing Editor Michael Sone

Acting News Editor Bob Hendrickson

C.U .P . Editor Irene Fraze r

Club's Editor Wendy Barr

Features Editor Sandra Scott

Head Photographer Colin Landie

Senior Editor: Allan Chernov

Reporters and Desk :

Diane Greenall, Ian Brown, George Railion, Jeanie Dunbar

Art Powell, Dick Schuler, Peter Cruikshank, Al Graves

Edison Inouie, Ed Lavelle, Derek Allen, Farida Sewell

Same PlayFinal Act?

About this time every year, the Ubyssey and the Under-

raduates Societies ' Committee have a bitter and senseless

,)3attle .

The battle - always starts when the Editor boldly announce s

.that for once there will-be no faculty editions of the Ubyssey .

This statement usually distresses the presidents of the

-various faculties and they become so incensed that they decide

the Editor needs a rest . -

When asked why they think faculty editions are necessar y

, they parrot words like "tradition", "popular" and "pleasant

_relief" ; they call the hapless Editor a dictator and/or a tool o f

the Student's Council ; and then they decide to take matters

into their own hands .

The inevitable result, of course, is that faculty editions re -

_rnain part of the Ubyssey which begins to function less as a

newspaper and more as an abusive pamphlet .

The functions of a student newspaper should be to infor m

..its readers and to constructively criticize their actions as wel l

as those of • governmental agencies . These functions are not per-

formed by faculty editions.

If the leaders of USC had ever taken the time to find ou t

why Editors despise faculty editions, this 'matter could hav e

4been cleared up long ago .

The Editor 's objections to these pernicious rags are quite

plausible . He is wholly responsible for every word which i s

printed under "The Ubyssey " and he must therefore oversee

all faculty editions ; as the faculties do not know how to corn-

p}ose a paper, they request the aid of the Ubyssey 's staff; and

as explained above, faculty editions are not newspapers and

do not perform a service to the students .

The solution to the problem, tentatively accepted at yester-

day's meeting with USC, is also plausible . Those faculties which

4isist on their own papers, can publish them, providing they

are not part of the Ubyssey, and providing the faculties con-cerned agree to pay all extra costs .

Before any such editions ,are published, however, the stu-

dent body should be allowed to decide whether or not it desire s

faculty editions in addition to the Ubyssey.

(Continued )During the past year, the

frequently repeated proposalsfor summit talks prove dto be effective instrumentsfor dividing the West .

They were missiles of propa-ganda warfare rather tha nnotes of diplomacy, and the ywere aimed at public opinionoutside the Communist bloc .Since the Communists do nottolerate free discussion a thome, their propaganda cam-paign for a summit conferenc e— like all cold veer battles —has been waged upon the terri-tory of the free world .

Because of the Iron Curtain ,Soviet propagandists ra r eneither responsive nor respon-sible to an informed publi copinion . They can launch a pro-paganda campaign with impu-nity; they need not fear a"boomerang" . For example ,they have been able to go re-peatedly to "the brink" of war,knowing that -fear psychosis ,which they hoped to induce inthe West, would not spread t othe Soviet Union .

Without arguing the merit sof specific policies, it is easyto demonstrate that Americanpolicy makers do not sharethis advantage . For example ,President Truman, in a pres sconference at the time of th eKorean war, admitted that th euse of atomic bombs had bee nconsidered . His statement trig-gered anguished protests a t!home and abroad . Whether o rnot his revelation was intendedas 'a propaganda gambit is notimportant : The psychologica leffect 'which his statementcould have had upon the enem ywas almost completely vitiate dby the public clamor it pro-voked .

Indeed, one can argue plaus-ibly that psychological warfare ,in the full meaning of the word ,is incompatible with democra-tic society in peacetime. Effec-tive psychological warfare re -quires a measure of deception .A fundamental tenet of demo-cratic government is that al lpolicies be subjected to th escrutiny of elected representa-tives and the public at large .It is difficult, to say the least ,to carry out deception in suc hcircumstances. Thus, it is im-possible for the American Gov-ernment to get the maximu mof propaganda value from it smissile program by reportin gonly successful experiments .The 'Soviets, by contrast, hav eshielded carefully their failuresin rocketry . They have beenable to present, to the worldand to their own people, an un-blemished record of successfu llaunchings .

-Of late, the Iron Curtain ha s

been raised a little, just enoughto give the Soviet peoples aglimpse of the outside world .Yet the Soviet Government ha sin no way relaxed its hold up-on the levers of public opinion .For the foreseeable future, So-viet foreign policy is unlikelyto be hampered by the vagarie sof public debate .

(2) Soviet propaganda train-ing. Revolutionary movementsplace a high premium on agi-tation. Any Soviet citizen whoascends the ladder of the Com-munist hierarchy must be a pro -pagandist by schooling and in-clination .

American leadership is notsubject to the same discipline .Within our Government struc-ture, policy-making and propa-ganda are, for the - most part ,separate functions . The Ameri-can propaganda establishment ,consisting of the United State sIsIformation Agency and its

overseas missions, is largely anadjunct to the policy=makin gcouncils of the American Gov-ernment. Significantly, t h ehead of the U .S .I .A. attends thedeliberations of . the NationalSecurity Council as an observer—not as a full-fledged partici-pant .

The Soviet policy maker, atrained agitator guided by ataut doctrine and clearly de -fined policy lines, can quickl yassess the propaganda potentia lof any situation and move rap-idly to exploit it . By contrast ,more often than not, the West-ern propagandist takes his cu efrom the policy maker andgoes into action only when agiven policy is agreed upon .As a result, our propaganda ishard put to it to keep pac ewith the rapid tide of events .

(3) The Soviet gl obal propa-ganda network. National Com-munist parties and their frontsserve Soviet propaganda i nseveral ways . They provide th ebasic intelligence on the basisof ,which effective propagand apolicies, carefully tailored t othe particular national envi-ronment, can be devised an dimplemented . They act as re -lay stations and amplifiers ofSoviet policy emanating fromMoscow. By infiltrating localcommunications media, the yare able to widen the dissem-ination of Soviet propaganda .

An important function o flocal Communist - parties is toserve as propaganda proxies .Through them, the Soviets areable to hoise "trial balloons"and to choose between diversepolicy alternatives . Moreover ,Communist propaganda, artic-ulated by national parties doe snot commit the Soviet directly .For -example, sporadic threat sof war, when relayed by loca lCommunist party spokesmen ,tend to me more bellicose tha nthose contained in official So-viet diplomatic communiques .

This is not to say that thi shighly refined global appara-tus always functions smooth-ly or 'effectively . There have-been times ..when local Com-munist parties were caughtcompletely off guard by sud-den changes in the interna-tional situation or Soviet poli-cy shifts . A classic exampl eof this was the German at-tack upon. the Soviet Unionon June 22, 1941, which forcedthe American Communists t oabandon overnight thei rharangues against Presiden tRoosevelt's "interventionist"policy. Similarly, the brutalSoviet suppression of the Hun-garian uprising ushered in aperiod of confusion among th eEuropean Communist parties .

(4) The historic environ-ment. The swelling ideologica lcurrents in Asia and Africa—nationalism, neutralism, anti -colonialism, anti-imperialismand anti-capitalism — are di-rected against the West . Thu sthe West gets relatively smallpsychological results in com-parison with its expenditur eof effort and resources .

Conversely, the Communist sare able to win allies, stir uptrouble for the West and reaphandsome strategic profits atlow cost . Several years ago ,an Arab official, referring toSoviet diplomatic support i nthe United Nations for Cairo' sblockade of Israel, summe dup the Western predicament :"One veto by Vishinsky isworth all the aid of Americaand Britain."

Much has been said andwritten about the success ofMoscow's aid programs inwinning friends for the SovietUnion in the under-develope dworld . There is no discount-ing the propaganda value o fCommunist "aid with nostrings attached ." Yet, asJoseph S . Berliner has pointe dout in his important study"Soviet Economic Aid," evenif there were no Communis teconomic offensive "we wouldstill witness the policy offriendship with the govern-ments of the under-develope dcountries . . . Soviet diplo-macy would still win friendsin the East at little or no cos tto the U.S.S .R . by the posi-tions it took on internationalissues such as Goa . "

The Soviets exploit the rev-olutionary currents whichsweep the Afro-Asian worl din several ways . First, theSoviet "shortcut" to indus-trialization sets an examplethat appeals powerfully to theemerging nations of Asia an d

Africa .

Ed. Note: Those who havebeen following this informativearticle will be pleased to hearthat the final installment wil lappear in the next issue .

LETTER SEditor ,The Ubyssey .Dear Sir :

The Fuehrer of that cell o fFascist reaction, the rowingteam, has impuned the strengthof our People's Democratic Foot-ball team. Such knavish state-ments we accept as exemplify-ing the decadence of capitalistrowers . To prove to the uncom-mitted minds on campus tha tfootball players are of superiorstrength, we accept the chal-lenge proffered us . NEXTWEDNESDAY WE WILLMEET THE ROWERS ON THESPECIFIED FIELD OF COM-BAT. WE WILL OUT-TUGTHEM. As elected commissa rfor football, I urge all peace-loving students to be at theMain Mall in front of the lib-rary next Wednesday, to wit-ness the unconquerable prowessof the football players . Be youassured WE WILL BURYTHEM. All hail our nobl eleader Gnup .

JACK HENWOOD ,Commissar of Football

P.S .—Bring your own vodka .

Editor ,The Ubyssey.Dear Sir :

In reply to Mr . Hermanrud' sletter in last Thursday's Ubys-sey referring to the flags dis-played in the German Club' sbooth on Club's Day, I wouldlike to enlighten all concernedregarding the same .

The flags so displayed wereGerman, and not Belgic as Mr .Hermanrud observed! For ar-tistic effect, the German flag ,of the Federal Republic, wa slaid horizontally and it is ratherdifficult for someone unfami-liar with an original nationa lflag to discern the difference ,especially since the Norwegianstandard is merely a variationof the Danish .

This paper, I feel, is not abattleground for past griev-ances .

I remain ,

—KEN HEGLER,Pres., German Club .

UNIVERSITY BOOK STOR EHOURS: - - - - 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

SATURDAY: - - - 9 a.m. to Noon

LOOSE LEAF NOTE BOOK S. EXERCISE BOOKS AND SCRIBBLER S

GRAPHIC ENGINEERING PAPER, $ICLOGY PAPER,

LOOSE LEAF REFILLS, FOUNTAIN PENS and INK ,DRAWING PAPER

Owned and Opera ted by . . .

TIE UNIVERSITY . OF B.C.

Friday, October 23, 1959

THE U B Y S S E Y

PAGE THREE

By ERNIE HARDE R

O -rrisrrend' rrrrirrrrrr. rrz~rarmrioggrega

If all goes according to agreement, by 4:30 this afternoon ,about 17 Varsity gridders who exhibit their football talent swith off-campus organizations will have official consent to do so .

Because 4:30 is the deadline set for letters of application ,for release of individual players, giving them permission to lin eup for junior playoffs .Ask Permission

According to rules of the CRU, students must obtain writte npermission from their College or High School before enteringCRU Junior competition .

Apparently, this wasn ' t done.Briefly, UBC Men's Athletic Committee has given players

the green light, providing they comply with the agreement de-cided on at an emergency meeting this week .

In' future students must report to practices of the Thunder -birds or Jayvees . Only if they are cut from the teams her, orobtain written release no later than October 1, will ' they b epermitted to join a junior team in the CRU .WCIAU at Stak e

That 's the story. It caused particularly North Shore andBlue Bombers ' teams some worry .

It was brought to light because the future of the re-organized WCIAU is at stake .

We also have some responsibility to strengthen the posi-tions of the University of Alberta and Saskatchewan in regar dto their player rights .

The CRU rule governing Junior Series applies across th ecountry. rFollow the Birds

Our football team has won the right to meet the easternchampion for the Canadian college title .

They 'll play in Varsity Stadium before a partisan crow dof 27,000 next month.

MAA president Ian Stewart has enquired at Students' Coun -.cll . Other students have backed it .To Torvklt o

Our champions deserve cheerleaders, fans.Can we charter a plane? Perhaps there is some way o f

sharing costs . Is there any way we can follow the Birds?

Co-Editors Ann Pickard, Ernie Harde rStaff :

Fred Fletcher, Mike Hunter, Alan Dafo e

REBOUNDS

Barb Robertson, ex-OceanFalls player, and Diane Beach ,

ex-Kitsilano High, led the re-bound department .

High scorer for UBC was GailLeitner with ten points . DianeBeach and Anne Lindsay fol-lowed with seven .

UBC led the fast game for th efirst minute. Poor passing wa s

pie main Thunderette fault o fthe evening . This should im-prove as the team gains moreexperience .

Next Wednesday Thunder-ettes take on C-Fun at WinstonChurchill Gym .

V .O.C. SHORT LONG HIKE

The V.O.C . short long hikewill be held this weekend o nMt. Strachan. This is a qualifi-cation hike for prospective ne wmembers . A bus will leave th eUBC bus stop at 6 .30 p .m. onSaturday evening . This buswill stop at the UBC gates, a t10th and Alma, and at Broad-way and Fir. The return tripwill cost $1 .00 . If you do nottake the bus be at the Holly -burn Chairlift by 7 :30 p .m : . o nSaturday, Oct . 24 .

For more information see th eV :O.C. notice board on th eQuad, at the bus stop, and inthe V.O.C. Clubroom behind th eBrock .

SHORTSChet Bell of Delta Upsilon

won the annual Intramura lGolf Tournament (individualcompetition) .played last week ,shooting a 74 over the Univers-ity layout .

Bell won easily over Do nBodel of Alpha Delta Phi, an dMike Tompkins of Phi DeltaTheta, who both carded 79's .The tournament was played un -der somewhat less than idealconditions . The fairways wer ewet, the greens bare, and thescores high. For example, th e10th best score was 95, hardlyan indication of the golfers whoare attending the university ,but who don't bother to get ou tand play .

INTRAMURAL BOWLIN GQualifying rounds: Friday,

Oct . 23, at 12 :30, 2 :30, 9 :00 p .m .Saturday, Oct . 24, at 2 :30 . En -tries close 1 :00 p .m . Friday ,Oct . 23. A list of qualifiers willbe posted Monday, Oct . 26th inthe bawling alley . Match pla y

Tuesday, Oct .

BEAT MUSTANG S

Last Stiaday the young 'birds

annihilated the Chilliwack Mus-tangs 40-19 in Chilliwack. Ron

Kincade led the scoring parade

with three touchdowns. Bil lReidl, Dave Lee,andSteve Nor-ris each scored single touch-

downs .

The scoring was rounded out

by Bob Donaldson and QB Jack

McQuarrie, wills each tallied twopoints .

O'CONNELL STANDOUTAnother standout player was

Larry O'Connell, brother of '5 4Thunderbird Captain Kevi nO'Connell .

Pirates Host

Frank's FlockEvery win from now on fo r

Frank Gnup's 'Birds will set aUBC record .

Tomorrow Thunderbirds willbe in Spokane where they ar eslated to meet the hottest teamin the Evergreen Conference—Whitworth Pirates .

Rugby Team

Undefeated

UBC's first rugby squad, th eThunderbirds, will be aimingfor their third straight winwhen they meet Richmond atBrockton Oval at 1 :30 tomor-row afternoon .

Braves go against Rowin gClub in the other First Divisionsgame at Brockton at 2 :30 .

Other rugby games for UB Cteams in the Second Divisiontomorrow are :

Tomahawks vs Barbarians a tAggies Field .

P.E. Majors vs Ex-Brits atDouglas S .W .

Seventy-one players , turnedout to vie for positions on the1959 versions of UBC's -basket.balling Thunderbirds .

All of last season's team, ek-cept Dave Dumaresq- and Bil lMcDonald were present-amongthem, were-Ken . .Wihslade, Batry Drummond and Norris Mar-tin .

-

GQ0D SHAPEThee boys appeared in top phys-

ical shape and coach Jack :Pom-fret is optimistic.

. ,

This season' the Thunderbirdswill be playing in three cate-gories: Exhibition, Senior Aand WCIAU. Their schedulecalls for at least 32 games - -more if they are in playoffs .

Birds' first exhibition meet-ing is next weekend in Alberni ,when they meet the Athletics .

Frank _11'11 V sty-I,abat s maim-

ter Sunday, Frank Barron willprobably occupy . the oiltside, left :

'positionfor the ; university, 'elev-en. ' Frank, who sat ottt last.Sunday 's game because of an in-jury, has played soccer at UBCfor four years . •A G.OALIEOriginally a goalkeeper, Fran k

learned his soccer fundamental sin England. He enjoyed a great. 'season with the Third DivisionUBC team three years ago whenhe scored 14 goals . Harropmoved to Second Division com-petition two seasons ago and hasbeen a key man in the Varsit yforward line ever since .

This season, Frank got off t oa good start by getting two goal sin Varsity's opening victoryover Marshall-Pontiacs .THE FUTUR E

What does the 1959-60 seasonhold in store for his team? Ac-cording to Harrop, Varsity hasa good chance of capturing sec-ond place over the 14-game sche-dule in this tough eight-teamleague

His reason: Harrop believesthat this season's version of Var-sity has plenty of potential pow-er in its passing attack in addi-tion to a fine defence .STATISTIC S

Finally statistics . Frank Har-rop is 21 years old, stands 5 feet6 ins . high, weighs 145 pound ssoaking wet and graduated witha B.A. in the 1958-59 winter ses-sion. Now studying law, he in-tends to play soccer for severa lmore years on the campus .

'

Richmond BlastsOur ThUnderettes

Thunderettes started the Women 's Basketball season offwith a ` 62-36 loss to the Richmond Merchants .

The Richmond Merchants may be a new name to the cityBasketball picture but the players are well known. Last yearthese women played for the Canadian runner-up Eilers .

The score is not indicative ofdthe Thunderette team. Playingtogether for the first time, the

girls put up a spirited offense SPORTS

commences on27th .

BOY'S RULE SBASKETBALL MANAGE R

Th'e Junior Girl's basketbal lteam needs a manager! Anygirls interested please contactMiriam Sheppard •at . REgent) Eastern Washington, prior t o8-9026 .

losing 6-0 to CPS' last weekend .

The Pirates, coached by ex -B.C. Lion end Sam Adams, ha d

rolled up four wins, taking Wil-lamette, Lewis and Clark, an d

defending Evergreen co-cham-pions Western Washington and

Bird Gagers

WHO WON? U.B .C.-Women's Track Team ran against theclockyesterdayin the Intercollegiate Telegraphic Meet . Results won' tbe known t ntiFthe Universities of Alberta, Manitoba and Sask-atchewan compile individual times . Here Pan,Ain. star , allyMcCallum breaks from the starts . Sally placed first in theShot' Put, second in the 60 and 100 yard dashes and 'anchoredthe 'V.B C.re)a,y , tgam in yesterday's meet .

Chap,pion Jc.yye se

Host island VprnpsU.B.C. Jayvees put their unbeaten record on the line Sat-

urday when they take on Victoria Vampires here .Vampires were the province 's strongest junior entry las t

year. This will be the first real test that Coach Dick Miller'ssquad has faced'this season.

The Jayyees, "haVe 'racked up

six easy triumphs in the Fraser

Valley Junior, m mLeague, includ-

ing four+ ' shutouts .

M4fz & Vozny

$48 H6we` St .

1MJ-4'115 ,

Custom Tailored Suitsfor ;'dips. ],Gentleziw i

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PAGE FOUR

* THE UB Y

No Kick From ChampagneCRITICISM A

EDITOR : M

Some Very ts.

' "There stood the champagne ,but you tasted it not" quotesFru Rita Allmers reproachfull yto rer husband in Ibsen's `Littl eEyolf .' Although Ibsen's writ-ings are less like champagnethan like his native Aquavit —strong, burning and bitter, bu twith elevating effect — thi sremark might well be directedto these responsible for the cur-rent Freddy Wood productionof this play. With one possibl eexception, the cast lack th eemotional intensity required b ytheir author to give convinc-tion to the otherwise incredibl yconcertinaed plot; nor doesSam Payne appear to hav egiven the help expected of adirector . Underplayed and mis-understood, `Little Eyolf' stran-gely resembles a drawing roomcomedy made somewhat un-comfortable by the embarras-ing instrusion -of Little Eyolf' sdrowning .

_ The one possible exception isPeter Howarth, who, as Alfre dAllmers, an ex-school teache rwho has married money an dacquired literary pretensions ,hints at the emotion he migh thave achieved had his col -leagues sparked the necessar yconflict . When the play opens ,Allmers has just returned fro msix weeks alone in the moun-

tains, where he has rid him-self of the last of his physicalpassion for his wife ; her re-mark, quoted above, result sfrom his indifference to her un-derstandable aphrodisiacal pre-parations (wine, soft light ,loose hair) for his return . Buthe has still , to lose his cripple dson, Little Eyolf, in whose fu-ture capabilities Allmers hasan obssessive and unrealisti cfaith, and his supposed siste rAsta, who has given him aquiet sibling love not subjec tto the "Law of Change", beforehe can become the selfless cru-sader Ibsen wanted to show usbefore the final curtain : a manpurged by and resigned to con-flict with a Hardyesque Fate ,an egotist turned humanitarian ,an intellectual taking up th ecudgels of social responsibility .

Mr. Howarth 's mellifluou svoice is excellent in the symbol-istic passage, but in the realis-tic scenes which alternate be-wilderingly with the formerhas the strained ring of a trap-ped poet; ,perhaps the failureof his fellow-players to com-municate places too great aburden on him .

Most of his scenes are playe dwith Betty Phillips (Fru RitaAllmers) and most of the blamemust fall on her . Ibsen's Rita isa woman of great sexual andsocial possessiveness ; when shecries to Alfred, `at last, I shouldhave you to myself alone!' sh ethrows her arms around hi sneck ' in passionate embrace ;Miss Phillips cuddles him andcarefully lays her head on hi schest . Throughout, this actres smisses the intensity she iscalled on to portray . The dis-gust with the Rat-Wife, thedistraction of Eyplf's drowning ,the torment of guilt attendan tupon this, the outraged angerat her husband's comment thathe has married her for hermoney: she gives us none o fthese . Instead, she turns he rblue-eyed smile upon the audi-ence, inviting them to join he rin rueful enjoyment of huma nweakness . Technically, as o fcourse, Miss Phillips is quit eaccomplished ; she has a pleas-ing voice, and a graceful car-riage reminiscent, in her floor-length skirts, of a clipper-shi punder full sail but, to continuethe analogy, develops a definitelist to starboard when face dwith the winds of emotion —never, as already indicated ,Norwegian cliff-top, but a Dan-

more than a gentle breeze t oher .

When Allmers has discarde dthe crutch of his wife, of hisunfinished book on "HumanResponsibility", and seen hi sson floating in tre fjord, _he tries again to lean upon hissister, Asta,, rather than fac ethe open eyes of Little Eyol freminding him always, from th esea-floor, of man's mortalit yand common guilt ; but she ha sdiscovered for herself andshown him that she is in fac tnot his blood relation, an dleaves with Borgheim, the pa-tient and shadowy engineerwho has been her suitor.

Nonie Stewart is an adequateAsta, although from time totime she had upon her lips anabstracted smile . Nor does shelook her colleague in the ey eoften enough, which does nothelp her to communicate, none-the-less, she has a successfu lscene with Mr. Howarth follow-ing the death of Little Eyolf ,when they chat about thei rshared childhood while shesews a mourning-band on, hissleeve. This scene was the best

of this production: easy andnatural, and illustrates well apoint Ibsen wanted to make ,that human grief, when not con -tinually consiously self-inducedis transitory; Allmers forgetshis dead son in his return t oearlier memories .

In other parts, Ion Berge rshuffles his feet, pockets andunpockets his hands, and con-tinually clears his throat whilestriving, with some success, togive us an uncomplicated Borg -heim, Man of Action ; NormanStacey is a well-behaved Littl eEyolf, and Barbara Tremain abreathy Rat-Wife not at all sini-ster in spite of a great deal o fmake-up, with a most cuddlylittle dog in her rat-catcher' svalise .

This cuddly pup seems tohave given the key to the wholeproduction. Rita is a perfecthostess ; Allmers a captive poet . .Asia hears her voices, Borg-heim smells of tweed; the Rat-Wife is conscious enough of hersocial position to pass up, tho 'tired, the nearest chair andcross to extreme stage left be-fore sitting down . The Act On eset is pleasantly accurate : butthe curtain rises after the in-termission to disclose, not aish Modern interior of a West

Vancouver home, completewith wrought-iron bannisters,in-door plants, and a view o fHowe Sound through the pic-ture window .

And that flag pole . One can' tleave it out ; it might be a pain -fully obvious piece of symbol -ism, but the author wanted it .Yet a full-size flag on this low-ceilinged stage looks ridiculou sWhy not a miniature flag? Andan accurate one, rather thanthe anachronistic banner usedwhich post-dates the play by afull ten years .

.Well, there you ,are . Ibsen as

drawing-room comedy is a no-vel idea ; but, having sampledthe Freddy Wood's "Little Ey-olf", one is disinclined to trymore .

Schnapps or champagne, nei-ther was being served, and ifmy colleague Jack Richardsthought the beverage a marvel-lous"; he is no judge of wineor whiskey.

"De havde kunstig cham-pagne," perhaps, "men je gkunne ikke svelge den . "

—David Bromige.

The writing of RobertsonDavies, playwright, editor, andnovelist, has for some time com-manded a respected position inthe field of arts in Canada andwith the publication of twobest-selling novels, Leaven o fMalice and more recently, AMixture of Frailties, he hasbeen accepted abroad as a no-velist of the first order .

Leave of Malice introducted. the reader to the Canadian cit yof Salterton, in size and char-acter probably not unlike Mr .Davies' native Peterborough.For this Canadian writer appar-ently is not worried by the vie wthat this country does not pro-vide the stuff that good liter-ature is made of and that aprosaic setting will result inprosaic reading. That wordcould hardly be applied toeither Davies' story or his char-acterization or his wit in A

Currently showing at the`Vogue', "Anatomy of a Mur-der" is one of the many recentHollywood productions thatcontinually reminds us thatmovies are indeed `getting bet-ter than ever' . Under the cap-able direction of Otto Premin-ger, John Traver's recent nove lof the same name has beensuccessfully adapted for thescreen . To do this, Mr. Premin-ger ,has focused on some of themore sensational aspects of th ebook, and in fact, many of th escenes adopt the Hitchcock tech-nique of ' sacrificing the truthfor emotional effect. But theintesified effects are certainlythere, and in a movie thatclaims to be a thriller and noth-ing more, such extravagance scannot, I feel, be seriouslycriticized .

Briefly, the story is about asmall-town lawyer in norther nMichigan and his attempt to de-fend an ex-army sergeant indic-ted on a murder charge. Thedefendant shot and killed aman he believed had raped hi swife — a fact that leads t omuch of the courtroom dram aas well as the sensationalismmentioned earlier .

Most of the characters in th estory are stereotyped — muchin the vein of Earle StanleyGardner of Perry Mason fame .This is not as bad as it seems ,however, for the cast has bee ncarefully chosen to represen tthe various `types' appearing inthe story. In choosing JamesStewart for the role of the bril-liant but easy-going small-tow nlawyer untainted iby the driv-ing ambitions of the big city ,Hollywood has made a happ ychoice. Eve Arden is convinc-ing as the faithful secretarywho with reluctance but wit hsympathetic understanding putsup with the eccentricities o fher 'boss' .

The judge is admirablyplayed by Joseph N. Welch,who became popular with TVviewers during the McCarth ytrials some years . ago, when h edefended the secretary of the

Mixture of Frailties, whichagain uses Salterton as itsbackground .

There are times when hehovers on the edge of melo-drama and occasionally he ac-tually falls over, but oddl yenough, these scenes have astheir setting the curious Bo-hemian world of London Mu-sicians . On the other hand, itis in his depiction of Saltertonlife that Davies' humour an dinsight appear most forcefully .He presents the whole range ofsmall town society, from Moni-ca Gall, who works at the GlueWorks and sings with the Hear tand Hope Gospel Quartet, tothe late Mrs. Louisa Bridge -water, who to spite her son an ddaughter-in-law stipulated inwill that until they produce da son the income from her sub-stantial estate was to be de-voted to the training abroad of

army. Although one would im-agine•that Mr . Welch could no tcarry off a dramatic role nearl yas well, in this film his perk-,formance is just right .

It seems as invalid to criti-cize this movie on the ground sLnat the characters are stereo-types as it is to condemn it forits sensationalism . After all (asstated above), the movie pur-ports to be simply a courtroo mthriller designed not for apermanent impact, but for atemporary sensational appeal .What is important is that th eactors are well suited for theirroles, and that the action is fastmoving and seldom fails to holdour interest .

If you don 't understand thinsments on "LITTLE EYOLF".

OVER

USED AND NEW POCKE'.BOOKS, COMICS, PRINTS,

ET(

AT CANADA':USED BOG

TED FRASER'S

1247 Granville Street

ALFRED ALLMERS (Peter Howarth) and his wife Rita (Betty Phillips) grieve for their .drowned son, Little Eyolf, in the current Freddy Wood production of the Ibsen play of tha tname .

Crime and Punishment

Y

Friday, October 23, 1959

PAGE FIVE

D REVIEW S3INCLAIR

ti

ced Frailties

Music At Noon

ie Salterton girl intereste dcareer in the arts .

he only person to be foun dwering to all the condition she will was Monica . A Mix -of Frailties is an account oftransition from a narro w

nal existnece to severa lrs of training under some o fand 's leading musicians .

-tagh Molloy, Monica's Iris he coach, finds it difficult toh the naive girl to emote, toin the `muhd' — as he put seven with the aid of a chairlake love to - and so event-y Monica's emotional de-rpment is placed in theds and ;bed of an ambitiousng composer, Giles Revel-:e . Giles is fanatically de-

to the production of a11 ,publication called 'Lan-

which concentrates onicizing- the critics, and hi sly and fascinating support-including a pornographer,

a B-type writer, and a couple ofloyally-loose women, are aptlyreferred to as `the menagerie' .

As Giles' mistress, or at leastone of them, Monica become sinvolved with this group, butshe never feels that she reallybelongs to it . Perhaps her Thir-teenth Apostle Church unbring-ing still clings to her . At anyrate, the changes wrought i nher character are of a subtlerand more spiritual nature thanany that could be inspired b ya complete relaxation into theloose-living of the members ofthe menagerie .

Davies' rich knowledge of th eworld of music ,and musician sis expertly mixed with hi sshrewd sense of irony in thisliterary Old Fashioned. Its wryhumor bubbles continually jus tbelow the surface and makes ita leisurely comfortable story toswallow.

—Norah Smith .

nails (via Love'and HateC.'s ladiesalong in Hadesack eve rat neverTer waryaver hairyrcial girl sarty whirl ssexual sophisti•cationalistsnotional vivisectionalists)ldly callousaver careless)dies frigidorals rigid

necessityasculinityC. "ladies"long in Hades.

read the "Sun ' s" corn-will be instructed .

,000OKS, MAGAZINESPS AND RECORDS,

=ESTORE

)OK BENDMU -2.3019

Seattle PoetsThe Poetry Centre, establish-

ed recently, is interested instimulating and nourishin gpoets and readers in this area .In collaboration with the Spe-cial Events Committee, it i sbringing David Wagoner an dCarolyn Kizer to the campustoday, for a public lecture . a tnoon, in Buchanan 106 .

Carolyn Kizer is a poet, an deditor of the new publicatio nPOETRY NORTHWEST. Thehandsome first issue of thislittle mag., with poems by Lat-timore, Larkin, Eberhart, an dothers, is on sale now in theCampus Bookstore . It is an ex-citing addition to the group ofrecent Vancouver publications ,— PRISM, ® CANADIAN RE -VIEW, and the Klanak Pres svolumes SHORT STORIES an dA QUALITY OF HALVES .

David Wagoner's second boo kof poems A PLACE TO STAN Dhas been called " . . . the mostbrilliant work since RichardWilbur, . . . ", and the work of" . . . a splendid lyric poet, wh ogives us not mood alone, bu tintellect, and, above all, re-sponsible imagination ." . . . .(Saturday Review) "David Wa-goner is rich with song, andwithin his skillfully built lyric sre reaches to discover his ownhuman place ." (Christian Sci-ence Monitor).

Mr. Wagoner is also a novel-ist . His most recent novel ,ROCK, has ,been called "a .tautly written, oddly poeticcontemporary novel that com-passionately and convincinglydelineates an unbeautiful Iocal eand confused lives and values" .

Mr.' Wagoner and Miss Kizerwill speak also on a C .B .C .broadcast, "Poets of the North -west Coast," on Friday evening,October 23rd .

The second visitor will ,b eGeorge Barker, poet and play-wright . He will be on campu sNov. 22-Nov. 29, reading andspeaking to several groups . Hi spublic lecture will be on Nov .24th, in the Auditorium .

—Helen Sonthoff .

For CollegePoets

The American College PoetrySociety has announced that it ssecond annual anthology of col-lege poetry is now being com-piled for publication this win -ter. Interested students areinvited to submit their work .

Contributions, which mustnot exceed 48 lines, should b esubmitted to Mr . Allan C . Fox ,c/o American College PoetrySociety, Box _24463, Los An-geles 24, California, and shoul dbe accompanied by the usua lstamped & addressed envelope .All entries must be postmarke dnot later than midnight Decem-ber 1st, 1959 .

five for my wife and nine foryou . "

As writer and director, it i sto Bergman's credit that he ha sbeen able to sort out the in-credible polarity of - his char-acter's emotions and arrive ata satisfying conclusion . Thefilm, which will be shown com-mercially in Vancouver nextmonth, is of course highlyrecommended .

Hallgren.

Two movements from HenryCowell's "Set of Five", and aSuite for Violin, Piano andPercussio3l by another contem-porary American composer AlHovhaness, were the featuredworks in last Wednesday's noonhour concert, played by HarryAdaskin, violin, Frances Adas-kin, piano, and Harold Brown ,percussion .

The Cowell piece used firsta battery of muted gongs andthen an assembly of tom-tomsas an accompaniment to theviolin and piano . Both move-ments were lyrical in ,the ex-treme, and spoke an extremelypersonal and warm languagewithout the least trace of bogussentimentalism .

The andante especially wa ssimple and unpretentious, yetwith a complete melodic andrhythmic control which wa semphasized by the subdued butmeaningful tom-tom - rhythms.

Cowell's "Two movements"was played really as a prelimin -ary to the main work of th eprogram, Hovhaness' "Suite . "Alan Hovhaness is probablyone of the most individual com -posers alive today. Having beenbrought up in a more-or-les sconventional musical genre, h ehas since developed an intenseinterest in the modal, rhythmi cand instrumental impulses o fhis ancestral Armenia, and, in-deed, of the East in general .

This in its turn has had a nimmediate and profound effec tupon his own art, since his in-terest in Oriental music goe sfar beyond mere curiosity, an dhas been the result of consider-able study on his part .

His music is in no way a sla-vish imitation of the cliches ofa folk-art far removed from theWestern idiom . On the con-trary, Hovhaness has taken notso much the content as theideals and philosophies of Ori-ental music, and has used theseto amplify and give form to hisown creative impulses .

It might be suspected tha tsuch an esoteric musical voca-bulary would pose serious lis-tening problems for the casualear, but this is not the case.

Whatver its philosophical ormusical origin, the music speak sdirectly to the listener with as-sertive rhythms, narrow yet ex-pressive melodies, and combin-ations of sound which, althoughthey exploit the most subtl erelations of consonance, disson-ance and tonality, have a prac-tical rather than theoreticalmeaning.

SpEcr~il ENT s

The "Suite for Violin, Pianoand Percussion" is an excellent _introduction to the music o fthis composer . It is in six shortmovements, and exploits th eresources of the violin, th epiano (played normally, andwith a stick), celeste, tam-tam,and xylophone .

Formally speaking, the mu-sic is not complex . The slowmovements especially empha-sized a long, weaving cantalla-tion on the part of the violin ,placed against a firmer rhyth-mic and melodic impulse fromthe celeste. To this, the pian^and tam-tam interjected 'colour-istic effects, especially in th euse of a stick against the lo wstrings of the piano as a per-cussive throbbing.

The fifth movement of thesuite is a canon, the melodythrusting forward (with som etonal ambivalence) in piano ,xylophone - and violin withstrong rhythmic urge, etching apentatonic outline which thecounterpoint weaves into asubtle and exciting, yet alwayscontrolled, web of sound . Thismovement attracted the appre-ciation of the large audience tosuch a degree that is was after-wards repeated as an encore .

The work ended with an al-legro . This movement whirledthe three instruments togetherinto a fitting conclusion, withmuch .oriental . melodic andrhythmic force . , Asa the ,workfinished, an impression of enor-mous spontaneity, almost mys-tical warmth, and innner exhil-aration was left with the lis-tener .

As Harry Adaskin said in hi sintroductory remarks : "Singunto the Lord a new song . . . "The work certainly does . Or, a sa rather perplexed co-ed con-tributed, with characteristiclogic : "Well, at least it's differ-ent!"

—Martin Bartlett .

NOTEThere is a mistaken impres-

sion that this page is the per-sonal property of a small cot-erie of individuals, and that foranyone else to submit wouldbe a waste of their time . Thi sis not so. We are more thanwilling to read anything tha tanybody cares to send in . Whoknows? You might prove to b eanother Fitzgerald .

1gs

Adjectives such as striking ,disturbing, luminous, tender ,sardonic can be used as no morethan starting points to describethe dramatic texture of IngmarBergman's Smiles of a Sum-mer Night .

Shown Sunday as the Van-couver Film Society's first 195 9presentation, the winner of th e1956 Cannes Film Festiva lGrand Prix is a study in con -trast .

Acclaimed as Europe 's mostbrilliant young director, Berg -man has in this film used mo-dern technology and his ownphotographical inventiveness t ocome up with a period comedyof manners .

Set in Sweden at the turn o fthe century, the film dissect sthe complex romantic entagle-ments of its characters with ahighly contemporary scalpel.The framework throughout islyrical, but within this there isa wide range : from humor toviolence, from subtlety to ribal -dry, from suicidal depression tothe elation of love.

Starred are "Sweden's fourmost beautiful women, "Ull aJacobsson as a lawyer's un-happy child-wife ; Eva Dahlbeckas an actress who is the law-yer's part-time mistress ; Margi tCarlquist as the wife of a coun twho vies with the lawyer forthe actress's affection ; and Har-

.-riet Andersson as the maid o fthe lawyers household .

Conflict, and violence, can-not help but arise between thelawyer, the count, and the law-yer's son by a previous mar-riage, a theology student wronevertheless is •attracted to hisfather's beautiful young wife .

The women's parts are allexcellently played, especiall ythat . of- Miss Jacobsson, whoplays her role with an idealmixture of childlike innocence .and' awakening -desire, JarlKulle, as the elegant count, act swith force and much unconsci-ous humour, as when he tell sthe -actress, "I have 20 hoursleave, six -hours -for travelling,

DON'T FORGET THE REST OF ANNUAL

SPECIAL EVENTS WEE K

October 27—Ray de la TorreClassic Cuban Guitarist .AUDITORIUM - 12 :30 .

October 29—Vancouver Symphony Orch .AUDITORIUM - 12:30.

October 30th—Celebrated- English Fol kSingers -

McColl and Seeger.

AUDITORIUM, 12 :30 .

PAGE SIX

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, October 23, 1959

GRAD STUDENTSNOW ORGANIZE D

COME TO THE

FALL TERM MIXERSponsored bf the Pre-Med Society

Saturday October 24 - 8 :00 to 12:00BROCK LOUNGE - ORCHESTRA

ARTHUR LAING, former .B.C . Liberal Party Leader -. -speaking to students in Bu . 216 Thursday . He strongly

criticized the present B .C. Social Credit Government. (Seestory on Page 1 .)

—Photo by Roger McAffee .

Composition WOODEN

Height 6 feet

advertising the Haney Correc-tional Institute, Player's pro-

duction "HARVEY". `

The rabbit is needed badly

and there is great surprisethat it would disappear fro mthe University grounds . Pleas e

notify SPECIAL EVENT S

COMMITTEE if you knowthe whereabouts o f

"HARVEY"

Single-press:' Model sc

IINITFD TAI I549 Granville MU . 1-4649

The officers of the newlyformed Graduate Students As-sociation were elected Thursda yin Physics 200 .

The first President of the ne wassociation is Joe O'Donnell, wh ois seeking his Ph .D. in Ch'emisty .O'Donnell has had past execu-tive experience with the Cham-ber of Commerce and with th eBoy Scouts .

The position of First Vic ePresident was filled by Joh nStacy of the Physics Faculty . Hehas had past experience as th eSecretary of the Resident Stu-dents Association, Kings Col-lege, Durham .

Miss Jean Taylor won theposition of Second Vice Presi-dent . She is working for he rMaster of Arts . For the past tw oyears she has taught Junior highschool .

'Gray Play' sHomecomingA top American dance band willbe imported to play at the twoHomecoming balls slated fo rNov. 6 and 7 .

Los Angeles band leaderJerry Gray will be bringing hisorchestra to the campus on thos edates .

-Gray has arranged and com-

posed for Artie Shaw, Tex Ben -eke, and the late Glen Miller .His arrangements include "Be -gin the Beguine", and he com-posed the Glen Miller hits, " AString of Pearls", an "Pennsyl-vania 6-5000" .

The Jerry Gray Orchestra wa sformed just after the First Worl dWar .

Carol Hennigan was electedsecretary of the association . Shei s in the Graduate Faculty ofBiological Science .

The chairman of the meeting,Bill Gordon, a graduate Mathe-matics student, was elected a sTreasurer .

Four new officers were als oelected. They are O. P. Bagai,Mathematics ; Jim Sharp, Chem-istry ; Bob McNaughton, Physics;and Ted Ulrych, Physics .

The executive have befor ethem the task of drawing up aconstitution for their new asso-ciation .

Sailors SteeringTo Barnacle BallThe tenth annual "Barnacl e

Ball," sponsored -gy the UNTD ,is to be held at HMCS Discovery,Friday, October 30 .

Dancing from 9 -p.m. to 1 a .m.will be to the sounds of the TedHazenby Combo .

In addition to full bar facili-ties, dinner will be served from11 o'clock onward .

Tickets are available at theAMS office, the UNTD office in

the Armouries, or from any U NTD cadet . Costs $3.75 per cou-

ple .

Volkwagen OwnersWe now have a trainedVolkswagen mechanic

from Germany

UNIVERSITY SHEL L10th and Discover y

ONE RABBI T

Last seen a week ago infront of the Library

CON Y

Continental StylingGoes to College . . : .

CONTINENTALSIAMES E

Pair 16•asSee this new Continental conceptin campus wear . . . slim, taperedslacks with pleatless front, flapback pockets and slanted sidepockets . In fine wool worstted .

In six exciting shades: Sizes 28-36 .Wear with or without cuffs .

Alterations Free!

Kitten creates a looped mohair cardigan i nheavy-knit texture . . . light as milkweed down ,daring in its dramatic simplicity . . . in colour sdipt from the rainbow . . . truly a `long-ter m

investment' for your college wardrobe . . .so lovely to wear, so easy to care for .

Sizes, 36 to 42, price $17.95-Pullover : price $15.95 . . . i n

colours exciting andultra smart !

a3a~r zssasa , ass

. . .Zook fox.the name.

------------- ------ -------- -------------- -

- Friday, October 23, 1959

THE UBYSSEY

PAGE SEVE N

Garrott To Reopen' SAC Supension Cas e

TORONTO , (CUP)—Ian Garratt, who was suspended fro mhis portfolio as Blue and White chairman on the U of T Student' sAdministration Council on September 30, said Wednesday nighthe will have his case reopened by the SAC .

Garratt had attempted to hire the marching band of th eUniversity of Michigan for Blue and White activities withoutauthorization of the .SAC 's executive committee, according t othe charges laid against him .

Council president Walter Mc-e)Lean pointed out that the SA Chad already voted unanimous

McMaster Degree

To UBC Engineer

of Engineering degree will b econferred on a UBC Scienc e

graduate at McMaster Univer-sity .

McMASTER (CUP)—A Master versity last year in metallurgica lengineering .

His thesis was entitled "TheStudy of Diffusion in Aluininu mAlloys" .

Mason's work, described b y

McMaster's Fall Convocation his mentor—Dr . J . S. Kirkaldy-

being held today, will see a Mas- as "excellent", took him fro m

ter of Engineering degree con- the newly opened engineerin g

ferred on a student for the first building to the nuclear reacto r

time in the university's history . now in operation on the Mc -Master Campus .

Dr. Kirkaldy explained thatMason was obliged to develo pradioactive techniques for meas -uring the composition of verysmall samples .

"The preliminary radiatio nwas carried out by Mason in ourreactor," said Mr. Kirkaldy,

UBC science graduate, Gren- "but final radiation had to b evill Mason, is the recipient of the done at Brookhaven, New York ,degree. because our power wasn't upMason entered the Ontario Uni- enough . "

?HE MILDEST BEST-TASTING CIGARETTE

The master's degree is beinggiven before the first graduatingclass of Engineers completing itscourse of studies in the recentlyfounded Faculty of Engineering .

The first engineering graduate swill not receive degrees until1961 . '

Sopron StudentsMarch In Memory

Sopron Forestry students wil lstage a march today .

The students will honour thethird anniversary of the 195 6Hungarian Revolution at 3 p .m .today .

The students will gather at theflagpole then march down theMain Mall and University Boule-vard to Memorial Gym .

At the Memorial Gym the ywill place a wreath to the mem-ory of the men and women wh ofought bravely against thei rCommunist rulers .

Professor KellgrenTo Speak For (A.R.:.

The Canadian Arthritis an dRheumatism Society's annua llecture will be delivered thi syear by Professor J . H. Kellgrenof Manchester University, Eng-land .

The lecture will be held onOctober 28 at 8:15 p .m. in Wes -brook 100 . The topic is "Con-nective tissue metabolism", an dwill be illustrated by slides .

Professor Kellgren is a gradu-ate of London and ManchesterUniversities and is -a Fellow o fthe Royal College of Surgeons .

He joined the rheumatism an dresearch centre at Mancheste rUniversity in 1947 and has bee ndirector of the clinical and la-boratory sections of the centr esince 1953 .

"The SAC gave him a brea kby not expelling him complet-ely",' McLean said . "If he per-sists, the SAC will be forced totake more seriously a motionregarding his complete expul-sion from the council . "

The Motion to expel Garrat twas defeated it a closed sessionof the SAC on September 30 .

Garratt stated the reason fo ropening his case was to "clea r

my name . "The listed charges agains t

Garratt were, "irresponsibility ,and conduct unbecoming to acouncil member ." Garratt at -tacks these charges .

"They made private chargesthey couldn't prove," he said ,"but then at the meeting the ymentioned only the charges ofirresponsibility and unbecom-ing conduct . These are mean-ingless . "

He went on to say that al-though the specific chargeswere not mentioned at th emeeting as charges, everyon econcerned had heard abou tthem, and had assumed the mto be true because they wentunanswered .

"I want a specific chargeplaced against me," Garrattsaid . "I will disprove it . "

HALL AND CATERINGSERVICE

Special Attention fo rUniversity Functions

2723 W. 4th Ave .RE 1-2814 - WE 9-3827

KENNETH KIERNA NMinister of Mine s

KIERNAN

TO SPEAKThe Honorable Kenneth Kier-

nan, B .C. Minister of Mines, willspeak at noon today in Bu: 100 .

Tre topic is 'Northern B .0Development" and will be ac-companied with slides .

The talk, to be held in Bu . 10 0will cover all phases of growth i nthe north.

Mr . Kiernan, MLA for Chilli-wack, has just completed a tou rof the north and is very interes-ted in the development of theoil and mineral resources of th e,area .

{A question period will foilo!w

the address .Mr. Kiernan's UBC talk is spon-sored by the campus Social pr+e-

dit Club.

ALMA CAB SALma 4422Affiliated with -

YELLOW CAB CO. LTD.MU 1-3311 -

non-confidence in Garratt atan earlier meeting .

ME NTWO BARBER SHOP S

TO SERVE YO Uinside the gates

• Brock Hall Extensio ne 5734 University Boulevard ,

Clara Nette(Music 52) says :

Your Campus Branch in the Administration Bldg.MERLE C . KIRBY, Manager

$i stg O rthe 'rdad to success is an early banking connect! oR.

1 strike the right note in my persona.

-

*names by paying expenses with a

,.,,'ersonal Checiumg Account at . . . bMY BANe_-

_

£ WON fIgdlp

What Makes Pup Corn Rip?

cI3MT OF MONTREAL'aa..7vcat Vak4Lac $fcdet0s

Popping corn contains water. When the water gets hot enough,the kernel explodes. Result : popcorn .

We're not passing this information along as a publi cservice . Actually we're up to the same old game.

You see, popcorn makes most people thirsty .Fortunately, when most people get thirstythey hanker for the good taste of Coca-Cola .

Wouldn't pdu` like some popcorn right now?C'mon now, wouldn't you?

SIGN OF GOOD TASTB

'SAT 'COKE' Or 'COCA-COLA'—BOTH TRADE-MARKS MEAN THE PIC SDUS TOF COCA-COLA LTD.-THE WORLD'S BEST-LOVED -SPARKLING_ DRINK .

PAGE EIGHT

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, October 23, 1959

Blue AcquasutomRaincoat taken from Bus StopCafeteria, on Tues ., Oct. 20,around mid-day. Croyden leftin its place . Would owner ofCroyden coat please contactLocal 254 at University o rRE 1-7960 .

University Hill Unite d- Church

Worshipping in Union Corteg eChape l

5990 Chancellor Blvd .Minister — Rev . W. Buckingha m

Services 11 :00 a .m . Sunday

'TWEEN CLASSE S(continued from page 1 )

C. C. F.Presents a discussion group

on the individual and societytoday at noon, Room 362, Broc kExtension. All members invite dto attend .

* * *CHINESE VARSITY CLU B

General meeting today at12 :30 . HL-1 . Elections . Everyon eout .

* * ,*

ARCHAEOLOGY CLU BNoon hour meeting of the

club Friday, Oct. 23, in Art s102. Dr. Borden will begin aseries of lectures on the pre -history of the Lower Mainland .

* * *

ALPHA OMEGA SOCIET YAll students of Ukrainian de,

scent please attend importantmeeting today in Bu 216 at 12 :30 .

* *

COMMONWEALTH CLUBPresents speakers and discus-

, sion on developments in theUnion of South Africa, Fridayevening, Oct . 23, 7:00 p.m., inBu 202 .

* * *

NEWMAN CLUB 'Sunday, Oct . 25, at St . Mark' s

.College, there will be a "Dayof Recollection", beginning at9:00 a .m. All Catholic students

are asked to make good use ofthis opportunity .

* * *ALLIANCE FRANCAISE

All students interested are in-vited to attend the showing o f"Burgeois Gentilhomme" withthe Comedie Francaise at th eVarsity Theatre 3 :30 p .m., Sun . ,October 25 .

* * *BIOLOGY CLU B

Biology Club general meetin gon Friday, Oct . 23, at 12 :30 inBu 200 to discuss future clubpolicy . All members are strongl yurged to attend .

* * *CAMERA CLUB

Camera Club will meet toda yto deal with the competitioncoming up next month .

* * *FILM SOC

Presents " H• enry V", the first

of four film classics, Oct . 27 and28, at 8 p .m. in Auditorium .Admission by series pass obtaine dat the door .

* * *UNIVERSITY BAPTIST CLUB

Meeting Friday 12:30 in Phy.302. Mr. Sonnenberg, N.A. Bap-tist Convention Secretary, willspeak on the topic "Priesthoo dof All Believers" .

* * *ALLIANCE FRANCAISE

Urgent meeting today in B u217. All interested please at -tend .

* * *

STUDENT CHRISTIANMOVEMENT

Dr. W. Taylor, principal ofUnion College will discuss "Mic-roscope on Prayer", on Friday ,12:30, Bu 205 .

* * *

PRE-MED SOCWill sponsor Fall Term Mixe r

Saturday, in Brock Lounge, 8

CLASSIFIE DWILL the following people

please pick up their mail a tthe Post Office as soon as pos-sible :

_Grant MacKerethDr. & Mrs . Porteu sR. RzzingaL. ChangRanjil Singh PannuNorman VickeryAudrey Carrington

A SET of Ford car keys bearin glicence tag No. 349-475 . Fin-der please phone RE 1-3618 .

WANTED — Riders from Wes tVancouver . Phone WA 2-0252 .

FOR HIRE—Dance Band, 5-1 2Pc's . Professional Campu s

Musicians, gall Larry - L A2-6789 .

WOULD person who took aSheaffer's black and silverEversharp pencil out of acloth pencil case on Oct. 20 ,in the Library stacks pleasereturn to College Shop Lostand Found .- Pencil was a gra-duate gift .

WANTED — Copy of "Frenc hCivilization Through Fictionwith Correct Translations" .'—Phone HE 3-8439 after 6 p .m .

BIRD CALLSSOc

- Brock- Qua d- Bus Stop

p .m. to 12 p .m. Orchestra and re-freshments .

RENTAL & SALES• Full Dres s• Morning Coats• White and Blue Coats• Shirts and Accessorie s• $1 .00 discount to

UBC Students .

E. A. LEE Ltd.623 HOWE

MU 3-2457

LESSON I IHOW TO CREATE

A "GREAT HUZZAH"

Simple - wear a Utex car coa tfrom EATON'S. This is a coatwith built-in warmth (two lin-ings, one of soft pile to thewaist and the other, quilted pad-ding to the hipline) . Lots ofstyle, , too : . single breasted wit hknit trim collar and double ven tat the back. It's your best be tfor a dashing year at U .B.C . —Comes in charcoal and beige.

Sizes 36 to '44 $22.95

Use Your Budget Account

Men's Wear - Main Floor- MU 5-7112

NEXT The GOOFERSWEE K

-says . . ."Don't look back,

something might b egaining on you! "

Satchel Paige, the ageless Negro pitcher, firs tcame _ to fame back in the 1930's when he playedsemi-pro baseball. He frequently called in theoutfield and proceeded to strike-out the batters inone, two, three order . He was old then, but in1953 he was still going strong . Someone askedSatchel what rules he followed to stay so youngand active. Here was his reply :

"Avoid fried foods, which angry up theblood. If your stomach disputes you, liedown and pacify it with cool thoughts .Keep the juices flowing. by janglingaround gently as you move . Go verylight on the vices such as carrying on insociety . The social ramble ain't restful .Avoid running at all times. Don't lookback, something might be gaining onyou . "

It 's that last bit of advice that I like most of all .If we could train ourselves to plan ahead for pro-blems we are bound to face, we'd all have morepeace of mind and perhaps live longer .

One of the problems you will face eventuallyis money for retirement . The NALAC'S Life-time Income Plan will help you solve it by pro-viding a regular cheque every month of your life,from the retirement day you specify. If somethinghappens to you, your family will still receive aregular monthly income . Your NALAC repre-sentative will be glad to explain a plan for yourfuture that will give you more "Confident Living"today.

KIRBY STONE FOURColumbia Recording Stars

• Extra Added Attractio n"BAGDAD EXOTIQUE "

A Sensational and Lavish Productio n

ENDS SATURDAYDirect from the Ed Sullivan Show ,

The

PUPPCR CLUIDRes. MU 1-8728 - ,,MU 3-971 9

Confidently.

H. P. SI GLUND,Presid

NORTH AMERICAN , arr.eL a ii

n.,a-a.xy.

LIFE

GROU P

4CKNESS

ACCIDENT '

•56-28

R. D. GARRETT - Provincial Manager619,Burrard Bldg.

Phone MU 3-3301