a blast of disapproval given daily newspapers · be limited to alumni and members of the graduating...

4
BU Y YOU R 1958 TOTE M SUBSCRIPTIO N TODA Y VOL, XL VANCOUVER, B .C ., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1957 No . 1 8 FLESH FELT LEATHER yesterday as Derek Fraser confronted Desmond Fitzgerald o n the steps of the Brock . The feud concerns Fitzgerald ' s remark that he doesn't think tha t the Commonwealth needy a Queen, —photo by Wally Thatche r A BLAST OF DISAPPROVA L GIVEN DAILY NEWSPAPER S Canadian metropolitan daily newspapers received a blast of disapproval last Saturday fro m the 20 delegates at the annual Western Canadian University Press Conference . In an attempt to explain "a reluctance on the part of university students to enter th e field of newspaper journalism" students at the Saskatton meeting drew up a 700 word in- dictment of Canadian professional journalism . The charges claimed "lot' s standards and unfair practice s . . contrary to the ideals of . m " journalis on the part of th e Next Tuesday city dailies . Says Edito r Lack of student interest in Marchac k v.nrking enn(ilti)ns and eat- , The Ubyssey-Blue and Gol d Pique is the campus magazine ; ployec benefits ' devoted to the iearch for hunter . , Pique is a good thing for yo u to spend your money on . luclropalitan newspapers with : Pique is edited and \t riticu . for the most part, by off-campus 1 . The aail ;ing of new s people, For the first issue . any- by tactic's ll ;al do not represent "It' s way . !the ideals of individual freedom ' Pique ' s (Adair is Meurice Gib- ' ;Ind individual rights . N o fro m bons . 2 . The selecting of facts out ccived at this juncture, but th e "Buy Pique . " Gibbons e'trys . of context . . . . and writing it best of Thew entries will he p! ( 1 E(' ilea says number o f other things, which he clessifi() s as slogans, the n~alnr part ()I ' which are not suitable for ()ll e licaIinn . For instance, tvitnesr , Inc fut - lowit1 : ' l ' er men 1 'nc Pima , extra tar it real Tomas/ drink , rip out page 3U nl' the luas;, dis - solve in prc-coaled nlan' u l water, turd prc .;ln - t . 'dry mar - tini, " And Ilii :; . .1 rolled I'Ie l e slakes a fine, : ;uck,iHl c st', titl e stick . " "Panic, of Page) , Tlotu Ill ' ttI twits ( ' Jett he h e \'It .t call, li ;,,, . r L . 'I'Itis it twI . l,neall , it the /alt s II It Boy (Inc into, ;v . FITZGERALD FLABBERGASTE D AVID MONARCHIS T 'SLAPS A CHEEK ' The Lord Altrincham incident was re-enacted in front of the Brock yesterday as Dere k riser, avid monarchist swung out at Desmond Fitzgerald . The feud originated when, Fitzgerald stated that the Empire did not really need a Queen . Fraser, who claims to be a descendent of the United Empir e Loyalists, confronted Fitzgeral d on the steps of the Brock an d slapped his cheek with a leathe r glove , GREATLY AFFRONTE D Flabbergasted, Fitzgerald said , "I am greatly affronted at thi s shard-like behavior," and chal- lenged the "bounder" to a due l with umbrellas . Only comment Fraser had o n the incident was "I wish I ha d hit harder, " Continuation of the argumen t will lake place tomorrow noo n ! at the Debating Union's Ope n Debate in Arts 100 . Fraser and Fitzgerald will b e the principal speakers as the y debate the topic : "Resolved tha t the Commonwealth does no t need a Queen . " Two law students will act as , Prose dower Than Ever Before--$3 .50 seconds . Smith will argue for the In view of increasing worl d THURSDAY affirmative while John Green ! tension, approaching decadence 1958 TOTEM— Subscriptions' Boom 20 (N .W . corner of Philo- will oppose the resolution . ill European art, and a rumo r Umbrellas will be unfurled' that the bullfight is about t o m sale today at 12 .30 in the', sop p y Hut today at noon) . '\MS office, College Shop, l,ib-, N. gat 12 :30 . ',try and Quad . The low price is, U N D E RGRAD WRITERS ' 53 .50, ;Workshop — Tonight at 1 :15 a t 1136 West 32nd . For transports - ; Greeks Hol d UBC SYMPHONY -- Orchcs lion phone Alma 4498-L or AL . rn practice at 7 .30 p .m . today ., 4534-L, 1 3rock North . Everyone who' Help Week " -d ays an instrument please at-'i MAMOOKS General Meetin g tend . today at 12 .30 to discuss plans The Fraternities and Sorora - ' . for the party . All present please . ' ties are having their annua l MARKETING CLUB will N. "Help Week" this Friday an d (told its first meeting tonight at DEBATING UNION presents!' Saturday . In those two days 200 pledge s from the Fraternaties and 12 5 Sorority pledges will be goin g what is expected of a commerce really need a Queen ." All weldaround to 25 different charit y graduate . come . All may speak . organizations such as : Canadia n National Institute for the Blind . , AQUA-SOC . — Today at noon TENNIS PLAYERS interested Kiwanis Clubs, Canadian Arth- revolution . in Arts 206, third and final lee• in learning to play squash for ritis and Rheumatism Society, He will not interview Elvi s Presley, or tell you what th e Queen wears when visitin g Charles at boarding school . Mr . Gambrill brings to ou r pages a world of experience . H e began his career with the Ubys- sey in 1955, authoring th e column, "Rim of Hell . " COMPARED TO WEST Education In U .S .S .R . Explaine d By BARBARA BOURN E Ubyssey Feature Edito r The launching of the "Re d moan" has drawn attention t o the differences between Rus- sian and Western education . What is the difference be- tween the pr o duc'Is' of Russia n and wcsicrn education " Accordieg, le Dr . Chris Rei d of the t : :I ;C Chemistry Depar h meal the Russian child leave s high school with a sense of ac- contplishuu'nt, "We may produce happie r people well-adjusted to thei r Pick A Pique " It ' s Off " Pique is coming out next Toes journalism as a career wes at - day . trihutcd to current journalisti c Pique costs two-hits (or maybe malpractice, not to physica l 35 cents), DELEGATES CHARG E The delegates charged the Society - sponsored centennia l proje('t contest has been official- ly postponed . Editor-in-Chief Patricia Mar - . . .'rh,lk dolefully announced toda y choice had been mad e the entries already re - (reap) ill a biased manner . 'I 'flee slanting al' nett : storie s y lht° in . y , rli ;nl mf emnlionall y charred materiel . . . and "jus t dialer II Inns' <Ilt ;lcks eu in- dividuals hetarc they are In'ovei ; guilty by fair trial . t . The discrimination in favo r nl' lanolin nt peanut . . \\ hos t 'aniline can influence ncw : ; - )tper I))lny , it I, ; ;rk of t(cee,e1)1ull of Ill y re : p,nI ihilll ;of the plane . Ihi rlc'le ; ; ; ;lt ; r p„nnc! .~I \ tint Ilse lack of u ;, l cu :ll,u I - . :,r1tu1 ;11' :. ip'n . .111, 1 Ir ;oiiut . ; ptra,l ;un- I-,r ,lu(ItiiJ s t ~pl,lin : bun I It : ller -lathin g ,1 1 Illllil() I tw ;; r ,I - ()vale- :,i()n .il ' screed for I1tc later contest, Mr s '1larchalt said . It was called oft' indefinitel y hrrau :e of a general lack of sup - port . C ' un ; ricutiuus Critics ' P a g c editor Carrie Hide is growin g a la t or(I for the centennial in- i tca(I . Important meeting of al l Homecoming float chairme n today at noon in the Boar d Room, 'Brock Hall . Ideas for floats will b e discussed . NOTICE TWEEN CLASSE S HOMECOMING DANCE TICKET S ON SALE AMS OFFICE TODA Y Tickets for . the Homecoming Dance on November 9t h go on sale today in the A .M .S. office in Brock Hall . The price is $4 .00 per couple . Tickets may be obtained for either th e Field House or the Armouries . The dance in Brock Hall wil l be limited to Alumni and members of the Graduating Class . Chairman Grant MacDonald emphasized that decora- tions, orchestras, and other facilities will be of equal calibr e at each dance . Featured ente ;rained Herb Jeffries will b e appearing at both dances for a 35 minute show . The Home - coming Queen will be crowned in the Field House at 11 p .m . and will be presented 15 minutes later in the Armouries . He further emphasized that a ticket is only valid for on e dance or the other, but not both , Students planning on taking in this fall classic would b e advised to get their tickets as soon as possible , Totem Subscriptions on Sale Today Decaden t Pubster To View Europ e ANTHONY GAMBRIL L Foreign Corresponden t The last picture taken o n Canadian shores . Gambril l was waiting for his ship . li e is bearing full travelling kit . By KEN LAM B Ubyssey Associate Edito r 9 p .m . in the Clubs Auditorium ., an open noon debate at 12 .30 i n Dr . Chapman will speak on the Arts 100 . Topic : "Resolved tha t value of post graduate work and' the Conunonwealth does not be outlawed in Spain, the Ubys- sey has despatched a reporte r to Europe to bring you the facts . He is Anthony Asquith Gam - brill, former ace reporter an d columnist for the Ubyssey, wh o will comrnent on Europe as .h, sees it during his winter swing ; from Northumberland to Nice . Mr . Gambrill is conversan t with tension, decadence, an d bull-fighting . He will bring you the rea l story of Paris bistros, as see n through the eyes of a Bistr o buff : and a recipe for Hungaria n goulash that will start anothe r tore on skin-diving theory plus winter conditioning, meet i n demonstration of rescue techni• I Arts 102 at 12 .30 today . ques Thursday evening from' o f. A e . . 5 .30 to 7 .00 in Empire Pool, sec- THE CRITIC'S CIRCLE will i Painting, digging, repairing , and to the last skin-diving train-, hold its next meeting tonight at ; washing walls and cars, and pol- ing session . Brink mask, finsi 8 p .m . at 4411 West 3rd Avenu e and snorkle . I, (take 4th Ave . bus to Trimbl e St . and walk down to 3rd) . Sub-,, will be participating . A grou p FOREST CLUB SPEAKER— , jest for discussion will be : . of pledges plus one active men ' F . & G . 100 at 12 .30 . Mr . F . A "Boun'our Tristesse" vs . "Chu ber will be assigned to eac h A . r Gartner Frt Idtil E colates fnBrccl'as agency . ,oesnusran - ' n 'face' for Alaska Pine Co . will, The two chahmen of "Help deportation to his native Man - speak on forest industrial a CRIMINOLOGY CLUB will Week " are Bob Edes ' , represen- cheater, tar and feathers, an d sperm helve speaker, Dr, L' ' k , on tative for the Inter Fraternity a position on the labor relation s 6 problems, Friday, November 1st, ratherCouncil ; and Mervyn Shallara, board -- that in 1956, Anthon y . VARSITY CHRISTIAN Fel-' than today as was previously' the Pan Helenic Society repre- changed his title to "Conte an d announced . sentative . Get It," and was even mor e lowship skating party tonight at This "Help Week" comments successful . i A ,. Edmunds Rollerway . Tickets chairman Eder, does much t o may still be obtained at Clu b IlOL1Se . their guest speake r CLUB presents promote good "wards the This year, in view of hi s r Ma' . Cece travelling role, his columns hav e University . I Newman, Ansco Color Agent, in it – a p p c a r c d tinder the name , the first of a two lecture-demon "Hither and Yawn ." Withou t WEIGHTLIFTING TEAM — Stratton : ; on "Processing your' FILM SHOWING of the R .C . rtpologizing 1'nr the pun, Mr . Organizational meeting of those ; own color" Friday noon in Arts A .F . production "Air Defence' G,uttbrill set off Sunday, fear. interested in trying out . Today ; 704 Command" will follow a talk by lessly on his journey , at 12 .30, Weight Room UBC Air Commodore H . H . C . Rut . Mcu s Gym . ATTENTION! — Club Presi- lodge, OBE, CD, on "An Air- His first report on Europe a s dents, Residences and Armed titan's Look at the Defence Pic- he secs it appears soon . PHILOSOPHY CLUB -- Pro-, Forces better move fast if your tore" today' at noon in Engineer It will tell all about the Cari b spective members call gain stem- : want space in the Tutuila Attend ing 201 . bership and information con- to notice in council office boxes (Continued on Page 3) Mr . Gambrill is taking lir e corning club activities in 1IM 2, AT ONCE! See 'TWEEN CLASSES lung route . bean , YMCA and YWCA . Their jobs will be to help gen- erally with such things as : ishing furniture . All fraternities and sororities The "Rim" was so successfu l — Gambrill was threatened wit h society, hut do they c(nh'ibul c to the advancement of i t EDUCATION DIFFER S Dr . Reid states that Russia n education is different hun t ours . '*Russian students are nn l protected from the stern har d world . " He knows Had if he doesn' t du well he only earl up i u 'nine in Siberia, according t o Dr . Reid . The question would not ap- peal' la It what is Russian (idl e cation . ", but what chang ;cs will Russia's successful technico- logical progress have on ou r own educational sy stmt " Dr . Reid believes that w e t o LITTLE EMPHASI S Il( points old that in lillssi a 1it11e emphasis is placed on ap- plied ,uldeels like Hume Ec . nr vague musses like gcncre I science which in Dr . Reld' s opinion "teach nautili at all . " Dean Neville Scarf() ul th e ('allege of Fducatinn hclicee s our educational system will b e c(luctllion in this country . must alter our approach etrenetiltinerl ill face of Ibis - ;did :, Idlest advance s "Snell a spotlight was need- ed In brio,, inure publi c tat In e((It'alion which tvil l r()sull. iu muse cnntriltilliau' lm U111t()r5iti('S ." lu : ; :ri(l . SCHOOLING BETTERE D 1)e ; in Semi'', feels hill th e scii midi, will not receive undu e nI )IIt ;cs lull Ihal nor srhoul .- ing tt ill lie lug hired ;is ii tt'hole . ''I'()nple (Mail wish la adop t tlls' Russian S,slc'llt .' Ile' said . "11111\ will slrcnglhcn our own ."

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Page 1: A BLAST OF DISAPPROVAL GIVEN DAILY NEWSPAPERS · be limited to Alumni and members of the Graduating Class. Chairman Grant MacDonald emphasized that decora-tions, orchestras, and other

BU Y

YOU R

1958

TOTE M

SUBSCRIPTIO N

TODAY

VOL, XL

VANCOUVER, B .C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1957

No. 1 8

FLESH FELT LEATHER yesterday as Derek Fraser confronted Desmond Fitzgerald o n

the steps of the Brock . The feud concerns Fitzgerald ' s remark that he doesn't think tha tthe Commonwealth needy a Queen,

—photo by Wally Thatche r

A BLAST OF DISAPPROVALGIVEN DAILY NEWSPAPER S

Canadian metropolitan daily newspapers received a blast of disapproval last Saturday fro mthe 20 delegates at the annual Western Canadian University Press Conference .

In an attempt to explain "a reluctance on the part of university students to enter thefield of newspaper journalism" students at the Saskatton meeting drew up a 700 word in-dictment of Canadian professional journalism .

The charges claimed "lot'sstandards and unfair practice s

. . contrary to the ideals of .m "journalis

on the part of the

Next Tuesday city dailies .

Says EditorLack of student interest in

Marchac k

v.nrking enn(ilti)ns and eat- ,

The Ubyssey-Blue and Gol dPique is the campus magazine ; ployec benefits '

devoted to the iearch for hunter . ,Pique is a good thing for yo u

to spend your money on .

luclropalitan newspapers with :Pique is edited and \t riticu .

for the most part, by off-campus

1 . The aail ;ing of new speople, For the first issue . any- by tactic's ll;al do not represent "It' s

way .

!the ideals of individual freedom 'Pique ' s (Adair is Meurice Gib- ' ;Ind individual rights .

N ofro m

bons .

2 . The selecting of facts out ccived at this juncture, but th e"Buy Pique . " Gibbons e'trys . of context. . . . and writing it best of Thew entries will he p! (1 E(' ilea says number o f

other things, which he clessifi() sas slogans, the n~alnr part ()I 'which are not suitable for ()ll e

licaIinn .For instance, tvitnesr, Inc fut -

lowit1 : ' l 'er men

1 'nc Pima ,

extra

tar it real Tomas/ drink ,

rip out page 3U nl' the luas;, dis -

solve in prc-coaled nlan' u l

water, turd prc .;ln - t . 'dry mar-

tini, " And Ilii :;

. .1 rolled I'Ie l e

slakes a fine, :;uck,iHl c st', titl e

stick . ""Panic, of Page) ,Tlotu Ill ' ttI twits( ' Jett he h e

\'It .t

call,

li ;,,,

. r L .

'I'Itis it twI . l,neall

,

it

the /alt s II

I t

Boy (Inc into, ;v .

FITZGERALD FLABBERGASTED

AVID MONARCHIST

'SLAPS A CHEEK '

The Lord Altrincham incident was re-enacted in front of the Brock yesterday as Dere k

riser, avid monarchist swung out at Desmond Fitzgerald .The feud originated when, Fitzgerald stated that the Empire did not really need a Queen .

Fraser, who claims to be adescendent of the United Empir eLoyalists, confronted Fitzgeral don the steps of the Brock an dslapped his cheek with a leathe rglove ,GREATLY AFFRONTE D

Flabbergasted, Fitzgerald said ,"I am greatly affronted at thi sshard-like behavior," and chal-lenged the "bounder" to a due lwith umbrellas .

Only comment Fraser had o nthe incident was "I wish I ha dhit harder, "

Continuation of the argumen twill lake place tomorrow noo n

! at the Debating Union's OpenDebate in Arts 100 .

Fraser and Fitzgerald will b ethe principal speakers as the ydebate the topic : "Resolved tha tthe Commonwealth does notneed a Queen . "

Two law students will act as ,

Prose dower Than Ever Before--$3 .50seconds .

Smith will argue for the

In view of increasing world

THURSDAY

affirmative while John Green ! tension, approaching decadence

1958 TOTEM— Subscriptions' Boom 20 (N .W . corner of Philo- will oppose the resolution .

ill European art, and a rumo r

Umbrellas will be unfurled' that the bullfight is about tom sale today at 12 .30 in the', soppy Hut today at noon) .'\MS office, College Shop, l,ib-,

N.

gat 12 :30 .',try and Quad . The low price is, U N D E RGRAD WRITERS '53 .50,

;Workshop — Tonight at 1 :15 a t1136 West 32nd . For transports -

;Greeks Hold

UBC SYMPHONY -- Orchcs lion phone Alma 4498-L or AL .rn practice at 7 .30 p.m . today ., 4534-L,

13rock North . Everyone who'

Help Week"-days an instrument please at-'i MAMOOKS General Meetingtend .

today at 12 .30 to discuss plans

The Fraternities and Sorora -'.

for the party . All present please . ' ties are having their annua l

MARKETING CLUB will

N.

"Help Week" this Friday an d

(told its first meeting tonight at

DEBATING UNION presents!' Saturday .In those two days 200 pledge s

from the Fraternaties and 12 5Sorority pledges will be goin g

what is expected of a commerce really need a Queen ." All weldaround to 25 different charit y

graduate .

come. All may speak .

organizations such as : Canadia nNational Institute for the Blind . ,

AQUA-SOC. — Today at noon

TENNIS PLAYERS interested Kiwanis Clubs, Canadian Arth- revolution .

in Arts 206, third and final lee• in learning to play squash for ritis and Rheumatism Society, He will not interview Elvi sPresley, or tell you what th eQueen wears when visitingCharles at boarding school .

Mr . Gambrill brings to ourpages a world of experience . Hebegan his career with the Ubys-sey in 1955, authoring thecolumn, "Rim of Hell . "

COMPARED TO WEST

Education In U .S .S .R. Explained

By BARBARA BOURN EUbyssey Feature Edito r

The launching of the "Re dmoan" has drawn attention t othe differences between Rus-sian and Western education .

What is the difference be-tween the produc'Is' of Russia nand wcsicrn education "

Accordieg, le Dr . Chris Rei dof the t ::I;C Chemistry Depar hmeal the Russian child leaveshigh school with a sense of ac-contplishuu'nt, „

"We may produce happie rpeople well-adjusted to thei r

Pick A Pique " It 's Off"

Pique is coming out next Toes journalism as a career wes at-day .

trihutcd to current journalisti cPique costs two-hits (or maybe malpractice, not to physica l

35 cents),

DELEGATES CHARG EThe delegates charged the

Society - sponsored centennia lproje('t contest has been official-ly postponed .

Editor-in-Chief Patricia Mar -. . .'rh,lk dolefully announced toda y

choice had been mad ethe entries already re -

(reap) ill a biased manner .

'I 'flee slanting al' nett : storiesy lht° in . y , rli ;nl mf emnlionall y

charred materiel . . . and "jus tdialer II Inns' <Ilt ;lcks eu in-dividuals hetarc they are In'ovei ;guilty by fair trial .

t . The discrimination in favo rnl' lanolin nt peanut

. . \\ hos t

'aniline

can

influence

ncw: ; -)tper I))lny ,

it

I, ; ;rk of t(cee,e1)1ull of Ill y

re : p,nI ihilll ;of the plane .

Ihi

rlc'le ; ; ; ;lt ;

r

p„nnc! .~I \ tint Ilse lack o f

u ;, l

cu :ll,u I -.

:,r1tu1 ;11' : . ip'n . .111, 1

Ir ;oiiut . ;

ptra,l ;un-

I-,r ,lu(ItiiJ s

t ~pl,lin : bun I It : ller -lathin g ,1 1

Illllil()

I

tw ; ; r ,I -

()vale- :,i()n .il

' screed for I1tc later contest, Mrs'1larchalt said .

It was called oft' indefinitel yhrrau:e of a general lack of sup-

port .

C ' un ; ricutiuus Critics ' P a g c

editor Carrie Hide is growin ga lator(I for the centennial in- itca(I .

Important meeting of al l

Homecoming float chairme n

today at noon in the Boar d

Room, 'Brock Hall .

Ideas for floats will b e

discussed .

NOTICE

TWEEN CLASSES

HOMECOMING DANCE TICKETS

ON SALE AMS OFFICE TODA YTickets for . the Homecoming Dance on November 9t h

go on sale today in the A .M.S. office in Brock Hall . The priceis $4 .00 per couple. Tickets may be obtained for either th eField House or the Armouries . The dance in Brock Hall wil lbe limited to Alumni and members of the Graduating Class .

Chairman Grant MacDonald emphasized that decora-tions, orchestras, and other facilities will be of equal calibr eat each dance . Featured ente ;rained Herb Jeffries will beappearing at both dances for a 35 minute show . The Home -coming Queen will be crowned in the Field House at 11 p .m.and will be presented 15 minutes later in the Armouries .

He further emphasized that a ticket is only valid for on edance or the other, but not both ,

Students planning on taking in this fall classic would b eadvised to get their tickets as soon as possible ,

Totem Subscriptions on Sale Today

Decadent

Pubster To

View Europe

ANTHONY GAMBRILLForeign Corresponden t

The last picture taken o nCanadian shores . Gambril lwas waiting for his ship . lieis bearing full travelling kit .

By KEN LAMBUbyssey Associate Edito r

9 p.m . in the Clubs Auditorium ., an open noon debate at 12 .30 inDr . Chapman will speak on the Arts 100 . Topic : "Resolved tha tvalue of post graduate work and' the Conunonwealth does not

be outlawed in Spain, the Ubys-sey has despatched a reporte rto Europe to bring you the facts .

He is Anthony Asquith Gam -brill, former ace reporter andcolumnist for the Ubyssey, whowill comrnent on Europe as .h,sees it during his winter swing;from Northumberland to Nice .

Mr . Gambrill is conversan twith tension, decadence, andbull-fighting .

He will bring you the rea lstory of Paris bistros, as see nthrough the eyes of a Bistrobuff: and a recipe for Hungariangoulash that will start anothe r

tore on skin-diving theory plus winter conditioning, meet i ndemonstration of rescue techni• I Arts 102 at 12 .30 today .ques

Thursday evening from'

of.

Ae.. 5.30 to 7 .00 in Empire Pool, sec- THE CRITIC'S CIRCLE will i Painting, digging, repairing ,

and to the last skin-diving train-, hold its next meeting tonight at ; washing walls and cars, and pol-

ing session . Brink mask, finsi 8 p .m . at 4411 West 3rd Avenu eand snorkle .

I, (take 4th Ave . bus to TrimbleSt . and walk down to 3rd) . Sub-,, will be participating . A grou p

FOREST CLUB SPEAKER— ,jest for discussion will be : . of pledges plus one active men'

F . & G . 100 at 12 .30 . Mr. F . A "Boun'our Tristesse" vs . "Chu ber will be assigned to eac hA .

r Gartner Frt Idtil E

colates fnBrccl'as

agency .

,oesnusran- 'n 'face' for Alaska Pine Co . will,

The two chahmen of "Help deportation to his native Man -

speak on forest industrial a

CRIMINOLOGY CLUB will Week " are Bob Edes'

, represen- cheater, tar and feathers, an d

sperm

helve speaker, Dr, L' ' k , on tative for the Inter Fraternity a position on the labor relation s6 problems,

Friday, November 1st, ratherCouncil ; and Mervyn Shallara, board -- that in 1956, Anthony.VARSITY CHRISTIAN Fel-' than today as was previously' the Pan Helenic Society repre- changed his title to "Conte an d

announced .

sentative .

Get It," and was even mor elowship skating party tonight at

This "Help Week" comments successful. i

A,.Edmunds Rollerway . Tickets

chairman Eder, does much t omay still be obtained at ClubIlOL1Se .

their guest speaker CLUB presents promote good

"wards the

This year, in view of hi s

r Ma'. Cece

travelling role, his columns hav eUniversity .I Newman, Ansco Color Agent, in it –

a p p c a r c d tinder the name,the first of a two lecture-demon

"Hither and Yawn." Withou tWEIGHTLIFTING TEAM — Stratton :; on "Processing your' FILM SHOWING of the R .C . rtpologizing 1'nr the pun, Mr .

Organizational meeting of those ; own color" Friday noon in Arts A .F . production "Air Defence' G,uttbrill set off Sunday, fear.interested in trying out . Today ; 704

Command" will follow a talk by lessly on his journey ,at 12 .30, Weight Room UBC

Air Commodore H . H . C . Rut .Mcu s Gym .

ATTENTION! — Club Presi- lodge, OBE, CD, on "An Air-

His first report on Europe a s

dents, Residences and Armed titan's Look at the Defence Pic- he secs it appears soon .

PHILOSOPHY CLUB -- Pro-, Forces better move fast if your tore" today' at noon in Engineer

It will tell all about the Cari bspective members call gain stem- : want space in the Tutuila Attend ing 201 .bership and information con- to notice in council office boxes

(Continued on Page 3)

Mr . Gambrill is taking lir ecorning club activities in 1IM 2, AT ONCE!

See 'TWEEN CLASSES

lung route .

bean ,

YMCA and YWCA .Their jobs will be to help gen-

erally with such things as :

ishing furniture .All fraternities and sororities

The "Rim" was so successfu l— Gambrill was threatened wit h

society, hut do they c(nh'ibul cto the advancement of i t

EDUCATION DIFFERSDr. Reid states that Russia n

education is different hun tours .

'*Russian students are nn lprotected from the stern hardworld . "

He knows Had if he doesn' tdu well he only earl up i u'nine in Siberia, according t oDr . Reid .

The question would not ap-peal' la It what is Russian (idl ecation .", but what chang;cs will

Russia's successful technico-logical progress have on ou rown educational sy stmt "

Dr . Reid believes that w et o

LITTLE EMPHASI SIl( points old that in lillssi a

1it11e emphasis is placed on ap-plied ,uldeels like Hume Ec .nr vague musses like gcncre Iscience which in Dr . Reld' sopinion "teach nautili at all . "

Dean Neville Scarf() ul th e('allege of Fducatinn hclicee sour educational system will b e

c(luctllion in this country .must alter our approach

etrenetiltinerl ill

face of Ibis -;did:, Idlest advances

"Snell a spotlight was need-ed In brio,, inure publi

c tat In e((It'alion

which

tvil lr()sull. iu muse cnntriltilliau' lmU111t()r5iti('S ." lu

: ; :ri(l .

SCHOOLING BETTERE D1)e ; in Semi'', feels hill the

scii midi, will not receive unduenI )IIt ;cs

lull Ihal nor srhoul .-ing tt ill lie lug hired ;is ii tt'hole .

''I'()nple (Mail wish la adop ttlls' Russian S,slc'llt .' Ile' said ."11111\ will slrcnglhcn our own ."

Page 2: A BLAST OF DISAPPROVAL GIVEN DAILY NEWSPAPERS · be limited to Alumni and members of the Graduating Class. Chairman Grant MacDonald emphasized that decora-tions, orchestras, and other

Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, October 31, 193 7

TILE UZI lt'SSZYAuthorized as second class mall . Post Office Department, 'Ottawa .

MEMBERS CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS

EDITOR.IN-CIIIEF PATRICIA MARCHAKNews Editor . -

Barbara Bourne Managing Editor Dave Robertso nAssistant News Editor

Helen Zukowski

Business Manager Harry YuilIAssociate Editor Ken Lamb

Features Editor Barbara Bourn eCUP Editor Marilyn Smith

SENIOR EDITOR DIANA SMIT H

Reporters and Deskrnen :— Mary Wilkins, Bill Pickin, Carol Osborne, Lois Boulding ,Barrie Cook and Tony Gum brill .

TELEPHONES :Editorial and News Offices AL, 4404, Locals 12, 13, 1 4Business and Advertising Offices AL. 4404, Local 6

would like to examine these

are told that cafeteria personnelare currently paid so little that experience dwaitresses are not obtainable . In fact, how-ever, waitresses and general help at thecafeteria are being paid, to start, 80 cent sper hour plus time and a half for overtime .At downtown restaurants the going unionwages at start are 75 cents per hour . This ,incidentally, is the wage paid to waitressesstarting at the off-campus restaurant whichoffers better service .

The second reason offered to students, tha tof low price meals, appears to be no longe rapplicable because meals have gone up a naverage of one-third over their cost of lastyear. Comparably priced meals off-campu sare available and they are of generally bette rcalibre and greater variety .

Comparably priced and lower priced meal sof better quality are now offered at other

There may be extenuating circumstancesat UBC which account for the poor service ,low quality meals, lack of variety in foods ,and for the apparent discrepancy betweenthe amount of money taken in and the serv-ices given out .

However, students are not informed ofsuch circumstances even when they repeat-edly question and criticize the existing situa-tion . Two student elected representativessit in on Food Services Committee pre-ambl ediscussions, are questioned regarding stu-dent habits of eating and various extraneoussubjects, and then are told to leave whil ethe administration committee on Foor Serv-ices talks over serious matters and votes .

From this point on, students see onlythe unhappy results of such talks and suc hvotes .

The reason given for not allowing stu-dents to vote with the Food Services andHousing committees is "lack of continuity . "This is questionable in view of the fac tthat students, despite an annul turnover ofexecutives and councillors as well as mem-bers, have maintained an admirable degre eof CufltiflUity fi'oii' year to year in thei rvarious clubs, organiations, and students 'council . Meanwhile, with no 'a' of dis-covering the truth and no means of imple-menting on a lamentable situation, studentsare forced to accept excuses which are a sdull and unpalatable as the food the com-mittee peddles .

In the past, students hoped that theadministration would, through control offood outlets and menus, eventually arriveat a combination of prices, menus and serv-ice that would prove satisfactory . This hasnot come to pass but the administration'smonopoly expands . It is obvious that th eFood Services Committee as presently con-structed . i , a dismal failure .

The time has come for the administra-tion to scrap the existing committee and it spolicies and to substitute for it one whichincludes fully participating students . The"contilIUity ' which the present constructe dcommittee has achieved is only a continuityof poor results .

A fourth campus eating place has bee n

put under the administration of the Uni-versity Food Services Committee . The cafe-teria in the gymnasium, formerly operated

under the auspices of the Legion with al l

surpluses going to a Bursary Fund for vet-eran's children, was taken over by the Uni-versity this fall .

This means that with the exception o fthe Campus Cupboard which serves onl ylight snacks, all eating facilities on campu sare operated by the university . All pricesand purchases, all menus and personnel, al lservice and time-schedules are determinedby the university committee .

It also means that students who muststay out on campus over dinner-hour mus teat at a university-owned and operated cafe .The only alternatives are one restaurant offthe immediate campus which offers poo rfood and service at exhorbitant prices, or ,and this only for students with cars, a cafeoutside the university gates .

The fact that this latter cafe, while notat all unusual as far as downtown restaur-ants go, is always packed with studentssuggests that something is far wrong withthe services on campus . This is further sug-guested by the recent failure of "cafeteri atickets" which gave reductions on meals fo rstudents eating regularly at the Campu sCafeteria . Only 20 students took advantag eof the offer although there are several hund-red who must eat somewhere between hereand Alma Road. It appears that studentswould rather miss out on a less expensiv eweekly pass for cafeteria meals than thro waway the daily hope that they may be give na ride outside the gates for a decent meal .

The reasons given by students for thei rdislike of cafeteria supper-hours are thepoor service and the poor quality meals .This fact was brought out in a letter t othis paper recently printed on this page.

The following retalliatory reasons hav ebeen given by the administration to stt:dentsvia student councillors who may air thei rcomplaints to the Food Services Committe ebut who may not sit in on planning dis-cussions nor vote on behalf of the studen tpopulation: "Underpaid staffs and low-cos tmeals, "

Wereasons .

We

WE'VE TRIED CONTINUIT YLet's Try Some Food For a Change

Canadian campi . The various universit yconferences held this year at London, Que-bec City, and Saskatoon, disclosed to UB Cdelegates the fact that these universities,which must be laboring under difficultiessimilar to those of UBC, are producing bette rmeals at equal or lower prices and are offer-ing a wider vat iety within each meal an dfrom day to day than are our own UBCFood Services Committee outlets .

The prices here are conspicuous espec-ially in view of the lack of overhead ascompared to that of profit-making restau-rants. In the main cafeteria no waitresse sare needed, cutting personnel down to kit-chen staff, servers at the cafeteria counter ,janitor, and one person to take money andsell cigarettes . Furthermore the cafeteriahours do not require that two or three staff sbe on duty at either end of the day, as isthe case in a privately-owned around-the-clock establishment and at many other Can-adian universities ' cafeterias which stayopen until ten at night .

A_.fl_v__v__

r

- a'- r

What 7h14 CampuAI Ileed-:4 .Frank is my name and I in -

tend to BE frank .What this campus needs ,

football-wise, is a little les stalk and a lot more action fro mthe student body and theal urnni .

We need action from stu-dents who play football off th ecampus, in what they call "areal rough, tough league . "

These junior and juvenil eleague players have, in man ycases, more football experienc ethan some of the players par-ticipating in the EvergreenConference . We would use al lof these kids . The job of build -log a league contender wouldbe that much easier if thes eboys would show some loyaltyand school spirit .

Winning is the aim of everyteam, and we are no exception .

Students make excuses fo rnot turning out for the foot -ball team, but criticize thecalibre of football played bythe varsity . They are, and al -ways will be, welcome to testtheir ability against those who

Editor's Not . :Mr . Fans here answers theUbyssey editorial claim of Octobe r16th that the combination of a mor eright Winnipeg Declaration and amore left Diefenbaker throne speec hhad deprived the C .C .F . party of it sunique position .Editor, The Ubyssey, .,Dear Madam :

The two Private Interestparties which for purposes ofdescription I shall call twiddle-dum and twiddle-dee, are nowCo m pletely indistinguishable .For decades they used to wea rcolored ribbons to distinguis hthemselves. Nowadays the onlyway to tell a Conliberal fro ma Libserative is to pinch him .If he squeals "by Jove" he' sConliberal - if "Mon Dieu"he's Libservative .

There are only two thingsthat are sure in Canadian poli-tics . The first is that no mat -ter which profit-motive part ythere is in Ottawa, it will sel lout the Canadian people a ssoon as it has a profitable op-portunity .

The second is that no matte rwhich profit motive party isthe one which will swallo wthe others, its only true alter -native is the C.C.F . We haveseen in B . C . how swiftly partylines are crossed when govern -ment posts and governmentcontracts are in the offing .

An example of my firs tpoint--speedy lack of concer nfr the people of Canada whe nit comes right down to hardfacts—is evident in our ne wtweedleclec government . Die!-

are already playing . A lot ofthem talk a great game. Somehave given it a whirl and foun dit tougher than it looks . They'vepacked up their gear, throw nin the towel, and gone to pla yin other leagues—where theycould practice when they fel tlike it and play regularly be -cause they didn't have to com-pete for their position .

Coming out for the varsit yis too much like going to work ,so they take the line of leas tresistance and play wherethere is little opposition an dless labor .

If the off-campus player swho feel they have the abilityto make the varsity team woul dcome out fop UBC football, i tstands to reason we shouldhave little trouble competin gin the Evergreen Conference .

We need more boys like oneswe have, boys who are notafraid to compete against talentthat is better organized, bettertrained, and more experienced ,boys who enjoy contact, an dwho are not afraid to be

enbaker in last year's bitterpipeline debates described thepipeline promoters as "buccan-eers" and the project as " Anefarious scheme" . P u b l i cWorks Minister Howard Gree ncalled the TransCanada dea l"the greatest betrayal of th eCanadian people since Confed-eration" .

What are Green and Diefen-baker doing now to rectify this"betrayal" and set this "nefari-ous scheme" aright? Nothing .Who are the betrayers? Wh oare in addition I might suggest- humbugs and poppinjays ?One factor is constant . It isthe Canadian people who arebetrayed .

With the Tory T h r o n eSpeech there was indeed a dil-emma created in Canadianpolitics . The dilemma is no t"what will happen to th eC .C.F." but rather "what ha shappened to private enter -prise . "

With both major profit-mo-tive parties paying lip serviceto social welfare schemes and"sharing the wealth" It look sas if there is a tremendou svacuum created on the politi-cal right, but this obviously i snot the case . Both twiddledeeand twiddle-durn were heavilyfinanced by business corpora-tions and you can be sure bothwill toe the line .

"creamed" as the saying goes .We need the boy who want s

to "cream" the opposition .

I'm a little surprised byalumni who say it is bad fo rmorale to compete agains t"supermen" . In my two andone-half seasons as footbal lcoach here, the Thunderbird shave never played against any -one with more than the usua lnumber of arms and legs .

I'm glad there are men onthe varsity who are not afrai dto play in the big, bad Ever-green Conference, who 'lookforward to the Saturday gamesa n d who enjoy competin gagainst the so-called "grea todds . "

Their morale is a lot higherthan the morale of those fe wwho want to quit because theyfeel they haven't a chance .

Following these defeatists'logic, the WIFU should disban dthe Edmonton Eskimos be -cause no team in the leaguecan defeat them, and theAmerican Baseball League had

The "Socialist" Conserva-tive Throne Speech is nothin gnew in the history of the CCF .It merely marks another in th elong line of CCF victories .Liberals in 1927 became "So-cialists" with Old Age Pen-sions, Conservatives, "Social-ists" in 1932 with the CBC and1934 with the Bank of Canada .Liberals again had a binge o f"Socialism" with TCA in 1937 ,Unemployment Insurance i n1940 and Family Allowance sin 1944 . Now we again have"Socialist" Conservatives ,

You will actually meet mem-bers of these parties who wil lboast of social welfare meas-ures. Private enterprise par-ties are displaying medals theyhave won in battles they hav elost 'hen they boast of thei rpetty welfare schemes . Theydo not believe in them - theydo not want them - they ar eonly performing delaying the -tics . It is a terrible thing tosee a political party turn can-nibal and destroy itself to spiteand evade another .

The C .C .F. stands for morethan just the idea of occasion -ally dropping crumbs fromCanada's economic table to pla -cate the underprivileged i nour society . This, the C.C.F .declares, is inadequate, an dwhat is more, immoral . A sdemocratic socialists C .C.F .er srecognize the equal worth o fall citizens in our society and

BY FRANK GNU P

better fold because the Yank .ees keep winning .

Since coming to USC, assist -ant coach Bob Ilindmarch andI have tried to instill confi-dence in the boys who com eout for the football team . Wefeel that our players are men -tally and physically equal totheir opponents, but don't rea-lize it .

The biggest drawback hasbeen defeatist talk from stu-dents and alumni . Talk doesn' thelp the football team. Theyneed moral support and practi-cal (sacking . They need moreand better equipment, bette rtraining facilities, better prac-tice times. All of this takesmoney. The kids now playin gare giving their time and effor tfor the school . Their only re-ward is the enjoyment they ge tfrom competing against goodopposition .

More players who are will-ing to work and play hard wil lbring the UBC football tea mup to a par with the others i nthe Evergreen Conference .

their God-given right to sharefairly in the world's bounty .

When other parties start toimplement the economic plan -fling and social democracy tha tis necessary for a decent rela-tionship 'between human be-ings—then they will becom esocialists—no sooner—no later .The "Socialists" Tory budge twas jut Uncle John's way ofwishing Canadians "bon voy-age" as he sells us down th eriver.

The C.C.F . celebrates it s25th Anniversary this fall .What has it accomplished i nthese 25 years? Well, political-ly it has reached the poin twhere it is the second larges tparty in English speakingCanada, the largest party i nWestern Canada, the balanceof power in Otta wa , the gov-ernment in Saskatchewan an dthe next government in bot hB . C . and Manitoba .

Legislatively it has been th e

stimulus and source of every

single piece of Canadian legis -

lation which is in the interes t

of the common people o fCanada .

Canada's first health scheme ,Old Age Pensions, Unemploy-

ment Insurance, the Bank o fCanada Act, Family Allow-ances—all these measures an dcountless more originated intime minds and through thework of men like J . S . Woods.worth and M . J . Coldwell .

11's The Twiddle - dee Govermen tThat Doesn't Know Which Way To Go'

BY FAR/S

LETTERS TO THE EDITO R

Homecomin gEditor, The Ubyssey,Dear Madam .

The success of Homecomin ghas been sabotaged unwittingl yby lack of perspicacity or fore -sight on the part of the FirstMember at Large .

People like myself wh ocome fr()tT1 out of town andlook forward to a visit wit hthe family when the few op-portunities arise, must no wchoose between Homecomingand the long te . eekend onwhich the festivities are bein gheld . A simple perusal of th eUniversity Calendar " ii 1 re -veal fat- in advance that Na -'eiber I liii is a university -

recognized holiday and tha tHomecoming should not beheld on that weekend . Theresult is that }ninclr'cls of stu-dents w i l l absent themselve sfrom the a n ua I celebration o relse disappoint the members ()I 'their families who ill'(' lookin gforward te seeing them .

Before I leave the subject ,the va;cillining in connectio n

'i1h

\'I1(tl1't'

()I'

nut

1 herbvoiilcl be a

\Va s

I

ICI

1

.

(

!

t

only say that the man who i sin charge of the whole show i snot making an honest attemp tto do the job he said he woul dduring the campaign election slast spring .

Yours truly ,

JOHN GAYTO N

Reply to Von Kries —Editor, The Ubyssey ,Dear Madam :

Huzzah, Mr, Von Kries! I nyour letter of October 25, eith-er you've hit the nail on thehead or . you've got an awfu lbruised thdjflhl) . You say you('an't stand Engineers . You sayyou can't stand rowdy be-havior at AMS meetings . Yousay you envy well-dressed men ,You say Engineers are sheep .You Sa\' you are against th eproposed $5 increase in fees .\' ()lI SV (hisses should not b ecancelled . Well, let's sit dow nYogi-like and count our tot's .

'I'm

I Oie, 1 2 :O ; the place ,Armouries ; event, A MS meet-ing : main feature, hill-billy an -tics of Engineers, and, I mus tI nit forget . the proposed $5 in -(Tease

fees,

As far as the cacaphony an dGrade Ten antics of Engineer sis concerned let us put it dow nto a release of nervous tension .More students should act up a tAMS meetings . It's good forthe nervous system . In fact ,next meeting, don't sit therefrustrated-like, but stand on achair and yell, ape-like, at th etop of your voice. It's good .You'll never need a psychia-trist .

Next is the proposed in-crease in fees. At this point ,or I should say, on this point ,we agree .

I, truthfully, am against th efive-dollar increase . That isto say the President of the En-gineering Undergraduate So-ciety (commonly called theEUS), Russ Fraser, was notrepresenting EUS views whenhe expressed the opinion tha t"students unable to raise th el'O r) OS ('d additional five dolla rAMS Ice should go to another110 iversitv," Pooh. Conse-quently, if he is not represent -jug EUS views, he is eithe rpresenting his own opinion —WHICH IS OK--or presentin gthe opinion of a fraternity

WHICH IS WRONG . He spoketoo strongly and out of place .Critic .

The UBC campus is just on ebig Puppet Show with the fre tboys pulling the strings . Thisview is not slanted toward an yone person but at the campusas a whole. But I suppose Pup-pet Shows are good as long a sthe strings don't break . MonDieu .

Now, about this inferiority"dress" complex that you ma yhave. The answer is simple .Dress like an Engineer 'caus eit's cheap . Here are the basicrequirements :

1. One pair jeans (need no tbe Ivy League )

2. One T-Shir t3. One Red Cardigan Sweat-

er .

No laundry bills and yet al -ways a bright dresser .

So, Dear Diary, in closing, Ijust have to say that I hate th eidea of' an increase in fees . Iwould rather pay the moneyfor a good bottle of booze andhave a brawl at the Commo-dore. But, on second thought ,clear diary, I wouldn't min dgiving

$5 to the

A.IVIS II it

meant giving the professors abigger salary . At least, if Ibuy a bottle of booze, I kno wthat this is one form of educa-tion that will go to "my head . "

Yours very truly ,EDWARD J. MAllUCA.

Engineering 3 .P .S . : I am also agains t

these "phoney" meeting sthat the EUS has the daybefore AMS meetings to tel l"fellow sheep" how to vote .Toujours gale .

Athletic ScholarshipsEditor, The Ubyssey ,Dear Madam :

Why should many of ourbest athletes go to America ncolleges' Don't they want t ostay in B. C .? Don't we needtheta here? We need them ondthey want to stay, but becaus ewe fail to help them financiall ywhen they give i,ip their tim elot' training, they go to th eU .S .

It would be much wiser t ohelp them ourselves and en -able thciii to stay in Canada .There are too many of o nVOtlflg people going south as i tit . DO ,\'()Li think ii is sensible

to lose our local talent whe nwe need them here at U .B .C . ?I would like to see more Cana-dian athletes staying in Cana-dian universities, So, for thei rsakes and ours, let's do some -thing about athletic scholar-ships .

JOHN DAVIES,Education II .

Totem Agai n

Editor, The Ubyssey ,Dear Madam :

Re : "T o t c ni Disappoint-ment," October 22 issue ,

We were greatly alarme dupon reading the recent ite min the Ubyssey which state dthat Undcrgrad pictures are t ohe omitted from the year sTotem !

Is t h e %VhOIC problem lac kof help in cataloguing pictures ?If so, there are undoubtedl ymany members of "the larg egrey mass" is .ho 'otild he vihi-ii'ig to give of their time if stic'l mwould fissure the inclusion o f0 I chergrad pict ii i'es ,

Opinions on campus practic -ally guarantee that

Tote msales

'ill take a dismsli'oiis and

costly drop if this decisionstands .

BARB BAKER. Ed. I .SUE PRETTIE, Arts I.

PENNY TRELFORD, Arts I.

Thanks!Editor, The Ubyssey ,Dear Madam :

May I use this space to than kthe person who found my wal-let and returned it to rriy dorm?

The honesty and considera-tion shown are very much ap-preciated .

Thanks !Sincerely ,

FRANCES McKINNON ,Arts I .

Where's Ours ?

Editor, The Ubyssey ,Dear Madam :

We hole 'from your pape rof October 24 . that there is on eVOIi1il Ii for eVCry three me nall the ('atilpils . Please sendours 11) the F , I] .S. office whereve 'ihl be glad to pick her up

any 11(11)0 .Yours truly ,

THREE ENGINEERS .

C

Page 3: A BLAST OF DISAPPROVAL GIVEN DAILY NEWSPAPERS · be limited to Alumni and members of the Graduating Class. Chairman Grant MacDonald emphasized that decora-tions, orchestras, and other

Thursday, October 31, 1957 .

THE UBYSSEY

Page 8

ABOVE ARE ALPHA OMICRON PI members, Sharon Wright and Miriam Haahti at -tempting to sell Jim Horseman a ticket to the B.C . Fashion Designers, "Figures in Fashion . "The affair, sponsored by the sorority, will feature men's clothing this year, as well a sthe usual women's outfits .

--photo by Wally Thatcher

to early a child's voice. . .

. . .or move the bottom of a lakeAt Lachine, Que., Northern Electric manufactures telephon ecoil wire which is as thin as a human hair , ,At the same plant, Northern recently completed a mammothcustom-built power cable with a diameter of just unde rsix inches . This cable—one of the largest of its kind eve rproduced—is supplying electric power to two ,giganti c10,000 h .p, dredges now operating at Steep Rock Lake .These two contrasting achievements in manufacturing ar edramatic proof of the versatility of the Northern Electri cCompany, In addition to manufacturing electrical wire an dcable, and communications equipment and systems, Norther nElectric also distribute approximately 100,000 electrica lproducts which stem from more than 1,000 separat emanufacturers.

There are interesting careers—and a continual need for Universit yGraduates—at the Northern Electric Company Limited . A, letter orpostcard to the College Relations Department, Box 6124, Montreal ,will bring full information concerning these opportunities .

Nort/iw'ti E1QCIr/c 6657 . 5

SERVES YOU BES T

You'll enjoy today's copy of this publication

much more if you'll get up right now and ge t

yourself an ice-cold bottle of Coca-Cola .

(Naturally, we'd be happier, too!)

Don't just sit there !

Hither andYawn

By TONY GAMBRILL

Coach Yup is known to b ereconsidering the football situa-tion in view of this year's stringof losses . In an interview withyour reporter Yup announced :

Next year things will be dif-ferent . "

Sounds familiar? Wait a min-ute . . .

"Right now were scoutin gseveral prospects in a numbe rof American colleges," he con-tinued . "No more tired rugge rplayers for us . "

He flicked the ash off his OldSheep Dip cigar, took a heav ydrag and spat into his mono-grammed spittoon .

"Yep," said Yup, "footbal lscholarships are coming in . DaPreem — M . Bennett — is go-ing to make the economic cli-mate here healthy for footbal lplayers . "

"Coach," I stammered, "yo umean the premier is going t osubsidize your program?"

"Yep, the imports will all b eappointed non-voting, non-exis-tent vice-presidents in the Wen-ner-Gren organization, "

Horrified, I drew my breat hin only to fill my craw with th elout smoke of his Old SheepDip.

"Are we ,abandoning the de -cent things in life? Our ideals ?Our belief in playing the game ?Of being good sports and puttingup a fine show? Are we givingup these things just to win foot -ball games? "

Tears welled up in Yup's eye srevealing the warm tender sid eof Yup the Football Field Mar-shal . Here was the man who ,when his boys lost 64-0, coul dlaugh, hysterically, of course ,but at least he laughed . Herewas the man with the guts t oeven send in the bench when

"So you get good ball players ,but can they pass exams? "

"We got that fixed," he mum -bled, staring down at his deser tboots . "The boys will honor i nleather work . "

"Leather wo . .A waft of Old Sheep Dip

choked off my exclamation ,"Don't bug me, will ya? I'm

doing my best but I'm tired o fseeing my boys lose just becaus ethey gotta get a lousy educa-tion ."

ENGLISHDEPARTMENI

NEEDNEROURGENTLY 'The English Department' s

"PEER GYNT" needs a violinis tor two. There is a weddingscene — in which Peer getsdrunk and otherwise disgrace shimself — in which the guestsindulge in square dancing.

A country "fiddler" is neededto accompany them, he is a mem-ber of the cast "on stage." Mys-terious "off stage" effects onthe violin will also be called fo rto create atmosphere .

present the Bishop of Cariboo, !Rt. Rev. R. Dean, who will !speak on Evangelism in En . 202at 12.30 .

CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION iwill hold a general meeting o nFriday in Arts 105 at 12 .30 .Subject : Approval of pre-Christ-mas programme .

: * :

GIRLS! — Use your sparetime for ping pong in the NewGames Room of the Brock Ex -tension, open every afternoon .

UBC Radio News on Station 600(CJOR) produced by UBC Radio .

FRIDA YS.C.M . invites you to thei r

Hallowe'en party this Friday at8 .30 in the SCM room, 312 Aud .25c each .

ARE YOU RA VEN FORFIFTY (50) DOLLARS .

All stories printed inRAVEN automatically be-come eligible for the fift ydollar prize offered annual-ly by the MacMillan Pub-lishing Company . Hand inyour manuscript to theRAVEN, located in theUbyssey office, downstairsin the old North Brock,

Remember, Friday is thelast day for submissions .Place name and telephon enumber on the first page.

Double BreastedSuits

Converted into newSINGLE BREASTE D

MODELS

UNITED TAILOR S549 Granville

PA 4649

Double breasted suitsmodernized in the newsingle breasted styles .

Matz and WoznySPECIAL STUDENT RATE S548 Howe St . MArine 4715

• (REGULAR OFFICER TRAINING PLAN )•

• Flight Cadets (male) arep enrolled in the Regula r

q Force—during the Uni -e versity year are subsidize d

for tuition with a grant fo ro books and instrumentsq and receive pay and allow-• ances throughout th e

whole year .

Openings now for

Openings now fo rTECHNICAL

). AIR CREW IAND NONTECHNICAL

AND TECHNICALOFFICERS .

► OFFICERS .

*This plan applies to the three Armed Service s

Gct full details at once so that you can take advantage of' thisopportunity now, while you are still attending University. Forfull information on requirements, pay and other benefits, ,

SEE YOUR RCAF RESIDENT STAFF OFFICER ,OR THE COMMANDING OFFICER OF YOUR RCAF UNIVERSIT Y

SQUADRON LOCATED ON YOUR CAMPU SUBC violinists are invited, are

urged, to make themselvesknown, and to take part in th eproduction. They are asked toget in touch with Miss Doroth ySomerset in the Extension De-partment, Hut L-10, during th e

things got tough.

noon hour as soon as possible .Then he straightened his Old ! ,

School Tie, stiffened his upperlip and spoke out :

"We gotta do this. We gottaget a winning team . Alumniabandon us, students miss games

V. C. F. and Anglican S . C.and the players are now skip-ping practices to attend lec-tures ."

'TWEEN CLASSE S(Continued from Page 1 )

FlimSoc PresentsChaplin s "Mlle "

"Tillie's Punctured Romance, "Charlie Chaplin's first full-lengthmovie, will be shown Tuesday ,November 5th, by Filmsoc .

It is screamingly funny, an dcertainly worth the effort an dmoney to see it .

See the AmazingThere will he four showings,

REMINGTO Nat 330, 6, 8 and 10 p.m .

TYPEWRITE RAdmission will be 35 centsfor students and staff on Ares- +1 Down, $1 per Wee kentation of identification to thecashier .

I turned away, shaking my NOTICE — Monday throug h

head in an effort to keep the' Friday at 8 .10 p .m . listen to

, stinging smoke out of my eyes ."Buddy . . ." he began ."Yeah?""About the decent things lik e

playing the game and being agood sport — will ya forgiveme? "

I looked down at him, a los tsoul trying to survive in thegridiron jungle .

"Well, okay, but there's one sents an illustrated lecture o nthing I 'll never forgive you for ; paris by M. Claude Treil in AG. . .", I choked out, a suffocating 100 at noon Friday .sensation clutching mh ty ces ."What's that? "

smoking those crumm ycigars."

UNIV. BAPTIST CLUB —Friday at 12 .30 in Physics 301 ,

1Rev . E . V. Apps will speak onthe "Origin of Hallowe'en" .

PSYCHOLOGY CLUB — OnFriday at 12 .30 in I-IM-2 therewill be a film "Psychiatry i nAction ." Everyone welcome .Members free; non-members 10c .

PHRATERES ALL PHI meet-ing Friday in W. 100 at 12.30 .Everyone out .

ALLIANCE FRANCAIS pre -

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Page 4: A BLAST OF DISAPPROVAL GIVEN DAILY NEWSPAPERS · be limited to Alumni and members of the Graduating Class. Chairman Grant MacDonald emphasized that decora-tions, orchestras, and other

Page 4

THE UDYSSEY

Thursday. October 31, 195 7

PICTURED ABOVE IS .trumpeter Don Cherry, who, with his quintet, will appear in aJazzsoc-sponsored concert Friday noon in the Auditorium . Cherry, although working ou tof Los Angeles, is in the Bird-Miler Davis tradition . He will, shortly, record on a n

Eastern label .

CANADIAN ART REVISITE D(As a result of the recent increased fund allotment to The Brock Hall Collection of

Canadian Painters, and the official opening of that collection, we feel that it might be apt

to offer some comment upon the paintings from the artists themselves . Readers may findit interesting, if not rewarding, to compare these comments with the critique of TheBrock paintings written by John Darling, which ran in the October 17 number of 'I h eReviews and Criticism page . The comments offered below are taken verbatim from theofficial Art Committee brochure dealing with the Brock Hall collection.B.H .)

Filmsoc -Excellent Films, Poor PresentationFilms shown in UBC's Auditorium come up against what are perhaps the mos t

formidable barriers against audience comprehension this side of the assorted bear-baiters ,prostitutes, orange-hawkers, brawling transients, and dandies in the pit of Shakespear 'sGlobe .

After cutting through th emanifold disadvantages of a

dim, scratchy print, a malfunc-tioning sound-reproduction sys.tom, and frequently inept pro-jection, the film must stillevoke the appropriate respons efrom an audience whose prim-ary motivation in being ther ein the first place is more tha nlikely the desire to allow theirdigestive tract every possiblechance of survival . Yet themajority of films offered byFilmsoc this fall have playedto the hushed, attentive housesthat are the only favorabl eevaluation of artistic excellencethat really make much differ-ence in this medium, for soclosely knit are what thefilmaker has to say and hismethod of saying it, the majorpart of any given film's suc-cess is extent to which it cap-tures and directs the imagina-tion of a mass audience in ex-actly the same way, and at thesame time .

So far this year, our imagin-ation has been directed in anumber of emotionally reward-ing ways, by filmakers of nu-merous nationalities and ,per-suations .

CHARLIE CHAPLIN and MARIE DREISLE RSee story in "Events of Interest "

Ask your l'la(('nten1 Office rnow for our twice) . (booklets .

TOM HODGSON: "PAINTING FULL GROWN"

"I often use Nature to help me get started in build-

ing a painting; that is, I look directly at Nature and take

from it colors and forms, etc ., and re-relate them on

my canvas in terms of just color and form rather than

a direct replica of Nature and its deail . On occasion, I do

not need Nature to get started . I build directly from m y

experiences ; with forms and colors suggesting to me

other forms and colors, so that the painting seems to grow .

This is not a haphazard growth but one that is of m eand controlled by me to an end that is vaguely in sigh t

from the beginning . "Painting Full Grown" is an example

of this method of working ; hence its title . "

JOHN KORNER: "COAST EMBLEM"

"Coast Emblem represents the result of an initia l

strongly registered experience which led to the choice o fthe motif, and of a secondary experience which lies in the

painting process itself . The initial feeling (about a Wes tCoast landscape) crystallized into a pictorial idea whic h

was allowed to assume its own development in painterl y

terms. Although its point of departure was quite direct ,Coast Emblem is not a descriptive painting : neither couldit be labelled, if that were necessary, an abstract painting .Is it a maze of images, sufficiently intriguing to obliterat ereality? Or does its form bring forth new truths which ca n

enrich momentary experience? Can it even uncover mor epermanent values either of our own internal potentialitiesor as insight into the nature of the external world? "

E. J. HUGHES :

"ABANDONED VILLAGE, RIVERS INLET, B .C. "

"I painted this picture from a sketch which I did i n1938 when I was working at the nearby Brunswick Can-nery . This old water mill and these cottages are part ofa group of several more buildings . Why they wereabandoned to the bleaching and rotting elements of th eweather, I don't know . On viewing the scene, I was im-pressed by the loneliness, the starkness and emptiness o fthe pale buildings against the dark cedar background ,and the contrast of the twisted driftwood root forms wit hthe straight-line forms of the buildings."

CASSALS ON TVBy BRENDA RUNGE

One of the few benefits fro ma scholastic point of view i nhaving a TV set is that one ca nmeet great artists such as Pa-blo Casals .

Profile (Tues . night, 10 p .m. ,Channel 2) featured an inter-view with Pablo Casals in hi sattic study in Prades where heis in self-imposed exile . Made -line Fulton, one of his Ameri-can pupils, questioned him onhis !tie story. Miss Fulton tooktier job very seriously, draw-ing him back to the subjec tjust as soon as his anecdote sbecame interesting. It migh thave been more rewarding t olisten to the master ramble onin his own fascinating way fo rthe full half hour without Mis sFulton's interruptions .

In spite of Miss Fulton push-ing him, he managed to dro pmany words of wisdom .

On art : Art, he feels is na-ture, and musical interpreta-tions therefore will and mustvary infinitely as does nature .

On his exile from Spain : —"Everything is possible and ac-cepted nowadays. I refuse toaccept it, that's all! "

The program began and end-ed with two solos . Casals alsoplayed an old recording of hi sTrio where the purity of theartist's tone was clearly distin-guishable even through th escratching of the old record .

See the Amazin gREMINGTON

TYPEWRITER$1 Down, $1 per Week

COLLEGE SHOP

Events of Interes tPerhaps major events of thi s

coming week, or any other, arethe two Filmsoc presentationson Tuesday and Thursday . Onthe fifth at 3 :30, 6 :00, 8:00 and10 :00, the Chaplin film "Tillie' sPunctured Romance," wit hMarie Driesler, will be shownIt will be accompanied by Dis-ney's "Toad, of Toad Hall," on eof the more artful of tha tgentleman's c r e a t i s . OnThursday the seventh, one o fthe monuments of the Frenchfilm industry, and certainly on eof the great motion picture smade in any country ,to date ,Dreyer's 1928 treatment of theJoan of Arc legend : "PassionDe Jeanne D'Arc," will beshown at 12:30 and 3 :30 . Thislatter film is an artistic ex-perience unavailable anywhereelse. Student admission for th eusual price. Both films will beshown in the Auditorium .

Equally happy news, how -ever, is the appearance Monda ynoon of Dennis Matthews ,pianist, and Leon Gossens, obe ,in the Auditorium. T h e s egentlemen will present a con-cert of Bach that is not to bemissed, if you like Bach, andprobably even if you don't . Mr .Goossens is recognized as theworld's leading oboeist . DannyKaye once remarked-that th eoboe is an ill wind that nobodyblows good ; Mr . Goossens haslittle trouble in refuting this .

There will be another con-cert of French music in Physics200, Wednesday noon. Theartists this time will be JoycePerry, soprano, and GenevieveCarey, piano.

The same room will se creadings and songs from Den-mark delivered by Marja Mour-ler, Friday at noon .

The Fall Plays presented b ythe Player's Club will includea farce lampooning the com-munity-theatre movement o fthe 1920's . We are informedthat, as a satire, it is prett ybiting, and as a farce, it lack sonly the throwing of Custar dpies. It is entitled "The Torch-bearers ."—B .H .

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"PAISAN," the film onwhich Roberto Rosselini buil this reputation, the reputationwhich he later destroyed wit hsuch films as "STROMBOLI, "used the stuff of life, unadorn-ed, to create a general feelingof tragedy and irony. Hisactors were, for the most part ,non-professional ; his camera -work was austere and unrelent-ing; his subjects were the ruin-ed cities and damaged peoplesof war-time Italy . The charac-ter and incident of this fil mwere astringently drawn, ye tone was certain that they coul dbe drawn no other way . .

The French have been mire .

sented by "SEVEN DEADL YSINS," as a result of whic hDeMaupassant seems a gooddeal more supportable, an d"JOUR DE FETE," in which nohuman emotion seemed justif-iably exempt from laughter .

"FROM HERE TO ETERN-ITY" as a film invariablydraws comparison to the boo k

which gave it birth . The vie wof life presented by both i sapproximately the same, yetwhile the most frequently re-

curring emotion evoked by thebook was one which gave riseto the violent throwing of i tacross the room, the film de-manded credibility — and gotit, la r gely, this time, becaus eof the sensitivity of the actor sin v olved . Given the samematerial to work with, for ex -ample, Montgomery Clift raisedthe stature of Prewit from thatof a catatonic to that of aproud, sensative, and outrage denmmon man .—B .11 .

Men find wome nstuck-Ms I n

ENGINEERIN GARTS/SCIENC E

COMMERC.BUS. ADM .

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I,II,•1I L yn, lI 'r, l, .,du,n r

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Filmsoc Presents

BORN YESTERDAYToday: 12:30 - 2:30 p .m.

CHARLIE CHAPLIN IN

TILLIE'S PUNCTURE DROMANCE

Tuesday, November 5, 195 7Four Shows: 3:30, 6:00, 8:00 and 10:00 pan .

Admission 65c — Spechll, Students 35 c

Also : DISNEY'S TOAD OF TOAD MALI ,

Tuesday Noon, 12:30 - 1 :30

ICHABOD CRAN E(Disney)

HEA RAir Commodore H . H . C . Rutledge ,

O.B.E,, C.D.

ENGINEERING 20 1

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31s t

12 :30 NOON

•"What do I like about the Bell? The wa yyour progress is encouraged ! .`When I joined the hell, I was soon give nseveral projects to work on . True, there \1'a5

always a more experienced engineer a\ail-able for guidance, but at the earliest practica lmoment I was 'on my own '

"Before long, I was working on special pro-jects involving daily contact with other en-gineers and telephone people all over Nort hAmerica"My progress, MeanWhile, 11115 been helpedby several courses which include one oi ldepartmental administration. I found ther ewas more to being an engineer at the Bel lthan just solv ing technical problems !"I wanted a job where ambitio nwould lie encouraged, I 'xcfound that — and a I rleiull yatmosphere in which towork ,too -- at time Bell ! "

REVIEWS AND CRITICISMEDITOR, BARRIE HALE