snow .closes city schools as ubc plods to classes .closes city schools students and professors...

4
U V Wrist' coo . ; M a u JEn n Snow .Closes City School s Students and professors plowed knee-deep through sno w Monday to attend UBC classes, while public schools and kinder- gartens all over the lower mainland closed their doors to th e .__— frosty weather . A large number of students , tired from the ordeal of getting ' to university in time for mornin g F ilmsoc Shows classes Monday, were askin g why lectures were not cancelle d until the weather lets up . Others 'Bicycle thief' simply stayed home, as did a number of professors. President N . A . M . MacKen - FILMSOC presents a free noon ale, who tramped to his office on rhow, "This Is Oil," today in skis, declared that UBC "wil l the Auditorium . "Bicycl e Thief" will be' shown today a t 3 :46, 6 and 8 :15 p .m . Price fo r students and staff 1s'25 cents . CIVIL LIBERTIES UNIO N presents Stuart Chambers i n Arts 100 at noon today . H e will present the Progressiv e Conservative Party view o n Civil Liberties. JAllSOC will feature a dis- course on Duke Ellington by A l Reusch in the Brock Stage Roo m today at noon . The campu s Coolsters will present a concert Many students, discourage d in the auditorium Wednesda y noon . because they mushed throug h early morning snow drifts only VARSITY CHRISTIAN FEL• to be met by "cancelled class " LOWSHIP will present a talk on notices, threatened not to re - "Racialism In South Africa" byturn to UBC until the weathe r the Rev . Mr . Wighton In Physics chan ges , 201 Wednesday noon . Mike Nrittal, AMS activitie s co-ordinator, said no furthe r activities will be booked on cam - pus until brighter weathe r comes . Some scheduled meet- ings have already been esncelf i ed . Department of extension nigh t classes have been cancelled un- til further notice, declared a spokesman Monday . —Photo byJohn Robertson ... USC Discilpin e The above scene greeted male students in the men' s lavatory in Brock hall Monday morning . The bottle was left, as other bottles are often left, after a Saturday nigh t dance in the Brock . By-law 10, article 2 of the AMS constitution reads : "Drinking of intoxicating liquors at student universit y functions held on the university campus is prohibited . . . " The Discipline committee of the Undergraduate Soci- eties Committee is supposedly responsible for policin g Brock hall dances . Last week USC, in presenting its plea to leave student discipline tinder USC jurisdiction, tol d Student Council that student functions were being ade- quately policed . Two weeks ago, a student barely escaped serious injur y at a Brock hall dance . USC's discipline contimittee refuse d to investigate or lay a charge . USC still contends that it is doing an adequate job o f maintaining student discipline . 1'SC says that there is n o need for an independent student court to try and sentenc e students who disregard AMS by-laws . Civil Liberties Union presents Stuart Chambers i n Arts 100 noon today . He will present the Progressive Con- servative Party's view on civil, liberties . Last Week CLU presented LPP Nigel Morgan . Th e speakers are asked to , ,present their views on civil liberties , and represent various . Canadian political parties . CLU plans to have all Canadian political party policie s on civil liberties represented by guest speakers at UBC . attending , One enterprising gentlema n bought a dozen handkerchief s for a dime and was seen later lion to prevail, " giving them away for a quarte r each at the bus stop . B er st bargain was a Hughes Man's Right To Knowledg e Owens slide rule at 1Q pennies . ! s t in excuse for a raincoat, obvi-I Theme Of Bi .'Centennial q m u e an stio n ager s, pend i de l to ng ete receip t thre e the of ously a misfit, went to an ap forms which would not contai n plied science student, w h i 1 e a ', URC's week-long celebration of Columbia University's Bi- them . shivering artsman satified him- Centennial will consider nearly every aspect of the celebration ' s Apparenty Halse was instruct self with a single angora glove . theme, cd to do so by the CNE, but whe n All this goes to prove, of All built around the theme of "Man's Right to Knowledg e thing risked by the reporter if he done e if tha t they get people it will they r i any - ght and' the Free Use Thereof " , a whole array of lectures and panel s t when he handed the forms to P ane_ 1 he said he had not . price — 10c, Staunch upholders discussions will be presented to ored by the Vancouver Cite- When asked why, he pleaded of the theory are members of the students, beginning with world- • 4 for etfu l Student Council, who collected' renowned philosopher Irwin Ed- stun Club, who, iw grantfn g loess , $72 .90 proceeds . man ' s speech in the Auditorium the Canadian Club Lectureship , made it possible to invite Dr . Ed Dr . Sage Honore d The money minded bid a Friday . man to Vancouver . total of five dollars on a wallet US . REPRESENTED , In co-operation with the facul R that appeared as if it was stuffed President Norman A . M . Mac- ty committee on the Columbia By Historian s with half of Fort Knox . It Nos ' Kenzie will be chairman at the Bi-Centennial, headed by Dr . J . •1)t' . Walter N , Sage, professo r stuffed, with paper all right, but noon meeting featuring Dr, Ed G Spaulding, campus organiza emeritus and ex-head of t h e not the right kind, man . Robert Smyth, united lions arc presenting a week lone UBC History Department was -- IStates Consul General, will prey- program of panels and debates honored with a life membershi p Finder Is Keeper 'ens Dr, MacKenzie with an Arne centered on the thence of man's in the BC Historical Associa- crican flag, receiving a Canadian right to knowledge . lion Friday night , In Half-Dollar Case flag in return, The honor was presented a t Then Dr . Barnett Savory of Parliamentary Forum and Ci- the monthly meeting of the as- Liberties are co-sponsoring aocinntion by the immediate pas t president, Barry Gilliland o f ' tween classes not be closed . He said as long as the heat an d light held out, UBC will remai n open . "It's a working institution, not a school," he said . "And anyon e who wants to come out can . " A powerhouse spokesman said there is enough fuel on hand t o last through three weeks of ott r "arctic" weather . However, many morning clas- ses were cancelled Monday . Some of them because lecturer s could not make it to elapses . ' CCF CLUB will present Bo b Strachan speaking on "Educa- tional Finance and UBC Devel- opment" in Arts 100 Wednesda y riooti'" „ • --a ' ALHPA OMEGA SOCIET Y will have its general meetin g Continued on Page 3 See CLASSES THE U . B YSSE Y As UBC Plods To Classe s Half Open, Closed State ('LU TO PRESENT . PC'S VIE W Criticized By Students IN MAW OF 'RIGHTS' TALK S VANCOUVER, B .C ., TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 195 4 Over 100 students Friday raised a barrage of hecklin g against speaker Beatrice Ferneyhough, Labor Progressive mem- ber recently expelled from the Red Cross . , Miss Ferneyhough spoke on political discrimination, call - it a threat to Canadian democracy . She was sponsored by he Social Problems Club . Durin g the discussion period students raised questions con- cerning a downtown paper ' s claims that Miss Ferneyhoug h had served a jail term during the war, and that she was con- victed of using aliases . Defending her position, she de- clined to comment but said tha t these charges were "of a seri- ous nature. " home satisfied Friday after en- cic " t familiarity with the B .C . and Dr . Angus told the large a letter of recomendation fro m toying Geoff Devils, and his Ch i lest Auction . teaching staff, but the press gave audience of the disgust he had the CNE terminal agent to,th e "political affiliations " as the felt when he first learned about employment officer, E . A . Halse . reason, said Miss Ferneyhough . the negotiations in 1945 . He stated that though the let - Everything went, from a pair , Nobody in Canada expects trr had asked he be among th e 20 selections, he had not bee n notified by Halse at the proper time . Furthermore, he said , liaise had turned over an appli- i cation form to him only after a "heated discussion . " Hill has also complained abou t the content of the applicatio n form . This form requires th e applicant to give informatio n concerning his nationality, plac e of birth and complexion . Hill filed his complaint wit h the Department of Labour on December 15 . He later received a letter dated January 4 stating that CNE had informed all it s MANY DEFECT S tar, to a bushel of snowballs, ions when applying for a job, Dr . Curtis did not think tha t bought by an anxious appliedshs continued, any constitutional amendment s icience student . ' ••I had every reason to feel could prevent situations like th e Indian belts, bear rugs, Com- that I had already been accept- split over Korea from arising , munist manifestos, and' two vol•'ed as a permanent employee ." and he stressed the usefulnes s Imes of Dr . Whimsey ' s treatise Miss Ferneyhough s a I'd that of regional security pacts as pro - on the mating habits of the the Red Cross is a non-partisan vlded for by the Charter . Tsetse fly were among articles organization, without political, i bought for a dime by students racial or religious discrimina Bourne said that the Charte r lion, and " to allow this incident is full of defects, and in his opi n to go by would be to allow the' ion the most pressing task is t o principles of discrimatory selec• , incorporate n it some new pro - visions to offset the destructiv e COMBO (ONLERi , M co a One of the most unique con- certs of the term takes plac e Wednesday when Jazzaoe pre- sents the Campus Coolater s -in d noon hour concert in th e Auditorlum . The Coolaters are the firs t jazz group UBC has ever pco- duced . ` Horns of Jim Carney, Zoo t Chadler and Wally ' Lightbod y will front the combo . Cuddles Johnson, bassist with Ray Nor- ris, will assist Brian Guns, Nor- val Garrard and Sandy Ross i n the rhythm ,a+~ct l on . of ,Cadillac car keys, minus the to be asked their political opin - Ferneyhough Fights . Bu t Student Hecklers Toug h ing Rugs Shar e Block Wit h Snowballs TORONTO -et (CUP) -- A charge . of racial discriminatio n has been laid by graduate stu- dent Daniel G . Hill against a n officer of the Hart House (Uni- versity of Toronto) Employmen t The discussion panel agreed Hill said he had applied for a The reason given for her dis that the same issue had been Christmas job with the Canadia n Frock bargain hunters went missal was that she lacked suffi- avoided by the United Nations National Express and had taken UBC GRADUAT E Miss Ferneyhough ; a UBC graduate, said that "the righ t to freely express one's opinions , draw one's own conclusions, an d try to convince others, is the es- sence of democracy . " She was hired ' by the Re d Cross December 4 or( recom- mendation of the personnel de- partment of UBC and approve d by H . N. McCorkindale, Super- intendent of Vancouver schools , and, Harold Campbell, deput y minister of educaion . She wa s fired December 6 . POLITICS AGAIN Price 5e; No . 3 2 Cartoon by Bruce McWilllam l " .. . and I repeat, all Vancouver schools closed today, all Van- couver schools closed, including Bo Peep kindergarten an d Finchley School for Girls . . . CHARTER SCORE D Panel AgreesU N , U , , Security Is Wea k United Nations may well be on the very road that took th e League of Nations to its disastrous failure, unless the Charte r is improved . That was the impression received at the symposium on U N Charter Revision sponsored by ' . - lhe United Nations Club in Arts Student Hi t . ~ , 100 Friday noon . Charter in mind, the discussio n panel, cogsisting of Presiden t N . A . M . MacKenzie, Dean Hen- ry Angus, . Dean George Curtis , and Professor Charles Bourne , stressed the necessity of compul- sory collective security, the is - sue that vas sidestepped by th e League of Nations and later un- der mined its efficiency, !Service . COMPULSORY SECURITY j o b ' - With the 1955 revision of the Racialis m ervic e The case, of the missing half - dollar is causing some excite- ment at Brock Hall . Pinned up in the east hall o f the building is one half of a Canadian one-dollar hill . Any - 'none who finds the other half ca n walk away with both pieces an d make himself a dollar richer, UBC's Philosophy Departmen t will introduce Dr . Edman, wh o is a professor of philosophy, a t Columbia University . The Vancouver Institute wil l luau. Dr . E d m a n speak o n "Knowledge as Freedom," Jan- uary 30 at Ii ;15 p .m . in the Audi- toriimi . This meeting is spon- a panel discussion on the righ t to knowledge as law, custom and ' Victoria , deal, Monday noon in the Audi- Dr . Sage was, tip to this year , torium . Dean G . C . Andrew will professor and head of the UB C chair a panel composed (if Mr . history department . His pos t A, W . R . Carrothers, from the here t UBC was taken every b y Continued on Page 3 Dr . I~ . M . Seward, professor o f Sce COLUMBIA In tceruaIMeal Studies . vii

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UV

Wrist' coo.; Mau

JEn n

Snow .Closes City Schools

Students and professors plowed knee-deep through sno wMonday to attend UBC classes, while public schools and kinder-gartens all over the lower mainland closed their doors to the .__—

frosty weather .A large number of students ,

tired from the ordeal of getting 'to university in time for mornin g

F ilmsoc Shows

classes Monday, were askingwhy lectures were not cancelleduntil the weather lets up . Others

'Bicycle thief'

simply stayed home, as did anumber of professors.

President N. A. M. MacKen-FILMSOC presents a free noon ale, who tramped to his office on

rhow, "This Is Oil," today in skis, declared that UBC "wil lthe Auditorium . "BicycleThief" will be' shown today a t3:46, 6 and 8 :15 p .m . Price forstudents and staff 1s'25 cents .

CIVIL LIBERTIES UNIO Npresents Stuart Chambers i nArts 100 at noon today. Hewill present the Progressiv eConservative Party view o nCivil Liberties.

JAllSOC will feature a dis-course on Duke Ellington by A lReusch in the Brock Stage Roomtoday at noon. The campu sCoolsters will present a concert Many students, discourage din the auditorium Wednesda ynoon .

because they mushed throughearly morning snow drifts only

VARSITY CHRISTIAN FEL• to be met by "cancelled class "LOWSHIP will present a talk on notices, threatened not to re -"Racialism In South Africa" byturn to UBC until the weathe rthe Rev . Mr. Wighton In Physics changes ,201 Wednesday noon. Mike Nrittal, AMS activities

co-ordinator, said no furthe ractivities will be booked on cam -pus until brighter weathercomes. Some scheduled meet-ings have already been esncelfied .

Department of extension nigh tclasses have been cancelled un-til further notice, declared aspokesman Monday .

—Photo byJohn Robertson

. . . USC DiscilpineThe above scene greeted male students in the men's

lavatory in Brock hall Monday morning . The bottle wasleft, as other bottles are often left, after a Saturday nightdance in the Brock.

By-law 10, article 2 of the AMS constitution reads :"Drinking of intoxicating liquors at student universityfunctions held on the university campus is prohibited . . . "

The Discipline committee of the Undergraduate Soci-eties Committee is supposedly responsible for policingBrock hall dances. Last week USC, in presenting its pleato leave student discipline tinder USC jurisdiction, tol dStudent Council that student functions were being ade-quately policed .

Two weeks ago, a student barely escaped serious injuryat a Brock hall dance . USC's discipline contimittee refuse dto investigate or lay a charge .

USC still contends that it is doing an adequate job ofmaintaining student discipline . 1'SC says that there is noneed for an independent student court to try and sentenc estudents who disregard AMS by-laws .

Civil Liberties Union presents Stuart Chambers in

Arts 100 noon today . He will present the Progressive Con-servative Party's view on civil, liberties .

Last Week CLU presented LPP Nigel Morgan . The

speakers are asked to, ,present their views on civil liberties ,

and represent various. Canadian political parties .CLU plans to have all Canadian political party policie s

on civil liberties represented by guest speakers at UBC .

attending ,One enterprising gentlema n

bought a dozen handkerchiefsfor a dime and was seen later lion to prevail, "

giving them away for a quarte reach at the bus stop

. Berst bargain was a Hughes Man's Right To Knowledge

Owens slide rule at 1Q pennies . !

stin excuse for a raincoat, obvi-I Theme Of Bi.'Centennial

qm

uean

stionager

s, pendide lto

ngete

receiptthreethe

ofously a misfit, went to an ap

forms which would not contai nplied science student, w h i 1 e a ',

URC's week-long celebration of Columbia University's Bi- them .shivering artsman satified him- Centennial will consider nearly every aspect of the celebration 's Apparenty Halse was instruct—self with a single angora glove . theme,

cd to do so by the CNE, but whenAll this goes to prove, of

All built around the theme of "Man's Right to Knowledg e

thing

risked by the reporter if he done

eifthatthey get

peopleitwill

they r iany-ght and' the Free Use Thereof " , a whole array of lectures and panel s t when he handed the forms to

Pane_ 1

he said he had not .price — 10c, Staunch upholders discussions will be presented to ored by the Vancouver Cite- When asked why, he pleadedof the theory are members of the students, beginning with world- •

4 for etfu lStudent Council, who collected' renowned philosopher Irwin Ed-

stun Club, who, iw grantfn

g

loess ,

$72 .90 proceeds .

man 's speech in the Auditorium the Canadian Club Lectureship ,made it possible to invite Dr . Ed Dr. Sage HonoredThe money minded bid a Friday . man to Vancouver .

total of five dollars on a wallet US. REPRESENTED

,In co-operation with the facul Rthat appeared as if it was stuffed

President Norman A . M . Mac- ty committee on the Columbia By Historianswith half of Fort Knox. It Nos ' Kenzie will be chairman at the Bi-Centennial, headed by Dr . J .

•1)t' . Walter N , Sage, professo rstuffed, with paper all right, but noon meeting featuring Dr, Ed G Spaulding, campus organiza emeritus and ex-head of t h enot the right kind,

man .

Robert Smyth, united lions arc presenting a week lone UBC History Department was-- IStates Consul General, will prey- program of panels and debates honored with a life membership

Finder Is Keeper'ens Dr, MacKenzie with an Arne centered on the thence of man's in the BC Historical Associa-crican flag, receiving a Canadian right to knowledge .

lion Friday night ,

In Half-Dollar Caseflag in return,

The honor was presented a tThen Dr . Barnett Savory of Parliamentary Forum and Ci- the monthly meeting of the as-

Liberties are co-sponsoring aocinntion by the immediate pas tpresident, Barry Gilliland of

'tween classes

not be closed . ”He said as long as the heat an d

light held out, UBC will remai nopen .

"It's a working institution, nota school," he said . "And anyonewho wants to come out can . "

A powerhouse spokesman saidthere is enough fuel on hand tolast through three weeks of ott r"arctic" weather .

However, many morning clas-ses were cancelled Monday .Some of them because lecturerscould not make it to elapses .

' CCF CLUB will present Bo bStrachan speaking on "Educa-tional Finance and UBC Devel-opment" in Arts 100 Wednesdayriooti'" „

• --a '

ALHPA • OMEGA SOCIET Ywill have its general meetin g

Continued on Page 3See CLASSES

THE U . B YSSE Y

As UBC Plods To Classe sHalf Open, Closed State ('LU TO PRESENT. PC'S VIEW

Criticized By Students IN MAW OF 'RIGHTS' TALKS

VANCOUVER, B .C., TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 195 4

Over 100 students Friday raised a barrage of hecklin g

against speaker Beatrice Ferneyhough, Labor Progressive mem-ber recently expelled from the Red Cross . ,

Miss Ferneyhough spoke on political discrimination, call-

it a threat to Canadian democracy . She was sponsored byhe Social Problems Club .

During the discussion periodstudents raised questions con-cerning a downtown paper ' sclaims that Miss Ferneyhoughhad served a jail term duringthe war, and that she was con-victed of using aliases .

Defending her position, she de-clined to comment but said tha tthese charges were "of a seri-ous nature. "

home satisfied Friday after en- cic " t familiarity with the B .C . and Dr. Angus told the large a letter of recomendation fro m

toying Geoff Devils, and his Ch ilest Auction .

teaching staff, but the press gave audience of the disgust he had the CNE terminal agent to,th e

"political affiliations "

as the felt when he first learned about employment officer, E. A . Halse .

reason, said Miss Ferneyhough . the negotiations in 1945 .

He stated that though the let-Everything went, from a pair ,Nobody in Canada expects trr had asked he be among the

20 selections, he had not beennotified by Halse at the propertime. Furthermore, he said ,liaise had turned over an appli-

i cation form to him only after a"heated discussion . "

Hill has also complained aboutthe content of the applicationform. This form requires theapplicant to give informationconcerning his nationality, placeof birth and complexion .

Hill filed his complaint withthe Department of Labour onDecember 15 . He later receiveda letter dated January 4 statingthat CNE had informed all it s

MANY DEFECTStar, to a bushel of snowballs, ions when applying for a job,

Dr. Curtis did not think tha tbought by an anxious appliedshs continued,

any constitutional amendment sicience student .

'

••I had every reason to feel could prevent situations like theIndian belts, bear rugs, Com- that I had already been accept- split over Korea from arising ,

munist manifestos, and' two vol•'ed as a permanent employee ." and he stressed the usefulnes sImes of Dr . Whimsey 's treatise Miss Ferneyhough s a I'd that of regional security pacts as pro-on the mating habits of the the Red Cross is a non-partisan vlded for by the Charter .Tsetse fly were among articles organization, without political, ibought for a dime by students racial or religious discrimina Bourne said that the Charte r

lion, and " to allow this incident is full of defects, and in his opi nto go by would be to allow the' ion the most pressing task is t o

principles of discrimatory selec• , incorporate n it some new pro -visions to offset the destructiv e

COMBO (ONLERi ,

M

coaOne of the most unique con-

certs of the term takes plac eWednesday when Jazzaoe pre-sents the Campus Coolaters-in d noon hour concert in th eAuditorlum .

The Coolaters are the firstjazz group UBC has ever pco-duced.

`Horns of Jim Carney, Zoo t

Chadler and Wally ' Lightbodywill front the combo . CuddlesJohnson, bassist with Ray Nor-ris, will assist Brian Guns, Nor-val Garrard and Sandy Ross i nthe rhythm ,a+~ct lon .

of ,Cadillac car keys, minus the to be asked their political opin -

Ferneyhough Fights . ButStudent Hecklers Tough

ing

Rugs Share

Block With

Snowballs

TORONTO -et (CUP) --Acharge . of racial discriminationhas been laid by graduate stu-dent Daniel G . Hill against anofficer of the Hart House (Uni-versity of Toronto) Employment

The discussion panel agreed

Hill said he had applied for a

The reason given for her dis that the same issue had been Christmas job with the Canadian

Frock bargain hunters went missal was that she lacked suffi- avoided by the United Nations National Express and had taken

UBC GRADUATEMiss Ferneyhough; a UBC

graduate, said that "the rightto freely express one's opinions ,draw one's own conclusions, an dtry to convince others, is the es-sence of democracy . "

She was hired ' by the RedCross December 4 or( recom-mendation of the personnel de-partment of UBC and approve dby H. N. McCorkindale, Super-intendent of Vancouver schools ,and, Harold Campbell, deputyminister of educaion. She wasfired December 6 .

POLITICS AGAIN

Price 5e; No. 32

Cartoon by Bruce McWilllaml

" . . . and I repeat, all Vancouver schools closed today, all Van-couver schools closed, including Bo Peep kindergarten andFinchley School for Girls . . .

CHARTER SCORED

Panel AgreesU N , U, ,

Security Is Weak

United Nations may well be on the very road that took the

League of Nations to its disastrous failure, unless the Charte r

is improved .That was the impression received at the symposium on UN

Charter Revision sponsored by '. -

lhe United Nations Club in ArtsStudent Hit. ~

,

100 Friday noon .

Charter in mind, the discussionpanel, cogsisting of Presiden tN . A. M . MacKenzie, Dean Hen-ry Angus, . Dean George Curtis ,and Professor Charles Bourne ,stressed the necessity of compul-sory collective security, the is -sue that vas sidestepped by theLeague of Nations and later un-dermined its efficiency,

!Service .

COMPULSORY SECURITY job '-With the 1955 revision of the

Racialism

ervice

The case, of the missing half -dollar is causing some excite-ment at Brock Hall .

Pinned up in the east hall o fthe building is one half of aCanadian one-dollar hill . Any -

'none who finds the other half ca nwalk away with both pieces an dmake himself a dollar richer,

UBC's Philosophy Departmen twill introduce Dr . Edman, whois a professor of philosophy, a tColumbia University .

The Vancouver Institute wil lluau. Dr. E d m a n speak o n"Knowledge as Freedom," Jan-uary 30 at Ii ;15 p .m . in the Audi-toriimi . This meeting is spon-

a panel discussion on the righ tto knowledge as law, custom and ' Victoria ,deal, Monday noon in the Audi-

Dr . Sage was, tip to this year ,torium . Dean G . C. Andrew will professor and head of the UB Cchair a panel composed (if Mr . history department .

His pos tA, W . R . Carrothers, from the here t UBC was taken every b y

Continued on Page 3

Dr. I~. M . Seward, professor ofSce COLUMBIA

In tceruaIMeal Studies .

vii

PAGE TWO

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, January 26, 1954

THE UBYSSE YMEMBER, CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRES S

Authorized as second class mail, Post Office, Dept ., OttawaMail subscriptions 2 per year . Student subscriptions $1 .20 per year(Included in AMS fees). Published in Vancouver throughout theuniversity year by the Student Publications Board of the AlmaMeter Society, University of British Columbia, Editorial opinion sexpressed herein are those of the editorial staff of The Ubyssey ,and not necessarily those of the Alma Mater Society or th eUniversity .

Editordn-Chief ALLAN FOTHERINGHA M

Managing Editor—Peter Sypnowich

City Editor—Ed Parke r

Executive Editor—Jerome Angel

Sports Editor—Stan Bec k

Senior Editor this issue Bert Gordon

CUP Editor . Ken Lamb

Fingers callous tl by: Ray Logie, Ken Lamb, Ab Kent, BruceMcWilliams, Dick Dolman, Dave Hallett, Bud Glucksman, Bil lStpvdal, Beverly Cartrell, Peter Pineo, Peter Krosby, Pat Carney ,

,Charlie Watt, Jean Whiteside, Martin Chess .

dli~

Momism Inc PapaWE'RE glad to see that, perched atop the drivel on th e

current Hit Parade, is a Swiss folk song peddled by som eTip Pan Alley merchants as "Oh, Mine Papa?'

We're glad to see this is only for the fact that it tem-porarily refutes the "momism" theory of novelist Phili pWylie and a few other people who claim that North Americ ais run by Westwood Sewing Circles .

Mr. Wylie (Opus 21, Generation of Vipers) is always soperfectly right in all his theories that, for once, we're gladto see him run up against the dead-end of a best-selling record.

Now we'll just sit back and wait for Eddie Fisher to come

. out with a platter extolling the virtues of mother-in-la wand then watch the cartoonists and gag writers squirm .

F

I T rI11AL

Sto yva Is. A Fool-SEVEN full days ago there appeared in these columns a n

editorial by one Johann Stoyva, campus intellectual . That edi-torial attacked the fraternity system. It is time that editoria lhad its answer.

TO EXPECT an answer from the fraternity men is ab-surd. They know they need not bother with intellectuals.The answer must come from another intellectual. Fightlukewarm water with lukewarm water . I qualify . I thereforeanswer :

TO UNDERSTAND the true meaning of Stoyva's argu -ment it is first necessary to analyse the manner in which tha targument is presented, Are the facts stated clearly'? Is it i nterms forthright, honest, and confident that Stoyva lays beforeus its attitude towards those facts ?

NO. The answer to both our questions is "No". We de-duce that Stoyva is just another misfit intellectuale0ne wh ocould not reconcile the natural debt of Man to Mind with theequally natural debt of Man to Society . Stoyva was afraid o fgetting short-changed . Alors ,

"He—alone—passes by ,. .Walking wintry streets of night ,Throwing bricks at each warm windowHe alone passes by . "

STOYVA may be dismissed as a fool, Those 'facts ' , how-ever at which he so slyly hints, merit careful appreciation .If they were true, what would be their significance ?

FIRST 'FACT' . All fraternities rest on an apparentl yfirm foundation of class distinction . So what? Organizationis fundamental to the accomplishment of great things. Hier-archy is fundamental to organization. And hierarchy mean sclass distinction . In Egypt there were priests. In NorthAmerica we have businessmen. In Russia there are police -men. Fraternity men simply recognize this principle .

SECOND 'FACT !' Most fraternities surround them -selves with a curtain of secrecy . Once again, so what? Sac -redness and secrecy go, inevitably, hand in hand . Those thingswe hold most necessary we also hold most secret . Isn't thatonly natural? There is no toilet in my living-room .

THIRD 'FACT' ! Some who join fraternities do so witha view to future pecuniary gain . Some!!! To join without thi s

view would surely be insanity! Who ever heard of payin gone hundred dollars for 'fellowship' ?

FOURTH 'FACT' . Some fraternity men are homosex-uals. I see no grounds for objection here. I myself knowhundreds of homosexuals. They are in every walk of life .Besides, some sorority girls may be lesbians .

ENOUGH of Stoyva's 'facts' . Even if true, none of themare alarming. There is only one more thing to be dealt wit h--Stoyva's conclusion .

STOYVA CONCLUDES that the fraternities should b eInvestigated. He says that either they would be guilty orthey would not be guilty. And if they were guilty they wouldhave to be dismissed from the campus . While if they wer enot guilty they would have to be absorbed by the AMS, Iam sure that the 'frets' would find 'either alternative distaste-ful .

I CONCLUDE, contrary to Stoyva, that the fraternitie sshould not he investigated, I say that, in this circumstance ,either they would change their ways or they would not chang etheir ways . If they changed their ways then everyone—in-cluding Stoyva—would be happy . While if they didn't changeat all . , . Well, no one would find out anyway . In eithercase, I 'm sure they'd like me .

OF COURSE this does not mean that fraternities ac-complish anything, are very basic to our way of life, or do

anyone except fraternity members much good . Thank you .Sandy Manson, Member at Large .

", , .Pub . . ll*e&f! . . a basketball team! . . desk i*@?*!

DiscriminationEditor, The Ubyssey :The controversy over fra-

ternities has arisen again, andonce again the discriminatoryclauses are providing the focalpoint of the whole question .

Apart from the fact thatthey are an insult to all thos estudents who are exclude dby them, these clauses reflec tupon the whole University, tothe detriment of both the Ad .ministration and the studentbody. Because we toleratethese . expressions of racialvanity, because our A.M.S .which espouse them, and be-cause the Administration re-fuses to take action, the pub-lic cannot but think that w ehold the views implicit in theseclauses .

It may be that frets are de-void of any commendator yprinciple which justifies thei rexistence. Certainly it can-not be disputed that ttie highcost of fret membership pro-hibits students in the lowe reconomic strata from partici-pating in this aspect of col-lege life — think of how man yare deprived of the chance to-become Mardi Gras King . Thissort of thing is rather out ofplace on a democratic campus ,and it ig evidence that the"smell of (with tongue - in-cheek) does actually exist . Thecharge of "buying friends" ap-pears also to be not unfounded ,for what other phrase can des-cribe the foolish notion tha tfriendship can be purchase dalong with a pin ?

Now these considerations donot mean that expulsion of thefrets is necessary . No onewould object to fraternitie srevelling in their supposed ex-clusiveness . We can probablyput up with their crude at -tempts to achieve recognitio nas a superior economic caste .But we must not tolerate theirrefusal to discard from thei rconstitutions clauses whic htestify to a bigoted belief i nthe inequality of man — abelief which not only contra-venes our ideals of justice an ddemocracy, but flies most ab-surdly in the face of biolog yas well .

Tom Berger1st Law .

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Annie And Pogo

Don't know about you but I sincerely believe that our comi cstrips are due for a complete overhaul . Since one of those"nation-wide surveys" has proved beyond a shadow of a doub tthat the comic p a ge is the most wide lrv-read page of your dail ynewspaper, I think you'll agree with me (although I don't par -ticularly care if you don't) that Alley Oop and Rex Morga nM.D . should be brought up to snuff .

Already I hear a claim from the back row that our funn ypapers aren't funny. That is Immaterial . In an age where anIndiana educator can seriously claim that the story of Robi nHood should be banned from story books because it has Com -munistic connotations you can't expect anything to be funny .

"Archie" and "The Katzenjammer Kids" can plod along intheir medieval ignorance and mirth, but a modern comic strip ,to be successful, has to be in dead, almost sadistic earnestness .A few corpses and a subversive plot or two don't do any harmeither .

Of course there is Pogo, but there are more people wh othink Pogo Is childish drivel than think Albert and Co. is funny.They're idiots, of course, these people, but they're in th emajority . And isn't that what counts ?

Annie, Sandy and The AspWhen you come to think of it, Al Capp, Stan Freberg an d

Walt Kelly, the mastermind behind Pogo, Churchy La Femm eand LIl Grundoon, are the only people who are keeping th eExcited States of America from popping its collective marbles .Without these three, with an assist from Abe Burrows andEartha Kitt, the US would crack up in a cloud of nib-committee sand television sets .

Well, to get back to the, subject, let's start with LittleOrphan Annie, the most repulsive little brat who ever breatheddemocracy's sweet air . Aside from the fact that the little fake rrefuses to grow up, a fact that aggravates my rheumatism, Iwould gladly give my master-key to the women's dorms just tosee someone really clobber that red-haired little stinker . I havea beautiful dream, nights after coming home from my canned-heat hideout under the Georgia street viaduct, in which Anni eis forced to elope with a no-good Applied Science student an dmeets her bitter end on a cockroach-infested bed in a KansasCity Salvation Army home .

Daddy Sawbucks, in my dream, turns ouf to be Igor Gou -zenko's brother-in-law (before the Reformation) and is shot fo rsmuggling hernias across the Saskatchewan•North Dakot aborder. Meanwhile Punjab gets ste#ed to the eyeballs on fer -mented jungle-juice, goes berserk in Macy's bargain basemen tand kills nine women shoppers before he is finally beheaded byThe Asp, who is a dope peddler for Mandrake the Magician ,another of my pet slobs . The Asp is then bitten by Sandy, wh ois rabid with rabies .

Does Sandy Speak German?Now we finally get to Sandy . I like some dogs but that big

refugee from a brandy cask in the Alps is a traitor to man'sbest friend. He is the most illiterate dog I have ever seen .All he ever says is that damn "Arf ." Every time Annie, in all herpre-puberty innocence, shouts "Hark!" Sandy gives that Victo rMature smile and grunts "Arf ." There is a, possibility that hespeaks German and is just being smart by saying ;woman "backwards, but I doubt it, In my dream Sandy is tortured by amob of tom-cats, is ground up into Pard and fed to Smilin' Jack .So much for the orphan .

Lii' Abner, of course, can make my personal, selfish O .K.list, but even Al Capp has diluted his genius by allowing DaisyMae to get her matrimonial hooks into her big stupid boyfriend .In Isis concession to the security-minded, family-conscious grou pin society Capp has dealt a bitter blow to us confirmed bache -lors who believed as long as Abner could fight off that delicioushunk of female, we could endure another weekend at the Em -bassy .

But once Capp, no doubt busy with Fearless Fosdick ,forgot his satire for a moment and let Abner get hooked, frater -nity pins and boy scout badges began to change sweaters a tan alarming rate . Capp may not realize it but he was largelyresponsible for the fact that the birth rate jumped three notchesthis annum .

Copp Ruined Us Bachelorsused to follow Joe Palooka when he was an All-America n

kid but once he started to fight Commie agents in Japan wh oscreamed "Achtung!" I quit and went back to Steve Canyon,one of the best drawn strips in the business . Even though Iwould like to see Canyon embarrassed just once, I like Steve, i fonly for the beautifully-stacked females he has hidden justaround the next air-field .

King Argo and Flook can be dismissed as Pogo for th epeasants while Steve Roper serves as useful wallpaper for thePub offices. "The fighting newspaperman" gives us hours o fkicks when we have nothing more terrifying to do than i taround the office looking at 'tween classes notices .

Good old Mary Worth goes through life looking for adven -

ture and always seems to find, about every three weeks, acommon, ordinary American girl, complete with 38" bust . Howan old sedate biddy like Mary keeps her self-respect around he rvoluptuous companions is a mystery to me .

Terry of the Pirates, the teen-ager's Steve Canyon, has neve rbeen the same since Milton Caniff left him to draw (Canyon' sgirlfriends . But Terry also is too busy fighting the subversiv eforces behind the Iron Curtain to pay any attention to hisreaders .

That's the trouble with our comic strips, they are so con -cerned with saving the Free World, they've forgotten ho wstupid Joe Palooka looks slugging it out with an MIG .

Now take Pogo . . .

UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE

Hrs. 9 a.m. to 5 p .m. Sat. 9 a.m. to Noon

Loose-Leaf Note Books, Exercise ,Books and Scribblers ,

Graphic Engineering Paper, Biology Paper, Loose-Lea f

Refills, Fountain Pens and Ink and Drawing Instruments .

Owned and Operated by

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LETTERS to the EDITORSociety Errs

Editor, The Ubyssey ;With reference to your edi-

torial of Tuesday, January 19 ,certain general principles hav ebeen overlooked . The atten-tion of your readers should bedrawn to the Following :

"I do not think we can eve rtrust society , . . to estimatefrom day to day the particula rvalue of what we do . . . So-ciety is bound to make mis-takes about the value of par-

, ticular contributions, engr-mously overating some andunderrating others . "

Christopher Salmon in "TheListener," Decemeber 17, 1953 .

"An Intelligent Student"

ea‘p6errtThe

WeekThe Ubyssey sneers this

week at Roy V. Harris, mem-ber of the board of regentsof the University of Georgia .When Georgia's student news-paper, "Red and Black," at-tacked racial segregation in ,an editorial, Harris threaten-ed to cut off the funds of the"Red and Black. "

Harris said, " . . , the univer -sity is not going to turn overany money to the 'Red andBlack" unless the editorschange their policy."

A RASPBERRY OF THEWEEK goes to Harris whosaid that if "t hose sissies"would spend their time play-ing football they wouldn't getmixed up in things "thatweren't their business."

ALE HIS WEEK !

ANY

DRE S SL0roSUD

C59ed

C

37 YEARS OF SERVIC ETO THE UNIVERSITY OF

BRITISH COLUMBIA ,ITS FRATERNITIE SAND SORORITIES .

THERE'S A REASON

1035 Seymour St . ,Vancouver, B .C .

Tuesday, January 26, 1954

T11 URYSSEY

PAGE TIREEe

smoke•

Two DisciplinaryBoards Planned

The Undergraduate Societies Committee, now in charge o fjudging reported infractions of student discipline, offered Mon -

day to take partial responsibility for seeking out offenders .0 Committee members made

the motion after hearing a re-port from the Council revisioncommittee on the results of ameeting with Faculty heads .

SEEK OFFENDER S"Dr. Shrum was particular-

ly outspoken on the question ofseeking offenders," said . Coun-cillor Bill St . John. "He andI agree that the discipline com-mittee must have some powe rto seek out offenders after hear-ing rumors . "

The final decision of USC onthe discipline code was made ,as the revision committee's planfor judging and a seven-ma nboard for investigation werediscussed and accepted .

This plan must be approve dby Student Council before i tbecomes law .

CI assesContinued from Page 1

at noon Wednesday in Arts 102 .All members must attend.

PSYCHOLOGY CLUB pre-sents a. lecture by Dr. Kinnardin the Psychology building o nWednesday at 7 :30 p.m. Topicof the talk will be "Physiologi-cal Psychology in Relation to,the Electroence phalograph . "There will be a business meet-ing for the club members Wed-nesday noon in the clubroom . '

PARLIAMENTARY FORUMwill stage a political rally inArts 100 Thursday noon . Allcampus parties wig, presenttheir views on current affairs .

CIRCULO LATINO AMERI-CANO will hold its next meet-ing on Thursday night at th ehome of Diane Livingstone, 379 1West 41st Ave ., at 8 p.m . Dr.Brooke will speak on Spain .Films will follow .

FARMER'S FROLIC will beheld in the armouries on Janu-ary 29, from 9 p .m. to 10 p .m .Hard times dress will be the or-der of the evening, and prizeswill be awarded for best cos-tumes. Reg Forbes and hisRoof Lifters 'will provide themusic. Price, $1 .75 couple .

ColumbiaContinued from Page 1

Law Faculty, Mr . W. G. Dixon ,from the School of Social Work ,and Dr. Barnett Savery, Chair -man of the Philosophy Depart-ment .

Tuesday noon the Religiou sCouncil of the LSE will presenta panel on "Religion and Edu-cation . . . Incompatible?" Speak-ers are Rabbi David Kogen, Mr .Hector MacRae of the NewmanClub, and Rev. M. Nicholson o fthe Varsity Christian Fellow -ship .

"Academic Freedom" will bediscussed by the UN club onWednesday. Chairman is Dr.W. G . Black, and speakers in-clude Dr. B . W . Hoerter of th eCBC, Dr. Vladimir Krajina, Dr .H. E. Rominois, both UBC pro-fessors, and Mr. S. Saraceno ,Italian Consul in Vancouver.

Prominent representatives o fBC's political parties will ask,"Do Canadians Need a Bill o fRights" at the meeting sponsore dby the LSE Political Council o nThursday afternoon .

The Physics Department take sover the program Friday, whe nDr. Gordon Shrum, Dr. J. B.Warren, and Dr. J. B . Brown ,will ask, "Can Scientists Talk? "Chairman of the meeting i sJohann Stoyva, President of th eLSE .

These five noon hour meeting swill all be held in the Auditor-ium .

FILL IN THE COUPO?h SHE LL

BE THE BELLE Of THE BOOKIf you know of a beautiful girl who is returning to UBC

next year, send in her name to the Totem, Brock Hall, Uni -versity of B.C.

Nominations must be submitted by some male student .Please use the coupon below :I nominate the following girl for 1954 Totem Queen :

NameAddressPhone No . Year FacultyMy Name IsAddress +Phone No. Year Faculty.

UBC McGoun AmendmentsTo :Bar Professor-Judges

Professors will not be allowed as judges in intercollegiat edebates if the proposed UBC amendments to the McGoun cu pdebating- constitution are passed .

Copies of the proposed chan•9 Amendments will become ef -fective when ratified by thre eof the four western universities ,said Copithorne .

Objection to professors a sjudges in the debates Is that theymey be partial toward their ow nuniversity .

Mardi brasRaffle PrizeWinners

January 21.G. Balcom, E. Lewis, R . Gray,

L. Parsons, A. Carswell, R . Far-ris, M. Murato, D. Pepper, F .Twarog, E, Davis, J . Sloan, J.Curtis, H. Carrier, J. Phillips,J. Bowen, J. Shlppabotham, F.Bowmen, V. Wright, A. Tillman ,C. Rogers, "This is it," C . Scobie,S. Knight, M. Hickiki, P. Bush,J. Rees, E. Murphy, E . Pakl, R .Fero, D. Allen, D . Swan, E. Kop-per, R. Fraser, R. Retallaek, G.Leitch, H. Vukamovich, W. Tay-lor.

Prize winners in the Mard iGras raffle have been announcedwith lucky Mrs. J. Issac, 3563Adanac, winning a fur coat do-nated by R. J. Pop.

Second and third prizes, wris twatches, are ready at the AM Soffice for Mrs . E. Hadley, 581 8Alma, and Mr. Knox, 3870 Mell-vllle . Winners,, printed below,are asked to present their tick-ets at the AMS office before

ges to the Western UniversityDebating League constitution, al -ready approved by UBC, arebeing sent to the three othermember universities for ratifica-tion, said Maurice Copithorne ,Parliamentary Forum president .

What's news at Inch ?

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PAGE FOUR

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, January 26, 1954

Birds Fail In Bid For FirstLose Friday To Kerries 5Goalie Wood UnbeatableLeads Mates To Wi n

By MARTIN CHESS

A slow. start and weak attack were the Birds ' downfal l

as they dropped their Friday night encounter with the Kerrie s

5.1. 'With no excuses but these the Birds failed in their attemp t

to regain the top spot in the inter-City league .Coach Dick Mitchell was un-i

FOOTBALL MEETING A T NOON;TROPHY WINNER TO BE CHOSEN

sThere will be an important meeting of last year 's foot-

ball team at noon today in Stage room of the Brock .Elections will be held to decide the captain of the

next year's team. Also the winner of the Dr. Burke Trophywhich goes to the most inspirational player on the team ,

will be decided .The forthcoming awards banquet will also be dis-

cussed.

Never let it be said that the JVs have no fight . The junior

varsity were playing the inept Arctic Club at Lord Byng Gym

Thursday night ' in what was a dull affair until two of the

thought that the crowd should get their moneys worth .

Kevin O'Connell, the fighting

Irishman of the Jayvees, tookheated exception to the check-ing of Arctics Zoli Danes an dmistook Lord Byng Grit forMadison Square Garden .

Fisticuffs InJV, Arctic Game

—Photo by John RobertsonMO CUNNINGHAM was outstanding in a losing cause a sthe Varsity hockey team suffered a 5-1 defeat at the hand s

of the Kerries on Friday night . Mo gaided his , experience inVictoria Commercial League play where he was chosen

the "most valuable player" last year .

S

The Birds dominated the playin the third period, but it wasn' tuntil 15:15 that Ray Inv took Basketball League for the 1954 season, in which Varsity 's Bluesa short pass from Bob Gilhooley

scored a double victor over the McMaster Marauders in Hartand popped it past the amazed '

y

George Wood .

a House carried the spectators hack to the football season .Steve Oneschuk b o r e t h e

BIRDS BREAK SHUTOUT

with ZO points came in for six . -'brunt of the attack when Mar -

This score was the Birds last

cial attention from the visitors ,alder's Ken Stanley and co -

effort, .small consolation for, harts tackled him justshort of being bounced with consisten t

the pregame favorites . Coach the basket in a vain attempt to'frequency off the walls an d

Frank Fredrickson was not i stop the Blues in their drive chairs . Besides his points, George ,greeted as he expected, but the

, also managed to pick up a blac kto a 61-49 victory .

Birds tried for him all the way .'

eye ,and an assortment of othe rIt was a night of vicious play mementos of the clash ,

Mo Cunningham played a n that resembled Thursday nightoutstanding game for the Birds t Maple Leaf

Steve Oneschuk was not s oGardens mart

showing indeed, why he was than a big league basketball fortunate and had to settle for a

chosen as "Most Valuable Play game. With both teams using tacescd

nc~lse~r were the resul tsmashed

ofer" in the Victoria Commercial a zone defence in the cramped a beautiful flying tackle aroun dLeague last year. Bob Gilhooley }fart House gym there was his neck as he was innocentl ywas sparkling on defence, al-bound to be trouble, and trouble

1

ways ready to backcheck smart- there was,

laying up a shot . He must have

ly when the Kerries were on the

forgotten to ask Marauder's pe r

move .

After playing a first quarter1 mission to apprcktch their hoop .of scramble ball which had the

Mary Tile and Jimmy Russel lING PLAYS ROUGH

Blues in front by a 19-15 mar- were also recipients of little tro -Ray Ing threw t h e neatest gin, McMaster seemed to lose all i phics from McMaster . Mary was

block of the current season when interest in the hall, shifting their kicked clear to Brazil and Jim -he hit one Kerrie defenceman attention to the Varsity players my was given proof, thanks toso hard that he flew into the who were doing most to £rus- probing Marauder teeth an dboards and almost into the firstitrate their winning intentions . fingernails, that he too has redrow of empty seats .

George Stulac, Blue's best blood ,

Basketball IsRough In East

TORONTO—(CUP)—The opener of the Intercollegiate

able to-get down from the wild sof North Vancouver, so formermentor. Frank Fredrlkson wascalled out of retirement to leadthe Birds in their duel with th e

Kerries ,

24 AT END OF FIRST 'Throughout the first period

the Birds fought desperately t ostrengthen the weak and slowattack. When the bell rang theBirds were on the short end of

a 2.0 score .

During the ten minute inter-mission Coach Fredrikson trie d

,to prove to the tired Birds thatthey were still the best team on

the ice. But they could not ge tthe little black disk into theKerrie nets in the second per-iod. The Birds pressed the at-tack more fiercely but goali eWood was able to turn backeverything they placed at hi sdoorstep .

GOALIE WOOD TERRIFI CThe Kerries managed to add

*mother to their total with alightning test play . When theperiod ended, the Birds stil lhadn't put anything on the score-board.

The second recess gave CoachFredrickson time to tell his Bird sexabtly where they stood. Theyhad twenty minutes to score, atleast thre goals and that leftthem little time for anythin gbut hard and fast play.

Alas, the poor Birds returnedto the ice only to have the Ker-ries puah anther goal past be-wildered Don Anderson . Theironly hope now was to break theshutout that Wood was protect-ing so superbly .

Ball GamesCancelledBy Weather

Basketball, rugby, and soccerall had games cancelled over th eweekend because of the incle-ment weather .

The home and home exhibi-tion basketball series betwee nthe Western Washington} Vikingsand the Birds was called off dueto the hazardous road conditions .The Birds were,hoping to usethe series to gain added exper-ience for this week-end's roadgames . '

WIN STREAK INTACTAs was expected, Albert Leith-

waite's rugby squad didn't mee tNorth-Wests in the stadium Sa -turday . .The cancellation kep talive the Varsity rugger team' sone game winning streak .

The Bird soccer team was un-able to meet Collingwood Legionin a 'B' Division fixture. If pos-sible, the teams will play of fthe contest this week-end . Lastweek Ed Luckett acquired oneplayer and lost two others . For-ward Bruce Medley joined th esquad and right winger Sta nGlasgow and fullback Don Ren-ton announced their intention ofquitting .

For UBCEDMONTON — (CUP) —

University of Alberta GoldenBears scored their second vic-tory in as many nights overUniversity of Saskatchewan Hus-kies by beating the visitors 4- 1Saturday night In the secondgame of the best-of-five HardyCup Series .

The teams meet in Saskatoo nfor two more games February12 and 13 . A fifth game, if nee•essary, will be played in Sas-katoon February 15 .

BEARS HERE IN FEBRUAR YHuskies, winner of the Hardy

Cup for the last two years lost5-3 .,to the Bears here Fridaynight .

On February 22 and 23 th eGolden Bears will be in Van-couver to do battle with TheUniversity of British Columbi aThunderbirds for the HamberCup. The Golden Bears havewon the Cup for the last twoyears and are favoured to re-peat again this year .

Kevin began to belt Zell, whowas apparently too stunned toretaliate, all around the gym .After a while Zell began to getthe hang of things and struckKevin a few solid blows himself .

CARTER SCORES 30When the pugilists were sepa-

rated by the referees the gy mlooked more like the Red Se athan a basketball floor .

In what surely must be classsed as the understatement of th eyear, referee Gummy Leach inhis report wrote in part : "In myopinion O'Connell was the ag-gressor." The 50 spectators pres-ent will likely get a kick outof that observation .

IN TIE FOR THIRDThe game itself was a hug e

success from the Jayvees poin tof view. Jim Carter, who hashecovered from his , ankle in-jury, had his best night of th eseason as he potted 30 points toleod his mates to 67 .58 victory .The win moved the Jayvees intoa third place tie with Westmins-ter Moderns .

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