sororities pledge over 100 . girk · nellie on victoria island in the arctic village for two years....

4
U L VOLUME XXXIV e VANCOUVER, B .C ., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 151 5 CENTS NO . 9 ew Federal Gran t ids 'u' H O s ' piI, Campus Hospital Of 26 ®{ s a l tin. . , ._ . Beds To Open Next Yea r Appointe d 'three outstanding doctors hav e been appointed as heads of depart- ments at 1113('''8 luedival Iteellte . Appointmouts of I)r . Willia m Boyd, head of department of path• 1 oli)gy ;' Dr . ...lames C . Foulke hea d of department' of Pharmacology, ; and Mr . John F . 51(( '.reary, hea d of depttrtnteut °f Pharmacology, ' have hen confirmed the universit y Sororities Pledg e Over 100 . Girk ' Climax of fall rushing at UBC came for co-eds Thursda y when the nine sororities released their final bids, Just over a hundred girls were pledged Thursday night at their respectiv e R des ation s ice fe d Modes SCholanshtit-nppplica - tions are now being accepted by provincial committee fo r 1952 . Common experience et Oxfor d come in public like of Rhodes stein ( lets, many of whom are distingui- shed clergymen, business, sci entlmts, authors, doctors and east veers . Of 449 former Canadians Rhode s Scholarship students more than t o are actively engaged in federu l and provincial public affairs, In- cluding the Secretary to the Cabi- net, the Under-Seeretary and th e Deputy Under-Secretary, two hig h Commissioners and several De- partment of External Affairs . Candidates must be unmarrie d male Canadian citizens or Britis h subjects, with at least 5 years res . To Head FU S Idence In Canada . They must be between the ages of 19 and 25 on , October 1, 1952, and have com- pleted two years of study at a Can ' edlan university . Further particulars and applica- tion forms may be obtained fro m the university registrar . Faculty Head s announced . FIRST HOMECOMING Queen Candidate, Lyle McLenna n has ' been chosen to represent Women's Undergraduat e Society. Three ex-Magee students, al l experienced in student gov- ernment, will guide the Fres h Undergraduate Society thi s Magee Pupil s year . ('resident Jim MacDonald, vice- president Joyce Hart and secretar y treasurer Don McCallum brings t o F'US a year of experience in work - lug together at Magee . Jim was president of the Mage e Student Council ; Joyce was head of I he Geri's League ; and Don wa s president of the boy's Ht-Y . Working together, they plan t o give h'US a busy year and hope t o male the still-young organization a power on the campus . parties. Coke parties, teas and clos- ed mends have occupied th e rushees since university . open- ed, Wednesday began the firs t day silence, as sorority girl s and rushees were forbidden t o converse on or oft the campus . (See Page 3 for rushing results ) men, informed each girl wit h which group she would be af- filiated . Wild cheering rin d screams of joy Issued from th e CO as the rushees nodded an d smiled at the tables of thei r new sisters . Thursday night the girls re- ceived their pledge plum at th e pledge parties . The pledgin g period lasts until just befor e Christmas . 'fhe fraternitie s got into the picture too, b y serenading the girls at th e pledge parties . Footbal l Danc e Saturda y SEE YOU ALL at the Foot . ball Dance, Saturday, courtes y the Varsity Outdoor Club . Ad- mission 50c per person . Time : 8 :30 . Music by Radsoc . * * * SOCIETY OF AUTOMOTIV E Engineers will hold its organiza- tional meeting in Engineering 20 1 at 12 :30 Monday . A film of the run . ning of the 1949 Indianapolis rac e will be shown . * * * MISS . UR$ULA BURROWS , R .N ., of the Zenana Bible and Me - dical . Mission will speak about e lean Indian Mtaslon Hoe . I." on Friday noon in Eng . 202 . This program is sponsored by th e Varsity Christian Fellowship . * *, * THE NUS WILL HOLD a meet- ing on Monday night Oct. 15 at 6 ;00 p .m . In the South Englan d Reading Room of the 1950 . reed. once at the Vancouver General ` "Itospitalr ' * * , * ALL. CLUB PRESIDENTS ar e urged to attend the MajeleMino r LSE meeting on Monday, Octobe r 15 at 3 :hO in the Double Committee Room, Brock Hall . Dr . MacKenzi e and Doan Gage will outline Ad ministration's Ideas on campu s maintenance . ' By JEAN SMITH A $26,00 federal grant for a new Student University Hos- pital at UBC was announced t at Ottawa Thursday by Hon. Paul Martin, minister of National Health and Welfare , ee The grant comes under a ` polic y 'TWEE CLASSES which the dominion government has followed for the past two o r aiammismammalage, three years of allotting $1,000 pe r bed for acute cases in new genera l hospitals . ) To students, it means tha t they *111 be able to receive tree inert as well as examination at the university when they are ill . WESSROOK BUILDIN G To be located in the south hal f fourth floor of the Weebrook Build- ing, the Hospital will be open t o all students, not just those resid- ing on the campus . It will contai n 26 beds, an operating room an d x-ray facilities . The administration of the de- partment of medicine is, in gen oral, "pleased that the Hon . Pau l Martin and his department hav e seen tit to give 'support in° this wa y to a hospital for students on th e campus at UBC " "This is the normal procedur e followed in establishing new bed s In any hospital in Canada, once th e ltoapitgl has been recognised as a general hospital," a spokesman tor the faculty explained . OPEN IN '62 No date has yet been lot for th e opeMng of the hospital since , n o etlu pment has yet been instate d and it Is impossible to know ktlW long it will be before the visi t meat arrives. The faculty fiel d sure, however, that it will be I n operation by Sept . 1962 . The amount . .provlded by the gov- ernment will be helpful in financin g the equipment, but it won't pa y for it all. Other (funds will be need- ed . The spokesman also mentione d that "since the hospital is classi- fied as a general hospital it i s possible that it will be assiste d financially by BCHIS, " NO MAJOR OPERATION S Tho hospital will be used fo r medically acute oases, for mino r surgery and possibly as a clearin g station for communicable diseases . Major surgical operations will no t be performed there . Negotiations for the grant wer e made by the committee on healt h and welfare under the chairman . ship of Dr . M . M . Weaver, dean of the faculty of medicine . The sub- mission to Ottawa stated tha t "The Students' University Hospita l is planned to provide for acute ill- nesses of students and occasiona l faculty members at UBC .' The hospital will come under th e present University Health Service , will have a permanent staff o f doctors and will operate on a 24 hour basis . Fortner Uii( ; United Nations Clu b president, Mike Hinds-Smith i s spreading the gospel to the hin- terlands of Toronto . Taking time out from his gradu- ate work In International Studies , Mike has launched a branch o f the UN club on the University o f Toronto campus . The UN Club of UBC has vote d to send a message of congratula- tions to Mike and the members o f Toronto's newest club . UN Mik e Invade s Toront o be launched Postpone s UBC Visi t Visit of George Drew, Nationa l ] P rogressive Conservative loader , to the UBC campus has been post- poned because of the royal tour . This was announced Thursra y at a meeting of the Student Pro- gressive Conservative Party . lie was to have arrived on Oct- ober 20—no now date has been set . At this shooting the general pol- icy of the club (111(1 its future pro grantee were discussed . Noodniks Reve l At Monty ' s visi t Goodman discs, Nellie on Victoria Island in th e Arctic village for two years . Another year was spent wit h the natives of New Guinea , while still another was spen t with the H .C . Indians on th e Skeeua River and at Fort Gra- ham . lie stayed one winter wit h the Indians of South Vancou- ver lahtnd, Iho Fraser Volley and Chilliwack . Dr . Jeness' first job 11ore was to Messily a , display in UBC' s Anthropological nmseum, Thi s display had puzzled staff fo r years, but Dr . Jeness moon sol- ved the problem—he divided I t into two groups, one for item s used by northern Indians an d one for those used by Eskimos . Daring the war, lie Jenes s mimed . First big ,lob ul' NITS will com p Monty MacFarlane, leader ul' the i Ilout000mlug October 27 . Mac - local uuodnl(ks, came out to see Irnneid and his executive will b e the Jll$socel's yesterday . in charge of the balloting for th e NostctIghc ran rampant ao 'Monte Homecoming queen . played some of the old Resat)" ttud gem ; officials art, detecurhled t o display an original float in th e MacFarlane's wisecracking and Iiumecnmin . ~ parade . dry it, made the session very Jack i .iotott , has been name d pleasant, tun+or„ary f,resldont cud lion 'Mat. - (Don't forget Shearing is corn shall honorary vice-presi(eot . or l lo g .) 1'l ti . NFCUS To See k Federal Grants. Will Launch New Campaign • . For Higher Education Ai d By JOE SCHLESINGER ' (Ubyssey Staff Writer ) An intensified campaign to impress the federal governmen t with the need for educational grants wil l by the campus NFCUS committee this year . This was decided at the first e general meeting of the committee , which was attended only by a sprite klieg of enthusiasts . Arnold Dewlturst, who heade d last year's cost of living survey . stressed that It was necessary t o hammer home the financial pligh t of prospective university student s while the Massey Report is stil l current . 'BIRDS WI N AT LAS T OVER BOOKWORM S Football fans and bookworm s don't mix . , UBC librarian Nell Harlo w announced Thursday ' that th e library will close Saturday a t 2 p .m . because of the Wester n Washington football game . "Last year we found it Im- possible to prevent rooter s from swarming on to the lib- rary root and on to book-stac k 'levels," Harlow said . "Thi s created a serious hazard to per - sons and to university proper - ties. "Noise and excitement of th e game will make serious stud y pretty difficult," he added . ' Normal Saturday hours of 9 a .m . to 6 p .m . will resume o n non-football afternoons. Scholarshi p Winner s Announce d Names of five winners of NF- CUS exchange scholarships to UBC were announced Thursday . Roland Neil Carson, Wester n Ontario ; Jean Mary Smith, Albe rt' tag James Douglas Wood, Toronto ; Beatrice Grace Prodanchuk, Saw katchewan,' and' Jake Doerkeen , Manitoba have won awards th e Registrars office . disclosed. The award consists of a waiver of school fees. UBC accepts onl y one student a Year from any uni- versity . Standings released late yester- day by Red Cross officials were : Arts 139 . Agriculture 38, Aip- plied Science 84, Commerce 90 , Forestry 20, Graduate studies 17, and Home Economies 5 . The UDC committee has bee n entrusted by the National Confer - ence held at Western Universit y lust month to spearhead the cam - There ' s at least on e member of UBC's facult y who believes in getting hi s information first hand . Dr . Diamond Jeness, forme r New Zealander now visitin g professor in anthropology a t Utt(', found out about Eskim o conditions by living as an ad - opted member of an Eskimo ' ' PHIL DADSON New Vice-Presiden t ice-Pres . PRO Post s Are Tal l Phil Dadson has ' ..beset tip ed as Students' Cotunei s'new vice-president. ' . Dadson, who was 'previousl y elected chairman of the AMR Development Fund, was op . proved by acclamation in th e absence of any counter con . iilttions . e ' Btudeute' Council also apsleItliei . t+BBa Publloity Dir•eter . ': Nieboils to the position of Allel e Public Relations Wider. Both ) adeon and Nicholls com e to 2 e#r lie* lobe with a wealth' O t catmints experience behind them . - Dodson was one of the founder s and prime movers of the Co * merce Llason Committee and "ra n for president in the C1JS. election' , Apart from his LSE activities , Nicholls also worked' as publicit y chairman for the War Memoria l Fund and Fresh Week . In his new job lie will act a s liason officer between Students ' Council, the faculty club, and th e editorial board of the Ubyssey , Ater his appointment, Nicholl s resigned from his position in tbs .. LAID . Dadson, it is expected, Wlt l also relinquish his previoute Poet . Trade- School ; Forges Ahea d (Special to Ubyssey ) PHOENIX, Ariz (AAUP) -- A tota3 of 189 students have enrolle d at the American Institute for For- eign Trade, representing an 11 per - cent increase over last fall's e n rollment . In contrast is the nationwide 1 1 percent decrease of enrollment In , instltutlons of higher learning . The degree of Bachelor of 'For• ., else 'rr( .do, authorized for the' firs t time for members of the June 1951 ° class, will now be given annually . The American institute for For- eign Trade„ which was founded I n 1946, made its initial emphasis o n Central and South American coup - tries . During the first three year s of its operation, only'l .atlu Ameel , can area courses .were available . During the lust two years, are a courses of Western Europe and th e Far East were set up . "This yea r French was added to the curriculum . was the deputy director of In - telligence for the Canadian Government . Until Chrlstma e he will land a seminar on B .C . Indians . Then Ito will leave fo r Italy . This export on Eskimo life I s the author of a best seller, "People of the Twilight" - - about the Eskimos, of course . Arts C Mtt More B i Thursday morning Dr. Do s qtly Aiawc)ateY .- Peep- ;Alt Wo "ate, t4 # attd In Blood Donor's competitio n Thursday. pus activities . At their first meeting °n ( etcher, LIVES IN MLO O I the council will elect boys taut oats sports representatives . A delegate to WIJS will ills° b e This week each of the 30 frosll .pal gn . English classes will elect a reeve- its task will be co-ordinat e sweetie( to serve on w Council of and evaluate surveys held on othe r Representatives . 'Phis council, to• l Canadian camps . For this purpose tenser whir the three executives, NF'CUS extends Its welcome t o will represent the fresh on nil cam- anyone Interested . Prof . Gets Lecture Material First Hand

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Page 1: Sororities Pledge Over 100 . Girk · Nellie on Victoria Island in the Arctic village for two years. Another year was spent with the natives of New Guinea, while still another was

U L

VOLUME XXXIV

eVANCOUVER, B .C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 151 5 CENTS

NO. 9

ew Federal Grant

ids 'u' H Os ' piI,

Campus Hospital Of 26 ®{ s

al

tin. .

,._ .

Beds To Open Next Year

Appointed'three outstanding doctors hav e

been appointed as heads of depart-

ments at 1113('''8 luedival Iteellte .

Appointmouts of I)r . Willia m

Boyd, head of department of path• 1

oli)gy ;' Dr . . ..lames C. Foulke head

of department' of Pharmacology, ;

and Mr. John F. 51(( '.reary, hea d

of depttrtnteut °f Pharmacology, '

have hen confirmed the universit y

Sororities PledgeOver 100 . Girk '

Climax of fall rushing at UBC came for co-eds Thursda ywhen the nine sororities released their final bids, Just over ahundred girls were pledged Thursday night at their respective

R desations

ice fedModes SCholanshtit-nppplica-

tions are now being acceptedby provincial committee for1952.

Common experience et Oxfor d

come in public like of Rhodes stein (

lets, many of whom are distingui-

shed clergymen, business, sci •

entlmts, authors, doctors and east •

veers .

Of 449 former Canadians Rhode s

Scholarship students more than t o

are actively engaged in federu l

and provincial public affairs, In-

cluding the Secretary to the Cabi-

net, the Under-Seeretary and the

Deputy Under-Secretary, two hig h

Commissioners and several De-

partment of External Affairs .

Candidates must be unmarried

male Canadian citizens or Britis h

subjects, with at least 5 years res . To Head FUSIdence In Canada . They must be

between the ages of 19 and 25 on ,

October 1, 1952, and have com-

pleted two years of study at a Can '

edlan university .

Further particulars and applica-

tion forms may be obtained fro m

the university registrar .

Faculty Head s

announced .

FIRST HOMECOMING Queen Candidate, Lyle McLennanhas ' been chosen to represent Women's UndergraduateSociety.

Three ex-Magee students, al lexperienced in student gov-ernment, will guide the FreshUndergraduate Society this

Magee Pupil s

year .('resident Jim MacDonald, vice-

president Joyce Hart and secretary

treasurer Don McCallum brings t o

F'US a year of experience in work -lug together at Magee .

Jim was president of the Mage e

Student Council ; Joyce was head

of I he Geri's League ; and Don wa s

president of the boy's Ht-Y .

Working together, they plan t o

give h'US a busy year and hope t o

male the still-young organization apower on the campus .

parties.Coke parties, teas and clos-

ed mends have occupied th erushees since university . open-

ed, Wednesday began the firs t

day silence, as sorority girls

and rushees were forbidden to

converse on or oft the campus.

(See Page 3 for rushing results )

men, informed each girl wit h

which group she would be af-

filiated . Wild cheering rin d

screams of joy Issued from the

CO as the rushees nodded an d

smiled at the tables of thei r

new sisters .

Thursday night the girls re-

ceived their pledge plum at the

pledge parties . The pledging

period lasts until just befor e

Christmas . 'fhe fraternities

got into the picture too, by

serenading the girls at th epledge parties .

Football

Dance

Saturday

SEE YOU ALL at the Foot.

ball Dance, Saturday, courtesy

the Varsity Outdoor Club. Ad-

mission 50c per person. Time :

8:30. Music by Radsoc .* * *

SOCIETY OF AUTOMOTIV E

Engineers will hold its organiza-

tional meeting in Engineering 20 1

at 12 :30 Monday. A film of the run .

ning of the 1949 Indianapolis rac e

will be shown .* * *

MISS . UR$ULA BURROWS ,

R.N., of the Zenana Bible and Me-

dical . Mission will speak about

e lean Indian Mtaslon Hoe.

I." on Friday noon in Eng. 202 .

This program is sponsored by the

Varsity Christian Fellowship.

* *, *

THE NUS WILL HOLD a meet-

ing on Monday night Oct. 15 at

6;00 p.m. In the South England

Reading Room of the 1950 . reed.

once at the Vancouver General`"Itospitalr

'

* * , *

ALL. CLUB PRESIDENTS areurged to attend the MajeleMino r

LSE meeting on Monday, Octobe r

15 at 3 :hO in the Double Committee

Room, Brock Hall . Dr. MacKenzi e

and Doan Gage will outline Ad •

ministration's Ideas on campu smaintenance .

' By JEAN SMITH

A $26,00 federal grant for a new Student University Hos-

pital at UBC was announced tat Ottawa Thursday by Hon. Paul

Martin, minister of National Health and Welfare ,

ee The grant comes under a ` policy

'TWEE CLASSES

which the dominion government

has followed for the past two oraiammismammalage, three years of allotting $1,000 per

bed for acute cases in new genera l

hospitals .

)To students, it means tha t

they *111 be able to receive tree•

inert as well as examination at

the university when they are ill .

WESSROOK BUILDING

To be located in the south hal f

fourth floor of the Weebrook Build-

ing, the Hospital will be open to

all students, not just those resid-

ing on the campus . It will contain

26 beds, an operating room an d

x-ray facilities .

The administration of the de-

partment of medicine is, in gen •

oral, "pleased that the Hon. Paul

Martin and his department have

seen tit to give 'support in° this way

to a hospital for students on th e

campus at UBC""This is the normal procedure

followed in establishing new beds

In any hospital in Canada, once th e

ltoapitgl has been recognised as a

general hospital," a spokesman tor

the faculty explained .

OPEN IN '62

No date has yet been lot for the

opeMng of the hospital since , n o

etlu pment has yet been instate d

and it Is impossible to know ktlW

long it will be before the visitmeat arrives. The faculty field

sure, however, that it will be In

operation by Sept . 1962 .

The amount . .provlded by the gov-

ernment will be helpful in financin gthe equipment, but it won't pa y

for it all. Other (funds will be need-

ed .The spokesman also mentioned

that "since the hospital is classi-

fied as a general hospital it i s

possible that it will be assiste d

financially by BCHIS,"

NO MAJOR OPERATIONS

Tho hospital will be used fo r

medically acute oases, for minor

surgery and possibly as a clearin gstation for communicable diseases .

Major surgical operations will not

be performed there .

Negotiations for the grant were

made by the committee on healt h

and welfare under the chairman .

ship of Dr. M. M. Weaver, dean of

the faculty of medicine. The sub-

mission to Ottawa stated tha t

"The Students' University Hospital

is planned to provide for acute ill-

nesses of students and occasiona l

faculty members at UBC.'

The hospital will come under th e

present University Health Service ,

will have a permanent staff of

doctors and will operate on a 24 •

hour basis .

Fortner Uii( ; United Nations Clu b

president, Mike Hinds-Smith i s

spreading the gospel to the hin-

terlands of Toronto .

Taking time out from his gradu-

ate work In International Studies ,

Mike has launched a branch o f

the UN club on the University o f

Toronto campus .

The UN Club of UBC has voted

to send a message of congratula-

tions to Mike and the members o f

Toronto's newest club .

UN Mike

Invades

Toronto

be launched

Postpones

UBC Visit

Visit of George Drew, Nationa l

] P rogressive Conservative loader ,

to the UBC campus has been post-

poned because of the royal tour .

This was announced Thursra y

at a meeting of the Student Pro-

gressive Conservative Party .

lie was to have arrived on Oct-

ober 20—no now date has been set .

At this shooting the general pol-

icy of the club (111(1 its future pro •

grantee were discussed .

Noodniks Reve lAt Monty ' s visi t

Goodman discs,

Nellie on Victoria Island in th e

Arctic village for two years .

Another year was spent with

the natives of New Guinea ,

while still another was spen t

with the H.C. Indians on th e

Skeeua River and at Fort Gra-

ham . lie stayed one winter wit h

the Indians of South Vancou-

ver lahtnd, Iho Fraser Volley

and Chilliwack .

Dr . Jeness' first job 11ore was

to Messily a, display in UBC' s

Anthropological nmseum, Thi s

display had puzzled staff fo r

years, but Dr. Jeness moon sol-

ved the problem—he divided I t

into two groups, one for items

used by northern Indians an d

one for those used by Eskimos .

Daring the war, lie Jenes s

mimed .First big ,lob ul' NITS will com p

Monty MacFarlane, leader ul' the i

Ilout000mlug October 27. Mac -local uuodnl(ks, came out to see Irnneid and his executive will be

the Jll$socel's yesterday .

in charge of the balloting for th e

NostctIghc ran rampant ao 'Monte Homecoming queen .played some of the old Resat)" ttud

gem; officials art, detecurhled t o

display an original float in th e

MacFarlane's wisecracking and Iiumecnmin .~ parade .

dry

it, made the session very

Jack i .iotott , has been name d

pleasant,

tun+or„ary f,resldont cud lion 'Mat. -

(Don't forget Shearing is corn shall honorary vice-presi(eot. or l

lo g .)

1'l ti .

NFCUS To Seek

Federal Grants.

Will Launch New Campaign •.

For Higher Education Aid

By JOE SCHLESINGER '

(Ubyssey Staff Writer )

An intensified campaign to impress the federal government

with the need for educational grants wil l

by the campus NFCUS committee this year .

This was decided at the first e

general meeting of the committee ,

which was attended only by a sprite

klieg of enthusiasts .

Arnold Dewlturst, who heade d

last year's cost of living survey .

stressed that It was necessary t o

hammer home the financial pligh t

of prospective university student s

while the Massey Report is stil l

current .

'BIRDS WI N

AT LAST

OVER BOOKWORMS

Football fans and bookworm s

don't mix . ,

UBC librarian Nell Harlo w

announced Thursday 'that the

library will close Saturday at

2 p .m. because of the Wester n

Washington football game .

"Last year we found it Im-

possible to prevent rooter s

from swarming on to the lib-

rary root and on to book-stac k

'levels," Harlow said . "This

created a serious hazard to per-

sons and to university proper -

ties."Noise and excitement of th e

game will make serious study

pretty difficult," he added . '

Normal Saturday hours of 9

a .m. to 6 p .m. will resume on

non-football afternoons.

ScholarshipWinnersAnnounced

Names of five winners of NF-

CUS exchange scholarships to

UBC were announced Thursday .Roland Neil Carson, Western

Ontario ; Jean Mary Smith, Albert' •tag James Douglas Wood, Toronto ;

Beatrice Grace Prodanchuk, Saw

katchewan,' and' Jake Doerkeen ,

Manitoba have won awards th e

Registrars office . disclosed.

The award consists of a waiver

of school fees. UBC accepts only

one student a Year from any uni-versity .

Standings released late yester-

day by Red Cross officials were :

Arts 139. Agriculture 38, Aip-

plied Science 84, Commerce 90 ,

Forestry 20, Graduate studies 17,

and Home Economies 5 .

The UDC committee has bee n

entrusted by the National Confer-

ence held at Western Universit y

lust month to spearhead the cam -

There 's at least one

member of UBC's faculty

who believes in getting hi s

information first hand .

Dr. Diamond Jeness, forme r

New Zealander now visitin g

professor in anthropology a t

Utt(', found out about Eskim o

conditions by living as an ad -

opted member of an Eskimo

' ' PHIL DADSON

New Vice-President

ice-Pres .

PRO Posts

Are Tall

Phil Dadson has ' ..beset tip

ed as Students' Cotunei s'new

vice-president.

' .

Dadson, who was 'previously

elected chairman of the AMR

Development Fund, was op.

proved by acclamation in the

absence of any counter con.

iilttions.

e '

Btudeute' Council also apsleItliei .

t+BBa Publloity Dir•eter. '::

Nieboils to the position of Allele

Public Relations Wider.

Both ) adeon and Nicholls come

to 2 e#r lie* lobe with a wealth' Ot

catmints experience behind them . -

Dodson was one of the foundersand prime movers of the Co*

merce Llason Committee and "ran

for president in the C1JS. election',

Apart from his LSE activities ,

Nicholls also worked' as publicity

chairman for the War Memorial

Fund and Fresh Week .

In his new job lie will act a s

liason officer between Students '

Council, the faculty club, and the

editorial board of the Ubyssey ,

Ater his appointment, Nicholls

resigned from his position in tbs. .

LAID . Dadson, it is expected, Wltl

also relinquish his previoute Poet .

Trade- School ;

Forges Ahead

(Special to Ubyssey)

PHOENIX, Ariz (AAUP) -- A

tota3 of 189 students have enrolled

at the American Institute for For-

eign Trade, representing an 11 per -

cent increase over last fall's en

rollment .

In contrast is the nationwide 1 1

percent decrease of enrollment In ,

instltutlons of higher learning.

The degree of Bachelor of 'For•. ,

else 'rr(.do, authorized for the' firs t

time for members of the June 1951°

class, will now be given annually .

The American institute for For-eign Trade„ which was founded I n

1946, made its initial emphasis on

Central and South American coup-

tries . During the first three year s

of its operation, only'l.atlu Ameel,

can area courses .were available .

During the lust two years, area

courses of Western Europe and th e

Far East were set up . "This year

French was added to the curriculum .

was the deputy director of In-telligence for the Canadian

Government . Until Chrlstmae

he will land a seminar on B .C .

Indians . Then Ito will leave fo r

Italy .

This export on Eskimo life Is

the author of a best seller,

"People of the Twilight" - -

about the Eskimos, of course .

Arts C MttMore BiThursday morning Dr. Dos

qtly Aiawc)ateY.- Peep- ;Alt Wo "ate, t4 # attdIn Blood Donor's competitio n

Thursday.

pus activities .At their first meeting °n ( ►etcher, LIVES IN MLOOI

the council will elect boys taut

oats sports representatives .

A delegate to WIJS will ills° b e

This week each of the 30 frosll .palg n .

English classes will elect a reeve- its task will be co-ordinatesweetie( to serve on w Council of and evaluate surveys held on othe r

Representatives. 'Phis council, to• l Canadian camps. For this purposetenser whir the three executives, NF'CUS extends Its welcome to

will represent the fresh on nil cam- anyone Interested .

Prof. Gets Lecture Material First Hand

Page 2: Sororities Pledge Over 100 . Girk · Nellie on Victoria Island in the Arctic village for two years. Another year was spent with the natives of New Guinea, while still another was

Page Two

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, October 12 1951

M1.M13teR CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRES SAuthorized as second class nail by the Post Office Dept . Ottawa. Atndeet subseriPtltrhs

$1.00 per year (included in AMS fees), Mail subscription $2 .00 pr year . Single copies

five cents. Published throughout the University year by the Student publications Boardof the Alma Master Society, University or British Columbia, Editorial opinions expresse dherein are those of the editorial staff of the Ubyssey, and not neoessarly those of th eAlma Mater Society or of the University .Offices inBrock Hall, Phone AL

16214

For dlapiay advertls ng, phone ALtpa 325 3

FOR-IN-CM' , . .

AR d UR -EXECUTIVE EDITOR—ALLAN GOLDSMITH MANAGING EDITOR—DOUG HEA LCity Editor, Harold Berson ; Copy Editor, Chuck goon ; F1eature§ Editor, Jelt'a Nattier -Remy ; Fine Arts Mittel? John Nrockington ; CUP 10ditor, Shiela Keehn ; Warden'sEditor, 13lorenee McNeil ; Senior Editors, John Napier-Homy (Teesdale, Doug Upex(Thursday), Elsie amnia (Friday, .

rground Again

Editor, The Ubyssey ;Another ounce of flesh has been

r'kllllaily, If not painlessly, extrac -ted fr om the students at UBC .There is a limit beyond which th emost skillful and daring surgeonwill go ; that limit has been passed .

The latest extraction is the 25cent fee charged before studentsmay receive their Alma Mate rpasses . Already each stud`ent pay sthe exorbitant stun of 16 dollar sand now has to pay 25 cents to re •.elve evidence that he has_paid hi stee. it is probably the first receip tIn history on which a payment i sdemanded . Even the Russians won' tclaim that first.

The method used in obtaining th eadded payment is not only subtle ,It is dishonest. No student was in .formed that he was to be chargeds. fee to be photographed for thi scard, but on the contrary was toldit was parts of registration .

41'hat to me is pure, unadulter-ated dishonesty .

I hope during the year the AM Sofficials, clerks or whatever powersthat be, will derive some pleasur efrom picking from the files mydusty photograph and, gazing wilt -fully at the' stUdeft who rsfhsetl aminor operation .

Yours truly ,Theo, G. Pearce ,2nd year law.

LIMIT REACHE D

t

PILE FEE

Editor, The Ubyssey ;Can the AMS officials explai n

why the students are being charg-ed a fee of 25 cents to cover th ecost of minlattre photographs .The fee in itself' is insignificant ,but the fact remains that unsuspec-ting students were herded into aphotographer's booth on registra -tion day and Were not informe dthere was a charge for the' pie -terms '

This new method of painlessl yextracting the student's money willresult 1 adding $1500 to someone' still If ",000 ` students pay the 25c .

I for one, do not intend to b etaken In 'this manner because Ibelieve my AMS foe should cove r-tech incidentals and should alsoEntitle me An a membership can't] .

If this charge was ahselutel yi , ecessary, why were th enot Informed when the photolq'r, .ph,snsere tieing la ken ''

Sincerely ,Doug II . Cherry .

"Pool of London"Behar Colleano • Susan Sha w

"The Story of G. !z JOE"Milton Mitcliu m

Burgess Meredit h

Werner has it that some of the council --'I tnd Tuesday night's motion of non-

'confidence in AMS president Vaughn LyonSte Way drumming up support for a newl trconffdence vote which will likely b e*Ought fer'ward at next Thursday's general

,move does cone, students will b e

' a liens &distort which, we sus-

( .tlfe baeldara 'of' the stove hope will be

l

fn the entottonal heat of the moment.

The mere fact that the movement is notopen is sufficient to cast doubts on the sincer-ity of its backers.

Students will do well -to- give objectiveconsideration to the problem in the interim .

NO onB will deny that, the AMS is, inalmost every respect, being better run thanat tiny time in the last several years .

Activity Is evident on all sides.

Di pile budget problems, the student ad-ministrators have drawn up an activity pro-

The royal tour is finally under way andPrincess Elizabeth 'and her bus bandhave snatched the headlines from the oi lVials in Iran, the war in Korea and the Brit-li'L'electionts ,

It is unlikely that anything short of atriple-axe murder will drive them from thefront pages for the next couple of weeks an dphis looks like a good time to ask ourselvesjust why we have a monarchy and find ou t,what the shouting's about .

A lot of students doubtless feel that thewhole thing is a lot of nonsense .

Yet even they cannot deny that some -thing would be missing if we were to chuc kthe monarchy--tomorrow, and they will pro-bably break their necks Oct . 20 to catch aglfnrtpe of the princess when she is whiske dacross the campus.

111

Strangely enough, the monarchy seemsi to be a 'symbol for the ideas which hold theBritish 'Commonwealth together, for the tea -

There is always something rather pleas-ant about seeing• four gentlemen sittin garound their music stands, playing music fo rsuing quartet . When these gentlemen canmake beautiful sounds, all together, the yconstitute a most satisfying musical experi-ence, satisfying at least to themselves .

But when these same four get upon a,platform to play for an audience, they ar efaced not only with the problem of pleasingthemselves but also of pleasing their audi-ence . Through projection, the music mustlive again for us as well as they .

To the Griller Quartet who opened theLSE concert season at noon on Thursday ,music is obviously something very real . Theycouldn 't play' it so well from the technica lpoint of view, but for me their music wassomething heard in another room .

Perhaps I didn't make sufficient effor tto help them project across +he footlights bu twhatever the problem, the result failed t ojell . Music to the Grillers proves to be a bar-rier they have not yet allowed us to clamberacross to complete musical satisfaction.

Of course their quartet playing is of adifferent school than that of the America nand European quartets. The emphasis hereis on refinement, polished phrasing, slower

' tempi and scrupulous observance of th eprinted page even if such observance neglect slife breath .

I must admit that they didn't have muc hof a chance to begin their program . TheMozart ' Quartet (K 159 in B flat) is not one

"vigorous programs .,

, Yet eight student councillors staged anopen reivolt and charged Mr. Lyon with "dic-tatorial methods" and "misuse of his posi-tion . "

The charges are vague and they wereso little 'substantiated that their backers wereforced to withdraw''them.

The problem is, of course, simply thatcouncillors suspected trouble from a presi-dent whom they felt 'had "political involve-ment" and, against the background of suchsuspicions, actions which would ' have appear-ed as 'mere routine, are made to look likemajor crimes . '

Students should realize that the sus-pictons are totally unfounded .

ditions of British jtzettce, political and intel-lertuat freedom, and, above, all for th estrange emotive concept called "fair play" .

It is, of course, ridiculous to believe tha tthe individuals xho. are used to symbolize thi spelygot of ideas really .have anything to dowith the things , themselves, Just as ridiculous,in fact, as it would be to believe that'the un-dressed girls in the' breakfast food ads haveanything to do with the quality of the por-ridge .

Yet we cannot deny that the symbol splay a necessary role in today 's society andwe cannot avoid being greatful to the roya lfamily for taking on a rather nasty job whic hfew of us would want .

The respect which we owe them as in-dividuals is, purely and simply, the respectwhich is due to any individual who gives farmore to society than he can ever expect toget in return.

New 'vuioftw CTIlbflt Hiflr sureWant your hair to have natura llustre ? Want it to have that "last=combed" look all day 'long? It's theeasiest thitlg you know with thisnew, different heir tonic — theonly cream that contains wonder -working V'iratdl* . Try a bottle !You, too,' will agree that this is the'hair took you've always wanted .*Glen yew bill lafra—begs It ht

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ln`tiic Auditoridm' Buildin g

MERLE Gr. KIRBY ,

Manage rCri icon the

gram which should satisfy almost everyone .

The LSE has a special events program ,unparalleled in •UBC History ,

Athletic activity is on the upsurge ,

ISS and NFCUS have both prepare d

fJ4CUSafy Symbol

by John Brockii

n

of that sublime genius 's most. co'nsidere'd andinspired efforts . A little less reverences andhumility in the approach to a very youngcomposer 's work might have made for livelier 'listening .

The only other work on the program wa sa String Quartet by Sibelius, the' Finnis hcomposer 's only work in this form. There arefive movements subtitled `ntima'te voices . "Although this was the' first time that I hav eheard this quartet, it =strikes me as being 'rather short on musical material and longon playing time. The third movement (slow )especially seemed drawn out, points beingstated too frequently and effects losing muchof their effectiveness thrbttgh overstatement .

Also noticeable in this work was themain weakness of the Quartet . It is one ofpersonnel . The first violin dominates not onlythought and in matters of leadership, as hemust do for the sake of smooth working, butalso in matters of tone. He did not blend andwas far too often accompanied by the otherinstruments in passages where Sibelius ha dobviously attempted to 'equalize the auralimportance of the four . The cellist did no talways take too kindly to the first violin' ssolist qualities and one sensed a clash in con-ception, a regrettable' clash for obviously thecellist is the "class " of the quartet .

To this listener, the Griller Quarte tseems as flavorless as English cooking bu tjust as substantial and nourishing as any, i fwe prefer our foods without spice . They area good quartet but not quite my dish,

FOR expert advice on mone y

matters call on .

WORKINO WITH CANADIANS IN IVIRY WALK OP Ltte'$INCh1I1f,M

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GLENAYR•KNIT LIMITED TORONTO

Page 3: Sororities Pledge Over 100 . Girk · Nellie on Victoria Island in the Arctic village for two years. Another year was spent with the natives of New Guinea, while still another was

Friday, October .1x 1951

THE UBYSSEY

._ — Pigs Three

•aytire CBC Stars

wife.Jelly Anderson, coach of the

Thunderbirds and Dave MacFar•lane, captain will be the mainspeakers . Master of Ceremonieswill be Kickapoos Own tieug Frank.

Mickey McMartin, Drummer ,Stan (Cuddles) Johnson, Base,(who played with Frankie Lane onhis last visit here) and John Em-erson, heard on CRC's "Club Date"will also a)pear. Emerson is wel lknown around Vancouver and'played it the Shaughnessy Veter-an's Club during did after the 'war . Ail are stars of CBC's "Sun -shine Brigade. "

liick Stephen's, John Willoughby,Al f oneeca and Audry Eagterbrookof campus' "Four Dot's and adash," quintet will be on han dalso,

Here are the

sororities rushing ;

ALPHA PFII — Beverley Saul ,Sylvia Moore„Sheila Kearns, Bar-bara Lynch, Claire Nelson, Gwy nP'earnside, Margaret Hall, Joa nHodson, Sweetie S'eymOUr, Marga-ret Batty, Alice Pitcairn, Phylli sKolle, Nancy Northrop and Mari-lyn Stevens .

ALPHA DELTA PI — Nan Ad-amson, Beverley Girkinshaw, An nByrne, Ann Challenger, Dawn Dad•gleish, Shirley Driver, Glennys El•lergot, Monies Holtby, ShirleyWooster, Hillary • Yates, AudreyCrossman, Patricia Crumb, .RuthSimpson and Florence Dodson .

ALPHA GAMMA DELTA — Dor-een Davies, Donna Fletcher, MaryHarrison, Stephanie Notes!, Shel •agh Rose, Shirley Griffin, Ra eConnell, Marie McRae, Audrey Ea•sterbrook, Mary . Urich, MarilynMatchett and rBarbara Sheppard .

ALPHA 0MICRON' Pi ee Marg-aret Atchison, Donna Berry, Cyn•thaw Bigelow, Elizabeth Booth, San •dra Cockburn, Trisha Horne, Ise.bel Hobson, Donna Metcalfe, May1 1McAlpine, Pauline Marshall, WithFlehardso'n, Marguerite Stalker,Gwen Vicar and Antie Walker .

,KAPPA ALPHA' TFhtTA—Hele nMcCurrech, Ann MaeLaren, Wendy 'Martin, Shirley Macienzie, Jill Say ,Doris Strachan and Sh irle'y ,Stratan-dortt

DELTA Pill Eptii.ON' -= Barb-Arai Aaron, Sylvia Danner, Alws' -rlsse Sinol'ensky, Blooms Tadnianand Sally Teh'enbauin.

DELTA GAMMA — Ann Bissett ,Marilee Wllabn', Joan` Murphy ,Cathy Monro, Ruth Strahan, Nanc y 'Murray, Mary Wrinch, Jean` Hood ,Marilyn Attar, Marian Balili/hiePhyllis Grant, Xaty Mellish, Ros e .mary Bonitace, Shirley' Sch'ater and 'Ina Ritchie .

'GAMMA PHI SETA — Barbar aIfoltoway, Elaine Dennedy, Pa tMcLennan, Betty Wlltse, Pat

TODAY, the International , Stu-delfts Club will hold a generalmeeting' In Arts 204 at 12 :30,

* * *CHE'M'ICAL INSTITUTE of Cale

add will hear Dr, L. D. Haywardspeak on "Wteid Chemistry" todayin Chem 200 at noon. Plane forthe upcoming dance`s are on theagenda. All budding chemists ar eurged to attend.

* * *"PROC;EESINO, E N `L ARDI'g4 G',

and the Use of Camerae" is theshbrect for the next Camera Clubmeeting Wedttesday in Arts ' 20gat 12 :30 . Members please bringyour transparencies for a sheer-ing next week.

* * *MUSSEOC is throwing a get-

together banquet and dance todayat 12:30 in Brock Hall . Free to al lpaid-up members,

"THE' Pi'I'C `E OP PE'ACt" is thetriple of Mrs. D. Steihene speak-ing at the United Nations Clubmeeting Tues., noon in Arts 100 ,

• * *LIED! ' 0NCER?' will feature

the meeting or the German Club i ndance hall but Friday at 3 :30.

tw

*EVE'RY WEDNESDAY, St .

John's ADrbttlance gives a first AidComae at 12 :30 in Hut B•4. Everyone interested rlear;e turn out nextWednesday,

DANCE CLUB INE(I UCTOR4practice tonight 7 :30 p.ni, d4, Any-one interested to weleonie . Youdon't ' Wee to 'be' a 01)40' tenter t ostart.

FOR SALE .'GENT'S S3ICYCLE $12 . SLIDErule nearly new, cheap. PhoneRich 0519L1,

7— 3

COMPL11Tgi' SET OF THIRD YR .Commerce boons. Marketing- airtion . Bob, AL 3554611 .

. Eleanor, the girl who caused such a sensation last year,Will be' one of the featured stars at the Kiakapoo Pep Rally todayat ri's'en.

o

The ' . fir's Kiekap`oo Pep Rally 'of the year\ s Dianned to stir wpspirit for Saturday's football gamebetween Western Washington V9k-fngN and UBC's Thunderbirds .

Itti'in attraction will be well re.membered' Eleanor' of CBC, who isfeatured' on' ' Friday nights withRay Norris Quintet, Eleanor, who'appeared at several of last yearsrallies and aroused . great enthnsi•asm, hails . originally from Edition -ton and is now a Vancouver house-

"Now I don 't want anyth to eitette you . . .

Cioik

results of the , Wiltce, Fay poison, linghoen Cre eand Kay Stewart .K 'A'PPA' • KAPPA GAMMA — PennyL''raide, Ann Cameron, Mariann eCell, Elizabeth Houston, Pet Mat 'sDonald, Maxine Millham, JoanThatcher, Valerie Wright, Ball y

Ross .Brown and Betsy

alit aid *AM '

Pink and Blue

SIZESSmall, Medium

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taiAN AND'RIMWITH AN SEi'AA WIDI

SAND OF $ATN SMOOTHOlNUiNI I000ID 'CO*K.

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NOTICESHOW'S YOUR BRIDGE? JOINthe Bridge Group In the Broc kSnack Bar, for fun. Instructionand supervised piey, 7 to 9 Monday .Open night October 15 . Bring cards .Mr. Gilbert, FA 94978 .VIt7ACS CI,UlI MI ETIN( ; TIIIIRS .dtry, Oct . I1th :e, 1 :30 In III 211 .

GEOlt(U BARNES — PLEAS E

call at the AMS office .WOMEN'S SWIM 'I'EAM PRAC •

lice Thursday at 5 p.m. at Crysta lPool. Meet at, Gym at 4 :30 .THE BOTANICAL GARDEN SOC -lety tour of Arboretum Mid Ros eGarden If weather untavoreblethere will bey an alternative pr'o-gram on Friday, at 12 :30 In Physic s201 .

,TRANSPORTATIO NRIDERS WANTED FROM N . VAN .0 days a week for S :30's. 1lhoneBruce at North 23518 .

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Forecast for the Future=-gala winter Evenings, formal datides, and YINJ lookingyour prettiest in a gown from EATON'S . Pictured from the Fall Collection, a dress t i

combines the swirl of a net skirt with the elegance of satin . A bite Club Original 39.'

Dress Department, second Floor

Added brilliance for a dressy evening—a glittering rhinestone bracelet .

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From the large collection of distinctive earrings, four rhinestones set on a curve . 2.00

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Page 4: Sororities Pledge Over 100 . Girk · Nellie on Victoria Island in the Arctic village for two years. Another year was spent with the natives of New Guinea, while still another was

Page Four ..THE:UBYSSISY -%'„'--' —I" Friday, October 12 1951

r

r FUMBLING the ball and catching sports editor Alex Mac •

Gillivt'ay neatly on the chin is Via Edwards, ex-

Colling-wood soccer player : Recently converted to Varsity soccer,

he , is slated to play the 'Collies at Callister Park Saturday.

Spacers Face

S der

, arsity Prepares To. Meet

Toughest ' Opposition Yet

The forthcoming game in rem! •niseent of last year's struggle be-tween these two teams in whichevery league game ended in a tie .But in the play-off game Varsit ydefeated Collingwood by a sco reof 4.2, thereby winning the Imper-ial Cup.

Collingwood will be all out fo rrevenge and so the Varsity boy sare preparing for a close battle .

'Swanson

, Chritcfer, ,

lop► Golfers

Charlie Swanson and Gordo nChrletofer fired 3 over par 74 's toshare medalist honors in the quail.Eying round of the UBC golf cham-pionship p)eyed at universitycourse last week .

Other scares set by the links me nIn the 70's were : George McKin-non with 75, Al Hunter with 77 ,and Max Swanson with 78.

Turnout of low handicap player swas good with scor es of 85 or bet-ter being posted.

high handicap-

By PETER PRASTOSKI

The second game of the season for the Varsity Thunderbird

Soccer team will be played at Callister Park, next Sunday ,

Oct, 14 at 2 .80:

In this game Versity meets Collingwood which is rated as

the top team of Varsity's opposition for the season .

Collingwood has played three *games so far this year and hasbeen victorious in each encounter .Varsity has only a tie so far thi sseason, but the team is rapidlygetting into • condition ,

UDC Chiefs are also slated tomeet a top team In their division .The kickoff' is at 2 p .m. at Con -federation Park in North Vancou-ver when the team meets L & KLumber next " •Sunday ,' Roger Fox, manager and coach ,

expects the,team - te- be , greatly im-proved over last year, mostly be-cause of the reinforcements from

Match play starts this *reek .the freshman class .

Draw hits been posted in tho_quad .

Rainpet's .

hampered

Arts Committee. The programemphasized various method sused in the approach and ,pre •sentu ion of a creative cotnpo-sition .

'This year the club's plan ¢

Include another noon-hour sho wand possible demonstrations atvarious Vancouver 'H i g hSchools .

The club meets weekly o nTuesdays at 3:30 in the Wo-men's Gym. All those who areinterested are welcome.

The benefits of a 'life insurance program, likethe benefits of education,

increase as you grow older .

Vancouver Branch Office — 402 W . Pender Stree tERIC V. CHOWN, LL.B., Branch Manager

,. session

By JAN CHAPTER

Creative expression In danc eIs the primary concern of theModern Dance Club here on th ecampus. The membership i scomposed of both experience dand Inexperienced dancers, whohave formed the club becaus eof their enjoyment and interes tIn this creative phase of thedance .

Dance, Itself, dates back t oprimitive times and Moder nDance is basically the primi-tive rhythmic urge given Indivi-dual expression. Interpretiv edance, as modern dance i ssometime called, is without th erestrictions associated withballet, where the ballerina dan-ces to on established pattern .The ballerina also emphasize sthe perfection and grace of tra-ditional forms of the dance .The modern dancer, in turn, i sherself a creator of form. Her

tradition i sexpression.

Last fall the Modern Danc eClub, which was first formed atthat time, took part in a noon -hour performance which dis-played the various forms o fdance offered as recreationalactivity on campus . In thespring, the dance group had,,as its main production, ,a noo nhour demonstration which wassponsored by the Literary Sci-entific Executive and the Fin e

In :Dancing,freedom of ,artisti c

LEARN TO DANC E• QUICKLY• EASILY

• PRIVATELY

3 Lessons $6,00.10 Lessons 916,0 0

Frances MurphyDance School

Alma Hal ;

8679 W. Broadway

CE. 8878

BA 342`

SheilaCharters

AS DARKNI$$ fell Sundayevening two members of theVarsity Outdoor Club foundthemselves stranded on top ofMount Elphlnstone ,

As both of them were expert •ettoed mountaineers there wasno. real danger but probablymime discomfort and dieap-pointment at missing the dance.

Nearly 100 new and old mem-bers turned out for the Var-sity Outdoor Club long hikelast weekend, 'It Was a ga yand carefree crowd that leftthe dock at the foot of Gor eAra, at ,8 o'clock Saturday af-ternoon,

*:~1 group' singing around thepiano proytdad Anita for thettri and 'One-halt hour `trip to$10hinetbtte . ae' they -chante dthe, traditional YOC songs . Therest of the group congested onthe top deck where they relax-ed unde r the warm sun,

* * *SINGING continued xi we

hiked the short dletanae fromWiiltamu Landing to the YMC ACapt. and didn't stop until th e111:110 curfew that, nits . , The

~dAnoe .broke uv early to insureennrge4lo hiker., for the longtrek but u omit ,

By shortly attar 9 SaturdayHorning the laic party hadI4ft camp, It was almost noo n'the time evehybrle tsaobedthe sad to the steeply curving

`logging trail 2000 feet above'Sea level; It Way a *ugh climbfor *e ubconditiop.d begin•tiers pat definitely worth theef$Ortt ; The view tuns Inagntfl•tent,

•'.,

4k *I~b09f 14URI9 up to the peak

over 2100 tea hIshp ..there wasno trail; This r*mslnder of thed11n1b t aoptioapl t ,;t'poae of uswho o9ntlnuep ap lush+wacke dthe test , of-,`the way throughdeadfall and intermittent stret-ches of practically , impenatr•able bushes! ,

Most ;ordlplary people woul dbe more their content to restafter a strenuous day of climb-ing mountains, but not h eVOOets 4, Elphtnstone leftthem undaunted and after aes-treeing 'bower and invigorat-ing supper they danced again ,The VOC btd gave this Sun-day nice gahering a certai nclass,

* * *LATE NEXT morning we al l

congregated on the float to watc hthe hl)arlous antics of a fewnot•sosdignifled old members o fthe club . I don't think anyon ecame away from the perform-ance completely dry bec use i fthey weren't actually thrown inthey were probably doused witha budket of water.

It was with reluctance we.viewed the arrival of the boa tthat afternoon and it was a nunwilling group that slowl yboarded the craft.

:ALEX MACQILLIVRA Y

Strange as it may seem Ath•letie .Director Robert (Bob )fobtnette says Saturday' sfeotdall tussle at Varsity Sta.ding- will be a revenge matchvthah the 'Birds meet Wester nWas'htngton Vikings .

lttObinette terms the contes t"revenge" because Coach EdLappenbusch's Vikings gotthemselves chopped up 14-0 las tlvteek•end courtesy Pacific Lu•theran,Vikings felt they wer eheaded for a big year thi sfa l l, In fact it's been said they

expected , to to through the sea-son undefeated.

However, when Bob tells u sit, will be "revenge" when Vik-ings tangle *Rh the 'BirdsSaturday, we can only inter-pret his statement to mean thatthe Vikings are going all out t otrample UBC, who they wal-loped 46.6 in a conference con-tent earlier this year, simplybecause they can beat UBC.However, even though they'replagued with injuries, the loca lgridders may just come up wit ha ;big surprise 'Saturday .

For one thing, Vikings e`ndress only 26 men for this gameunder conference rules . That' s

. ,NOTIC E

Next practice of UBC hocke yteam has been changed from Mon-day to Tuesday at 10 :80 p.m. atKerrlsdale Aiena ,

* . *

*All men interested in either the

Junior or, Savior Varsity swi msquad are -requested to attend ameeting on Friday noon at theNew Gym sout) lecture room . Thi sis an imP9Mapt meeting and thelast one ,before practices start .

eaten .Vikings

ant Bird Blood

the limit .

Thus Jelly Anderson's chart,as feel the Americans won' tbe able to operate their twoplatoon system .

'Birds have been drilling fo rthe past week on tuckling,, win dsprints and pass defence.

There will be some new face s4

GIRL'S BASKETBALL

The first girl's basketball tea mpractice was last Wednesday fro m4 to 6 o'clock in the Women's , Gym •nasium . ' Alpproximately 28 girl sturned out for practice and JoanMacArthur, the coach, feels sur ethat two or three excellent team scan be selected from this group.In fact, the whole first string o flast year's team, with the- excep •tion of Mimi Wright and Doree nBrinham are back on the campus .Eleanor Cave will hold down cen-tre spot with her excellent pivo tshot . Sheila Moore and Pat Dono-van, guards, and Eleanor Nyholmand Jan Crafter, forwards, cone,

Arts Grey Set The Pace

In . 'Qlle ball Tussle

ONCE again the Arts teams have shown the way inthe volleyball tussle . Arts I Grey set the pace in the Tues . '

day 'opener, trimming the Hillel olu'b by eleven . points. ,while Arts I Yellow beat an enthusiastic VOC crew 22 t o15 .

,

Although VOC went down to defeat they were th emost colourful team on the floor as well as on the sides'lines, where they had a strong cheering section,

Whoops! sorry, OW moo

prise the rest of the first string.

With much more time in th e

gymnasium this year, It' Is ' believed

we will have -a really geed _team ,

and probably enter the `Senior ALeague, There ' are four *Ts I nSonlm' A this year .'They are : Ma•jm'ettes, filers, Kitsilano Commit.Icy Center and Thunderettes . Thiswill prove excellent competitio nbecause last years" Ellers teamhas broken up and are now playing on two teams . The winner ofthe league will be sent to the Ca-nadian Women's Basketball finalsin the East, for the playoffs .

in the lineup Saturday. An-

derson will choose from DonMcGinnis, Jerry Nestman, BobMcLean and Matt Henderson .

Biggest blow to the 'Bird s*as the lose for the year ofhuge Gordy Hogarth ; 'Gor dyhad to quit after an old injur ystarted acting up .

Ben Franklin Printed:

e that can take rest

is greater than

he that can take cities ..B. Franklin

Poor Richard's Almanac, 173 7

' There's a time to pause in every activity .When you make that pause refreshing wit hice-cold Coca-Cola you can take what comeswith ease .

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