thz ui ysszy · thz ui ysszy vancouver, b,c., thursday, october 14, 1954 5 cents no. 11 mac vs usc;...

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VOLUME 27 THZ UI YSSZ Y VANCOUVER, B,C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1954 5 CENTS No. 1 1 MAC vs USC ; Pub To Fight Censur e Big . Battl e Loom s OverDime Two Issues Facin g Special AMS Meetin g A dime to the Undergraduat e Societies or a dime to the Men' s Athletic Directorate? That is th e question—that students will b e asked to resolve at the specia l general AMS meeting In th e Armory at noon today . When treasurer Ron Bray pre- sented his 1954 .55 budget a t the general meeting of Septem- ber 30 he alloted $3 .20 per student to MAD and $1 per mem- ber to USC, ' AMENDMEN T Students passed the followin g USC sponsored amendment t o Bray's budget : "That undergraduate societies ' grant be restored to $1 .10 pe r member ; this money to be aq gulped by holding the MA D grant at .$3 .10 per student. Su r plus funds resulting from un- organized undergraduates socie- ties shall revert to MAC . " Last year MAD received $3 .1 0 per student and USC $1 .10 per member. REASON S Bray gave the following rea- sons for increasing MAD's bud - get and decreasing USC's . 1 . At the 1952 general AM S meeting the students voted t o allot MAD $3 .20 per studen t when enrollment at UBC reach- ed 5500 or over . This year' s enrollment exceeded 5500 . 2 Eleven out of 16 organs . rations in the USC ended th e last fiscal year with surpluse s amounting to $1299 .99 . Bra y therefore , claimed USC could well Withstand a ten cent cu t this year without curtailing it s program . MEMBERS As USC has approximatel y 2800 members and they receiv e $1 .10 per member MAD's budge t will actually be cut only a nickel as they receive mone y from approximately 5800 stu- dents . Feeling that MAD had bee n done an injustice president Bo b Brady obtained more than th e necessary amount of signature s on a petition to have the US C day' s amendmen t meeting rescinded wa s nded called . and to- Of Progra m This then is what student s must decide at noon today . Brock Hal l Extensio n Planne d Plans for two extensions t o Brock Hall have been under dis- cussion between the Studen t Council and the Board of Gov- ernors for the past six month s It was stated by board member , Professor E . D . McPhee in a recent interview . So far it has been tentativel y proposed that an extension b e added to the north end of th e Brock for a new bookstore an d another wing be added to th e south end . McPhee said the council ha d asked that the discussion b e deferred until "other matter s are cleared up ." He would mak e no statement as to the natur e of the "other matters . " With the construction of a ne w „' p ool on University Boulevard, l Vancouver Scheol Board has p issued a special plea asking i UHC students to drive carefully, i I and watch feu' school childre n crossing the Boulevard . The school is an addition t o UniversO Ilill Seaie)l ()it C'h .i n money in other ways . I c(Ilor Unole\ard . The issue here is not whether you are for the frater- nities, or against them; The Ubyssey does not demand nor is entitled—to have its stand against the discriminator y fraternities formally endorsed by the Alma Mate r Society . The Issue here is not whether you respect the author - ity of Student Council ; The Ubyssey has always recognize d Student Council as the governing body of all studen t affairif . The issue here is not whether The Ubyssey should b e a law unto itself; The Ubyssey realizes fully that it, too , must submit its workings to Student Council for scrutin y and approval . , This is the issue: that The Ubyssey should not be ' submitted to punitive action by Student Council be - came of its editorial policy ; That Student Council has the tight to take actio n , against The Ubyaaey only on the grounds that it has faile d to carry out its full obligations and duties as a studen t newspaper . Action against The Ubyssey on any other ground i s an attempt to control the press . And a free press is neede d at UBC just as much as anywhere else . We are convinced that, in stating the names of three , discriminatory fraternities in the way in which we did , we did not violate our obligations as a students newspaper . On the contrary, we are convinced of just the opposite . Student Council has told us, "No attempt has been ' made to dictate to The Ubyssey what they can or canno t print. " Yet this is exactly what has been done . . Student Council Tuesday night shied away from stat- ing that their motion of censure was made on the groun d that The Ubyssey violated its obligation . That would have been impossible . We ask you : regardless of whether you agree wit h The Ubyssey in its stand against the three fraternities con - corned, did wM fail in ,air obligation* . to you, as a, studen t newspaper? Sorority Statemen t Challenged By Pape r ['he Ubyssey has challenged Panhellenic Association t o produce the names of the " hundreds" of girls, both whit e and otherwise, ignored when mailing sorority rushing infor- mation . s e--- The sorority council issued a Deadline Nearin g statement in reply to article s appearing in the Ubyssey of Oc- Undergrad Pie s tober 8 claiming that colored girls were not given informatio n about sororities. "There is nothing remarkabl e in the fact that The Ubyssey wa s able to find students who ha d not received rushing handbooks . The most casual check could re - veal hundreds of girls who di d (Continued on Page 3 ) See SORORITIE S HOMECOMING BAS H By MARGIE McNEIL L Gallant UBC frontiersme n are expected to be on han d this weekend to defend th e fair Georgia from the invadin g Americans . A Bellingham invasion i n reverse, students fromWester n Washington College of Educa- tion will arrive Saturday t o avenge the Leopold Attac k of last year . Spearheading this Anschlus s will be two buses cramme d to the stanchions with wild - eyed, whiskey-addled fans , spurred by the intoxicatin g martial music of their 7 0 piece band . COUNTER-ATTAC K This attack, promising to b e the biggest blow to the Wes t Coast since the Chicago fire , comes as a result of "accident - al damage" done by fun-lov- ing UBC students during pas t visits to the enemy strong - hold . In an attempt to preven t the total razing of the Georgi a brick by brick, Viking fan s will oe given opportunity t o release pent-up emotions b y hurling a bomb through th e JIM KILLEE N Killee n Wins US C Electio n Jim Killeen was elected Un- dergraduate Society Committe e chaiman Friday by a 35 vot e majority in the second count . Friday's election was held af- ter the first USC election wa s declared invalid by Studen t Council because of improper bal - lots . Approximately 1500 student s voted in the second electio n as compared with 1239 in th e original . Walter Young came secon d with Victor Isfeld third . Isfel d carried the engineering pollin g booth strongly but, Kijleen gad Young picked up votes at al l other booths . USC chairman Killeen an- nounced Wednesday that regula r USC meetings will be held in the board room at Brock Hal l on Mondays and urged all under - graduate societies to make sure they are represented . PoetAude n Highligh t Drive Nixe d Student Council Tuesday re- jected a United Nations Clu b request to hold a one-clay charit y drive on campus with proceed s to go to the UN Educational , Scientific and Cultural Organiza- lion (UNESCO) . The request, made b y club president Ted Lee , rejected on the grotn,d s the three charity drives alread y scheduled are a sufficient drain F on students' pocket stoney an d Ihat the club could raise Ih e U N wa s that . U .N . Charity A day to remember will' be Oct . 27 when the world-renown- ed poet, W . H . Auden , will ap- pear in the Auditot4bm to rea d both his and other poet's works . Any student having taken Eng- lish 100 will recall his brilliant , symbolic poems . Auden will appear on th e Special Events program whic h got underway Wed . With the pre- sentation of two novelty dance s and a feature ballet by the Ka y Armstrong Dance Company . The powerful strains of fa- mous classics will fill the Audi- torium Nov . 4 when the Van- couver Symphony Orchestra wil l appear under the direction of Irwin Hoffman . These and many other famou s artists fill the program fro m now until Easter and the SE C promises many pleasurable an d stimulating noon hours . The two-man organizationa l committee of Gerry Hodges an d Isy Wolfe are badly in need o f help in the organization and pre- sentation of this extensive pro - gram . A meeting will be hel d Wednesday, October 20 in th e Brock Men's Club room primar- ily for recruiting purposes . New School Built ; Drivers Behave October 22 is the absolut e deadline for undergraduates t o have their pictures taken if the y haven't already done so . The photographer is a patient fello w but he can only wait so long . This is the last time he will b e on the campus, in the Doubl e Committee room, between 11 :3 0 a .m . and 2 :00 p .m . Brock Hall window If th e spirit moves them . DANC E The "Bird's Bounce," a dance sponsored by the Com- merce Undergraduate Society , will be held in Brock Hall fol - Request that the Alma Mater Society rescind Studen t Council's motion of censure against the Ubyssey will be mad e at today's general meeting in the armory, following a heate d Student Council meeting Tuesday night . . The meeting brought these de- e velopments : 1. Neither Student Council nor The Ubyssey editorial boar d will resign after the student de- cision . Councillors passed a mo- tion of confidence in the editor- ial board, and at the same tim e announced they would not resig n themselves . 2. Student Council refused t o rescind its motion of censure, a s requested by The Ubyssey , 3. Student Council refused to affirm the principle, demande d by Editor-in-Chief Sypnowich , that The Ubyssey should only b e submitted to punitive measure s by Student Council if at an y time it fails in its duties as a student newspaper . 4. Councillors' also refused t o state that their motion of cen- sure was made on the ground s The Ubyssey had neglected it s duty . POOR TASTE The censure passed by Studen t Council last week attacked Th e Ubyssey for its "taste" in its pre- sentation of the names of th e three discriminatory fraternitie s at UBC. In passing its motion of con- fidence in editors Tuesday night , Councillors admitted they ha d "cast doubt" on the . "compet- ence of Ubyssey editors, an d would therefore remove it . , The Student Council motion of confidence was passed Agent - mouldy except for the absten- tion of Co-ordinator Jerome An - gel . Editors have since decided no t to demand a motion of confid- enc at today's meeting . "Bu t we'l of course resign if th e meeting itself askeds for and get s a motion of non-confidence i n us," said Editor-in-Chief Sypno- wich . Councillors stated at the meet- ing that they themselves woul d not resign if their motion of cen- sure was defeated at today' s meeting . Earlier, Treasurer Ron Bra y and President Dick Underhil l had announced that Studen t Council would resign if this hap- pened . ONLY CRITICISM " Councillors refused to rescin d thei rmo ti fonocnseu ROc o their motion of censure outright . No vote was taken . President Dick Underhill , (Continued on Page 3 ) ' See CENSURE 'twesn class . : ALL NOON HOUR lunettea s meetings, speakers, etc„ ' a>~ cancelled today because of th e special AMS General Meeting . CERCLE FRANCAIS will hol d a "Causerie" this afternoo n from 2 :30 to 4 :30 . Location will be posted on the club's notic e board in the Arts Building . Bleedin g Forestry Cops Cu p . Enthusiasm of blood donor s spurted up at the end of th e UBC fall drive to bring the . total up to 1470 pints of th e 2000 mark set by the quota . Winner of the Globulin , Gob - let was the Forestry facult y with 57% .of students registere d In that course donating, . . _ The cup will be presente d with due ceremony by the Nurse s and Home Economics students , co-sponsors of the drive, some - time next week . Number of donors was 1*7 0 but rejects brought the tota l down to 1470 pints . CBUT televised the drive • o n Thursday . Major W . A . Freeman, pane l organizer for blood donor com- mittee of the Vancouver Re d Cross, who expressed doubt at the start of the drive that the optimistic quota would be achiev - ed, was very pleased with th e outcome . The number of pints neede d by BC hospitals-and BC's quot a of gamma globulin was exceed- ed by 220 pints . Breakdown of faculty totals , according to number of student s registered in each faculty, fol- lows : Forestry 57%, Nursing 50'x , Agriculture 47%, Home Ec . 44%, Applied Science 42% , Teacher Training 39%, Architec- rute 32%, Commerce 32%, Art s and Sciences 31%, Physical E d 28%, Pharmacy 19%, Graduate Studies 18%, Law 17%, Med s 12%, Social Work 6% . lowing the football game . Fo r $1 .50 per couple, all loca l gentry and guests may liste n to the music rendered by A l Herd's orchestra and devou r cigarettes donated by Imperia l Tobacco . The Snack Bar will be ope n for those in need of extr a caloric strength . Guests are asked to brin g their own portable ashtray s and fire hoses . Yanks To Avenge Leopold ! VALIANT PUBSTEHS are preparing to repulse a horde of drunken American college boy s from Western Washington College of Education on the final clay of Homecoming Week . A n American attack is expected in retaliation for USC's action las t ham's Leopold Hotel to the ground . —IDITORIAL - year in leveliing Belling _ Photo by Pete Piue o a,

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Page 1: THZ UI YSSZY · THZ UI YSSZY VANCOUVER, B,C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1954 5 CENTS No. 11 MAC vs USC; Pub To Fight Censure Big . Battle Looms OverDime Two Issues Facing Special AMS

VOLUME 27

THZ UI YSSZYVANCOUVER, B,C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1954

5 CENTS No. 11

MAC vs USC; Pub To Fight CensureBig . BattleLoomsOverDime

Two Issues Facing

Special AMS Meeting

A dime to the Undergraduat eSocieties or a dime to the Men' sAthletic Directorate? That is thequestion—that students will beasked to resolve at the specia lgeneral AMS meeting In theArmory at noon today .

When treasurer Ron Bray pre-sented his 1954.55 budget a tthe general meeting of Septem-ber 30 he alloted $3 .20 perstudent to MAD and $1 per mem-ber to USC,

'AMENDMEN T

Students passed the followin gUSC sponsored amendment toBray's budget:

"That undergraduate societies 'grant be restored to $1 .10 permember; this money to be aq•gulped by holding the MADgrant at .$3 .10 per student. Surplus funds resulting from un-organized undergraduates socie-ties shall revert to MAC . "

Last year MAD received $3 .1 0per student and USC $1 .10 permember.REASONS

Bray gave the following rea-sons for increasing MAD's bud -get and decreasing USC's .

1 . At the 1952 general AMSmeeting the students voted toallot MAD $3.20 per studen twhen enrollment at UBC reach-ed 5500 or over . This year' senrollment exceeded 5500 .

2 Eleven out of 16 organs.rations in the USC ended th elast fiscal year with surplusesamounting to $1299 .99. Braytherefore ,claimed USC couldwell Withstand a ten cent cutthis year without curtailing itsprogram.MEMBERS

As USC has approximatel y2800 members and they receiv e$1 .10 per member MAD's budge twill actually be cut only anickel as they receive moneyfrom approximately 5800 stu-dents .

Feeling that MAD had beendone an injustice president BobBrady obtained more than thenecessary amount of signatureson a petition to have the USC

day' samendment

meetingrescinded

wasnded

called .and to- Of Program

This then is what studentsmust decide at noon today .

Brock Hal lExtensionPlanned

Plans for two extensions t oBrock Hall have been under dis-cussion between the Studen tCouncil and the Board of Gov-ernors for the past six month sIt was stated by board member ,Professor E . D. McPhee in arecent interview .

So far it has been tentativelyproposed that an extension beadded to the north end of th eBrock for a new bookstore an danother wing be added to th esouth end .

McPhee said the council hadasked that the discussion bedeferred until "other matter sare cleared up." He would makeno statement as to the natur eof the "other matters . "

With the construction of a ne w„'p ool on University Boulevard, lVancouver Scheol Board has pissued a special plea asking iUHC students to drive carefully, iIand watch feu' school childre ncrossing the Boulevard .

The school is an addition t oUniversO Ilill Seaie)l ()it C'h .i n

money in other ways .

I c(Ilor Unole\ard .

The issue here is not whether you are for the frater-nities, or against them; The Ubyssey does not demand—nor is entitled—to have its stand against the discriminatoryfraternities formally endorsed by the Alma MaterSociety

. The Issue here is not whether you respect the author -ity of Student Council ; The Ubyssey has always recognizedStudent Council as the governing body of all studentaffairif .

The issue here is not whether The Ubyssey should bea law unto itself; The Ubyssey realizes fully that it, too ,must submit its workings to Student Council for scrutin yand approval . ,

This is the issue: that The Ubyssey should not be 'submitted to punitive action by Student Council be-came of its editorial policy ;

That Student Council has the tight to take action, against The Ubyaaey only on the grounds that it has failed

to carry out its full obligations and duties as a studentnewspaper.

Action against The Ubyssey on any other ground i san attempt to control the press. And a free press is neede dat UBC just as much as anywhere else .

We are convinced that, in stating the names of three ,discriminatory fraternities in the way in which we did ,we did not violate our obligations as a students newspaper .On the contrary, we are convinced of just the opposite .

Student Council has told us, "No attempt has been' made to dictate to The Ubyssey what they can or cannotprint."

Yet this is exactly what has been done.. Student Council Tuesday night shied away from stat-ing that their motion of censure was made on the groun dthat The Ubyssey violated its obligation .

That would have been impossible .We ask you: regardless of whether you agree with

The Ubyssey in its stand against the three fraternities con -corned, did wM fail in ,air obligation*. to you, as a, studentnewspaper?

Sorority Statement

Challenged By Paper

['he Ubyssey has challenged Panhellenic Association t oproduce the names of the "hundreds" of girls, both whiteand otherwise, ignored when mailing sorority rushing infor-mation .

se---The sorority council issued a Deadline Nearingstatement in reply to articles

appearing in the Ubyssey of Oc- Undergrad Piestober 8 claiming that coloredgirls were not given informationabout sororities.

"There is nothing remarkabl ein the fact that The Ubyssey wasable to find students who hadnot received rushing handbooks .The most casual check could re -veal hundreds of girls who di d

(Continued on Page 3 )See SORORITIES

HOMECOMING BAS H

By MARGIE McNEILL

Gallant UBC frontiersme nare expected to be on handthis weekend to defend thefair Georgia from the invadingAmericans .

A Bellingham invasion inreverse, students fromWester nWashington College of Educa-tion will arrive Saturday t oavenge the Leopold Attac kof last year .

Spearheading this Anschlusswill be two buses crammedto the stanchions with wild -eyed, whiskey-addled fans ,spurred by the intoxicatin gmartial music of their 7 0piece band .COUNTER-ATTAC K

This attack, promising to b ethe biggest blow to the Wes tCoast since the Chicago fire ,comes as a result of "accident -al damage" done by fun-lov-ing UBC students during pas tvisits to the enemy strong-hold .

In an attempt to preven tthe total razing of the Georgi abrick by brick, Viking fan swill oe given opportunity torelease pent-up emotions b yhurling a bomb through the

JIM KILLEE N

KilleenWins USCElection

Jim Killeen was elected Un-dergraduate Society Committe echaiman Friday by a 35 votemajority in the second count .

Friday's election was held af-ter the first USC election wa sdeclared invalid by Studen tCouncil because of improper bal -lots.

Approximately 1500 studentsvoted in the second electionas compared with 1239 in theoriginal .

Walter Young came secondwith Victor Isfeld third . Isfeldcarried the engineering pollingbooth strongly but, Kijleen gadYoung picked up votes at allother booths .

USC chairman Killeen an-nounced Wednesday that regula rUSC meetings will be held inthe board room at Brock Hallon Mondays and urged all under-graduate societies to make surethey are represented.

PoetAudenHighlight

Drive NixedStudent Council Tuesday re-

jected a United Nations Clu brequest to hold a one-clay charit ydrive on campus with proceed sto go to the UN Educational ,Scientific and Cultural Organiza-lion (UNESCO) .

The request, made byclub president Ted Lee ,rejected on the grotn,d sthe three charity drives alread yscheduled are a sufficient drain Fon students' pocket stoney an dIhat the club could raise Ihe

U Nwasthat .

U.N. Charity

A day to remember will' beOct . 27 when the world-renown-ed poet, W. H. Auden , will ap-pear in the Auditot4bm to rea dboth his and other poet's works.Any student having taken Eng-lish 100 will recall his brilliant,symbolic poems.

Auden will appear on theSpecial Events program whic hgot underway Wed . With the pre-sentation of two novelty dancesand a feature ballet by the Ka yArmstrong Dance Company .

The powerful strains of fa-mous classics will fill the Audi-torium Nov . 4 when the Van-couver Symphony Orchestra wil lappear under the direction ofIrwin Hoffman .

These and many other famou sartists fill the program fro mnow until Easter and the SE Cpromises many pleasurable an dstimulating noon hours .

The two-man organizationa lcommittee of Gerry Hodges an dIsy Wolfe are badly in need ofhelp in the organization and pre-sentation of this extensive pro-gram . A meeting will be heldWednesday, October 20 in th eBrock Men's Club room primar-ily for recruiting purposes .

New School Built;Drivers Behave

October 22 is the absolutedeadline for undergraduates tohave their pictures taken if theyhaven't already done so. Thephotographer is a patient fello wbut he can only wait so long .This is the last time he will beon the campus, in the Doubl eCommittee room, between 11 :30a .m. and 2:00 p .m .

Brock Hall window If thespirit moves them .DANCE

The "Bird's Bounce," adance sponsored by the Com-merce Undergraduate Society ,will be held in Brock Hall fol-

Request that the Alma Mater Society rescind StudentCouncil's motion of censure against the Ubyssey will be madeat today's general meeting in the armory, following a heate dStudent Council meeting Tuesday night .. The meeting brought these de- e

velopments :1. Neither Student Council

nor The Ubyssey editorial boardwill resign after the student de-cision. Councillors passed a mo-tion of confidence in the editor-ial board, and at the same timeannounced they would not resignthemselves .

2. Student Council refused t orescind its motion of censure, a srequested by The Ubyssey ,

3. Student Council refused toaffirm the principle, demandedby Editor-in-Chief Sypnowich ,that The Ubyssey should only besubmitted to punitive measure sby Student Council if at an ytime it fails in its duties as astudent newspaper .

4. Councillors' also refused tostate that their motion of cen-sure was made on the groundsThe Ubyssey had neglected itsduty .POOR TASTE

The censure passed by StudentCouncil last week attacked Th eUbyssey for its "taste" in its pre-sentation of the names of thethree discriminatory fraternitie sat UBC.

In passing its motion of con-fidence in editors Tuesday night ,Councillors admitted they ha d"cast doubt" on the. "compet-ence of Ubyssey editors, andwould therefore remove it . ,

The Student Council motion ofconfidence was passed Agent-mouldy except for the absten-tion of Co-ordinator Jerome An-gel .

Editors have since decided notto demand a motion of confid-enc at today's meeting . "Butwe'l of course resign if th emeeting itself askeds for and getsa motion of non-confidence inus," said Editor-in-Chief Sypno-wich .

Councillors stated at the meet-ing that they themselves woul dnot resign if their motion of cen-sure was defeated at today'smeeting .

Earlier, Treasurer Ron Brayand President Dick Underhil lhad announced that StudentCouncil would resign if this hap-pened .ONLY CRITICISM"

Councillors refused to rescin dthei rmo ti fonocnseu ROcotheir motion of censure outright .No vote was taken .

President Dick Underhill ,(Continued on Page 3 )

' See CENSURE

'twesn class.:

ALL NOON HOUR lunetteasmeetings, speakers, etc„ ' a>~cancelled today because of th especial AMS General Meeting.

CERCLE FRANCAIS will holda "Causerie" this afternoonfrom 2:30 to 4 :30. Location willbe posted on the club's noticeboard in the Arts Building .

Bleeding

Forestry

Cops Cup

. Enthusiasm of blood donorsspurted up at the end of theUBC fall drive to bring the .total up to 1470 pints of the2000 mark set by the quota .

Winner of the Globulin , Gob-let was the Forestry facultywith 57% .of students registeredIn that course donating, . . _

The cup will be presentedwith due ceremony by the Nursesand Home Economics students ,co-sponsors of the drive, some-time next week .

Number of donors was 1*70but rejects brought the tota ldown to 1470 pints .

CBUT televised the drive • onThursday.

Major W. A. Freeman, panelorganizer for blood donor com-mittee of the Vancouver Re dCross, who expressed doubt atthe start of the drive that theoptimistic quota would be achiev-ed, was very pleased with theoutcome .

The number of pints neededby BC hospitals-and BC's quot aof gamma globulin was exceed-ed by 220 pints .

Breakdown of faculty totals ,according to number of studentsregistered in each faculty, fol-lows :

Forestry 57%, Nursing 50'x ,Agriculture 47%, Home Ec.44%, Applied Science 42% ,Teacher Training 39%, Architec-rute 32%, Commerce 32%, Artsand Sciences 31%, Physical E d28%, Pharmacy 19%, GraduateStudies 18%, Law 17%, Meds12%, Social Work 6% .

lowing the football game . For$1 .50 per couple, all localgentry and guests may liste nto the music rendered by A lHerd's orchestra and devourcigarettes donated by Imperia lTobacco .

The Snack Bar will be ope nfor those in need of extra

caloric strength.Guests are asked to bring

their own portable ashtray sand fire hoses .

Yanks To Avenge Leopold!

VALIANT PUBSTEHS are preparing to repulse a horde of drunken American college boy sfrom Western Washington College of Education on the final clay of Homecoming Week . AnAmerican attack is expected in retaliation for USC's action las tham's Leopold Hotel to the ground .

—IDITORIAL -

year in leveliing Belling _

Photo by Pete Piue o

a,

Page 2: THZ UI YSSZY · THZ UI YSSZY VANCOUVER, B,C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1954 5 CENTS No. 11 MAC vs USC; Pub To Fight Censure Big . Battle Looms OverDime Two Issues Facing Special AMS

Pare 2

THE tj"DYYSSBY

Thursday, October 14, 1954

THE UBYSSEY

&lldt Ay gland

MEMBER, CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRES S

Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Dept ., Ottawa.Mail subscriptions $2 .50 per year . Published in Vancouver through -out the uni*'ereity year by the Student Publications Board of th eAlma Mater Society, Universtity of British Columbia . Editorialopinions expressed herein are those of the editorial staff of Th eUbyssey, and not necessarily those of the Alma Mater Society orthe University. Business and advertising telephones are Alma 123 0or Alma 1231 .

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF—PETER BYPNOWIC H

Managing Editor—Ray Logic

News Editor—Pat CarneyCUP Editor---Serf Cordon

Sports Editor—Ken LambAssociate Editor—Stan Beck

Executive Editor—Geoff Conway

Senior Editor—SANDY ROSS

Desk and Reporters : Margie McNeill, Lou Letterman, Bria nGuns, Nancy Seed, Ritchie Williams, Jean Whiteside, Jackie Seale ,Bob Johannes, Judy Thormahlen.

'Sports : Madrice Gibbons, Peter ' Worthington .

We're WaitingMiss Underhill's contention that Pan-Hellenic failed t o

issue invitation brochures and applications to "hundreds" o fconeds, regardless of race, is not good enough for us .

We challenge Pan-Hellenic to produce a list of thes e"hundreds " of co-eds.

Before The Ubyssey even began its investigation whic hultimately exposed the fact that Pan-Hellenic eliminated al l

:colored girls on campus from their mailing list, we asked MissUnderhill who received the brochures.

She answered strongly : "All girls in second, third andfourth years."

But even granting Pan-Hellenic the privilege of chang-ing horses in mid-stream, we still challenge Pan-Hellenic t oelrlaln why ALL colored girls were eliminated from the in-

vitation list .

The only explanation is that Pan-Hellenic discriminate don the bath of race .

This was their only means of barring "non-Caucasions "from membership in sororities, since all girls who actuall yrush must be guaranteed membership in a sorority .

We hope Faculty Council or the Dean of Women, Mis sM. Dorothy Mawdsley, will not be misled ,by invalid, "second -look" claims of Pan-Hellenic .

We hope faculty action is on the way.

Who Cares ?Perhaps students are weary of being dragged out t o

Alma Mater Society meetings . Perhaps they are tired o fsettling differences between student groups .

Perhaps they couldn't care less .

But today 's general meeting, regardless of the vital issue sto be arbitrated, should be attended by every student wh opossibly can .

For even if you do not care to choose between the argu-ments of the Mens' Athletic Directorate and the under-gradaute societies, or the arguments of The Ubyssey an dStudent Council, you should guard your right to do so .

And this means accepting its responsibilities .

GUEST EDITORIA L

Council Press ure Tactics 'Today The Ubyssey is asking Council to rescind a motio n

of censure . Students must support their newspaper's righ tand duty to print all the news, tastefully worded or not .On such freedom do knowledge and democracy depend .

If students will peer through the smoke screen throw nout by the "would-be" censors they will discover the fol-lowing facts :

On October 1 The Ubyssey ran a news item giving th enames of fraternities still having discriminatory clauses .This news item was short, factual, and impartial . Its objectiv estyle shows a delicate restraint from any expression of edi-torial opinion . Also printed impartially on the front page wasa nicely commendatory committee report on the remova lof discriminatory clauses by two fraternities ,

Student Council has seen fit to censure the `"taste" em-ployed in presenting one of these news stories but not theother. Why? Each was scrupulously truthful . Is truth i n"poor taste " on the UBC campus? Or were personal feel-ings instead of Council responsibilities behind this one-3ided protest ?

Tuesday evening Student Council contradicted them -selves by passing a vote of, confidence in the editorial staff .If Councillors knew constitutional procedure they woul drealize that in a democratically elected government. a motionof censure is equivalent to a non-confidence motion and gen-erally calls for a resignation . In fact, Councillors Longstaff easked for the editor's resignation (witness two Ubyssey re -porters), Such pressure tactics lead to censorship and supres-sion of enquiry . We defend Council's right to icriticize bu tnot to stifle news . Motions of censure can do just that .

Civil Liberties U nion urges :student support of Ubyssey' sstand .

Freda MesserschniidI ,President, Civil, Liberties Union .

ALL PUBSTERS would bewise to assemble in the NorthBrock basement today at noon .Not one, but two parties are inthe offing .

TOMOUE _

"MurderExCa fhedr '

Mango Chutney strode intothe Council Room, nodded tothe Chairman and took hi splace at the great green table .He was immediately accordedrecognition by the chair, an dwith a swift glance at his wrist swatch, he rose to speak .

"Mr. Chairman, ladies an dgentlemen of Council : To move ,or not to move that is the ques-tion: whether 'tis nobler in sil-ence to suffer the slings an darrows ' of outrageous newsmen ,or to take arms'gainat the' pac kof rats, and by Motion of Cen-sure and then . . . "He brokeoff abruptly as noises of scuf-fling were heard, on the roofabove .

"Crucify him!" shrilled avoice above, and a squat edi-torial figure plummetedthrough the open skylight t oland in the center of the Coun-cil Table .

"I beseech you, Chairma nand Councillors," began thestrange visitor, drawing him -self up to a sitting position, "Iffor I want that glib and oily art ,to speak and purpose not ; sincewhat I well intend, I'll do't be-fore I warn you,—I beseechthat you make known it is novicious blot, murder or foul-ness, no unchaste action, or dis -honoured step, that hath depriv -ed me of all grace and favour;but even for want of that forwhich I'm richer, a fawnin geye, and such a tongue °NO amglad I have not, though not tohave it hath lost me . . . " Thefigure began to sob. " . . . al lfriendship," it concluded .

During this display a statu-esque goneril in a leopard skincoat had slipped in at the door ."Better thou hadst not bee nborn than not to have please dme better," she said .

She put down her glass ofsherry, moved quickly to thetable and, picking up the jelly -like figure, she placed it to

. her breast, and, carried it fro mthe room . The door close dsoftly behind her .

"Ach, to resign, to take aholiday," mumbled Horac eWinkley as he nervously fing-ered his robe of office . "A hol-iday—no more: for why shoul dwe bear the whips and scorn sof office, the Faculty Council' swrong, The Ubyssey's contum-ely,the fangs of despised soror-ity girls, the apathy of thosewe represent, the insolence o fthe downtown press, and al lthe other spurns that patien tmerit of th' unworthy takes,when we might so simply ou rquietus make with a bare frat-pin? Who would these robe sbear?"

Winkley felt the Chairman' shand upon his shoulder . "Thuscloth reflection make coward sof us all . "

Suddenly Chutney leaped tohis feet, "And thus the nativehue of my resolution is sicklie' do'er with the pale cast ofdoubt!" he cried . "And enter -prises of great pith and momen twith this regard their currents

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turn away, and lose the nameof action! Oh, we will not belost. I move censureshipi Ou rthoughts be bloody or be noth-ing worth . . .

Five minutes later he wasseen to stride from the room .A slight smile creased his lips .With a glance at his wristwatchhe was out of sight .

—Sandy Manson .

Why He Came

Editor, The Ubyssey ;Coming all the way from th e

West Indies or any countr youtside Canada, it .is logicalthat one be questioned "Whydid you select B .C. or' U .B.C ."

But some ask no questions ;they watch, frown, conclude .We choose B .C. because wehear that yours is not a partof the country so unbearabl ycold (laying aside the acade-mic) . It Is ' true that yourwarmth and interest deserve sto be short-lived, readily evil!porated when the little npveltywe offer is exhausted, but thi sis intangible to someone easilyadapted to a new environmen tof frustration .

It doesn't take long for il-lusions to lift . President Mac-Kenzie states that he is againstall forms of discrimination .Reflection illuminates th eadage, no smoke without fire -people don't talk of discrimin-ation unless it EXISTS. I giveyou my sympathy in havingto uphold your heavy streetbanner headlines in the faceof challenge of your rights .

I won't weep for the Chinesegirls because their treatmen tshould make them realize tha tthe road to friendship runsthrough Scorn and Tolerance ,before the citadel of acceptanceis attained .

Thanking you for anygroups you may find, I remain ,

Respectfully ,J . Mitchell ,4 Agriculture

Supports Stand ?Editor, The Ubyssey ;

Concerning the fraternit ydiscrimination, I fully suppor tyour stand, however, I woul dlike to point out a greater un-noticed discrimination in you rown columns.

The cq-writers of d popula rc,gllmn showed their contemptagainst .a certain province b yrationing to a locale of one oftheir scenarios as Duplesses-ville . A sportswriter referredto a former UBC gridder play-ing for Montreal Alouette ssotuawiere east of Canada . Evi-dently he doesn't know Mon-treal is in Canada .

Afr being conquered by theIOW*, this old part of Canadaacted with the British agains tppsslb1e invasions by the Yan-kees from the south and in re-tprn it gained the rights whichare still being 'used. The dif-fprepces bi'Ou*t about can only ,by somas politically, as ourupskppgrted prime Minister i strying to do, and not by nam ecalling which has proved unsuc-cessful for these hundreds ofyears .

Therefore, Mr. Editor, beforepointing out the smell in th efraternities' and sororities 'back yards, first clean out th estink in your own columns .

Arnold Kroll, Arts 2

'Copped StatementEditor's note: The following

atetement was handed in lat eat night, fully five hours afterthe normal copy deadline . Be-cause of this, we wire unabl eto give the statemnp the prosmime. it justly deserves . Hadthe statement been sumitted bythe copy deadline, it wouldhave been run on the frontpMti

Editor, The Ubyssey :Unimportant issues some-

times arise . So with the publi-cations board motion. Whenthey do, your council mustmeet them .

The question of want of con-fidence is not in issue . No at-tempt has been made to censor ;only to censure, and rightly so.

No "punishments" have beenthreatened ; we hope there wil lnever be any need for them .

Those in authority must hav eresponsibility; We cannot con-celve of responsibility withou tliability to criticism . Attemptshave been made to interpretwhat the Council motion reallymeans . We think it means whatit says : no more but no leis .

We demand a free and res-ponsible press . We do not want

•a press free from liability tocriticism . .

Your Council has the duty toact on your behalf subject t othe constitution of the Alm aMater Society. We think weacted constitutionally and thusvalidly .

Fraternties, discrimination ,Ubyssey policy are thus not inquestion. There can be n odoubt that the Student Counci lacted constitutionally. We knowthat the students ,will agreewith us .

Wendy Sutton ,Acting President .Danny Goldsmith ,

Public Relations Officer

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Page 3: THZ UI YSSZY · THZ UI YSSZY VANCOUVER, B,C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1954 5 CENTS No. 11 MAC vs USC; Pub To Fight Censure Big . Battle Looms OverDime Two Issues Facing Special AMS

Thursday, October 14,1954 -

THE VBYSSEY

Page ,

' Wages Up- ..

2p00 Pay Shotthan 2000 UBC students are "working their wa y

—*through college" this year .

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BIWR TOTEM FORMORE BUYERS

Arrangements with Wrig-fey's Printers Ltd . have jus tbeen made which will permi tproduction of a .300 pageTotem this year, Ann Roger ,Totem Editor, announced Wed.nesday.

Increased size was made pos -sible by record advance sales—over 2,000-made at registra-tion. Orders may still be plac-ed for the yearbook in th eAMS office, Brock Hall . Price :$3.85 plus tax until Nov, 1 ,when the price will be raise dto $4 .50 .

Don't Delay;Swim Now!

Anyone ' deiiring a few moredips in the BEG pool, had bettermake ate freezing dip before th eweek Is out .

Though no definite date hasbeen set, the poi is expectedto be closed down wfthin a veryfew days for repairs, a chang efrom the earlier announced dateof November I .

Homecomin gC a ncii datesNeeded Soon

Monday, November first is th eofficial opening of this year' sHomecoming Week . The festivi-ties continuing through the weekwill end with the big footballand Homecoming dance on No -vember 6 .

The Queen to reign over th egala event will be chosen fromamong the contestants enteredby the various campus facultiesand organizations at a tea heldin the Brock Hall Dining RoomOctober 28 .

•The names of these candidates

must be submitted to the Home -coming Committees before Wed -nesday, October 20. .

After reviewing replies of4100 students to questionnaires ,UBC Personnel Director JohnMcLean said Tuesday that 191 8male students and 157 femal e'students indicated they are solel yresponsible for financing alltheir university expenses .

Another 1123 men and 284women answered they were res-ponsible-for all expenses excep troom and board .

The job picture brightene dthis summer with a general In-crease in average earnings.

Average gross earnings formale students was $719 compar-ed with $712 the previous year .

Women students averaged$344 In 1954 and 5315 In 1953 .

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ForumTo CoachDebators

In hopes of recapturing th eMcgsoun Cup this year, the Par-liamentary Forum will holdweakly coaching and debatingsessions .

Forum vice-president, PeterHenslowe, said Wednesday, theForum will rearrange the for-mation of coaching 8nd debatin gsessions. Alter the completion ofthe weekly evening sesisons, afour.man team for the MoGounChampionships will be , chosento compete .

Arthur Laing, B .C. Liberalwhip, and two Faculty members , ,Professors Read and Davies, wil lcoach the Cup representatives .

McGoun Cup Debates are heldIn the late spring between . four

representatives ~of any CanadianUniversity.

McGyun Cup, emilemattc ofthe "Western University Debat-ing Leave" hits been held bythe University of Manitoba forthe last i our years.

At present, no exact time ormeeting place has beep fixed .

Henslowe has asked anyon einterested in debating to atten dthe meeting in the Law Buildin gat 3 p .m. today. Those who fai lto make the meeting should eon-tact Peter Henslowe, Facultyof Law, before Oct, 20 .

More

What's news at MA?

~wsuu, (Continue4 from Pip 1)who is attending a NationalI °Gcratlon . of Canadian Univer-sit ;r Students convention in To-rota, and will not be at today' sti,rctir.l, said in a letter to Coun-rii :

"It is my personal feeling thatStudent Council cannot andshould not submit to threats ofresignation made by the editoria lboat'd of The Ubyssey . "Sypnowich charged the cen-sure was "unjust ", contendingthat council does not have theright to "dictate how news and

',editorial opinions should be pre-sented .

"Disciplinary action againstThe Ubyssey should only betaken when the paper violatesthe trust. of the students, andfails in its duties as a campu snewspaper," he said .

In refusing to limit council' scensure on these grounds, AM Streasurer Ron Bray stated coun-cil had the right to criticize an y"subsidiary organization" of th eAMS .

"Council has as much righ tto criticize The Ubyssey as thegaper has to criticize councilmembers," he said .

Sypnowich countered withthe charge that therefore dis-ciplinary action by council coul donly be considered as an "ex-pression of opinion," not as a"punitive measure . "

He asked council to state whe-ther The Ubyssey was censuredfor neglecting its duties .

' Council refused to base thecensure on any grounds otherthan "poor taste ."! ALICIOUS SLANDER

"Under the guise of a newsstory, The Ubyssey maliciousl yslandered the fraternities," sai dRon Longstaffe, member-at-large .

Sypnowich pointed out at n otime did The Ubyssey claim th efraternity expose was a "new sstory . "

SORORITIES(Continued from Page 1 )

not receive them, but anyon einterested could have receivedthem through the means listedabove," the statement claimed .

Panhellenic president NancyUnderhill stated previous t oUbyssey investigation that "al lgirls in second, third and fourthyears are sent a booklet contain-ing the information .

The statement, which wa ssigned by Panhell president ,Mrs . E . A . Robertson, alumnae ad -visor, and Carol Abrahamson ,publicity chairman, gave "a

small budget for rushing " as anexplanation for not mailing th ebooklet to everyone .

Panhell ' s statement said theysend booklets "only to people

who they feel are likely to rush . "It went on to explain tha t

'`after that anyone can get a bookby merely asking for it . "

"If they do not get this book -let by one of the Iwo abovemeans before registration week ,they are able to obtain it fro mthe Panhellenic booth in the ar-mouries, " the statement contend-ed,

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The oxygen, thus obtained from the air, i sconducted through a pipe-line to the smelte rwhere it is used in Inco's new oxygen proces sof flash smelting the copper concentrates . Thi sprocess eliminates the use of coal and make spossible the economical production of a valuableby-product—sulphur dioxide—which eventuall yis used in making paper .

This oxygen plant, the firseof its size and kind i nCanada, produces more than twice as much oxygenper year as all other plants in this country . It is oneexample of the way Inco introduces new economie sand finds uses for by-products formerly without value .

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Page 4: THZ UI YSSZY · THZ UI YSSZY VANCOUVER, B,C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1954 5 CENTS No. 11 MAC vs USC; Pub To Fight Censure Big . Battle Looms OverDime Two Issues Facing Special AMS

Page l

THE UB'YSSEY

Thursday, October 14, 1954

Rugger Chiefs LoseFirst To BurnabyPoor Kicking Beat Us 5AD SCEN E

But Albert Smiles On SoccerKaput

REFEREES NEEDED

FOR INTRAMURALS .

Dig out the whistles and rulebook, men, the intramura lleague Is looking for referees for vplleyball, 'soccer an dbasketball .

1 'All those who wanted to learn to handle men and tak e

part in wars, but who were turned down by the COTC,are asked to see Gordy,> Mundle, 3 PE, as soon as possible .

Others may see !him too . You don't even have tobring your' own whistle, though in its impoverished stat ethe athletic department would, certainly appreciate it .

SLIGHT EDG ESouth Burnaby held a slight

territorial edge over the stud-ents in the game, and onstrength of the day's play mer-ited their win . Nonetheless hadit not been for the exception-ally fns kicking of the Burn-aby backs, Varsity might wel lhave upset the veterans. In theboot-'em department UBC rana ' weak second.

Coach Albert Laithewaite isnot discouraged ; he is just as"proud" of his "boys" as is anyAmerican football coach of his"men". By McKechnle Cu ptime, and the California mat-ches, the Thunderbirds will no tlet admirers down . Regardlessof who wins or loses ; the oppo-sition will know that it ha sbeen in a gamy—and the spec-tators that they have seen one .DUNBAR REFS

The Burnaby-Varsity gamewas refereed by Bill Dunbar, a

forced our confident Birds toreturn from Eastern Washing-ton without their thunder .FAVORED

Coach Coryell's crew wa swell favored by the odds an dright to the first quarter hor nit appeared that victory wasat long last theirs .

In just seven plays afterJerry Stewart first crouche dbehind his centerman and be-gan 'to sonorously call signals ,he was handing oft to Ji mBoulding who breached th eline for UBC's first score .WRONG END

But from then on the Birds

Laithewaite • coached ex-Bird .In a rhubarb Dunbar ejectedHarry Winter (who drop-kick-ed for three big Burnabypoints) for arguing too enthusiastically .

Next game is against thehigh-flying North Shore squa dat Confederation Park on Sat-urday, October 16th .

Week's BestTo Win FreeSteak Meal

A new reward has been addedto the small list available toUBC football players .

The reward, provided, byDean's eatery, something or oth-er west 10th (see ad elsewhere) .is offering a tree steak dinnerserved up to the Player of theWeek. The battered hero is chos-en by 'his teammates followingthe game and picks up his fre efeed sometime the followingweek .

Winners to date have beenbackfield battering ram and Pen .ticton peach tree Jim Boulding ,who produced no end of lumpson PLC defenders, and centreRon Stewart, who sparked th eline against Eastern Washington .

Incidentally, the steak an-nouncement in no way coincideswith the announced. poverty offootball players, as Dean's offe rwas made sometime ago .

UBC soccer front was glumtoday after a saddening weekendwhich saw the Varsity bow 1-0to Collingwood and the Chiefsdropped an 8-0 decision toMain Athletics .

CHANCES GALORE 'Varsity had dozens of chance s

to tie the score which had comein the first few minutes ofplay. The pew forward line car'led the ball deep into the Col -lies zone time and again but theyfailed to away with their shots .Chick Stew, UBC soccer mana-ger, explained that the tea mthat shoots is the team that win sand UBC were not shooting.

The absence of defensema nDick Matthews and forward Sta nGlasgow hurt the team. Glasgow ,the UBC field general, whomakes the forward line an ddefensive wall work as a uni twas sorely hissed.

With more practise the rookieline should gain enough exper-ience to function well with th eveteran defense; then the Birdswill win .

GrassHockey

Splits Bil l

UBC grass hockey opened itsschedule over good-things-to-ea tweekend and like many othe rsports, success was art n' art .

Varsity, despite supreme' con-trol over the play, were em-barrased about firing on theopposition goalie and only nip-ped by Redbirds 2-1 .

The UBC team (nobody under-stands the name distinction) o nthe other hand was embarrasse dabout every thing and woun dup on the sad end of a 7-1 scorewith the Cardinals .

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Varsity's Miller Cup rugger team dropped a breath-taking9-6 decision to rugged South Burnaby, Saturday, in the latter'shome park.

This is not the first ruggergame that UBC has lost, no ris it likely to he the last; yetthere is little reason for gloomin the defeat . South Burnabyis an experienced hard-diggingsquad, which thrives on roughgoing—df which there wasplenty Saturday .

UBC (championing the los trouse of "Youth"), fought bac kfrom a 6.0 deficit to stay in thegame all the way, and make i tas tight as possible. Team cap-tain Doug MacMillan and RayPearlstrom scored unconvertedtries for Varsity, and lead spir-ited rallies .

Fickle FateFlaunts Birds

put the squad behind the eightball .

Why is our team, always lefton the one-yard line in theseclose games? Is it because it ise pattern of habit, conditione dover the years ?

Are the Americans more en-thusiastic about the game? Oris it just because of the badbreaks?HOPEFUL

Let us hope it is the last andthat Dame Fortune will hel pUBC break the barrier this Sat-urday when they meet twice -clobbered Western Washington .

The Thunderbirds wouldn' twere on the wrong end of it all . dare lose on their TV debut .

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