U1•YsszY - library.ubc.ca filebe the format of next Tuesday's Jazz Soc meeting. A piano-bass duo...

4
VOLUME XXXV U1•Yssz Y VANCOUVER, B .C ., FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, 1953 PRICE 5c ; No . 3 3 F P Pep Meet Choose s Hindmarch As King . Football Captain Reign s Over Cuban Mardi Gra s —Ubyssey Photo by Hux Lovel y TORRID DANCING of Diana Cox will lead two shapely chorus lines on to the dance floo r of the Commodore next Thursday and Friday for the Mardi Gras in Cuba . Highlight o f the dance will be the election of a Queen of the Mardi Gras from among the / nine candi- dates . Tickets for the Mardi Gras, the most popular dance at UBC, are now on sale i n the AMS office, at the Caf and at the Commodore . "Chiang's troops should be used in Korea in order to hel p eliminate international banditry," declared Tom Franck i n yesterday's Forum debate . r a_ __sss r Speaking at yesterday ' s prelim- inary trials for the McGoun t r u e debates, Franck malutaiped tha t It would be Jot advantage to use al l available troops in the Noree n police action . GOOD PRESBYTERIA N Franck maintained that the gne .s thin was not whether Chiang wa s a good Presbyterian or not, bu t rather that the policy was a mat - ter of proving that armed aggrea- slo p does nat pay . John Coates, the first speake r for the negative, argued that t o present the issue ;as a moral ques- tion was "utter rubbish," Matte r at stake was not the problem o f defending the territorial Integrit y of member states . CALCULATED RIS K Ted liedwen, the final speake r for the affirmative dociared tha t the question of sending Nationalis t troops to Korea was u mutter o f ralcttlated risk . cal area of eligibility was expande d to include all printers and puhlist - ers operating In the eleven Wes t ern States, \Vestern Texas, Alherl ;f , British Columbia and flawaii . FIRST TIME ON CAMPU S That means that & t.he show hit s reached Vancouver and our camp - us for the first time, it will be buc k annually from now ou anti is wel l worth examining closely . There are, besides hooks, th e layouts for these books, and ou t explanstinu of their contents an d pictures . Ally person who is in . tere : .ted In little 1010111 1 and in the netuufucturn of bno!;s Piano, Bas s Jazz Featur e "Jazz Concert In Miniature" wil l be the format of next Tuesday' s Jazz Soc meeting . A piano-bass du o will be presented In HM 1 at 12 :3 0 on Tuesday, J' ;at . 13 . Pianist Verne McLachlln an d bassist (Jerry huller are the two artists at this offering of the Jaz z Soc . Their idiom of jazz is th e swing era of the late 30's and thei r musicis very patatalile to the ear . Non-members will be charged 1 0 cents admittance to this perform au•e , This Is Just one of the many W . tore events that the Jazz Soc i s planning t'or the coming season . A Dixieland concert will be held i n the Auditorium in early Februar y and a concert of modern jazz wil l be given in !Meth, Nominations for next year' s AMS president will open Jan . 21 and close Jan . 28. Positions open are for the of . faces of the president of th e AMS, chairman and secretary o f the Undergraduate Society Corn mittee . Elections will be held on Wed- nesday, Feb . 4 . AMS cards com plete with picture must be pre- sented at the time•of voting , Nominations must be turne d in to the AMS secretary . WINNERS TO OBTAI N SCHOLARSHIP CARD S ' Winners of scholarships an d bursaries should call at the Reg . Istrar's office for their scholar ship cards . These should be signed b y their Instructors for the secon d term and returned to the ac - counting office so that cheque s may be issued ' This doss not apply to holder s of special and dorhlnlon•provin tial youth training bursaries , Typing Included I n University Courses Dance tickets for next week' s Mardi Gras are now on sale a t the . AMS office . During noo n hours they are also on sale at the entrance to the cafeteria . DR F . A . Kaempffer, of the De- partment of Physics will speak o n "The Idea of General Relativity " at a meeting of the Royal Astro- nomical Society of Canada to h e held in Room 202, Physics Buil d Ing Jun . 13 at p .m . The lecture will not be mathe matica . All interested are invited to at . tend the meeting of the Society, MP Sinclair , UBC Grad , Speaks Toda y Minister of Fisheries, Jimmy Sin- clair, 'will speak in Physics 200 to . day at noon . Slpclair is the mos t recent UBC grad to make good l a federal poHttcs and intends to giv e ft summary of his policies on hi s recently acquired ~osltlon,° Sinclair was a former UBC foot - ball' star and Rhodes scholar o f 1927 . He also held down the post tiop of editor of the Ubyssey for a short time . The Liberal Club executive state s that those who were disappointe d with the . nebulous talks of Dre w and Coldwell should not miss hear . lng Sinclair, Filmsoc Ree l To Aid Poli o "Soldiers Three" will be Film sac's feature presentation at 12 :3 0 Thursday, January 15th in aid o f the B.C . Polio Fund . This special two-hour noon sho w will be held in addition to the regu lar Tuesday presentation of "Prid e and Prejudice ." The film, by Bud - yard Klpling, star's Walter Pidgeon , Stewart Granger and David Nive n in a tale of the British Troops o n duty in Cototdal India , Admission price is only 26e . Students arb urged to attend t o support a great cause and to en joy two hours excellent entertain- ment . The entire proceeds go t o the B .C . Polio Fund . Today Last Chanc e For Job Intervie w Today is the last day that Civi l Service will be interviewing stu- dents for permanent and summe r employment . Three technical representative s of the Civil Service Commissio n will hold group discussions in th e Agriculture, Commerce, Engineer- ing, and Arts and Science facultie s on employment opportunities I n those fields . Those wishing to hold persona l Interviews with one of the offici- ale should make appointments im mediately through Mrs . Ure at th e Employment Placement Bureau o n the campus . DANCE CLUB square dancin g will commence in tVomen's Gy m on Monday, Jan . 12, noon , N , 1 PARLIAMENTARY FORUM pu b Ile speaking classes will resum e Monday, Jan . 12 et 12 :30 in Art s 201 . SPECTRUM CLUB will hold a "JE WISH FRATERNITIE S should be banned from the camp - us" will be the tonic of the debat e to be presented by the Ilillel homn- dation Monday et I,' :3ti . Speakin g for the affirmative will he .\l Gel d smith end the negative Dave ~A n Held . The Iflllel Ilonse is locate d across from the bend het dierml y behind Brock Ilall . Eleventh Book Exhibitio n In Library On Januar y Eleventh Western Books Exhibition is being held i n library of the university from the seventh of January t o Taraks innurl should most certainly atten d times . The first. is the gcogr, rph i• I exhibition , 16th . This y'eal' ' a 810)14 7 eared b y t'Inlf of Lo . au in t'nrmrfl : ;roue u1 ' booksellers, Ilhrariens an d Interested in printing . ~n~nese NaTIona-iISf A J, 7 01 0 , , , Into Korea -Franck Program of American folk Hon; s the will he presented by Elizabet h Reknit, Vancouver soprano, in th e Auditorium Wednesday noon . Folk Songs Feature to control ions . He then outline d the uses of Heavy Water obtaine d the the At W ed . Recital from Chalk River . stn . Union Stop s Culturi z~tio n Of Students . Union regulations preven t presentation of V a n c o u v e r featured th e Symphony in the Armouries Kappa Alpha today as was planned by th e AMS , AUS ' s latest attempt to brin g culture to the 6000 students whic h rosin the UBC campus has failed . Certain musicians' autos regula - tl p ns controlling the iotking hours 8olvelg - 1servdld and Alpha Gam - of the members of the orchestra ma Delta brought a tropic Islan d prevent the union , 'limbers from to the snowy campus of UBC whil e working between 12 noon and l it mauve, silver and green covere d p m, convertible carried Alpha Phl' s e POSTPONE LUNCH Alice Pitcairn, Delta Phi Epsilo n With the cooperation of the presented their choice for queen , Vancouver Symphony Society, the Flo Rosenbaum, in h car gaily deco . AMS was able to get , the union rated with balloons and streamers to relax the regulations . The union FLOWERED CONVERTIBL E agreed to let the orchestra per• A silver crescent of Gamma Ph i form for UPC student, It all the Beta featured the float of Marily n members were willing . to postpone White, while a red and black flow - their lunch for a kw hours . ered convertible escorted Delt a Since the orchestra %as not met choice Joan Welch . Sandra Cockas a whole for over three weeks it burn of Alpha Omicron Pi was ab- was impossible to contact all the sent because of illness . members in time for today's pro- Queen candidates will again b a posed performance, on parade before first-nighter s CUT THROAT Thursday and on Friday . Everyon e It is felt by the members of the attending the dance gets one bal . AUS responsible for the organize- lot . Lion of the orchestra's performance TICKET SALE BRIS K that the union is "cutting its own Dance tickets are going fast , throat" by allowing such rogul• ticket chair man Bob Rush repor!a , aloes to remain in effect, ! Those planning to go should mak e Today was tine only open date I up their parties now and mak e that the orchestra had left In its reservations directly at the Cunt schedule, modem float of Iris Gold o f Theta . trees als o More Nuclear Physic s Understanding Neede d to go into Physics next year would hi his closing remarks the Ph y get some direction and indication sits professor hoped that "this wil l of the training given by the Physics give you a reasonable idea of wha t Department, Dr . Warren stressed we have done and the type o f techniques we are developing . " 'Tween Classe s "Fundamental problem of Physics today is to achieve a n understanding of nuclear physics, " said Dr . Warren of th e Physics Department Thursday . The physicist spoke at a noo n hour meeting in Physics 201 'sponsored by the Physics Club . Hoping that students intending a Club was originally forme d the purpose of sociability 'an d chi drinking . The conscience s he membt'rs began to bother them ' developing other individual pro . ' was open only to colntnerce ate by plc Neil Fleishman . and they decided to do something l grams, including French-Canadian j dents . n Bin le mare c p ust active . Result, j caul .Ameria .ur Indian . I Anyone interested in enrollin g utter fauns downfalls and mach : 'Pickets for the event to be herd for the course should contact Prof . MUSICAL SOCIETY will hol d hard vwort, is todn)-'s \V r estore in rho auditorium Wednesday will (lonrlay at Ili ; 1 . A fee of f5 willI Its annual Ticket Banquet an d Dunk Exhibition . , he avuilahlc at loc . he chance . (lance tonight at 6 p .ut , POUNCE AND COFFIN CLUB sponsored 1)y the AL'S, :Ilia'- ;j Beginning this term, i'B C \Vestruu L' '' ids Exitihit i4 Hpoa , Ihanit, 11Iw gave a folk song tour ' dents c r ate all faculties will h e this Itmea ,fad coffin, from the New Englund states to able to include typing in thei r Atwell S . The club is ('ulifornia, will sing the songs of course of studies . printers, vaimie locales in costume . C . C . Gourley, Department o f others site sings spi r ituals of the Commerce, has announced classe s , °'shakers", an old-time sect ., meets jilt typing are now being offered t o of the sea, mountain ballads and all students on the campus Mon - Creole songs . clay, Wednesday and Friday ere . SOARED meetin g eo Ilet repetnire includes hundredsI'tinge In Eng . 21111 will tceture talk s fl of folk songs from which she is Previously, the typing course tying the position of social ('radii , today at 12 :3 0 clari Mardi Gras in Cuba has one half of the royal couple tha t will reign over the ball next Thursday and Friday , Bob Hindmarch, captain of the . Thunderbird football team, wa s elected Mardi Gras King at th e pep meet held in the Armourle e yesterday . Hindmarch edged ou t eleven other candidates in a clos e contest. CHOICES PAR/DE D Whistles, cheers and applaus e greeted the queen candidates a s sororities paraded their choice s before the 'students who crowde d the Armouries . Floats carried ou t the tropic theme of the Mard i Gras . Ann Oameron of Kappa Kapp a Gamma led the parade In a tropi c cabana, followed by Gall Dodds o f Alpha Delta PI escorted by a port able palm tree. Pal m UN Club Featur e Anderson ; Topi c Food For Million s UN Club meeting today In Art a 100 will feature an address b y W . J . Anderson, head of the De . partment of Agricultural E .conom• the Importance attached to nuclea r Les . physics . He will speak on the topic "Food "More than 70 percent of al l for the Millions," dealing largely articles in physics magazines ass t with the work being carried on by textbooks are about nuclear phy• Kaempffer To Discuss Relativity the Food and Agriculture Organ• slue" he said , izatlon of the United Nations, VARIOUS APPARATU S Mr. Anderson is well acquainted Dr . Warren then went on to out . At Astronomical Society Meetin g with his subject having recently ; line various apparatus used by th e attended worlu conferences of ' .)g•j Physics Department of UBC , ricultural economists In Route and fie gave an extensive explana in the United States . than of the "Van de Graff," source s . of neutrons and the main efforts meeting In the ('resident' s !Reception Room, Itroc k ' Tuesday at 3 :30 . SPECIAL EVENTS COMMIT . $ N . MITTEE of the AUS will meet to . j PREMEDS present the Pilaf "Se t day at 12 :30 in the (ouncll Itoom ling up an Operating .Room" tori,a r of Brock Mall . Anyone interested' at Ilnmll ht physics 202 . please attend . general Hall, nri

Transcript of U1•YsszY - library.ubc.ca filebe the format of next Tuesday's Jazz Soc meeting. A piano-bass duo...

VOLUME XXXV

U1•YsszYVANCOUVER, B .C., FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, 1953 PRICE 5c; No. 33

F

P

Pep Meet Chooses

Hindmarch As King.

Football Captain Reigns

Over Cuban Mardi Gras

—Ubyssey Photo by Hux Lovel y

TORRID DANCING of Diana Cox will lead two shapely chorus lines on to the dance floo r

of the Commodore next Thursday and Friday for the Mardi Gras in Cuba. Highlight o f

the dance will be the election of a Queen of the Mardi Gras from among the / nine candi-

dates . Tickets for the Mardi Gras, the most popular dance at UBC, are now on sale i n

the AMS office, at the Caf and at the Commodore .

"Chiang's troops should be used in Korea in order to hel p

eliminate international banditry," declared Tom Franck i nyesterday's Forum debate .

r

a_

__sss

r

Speaking at yesterday ' s prelim-inary trials for the McGoun t r uedebates, Franck malutaiped tha t

It would be Jot advantage to use al lavailable troops in the Noree npolice action .

GOOD PRESBYTERIANFranck maintained that the gne .s •

thin was not whether Chiang wa sa good Presbyterian or not, bu trather that the policy was a mat -ter of proving that armed aggrea-

slo p does nat pay .John Coates, the first speake r

for the negative, argued that t opresent the issue ;as a moral ques-tion was "utter rubbish," Matte rat stake was not the problem ofdefending the territorial Integrit yof member states .

CALCULATED RIS KTed liedwen, the final speake r

for the affirmative dociared tha tthe question of sending Nationalis ttroops to Korea was u mutter o fralcttlated risk .

cal area of eligibility was expande dto include all printers and puhlist -

ers operating In the eleven Wes t

ern States, \Vestern Texas, Alherl ;f ,British Columbia and flawaii .

FIRST TIME ON CAMPU SThat means that & t.he show hit s

reached Vancouver and our camp -

us for the first time, it will be buc k

annually from now ou anti is wel l

worth examining closely .

There are, besides hooks, th e

layouts for these books, and ou texplanstinu of their contents an dpictures . Ally person who is in .tere : .ted

In little 1010111 1

and in the netuufucturn of bno!;s

Piano, BassJazz Feature

"Jazz Concert In Miniature" wil lbe the format of next Tuesday' sJazz Soc meeting . A piano-bass duowill be presented In HM 1 at 12 :30

on Tuesday, J';at . 13 .

Pianist Verne McLachlln an dbassist (Jerry huller are the twoartists at this offering of the Jazz

Soc . Their idiom of jazz is th e

swing era of the late 30's and thei rmusicis very patatalile to the ear .

Non-members will be charged 10

cents admittance to this perform •au•e ,

This Is Just one of the many W .tore events that the Jazz Soc i s

planning t'or the coming season . ADixieland concert will be held i nthe Auditorium in early Februar yand a concert of modern jazz wil lbe given in !Meth,

Nominations for next year' sAMS president will open Jan .

21 and close Jan . 28.

Positions open are for the of .faces of the president of th eAMS, chairman and secretary o f

the Undergraduate Society Corn •

mittee .

Elections will be held on Wed-nesday, Feb. 4. AMS cards com •

plete with picture must be pre-sented at the time•of voting ,

Nominations must be turne din to the AMS secretary .

WINNERS TO OBTAIN

SCHOLARSHIP CARDS

' Winners of scholarships an dbursaries should call at the Reg.Istrar's office for their scholar•

ship cards .These should be signed b y

their Instructors for the secon dterm and returned to the ac-counting office so that cheque smay be issued

'This doss not apply to holder s

of special and dorhlnlon•provin •tial youth training bursaries ,

Typing Included I n

University Courses

Dance tickets for next week' s

Mardi Gras are now on sale at

the . AMS office . During noo nhours they are also on sale atthe entrance to the cafeteria.

DR F. A. Kaempffer, of the De-partment of Physics will speak on"The Idea of General Relativity"

at a meeting of the Royal Astro-nomical Society of Canada to h eheld in Room 202, Physics Buil dIng Jun. 13 at

p .m .

The lecture will not be mathe •matica .

All interested are invited to at .tend the meeting of the Society,

MP Sinclair ,

UBC Grad,

Speaks Today

Minister of Fisheries, Jimmy Sin-clair, 'will speak in Physics 200 to .

day at noon. Slpclair is the mos t

recent UBC grad to make good l afederal poHttcs and intends to giv e

ft summary of his policies on hi s

recently acquired ~osltlon,°

Sinclair was a former UBC foot-

ball' star and Rhodes scholar o f

1927 . He also held down the post •tiop of editor of the Ubyssey for a

short time .The Liberal Club executive state s

that those who were disappointe d

with the . nebulous talks of Drew

and Coldwell should not miss hear.

lng Sinclair,

Filmsoc Reel

To Aid Polio

"Soldiers Three" will be Film •

sac's feature presentation at 12 :3 0

Thursday, January 15th in aid o f

the B.C. Polio Fund .

This special two-hour noon sho w

will be held in addition to the regu •lar Tuesday presentation of "Pride

and Prejudice ." The film, by Bud -

yard Klpling, star's Walter Pidgeon ,

Stewart Granger and David Nive nin a tale of the British Troops o n

duty in Cototdal India ,

Admission price is only 26e .

Students arb urged to attend t osupport a great cause and to en •

joy two hours excellent entertain-

ment. The entire proceeds go t o

the B .C. Polio Fund .

Today Last Chance

For Job Interview

Today is the last day that Civi lService will be interviewing stu-dents for permanent and summe r

employment .

Three technical representative s

of the Civil Service Commissio n

will hold group discussions in th eAgriculture, Commerce, Engineer-ing, and Arts and Science facultie s

on employment opportunities I n

those fields .

Those wishing to hold persona lInterviews with one of the offici-ale should make appointments im •mediately through Mrs . Ure at the

Employment Placement Bureau o n

the campus .

DANCE CLUB square dancin gwill commence in tVomen's Gy mon Monday, Jan. 12, noon ,

N

,1

PARLIAMENTARY FORUM pu bIle speaking classes will resumeMonday, Jan . 12 et 12 :30 in Arts

201 .

SPECTRUM CLUB will hold a

"JE WISH FRATERNITIE Sshould be banned from the camp -us" will be the tonic of the debat eto be presented by the Ilillel homn-dation Monday et I,' :3ti . Speakin g

for the affirmative will he .\l Gel dsmith end the negative Dave ~A nHeld . The Iflllel Ilonse is locate dacross from the bend het dierml ybehind Brock Ilall .

Eleventh Book Exhibitio nIn Library On January

Eleventh Western Books Exhibition is being held i nlibrary of the university from the seventh of January t o

Taraksinnurl should most certainly atten d

times. The first. is the gcogr, rph i• I exhibition ,

16th .This y'eal' ' a 810)14

7

eared b y

t'Inlf of Lo.

au

in t'nrmrfl :;roue

u1 '

booksellers, Ilhrariens an dInterested in printing .

~n~nese NaTIona-iISf AJ,7010,

,,

Into Korea -Franck

Program of American folk Hon; sthe

will he presented by Elizabet hReknit, Vancouver soprano, in th eAuditorium Wednesday noon .

Folk Songs Feature to control ions . He then outline d

the uses of Heavy Water obtained

thethe At Wed. Recital

from Chalk River .

stn .

Union Stops

Culturi z~tion

Of Students .

Union regulations prevent

presentation of V a n c o u v e r featured th eSymphony in the Armouries Kappa Alpha

today as was planned by the

AMS,AUS 's latest attempt to bring

culture to the 6000 students whichrosin the UBC campus has failed .

Certain musicians' autos regula -

tlpns controlling the iotking hours 8olvelg - 1servdld and Alpha Gam -of the members of the orchestra ma Delta brought a tropic Islan d

prevent the union , 'limbers from to the snowy campus of UBC whil e

working between 12 noon and l it mauve, silver and green covere d

p m,

convertible carried Alpha Phl' s

ePOSTPONE LUNCH

Alice Pitcairn, Delta Phi Epsilo n

With the cooperation of the presented their choice for queen ,

Vancouver Symphony Society, the Flo Rosenbaum, in h car gaily deco .

AMS was able to get, the union rated with balloons and streamers •

to relax the regulations . The union FLOWERED CONVERTIBL E

agreed to let the orchestra per• A silver crescent of Gamma Ph i

form for UPC student, It all the Beta featured the float of Marily n

members were willing . to postpone White, while a red and black flow -

their lunch for a kw hours .

ered convertible escorted Delt a

Since the orchestra %as not met choice Joan Welch . Sandra Cock•

as a whole for over three weeks it burn of Alpha Omicron Pi was ab-was impossible to contact all the sent because of illness.

members in time for today's pro- Queen candidates will again b a

posed performance,

on parade before first-nighter s

CUT THROAT

Thursday and on Friday . Everyon e

It is felt by the members of the attending the dance gets one bal .

AUS responsible for the organize- lot .Lion of the orchestra's performance TICKET SALE BRISK

that the union is "cutting its own

Dance tickets are going fast ,

throat" by allowing such rogul• ticket chair man Bob Rush repor!a ,

aloes to remain in effect,

! Those planning to go should mak e

Today was tine only open date I up their parties now and mak e

that the orchestra had left In its reservations directly at the Cunt •

schedule,

modem

float of Iris Gold of

Theta .

trees also

More Nuclear Physics

Understanding Needed

to go into Physics next year wouldhi his closing remarks the Phy

get some direction and indication sits professor hoped that "this wil l

of the training given by the Physics give you a reasonable idea of what

Department, Dr. Warren stressed we have done and the type o f

techniques we are developing. "

'Tween Classes

"Fundamental problem of Physics today is to achieve an

understanding of nuclear physics, " said Dr. Warren of the

Physics Department Thursday. The physicist spoke at a noon

hour meeting in Physics 201 'sponsored by the Physics Club .

Hoping that students intending a

Club was originally forme dthe purpose of sociability 'an dchi drinking . The conscienceshe membt'rs began to bother them ' developing other individual pro . ' was open only to colntnerce ate by plc Neil Fleishman .

and they decided to do something l grams, including French-Canadian j dents .

n Bin le mare c pust active . Result, j caul .Ameria .ur Indian .

I

Anyone interested in enrollin g

utter fauns downfalls and mach :

'Pickets for the event to be herd for the course should contact Prof .

MUSICAL SOCIETY will hol dhard

vwort,

is

todn)-'s

\V r estore in rho auditorium Wednesday will (lonrlay at Ili ; 1 . A fee of f5 willI Its annual Ticket

Banquet an dDunk

Exhibition .

, he avuilahlc at loc .

he chance .

(lance tonight at 6 p .ut ,

POUNCE AND COFFIN CLUBsponsored 1)y the AL'S, :Ilia'-;j Beginning this term, i'B C

\Vestruu L' '' ids Exitihit i4 Hpoa , Ihanit, 11Iw gave a folk song tour ' dents c r ate all faculties will h ethis Itmea

,fad coffin, from the New Englund states to able to include typing in thei r

Atwell S . The club is ('ulifornia, will sing the songs of course of studies .printers, vaimie locales in costume .

C . C . Gourley, Department o f

others

site sings spi r ituals of the Commerce, has announced classe s

, °'shakers", an old-time sect., meets jilt typing are now being offered t oof the sea, mountain ballads and all students on the campus Mon -

Creole songs .

clay, Wednesday and Friday ere .

SOARED meetin g

eo

Ilet repetnire includes hundredsI'tinge

In Eng . 21111 will tceture talk sfl of folk songs from which she is

Previously, the typing course tying the position of social ('radii ,

today at 12 :30

clari •

Mardi Gras in Cuba has one half of the royal couple tha t

will reign over the ball next Thursday and Friday ,

Bob Hindmarch, captain of the.

Thunderbird football team, wa selected Mardi Gras King at th e

pep meet held in the Armourle e

yesterday. Hindmarch edged out

eleven other candidates in a clos e

contest.CHOICES PAR/DED

Whistles, cheers and applaus e

greeted the queen candidates a ssororities paraded their choices

before the 'students who crowded

the Armouries . Floats carried ou t

the tropic theme of the Mard i

Gras .Ann Oameron of Kappa Kapp a

Gamma led the parade In a tropi c

cabana, followed by Gall Dodds o f

Alpha Delta PI escorted by a port •

able palm tree. Palm

UN Club Feature

Anderson; Topic

Food For Millions

UN Club meeting today In Art a100 will feature an address b yW . J. Anderson, head of the De .

partment of Agricultural E.conom• the Importance attached to nuclea rLes .

physics .

He will speak on the topic "Food

"More than 70 percent of al l

for the Millions," dealing largely articles in physics magazines asst

with the work being carried on by textbooks are about nuclear phy•

Kaempffer To Discuss Relativitythe Food and Agriculture Organ• slue" he said ,

izatlon of the United Nations,

VARIOUS APPARATU S

Mr. Anderson is well acquainted Dr . Warren then went on to out .

At Astronomical Society Meetingwith his subject having recently ; line various apparatus used by the

attended worlu conferences of ' .)g•j Physics Department of UBC ,

ricultural economists In Route and

fie gave an extensive explana •

in the United States .

than of the "Van de Graff," source s

.

— of neutrons and the main efforts

meeting In the ('resident' s!Reception Room, Itroc k' Tuesday at 3 :30 .

SPECIAL EVENTS COMMIT .

$

N.MITTEE of the AUS will meet to . j PREMEDS present the Pilaf "Setday at 12 :30 in the (ouncll Itoom ling up an Operating .Room" tori,a rof Brock Mall . Anyone interested' at Ilnmll ht physics 202 .please attend .

generalHall, nri

ta—Kr'r', the tlbyssey,dlr ;

7me etti tioh has got to the

.1

r ,p

w'her'e tt I . no Loafer par •e lei e " bash the eltngt'lon offae fan y ri 'tt , i'll's statetit as made by myse1C is as fol .lows :

Social Credit party Is'aligally against International

fin)1nce,feremet Oil's i think that meet

IaQ4 rinWO dill ftnaae mss ere ~tljwan4 Sur enemies have used` thi s'bet y to and'ua an anti•setuitle, "

1} ceey fin' 'J sttte thatIW t̀lip Is What I said nobodyhissed It ,because every one of uswere tai fig

'at once. It that is

:4427a`n aology Is owing to the

es'ey+ ,for my statement of yes

• aver, that is done now aidthe nation' r am li eakl'rig oncea' 4h . b' 4galpst the brand of"itfater" afta`ched tg me by ater t Ste a tor . .Apart from,al Ai 4 Credit principles andaside from them i m ust clear mycharacter .

i have many Jewish friends Intoy faculty and outside who, i fthis matter is carried any further,I'm sure would speak for m ycharacter ,

1 hope this will clear up an ymisunderstanding ,

—W . S. Thompson .Dear Sir :

I wish to thank fan Seymourfor pointing out—and pointin gup—a couple of items in the Dee .4 "Eyre" that I had not made quiteclear.

First, my disappointment at th elack of publication of the name sIn the "Vice ltleekbook" was th enetnral human reaction ; did yo uever read a "fascinating" story ,and then find the last two page smissing? One gets IllUcll the sam efrustrated feeling.

Next, I must concur that 1 hav elittle knowledge of the technica lintricacies of the law-+fortunate •ly . However, I still point ou tunit the "book" was presented i pevident() ; therefore some eredeuce'may be attached to it . Onemay assume that It would serv eas a basin for further investiga •dol, at leant .

Again, f was not so much advo -cating that the names In the bea khe publlolzed as showing up th eglaring ,contrast between the fac tthat the names of the women Im -plicated wore made public, whit ethe names of no men were s otreated . I grant that mere namesIn a book lire entail evidenc e4ext;ept,t) ale .f1CMPlu a,H!a'C'1

aEditor, the Ubyssey,

OIlEMiSTRY COACHING —Money-back guarantee of passing ,AL 1647, 4595 W. 6th, (36)MRt' NCit WEAK? COACHIN Gin grammar and conversation b yformer Ut3C lecturer . Past suc-cesses with students . Reasonabl erates, University area . PhoneTYPING : ESSAYS, THESIS ,Notes, expertly and prempti ,'typed . Moderate rates . 11'e useCampbells' book of rules, Blake yand L'ook's, and Eseay Specifie dthus by the Dept. of Applied S(! •ence, Serving studoIts since 191 ; .Mrs . A . O. Robinson, 4180 W 11t hAvenue . AL, 09151t .

(IIi )TYPING : ESSAYS, THEtI4 ,nll(IlnacrIpts, mtnoogruphi n ,q. ! Ielse Street, No, 7 Dalhousie Apts ., iUniversity Blvd . AL. (16558, (Iii IMANY THANKS To TilE S'I'I'• Ident who found my FIIlSe . Iansorry for the trouble I caused hin tand regret Belt he did not leav ehis name,

at) ,WANTED, RII)I:ItS t'RO11 'a'l'i t01l(1 t)uabnr or en route.,

l )Mon ., Wed ., Fri, Cell Phyllis . ('ll .

Editor, the Ubyssey ,Dear Sir :'1'Tlotupmon Is tlnlustifled In hisattack on the Uhyssey's reporte rwho quoted ills exact words: We*re against'', terngtloual financ eend most international financier sare Jews ." These are the word she spoke In the 14ub11e'atlon offic eon Rbnday noon, and I feelT1i ' 'ti peon le showing his inn-maturity by, accusing the re•prrrfter . of nttrtbirtinif to him, "an 'unnnhlgated perverslon' of th etruth, "

I ' am not amember of the Socia lCr t Ph►rty or the lSta of thef.)livssey mid therefore 1 am no tiii idi'eed the either side. Out Iwag there and Thompson did sa ythe wordb that implied racism :,14 ompeon should admit he saidtlelse ' wor̀da' and

.apologize to the

Obyssey aid to ' the reporter ,Ed 2llke, 3rd Arts,

of Stalinist ol'f1('Py anti llteratlu'e )but plea's() bear In mind that th epolice had tile "house of 111 fame "under observation for some tim ebefore acting ; they must haveobserved the "customers" abou tthe place, or they would' have ha dno evidence. Qould they not haveused their observations as a basisfor action against the persons,observed'?

, .Clnally,,iitn agrees that ther eis :a doable standard—and sug-gests that It is right that im-portant citizens should be allowe dto do what unimportant peopl eare punished for. There, • o fcourse, he is stating the practic eof our society, and he Is admittin gthat mach of our society is buil tLI hypocrisy—upon pretenceaid refusal to admit facts .

'pile in agreement upon manythings, here fan and I part com -pany. I may that such situation sare Inherent in our present typ eof society. I also say that, whil emuch' behavior is necessary t odnrry on the business of our ,so •tasty, it Is at the same tim e(u!tlt r undermining that mime

witaetr;ce

it glosses over problems ,out eliinthating them, and

serves to make people less abl eto 4eal ;effectively with all prob.lame . It encourages bad—in thatthey are weakening—habits o fthought.

Ian may be "amazed at th eunitte trick of socialists of bein gsite to twist any subiect aroundtill the argument boils down t ocapitalism versus socialism ." Ofcourse, this le going a bit far ; ,bu tI will say, that any subject con-nected with the social sciencesdoeet► 't' need any twisting to com eto that fit'nd'atnentgi conflict . it'sright there, all through our eadefy !

'''1ie only, thing left to clearup is for the moralists . To them .i want tai say only thin ; I amn'o't advocating prostitution ,neither am f condemning it—b yItself. I am saying that it i spart of a much larger problemwhich humanity must soon solvein its entirety, or suffer for th efailure . Neither human nor super •human leaders will solve it ; I tis the job of all of us.

—Bob Loosmore ,

Dear Sir :In the middle of the greates t

depression known to wester ncivilization . *Social Credit, th emonetary reform party, swept in -to power In Alberta . The :ragewas set for a reform party .

Wheat was rotting on th eground, people were cold an dhungry and living in sharks in aland of oil and forests, grain an dbeef . The people took "Bible Bill "Aberhart's soft money theories;with religious fervour . Ile blame dfinance for the gap between pro •dllction and distribution .

Tills gap could be filled he said ,without disturbing capitalism, th e

ACCOUNTIN GAGRICULTUR EARTS (CLERICAL )CHEMISTRYENGINEERIN GFORESTR Y

1

or

GEOGRAPH YGEOLOGYMATHEMATIC SMEDICIN EPHYSIC SSURVEYIN G

The Public Service Of (wiid.Offers Careers in

SUMMER EMPLOYMEN Tprovides an introductio n

APPLY BEFORE JANUARY 12, 195 3law llformaton visi t

PERS'ONNEI, 14 PLACEMENT BUREA UHut M7, U .B .C .

Civil Service Commission District Offic e6th Floor — 1110 West Georgia Street, Vancouver B .C .

EUROPE - Student TOUrs73 DAYS - $1230

June 6 — Sail one class S.S. Groote Beer, chartered byHolland American Line, from New York .EUROPE BY MOTOR! Holland, Brussels, the Rhine ,Bavarian Castles, Austrian Tyrol, Italian Dolomites ,Venice, Rome, the Hill Towns, Florence, Italian an dFrench Rivieras, French Alps, Switzerland, Paris . Scot •lend, English Lakes, Shakespeare Country, Devon, th eWest Country, London ,

Aug, 10 — Sail from Southampton one class ou S.S.Groote Beer .

Aug, 18 — Arrive New York.

72 DAYS — $1194 .June 11 —• Sail tourist class from Montreal S .S. Ascania .

Scotland, English Lakes, Chester, Shakespeare Country ,North and South Devon, London, Holland, Belgium, Ger .many (the Rhine and Black Forest), Switzerland, Italia nLakes, Venice, Rome, Hill Towns, Florence, Italian an dFrench Rivieras, Paris .

Aug, 13 — Sail from Le Havre S,S .Satnaria, tourist class .Aug. 21 — Arrive Quebec .

ask for detailed itinerarie sUNIVERSITY TRAVEL CLU B

57 Bloor St . West, Toronto, Kingsclale 698 4Management ; J . F . & G . H . Lucas

1

profit system, private ownerehl por enpital•labonr relatlonshlps I, ya simple monetary reform. Allthat needs to be done 1s borro wmoney on future production, "an •clal credit", and with It eithe rpay cash dividends to the peopl eor subsidized producers so the ycan buy what they have produce dcan sell cheaply enough for con -sumers to buy. Either or bothplans may be used. No classstruggle, no need for labour tin .Ions or price controls—tire print-ing press will solve all problems .

Mr. Aberhart overlooked a veryelementary rule that states it isimpossible to have "social" credi tunder private ownerships . Allcredit under capitalism is prtvat ecredit, It Is made up of nothingmore or less than surplus value saccumulated from the explolta-tion of labour . The only way i nwhich a capitalistic governmen tcan provide a measure of prosper -fly for those who live by the Ol eof their power is to Increase isle sof labour time,

in order to do this It meet bar -row' private surpluses at ma'r16e tterms and use them in crettitt gthe social assets that provid th esocial surplus . A governnidnt canbreak with the present financia lsetup only when it Is prepare dto first socialize the privatel yowned tools of production usedto create private surpluses.

Then it •will have its Ott esources of capital and may dra won them for the distribution o fsocial benefits . In no other %staywill the monetary reform schl$iiieswork. The people as a whole di dnot understand the econeatICe o fthe scheme ; all they grasped' ea sthe promise of 125 a Meath div adead' to everybody--a protntisd' a syet unfulfilled .

Mr. Aberhart's luck, or "divin eprovidence" was working over.time and did him two great fa vours to save the fate of his party.The federal authorltieA declare dall his banking legislation of 1937and 1938 ultra vires, as bankingwas a power of the federal parlla•meat alone by virtue of sectio n91 of the British North Americ aAct .

He denounced this "bankers'conspiracy" long and loud andproceeded to borrow money fro mhis Wall Street "enemies`', Thesecond piece of good fortun ewhich befell the Alberta goitern .meet was that prosperity loome don the horizon . Prosperity eac has Aberhart himself had neverdreamed even if his monetar yscheme had worked well ,

011 was discovered, the ranche swar(' prospering, with the out -break ()I' war wheat lull hei rprice,' went lip . Edmonton Itocams' the big American base i tstill is, a boom town. Actuall yAlberta ronld be it tax free para -dise It.' the oil were under subtl eownership. Imperial Oil, a Stan .

Continued on Page 4SEE LETTERS TO EDITO R

Page 2

THE tIBYSSET

Friday, January 9, 195 3

THEMEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS

iEITERS TO THE EDITOR

Authorized us second elites mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa .

Student Subscriptions $1,20 per year (included in AMS leas), Mall subscription s$2 .00 per year. Single copies five cents . Published throughout the University year bythe Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society, University of Brltlu hColumbia . Editorial opinions expressed heroin are those of the editorial staff of th eUbyssey, and not necessarily those of the'Alma Mater Society or of the University .

Offices In Brock Hall

For display advertisingPhone ALma 1624

Phone ALma 325 8

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Featur

"""' JOR 9CHLE ;INQE R. . .Feature Editor, Elsie Gorbat ; City Fidltor, Myra Green ;

News Editor, Ron Sapera ; Women's Editor, Flo McNeil ; Literary Editor, Galt E1kinp`ton ;OUP Editor, Patsy Byrne ; Circulation Manager, Marion Novak ; Editorial Assistant ,Vaughan Lyon ; Staff Photographer, Hux Lovely ,

Senior Editor this Issue Pete PlneoReporters and Deskmen : Tom Shorter, Marie Adam, Nonny Sypnowich, Ray Logic,Johann Stroyva, Harvey King, Anlee 'Blackman . Feature Reporter : Valerie Gareth) .

Letters to the Editor should be restricted to 160 words, The Ubyesey reserves theright to cut letters and cannot guarantee to publish all letters received .

Of Odds And HandicapsGambling is forbidden on this campus by

statute, ordinance, by-law and what not else.%it every time examinations roll around a

few of the deities who are entrusted withNtting up the Obstacles in our quest for adecree cannot resist the temptation of reducelag examination papers into "multiple choice "aind "true or false" questions, as pure a form

of gambling as Russian roulette .

Not that the odds are fair . But then onecannot expect "bookies " to be fair. However,bookies on racetracks would not stay inboldness very long if the jockey club stewardsmatched berates as ineptly as examinationhandicap makers .

The very department that could be ex-pected to put up a "race" defying all "sys-tems", usually comes through with favoritesevident beyond all odds . We refer, of course ,to the Psychology Department's quiz firbeginners which any beginner (in gambling)can beat by just choosing the most obvious

Students buying books at the UniversityBook Store expect that the texts they buywill be at least as cheap, if not cheaper, thanthey will be able to buy elsewhere .

Such is not the case at the University Boo kStore on this campus. For example, a re•gjaired text in an advanced philosophy course3s being sold at $7.50, while the same textmay be bought elsewhere for $4.75. TheBookstore stocks the American edition of thetext which has the increased cost of a sligh ttariff and the profit taken by a Canada()

Plugged NickleONCE UPON A TIME . . . there was a colon y

of Black Ants and a colony of lied Ants . The

Black Ants were Industrious and hard-working, an d

generally at peace with their fellow alts . Therewere a groat many of them, and they were th eundisputed leaders of the ant-world .

The red ants, on the other hand, were a miserabl eaccumulation of ant•t!ques, who had failed a t.practically everything and who were generall yregarded by everyone as cranks . They wasted al ltheir energy on hating other chase's or groupie or

ants, like %ionlHtlCmunnullat . Wnli1StreetiIntelIllants, t ants, who iiId not exist . They also espouse da religion of love with great fervour, hating des-perately anyone who did not share their love .Among other things ,they also championed a sys4 4tern or giving patch ant tweat .y pleCP,4 or pape rmarked "Iwlti9Al) ('itlrJlII -please (sat" each solidi ,

;laths ants considered this nuttier than ll ideal 'fruit 'aka ,

AMONG THE CONVIVIAL Black ants were abon lten little fellowH who wanted very slush to htwenoiIMt1C)RrrAINT, They had made several tries t oget the other black tints to overthrow the ruler sbut wlthou . success, Then, one day, an anteate rstumbled scrums the Black ants' hill, and ate a lot o fants and generally disrupted the conrl'ortnht oscheme of things in the, vicinity .

The tea discontented and ambitious Black anu swere quick to realize the potentialities of suc hMisfortune. hl a flash they had swarmed over t othe Rod arts, leaving everything behind but acan of black paint . itet'er.) you could say "I'ro •toeole of the Elders of Zion" they had talked th eRod ants Into accepting them as their loaders . Wi twill lead you to the Balmy Hill," they 'shouted ,and the Iced Ants clapped their hands in a roa rof applause . ('There weren't many or them, bu tthey haft eight hands each) . "Before long we wil lhave attracted all the other Black huts over here ,luI(I then err will he the leaders of the mosa power-ful and most prosperous act—hill the field . "THE TERRIBLE TEN, led by two ants know' Ias Silly and 1Varky knew that the other Meek Ant ehad repudiated their rulers and were shopplln ;around for something new . They also knew tha tthe vast majority ()I ' Meek lint ., wanted sotneth!ne,very much Witt the ty pe ()l' leticership they had bee nused to in the happy (lays 13 . .1 , I Irfnrr .Inteiatert ,so in a flash they had painted all the funny Intl :crackemt Red ants II deep 131ur1( Then they invitedthe regular mark ants t, ',MU . aver, warningexited :Illts to rnr goodness side ; keep their trop ;

It .

` alternative offered . If our psychologist s

started using some of their own medicine in

setting up these examinations, we do no t

doubt they could make it a "classic" .

However, we believe that the whole struc-ture of these "objective" examinations is In

need of revision . The only justification wecan find for these quizzes is the fact that ther eis probably a shortage of markers to cop ewith some of the larger classes .

Beyond the simplicity for marking pur-poses there also seems to be a tendency t oregard purely subjective questions as anencouragement to students relying purely o nwhat is commonly known as "the gift of thegab" . This danger, however, can be elimin-ated by giving examination papers more care-ful consideration . It is not as insurmountablea problem as the invalidity of examination sbased on the ability to sift words and associatethem with another set of given words .

distributor. The same book, however, may bebought direct from a British publishing com-pany at a saving of $2 .75?

The Book Store has,a virtual monopoly onthe campus. If they do not offer books t othe students at minimum prices it would bebetter to have private' bookstores competin gfor the text book business. If the Book Stor eis to operate as a service to the students, the nthey should not waste students ' money onexhorbitant book costs ,

by franc

The Majority of the Back ants, luaderloes thoug hthey were, were kill pretty wary of the Red An t11111, which they associated with the screwy Idea sof a creepy ant named Mad DUMAS, but th eTerrible Ten assured them that since they ha dtaken over, all that had changed, and that now yo ucouldn't toll the Red ants from the Black, excep tthey were even blacker, because their cont hadn' thad time to got dirty .

So the regular Black (alts agreed to come ove rroc a look•t ee ,

EARLY ONE MORNING they arrived at the Ice dIfllh Ited had been creemetl out, and VERY SLAC Ksebstituted, They banged their feelers on th edoor, and were promptly ushered into a large hal lfilled with the repaints and the Terrible Ten . "flo ware you?" said a visiting Black Ant . "Magnificent! "beamed the 'terrible Ten, "Victimized by Wal l .Street Zlouiste , " blu r ted the old•tlnler, Wacky gav ethem a dirty look, and the vlvitors looked shocked .

"Something he ate ;" mumbled Wacky, and trie dto shove the errant Repaint ant into It Closet ,

"You have lots of room, here," ghsorved a quick -witted visitor, trying to avoid unpleasantness .

"Yes, indeed, very modern," smiled Slily ,

"IT'S BECAUSE we keep out ,Commtunist Finan -ciers and Jews," snapped a Repainted red .

"And when we start Issuing our monthly dividen din hrond•crtltltlli we eau all situp working and enjo yit even more," suggested another, his Rod col tbeginning to flash through the hastily applied paint .

"1'essir . And alter we've wrested control of ou rnatural resources out of the greedy clutches of t heAmerican Imperialists and put its control into th ehauls of the industrial•Corporate Parliament, an d;veered the Antio•Saxon strain in our society an d. , . and . . ." By this time the ex•lted ants wer ejumping around . Heinen); and shouting "Illielnjai "Their breath came In short, heavy pants . (Ther ewere pants in these ante, '

THE VISITING BLACK Intl looked frigllte u p l, ltied dismayed as they hurriedly said good-by t otheir ee-compat'iot4, the Terrible Tell, and hurrie d;Iwey . "Rut . . . Ihlt . . ." sputtered Wacky an dSilly as they stood there watching their new Re dtint followers whooping and shouting alt shoo tthem, "Ihey don't run this lilt! ; we do. They electe dus . \\'a r se respectahle now, You're just seein gtII . lunatic fringe . . . "

Their lust words dwindled and were drowned ou thr ;i boisterous chorus of "011 the Printing Press ,N1ft : (1a, Prosperity is Bore to Stay ."

Book Store Monopoly

Friday, January 9, 1933

THt VBYSSEY

Page 3

By GALT ELKINGTON

picture of the ctbstrect school .BIG NAMES

An example or the big name srepresented in the show is Han sHoffman, . New York art teache rand former instructor or Don Jar-vis and Lionel Thomas, both ofthe university's Architectural lh(1)drlluent, ,

Stmlellts who tlpprmlch the 4hal y

hi a literal frame of plied aw lask themselves "what does thi smean''" twill work themselves int oan intellectual "tizzy ." The o h

server should relax and 'accept th epaintings as purely visual an depi tI ti tI experiences.TITLES USELES S

Evert the titles of the paiitinasare useless as clues to their mean-ing . The titles are it the picture smerely as a means of identifir' . tdon and 0aenot be used for at, ydeeper purpose

The show is well worth ever ystudent's time because it k • '

dents will lay presented by the IIi Ilet h'omuhllilla next wir ed : .

IIiI1 l is spunsurlug a week tu n

series of debates and lectures o epertinent end controversial issues ,

,

Hi r st (IviedO Jlonday tlellt l

the negative .ASSIMILATIO N

"'That. Ilillel should w'urk to .

wards the assititlativa et' Jetvisl i

Ptv~ple," will b0 discs sod by Di m .

ay Goldsmith, let year late andShush- Shuher, serand year t\rts ,Tne4day •

Other topics to h0 dtsrassa( llate)' Ill the werl( in( beltsftellets of Christian science,• "It s

401tv41 that Jewt4li t iIitlana ipsi( tire . are Ila loiiro . r applicabl ela nuxll rt d ;iv I1v in . ; ." ' I'he lof

tlil

Sl ;•uial,v ;

ind

th eIse

., .

tIiIi . l

all

\ leek' s

11 stlule°ul~ ue Ilse r,uapii

l e

lend

1111 . -, .

I ;iltr+ .

The

Iitll,'I

it

.11 ,1 1

11,

I~~

~ia,l

I'1111,

11 . 11 1Cent

Illy

11,'nil

111.11

t Iley (iii. b y . .\i t ie, t0 he e11jayennot analyzed .

'I'Ile art gallery is in the haste

meat ul the uul'ary I'ar those al twish to sU'lIl do t and have alook at What these eccentri cpeople wa call artists du wit htheir tithe . One does not hove . o

spent) hour, closely examinin gevery pl'at'e .MOVE ALON G

It you don't like it, move alonto the text \on may find Dueaowtg the utatty usually hanging

there that pleases you . If you d o

y(tt have not wasted yule' trite an d

"PRIDE AND '

PREJUDICE "

Starring

Word origins have always ha dIan• obscure fascination for ourfrenetic hinds. One in particula rstood foremost In our minds a swe celebrated the festive season .The word ►Mistletoe has romanti cconnotations for us all nowadays ,but this has not always been th ecase .

As we lured people under themisteltoe, we thought of the origi nof its name and laughed rudel yif Internally . It comes from tw oAnglo-Saxon words, MIST for dun gor droppings and TAN for twig .

It was thought that mistleto egrew from little heaps of bir ddroppings on the trees, and thu sone of the twentieth century' sIliost amorous and pleasant cue -toms 4s oohsummated under asort of aerial manure pile .

A look at word origins will ofte nprick the bubbles of modern Pre-tentiousness. The lady with herIlly white hands and sluggish lif ewas originally the Angle Saxo nhlaefdige or kneader of the brea dbefore it was baked. Her sole tune -tion was too cook for the lord, orhlaefweurd, the loaf-keeper, an dkeep hint happy in sundry otherways .

This attitude towards womensurvived for a long time. In anearly Persian manuscript the hus -band is told not to chastise hi swife with Iron rods, but to' us esilken cords which will hurt jus tas much but will not incapucltat eher for work . The council of Tren tof A,l) . 400 says-

PHOTO BOARD AETS The husband Is bound to chas-tise his wife, unless he be a cleric .

In which case he may chastiseher the harder .

When a muscle-bound f r iend dis -plays his immense strength to yon ,you might deflate him a little bytelling him that the word muscl eIs derived from the Latin diminu -tive musculus or mils, a mouse .

Presumably the Romans whenthey waved themselves around d oing Roman exercises thought of

i the bulges wriggling over them a -.mice running up and down . Per .Imps this wll he alarming to girl swith the traditional end customar yfear of mice, so we hasten to am -sure them that the Romans ha dvivid imaginations .

We feel that the English lams !ago is very stereotyped as it is use dtoday, with the same words wit hlitte or no variety used again an dagain. To enliven our vocabulary . 'we have been browsing in Web •ster's dictionary, a ' wonderfu lboon for the lover of the strange,and % unusual In language .

There appear a number ofstrange beasts, which we have put

Far East Expert

To Address U .N. .

1!' ell known Far Eastern travel -ler, Anthony Douglas, will db ;cuesproblems of the Far East at th eregular meeting of the Vancouve rBranch of the UN Associstion inCanada, to be held January 14 i nChristmas Seal Auditorium, 10t hand Willow at II p .m .

Douglus served in the Pacifi cWar as liaison officer between the .British and Dutch Medical Corpsand was a war prisoner of the Jap -anese for three and one-half years .

into a little verse, names con-nected by appropriate adjectives .as an intellectual exercise . Thetitle, suitable enough, means "lov eof empty talk or noise . "

IntOr I~ rulernily Council ,

American Abstract Ar tEeaturedAtUBC Gallery

By TOM SHORTERRene Beaux, curator of the university art gallery, state d

yesterday that the biggest art show of the year for Vancouve ris on now in the gallery of the university library . Americanabstract paintings by the leading "Avant-Garde " painters of theAmerican nations are on show . Dover's biggest and because i t

Originally organized for Paris l represents the only new develop -and shown in New York before go• meat n art anywhere in the world .Ing to France, the American Van Many of the Dictates, althoug hguard show contains 25 paintings apparently very casual, took manyby 25 different artists . This gives I hioiiths of painting and repaintin gthe observer and art lover a broad and the show is of a very Itigh

standard for this reason alone ,NOT ONE IOT A

Many persons do not visit ou tuniversity art gallery because theyare of the opinion that art is onl y101 those who understand it . Thi° ,lit' 'uln'4e, is <ibs(ltttely ridl'ulnvs .

Ninny percrnt 0f tln l pcapl e%%•h(, hate I1 allied to ell ,juy art du .lial

Iladrl ' - iilnl

aiie

iuti1

of

V' l ia r

you have relaxed .

Sti ii'i ii Iatioi'i

You may begin enjoying art new ,'The t ;gllery is featuring what i s

Of Thought

prubibly the bigge4t are showthe your ;lad it Icl4 rile prlvil0g, ,

eayt t that the show i4 flakin g

Is ' 1.1.1 Illel Aim

Canadian Stall) Only,

1 program tut stiautiate urigin,ll AS HUMA N

thinking •',utung

auiver•ity sta,,

The men who pointed these pie -

tune; were as human as the peoplewho will luck at . thew .

flip phserver keep, Iii:, one thought i nmind while he is looking at th eprinces he will he able to appre't •ate

the

artist's

view poin t

will be be "Itesulved that Jewish tltt shy en ,juy what he secs •

Fraternities

should

he

banned

Th i s is esper! illy ne at u l

trout the campus ." Speaking tar ;ih~lrael ,'haul and if 0110 I s

the affirmative will he At Cold- l)t j tI auw is the time ,

smith, editar u( the "'totem" whil elive :UII1o11, president of th e

will takeFILMSO C

TUESDA Y

Jan . 1 2

Jane Austen's

a11 d

ti tt o

Greer GARSO N

Lawrence OLIVE R

Especially for Eng . 200

StudentsAUDITORIU M25c

Photo courtesy American Federation of Ar t

PUZZLED? So was the painter . All he could find in the way of a name for his creation was

"Oil No. 1". The Ubyssey in the interest of expanding its circulation is sponsoring a

"Name The Picture Contest". The prize for the most imaginative name for this canva s

by Bradley Walker Tomlin is one free subscription to The Ubyssey for one year . Only

regular subscribers are eligible . The painting is on display in the basement gallery of th elibrary in conjunction with a show of American Avant-Garde painters .

NOON IN NOW

Photographic Department o f

the Publications. Board will meet

today In the Totem Office, North

Basement, Brock Hall ,

Any person Interested In be -

coming a member of the staff wil l

be welcomed .

(0 .

\\\\

r

gATaIV'5

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Page 4

The Freshinall RuhillgThe N. A. D. Viewpoint

The following recommendations regarding freshmenand eligibility were passed by the Men's Athletic Counci llast night and they will be given to the Student's Counci lin hope that the Senate will accept them .—Ed.

1. DEFINITION OF A FRESHMAN FOR THE PURPOSEOF ATHLETICS:

Any student attending UBC or Qne of the Affiliated Colleges for the first time, who has not full senior matri c

standing. A student who has gone to summer school ,andpassed 6 units towards his senior matric will be considere da freshman. Any student who has attended summer schooland/or a winter session and accumulated 12 units toward shis senior matric will NOT be considered a freshman . ..

2. DEFINITION OF A THUNDERBIRD TEAM :The first team of any sport. The Varsity team .

3. ELIGIBILITY :

A. Effective Immediately . Transfers from universities orcolleges not .affiliated with UBC will be ineligible tocompete on the first teams until they have attended . onewinter session at UBC of one summer session at UB Cand taken 6 units during that session.

B. Effective immediately. Transferees must have passed6 units at summer sohool to be eligible .

No student shall be eligible to play for the first tea munless in the last winter session previously attended, h ewas granted ,standing in whole or in part for most of tha tsession, and after writing any necessary supplementals ,he completed all but at most three units of what is con-sidered a full year's work in the course taken .

C. Students shall only be alldwed 4 years of eligibility toplay on a first team in Conference play .

4. At the dates indicated, the sport mentioned must have afreshman or JV team, and from that date on no freshma nwill be eligibile for the Thunderbird team in the sport . Theonly exceptiops allowed will be students over 22 years o fage, who can obtain special permission from the Athleti cDirector and Dean Gage .

To apply in1953-54 Basketball .1954-55 Rugby, Soccer, Crew, Football.1955-56 Golf, Tennis, Grass-hockey, Cricket ,

Track, Swimming, Ice-hockey, Skiing ,Badminton, Fencing, Gymnastics, Boxing ,Wrestling and Weightlifting .

An extension of time shall be granted to a sport b yMAC, which can show reasonable cause for such extension .

All ineligible players will be allowed to play on th efreshman or JV teams, and coaches should encourage the mto do so .

5. OTHER SPECIAL CASES :in cases where a student stops school before completin g

his year, he will have to obtain permission from the Regis-trar, Dean Gage, and the Athletic Director before being rule deligible for a first team . In the case of a freshman, and h areturns, he will once again 'be considered a freshman .

An athletic counselling service should be set up. Studentsendeavouring to compete in more than one sport during th eschool year shall have a 60 per cent average and be cleared bythe Athletic Director .

THE VBYSSE Y

McLeod opened with a field goa lthen Bobby Bone took ' over. Hethrew in four straight one•handersand the Birds had a 49.40 lead. Atthree-quarter time Pomfret an dhis men stretched the laud to 51 . 4rbefore Seattle could get organized .

The Falcons crept to within sixpoints and the proceedings bega nto get rough. Seattle began tcpress downfloor forcing UBC toresort to floor-length passes . Thoclose checking and sloppy pla ytook Its toll as two Falcons weresent to the showers and anothe rassessed a technical for delibenateroughness.

ERNIE DOES ITWith a minute remaining Bird s

LETTERS TO THE EDITORContinued from Page 2

They are antiaRemltic and havea connection with British Israel ,whose pamphlets are on sale a tSocial Credit conventions . Theyuse the Bible as a political we,i •pea, a fatal mistake among th eCatholic voters to the extent tha tCatholic Bishops denounced So-cial Credit and refused the use o fchurch halls for meetings .

Social Creditors have failedmiserably in the federal field an dwill continue to he u failure aslong as their creed Includes clas sconsciousness, racial and relig-ious bigotry .

It would be unwise however ,to assume' that Social Credit wil lnot grow in the West . The move-ment at the bottom Is a wester nagrarian revolt against the finan-cial and commercial policies ofthe east (Montreal and Toronto) ."It is the fundamental feeling o fdissatisfaction with national fis-cal policies which have placed 1

burdens upon agriculture for th ebenefit of secondary industry .and it is also the deep agraria nhatred of high Interest rates ,mortgages and debt," say sauthority .

These underlying cause snot removed by dLsproving th eA plus It theorem . Social Credi twill only he displaced by som eother party which appears equall yconcerned to protect the farmers 'interests .

George G . t 'hnpn ► an .2nd Yr, Law,

Friday, January 9,'195 3

haug was fouled and promptly san kboth gift tosses to clinch the game .

John McLeod and Bob Bon atopped thq Birds with 16 and 1 1points . Jim Robeck, a smooth per . against Seattle Paclfc yetiterday ,former, Jim Geier and Elmer 4.Bradley, a big favorite with thecrowd, were best for the Falcons .

The same teams meet again to.night and the Birds wind up abusy weekend against Mt. VernonSaturday night in the gym .

RANDOM DRIBBLES—Pomfre tused Bob Hindmaroh, up from theJayvees . . . Bobby was a little lat efor the game as he was busy show •ing off his legs enough to win himthe Mardi Oral King title . . . GavDempster looked good despite hi slayoff. Seattle Pacific tipped East .ern Washington as the team t obeat in the Evergreen teasel . . r

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rLoose-leaf Note Books, Exercise Books and Scribblers,

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In case of any dispute or special situation arising, MACcan be asked to render a final decision .

A sportswriter on a downtow n

newspaper recently conducted a

aeries of articles whloh dealt with

the attitudes of school officials anti

principles towards maintainin g

football on an inter-high schoo l

basis .

The general consensus of opin •

Ion was that American football In

Vancouver high schools was not

worth the time and trouble it in-

volved unless student sttpport be .

came more evident than In pas t

years .

Nevertheless coaches In five

schools are interested enough i nthe sport to take full responsibilit y

for training teams . whether generalstudent interest was behind the mor not .

it has been the custom in pas tyears for the University to' equipthe entire league with pads . bootsand helmets, and since the arriva lof coach Jelly Andersen on thecampus, UBC has provided ever yhelp possible .

As in previous years, Mr. Ander •sen will arrange for Physical Ed.majors to officiate at all the regu •far Inter-High league games .

Not Afraid Of YankeesFortunately for the good health

of future UBC American footbal l

teams, City high schools have de-

cided to continue American foot -

ball on a five team busts for th e

1953 season ,

For a while It looked as if the

league would be a thing of the pas t

when student support of the game s

were practically non-existent dur-

ing 1952 .

came back with a blazing rally totake the four-point victory .

Belittle displayed a good fas tbreak and a hustling team bu tJack Pomfret's boys were quickerto capitalize on the breaks an d

earned the win, their seventh o fthe season.

John McLeod paced the Bird sto a quick 14 .7 lead before thequick breaking Falcons came beck .Racing down floor for layups thevisitors pulled thud 21.20 at quar-ter time . '

Gav Dempster and Buzz Hudsonthrew In two long ones to start oftthe second stanza and Birds wer enever behind again.

lard subsidiary . owns about 7 0per cent of the reserves, esti-mated at a billion barrels .

'I'weatyone•ye,u' lenses o ncrown lands are auctioned of fwithout a thought of conservatio nand the money Is used for curren tprovincial expenses . About twen-ty-five million barrels were pro-duced In 1950 and almost fort ymillion in 1951 . So much for th eprovince which supports a socia lcredit government which doo mnot practise"eoclal" credit—ba twhat of the national picture ?

As a federal party Social Credi thas had little Success becaus ealong with an unworkable move •tary scheme It incorporates a poli-tical philosophy which graduall yassumes a fascist form. In thei rown political platforms, 'parlia •nients are a fake. the peopleshould vote one leader (thei rlender) who will decide on meth •oda to give the people food, home sand peace .

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Shake•rpeare scribed

There 's not a minute

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should stretch

without some

pleasureAnthony and Cleopatra

A minute's enough to stop at the

familiar red cooler for a Coke . Pleasure ?

Certainly . . . and refreshing, too.

Whaling/ularal Taxes

S

COM E

TO TH E

MARD I

GRAS

on o

are

ire Vomiter Sods McLeod, Bone Star AsMBC Win: Rough Game ;

Birds Win SeventhPlay Seattle Tonite

UPC Thunderbirds and Seattle Pacific Falcons provideda good advertisement for their game tonight when they clashe din a rough-and-tumble wide open game Thursda yUBC squeezing past the visitors 63.59 .

Birds took an early lead, let sSeattle tie it up at half time, then

hada slim 61 . 58 lead .

noon

ErnieDAN ZAHARKO, veteran Thunder •

N y .bird guard, didn't let his Christmas

rye and turkey disturb his shootin g

eye as he potted nine In the battle

UIC TAKES OVERA basket just before the buzzer

gave Seattle a 32-32 standoff a thalf time but when they came back ( the Faloons say Eastern is tougherafter the breather UBC , quickly than Puget Sound who looked lik etook charge. top contenders when they were

here before Xmas . . . Falcons 'record is 2 and 7.

UBC—Nyhaug 2, J . McLeod 16 ,G. McLeod 4 . Bone 11, UlisonEnharko 9, Dempster 2t Taylor 4 ,Hudson 6, Forward, Seymour, Car -ter, Hindmarch -63,

SEATTLE — Robbins 6 ,10, Peterson 5, Goertzon 7 ,9, Gueir 12, Byer 3, Stile slips, Dlllery 2-59 .

C

201

N