VOLUME XXXVI Stu gent - UBC Library Home URYS VOLUME XXXVI VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1952...

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TEL' URY S VOLUME XXXVI VANCOUVER, B .C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1952 Price 5c ; o . Stu gent Riot Prompts Council Pr~b o Rio t Lates t Fiasc o The riot with police after th e Applied Science smoker Wednes- day night marks the latest in a long line of Applied Sciencema n "stunts" dating back almost eigh t years . One of their most highly or- ganized stunts was during Home - coming Week 1952, when the y removed all the toilet seats fro m all the campus washrooms excep t those in the Applied Scienc e building , Chronologically : October, 1052 : Applied Scienc e attempted to raid a WUS pa- jama party in Brock Hall . The y were finally sent on their wa y by the proctor, who threatene d to have them expelled . ,February, 1151 Applied Scl- encemen parading . through th e women's dorms were thrown ou t by Professor Gordon Shrum an d a university detachment of th e RCMP . October, 1149 : Six police car s and two patrol wagons were call- ed to an Applied Science ban- quet downtown after B .C . Eelec- tric trol l ey wires were slashed . No charges were laid . Rhys M . Sales Archbishop William Duke AMS Student Council in an emergency meeting Thursda y night decided to await Monday' s trial before making any donnit i statement or decision regardin g the disturbance resulting fro m the Applied Science Smoker , Wednesday night. " Ivan Feltham, AMS president, will send a letter to Presiden t N . A . M . MaeICensie to the effec t that Student Council is initiatin g investigation into the matter bu t will await the police court trial before taking any further action . released on bail Thursday noo n after the Crown prosecuto r pleaded that not enough evi- dence was available for an im- mediate trial . Continued on page 4 See RIO T Restricte d Vote Offere d By NFCU S be held in the women's gymnas um. R - un c October, I$41r Applied Scienc e students "snake paraded " Convocation through the Orpheum Theatr e Ceremony and' ripped some of the c urtaln a and hangings . _ To Honor Archbishop Almost every year Applie d Sciencemen have attacked th e i Labor Progressive Constitutio n Four honorary doctorates are among the 275 degrees being Ubyssey offices, disrupted staff - conf+ ''toMedt 7 art°''o'elaek erdnnual convocation to be ''em' activiti•e ged°thee e ° ected '~ J ent C w . . ~ . equipmen t The fields of manufacturing, labor, agriculture and religion con - will be recognized by the bon• A point. taken particular ex -1 Part of the constitution, a re- Tors that if they passed the ton- '~ vocation, ceptlon to by councillors when draft of the national constitution stitution as it stood it mi ht a g P orary awards, WUSMeeti n if' of th e B .C . s Lieutenant •Governor . Literary and Scientific Execu tLabour Progressive Party, pear that the AMS approves o f Recipients are Arehbisop Wil ;1 the Honorable Clarence Wallace titre president Johann Stoyva sub- states that the club categorical- the aims and policies of the LP P couver ; 1 am Duke of Percy the Dioces e Bengough, of press Y Van•' ma head the list n In Agreement milted the constitution for ap- Iy deiethat the advocate club . of vlsitn b d . the y nitaries, g .proval, was the fact that DO pie- trrrc and violence to bring abou t dent of Trades and Labor Con-. Degree s g r'ees will be awarded to On Exchan e cent of campus LPP fees are ~nl't t Inri : e . Bill St . John, public relation s gross ; Rhys M . Sale, president of tome students from as far away to the national hr~uiqu ;u• 1'lich ( I Uderhill, AMS rue pre . ofhcce, affirmed that the AM S Ford of Canada, and Lawrence ' n a y Malaya . UBC's exchange scholarshiIr et', of ' the communist follow coticil• must be careful, sayin g:, it i s t upiety mid L P . Guichon, noted B .C . Cattle- Nine of the graduates will be plan has attracted a very touchy issue off campus . " i notice fro m man ' the World University Service . presented with PhD's, and of the Archie. McGugan, LPP clu b Immense Cast Rehearse s Chancellor Sherwood Lett will, rest, more than 40 are MA's . Student Council was told Mo n day night by Montreal conven president tried to dist i nguis h award the degrees and Rev . W . TO BE AWARDED lion delegate Joan MacArthur, iiu;t it was "not a matter of ap - A . Ferg uson will deliver the in Mr . Sale, who is to be award• proving of the policies of th e For Players Productio n I ed an LLD for his leadership in The convention seemed in s club, but rather of approving it s C snadian manufacturing, wil l deliver the Congregation ad - dress , Archbishop Duke and Mr . Ben - Litter Letter gough will also receive the bon- ourary Doctor of Laws and Let- ters degree, awarded as recogni- tion of their services to human- ity . A Doctor of Science degre e sey to reappraise the lunch, will be awarded to Mr Guichon , trash situation brought up by, known as "the Dean of B .C . cat - him in a letter to student coun- I ticmen", for his leadership i n the p rovince's cattle industry . Council has taken no definite! r action in an effort to curb the l She g raduates will don thei r Paper litter on the campus i s not clearing up, declared Presi- dent N . A . M . MacKenzie thi s week when asked by The Ubys - All Ignor e Percy Beagough Lawrence P . Guichon If all Canadian universitie s of an exchange program by the Risk have announced the cast of the two productions now in Council decided that the new now belonging to NFCUS do not national office of WUS, Miss full rehearsal at the auditorium . draft should be constructed along I agree to the fee increase, the n MacArthur stated, Huge membership in the Players' Club has made it possible the lines of those submitted by they may either drop out of th e This university is one of few -id-id— -id— _ "'to feature two first class plays other campus political clubs, es- organization, or have restricte d in Canada which has interne with large casts, ru'cially when referring to aims voting rights at the nationa l tional student exchange scholar- o em - Directed and adapted by Do- and policies . conventions on the basis of how agreement over establishment Players Club fall play directors Durnthy Davies and Sydney coistcncc on the rumpus , BLOODY AND BANDAGED John MacKinnon Pictured in police court Thursda y with Dean H . C . Gunning, head of the Dept . of Geology and Geography, on his right, an d on his left Bob Giegerich . Bob ' s brother, Roderick Giegerich, is one of the students who was arrested in Wednesday night's disturbance outside the White . Rose Ballroom. Pro - testing hand in the background belongs to Dave Dufton, president of the Applied Scienc e Undergraduate Society . WAS CHARGE D MacKinnon was charged wit h assaulting a constable and ob- structing a constable with othe r charges pending . Giegerieh and Mitchell were both charged wit h obstruction of a police con - stable . Arrest of the three students , John Malcolm MacKinnon, Fort Camp ; Peter James Mitchell , 405'2 W . 10th Ave ., and Rober t Montgomery Glegerlch, Acadi a Camp, followed a disturbanc e which took place outside th e White Rose Ballroom, 1248 W . Broadway . Charged with assault and obstruction of a police constable , the trio will . appear in court fo r trial Monday, Nov, 2 . They were Three Aireste d After Stag Part y Bail was set at $100 each for three UBC students by 11t h trate W . W . B . Machines in police court Thursday mor't1 tg , following their arrest after the Ap plied Science smokes Wed - nesday night, TWEEN CLASSE S TENNIS CLUB players wil l ineet tomorrow, Saturday, in th e Field House at 12 :30 p .m . Meet- ing will take place every Satur- day afternoon between 1200- 4 :30 p .m . . * * * THE CCF CLUB will hold a discussion group Sunday, Nev 1, at 7 :30 p .m . in the home o f Pat Thomas, 4158 West 10th . NEWMAN CLUB'S Footbal l Dance, will start at 8 p .m, . Setu r day night, Oct . 31, in the Brook . * * THE CHRISTIAN S O organization's weekly WAS * meeting will be held today $ 1 in Physics 300 . t * * ; .. HIGH SCHOOL CO general meeting *i11 ta k today, Friday, noon in et " Room of Brock Hall , ested are welcome . * * t F THE VARSITY O U Club's Hallowe'en party i idIB held at the Mt . Seymour o a on Saturday night, Oct, 31 , ing "anytime ." Work hike . start at 10 a .m . Sat u to the party . * * THE PREMED, Unde:b i Society will be address $ In Physics 202 at noo n Darrach of the Facult y ctti ' - PRE-LAW SOCIET Y meeting will take plac e at noon in Arts 104 . Age s the meeting includes a lecture on the principles of , a stitution and the formation o f for the Society . UN To Hear T On Sentiment a UNITED NATIONS Ma * meet today, nifty, In Art . at 12 :30 p.m . Guest speake r be Dr . Belachaw spea k "Sentamantalism in th e ies ." * B * CHEER LEADERS n g ettt 'ta t day. at noon in the W . 'e , i Gym. loth' Davies, the first play is an they arrange to pay their bac k iP ri r p e ts D n Juliet"ex a Th matter of a studen t . dent Council .Monday night on n the Lions Gate Hall at 8 Leads are goo Ncwitt and Bob change with Russia was discus se p e.iounds that approva l at this on Saturday night . Woodward, both old hands in lime may imply AMS endorse- ed briefly, but it was decided tha t Player' s Club productions . , P this was an impractical projec t moot of LPP olicies, FILMSOC will rese under existing circumstances . No p nt a 3 Other half of the double bill moo t , noon show Tuesday, Nov . 3 - - . local plan to that effect is being the Auditorium . The films t o will feature a new comedy b y messy appearance on the earned ' cwns in the armouries and stated, 40 per cent of money I ' AMS treasurer Al Goldsmith ; Canadian playwright, Robertson entertained, said Feltham, shown will be "In Search o f march to the rn, The di nits• forwarded to WUS national of . Through efforts of NFCUS, pus due to careless students who g Y g has asked the under g raduatc so Davies, posse and Friend at the D r . eat their lunches on lawns or in lies, both uniformed and gown flee by Carladlan universities defies involved in the display to ' Directed Iry Sydney lush, the . ISCI one the five Pcent tax on text AME e r ea will proceed to the gYm goes toward the new Indian n,ake their own arran gements ee , r , n C,uradiau promlcrc 'imported d toCanad a it hd fro m car, toes PARLINTARY FOR M parked rop npe will have a tap e Their suFtgFrstion that more from Brock Hall . health service . 'with photo studios . satire " as p f Aesop ' ' , , B Breakdown las t the Ue recorde r A Vii, qi c p av il - waste paper containers may be Tea will be served in Brock UBC's donation this year to Applied i Scicice, Architecture, in 'l ode s 2'd Players Club meted t federal budgel, able for its Publi c u Speak n g of use was heartily endorsed by Hall after the ceremonies, and the central office will be $300, :Nursing, and Forestry grads hers among the case, SUGGESTIONS N v class in Arts 201 Monday , the president, who would gladly all attending friends and rela- or an average of 10 cents per should see Klass studios when Performance dates are Nov . i The suggestion that student 2, at 12 :30 p .m ., so that o f arrange them through the build- flees of graduates will be w•el- student . Last Year, UBC sent no . , they visit the campus . Date has' 12, lit, and 14, Student admission Fircakdowr, of studuii disci members may have their vo l plies in Brok loun is blamed contributions to national Unem• Y not yet been decided . is 25c, general public 50c . t hgf te lk ployment Insurance during sum- recorded . c ,a on aa c byI isI uuturinl s THE PHY ,SICS SOCIETY n d of backin rrnclur' . ; actions I cy mer months, was dropped b y l' i both the UBC delegation and Chemistry Institute will hear th e he AMS discipline t ommiil` a chairman of the Defense Researc h the national convention . Proctor ., tvIlu 11 :IV(' been ;;rant- Board, Dr . Oland Solandt, spepk - cd aIuthuriI • Ii Mkt . AMS cards NFCUS cgntact with the In-ing on "Defense Research• i n from offenders, claim that little tcrnational Union of Students' Canada and Employment Upper s or no consideration is given thei r reports to the committee, an d cards are roturnud "lien withou t action . Distant tie cull i lines chair - Inch Jim PlfcNish stoic' . that ct- AMS RENTS ' sliiu linker is sa "clouded an d "nnucd u ;l" Ilcll I',IC tt-heels ol'' FOR VARSff Y SKA TING FAN S nuthis .i . re•fu .rc to turn . A nets, '1i1t t ilini d discipline , . You prairie refugees and all other aspiring a h Barb er a Ann Scott can have your moment of glory now thanks t c the Alma Mater Society . The athletic administration has rented Kerrisd l e Arena for student skating . First open night will be M clay, November 2 . Everyone is welcome—50 cents per p sun . 'Rua' I'liil l Many delegates ee s I x favored pu t ting more -money into interna-i UBC's annual, the tional relief, i,e, into the WUS popula r Totem, will be sadly lacking i n health service being established the rogue's gallery lineup i f in New Delhi, India, camera shy Grads posiPo e thei r At present, Miss MacArthur >hotographs much longer . ships . . ings and grounds department . come, money . a' s c w l~ltlV'l .ti',lt`LI) TtItTNl)EldBlf 1 LINi'1LN ready lu facie invaaiun o f Pacific .,ullierau ('ellime ( ;ladiat rs at V ;u•tiily ;itadtutn nl p .m . Sutter- . day arc : it End, Kell ' I ii loon : R . Tackle, Jerry OTlcm ;i :;tn ; R . (lewd , Dudley Gerry . ('sutler, Peter t ;r'iim . y ; l, . ("tumid, ( ' din' . l oh 'Brady ; uI . Tackle, Ernie Nyhuu t ; uu1 1., . Lad, CJlarlrg •Jaiuc ; :, . The filuu and Quid vrltu~ .d wit! Ill ;iyill l; Weil ' led bens the tie :Hun anti t ell! li e ull1~ ; lei' IIII'II' III',I I'~Ce~l' .',I' .'e :l (~ullie~l'r~l1e' 1 :'1 )I'1' o one wIII Itt'u Lc, . Ieeniel ul cult!, r tc I'I,iy ,t it ,u r luu n 'll " '---U1.iC Photo by John Robertso n (II ; .ei~ ;llnr , :'tu'cll lu lir ' l ' ry lu,br}, eamlricic teilh rules a n ti procedure, is now being draw n up by a former mc'nibcr of th e eommillce', send shullld be rrnd v ha' ntmratinli shad ly, r1(1 119( ' . Nish . 1C : .eb ,•nii1phill I III ,, new lrru - ~ rune neu~l be~ ;itlinneed by Sit e di nl ('~'tu~r!I In t . it is oile r ;1lice ll kilt bid lilb'l' : be reed y i f .n ineielrnle oration in Ibe riu l case now facetf, ' council . ll . will henceforth be limited, decide tunities" on Monday, Nov 2 , ed the delegates, because of that noon in Enginering 202 . organizations suspected commun- Continued on page 3 1st affiliation . See CLASSES Any grenlp un the eanipus Cain rent the arena . J a'Iii :,llc . 'l'he Shahan' Walls as ,sots se c in the gym I

Transcript of VOLUME XXXVI Stu gent - UBC Library Home URYS VOLUME XXXVI VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1952...

Page 1: VOLUME XXXVI Stu gent - UBC Library Home URYS VOLUME XXXVI VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1952 Price 5c; o. Stu gent Riot Prompts Council Pr~bo Rio t Latest Fiasco The riot with

TEL' URYS

VOLUME XXXVI

VANCOUVER, B .C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1952

Price 5c; o.

Stu gent Riot Prompts Council Pr~bo

Rio

t Latest

Fiasco

The riot with police after theApplied Science smoker Wednes-day night marks the latest in along line of Applied Sciencema n"stunts" dating back almost eightyears .

One of their most highly or-ganized stunts was during Home -coming Week 1952, when the yremoved all the toilet seats fromall the campus washrooms exceptthose in the Applied Scienc ebuilding ,

Chronologically :October, 1052: Applied Science

attempted to raid a WUS pa-jama party in Brock Hall . Theywere finally sent on their wayby the proctor, who threatene dto have them expelled .

,February, 1151 ► Applied Scl-encemen parading . through th ewomen's dorms were thrown ou tby Professor Gordon Shrum an da university detachment of theRCMP .

October, 1149 : Six police carsand two patrol wagons were call-ed to an Applied Science ban-quet downtown after B .C. Eelec-tric trol ley wires were slashed .No charges were laid .

Rhys M. Sales

Archbishop William Duke

AMS Student Council in anemergency meeting Thursda ynight decided to await Monday' strial before making any donnitistatement or decision regardingthe disturbance resulting fromthe Applied Science Smoker,Wednesday night. "

Ivan Feltham, AMS president,will send a letter to PresidentN. A. M. MaeICensie to the effectthat Student Council is initiatinginvestigation into the matter bu twill await the police court trialbefore taking any further action .

released on bail Thursday noonafter the Crown prosecuto rpleaded that not enough evi-dence was available for an im-mediate trial .

Continued on page 4See RIOT

Restricted

Vote Offered

By NFCUS

be held in the women's gymnas um.

R - unc

October, I$41r Applied Sciencestudents "snake

paraded"

Convocation through the Orpheum TheatreCeremony and' ripped some of the curtalnaand hangings . _

To Honor Archbishop

Almost every year AppliedSciencemen have attacked th ei

Labor Progressive ConstitutionFour honorary doctorates are among the 275 degrees being Ubyssey offices, disrupted staff -conf+

''toMedt 7art°''o'elaek

erdnnual convocation to be ''em' activiti•e

ged°thee

e ° ected '~

J

ent C w .

• .~

.equipment

The fields of manufacturing, labor, agriculture and religioncon-will be recognized by the bon•

A point. taken particular ex-1 Part of the constitution, a re- Tors that if they passed the ton-'~

vocation,

ceptlon to by councillors when draft of the national constitution stitution as it stood it mi ht ag

Porary awards,

WUSMeeti n

if'

of the

B .C. s Lieutenant •Governor .

Literary and Scientific Execu

tLabour Progressive Party, pear that the AMS approves o f

Recipients are Arehbisop Wil;1 the Honorable Clarence Wallace

titre president Johann Stoyva sub- states that the club categorical- the aims and policies of the LP P

couver ; 1►am Duke of

Percythe Diocese

Bengough,of press

YVan•' ma head the list

n

In Agreement milted the constitution for ap- Iy deiethat the advocate club .

of vlsitn b d ► .

theynitaries,

g

.proval, was the fact that DO pie- trrrc and violence to bring abou tdent of Trades and Labor Con-.

Degree sg r'ees will be awarded to On

Exchan e cent of campusLPP

fees are ~nl't t Inri : e .

Bill St . John, public relationsgross ; Rhys M. Sale, president of tome students from as far away

to the national hr~uiqu ;u•

1'lich ( I Uderhill, AMS rue pre . ofhcce, affirmed that the AM SFord of Canada, and Lawrence ' n

ay Malaya.

UBC's exchange scholarshiIr et', of ' the communist

follow coticil• must be careful, saying:,

it i st

upiety

mid

LP. Guichon, noted B .C. Cattle-

Nine of the graduates will be plan has attracted

a very touchy issue off campus . "

inotice from man'

the World University Service .

presented with PhD's, and of the

Archie. McGugan, LPP clu bImmense Cast RehearsesChancellor Sherwood Lett will, rest, more than 40 are MA's . Student Council was told Mo

n day nightby Montreal conven

president tried to dist i nguishaward the degrees and Rev . W. TO BE AWARDED

lion delegate Joan MacArthur,

iiu;t it was "not a matter of ap-A. Ferguson will deliver the in

Mr. Sale, who is to be award•

proving of the policies of theFor Players Production

I ed an LLD for his leadership in

The convention seemed in s

club, but rather of approving it sC snadian manufacturing, wil ldeliver the Congregation ad -dress ,

Archbishop Duke and Mr . Ben -

Litter Letter gough will also receive the bon-ourary Doctor of Laws and Let-ters degree, awarded as recogni-tion of their services to human-ity .

A Doctor of Science degre esey to reappraise the lunch, will be awarded to Mr Guichon ,trash situation brought up by, known as "the Dean of B.C . cat -him in a letter to student coun-

I ticmen", for his leadership i nthe province's cattle industry .

Council has taken no definite! raction in an effort to curb the l

She g raduates will don thei r

Paper litter on the campus i snot clearing up, declared Presi-dent N. A . M. MacKenzie thi sweek when asked by The Ubys-

All Ignore

Percy Beagough Lawrence P . Guichon

If all Canadian universitiesof an exchange program by the Risk have announced the cast of the two productions now in

Council decided that the new now belonging to NFCUS do notnational office of WUS, Miss full rehearsal at the auditorium .

draft should be constructed along I agree to the fee increase, the nMacArthur stated,

Huge membership in the Players' Club has made it possible the lines of those submitted by they may either drop out of th e

This university

is one of few

-id-id— -id— _ "'to feature two first class plays other campus political clubs, es- organization, or have restricted

in Canada which has interne

with large casts,

ru'cially when referring to aims voting rights at the national

tional student exchange scholar-

o em

- Directed and adapted by Do- and policies .

conventions on the basis of how

agreement over establishment

Players Club fall play directors Durnthy Davies and Sydney coistcncc on the rumpus ,

BLOODY AND BANDAGED John MacKinnon Pictured in police court Thursda ywith Dean H. C. Gunning, head of the Dept . of Geology and Geography, on his right, an don his left Bob Giegerich. Bob's brother, Roderick Giegerich, is one of the students whowas arrested in Wednesday night's disturbance outside the White. Rose Ballroom. Pro-testing hand in the background belongs to Dave Dufton, president of the Applied ScienceUndergraduate Society .

WAS CHARGEDMacKinnon was charged with

assaulting a constable and ob-structing a constable with othercharges pending . Giegerieh andMitchell were both charged withobstruction of a police con-stable .

Arrest of the three students ,John Malcolm MacKinnon, FortCamp; Peter James Mitchell ,405'2 W. 10th Ave ., and Rober tMontgomery Glegerlch, Acadi aCamp, followed a disturbancewhich took place outside theWhite Rose Ballroom, 1248 W .Broadway .

Charged with assault andobstruction of a police constable ,the trio will . appear in court fortrial Monday, Nov, 2 . They were

Three Airested

After Stag Party

Bail was set at $100 each for three UBC students by 11thtrate W. W. B. Machines in police court Thursday mor't1 tg ,following their arrest after the Applied Science smokes Wed -nesday night,

TWEEN CLASSES

TENNIS CLUB players willineet tomorrow, Saturday, in th eField House at 12:30 p.m. Meet-ing will take place every Satur-day afternoon between 1200-4 :30 p .m .

.* * *

THE CCF CLUB will hold adiscussion group Sunday, Nev1, at 7:30 p.m. in the home ofPat Thomas, 4158 West 10th .

NEWMAN CLUB'S Footbal lDance, will start at 8 p.m, . Seturday night, Oct . 31, in the Brook.

* *

THE CHRISTIAN SOorganization's weekly WAS*meeting will be held today $1in Physics 300 .

t * * ; . .

HIGH SCHOOL COgeneral meeting *i11 taktoday, Friday, noon in et"Room of Brock Hall,ested are welcome .

* * tFTHE VARSITY OU

Club's Hallowe'en party iidIBheld at the Mt. Seymour oaon Saturday night, Oct, 31,ing "anytime." Work hike.start at 10 a .m. Satuto the party .

* *THE PREMED, Unde:b i

Society will be address$In Physics 202 at noonDarrach of the Facultyctti

' -

PRE-LAW SOCIET Ymeeting will take placeat noon in Arts 104 . Agesthe meeting includes alecture on the principles of , astitution and the formation offor the Society .

UN To Hear T

On Sentimenta

UNITED NATIONS Ma *meet today, nifty, In Art.at 12:30 p.m. Guest speakerbe Dr. Belachaw speak"Sentamantalism in theies ."

* B *CHEER LEADERS ngettt 'tat

day. at noon in the W .

►'e ,iGym.

loth' Davies, the first play is an

they arrange to pay their bac kiPrirpets

D nJuliet"ex

aTh matter of a studen t.

dent Council .Monday night on

►n the Lions Gate Hall at 8Leads are goo Ncwitt and Bob

change with Russia was discusse

p

e.iounds that approva l at this

on Saturday night .Woodward, both old hands in lime may imply AMS endorse- ed briefly, but it was decided tha tPlayer's Club productions .

, P

this was an impractical projec t

mootof LPP olicies,

FILMSOC will reseunder existing circumstances . No

p

nt a3Other half of the double bill moo t

, noon show Tuesday, Nov . 3- - .

local plan to that effect is being the Auditorium . The films towill feature a new comedy b ymessy appearance on the earned 'cwns in the armouries and stated, 40 per cent of money I 'AMS treasurer Al Goldsmith ; Canadian playwright, Robertson

entertained, said Feltham,

shown will be "In Search ofmarch to the

rn, The di nits• forwarded to WUS national of

.

Through efforts of NFCUS,

„pus due to careless students who

g Y

g

has asked the under graduatc so Davies,

posse and Friend at the D r .eat their lunches on lawns or in lies, both uniformed and gown flee by Carladlan universities defies involved in the display to ' Directed Iry Sydney lush, the .

ISCI

one the five Pcent tax on text

AME

er ea will proceed to the gYm goes toward the new Indian n,ake their own arran gements

„ ee , r,n C,uradiau promlcrc 'imported dtoCanadaithd

fro m car,

toes

PARLINTARY FOR Mparked

rop npe will have a tap e Their suFtgFrstion that more from Brock Hall.

health service .

'with photo studios .

satire "

as

p f Aesop '',

, B

Breakdown

last the Ue

recorde r A Vii, qi c

p

av il -waste paper containers may be

Tea will be served in Brock

UBC's donation this year to

Applied

i Scicice, Architecture, in 'l ode s 2'd Players Club meted t federal budgel, able for its Public u

Speak n gof use was heartily endorsed by Hall after the ceremonies, and the central office will be $300, :Nursing, and Forestry grads hers among the case,

SUGGESTIONS

N vclass in Arts 201 Monday,the president, who would gladly all attending friends and rela- or an average of 10 cents per should see Klass studios when

Performance dates are Nov . i

The suggestion that student 2, at 12 :30 p .m., so that ofarrange them through the build- flees of graduates will be w•el- student . Last Year, UBC sent no . , they visit the campus. Date has' 12, lit, and 14, Student admission

Fircakdowr, of studuii disci

members may have their volplies in Brok loun

is blamed contributions to national Unem•

Ynot yet been decided .

is 25c, general public 50c .

t

hgf te

lk ployment Insurance during sum- recorded .c,a on aac byI isI uuturinl s

THE PHY,SICS SOCIETY ndof backin

rrnclur' .; actions I cy mer months, was dropped b yl' i

both the UBC delegation and Chemistry Institute will hear th e

he AMS discipline t ommiil` a

chairman of the Defense Researc hthe national convention .

Proctor ., tvIlu 11 :IV(' been ;;rant-

Board, Dr. Oland Solandt, spepk -

cd aIuthuriI • Ii Mkt . AMS cards

NFCUS cgntact with the In-ing on "Defense Research• i nfrom offenders, claim that little tcrnational Union of Students' Canada and Employment Upper sor no consideration is given theirreports to the committee, andcards are roturnud "lien withou taction .

Distant tie

cull i lines

chair -Inch Jim PlfcNish stoic' . that ct- AMS RENTS

' sliiu linker is sa "clouded and"nnucd u ;l" Ilcll I',IC tt-heels ol'' FOR VARSff Y SKA TING FAN

Snuthis .i . re•fu .rc to turn .

A nets, '1i1t t ilini d discipline

, .You prairie refugees and all other aspiringah Barb er aAnn Scott can have your moment of glory now thanks tcthe Alma Mater Society .

The athletic administration has rented Kerrisd l eArena for student skating . First open night will be Mclay, November 2 . Everyone is welcome—50 cents per psun .

'Rua'

I'liil l

Many delegates

ee s Ixfavored pu tting more -money into interna-i UBC's

annual, thetional relief, i,e, into the WUS

popular

Totem, will be sadly lacking i nhealth service being established the rogue's gallery lineup i fin New Delhi, India,

camera shy Grads posiPo e thei rAt present, Miss MacArthur >hotographs much longer .

ships .

.

ings and grounds department . come, money.

a'sc w

l~ltlV'l .ti',lt`LI) TtItTNl)EldBlf 1 LINi'1LN ready lu facie invaaiun o fPacific .,ullierau ('ellime (;ladiat rs at V ;u•tiily ;itadtutn nl

p .m . Sutter- .day arc : it End, Kell ' I ii loon: R . Tackle, Jerry OTlcm ;i :;tn ; R . (lewd ,Dudley Gerry . ('sutler, Peter t ;r'iim . y ; l, . ("tumid, ( ' din' . l oh 'Brady ;

uI .Tackle, Ernie Nyhuu t; uu1 1., . Lad, CJlarlrg •Jaiuc; :, . The filuu and Quid

vrltu~.d wit!

Ill ;iyill l; Weil ' led bens

the tie :Hun anti tell! l i eull1~;

lei'

IIII'II'

III',I

I'~Ce~l' .',I' .'e :l

(~ullie~l'r~l1e'

1 :'1

)I'1' oone wIII Itt'u Lc, . Ieeniel ul cult!, r

tc I'I,iy ,t it ,u rluu n 'll "

'---U1.iC Photo by John Robertson

(II ; .ei~ ;llnr ,:'tu'cll lu lir ' l ' ry

lu,br}, eamlricic teilh rules a n tiprocedure, is now being draw nup by a former mc'nibcr of th eeommillce', send shullld be rrnd vha' ntmratinli shad ly, r1(1 119(' .Nish .

1C : .eb ,•nii1phill I III , , new lrru -~ rune neu~l be~ ;itlinneed by Sit e

di nl

('~'tu~r!I

In t

.

it

is

oile r;1lice

ll kilt bid lilb'l': be reedyi f .n

ineielrnle oration

in Ibe riu lcase now facetf, ' council .ll .

will henceforth be limited, decide tunities" on Monday, Nov 2 ,ed the delegates, because of that noon in Enginering 202 .organizations suspected commun-

Continued on page 31st affiliation .

See CLASSES

Any grenlp un the eanipus Cain rent the arena . Ja'Iii :,llc . 'l'he Shahan' Walls as ,sots se cin the gym

I

Page 2: VOLUME XXXVI Stu gent - UBC Library Home URYS VOLUME XXXVI VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1952 Price 5c; o. Stu gent Riot Prompts Council Pr~bo Rio t Latest Fiasco The riot with

'THE UBYSSE YPAGE TWO

Applied Science students once again havedone their best to discredit the name of theuniversity. Their actions following theirsmoker Wednesday night have wiped ou tany good` public relations UBC students hav ebuilt. up in the last few years. In 30 minute sof .stupid, senseless brawling several hundredApplied Science students obliterated all th egood will'established by 5500 students ovenseveral years .

Last week was known as UBC Home-coming Week throughout Vancouver .Students Planned, arranged and carried ou ta tremendously successful program whichdid wonders in regard to publicity down -town. That Homecoming Parade on Saturdaycould have started a successful period ofgood feeling between the university and th eaverage Vancouvei citizen, . something thatobviously has been missing.

Instead a small group of nitwits in th eApplied Science faculty have once await le tloose their boyish exuberance and have drag-ged every UBC student with them . That i sthe molt unfortunate aspect of the whol emess. The downtown papers and radio ata-tioit referred to the law-breakers as "severalhundred rioting UBC students" ; not "severalhundred rioting Applied Science students . "

The inference that will be drawn fromthe dailies' headlines and stories is that UB Cstudents, a collective term, were involved inthe juvenile fracas . Possibly some day theA ' tied Science executive will realize tha ttkay are members of a larger organizatio nand that they are responsible to a more

= important group than their own selfishly-W minded undergraduate society. That larger ,

more important group is the Alma Mater So-ciety and everything that is done by AppliedScience students reflects on the Society .

WAD representative Marilyn Russellproved to be . a disappointment at Monda ynight 's Student Council meeting, belying . herearlier statement during the meeting whic hcannily put into a nutshell Council's atti-tude toward the new Labor-Progressive Partyclub .

Miss Russell had pointed to the copy ofthe national LPP charter being passed eagerlyfrom hand to hand by councillors, after clubpresident Archie McGugan had submitted i tas his club's constitution .

"I think we 're just afraid of that littleyellow book," she said, and nothing couldhave been closer to the truth .

Unfortunately, Miss Russell later aban-doned her observation to succumb to thefright suffered by her fellow councillors. Shevoted to throw the charter out . Only Co-ordinator Mike Nuttal supported LSE presi-dent Johann Stoyva's motion of approval .

Two sane objections to the charter wer emade by council. These were against a claus ewhich provided for 90 per cent of the newclub's fees to go off campus, and one whic hsubjected the club to the authority of th enational party .

These clauses had not offended LSE o rthe other campus political clubs, both group s

The actions of a certain handful ofstudents at the LPP meeting Monday noonproves one thing at least . Some students her ewould be far more at home in a college fo rthe training and edification of Hitler youththan a Canadian university and UBC i nparticular .

This on the surface childish act of tossin gfruit and heckling unfortunately has mor eserious implications . Apparently the good o fCOTC'ers are not the only ones who ar ein danger of being called (if the term may b eused) the "prototype of Hitler Youth" .

Those few hecklers indicated by thei rsomewhat dubious actions that they disap-Proved of the speaker—however, they did i tin a way reminiscent of the Fuehrer's bi gbrave brownshirts when they started thei rdrive against the democratic institutions and

It may be fruitless to hope that the exe-cutive of the Applied Science could realiz ethis fact but we hope that the repercussion sof Wednesday night's brawl may make tha texecutive face reality and admit their obliga-tions to the whole student body . '

Officials of the offending faculty wil lprobably come forth with the plea that thissort of thing won 't happen again . The recordbook contradicts them on this point . Execu-tives of the faculty have said the same thingin past years following similar incidents, an dinevitably there is more trouble at the nextApplied Science smoker.

UBC students are not panted specia lrates at Odeon theatres in the city because ofthe damage done by the Applied Scienc efaculty in a downtown theatre four years ago .All university organizations . were barredfrom the hall in which Applied Science hadtheir smoker last year.

These and other Incidents bear evidencethat trouble, and ensuing bad publicity, in-variably arise at Applied Science smokers .And there is no guarantee that more troublewon't arise at next year's smoker unlesssome drastic remedy is found.

Applied Science students are justl yfamous for their spirit and their peculiarbrand of 'esprit de corps'. It is unfortunatethat this tremendous spirit could not beused for useful purposes instead of beingutilized to maintain the tradition of thefaculty as the big, bad boys of the campus .

True spirit is expressed by supportinguniversity functions, by co-operating withother campus organizations and by directin gall energy toward bolstering UBC, not . justone faculty .

having recommended the constitution bepassed .

They knew that the CCF club is alreadysending part of its dues off campus, and thatevery club on campus is already subject tothe control of its parent party. If a campuspolitical club repudiated the wishes of itsparent party, it would no longer be able t oexist under its name . A Liberal club whichrejects Liberal policies is not Liberal .

Vice-president Dick Underhill showe dthe most reaction to the constitution—particu-larly the preamble, which contained suchRCMP-baiting phrases as "Canadian Com-munist Party" and "collective ownership . "

But Underhill's argument was more lud-icrous than his fright . He outspokenly refus-ed to' sanction the word "approval" in passingthe charter, on grounds that it would signify"coucil endorsement of LPP policies ."

The two former objections were not mad eformally by council ; members merely men-tioned them. Council's final motion containednot specific instructions for a new charter ,but asked only for a constitution "similarin form to those submitted by other campu spolitical clubs ."

Council seems to expect a Communis tclub to draft a charter which makes noreference to its leftist beliefs and aims .

organizations then existing in Germany .Hurling fruit at communist speakers wa s

their quaint method of disapproval also . Ofcourse their ire soon spread to Trade Unions ,Liberal organizations, ad infinitum .

It is, as history shows, a small jump fro mpelting tomatoes to burning books and per-secuting peoples .

Fortunately for this University 's reputa-tion and honor, the majority of students a tthe meeting did not demonstrate their dis-approval (if they did disapprove) in thismanner .

This handful of students accomplishedthe opposite to their aims . They made the res tof the students want that much more to giveMcGugan his `"right to speak"—a quaint righ tthat is given to People who live in democra -cies ,

MEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESSAuthorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa . .

Student subscriptions $1 .20 per year (included in AMS fees) . Mail subscrip-tions $2 per year . Single copies five cents. Published in Vancouver throughout th eUniversity year by the Student Publications Board of the Alma Meter Society ,University of British Columbia . Editorial opinions expressed herein are those ofthe editorial staff of The Ubyssey, and not necessarily those of the Alma MaterSociety or the University . Letters to the Editor should not be more than 150 words .The Ubyssey reserves the right to cut letters, and cannot guarantee publicatio nof all letters received .

Offices in Brock Hall

r For Display Advertisin gPhone ALma 1624

Phone ALraa 325 3This Edition:

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF JEROME ANGEL

Managing Editor Ron Sawa

City Editor Bruce McWilliams

Senior Editor limy Logic

Deskmen and Reporters—Pete Pineo, Dick Dolman, Ab Kent, Pat Carney ,Michael Ames, Bruce McWilliams, Ken Lamb, Mary Beth Kowluk, Jean White-side, Helen Donnelly, Dorothy Davis, Charlie Watt, Rosemary Kent-Barber ,Mary Lou Sterns .

Punish Them Now

Reactionary Counci l

More Vicious Actions

Bulletin To

List EventsAppearance or a weekl y

schedule of campus events i sslated shortly as a .new serviceof the university Departmen tof Extension ,

Due to be published ever ySaturday and circulated abou tthe campus, the bulletin wil lcontain times and places of bot hstudent and administratio nsponsored functions .

Poor RelationsEditor, The Ubyssey :

Several issues ago you ranan editorial lamenting our poo rpublic relations with down-town Vancouver.

;mat Friday night I attendedthe U.N. Club's Model Assemblyat the Brock, and a great man ynon-university people werethere. The program was a farce;a bunch of clowns put on a dis-play that was, to say the least,Unworthy of university stud-ents. Although the studentswere only modeling real dele-gates, they should have had en-ough respect for the UnitedNations and for the particulardelegates they portrayed (wh orepresent people the worldow) to conduct such an assem-bly with dignity, humility, andintelligence ; they did not . Theresulting pantomine was in th epoorest taste and, judging fromthe comments of numerou smembers of the audience, leftthe general public with a verybad impression of our studentsand what they can do .

Then on Saturday night atthe Homecoming Dance we hadanother example. On a veryliberal estimate, nearly halfof the college men there wer eeithr drunk or had lost controlof their liquor situation . Don' tMisunderstand me—I don't ob-ject to anybody getting tigh tenough to be in a gay partystood—that ' s just good fun. Butits a different matter whe npeople get so drunk they can' tWalk, and yet still go on drink-ing. I had never seen such adisgusting display of drunken-ness, disorderliness, and jus tplain adolescent behaviour .Again, any adult visitor fromdown-town could go away fro mthe campus with nothing but apoor impression of us .

Need you ask why our pub-lic relations with the city areso poor ?

Letters To gapers Laud Nicol;The Editor Reprint His ArticIeThe Editor

His

s

Flag RaisingEditor, The Ubyssey :

On behalf of the United Na-tions Club, I would like tothank the students who attend-ed the flag-raising ceremon y

and those who took part in the

Model General Assembly ,which was by general consen-sus of opinion, a success .

I would also like to thankall those who attended bothfunctions and indicated agai ntheir interest in the club .

JANE BANFIELD ,President

Wrong St atementsEditor, The Ubyssey :

in the last issue of your pape rthere appeared a letter by Mar -'ley Stevenson concerning Mr .Solon Low's staatement on theU.N . The letter contained som ewrong statements which I shal leorrect .

The letter clearly stated thatMr. Low called the U.N. asRueationable Internationa ljunta." The writer may hav edhosen to interpret the questionto suit her, but these are thefacts .

During the question periodMr. Vaughan Lyon asked Mr.Low if he was in favor of re-linquishing Canadian sovereign .ty to an international organ-

ization, Whereupon Mr,' Lo wanswered in the negative and

!concluded with the quoted?phrase . Then Mr. Lyon aske d

: Mr . Low a second questionWhich was worded very ctear-yly "Are you opposed to th eU.N." Mr. Low's answer wa sI"No, definitely -not" T s wa s!accurately reported in th etlbyssey and 'should clear u pany misunderstanding .

Mr, Low stated that he wasin favor of the U .N. as a bodyOf International discussion, co-operation and assistance . Can-ada, he thought, could do he rpart and still retain her sov-ereignty .

DISGUSTED"4th Year Arts Science.

JOHN REDEKOP .

EXPERT TYPING, PICKUP &delivery service Sundays .FR. 9591 . .

(30 )DURING THE ABSENCE O F

Mrs. A, 0, Robinson, studentsare asked to take their typin gto Mrs. Florence Gow, 445 8West 10th, AL 3682 .

(21 )1940 AUSTIN 10 SEDAN IN

good condition, new paint andbattery, cheap to operate .Why use bus? AL . 2190-L ,(John) or West. 27.53 .

(12)LOST—SMALL RED CHANG E

purse on campus Thursday—sentimental value—KE. 7818 .

LADYS WINTER COAT, BE-gonia red gabardine, trimmedblack lamb, chamois to waist ,matching fur and ornamentfor hat, dressy cut, excellen tcondition, size 36, length 44inches $35 . AL. 0468L eveningsonly .

A STERLING SILVER COM -pact with initials "MG" an dinscription "love Bill 5/12/53 "on back . If found please phon eKE. 8359L .

ONE RIDER FOR 8:30 START•ing from 23rd and Ontario .Phone Gordon . FA. 8917R.

RECORD PLAYER WITHspeaker; must play 33½ rpmrecords. Phone KE. 0495 after5:00 p.m .

GRADUATE ENGINEER WH Ointends to take chemistry 30 0next year would like privat ecoaching from a graduate o rhonor student in chemistry t obrush up in this subject. Pleasephone BA. 1745 .

FOLLOWING TH E

TRAIL-BLAZERS

As Canadians push back the frontier

developing new areas, building new

enterprises — banking service still follows

the pioneer. Today,

are more bank

branches to meet the needso changing,

gnnving Canada . . . they are

being g used more . . . th e they are doing

more or more people . . . than ever ticore.

Since 19011, branches of the chartere dbanks hove increa,ed from 700 to 3,800 .In the pint ten sear, alone, 3, 0,00 0bank account have been opened .

THE BANKS SERVING YOUR COMMUNITY

Board Hopes

To Hold Line

HikeAn Fe

e Professor E . McPhee, headof the commerce department ,

said Tuesday that the boardof governors would try t o.hold the line against fee in-creases this year .

He spoke at a Social Pro-blems Club, meeting on edu-cational financing .

Allan Goldsmith, AM STreasurer, who also spoke ,declared he would like to se e"more student control of themanagement of food servicesand the bookstore ."

CLASSIFIED

MONTREAL, Que . — (CUP) — One of Canada's to phumorists and an ex-staff member of The Ubyssey, Eri cNicol, better known to UBC students as "Jabez", is receivin gpublic recognition in university newspapers across Canada .

Four Canadian universitynewspapers so far have reprint-ed an article written by Nicolon "Book Burning Sugges -tions," a reprint from his col-umn in a Vancouver Daily .

The Silhouette, ' McMasterUniversity, Hamilton ; Queen'sJournal, University . of Kings-ton; The Georgian, Sir George 'four papers who ran NWilliams College, Montreal;and The Sheaf, University} ofSaskatchewan, Saskatoon, tarethe four papers who ran Nicol' sarticle . .

The Georgian, commentingon the fact that other univer-sity papers had "honored"Nicol by re-printing his article ,decided to follow suit.

In his article, Nicol. examine sthe best known nursery storiesand the drill manual of th earmed forces and comes to th econclusion that these are sub-versive .McPhee declared that UBC

has too few buildings andclassrooms, and that the esti-mated increase in enrolmentwill become evident in thre eVeers .

He implied that capitalgrants from the provinc ewere needed to facilitate ex-pansion .

Goldsmith felt that theAMS, completely student fi-nanced, was important In thatIt makes students more Inter-ested in how their money i sspent :, .

This also applies to individ-ual clubs charging dues, h efinished .

Activities CoordinatorSeeks New Assistant

Call for an assistant has bee nmade by Mike Nuttall, thisyear's AMS activity co-ordinato rJim McNish, USC president, an-nouneed Monday .

Anyone who holds the posi-tion of assistant this year canmake a strong bid to be Co. .ordinator of activities next year ,McNish added .

Entry Forms

Here Soon

Here are the rules in theUbyssey's sensational Alphabe tSoup Contest .

Clip them out and enter th econtest NOW I I 1

Submit your entries on theentry forms which will be pro-vided in Tuesday's Ubyssey, oron a reasonable facsimile of theform .

More contest forms will beavailable in the Pub office inthe Brock basement .

Remember, you have a chanceto win valuable mystery prizespresented by Dr . Norman Mac-Kenzie in an unveiling ceremonyafter the contest closes.

Here are the rules :(1) LI"at all abbreviations i n

current use on the campus, withtitles of each written out in full .

(2) After each title write ashort humorous or serious def-inition or explanation based onan accurate knowledge of theorganization .

(3) Entries, accompanied byname, faculty, and year, must besubmitted to the Ubyssey con-test editor not later than Nov . 21 .

(4) Separate prizes, awardedon the basis of completeness, ac-ceracy, humour, and aptness ofdefinition, will be ceremoniousl yawarded to the best Fresh entryand the best all round entry .

(5) All undergraduates withthe exception of PublicationsBoard staff and their families areeligible to enter the contest .

Friday, October 30, 1953

MAMOO/(S SEARCH

FOR L OST BRUSHES

"Oh where oh where haveour six brushes gone?" is thepresent theme of the Mamooks .Over the weekend various per -sons "borrowed" these brushe sfor poster and banner painting .announced Gerry Hodge .

The BEST and the SMALLESTPortable Typewriter in Canada

in leather briefcase weighs only 8ilbs ,SPECIAL STUDENT TERMS939 Hornby,Street, Vane, 1

for Demonstration or Phone TA. 3720YPE'iYR/TEIP

STUDENT TOUR Sail June 12 tourist class on S .S. At-lantic from Quebec on special conduct-ed tour limited to Students. A week in

London. Holland including Vollendam and Isle of Marken .Brussels, Cologne, the Rhine by steamer. Motor tour of theBlack , Forest, Liechtenstein, Australian Tyrol, Bavaria nCastles, Dolomites, Venice, Adriatic Coast, tiny Republic o fSan Marino . Rome, the Hill Towns ,Florence, Rome. Italianand French Rivieras, Franch Alps, Switzerland, Paris . Motortour of Scotland, English Lakes, North Wales, Shakespepr eCountry, Exmor, Glorious Devon—Returning tourist classon the S.S. Atlantic arriving Quebec August 18.

INDEPENDENT

Choose your departure and returndates; include as much or as little asyou wish in the price category of your

choice—all on a pre-arranged, prepaid basis . .An itinerarythat is made to order for you .

Ask for descriptive folders

University Travel Club Ltae

66 DAYS $1098

TRAVEL

SI Bloor St. West, Toronto . Ki. 6984Management : J . F . Sc G. H. Lucas

But even rockhounds can keep off

the rocks — by steady saving

a' 'IY BAN'n OHIO (4MSl& S

BANK OF MONTREALpsi we Swat

Your Bank on the Campus . . .In the Auditorium Buildin g

MERLE C. KIRKBY ,Manager.

WORKING WITH CANADIANS IN EVERY WALK Of LIFI SINCE 141 7

195 4

LEARN TO DANCE

• QUICKLY• EASILY

• PRIVATELY

Frances Murphy

Dance School

lima Hall 3679 W. Broadway

3E. 6878

BA. 3425

Page 3: VOLUME XXXVI Stu gent - UBC Library Home URYS VOLUME XXXVI VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1952 Price 5c; o. Stu gent Riot Prompts Council Pr~bo Rio t Latest Fiasco The riot with

VARSITY REVUE star Roma Hearn emotes during re-

hearsal of colorful musical "Blue and Gold" entertainmen t

'thew . Roma is also TUTS star and appears in skit which

is hilarious takeoff on greek letter societies .

—VbYaseY Photo by Dick Dolman

Leaving the editing of The Ubyssey to their staff, editor sAllan Fotheringham, Peter SYnnowieh and Ed Parker left last 1night to attend the western regional Canadian University Pressconference in Saskatoon .

Executive Editor, Jerome An-

gel will take over as acting edi -

a lusty chorus line serenades atimid rushette .

Among students wishing to as-si ;,t, prospective make-up expertsare needed to liclp in prepara-tion for dress rehearsals . Any-

one interested should report t oDorothy Somerset in the exten-sion department as soon as pos-

The names of the girls chose nto model in the WUS FashionShow have been released by Mr .and Mrs . Lloyd of Marty's Col-lege Shop :

Lila McLennan, Sandra Stury ,Juliet Grimston, Peggy Andreen ,Betty Hogg, Elspeth McPherson ,Lois Prince, Louise McLean ,Carol Gregory, Pam Gray, Anit aNewstead, Barb Schwenk, Mar-got Young, April Moore, Helen

Delegates from four univer-sity papers, The Manitoban (Uni-versity of Manitoba), The Sheaf(University of Saskatchewan),The Gateway (University of Al-berta), and The U.byssey will at -tend the conference .

Four young Canadians thrilledan audience of 400 students withselections from several operassung here Wednesday noon .

The Canadian Opera Ensemble ,considered the finest opera group sIn Canada, was presented by theSpecial Events and Fine ArtsCommittees in a special audi-torium concert .

Under the direction of Gile sGregoire, the group Is finishin ga nation wide tour of Canadaunder the patronage of GovernorGeneral Vincent Massey an dPrime Minister Louis St, Laur-ent .

WERE RECEIVE DThey were enthusiastically re-

ceived by the audience, wh ofound the vitality and spirit ofthe young singers contagious.

The group 'includes some ofthe best singers In Canada . Pat-rica . Poitras, mezzo-soprano, wasa finalist in the Metropolita nOpera Auditions of the Air an dhas given numerous recitals i nthe U.S. and Canada. Her per-formance of an aria from Semi-ramide was one of the highlightsof the programme.

Tenor Pierre Boutet, who at-tended Laval University as a1951 Singing Stars of Tomorrowwinner, he is currently studyin gmusic in New York .

SEARS FIALISTSoprano Simone Rainville fol-

lowed her musical studies inQuebec and Paris. She was alsoa finalist on Singing Stars ofTomorrow, and has given severa lrecitals in Canada .

Laval Graduate Gilles Lamon-tagne has sung baritone roleswith artists from the Metropoli-tan Opera, Also currently study-ing in New York, he has give nrecitals in major Canadian cities .

The programme included arias' ,from Faust, Semiramide, Car- Imen and La Boheme ; duets fromLes Contes d'Hoffmann, and I iBarbiere di Sivrglia ; and a quar-tet from Fidelio.

The quartet will give anotherrecital on Saturday In the Van-couver Art Gallery .

Conference sessions will beheld at the University of Saskat-chewan Saturday and Sunday.Agenda of the conference in-cludes discussions of the contri-butions of campus newspapersto student activities, censorshi pof college papers, the CUP wireservice, and the possibility o fwestern Intercollegiate athletics .

Addresses will be given by Dr .J. F. Leddy, Dean of Arts at U.of Saskatchewan, and formerSheaf editor, and by the manag-ing editor of the Saskatoon StarPhoenix .

Committee discussions will beheld on makeup, news-reporting ,sports, editorials, and features.A report on the travel and ac-commodation poo' will be given .

Each of the four western pa-pers contributes $125 to the I

:travel pool . Three delegates fromeach paper will attend the con-ference .

Anything worthwhile requires an effort on your part-

Act now while you have the opportunity! after yo u

leave university it will be more difficult to complete

the training necessary for your . Commission .

PRESIDENT'S DOGSNo details have been release d

about the mystery president ' sskit, but it is rumored that Dr

. for further information ,MacKenzie will appear withsome very pretty co-eds . Title ofthe three-minute skit is "Keepoff the Grass" ,

Also adding their talents to a i FHarvey-style opening skit in th e

. revue wily be two of presiden tMacKenzie's pet dogs .

Harvey, it will be remember- 1ed, was an imaginary rabbit . ; ,

eBut roles have been reversed inthe revue version. A supposedly -imaginary human being wil lshare the lead with Dr . MacKen-zie's dogs .300 MAN-HOURS

Well known author and Pro-vince columnist Eric Nicol whois a UBC graduate, wrote the •>~;'~'script for the action-packedshow, in conjunction with radio -author Ernie Perrault .

Production manager for theRevue, Tommy Lea borrowe dfrom his job of TUTS st- ge man -ager, keeps everybody busy as<;:,alast-minute preparations

are !completed . The cast spends over „: .300 man-hours per week rehears -ing

i

r-

dNfor the show .

Also rehearsing for their sup -porting roles in the president'

s skit are Dean Chant, ProfessorReid, head of the department o fEnglish, and Chief libraria n

By DICK DOLMANExtravagant two-hour Varsity Revue now being rehearse d

by Phil Keatley and Dorothy Somerset is shaping into one o fthe biggest and best shows in Vancouver entertainment .

Making their stage debut with President Norman Mac -Kenzie are 3 other faculty mem• tbers, a cast of ' 100 students,TUTS stars Roma Hearn and Le nGreenal, York theatre star DianaRicardo, and twq. of Dr. Mac-Kenzie's pet dogs.CHORUS GIRLS

Chorus girls get into the ac ttoo, with choreographers Mar aMcBirney and Diana Bancroftdirecting the "costumed" rhythmgals ,

The Blue and Gold epic t obe presented at UBC auditors- .um Nov. 5, 8, and 7, will fea-ture burlesque, costume come-dy, songs, with original musiccomposed by John Brooking-

4ton, and hilarious skits as take -offs on University life .Typical illustrated song "S"

is for the sweater you must fill" McCurrach, Janie Wright, Mar y

spoofs reek letter societies as Shaeffer, Mal McDonald, Der-C j! Brown, Joyce Rohrer, Mari-lyn McLallen, Jane Derry, Dian eLivingstone, Val Standel, Be vKemp .

• Obtain Her Majesty's Commission While At University . .

• Qualify For Your Rightful Position As A Leader in Tim eOf emergency.

r Membership In The Campus' finest Club.

preparing for the On Stage cal l

when the curtain goes up o n

the first performance Nov . 5 .'I i(l:cls tire available at A'fod-

crn tMTusic, al t 'ne extension (le-portmcn', and tit lbw ,lour,

full-fashioned . . , hand-finished . . .shrink-proof . . . moth-proof . *6 .95,31%93, 48 .95 . Jewelled and others higher .At good shops everywhere .

Page 4: VOLUME XXXVI Stu gent - UBC Library Home URYS VOLUME XXXVI VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1952 Price 5c; o. Stu gent Riot Prompts Council Pr~bo Rio t Latest Fiasco The riot with

PAGE FOUR THE b.B488EY Friday, October 30,19 5

FEMALE STARS ATTRACTED

TO NEW VARSITY TRACK CLUBIs nothing sacred ?That's what Bus Phillips has been muttering to him -

self after receiving the application of two FEMALES for

membership in the track club .Alice Whittey, a veteran of the Olympic Games and

sprinter Valerie Haig.Brown are the two offenders .The girls want to get the benefit of Bus' coaching an d

see the excellent movies that the club shows .

Commercial and Social Printers

and Publishers

PRINTERS OF THE uB rssEr

4430 W. 10th Ave .

AL 325 3

Fieldgate . Out As 'Birds Meet 'Glads'In .Final Home Game Of Football Season

~ St ----

1Albart Needs Coach "Air Force WantsFor Thursday Noon women Trainee s

English rugger mentor Albert.Laithwaite issued a harried ap-

All co-eds interested in wear-

peal today for a scrum -half ing the air force blue during their iI

college career must have their ,coach to help him out on Thurs. ,day noon hours,

applications into the RCAF Or -' derly Room in the Armouries be -

Any student who feels he can j fore Wednesday, October 28, S/ Lhandle the coacntng fob is ask- R. Herbert, Commanding Of-ed to drop into the gym and , fiver of UBC's Reserve Squad-speak to coach Laithwaite .

' eon has announced .

t+t

i s May e Upset"Feels Coach Coryel l

By RON SAPERA

Coach Don Coryell will be missing one and possibly two

of his best players Saturday afternoon when his UBC Thunder -

birds meet Pacific Lutheran College Qladitors in their fina l

home stand of the season . Game time is 2 p .m .End Norm Fieldgate has been forced to withdraw from th e

university because of financial difficulties and has turned in

his strip for the season.

The doubtful starter is starry — halfback Jack Hutchinson who i s

' I still sufering from badly pulledligaments in his leg . Hutch wasinjured early in the first quart-er of last week's game .

Buzz Hudson will take ove rFieldgate's right end slot with

- I Charley James over at the otwerCURLING CLUB—Organize• I

end of the line . Strengthenin gtion meeting for all interested his ends, Coryell has converted

centreman Cal Saarinen into a nend now that Pete Gregory i sin top form ."BULGY BILL" I N

The other end will be "BulgyBill" Boulding who . has alter-nated with Fieldgate at rightend all season.

The Blue and Gold squad wil lhave their work cut out for themwhen they meet the Glads onSaturday . The visiting teamboasts of Ron Billings, who wasseleqted as Associated Press' All -American for his defensive halfback work with the Lutes lastseason .

This year Billings has been con-verted into a quarterback an dhas led the team to one win andtwo losses . The defending cham-pions squeezed by Central 7 . 8but were nudged out by Easternand Western 14 .13 and 8-7 .POWER BACKS

Coach Mary Harahman hasonly 10 lettermen returning buthe says that they are specialist sand are not, accustomed to th eone-platoon system of gridiro nplay ,

His fears are not supported byhis powerhouse backfield re-turnees of Frank Karwoaki andDick Larson an4 the -addition o fWashington State's Frank Lan-caster,"IS THIS IT?"

Coach Coryell isn't overly l mpressed with the imposing arra yof football talent on the Gladi-ator squad .

"I feel that the boys are up forthis one," he said, "They are cap -able of an upset this season an dthis may be it . "

He admitted that every teamin the conference is vastly im-proved this year .

"But," he concluded, , "tha tmeans the 'Birds as well!"

Soccer Teams Play

Sunday Home Games

UBC's two soccer taams wti ll meet their toughest oppositionof the season Sunday as for the first time this year they bothplay on the campus . Game times are 2 :30 p .m .

College Printers

Ltd.

curlers on Friday, October 30 ,tat 12:30 in Arts 102 .

ICE HOCKEY—Practices willbe held on Sunday, Nov, 1 a t10:15 a .m. at the Forum and onMonday, Nov. 2 at 10:00 p.m. atKerrisdale Arena . First gamewill be played on Weds, Nov.4 at 8:00 p,m, in the Forum.

TRACK—A meeting of th eTrack and Cross-Country tea mwill be held on Monday, November 2 at 12:30 in Room 212of the Memorial Gym . Every -body welcome .

Annual cross - country, race ,will be held at 12:30 Tuesday ,starting at the Stadium track .Any groups entering must send a

'six man team and four men ou tof possible six must finish inorder to score potntg for theirteam.

Intermural managers meetingMonday, at 12:30, Room 213 i nthe Memorial Gym,

Intermural Table Tennisschedule on the bulletin in theMemorial Gym locker room . Par-ticipants remember to look fortheir times .

MONDAY—Spooks vs .glee: Big Dippers vs .Flames vs. Ghouls .

TUESDAY — Newman vs .Home Ec "I" ; Isobel McInnis vs .Turtles ; Pharmacy vs . Hornets .

WEDNESDAY — Spooks vs .Ann Wes. "A"; Ex-Jayo vs .Bronze : Nurses vs . Acadia ; Bel-lert vs . Kappas .

THURSDAY—V,O .C, vs . Ag•gies ; Sparkes vs, P .E . : Stars vs .Alert Jerkes : Home Ec . "II" vs .Gammins .

RIOTBLOOD SMEARED

MacKinnon appeare dwith a swollen, bandaged face, ,and blood-smeared jacket, whil ethe other two were apparentl yuninjured .

Witnesses said the riotin gstarted about 11 :25, . after theplanned entertainment at the 'smoker ceased . A large group o fthe revellers organizd a snak eparade outside the ballroom, ob .structing traffic on Broadway .

Police, who had been watch-ing the building for most of th eevening, moved in and tried todisperse the mob. "About 20" of '.the Applied Science student sturned on the patrol car and at-emped to overturn it .tThe two constables, "Robbie"

Robinson and A. A, Frederick -son, jumped from the car an dgrabbed the nearest troubl emaker . As Robinson attemptedto handcuff a rioter, MacKin-non allegedly leaped on his back ,attempting to pull the officer ,away, Robinson swung aroundand struck MacKinnon the sid eof his face, knocking him to the 'ground .

Meanwhile Frederickson call •ed headquarters for assistanc ethe mob made an attempt to fre ethe two handcuffed rioters, Tenponce car's Answered Frederick -

son's call, but the nwb began de-

flating the tires of the patro l

ears, before being dispersed .NONE OF THREE

None of the three students,' -restccl lt't' orig inally from Van-

couver . Mitchell is from Victoria )

Giegcrich is from Kimberly and

MacKinnon's home is

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UBC Foil Club

Hosts Fencing

T~urnament

UBC Fencing team will behosts to the 1958 edition of thePacific International FencingTournament Saturday in theMemorial Gym .

Foil artists from the states ofOregon, Washington and B .C .will be entered in the tourna-ment .

Fencing will go on all daySaturday with the Senior FoilsFinals being held in the eveningin the Women's Gymnasium .

UBC's eight man team hashigh hopes of repeating the hugesuccess scored in the B.C. cham-pionships held two weeks ago .

Of particular interest will bethe standings of brothers Johnand Loewen, who placed firstand second In the province tourn-ament.-- ;

FORGET

INVASIO N

BELLINGHAM

NOVEMBER 7

tudents Summer

Earnings Small

"The cost of a school year t oAccording to Major J . F. Mc the average student, "added Mr .

Lean, director of personnel ser• Mclean, "is approximately $050 ,vice for the university, women the men students who work ou tstudents made an average of of town pay out about $250 fo r

foci and board during the sum -mer, and as a result come backinto town with approximatel y

for both men and women S500, Therefore if no support i sforthcomin g, the average malestudent must get in the neigh-bourhood of $300 from outsid e

EARNINGS JUMPOver-all average summer earn-

ings have taken a jump for bot hmen and women students sinc e1932 . In 1952 the average we -lttell student earned $247 .67 ,while tile average man earnedt,ff85.62, This summer men reported $692 .50 earned .

Most students, according toh'1l . McLean, do not earn enoug hmoney to pay I'or the total cos tof their university year ,

"I'he peculiar thine about it, 'staled McLean, "is that quidni n e student, like to Ihink t lo ttlmy support themselves entirel yIlemug :i the hi pp o,\ they earn .I'h truth is, heel mos n ill ' the m~i I'et't'ive 111 llcl front ;In mint ,

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Meanwhile the once-beate nUBC Chiefs take on the leagu eleading North Burnaby LegionXI and also feel they will pullan upset and win their hom eopener .

Sitting In fourth' place, thejunior squad can pull themselve sinto contention by out-scorin gthe Legionnaires on Sunday .

CLASSE S

THE CIVIL LIBERTIES Unioninvites participation in its dis-

cussion of "Freedom in Radio an dT .V." in Engineering 202 o nTusday, Nov . 3, at 12 :30 p .m.

THE LIBERAL CLUB wil lhear a lecture by Vancouver-

I Burrard M .P., Dr. J. L. Mac -Dougall, on "The Problems of th eComing Session " in Arts 100 ,Tuesday noon .

Alt

N.

PSYCHOLOGY CLUB'S gen-eral meeting takes place Wed-nesday, Nov, 4 in the club roo mHM 3 . at noon . Discussion of thecoming party and other matterswill be the main features .

:6

At

THE DANCE CLUB forma ldance, open to all students, wil lbe held Friday, Nov . 6 at 9 p.m .in the Orchid Hall Cabaret, 272 3West 4th . Tickets will be avail -able Monday, Wednesday an dThursday noon in Hut HG4 a t$3 per couple .

Att

DR. J. L. MacDOUGALL, M .P .(Burrard), will speak in Arts 100next Tuesday noon, Nov. 3.Topic of the Liberal whip 's ad-dress wilt be "Problems Facin gthe Coming Session of Parlia-ment," with particular emphasi son the proposed Canadian flag,criminal code revisions, and agri-cultural surplusses . Liberal clu bsponsorers .

Ag-P,E ,

in

D

TH E

By CHARLIE WATTUnlike the burlesque-queen heroine of the recent movi e

"She's Working Her Way Through College, " most UBC womenstudnts do not earn enough money during the summer to cove rtheir university expenses .

5293 .00 last summr .

McLean has made a complet ereport of the employment situa-tionstudents which will appear in hi sinterim Report on employmen tstatistics . The report includes acomparison of wages students sotll'ces ,have earned during the past two _years,

.,n VDRAUGHTINGINSTRUMENTS

FROM $10.00

T-SQUARES, PROTRACTOR SSET SQUARES '

MECHANICAL ENGINEER SAND

POLYPHASE SLIDE RULE S

ZIPPER RING BOOK SComplete with Sheets an d

Index

AMES LETTERIN GINSTRUMENTS

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-4 Varsity, will he trying fo rtheir second in when they mee tDominions, at present second Inthe race for the championship .

The squad will be in top shapewith the return of Don Rento nfrom the injured list to bolsterthe defense . Varsity will be try-ing to get out of its present rutof draws by beating the visitors .

The Blue and Gold, presentl yin fourth place in the standings ,are up for this game and, thoughthe underdog, feel they can up -set the defending champions .They think that a main factorwill be they are playing at home .

!II At)

,

I

(4 - age. .eege

New Westminster Fraser Valley Branch Offic e

Zeller Bldg ., 604 Columbia St., New Westminster

Fred B. G'froerer, Branch Manager

N•Ib3

'Vancouver Interior B .C. Yukon Branch OfficeStock Exchange Bldg ., 475 Howe St.

H. C. Webber, C .L,U., Branch Manager

Vancouver Branch Office, 402 W . Pender St .

Eric V. Chown, LL.B., C,L,U., Branch Manager '

Victoria Branch Office, 201 Scollard Bldg. Robt. M. Moore, C .L,U ., Branch Manage r

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