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Nomination s Open . . . First Slat e Run Lik e H---! ! Don ' t Be Late Vol . XLIV . VANCOUVER, B .C ., TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1961 No . 4 2 Su g ar container ' bug g Fort . food foul ; kitchen crowde d 1y SHARON McKINNON A bug, live evidence of the food served in Fort Camp , was presented to Eric Ricker, chairman of the AMS Food Ser- vices Committee, at a complaint meeting attended by fifty _ students Friday . The bug had been found i n a sugar container at lunch i n Fort in Friday, and was deliver- ed to the meeting in the contain- er by a group of Fort Cam p residents . It was put in the cus- tody of Gil McKay, who wa s requested to show it to the diet- ician . for some improvement in t h e quality of food and service . - CAN'T ACT - If no satisfaction is forthcom- ing, he stated that he would se e Miss Blair, head of food service s on campus, a n d request tha t she look into t h e complaints . Ricker stressed, however, that : Major points bought up at his committee may only advise, the meeting were that the Fort the administration alone can . take definite action . Asked if any provisions wer e being made for enlarging t h e ' kitchen, Ricker replied that the ; - administration was trying to ge t rid of the camps, so any expert- ` sive - alterations would be im- practical. "There has been • a general - policy of replacing kitche n equipment as it wears out," h e said, "They want what they ca n use till the e n d, a nd heavy kitchen equipment could n o t f be easily transferred to th e Commons, when Fort Camp i s abolished . " When the men's huts in, For t are torn down, a new dining hal l will be erected for the women' s residences . Ricker said that h e felt a mistake had been mad e in ever getting 'the huts on cam - pus. SHEETS INEFFECTIV E Poor response, due to ineffi- cient distribution and genera l apathy on the part of residents , was given as the reason for th e ineffectiveness of the suggestion ' sheets distributed last term . -f$~' sets new re g ard ; shallenges the wort d By PETER GFJJN UBC's Intellectual Stunt Committee today challenged the universities of the world to beat the bed-pushing record set by ISC last weekend . The ISC bed travelled 42 miles_ from the International border t o UDC, to promote the World Uni- versity Service book drive fo r Japanese and Pakistani univer- sities, and to establish a ne w world bed-pushing record . The specially adapted bed be- gan its journey under the fog- irQuded Peace Arch, and cam e to a halt before a student crowd of 2,000 in front of the Brock . The entire journey took exactl y twelve hours and, twenty-fiv e minutes . Over thirty ISC member s pushed, pulled and shoved t o bring the stunt to its successfu l completion . Special mentio n goes to Mike Hunter, Ubysse y sports editor, who spent a long , lonely night in the Brock, keep- ing-the city's news media inform- ed on the bed's progress . The RCMP and Vancouver cit y police assisted the pusher s through the various traffi c hazards . dents of the Big Push can. be best described by excerpt s from a dairy of one the partici - pants . 12 :4)5 a ns —. Everybody wait- ing. the Canadian Customs , ready to leave 'for the Peac e Arch. 12:45-.-Passed through . the Peter Meekison, Open ] ;lous e Chairman, said today that very few women have volun- teered to act as guides at Open House . About 900 are urgent- ly needed . Persons interested are re- quired to sign the sheets i n the Open House Office abov e the AMS offices . About 100,000 people ar e expected to attend the annua l event, to be . held March 4 . Theme of this year's even t revolves around the Broc k Mural . The event will be open- ed by B .C . Lieut ., Governo r George Pearkes . ONE OF THE highlights of th e floor Show at Mardi Gra s was the Feline females wh o tantalized the Brooklyn' .Bu s Boys while Ibby sang out "Pe t Me Popper." Camp kitchen is overcrowded , and that although the food orig- inally purchased for the resi- dents is of good quality, 't h e preparation and service to the students leaves something to be desired . MORE COMPLAINT S food is served on dirty dishes . bag lunche sere dreadful stale bread, hard cookies . milk is often sour . it bugs, worms, hair, etc . often appear in the food : it food is wasted because stu- dents don't like it . Sunday dinner is good — why isn't it the rest of the week ? why isn't food in Fort a s good as in Common Block ? breakfasts are repulsivecold toast, raw eggs, green ham . food is served cold . meals are unattractivel y served . Ricker said that he thought most of the complaints at th e meeting were quite valid, an d that the dietician at Fort woul d be asked for an explanation, o r By DENIS STANLE Y Over $3,000 was realize d the Children's Foundation b y the Greek Letter Societies as a result of Mardi Gras '61 . "Mardi Gras goes to Broad - way" produced exciting costum- es and table decorations . A pack- ed house for three nights reveal- ed `costumes ranging from "An- nie Get Your Gun" to elaborat e costumes from "The King and I . " The best costume award 'o n Friday night went to John Hat- chett and Pat Lloyd-Jones wh o were dresed as Arabs . Saturday night winners wer e Bab Parker and Marilyn Lesli e who dressed in costumes depict - ing the "Flower Drum Song . " Marilyn dressed as a flower an d 'Bob dressed as a- drum ; they were chosen for their-originality . Delta Kappa Epsilon won. the ! a .m .—Crossed ' Patull o Peace Arch and began the jour- ney . 12 :30—Checked through Can- adian Customs—nothing to de- clare . (They thought the tires were filled with air! A fello w gets thirsty you know) . 1 :00 a .m .—Covered four miles : everyone in high spirits, sun g unprintable songs . Slight brea k in fog . 1 :30 a .m .—RCMP check . "Li t up like a Christmas tree" (Phe w didn't look under the mattress) . 2 :00 a .m .-First progress re- ports came out over C-FUN . Motorist asked for room service : (Clown-type motorist) . 3 :00 a .m . Minor crises ; bed frame split and battery i n radio truck gave out . 3 :30 a .m . Stopped at gas sta- tion for a "fillup" (Cheap round! ) 4 :00 a .m .—Passed Dees Islan d turn-off. Crew served coffee "i n bed . " 5 :00 Bridge with RCMP escort . RC - MP moved us rapidly . "It's goo d for your health ." Sure ! 8 :45 a .m .-,—Welding truck ar - 1lived and repaired bed . Re- trieved lost wheel and pilot car . 10 :20 Crossed Granvill e Bridge . Kyle Mitchell fell off - radio truck. Recovered . 11 :10 a .m .—Ubyssey reporter fel off truck Suspects fou l play. Recovered : 12:45 Arrived Brook . 'Maher , put on the hot water, my fee t are numb! —elite) by George leeldei- THE END OF THE BIG PUSH . (More pictures page . 6 .) Open &use ails , es in demand ry Hurley of Kappa Kappa Gam- ma . The floor show sparked by . "Take Back your Mink" by Ja n Owen, fresh vice pres ., a n d "Pet me 'Poppa" by Ibby Ogles- - by, 4th Physical Ed., came off s in true Broadway fashion. Cher . ' eographer Corneil Therrien and es t music director Errol Gay sue- ' seeded : in making the floor " ' show outstanding - Mardi Gras smash hit , plays to packed houses 4 best table decoration with thei r South Pacific theme . In a gail y for lighted corner of the Commo- ' dore they set up artificial palm s and rocks and took out t h e tables and chairs . Patrons t o their sections sat on the floo r and sipped out of coconut shell s while playing bongo drums . On Friday night the King an d Queen were chosen ; The King was Dave Howard of Alpha Del- ta Phi and the Queen was Sher .
Transcript
Page 1: Run Like Nominations Don Late Su ar container · Bridge. Kyle Mitchell fell off-radio truck. Recovered. 11:10 a.m.—Ubyssey reporter fel off truck Suspects foul play. Recovered:

NominationsOpen . . .

First Slate

Run LikeH---!!

Don 't Be Late

Vol . XLIV .

VANCOUVER, B .C ., TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1961

No. 42

Sugar container ' buggFort . food foul ;kitchen crowded

1y SHARON McKINNON

A bug, live evidence of the food served in Fort Camp ,was presented to Eric Ricker, chairman of the AMS Food Ser-vices Committee, at a complaint meeting attended by fifty _students Friday.

The bug had been found i na sugar container at lunch inFort in Friday, and was deliver-ed to the meeting in the contain-er by a group of Fort Cam presidents . It was put in the cus-tody of Gil McKay, who wa srequested to show it to the diet-ician .

for some improvement in t h equality of food and service .

-CAN'T ACT

-If no satisfaction is forthcom-

ing, he stated that he would se eMiss Blair, head of food serviceson campus, a n d request tha tshe look into t h e complaints .Ricker stressed, however, that :

Major points bought up at his committee may only advise,the meeting were that the Fort the administration alone can .

take definite action .Asked if any provisions were

being made for enlarging t h e 'kitchen, Ricker replied that the ; -administration was trying to ge trid of the camps, so any expert- `sive - alterations would be im-practical.

"There has been • a general -policy of replacing kitchenequipment as it wears out," h esaid, "They want what they ca nuse till the e n d, a nd heavykitchen equipment could n o tfbe easily transferred to th eCommons, when Fort Camp isabolished . "

When the men's huts in, For tare torn down, a new dining hal lwill be erected for the women' sresidences . Ricker said that hefelt a mistake had been madein ever getting 'the huts on cam-pus.SHEETS INEFFECTIVE

Poor response, due to ineffi-cient distribution and generalapathy on the part of residents ,was given as the reason for theineffectiveness of the suggestion 'sheets distributed last term .

-f$~' sets new regard;shallenges the wortd

By PETER GFJJN

UBC's Intellectual Stunt Committee today challenged the

universities of the world to beat the bed-pushing record set by

ISC last weekend .

The ISC bed travelled 42 miles_from the International border toUDC, to promote the World Uni-versity Service book drive forJapanese and Pakistani univer-sities, and to establish a newworld bed-pushing record .

The specially adapted bed be-gan its journey under the fog-irQuded Peace Arch, and cameto a halt before a student crowdof 2,000 in front of the Brock .The entire journey took exactlytwelve hours and, twenty-fiveminutes .

Over thirty ISC memberspushed, pulled and shoved t obring the stunt to its successfu lcompletion . Special mentio ngoes to Mike Hunter, Ubysseysports editor, who spent a long ,lonely night in the Brock, keep-ing-the city's news media inform-ed on the bed's progress .

The RCMP and Vancouver citypolice assisted the pusher sthrough the various traffichazards .

dents of the Big Push can.be best described by excerpt sfrom a dairy of one the partici-pants.

12 :4)5 a ns— .Everybody wait-ing.

the Canadian Customs ,ready to leave 'for the PeaceArch.

12:45-.-Passed through . the

Peter Meekison, Open ];louseChairman, said today thatvery few women have volun-teered to act as guides at OpenHouse. About 900 are urgent-ly needed.

Persons interested are re-quired to sign the sheets i nthe Open House Office abovethe AMS offices .

About 100,000 people ar eexpected to attend the annua levent, to be . held March 4 .Theme of this year's eventrevolves around the BrockMural . The event will be open-ed by B.C. Lieut ., GovernorGeorge Pearkes .

ONE OF THE highlights of th efloor Show at Mardi Gra swas the Feline females wh otantalized the Brooklyn' .Bu s

Boys while Ibby sang out "Pe tMe Popper."

Camp kitchen is overcrowded ,and that although the food orig-inally purchased for the resi-dents is of good quality, 't h epreparation and service to thestudents leaves something to bedesired .MORE COMPLAINTS

• food is served on dirtydishes .

• bag lunche sere dreadful—stale bread, hard cookies .

• milk is often sour .it bugs, worms, hair, etc . often

appear in the food :it food is wasted because stu-

dents don't like it.• Sunday dinner is good —

why isn't it the rest of the week ?• why isn't food in Fort a s

good as in Common Block ?• breakfasts are repulsive—

cold toast, raw eggs, green ham .• food is served cold .• meals are unattractively

served .Ricker said that he thought

most of the complaints at themeeting were quite valid, an dthat the dietician at Fort wouldbe asked for an explanation, o r

By DENIS STANLE Y

Over $3,000 was realizedthe Children's Foundation b ythe Greek Letter Societies as aresult of Mardi Gras '61 .

"Mardi Gras goes to Broad-way" produced exciting costum-es and table decorations . A pack-ed house for three nights reveal-ed `costumes ranging from "An-nie Get Your Gun" to elaborat ecostumes from "The King and I . "

The best costume award 'onFriday night went to John Hat-chett and Pat Lloyd-Jones wh owere dresed as Arabs .

Saturday night winners wereBab Parker and Marilyn Lesliewho dressed in costumes depict-ing the "Flower Drum Song . "Marilyn dressed as a flower and'Bob dressed as a- drum ; • theywere chosen for their-originality.

Delta Kappa Epsilon won. the !

a.m.—Crossed ' Patullo

Peace Arch and began the jour-ney .

12 :30—Checked through Can-adian Customs—nothing to de-clare. (They thought the tireswere filled with air! A fellowgets thirsty you know) .

1 :00 a .m.—Covered four miles :everyone in high spirits, sungunprintable songs. Slight breakin fog .

1 :30 a .m.—RCMP check . "Litup like a Christmas tree" (Phewdidn't look under the mattress) .

2:00 a.m .-First progress re-ports came out over C-FUN .Motorist asked for room service :(Clown-type motorist) .

3 :00 a .m . —Minor crises; bedframe split and battery inradio truck gave out .

3 :30 a .m. Stopped at gas sta-tion for a "fillup" (Cheap round! )

4:00 a .m.—Passed Dees Islandturn-off. Crew served coffee "inbed ."

5 :00Bridge with RCMP escort . RC-MP moved us rapidly . "It's goo dfor your health." Sure !

8 :45 a .m.-,—Welding truck ar-1lived and repaired bed . Re-trieved lost wheel and pilot car .

10:20 Crossed GranvilleBridge. Kyle Mitchell fell off-radio truck. Recovered .

11 :10 a.m.—Ubyssey reporterfel off truck Suspects foulplay. Recovered :

12:45 Arrived Brook . 'Maher,put on the hot water, my feetare numb!

—elite) by George leeldei-

THE END OF THE BIG PUSH . (More pictures page . 6 .)

Open &use ails,

es in demand

ry Hurley of Kappa Kappa Gam-ma .

The floor show sparked by ."Take Back your Mink" by JanOwen, fresh vice pres ., a n d"Pet me 'Poppa" by Ibby Ogles- -by, 4th Physical Ed., came offsin true Broadway fashion. Cher. 'eographer Corneil Therrien and estmusic director Errol Gay sue- 'seeded: in making the floor " 'show outstanding

-

Mardi Gras smash hit,

plays to packed houses 4

best table decoration with thei rSouth Pacific theme. In a gaily

for lighted corner of the Commo- 'dore they set up artificial palmsand rocks and took out t h etables and chairs . Patrons totheir sections sat on the floorand sipped out of coconut shellswhile playing bongo drums .

On Friday night the King andQueen were chosen ; The Kingwas Dave Howard of Alpha Del-ta Phi and the Queen was Sher .

Page 2: Run Like Nominations Don Late Su ar container · Bridge. Kyle Mitchell fell off-radio truck. Recovered. 11:10 a.m.—Ubyssey reporter fel off truck Suspects foul play. Recovered:

Page Two

THE UBY .SS .fY

Tuesday, Jauary 24, 196 1

IN SPITE of your experience at the General M feting, your missile needs further development .Try me again after the spring meeting .

"Authorized as second class mail by Post Office Department; OttawaMEMBER CANADIAN, UNIVERSITY PRESS

Published three times weekly throughout the University yea rin Vancouver by the Publications Board of the Alma Mater Societe .University of B .C . Editorial opinions expressed are those of th eFditorial Board of the Ubyssey and not necessarily those of th eAlma Mater Society of the University of B .C .

TELEPHUi\ ES : CA 4-3242, locals 12 (news desk), 13 (critics-_ sports ), 14 (Editor-in-Chief), 15, 6 (business offices) .

'Editor-in-Chief : Fred Fletche rManaging Editor Roger MCAfeeNews Editor

. .

. Denis StanleyAssociate Editors

. . Ian Brown, Ed Lavall ePhotography Editor .

.

. Baron Hende eSenior Editor Ann PickardSports Editor Mike HunterCritics Editor Dave BromigeCUP Editor . .

. . Bob Hendrickson

NEWS STAFF: Jerry Pirie, Stu McLaughlin, Bruc eHousser, Sharon McKinnon, Sharon Rodney, Georg eRailton, Keith Bradbury, Ruth Robertson, Nick Gil-bert, Pete Gelin, Sandra Scott, Derek Allen, MaureenCovell, Chuck Bishop, Frank Lambert .

CAVfool's joke ?What has .become of the Campus Association of Voters ?

A CAV representative came to The Ubyssey January

16, and assured our reporter that the group was genuine . He

produced a somewhat odd program, and stated that the grou p

was a bona fide student voters association ,

The group set itself up as opposition to the NBC. Friday,

the NBC nominated its slate of candidates . The elections ar e

drawing near . But, as . yet, we have heard nothing from the

CAV .Perhaps, the CAV is nothing but a joke . If so, it is in poo r

taste.Whatever we may think of the platform of the NBC, w e

have no doubt of their sincere interest in student government .

Of the originators of the CAN, we have no such assur-

ance. They must either produce some action soon, or b e

damned as fools .

Let's secedeHave you ever considered how valuable it might be for Bri-

tish Columbia to secede from Canada ?

Certainly, it is not an infeasible suggestion . When the eas t

Was isolated from this land of glory recently, no hardship was

wreaked in that sector of the country . Surely, then, we could

withdraw without feeling any moral qualms.

Think of the advantages . No worries about bad wheat

crops, no digs from eastern footballers, no irritating Toronto

smugness and all the rest .We could become an economic satellite of Japan and joi n

the boom in foreign trade with Canada . We could become a

sports and entertainment satellite of the U .S. After all, we

are- members of the Pacific .Coast Baseball League, and we

could easily join the National Football League . And who

watches the CBC anyway ?

No hardship to us, none to Canada . And think of the ad-

vantages . Just think . .

Marking inaccurate .Someone said a few_words the other day praising "th e

biggest mass scholarship scheme on the continent . " He was

referring, of course, to the Social Credit "money-for-marks' '

scheme . .

This scheme is in many ways a good thing and not a few

students are grateful for the extra shekels they have receive d

as beneficiaries.

'

But there is one thing wrong with the scheme . A thing

we have not seen mentioned anywhere .

The fault we are referring to is the unreliability of the

marking system at this university. In many courses, final

marks -are compiled by rather dubious methods .

The many-times-proven fact that .an exam score can vary

as much as forty percent when the same exam is marked by

a group of qualified markers working independently, is proo f

enough that there is at least a certain arnout of uncertainty

in exam marking .

This could easily result in disparities - when the mone y

is handed out .

But, for our part, we say, keep the cash coming—we

'might get lucky and win some :

Think! !It may be a new experience .

Of Beds and Book sEditor,The Ubyssey ,Dear Sir :

In my official capacity a sWUSC Chairman, and my un-official capacity as passenger ,I would like to thank -every-one who helped to break theworld distance bed - pushin grecord last Friday .

Thanks to the crews who.gotup in the wee small hours t ocome out and relieve theweary shifts who had. beenpushing since midnight .

Thanks to the hardy soul swho took it across the Patull oBridge at a flat-out run .

Thanks to the girls who rod ethe bed in the cold foggy dawn .

Thanks to the welder wh osaved us from coming in onthree wheels .'Thanks to the staff at

B.P.H.Q . (Bed Pushing Head-quarters) in The Ubyssey of-fice who kept the radio stationsinformed on the bed's progres sall through the night .

Thanks to the Councillorsand students who greeted us atthe Brock .

But special thanks to KyleMitchell, Ed . Lavalle, and Bil lRedmond who designed an dbuilt the ;bed, : arranged for th epublicity, cleared things withthe police, did most of the col-losal organizing job, and thenpushed the bed about 10 milesthemselves .

Thank-you all for your helpin launching the WUSC BookDrive for Pakistan and Japan .now all we need are thebooks!

-Sincerely,

Ruth Kidd ,- Law III

War FilmsEditor ,The Ubyssey,Dear Sir :

As a conscientious objecto rin the last world war and apeace lovirfg citizen of Canada .I must protest the showing ofa series of war films by theFilm Society during this week .

These films exaggerate theglory of war " a portray theslaughter of thousands in themost graphic ' detail . Films ofthis sort should be burned andthe persons responsible for thi ssort should be publicly casti-gated tor : their acts .

Yours in disgust ,Richard Bride, Arts II

JABBERWOCKY

BY DEREK ALLEN

The poet talks about fog creeping in on little cat 's feet ,but the murky soot that hunkered down on this benighted vil-lage recently had the feet of a mature, refty saber-tooth lion .

The stalking action of -a fog is certainly .characteristic ofthe feline, but an image anchored in feet has an insecure foun-dation . All cats, from the spoiled domestic in grandmother' slap to the vicious predator on the veldt, are hunters whos epadded paws shield claws that slash more viciously and quick-er than any assassin 's knife—and just as treacherously . Ipersonally do not care to be thought a tiny pink rodent scampering about in constant danger of being pounced on .

Besides, it scares hell out of me to see some ass (huma n

variety) come barreling out of the fog at about forty while Icower on the curb nerving myself to cross the street .

Entirely aside from that, all sorts of things come ou t

from inside hollow logs and under musty rocks when the yhave a suitable murky cover for comfort . The local criminal

element has a highly developed smash-and-grab techniqu ewaiting for the occasion, and the less courageous snatch purses .

Sex deviates and molesters abound—even the dogs turn vi-cious .

Fog does funny things to people. I :zitched a ride with a

fellow dressed in black . He wore a clerical collar and drove

very carefully . As we came onto the endowment lands he spedup a bit but didn't go over the speed limit—he commentedon how trick the RCMP were with their radar . As he said ,

a fellow in his profession can 't afford to get caught speeding .

It just doesn 't look right. Still, you have to be of quite suspi-cious temperament to think a defender of the peace and guar-

dian of the public weal eager enough to set up a road block

in the fog . As if there weren't enough dangers .in the streets ,

the police should add one more? It would be a brave constable

indeed who would step out to flag down a car when the fo g

makes hit-and-run such a tempting crime .

Then there is the matter of lights in. the parking lot . How

many cars have you seen sitting running down their batterie s

with the light switch behind carefully locked doors and th e

owner behind the eight ball . The callous chuckle sympatheti-

cally: "Serves the bloody fool right ." But those of us who are

somewhat less than perfect, who are, perhaps, unfortunat eenough to have been in this situation, anticipate with a touc h

of sadness the sinking feeling that will weaken a driver as h e

sees- beacons shining forth from his car .

If and when the cat creeps off, satiated, he leaves his

spoor behind—that smear condensed from the air we dar e

to breathe. Those among us who are clean living types, wh o

have not taken the most elementary precautions—such a s

toughening up our lungs with alcohol rubs (sloshings) or

coating them with nicotine-usually go about looking a bi t

pale and wan for a week or so . They recover. But 'in other

places the cat is stronger and swifter, and he gets his prey .

There must be a moral in this somewhere .

Page 3: Run Like Nominations Don Late Su ar container · Bridge. Kyle Mitchell fell off-radio truck. Recovered. 11:10 a.m.—Ubyssey reporter fel off truck Suspects foul play. Recovered:

The phrase "Water, wate reverywhere, nor any drop todrink" describes our present so-ciety rerfectly, said Leo Nim-sick, CCF MLA who spoke inBu. 205 on Friday .

Speaking on "The citizen o fTomorrow," Nimsick stressed ,that our economy is one-sidedand based on scarcity in an ageof plenty . "The people who ownand control the machinery ofproduction have to make aprofit . Everything is geared tothis . . profits before all . In anage of technical abundance, peo-ple live in poverty . "

"People used to feel that lei- !sure time was for the selectedfew alone," he pointed out . "Butnow, this feeling is changing ,and with the advance of automa-

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Tuesday, January 24, 1961

T H E U B Y S S E Y

Page Three

McGounCup Friday

UBC' ' tries for two straigh tA debating cup with a 38 -

year history will be the prize .Friday night as teams in fou rWestern Canadian universi-ties debate the topic : Resolve dthat Canada should follow aneutral foreign policy .

The McGoun Cup was do-nated in 1923 by Professor A .F. McGoun of the Universit yof Alberta . Symbolic of debat-ing supremacy in the Wester nCanada University DebatingLeague, it was won ' by UB Clast year for the first time .

Derek Allen, third Arts, an dMike Coleman, first Arts, wil luphold the affirmative againstWalter Shando and Ron Neu-man from the University o fAlberta .

Lorenne Gordon, f o u r t hArts, and David Anderson ,

second Law, travel to Saska-toon to take the negative sid eagainst University of Saskat-chewan opponents .

U. of S. representatives goto Manitoba which completesthe circle by sending a tea mto the University of Alberta ,Four simultaneous debateswill be held begining at 8p.m. in each time zone .

Overall winners are chosenby a point system based onawards made by 12 judges ,three at each debate .

Winner of the McGoun Cu pis eligible to send two debat-ers to Montreal in March t odebate against the champions

upve Atvaeac3Ves

in two eastern Canada leagues .

LORENNE GORDON

By SANDRA SCOT T

At a lively but disorderly meeting Friday Arts and Scienc e,;tudents approved a proposal to split the undergraduate societ ynto two groups .

Amendments to the new Arts rectify this situation and wer e

Undergraduate Society constitu defeated .

tion were also approved at the

Ken Hodkinson, Arts IV, sug-

general meeting, by approxi- gested that the society be spli t

mately 150 students .

into two groups, one for sopho-I mores and the other for junior s

Under the new Science cc,n- and seniors

-. stitution, students heading to

Hisses followed this proposalward a B .Sc . degree will be and it was not seriously con-considered members of the Sci sidered .

ASUS general meetingapproves faculty split

ence Undergraduate Society ,The . primary objections to th e

Arts and Science Undergraduat eSociety were that it was too ; Science IV, that mathematics

large and was not centralized, students be admitted to the Sci-Undergraduate Societ ac-y ,

counted for a good part of the

which provides separate under- discussion .

graduate societies for Arts stu- If Students' Council approve s

dents and Science students, does the constitutions, elections fo r

not substantially decrease the! the executives will take place

overpopulous Arts Society .

next month .

The new Science Undergrad- Nominations for presidents o fuate Society will include only the two societies will open Feb .

about 500 students while the ] 13, while nominations for othe rArts Undergraduate Society will positions will open Feb . 20 .

II represent some 3,000 students .

All nominations must be sub -'

amendments attempted to mitted to Bu . 115 .

Pearson to kickoffnew international seriesThe Honourable Lester B . The second lecture in the se-

Pearson will inaugurate a new tions ." He will speak at 12 :3 0series of public lectures at UBC Gross, a well-known internation-on February 2, President N . A. al lawyer from New York andM. MacKenzie anounced today . a member of the American dele -

The lectures, which will deal gation to the UN .with public and international The president said Mr . Pear-

son and Mr. Gross would giv eCanadian and American view-points on problems facing theUN. Negotiations are currentl ygoing on to bring a third per -son. to UBC from Europe to stat ethe European point of view.

The president said that Mr ..Pearson's close -connection withthe UN made him well qualifie dto give a Canadian point of viewon problems facing the UN .

_et

UNDERGRADUATE POSITION SPRODUCTION .ENGINEERIN G

PIPELINE ENGINEERING. (Second Year Only )

Debate concerning an amend-ment proposed by David Wales ,

MIKE COLEMA N

Says Nimsick :DEREK ALLE N

"Sit i

aflt" acarcyn ange o pen yple . "

"The problem is," Nimsickconcluded, "to learn how tomake use of the available time, I

once the primary hurdle of ap-plying automation has beenovercome ."

Cox, Butler featuredtion more free time will . . . and 1

should . . . be given to more pea- £nThe Folksong Society wil l

hold its first concert of thespring term Thursday at12:30 in Bu. 1013 Pref. AlCox and Dr . J . Butler will befeatured .

first concert

problems, have been establishe d, as .the result of an annual grantfrom a friend of the uiversity ,President MacKenzie said .

Mr. Pearson's address will b ethe first of three lectures wit hthe general title "A critical re-evaluation of the United Na-tions ." He wil lspeak at 12 :3 0p .m . in the UBC Armoury. Al l

j lectures will be open to the pub-lic .

GRADUATE POSITION SGEOLOGY

PRODUCTION ENGINEERIN GPIPELINE ENGINEERIN G

'jiUbsWI'S n (r1 and as Q r mpan

i tritLit

CALGARY, ALBERTAHAS POSITIONS AVAILABLE FOR GRADUATES AN D

UNDERGRADUATE S

on campus .

I

PersoNi ln :ervews

may be arrange d

through !h e

liniversify Pkcemen Office

Company Representatives

will be on the

Campus for Interviews

February 1, 2 , & 3

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Debators discussportentous topics

I

Topic for today's noon hou r

debate for the Legion Cup wil l

be "That Brock Mural is inPoor Taste ."

On Wednesday the topicbe "Resolved that : more womenshould study Engineering andmore men should study HomeEconomics . "

Twelve teams are competin gin the first round of the LegionCup . The six winning teams fromthe first round will be pairedoff for three debates in th e.second round .

Today the Sailing Club wil luebate against Beta Theta Psin Bu . 205, and Kappa KappaGamma will debate against theC.C.F. Cub in Bu . '203 .

On Wednesday The Ubysseywill meet Phi Delta Theta i nBu. 20'5, and Psi Upsilon will

Complete security never hasand never will exist for eitherindividuals or for nations, Rev.Philip Hewitt of Vancouver' sUnitarian church told the cam-

Women oppose

nuclear armsCanadian women have a res-

ponsibility to speak out agains tnuclear testing and the additionof more countries to the nuclea rclub, a representative of theWomen's Committee On Radia-tion Hazards Said in BrockLounge Monday.

Mrs . Dorothy Beck, B .A ., .B .S .W., M.S.W., said womenmust not suffer from false hu-mility but speak out against nu-clear testing . She said the citi-zens of the world must sto pnuclear war between the U.S .and Russia .

"It is time to reasses the mor-. 'telly of societal," Mks . Beck

told about one nundred students ."The problem inherent in nu-clear testing and nuclear war isa human problem not a politi-cal or scientific problem. It con-cerns us all . "

She said there is a twofolddanger in the continuation oftesting: a danger to the huma nfamily, and the danger of nu -clear war.

Mrs. Beck said she sees agreat danger of war if the Rus-sians start sending out armedplanes, as the U.S. does, whenthey see a suspicious object o ntheir radar sets .

pus Nuclear Disarmament clubon Monday . '

The search for security, isola-tionism, refusal to think in th epresent, smugness and a dan-

gerous brand of "Fantasy think-ing" are all psychological factorswhich prevent the West fromadopting a sane approach inworld affairs, " Dr . Hewitt said .

There are man logical arguments in favor of the nuclearbomb as a deterrent, but . . ."They ignore basic human pro-cesses of thought .

"We want to have everythin gon easy terms," said Dr. Hewitt .

"And we persist in thinkingthat something magical wil lcome along and save us fromthe consequences .of our folly . "

Dr. Hewitt stressed, however ,that there were other factorswhich ' made the situation lookless grim. There is a genuine*eh for international under-standing, and, there is alwaysthe instinct for survival .

But "Mass action must comefrom- the people of the world, "concluded the speaker, beforeunderstanding and then direc tdisarmament can be achieved.

1952 CITROEN SEDANNew Tires, Radio ,

Top condition $450 .00Tel. : T R 6-4332

Ask for Bat or Frank

PIG JOINSENGINEER S

A group of Engineers weretrue to type Monday afternoon

when they took a pig into the

Brock for a snack after givin git a guided tour of the Library .

We don't know whether theywere desperate for high "classcompany or were attempting to jtest the porker's reactions t oFood Services fare . At any rate ,the pig complained bitterlythroughout the ordeal .

Public Lands Appraisal I$375 - $545

Agriculture Graduat e

Economists I -$375 - $54 5

Planning Officers I$415 - $595

Fish and Wildlife Biologist$375 - $54 5

Agriculturists I$375 - $54 5

Social Workers I$315 - $455

Tuesday, Jauary 24, 196 1

Cafeteriacriticized

An NBC questionnaire revealsthat UBC Food Services are notup to standard .

The first question, "How muchdid you pay for your lunch? "brought the answer "48c . "

When asked if the student sthought the price was reason-able, answers varied. Fifty-onefelt it was and 49 felt the op-posite .

The fourth question rated th e

food. 15.6% felt the food was

"good," 40 .7% said it was "fair, "

28 .5% agreed that it was poor

and 13.5% gave the rating a s"unprintable . "

Descriptions of the coffe ewere interesting . One studen tcalled it good . Others expressedtheir opinions as "muck, " "de -testable," "dreadful, " "ugh," and"unbelievably horrible . "

Other comments were addedto the questionnaire. The cafeis "overcrowded, " "understaff-ed," and "giving a poor selec-tion." The equipment is "anti-quated" and "service is ineffi-cient . "

Assessors I$360 - $455

Probation Officers I$315 - $455

Planning Officers I I$520 - $655

Civil Engineers 1$395 - $570

District Agriculturists$375 - $54 5

Home Economists 1$330 - $475

-.Pane Four

meet the Liberal Club in Bu .104 .

Yesterday' sZeta Psi and Delta Upsilon o nthe topic "Bullfighting should

will replace Football in the Sta•dium . "The resolution was defeated .Peter Hebb, Law 1 speakin g

for the negative said that thecost of bullfighting would beprohibitive .

Cost of one bull fight wouldbe $940 plus funeral expenses ,he said. "Also .bulls would haveto be brought from Spain . Tha tmean a lot of bullshipping . "

John Lecky, Arts IV, support-ed bullfighting at UBC by say-ing footbal was " a wandering,aimless, patternless confusion . "He stated that ,bullfightingwould draw more spectator sthan the football games whichare now losing money .

winners were :

Rev. Philip Hewitt:

Never complete security

UNIVERSITY BOOK . STOREHOURS: -

- 9 a.m. to 5 p.m .

SATURDAY: -

- 9 a.m. to Noon

LOOSE LEAF NOTE BOOKSEXERCISE BOOKS AND SCRIBBLER S

GRAPHIC ENGINEERING PAPER, BIOLOGY PAPER ,

LOOSE LEAF REFILLS, FOUNTAIN PENS and INKDRAWING PAPER

Owned and Operated by . . .THE UNIVERSITY OF B .C .

T H E U B Y S S E Y

FRIDAY NIGHT at Mardi Gras newly-elected King Dav e

Howard places a crown on chosen Queen Sherry Hurley dur-

ing the mid-time activities .

MEN

CIRCLE

JOIN

K

CIRCLE K— UBC's first service clu b

- sponsored by Downtown Vancouver

Kiwanis Clu b

— meeting at noon Friday, Bu . 2225

PROVINCE OF ALBERTA

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES

for the

1961 GRADUATING CLAS S

For full details and application forms, contact your local University EmploymentOffice or write direct to the Personnel Administration Office, 404 LegislativeBuilding, Edmonton, Alberta.

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THE UBYSSEY Page FiveTuesday, January 24, 196 1

McGil l

GNU Party formed;palicy on everything

MONTREAL (CUP)—For this year's Mock Parliament

McGill students have organized a new political party, Th e

Greater National Uplift Party, called GNU . The following was

published in the McGill Daily: Prolegomena to any Future

Politikinginasmuch as some of the na-

tional political parties, it is re -ported, 'have contributed funds

to their namesake on campus ;

Inasmuch as the great major-ity of thinking people feel this

to be an unwarranted intrusion

into the ivory tower of academi clife ;

Inasmuch as this trend, i f

allowed to continue, will turnbrother against sister, student

against professor; and librariansagainst readers ;

Therefore, we, a band of un-

trammeled souls, have forme dthe GNU Party, a political groupdedicated to the position that if

anyone . is to make a mockery ofthe Model Parliament, it shouldbe students and not politicianswho make the mocking. To this

solemn end we pledge our un-ceasing endeavours.

GNU Party PlatformThe Greater National Uplift

Party

Purpose : To make the nationmove again, UPWARD! .

Motto : Up the Chief! Up theParty! Up the Nation .

Flag : A GNU (Canada's nationa lanimal) superimposed on an-other GNU (Canada's nationa lanimal) .

National Anthem:The GNU National Anthem (to

the tune of "I'm a GN'U, yo u'rea GNU, all the world lovesGNU's") .

Land of peace and plenty.Land of moral recitud eHonour, Pride and Principl eUniversal Gratitude (optional

platitude )Land of plains and mountain sWhere no human foot has tro dSave for the U.S. Air ForceAnd perhaps the hand of GodHigher, ever higherSoars our self esteemWe are the men of the momentWe are the coram of the cora mLand wherein our hopes abideLand whereon .our fathers diedLand which we can subdivid eOh God bless AmericaAnd God Save the KingBut please think of Canad aBefore you do a thingParty Colour: Burnt siennaParty Flower : PansyParty Cheer : "Heigh - H o u g h

Haugh-Huugh! I'm, a GNU .Who are you? (optional : 'Why

cate the encouragement of theecumenical movement by mor emeetings between the world' sreligious leaders, and SammyDavis, Jr .

Health and Welfare: We believ ethat an apple a day keeps thedoctor away, especially in theAnnapolis Valley .

Farm Programme : We believethat the CBC should increaseits broadcasts to p o v e r t ystricken areas .

Berlin (Crisis) : We will strongl ysuggest immediate evacuation .

Cuba: We will strongly suppor twhover is in power, when-ever they are in power .

C ..N .R . : We advocate that it bedenationalized .

National Defense : We advocatenon violence . When the rock-ets come, we advocate thatnightclubs be required toclose at 10:00 p.m. and thatbeer and wine be served onl ywith meals .

Aid to Underdeveloped Provin-ces: We advocate the right ofNova Scotia to, repurchasetheir territory for 65 cents ahead .

National Art Gallery : We advo-cate that all opposition lead-ers be hung in the Nationa lGallery .

Nee-Fascists : We. pledge thatthey will be tied to a wall an dfed ngthing but kippers whilea tap of cold water is kep trunning on the other side ofthe room.

I .O .11.E . : We pledge ourselves todiscover through a Royal Com-mission what this is :

C .P .R . : We advocate immediat enationalization, to see howthe other half lives .

II (phase 2 )The Canadian Senate: We will

immediately upon election ,appoint the entire opposition(no matter how inexperienced)to the Senate . We will, as . soonas Parliament convenes, abol-ish said Senate .

Revised Farm Programme : Webelieve (that) for every dro pof rain that falls, a flowergrows .

-Local Politics: We advocate an

investigation into public im-morality in Montreal and afte rthat, an investigation into pri-vate immorality in Monreal ,and subsequently a much les stroublesome investigation int opublic and private morality in .Montreal .

II (phase 3 )Vote GNU the pro-GNY party ,

and the only party in the elec-tion that isn't bound bypolitics, precedent or power .

WRITER'S SERVICELet us sell your story, article,book, TV, songs and poems .

1065 East 17th Ave. .

TR 6-636 2aspen Evenings

POINT GREY HOUS EFOR SALE

2 bedrooms and study and 1room in basement. Full price ,$15,500 . Phone 'CA 4-3010 orCA 4- 0435, 3964 West 11thAvenue .

sepaper next

SACKVILLE, N .B . ;(CUP)Jan. 18—Following the banish:ment of political clubs on h eMount Allison campus last week;the students' council may novatake steps to "investigate" thestudent newspaper .

Editor David Grant said yes-terday there were rumors thatthe SRC may try to declare hispaper "unconstitutional," T h epaper does not operate undera constitution, and receives it smoney from the university adsministration , a n d not the stu-dents .

The Eurhetorian Committee=seven students and eight facultymembers—is the only bodywhich has the right to suspendan -editor . Both the businessmanager and the editor a r emembers of the committee . Fourmembers of the council execu-tive and the president of t h eEurhetorian Society make upthe remainder of .t h e studentrepresentatives .

An editorial in the paper re-proved the council on threegrounds : more students voted inthe model parliament elections .than in the student council' elec-tion, and 10 per cent of the stu-dents were candidates ; onlyone side of the case was pre- 'sented to the council—the leads .ers of the student Liberal Party 'were attending the National .Liberal Rally in Ottawa; the ac-tion taken was extreme, political

Tickets for students are avail- i parties ' could be forced to adoptable at the AMS office, Inter- constitutions, thus placing the mnational House and WUSC of- I selves under council jurist:*

tan which were wiped out by fives for 50 cents .

Lion :

CHECK INTO THESE CAME OPENINGS FOR :

YOUNG -ADUATES

AT ALLAN :Aluminum Company of Canada, Limited is looking for university

graduates who seek careers where they can look forward to furthe r

developing their technical and administrative skills . .- .

-

This.major metal producing and fabricating-company has opening s

for metallurgical and chemical engineers, graduates in mechanical ,

industrial and electrical engineering, as well as young men holdin g

degrees in arts, commerce or law.

Alcan engages in the development of products and processes both

for itself and its customers, is identified with aluminum's rise as a

many-purpose metal with rapidly expanding uses and markets .

Research facilities are among the finest in the world .

This is the "growth situation" you may be looking for ; a chance

to make full use of your knowledge and potential, combined- with

attractive salary scales and working conditions, plus generou s

employees benefits . Company literature is available at your uni-

versity placement office or. upon request. Please write to :

ALUMINUM COMPANY OF CANADA, LTD.

Personnel Department ,

P.Q. Box 6090, Montreal 3, P.Q.

aren't you? )I (phase 1 )Civil Rights: We believe tha t

every man is created equal .Education: Every Canadian

child, except those of prose-cuted majority and minorit ygroups should be smart or getout .

Finance: We believe that a pen-ny saved is a penny earned .

External Affairs: We believethat the nations of the worldshould speak softly and keeptheir noses clean .

Matsu-Quemoy (Crisis) : We wil ldo our best to see that orde ris maintained and that no one

goes home hungry .Summit Conference : We advo -

A variety show to provide

funds for Pakistani educationa l

institutes ravaged b y recentfloods, will .be held Sunday at 8 Variety Show, and by persona lp .m. in International House .

contribution from students, facul -The Trinidadian Dancers, Cal- I, ty, and residents of the Van-

ypso singers, tne Jazz Quartet, couver area . Personal eontribu-and many other groups of talent- tions can be sent to Mr . Ishra ted foreign and local students will Husain, Chairman of the Corn -be appearing .

mittee, c/a the WUSC office i nThe Variety Show is the main Brock extension .

facet of a drive to raise fundsfor the rehabilitation . of educa-tional institutions in East Pakis-

Photo by Barry Iota

THIS ORPHAN PIG found a happy home with the Engineers .

►H to leaf ure dancers ,singers . at variety show

two typhoons during last Octoberand November .

The committee hopes to raisemoney by donations at the

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. . . but I thought everyone took payol a

AN

INTELLECTUAL

BEDTIMESTORY

. Page Six T°HE_ ,U .13YSSFY Tuesday, Jauary 24, 196 1

. . . .honest, a bed ;

. . tramp, tramp, tramp along the h ghwa y

. . . three £oot.weary £oot.sloggers

. . . 'hey where's Lavalle?

. . . if this is coffee, what ' do they serve on campus ?

. . . this was k'OT an A MS function

. . . one way to ride free

Photos by George Fielder

Page 7: Run Like Nominations Don Late Su ar container · Bridge. Kyle Mitchell fell off-radio truck. Recovered. 11:10 a.m.—Ubyssey reporter fel off truck Suspects foul play. Recovered:

Tuesday, January 24 i 1961

THE 'UBYSSEY

Page _Seve n

DerDeutsche

DerPhoenix

Hamburg is an ideal loca-

tion for an important cente r

of learning. It . has earned thereputation of being particular-

ly internati.onalIy-minded . The

tradition_ of a free and inde-pendent trading center is stil l

perpetuated today in the "Fre e

Hanseatic Stadt of Hamburg . "Hamburg's social and econo-

mic growth compares more .

with that of Stockholm or

London rather than that of -Munich or Berlin . In, conse-

quence it, is maintained byHamburgers that this commonhistorical growth has made

lHamburg. a symbol for al lnorthern peoples, an exp'res-sion of the totality of :their cul-

tural and economic develop-ment, and in practice can b erecognized in the old financial

houses, restored churches an d

theaters .In many respects Hamburg

does not differ iia essence frommost modern industrial centers .

The past has been blurred bythe colossal destruction of the

last war and astonishing econo -mic change. The old churches ,of which most symbolized anold order are . now overshadow- .ed by the symbol of a radical-ly new and perhaps mor ematerialistic order, the moder nskyscraper .

The great economic change shave spelt vast and far-reachingeconomic and social changes, -but the central theme thatdominates any view of modernGermany is the abnormal pre-dicament of the creation of tw oconstantly competing, conflict-ing German Governments .From German .eyes, therefore ,the future appears treacherou sand uninviting .

Militarily and politically, a nuntenable position in Centra l'Europe has forced the Bon nGovernment to search fo rstrength through unity. Thepolicy of working for theachievement of a _ "UnitedEurope" became the. focal poin tnot ' only of German foreignpolicy, but also one of thechief inspirations of Germanintellectualism and idealism .The path has not been easy andthe stumbling blocks many ,the chief of which is seen inthe figure of Charles de Gaulle .Although the fundamenta lpolicy has not altered, a morerealistic, if more disillusioned,approach to the problem ha sbeen taken .

The creation of wealth an dsubstantial increases in thegold reserves has led to in-creasing pressure on the BonnGovernment, particularly b ythe United States, to extendadditional aid towards the un-derdeveloped nations of Asiaand Africa . In addition, popu-lar enthusiasm on the part o fthe intelligentsia, particularl ythe universities, has been in-creasing . A result of this ha sbeen the announcement by th eBonn Government of substan-tial increases in foreign aid fo rthe coming fiscal year .

This is election year for th eBonn Government and it i sexpected that Adenauer wil lencounter his severest test fro mthe enormously popular figureof Willy Brandt . In my secon darticle I will attempt to an-ayze the issues at stake andthe personalities involved .

By RUDOLF B . BICH

The Hamburg University andits Student Body.

The six faculties of the Uni-versity of Hamburg offer atotal of more than 1800 lec-tures and seminar courses . Al -most the entire universe is of-fered to the curiosity of stu-dents. Over 40 different cours-es of study and examinationlead to as many professions :from pastor to naval engineer .More than 3000 persons, pro-fessors, lecturers, administrat-ive officials, office workers ,technicians and others, are em-ployed by the University ofHamburg. Together with mor ethan 14;000 students they forma community of more than17,000 people .

As a unit, the university can

be considered the largest en-terprise in Hamburg . This en-terprise is steadily growing .Until now, our university ha sbeen housed in old buildingswhich were originall y built fo rother purposes. Parts of theunicersity are now housed i nnew buildings . . . for insti-tutes, clinics, etc .

On May 15, 1957 the foun-dation for the new lecture hallbuilding, the Auditorium Max-imum, was laid . With this, th efirst project of the new con-struction program was started .For the first time, a new com-mon centre is being create dwhich serves all faculties of

the university . In 1959, on the40th birthday of our univer -

,sity, the Auditorium was ready.The new lecture hall accom-

modates 2000 persons.A number of institute build-

ings were provided for by th e

"Emergency Program for Uni-versity 'Construction" of 1955 .The plan. includes new build-ings for most faculties, ne wclinics and student's dormi-tories. Some of the institutesplanned are already finished;others are now under construc-tion . In two or three years th eHamburg University Construc-tion Plan should be fulfilled.THE HAMBURGSTUDENT BOD Y

Since just after World WarI, the Hamburg student self-

government has been an organ-ized part of the university . This .is the reason for good relation sbetween professors and stu-dents .

At the end of every semesterthere are general elections forthe student parliament, whic hconsists of 80 students from allfaculties. This constitutes th elegislative body of student self-government. Members a r eelected by the student bod ywhich is divided into electora lgroups according to facultie sand fields .

Each spring the ASTA i selected from members of thestudent parliament . The ASTAacts as an executive body . It

of two Canadian WUSCscholars, Charles Maclnnes ,presently in Germany, Joh nDressler, now back in our awncountry .

Thus through three different

and diverse point:. of view andexperiences a picture of a Ger-man university and the Ger-man peoples is vividly painted .

The UBYSSEY has set up

is responsible to the studen tparliament and has to carryout its decisions . The ASTAconsists of two presiding of-ficers and a minimum of five 'members, each of whom ha sto take care of a special de-partment . At the present th eother members of the ASTAare : two Social Officers, th ePress Officer, the Foreign Re-lations Officer, the Officer ofFinance, the Officer for` Rela-tions with East Germany, andthe Sports Officer .

STUDENT COMMUNIT YLIFE

The University of . Hamburghas about 60 different studentorganizations . At - the head ofthis long list are the Fachschaf-ten, which represent the stu-dents of one field or one fee -

ulty, and the scientific clubs .

Then it runs down the scalefrom old traditional organiza-tions to cultural, confessional ,athletic, political, present-daystudent groups . There are se v-eral clubs which pursue cer-tain habbies, such as film, ra-dio, newsyaper, or acting . Las tbut not least there is the "In-ternational Students Club"which cares for and assists for-eign students attending theuniversity .

Everywhere there isstimula-tion, a closeness to life, edu-cation, friends, students life ,and activities . . Serious studyand vigorous social activitystand side by side .

correspondence with Hamburgt niversity as well as withothers, the list of brother uni-versities communicating withthe IP is quickly growing eachweek .

Next week IP features areport on-the Venezuela nstudent riots by a student thereat the time of rioting and un-rest .

ed.l:llii

By JOHN DRESSLER

The Germans whom I metand came to know in Hamburgimpressed me with their desir eto see Germany again strongand wealthy . This has 'been th egreat factor in the amazingGerman recovery since 1945 .

Immediately after the war —before the last shots were fire d—the individual German shop-keerer, housewife or farmerhad become to shovel the rub-ble out. of bombed-out build-ings, to repair bridges, to re -open shops, to plant gardens .

For the first two years theyfought hunger and cold andsorrow, grimly and determined-ly. Each man, woman or childtried to rebuild or re-acquirefor himself that which he ha dbefore the war . A publishingen'erprise, the Axel SpringerVerlag, today the largest i nWest Germany, was begun inthe cellar of a bombed-out gar-age, a 'shopkeeper sold fromwhat once had been a he nhouse, a taxi firm began withone deserted American jeep .

There seems to have bee nlittle doubt in anyone's mindthat Germany could once mor ebe rebuilt into t h e greatestpower in Europe ; and only theGermans could bring to thi stask such an interne degree ofenergy, thoroughness and am-bition, even ruthlessness .

After the war — and evennow — construction workersworked double shifts withou textra pay in order to see thereconstruction proceed faster .Executives and managers work-ed such long hours rebuildingbusinesses . and industries thatthe malady known as "Mana-gierkrankeit" became commonenough to be differentiated .

The part played by the spiritof the German people must notbe under-rated in consideringthe German development . Partof their efforts stem from asimple love of work ; but thereis also an intense and deter-miner urge to see Germanyagain a world power .

Today Germany is the strong-est industrial power in Europe.A result, partly, of the situa-tion after the war. Factoriesand plants which had been dis-mantled and stripped in t h eimmediate post-war years werere-equipped with the newestand most . efficient machinesand methods when MarshallAid began pouring in . T h epolicy which was first to makeGermany weaker became t h einstrument for her becomin gstronger.

Today she is t h e foremost'automobile exporter in theworld. Her steel productionis again well over twenty mil-lion tons . Germans are export-ing enormously and are invest-ing heavily and opening branchplants in South America ,Southeast Asia and the MiddleEast . Krupp is carrying on ne-gotiations to invest in Cana-dian iron .

The employment situationithin the Federal Republic

is the best indication of Ger-many's recovery . Despite thetwelve million refugees whohave arrived in West Germanysince 1945 and despite thelarge number of foreigner s(mainly from Italy and Spain )working in the country, ther ewas, in the summer of 1959 ,'an acute labour shortage in

the Federal Republic . There isno indication that the econo-mic situation will change forthe worse in 1961 .

T o d a y, INTERNATIONA L

PAGE presents to the UBCstudent the picture conceive dof Hamburg University, an dGermany as a whole, by thre estudents. The writer of 'DieHamburger,' Rudolf B. Eich i seditor of 'Omnibus,' the Ham -burg 'U' newspaper, In 'DerPhoenix' and Der Deutsche;are witnessed the observations

Auditorium Maximum - - - - Hambur g

--Die Hamburger

INTER1AT10 iAL PAG EEdited by: FRANK F€NDENIG G

INTERNATIONAL PAGE NOTES

4

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Page Eight

THE U5YSSEY

Tuesday, Jauary 24, 196 1

UE -C radio licensecloser, says Climie

UN training centreworld's first at UBC

By NICK GILBERT

The United Nations Fellowship training center at UBC

is the first to be established in the world .Housed in the old Arts build-

ing under the supervision o fprofessor Cyril Belshaw, it workswith trainees from underdevel-oped countries .

Administration Officer Henr yMaggs said the training programwas first suggested by Dr . HughKeenleyside .

Because the main UN head-quarters is situated in NewYork, he felt it would be bene-ficial to found a training centrein the rapidly developing west ,where the trainees could stud ydirectly the up-to-date method sof development that are now i nuse .

Working with the Canadia ngovernment and Dr . Norman

• MacKenzie, Dr . Keenleyside, a sa representative of the UN ,found sufficient enthusiasm toestablish the center .. It was open-ed in June, 1959, for a threeyear trial period.

The trainees are leaders intheir respective fields and ar egiven Fellowships to come toVancouver only when their coun-tries have passed application sthrough the UN .

Arriving in Vancouver, thetrainees begin an intensive train -, which lasts fromlour months to a year . Resources,government and economic de-

, velopment are studied .

UBC students get$1,337,738 in awards

About a third of all students attending UBC last yearreceived some measure of financial assistance, according tofigures released today by the board of governors .

Dt ring the 1959-60 session5786 awards totalling $1,337, -738 .09 were made as comparedto 3381 awards for a total of$867,339 .70 during the previou syear .

Dean Walter Gage, chairma nof the UBC awards committee ,said the number of awards madedoes not represent the numbe rof individuals assisted sincesome students receive more tha none award . About half of th e1959-60 total was in loans whichwillSae repaid .

During the 1959-60 sessionstudents received awards fro msix principal sources . ,

University special bursariesand named bursaries—105 2awards for a total of $159,122 .50 .

Fellowships, scholarships, andprizes—834 awards for a tota lof $251,419 .59. Awards in thi shigh academic standing .

aeik Wanted-At last week's council meet-

ing a motion was passed whichcreated the new - position o f

clerk in the Students' Court.John Goodwin said Thurs-

day this had been done for two

main reasons. "The Students'Court clerk will have thepower to call witnesses beforethe Court and to lay charge sagainst those who do - not ap-pear .

He will also take over thepresent administrative dutiesof Chief Justice Marc Bell who

Barriers might, be overcom ein the near future to allow UB CRadio to become a licensed ra -dio station, . Bill Climie, presi-dent of Radsoc announced Fri-day .-

Twice during the . past threeyears Radsoc has independentlytried to achieve this status an dhas been turned down by th eBoard of Broadcast Governors .

There are two requirementswhich must be met before a li-cense can be grantee . The De-partment of Transport must besatisfied as to the technicalstandards of the station, and th esanction of the university ad-ministration must be obtained .

The technical specificationscould easily ,be met, but as th euniversity is the only continuingresponsible body to which a li-cense could be issued, the ap-proval of the senate is required .

To ensure continuity of pro-graming during the summer

months, the extension depart-ment will probably work in con-junction with Radsoc . Bill Cli-mie, president of Radsoc, metyesterday with Extension De-partment officials .

If the senate approves, AMSis willing to subsidize Radsocfor $1,500, if a summer progra mcan be worked out, and if theDepartment of Transport wil lgrant Radsoc a license, UB Cmight have a private broadcast-ing station next year .

NBC presents farc eWed . noon in Broc k

The New Blood on CampusClub will present ICen Hodkin-son's satirical farce, "Five Glori-ous Years" Wednesday noon i nBrock Lounge. Critics have ac-claimed this play as a "tour defarce" which spares nobody ina sensational expose. The ad-mission fee of 25c will go to theNBC Campaign Fund .

The study program may takethem to several universities ,government agencies or com-panies throughout Western Can-_ada and the U.S .

Depending on the topic withwhich the individual trainee i sconcerned, Abe center calls onthe heads of different faculties ,and from them draws the basisof the knowledge from whic ha comprehensive training pro-gram is prepared .

The trainee then works underdepartment heads of this orother universities, or with acompany specializing in his par-ticular field of study.

The campus center is onlyequipped to handle about 25trainees each year, but becauseof ,the well-planned individua lcourses, each is able to return tohis country and pass on to othersthe invaluable material he haslearned .

They, in turn, are better ableto aid in the faster and moreprofitable economical and cul-tural growth within their coun-tries .

Although it has been in opera-tion for only half its trial period ,the administrators feel this newUN venture .is a success an dwill probably be continued afterthe three-year trial period ha sbeen completed .

Loan funds—910 awards for atotal of $226,338. Students arerequired to repay- these loanseither at the end of the term orcategory were made to student swith outstanding records an dfollowing graduation .

Money from the student aidloan fund was distributed to -84 1students for a total of $396,420 .The University was authorizedby the provincial government t oborow up to $2 million to pro -vide for student aid under thisscheme .

Government of B.C. scholar-ships for first and second clas sstudents were awarded to 1540for a total of $202,788 .

Government of B .C. bursarie sto deserving students wereawarded to 528 individuals for atotal of $61,650 .

is already very busy:

Those duties consist of ar-ranging for a room for theCourt, letting the- paper knowwhen Court is in session, anddistributing copies of theCourt's proceedings. "

Applications for the positionof Student Court clerk shouldbe handed in to John Goodwinor to Box 75 in the CouncilOffice before 4 :00 p .m., today .

Jeffels addressesworld peace grou p

An organizational meetingwill be held in Bu. 217 Wednes-day f or people interested i nforming a world peace stud ygroup.

The meeting will be addressedby -Prof . R. Jeffels and Dr.Gropp.

MacMillan - Bloede l& Powell River Ltd .

OPEN MEETING RE: EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIE S

FOR 1961 GRADUATES

Forestry & Geology 100: 12 .30 p.m., Thursday, Jan: 26th

(Film: Company Representative to describe Company an d

Sales Careers)

ROY-AL CANADIAN NAV YOFFICER Swill be here

to interview and counsel student sinterested in a sponsored educatio nand a career as an officer in the RC N

on 26th and 27th January, 1961at 10 a .m . to 4 p.m .

IN THE UNIVERSITY PLACEMENT OFFIC E

Make an appointment for an interview throughyour University Placement Officer at :

THE PERSONEL OFFIC Eor UNTD Office, Armouries

rRMOPresents its Annua l

WAR SERIE S12:30 Auditorium,_ Today Through Thursda y

FRIDAY "TRIUMPH OF THE WILL" S0c

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Tuesday, January 24, 1961

T H E U B Y S S E Y

Page Nine

Journalism studen ttries stripping

TORONTO (CUP — Ed's Note : Pat MacLean became aburlesque queen last Saturday in one of the few remainin gburlesque houses in Canada . Normally she is a journalis mstudent at the Ryerson Institute in Toronto . H e r featureeditor challenged a pretty blonde typist-turned-stripper t oa contest with Pat . . . a typing contest. But CindyRichardson—who once earned $250 a month as a typist, an dnow earns $175 a week on the stage—replied that Pat woul dhave to prove her stuff as a stripper in the local theatre . Thisis Pat's story, of how she became Miss "Redd Hott ."

U.OFWASHINGTON

"God King" born on campus

I first heard about this onFriday morning, after my cof-fee break. As I appeared in sightof my classroom, a multitude o fvoices clamored, "Pat, howwould you like to strip?"

I joked back,. "I'd love tostrip. Where?" That one state-ment put me in a situation whichI had never dreamed possible .

"Good, get your coat, we're go-ing to the Lux to look at cos-tumes," was the reply .

"Just a moment," I said, "be -fore I decide whether I'm goingfor this or not, I have to knowhow far I'm expected to strip . "

"just as far as you want. Doyou know what a net bra is?"

.I didn't, so they insisted that Igo with them to seg what I wasgetting into, and to meet mycompetition .

In a few minutes I was stand-ing in front of the manager, andmy competitor, Cindy, a cuteblond, poured into purple'slacksoffered to lend me a costume .A tassled red dress, split downone side, was handed to me .It fit .

' "Now," she said, "all you needis some underclothes. Whatabout these?" She dangled an in -visible bra and panties beforeme. I gasped; they looked as

'though they were fashionedfrom saran wrap .

"Well," I gulped, "they would. be fine, except that I have to

go back to school. Have y o uanything that covers a bi tmore?"

She dug up her most decentcostume a couple ofinches of filmy white nylon . Ipolitely took these, but decidedthat if that was all I was goingto have on, I might as well qui tschool .

After seeing the afternoo nperformance, I decided I neede dsome practice in the art of strip-ping. Cindy agreed to be at thetheatre by nine the next morn-

• ing to teach me a few "bump sand grinds . "

In the meantime, t h e storysnowballed to such an extentthat the Toronto dailies and tele-vision studios wanted interviewsand pictures . This was a hotstory!

I was at the Lux the next

out there . "Minutes sped past . The intro-

duction to the typing contes twas given . I typed like a maddog, and had more words thanCindy, b u t only two of themwere real words . The rest wa sa garbled mess .

I dashed backstage, made aquick change into my strip cos-tume, then I was on .

I could see nothing. I don' tremember hearing any music ,though the band leader told m ehe did play "Blue Moon." I triedto remember what I had prac-tised earlier that day but endedup doing whatever came into myhead.

I unzippered the dress. sidledto the side of the stage, ducke dbehind the curtain, grabbed awaiting Ryerson beanie, a n dskipped back on the stage to acollege tune, wearing an o 1 dwhite T-shirt with a low neck -line, a short skirt, and blue gy mbloomers with a Ryerson pen-nant tucked on the back. Thecostume was not only decent, i twas completely sexless .

The show was over but t h epublicity wasn't . Reporters, ra-dio and television men took mytime for the rest of the evening .I had to phone my parents toassure them I hadn't gone pranc-ing around the Lux in pantie sand G-string.

FOR SALE—1950 ANGLIA ,$110. Phone Jerry Colman a tMU 1-5361 daytime only o rcall at No. 7, 1834 Hare St . ,evenings .

By JOAN GEIGE R

SEATTLE—A baby boy bornat the Washington Universit yHospital is gaining internation-al attention because of three"firsts" he represents .

THE YOUNG celebrity is re-garded as a "god king" by per-

haps one-fourth of the Tibetanpeople. He is the first Tibetanborn outside Asia to a Tibet-an holy family, the first Tibet-an born in the United Statesand the first child of the Sak-

yapa (Sock' ya pah) famil yborn in a hospital .

His father, Jigdal Sakyapa ,is head of one of four Buddhistreligious sects in Tibet . TheDalai Lama is considered thepolitical ruler of Tibet, but i sreligious leader of only theYellow Sect of the four re-ligious groups .

The 7-pound 15-ounce babyalready bears the weightytitle, "Dungsey" or "pillar ofthe family ." His first name willbe given him next month .

Had the "Dungsey" been ' agirl, the birth would have n o

religious significance . However ,Tibetan boys born to such aholy family are predestined tobecome monks . The oldest Sak-yapa boy 6, will be allowed t omarry to perpetuate thefamily . The three youngest willbecome celibate monks .

nTHFF :BIRTH of the new"god king" required the Uni-versity Hospital to abide byTibetan customs as well as byhospital regulations . A femaleobstertrician was called upo nto deliver the baby becaus eTibetan custom forbids thepresence of male attendants .

Also, the "Damn La," or

holy mother, - Jamyang Sak-yapa, asked for "rooming in"

priveleges during her hospitali-zation. The baby sleeps in hismother's room and is fed ,

clothed and bathed by her . Theother Sakyapa children were

born at home, unattended .The baby's parents, brothers

and three relatives are pallid-

paling in studies of Tibetan

language, customs and cultur eunder the sponsorship of th eFar Eastern Department .

Dr. Turrell V. Wylie, assis-tant professor of Tibetanstudies, brought the Sakyapafamily and three .of their rela-tives to the United States lastfall .

The family left with Dr .Wylie from Darjeeling, India .They fled to India last Marchafter an unsuccessful Tibetanrevolt against Communist rule .

morning by nine, but there wasno time for lessons . Photogra-phers and newsmen invaded th etheatre . In ad out of costume sI crawled as cameras clicked .

"Look seductive," p l e a d e done harried photographer .

The other show participant swere helpful . A girl who h a sbeen stripping for 12 years, in-terrupted her rushed dressing 1job to put on my make-up . Theemcee tried to cheer me up bysaying, "Look, everyone's onyour side . All your friends ar e

FILMSOC

Presents

"THE SEVE NDEADLY SINS"

TODAY

Auditorium, 3:30, 8 :00

(Restricted)

A Complimentary cop y

will be forwarded u-'p0n request.

ANY QJ/EST/0llfS ?

About Your NFCUS Life Pla nA qualified underwriter will be in the NFCUS Committee Room eac h

weekday from 12:00 noon to 1 :30 p.m. until the January 31st dead -

line to answer your questions .

ROOM 258 - BROCK EXTENSIO N

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If you are graduating in Arts, Commerce o rEngineering, you can put your university train-ing to practical use at IBM, working with theworld's most advanced computers. And you cangrow in knowledge through the company's ex-tensive engineering and research laboratories .

The work at IBM is interesting, challenging andwell paid. Advancement can be rapid, becauseof the company's ever expanding business .

If you would like to know what IBM has tooffer, write for our booklet "A Career with IBM".

V

INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES COMPANY LIMITED ~~444-7th Avenue West, Calgary, Albert a

ern District Manager—W. Dinsdals

at,

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-- Pcrg~ Ten

T H E U B Y S S E Y

Tuesday, Jauary 24, 196 1

Bisons buffaloed by 'BirdsUBC takes top spotin foul-filled folly

to cinch the game . Bill Cherpet aThunderbird goalie Ron Mo- assisted the first of the two . ; day at noon in the Brock Clu b

ling was the hero of the second UBC played the whole series i Room .game, stopping an astronomical with only three defencemen .total of 56 shots, while allowing

only two goals .In the first contest, the Bird s

were travel-weary, as they had

left Vancouver at 3 a .m. the l

same day . John Utendale ha d

scored the two lone UBC goals .

But t h e next night, better- j

rested and longing revenge, the ,

team pulled together and bea t

the prairie athletes at their ow n

game. The Birds led 1-0 at th eend of period one . By the closeof the second, Saskatchewanhad closed the gap, a n d thescore stood at, 2-2 -

In the third period, hotshotcentre John Utendale was penal-ized for seven minutes, leavin gthe UBC team shorthanded. Butin a magnificent job of penalty-killing, the Birds scored twice .Boone Strotlier scored the win-ner on a pass from Philips .

Then, while shorthanded, Bo bParker slammed home two goals

(UNIVERSIT YPHARMACY International Nickel Company

We carry everything

OF CANADA LIMITE Da Student needs

5754 UNIVERSITY BLVD.

"In The Village"

UBC THUNDERBIRDS Ken Winslade (left), Ed Pederson (on floor) and Dave Osborne (back-

ground) scramble for ball with Manitoba ' s Dave Mills . Birds won this game 60-40 and Fri -

day ' s encounter 72-54 .

Prairie Dogs splitW .- \ hustling 'Birds

The UBC hockey Thunderbirds showed the old comebac k

spirit Saturday night, when they rebounded after losing 11- 2

to the U. of Saskatchewan Huskies to beat- the prairie dogs

5-2 in the sequel .

There will be -an importan t

general meeting of the M e n' s

Athletic Association Wednesday

in Bu . 3248 . All team managersare urged - to attend, as . t h emethod of electing the MAApresident will be discussed .

The regular meeting of th eMAA executive will be held- to-

fOR ALL MM BRASS

Will visit the university to discuss career opportunitie s

CHEMISTRY AND GEOLOGY-

On February 6th, 7th and 8t h

ENGI N EERI NG• MINING• -METALLURGICA L• CHEMICA L• ELECTRICA L• MECHANICA L• CIVIL

International Nickel Compan y

We invite you to arrange an interview throug hYour Placement Office

graduating and post-graduating student s

Copper Cliff, Ontario

REPRESENTATIVES OF TH E

OF CANADA LIMITED

THE

inwith

10-minute mark UBC led 18-12 . Slade 27, Black .Poor shooting and ball-han -

dling hampered both clubs . Nei- j Manitoba (54) : Melnyk, Em-

ther team' was able to penetratethe other's defence, keeping

IMPORTANT MEET shooting percentages down and Galanchuk 17, Gibson .

fouls high .

Saturday—UBC (60) :- Lusk 4 ,The excitement of the first Osborne 14, Way' 12, Hartley 7 ,

half came to a head when Wayne W . Osborne 2, Farenholtz, Peder-

Osborne and Don Kubesh squar- son 9, McCallum 5, Winslade 7,

ed off to have it out, Osborne, ! Black .

in no mood to be tampered with Manitoba (40) : Melnyk Millsafter a poor Friday night, had 4, Kubesh 1, Zelmer 4, Bowe rcaught ano'her one of Kubesh's 3, Sedun, Henderson 11, Galan -uncontrollable elbows w h e n chuk 6, Gibson 4 .

By PETE GELIN

if Manitoba plays WCIAU football next year, the first

dace . they should look for players is the basketball to ,n_ .

Friday the Bisons started off

strong and were hard to contain . fighting for a rebound . They

The visitors held on to their i were both sent to cool off in the

lead until just 'before the half .They came back again in th e

third quarter to regain the lead .The final 10 minutes gave thehome crowd of 400 something t o

j yell about .

The fired-up 'Birds dumpedthrough 24 points in the lastquarter to provide the margi n

l of victory .High 'Bird for the night was

Ken Winslade with 27 points ,Ed Pederson coming up secon dwith 14. Winslade also picked u pa bruised knee and a very sor estomach, thanks to the effort sof Don Kubesh . Fortunately forthe 'Birds however, Kubesh foul-

SUMMARIE Sed out in the third quarter .

Friday—UBC (72) : Lusk 10,By Saturday night tempers D. Osborne 8, Way 9, Hartle y

had cooled slightly . The contest 2, W. Osborne 1, Farenholts,started off slowly and at t h Pederson 14, McCallum 1, Win-

showers .Clinging to a 30-20 lead, the

'Birds went into the third quar-ter looking bet'er . By againoutscoring the Bisons 30-20, the ytook both the game and t h eseries .

A bright star came into Jac kPomfret's horizon S a t u r d a ynight in t h e person of youngOsborne . Osborne not only ledin the point department Satur-day with 14, but played well de-fensively and under the boards.Dave Kay, coming up with an -other good night, sank 12 forthe winners .

bry 9, Mills 3, Kubesh 4 . Zelmer12, Bower, Sedun, Henderson 9 ,

GET YOUR STODA Y

A.M.S. OFFIC E(lOto 4)

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Tuesday, January 24, 1961

THE UBYSSEY

Page Eleven

Today we have some current news, only today the currentisn ' t very strong. Our old friend, the Western Canadian Inter-collegiate (gasp) Athletic Union, is facing ^pother trial ,

Last week the University of Manitoba refused to enter afootball team in the league, putting the pressure on the league 'sconstitution. This week the UBC basketballers loafed to tw omore easy wins, putting the pressure on UBC fans and officials .

From last year's games, and the four the Birds have playe dthis year, it is painfully evident that UBC is in a league whichan give them no competition . The poor (let ' s be factual

lousy) basketball is hurting the crowd swen worse .

Fans won't turn ou ttested . They want to see close, fast, sharp, high-scoring basket -ball. The only thing fast and sharp about last weekend's gam ewere Don Kubesh's elbows .

And, as one downtown sportswriter ably pointed out lastweek, the Birds have one of the finest basketball teams in Can-ada, and no one to test their ability . It 's a shame to see suchfine ballplayers as Ken Winslade playing before 300 people ,mostly friends and other UBC players .

The Birds entered the WCIAU presumably to lure fans an dsupport Canadian athletics. But the fans won't be lured to poorgames, and Canadian athletics won 't support the Birds (witnessManitoba) .

_Basically, the WCIAU is a matter of dollars and sense . It

posts a whopping sum to send a team to the Prairies, mone ythat doesn ' t grow in MAC wallets . Every time it rains on aSaturday afternoon in the fall, the bill-padders emeritus revise

the athletic budget .The money has to come from somewhere. The smalle r

;ports' budgets are lopped 25 or 50 bucks, which to them is asizeable sum .

The football squad is in a three-team' league—a hopeles s

situation .The WCIAU earlier put out an ultimatum which, if carrie d

Alt, would solve sine _league 's troubles . If the U. of Manitoba

lidn ' t enter a football team, they said, they would be expelle d

from the league . If this happened, the league would probabl y

fold .If Manitoba entered a team, the league would be strength -

need immensely, and would probably survive .

But the league a;patently won 't do what it says it will .

Manitoba says it won 't field a football team (it had a pretty

good one here last weekend) and the league is backing down .

[t wants to continue on a money-wasting, fan-losing, half-

eearted basis .WCIAU and UBC athletic officials refuse to say anything .

They answer all questions by !fraying nobody tells them any -thing, they don't know anything, and they don 't know anybody

who knows anything .They put the issue off, refusing to take action when inac-

tion is costing them in money and support . The WCIAU, trying

as it may be, is still a bush league . It's not going to change

. until some action is taken .And I would venture to say that the 'Birds in the Evergree n

are worth two in the Bush .

TS

Keglers Canada's bestThe UBC Bowling team es- beautiful goal set up by Roy

tablished itself as the best Uni-' Nosella to tie it up .versity team in Canada by win- The Jayvee-Imperial s

a recent telegraphic meet was cancelled due to fog .six other universities .

WeightliftingUBC weightlifters failed to

place in Saturday's odd-lift mee tat the central YMCA. However ,Neil Roberts and Andy Hindsmanaged to set two new UBCrecords . Roberts, lifting in the148-lb. class, curled 125 lbs . ,while Hinds, in the same class ,

lbs .

Braves gathertwo more scalps

Playing on Vancouver Islandthe UBC Braves defeated Court-enay high school 75-53 and th eCourtenay Senior "B" entry62-54 .

Friday the Braves tied intothe Courtenay High School teamand racked up 12 quick point sbefore the opposition got on thescore board .

Top scorers for Braves wer eJohn Cook (14), Brian Adams(12) and Doug Latta (10) .

'Saturday against the Senior Bteam, Rick Williamson (12), Ro nParker (11) and Latta (10) ledUBC . The rough game saw thre eCourtenay players foul out, an dthree Braves receive four foulsapiece .

HELD OVER 2nd WEE K

ALL TIME ATTENDANCE RECORD ESTABLISHE D

VARSITYlath at TRIMBLE CA 4 . 3730

as.iEMMANUELE RIVA..,_» ElJI OKAD A

a :IDAee ALAIN RESNAIS

EXECUTIVE OFFICE S

TRADERS FINANCE CORPORATION LIMITE D

orrice or mePRESIDENT

TRADERS BUILDIN G

625 CHURCH STREET

TORONTO 6',ONTARI Q

Within the past few years our company has selecte da small group of sales-minded young college men to representTraders in the many facets of the sales finance industry.

Because of the national scope of our organizatio ntoday and because many of our men in executive and man-agerial positions have been appointed from within our owncompany, we again find it necessary to search for career -minded individuals who have their sights set on the summit.

Traders is an all-Canadian sales finance company,founded in Winnipeg in 1920 as the . first independent companyof its kind . Since then we have grod*n from one office t oalmost 100 branches from coast to coast .

We are in the business of r'naking credit plansavailable to dealers in automobiles, trucks, boats, motors,appliances, home furnishings, industrial equipment andmachinery and many others too numerous to mention.

We, find it a fascinating and stimulating busines sand one that offers its own rewards to a serious young man ,Conditions have never been more favorable for establish-ing a career with Traders .

Sincerely,

R. M. Willmott-h

THOSE INTERESTED in a Finance Corporation• career ,should contact their career cdnnse1or immediatel yfor an appointment. A Traders Finance Corporationrepresentative will be conducting interviews on th ecampus within the next two weeks.

President.

to see a game that is ragged and uncon-

game

and hurting the players iUBC THUNDERBIRD goali emade 56 saves as puckster sclipped Saskatchewan 5-2Saturday in Saskatoon . RonMolina and mates were n 't sofortunate Friday, when theywere trounced 11-2 by th e

Huskies .

Varsity continued . their win-ning ways Saturday, whitewash-ing North Shore 3-0 . In theSecond division Blues tied India

UBC SQUAD

e

B 2-2 and Golds lost 3 -2 to

UBC SQUAD ENTERED Spurs on a penalty goal . Last -place Pedagogues were blasted

pingwith

UBC 's 3529 'total was wel lahead of second-place Carletonat 3347 and Queens at- 3237 .Other competitors, in order offinish, were Manitoba, . Kings -ton RMC, Alberta, and NewBrunswick .

Team members for the Birdswere Ron Greene, Ed Nicholson ,Ron Craig, Con Pinette, an dJerry Devine . Sunday UBCmeets an Abbotsford all-star

I team .Grasshockey

bench pressed 23 5

tion starts at 2 p .m. with theBlack Belt championship fro m7 to 9 .

5-1 by Hawks .Soccer

Over 200 individuals and 20 UBC Birds and Royal Oaksclubs are expected to enter the were tied 1-1 only minutes in -Vancouver Judo Club's 10th an- to the second half of their gamenual judo tournament Saturday at Central Park when fog set -at War Memorial Gym. ' tied in and the match was called .

Both' team and individualchampionships in all classes will ! League officials will decid e

if the game will be replayed .be decided . Preliminary competi- Royal Oakscored midway

through the first half to take a1-0 lead. But about 10 minutes

s later Frank Harrop scored a

IN JUDO CLASSIC

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Page Twelve

T H E - U-8'Y S-S .E Y

Tuesday, Jauary 24, 196 1

Tween Classes

Gibson' speaks today UBC CLASSIFIE DLIBERAL CLUB

Gordon Gibson, MLA NorthVancouver, will address Stu-dents today at noon in Bu. 104 .

'CONSERVVATIVE CLUBSpeaker Dr . R. M. Clark of

Ec. Dept .

JAll SOC .

Sterophonic Sound demonstra -tion today in Bu . 202 .

UN CLUB

Dr. S. Mack Eastman, speakson "The History of an Inter -national Police Force Ideal,1910-61, Hopes Deferred" Thurs -day noon in Bu . 102 .

EAST AISIAN SOCIETYCommunist Film: "Ten Joyous

Tears in China" two hours incolor. Thurs, noon in Chem . 105 .

.y.

aFSAM

iMr. Jae Morris, president of'MA discusses the fut 'are ofLabour - Management relations .Noon today in Bu. 1221 . Mem-bers only .

SCM"Radiation and Future Human

Welfare" noon today in Bu . 217 .Rev. David DuPlessi speaks o n"The Holy Spirit and Super-'natural Manifestations ." n o o nThurs ., Bu . 2239 .

MUSIC DEPT .Noon hour concert Wed. Bu.

106 . .

FILMSOCWar series continue s

less of public opinion .A

GERMAN CLU BFilm: "Foreign Students i n

Berlin," Friday Bu. 205.

APRSWed. noon in Bu. 223 . Talk on

N.I .C .A.P. Also tape .;:

gA at

ALPHA OMEGA SOC.Special banquet meeting, al l

members attend Wed. noon inBu. 216 .

EL CIRCUL .OProgram of Spanish Renais-

sance music at noon in Bu . 214 .

NUCLEAR DISARMAMEN TCLU B

Important general meetingnoon in Bu. 220 .

Yorke speaks o nMarx philosophy

A series of classes on impor-tant aspects of Marxist philos-ophy, sponsored by the UBCCommunist Club, will be held inBu. 216 Thursdays at noon .

Speaker this Thurs., BruceYorke, will give an introduc-tion to Marxist philosophy. Al lstudents seriousy interested inMarxism are welcome . A nomin-al registration fee for ' the serie swill be charged .

ONE OF THE outstanding cos-tumes at Mardi Gras thi sweekend were this coupl e

- dressed- in gay nineties . Un-fortunately they were not thewinners.

The Men's Honouurary. Frater-nity, Sigma Tau Chi announcesthe election of twelve members .They are: Stan Mader, Law 3 ;Russ Robinson, Corn . 4 ; FrankIoccubucci, Law 2 ; Charles Lan -caster, For . 3; Allen CornwallAgr . 4; David Bromige' Arts 4 ;non Robertson, Arts 4 ; MarkDaniels, Corn . 4; Ken Hodkin-son, Arts 4 ; Michael Sinclair Arts2; Bill Gordon Grad St . ; Eric .,Ricker Arts 4; Dean' Feltham,Corn. 3 .

FOR SALE: Phi Delta fiat pin ,purchased 1958 Contains 4diamonds, 10 seed pearls, gold .Cost new $115 . Ph. I. Keel ,RE 3-9025.

ONE GOLD' girl's signet Wringlost in the library. Initials onring, A. S .'Finder please phon eAM 6-6378 . Reward.

T p KE IT T OSPOTLES S

!Z. SHIRTS 19i

COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVIC EGlasses Fitted

24-TIour Service OPTICAL Repair s

VANCOUVER BLOC KMU 5-0928 — MU 3-2948

Main Floor

734 GRANVILLE ST.Immediate Appointmen t

NEW WESTMINSTER 675 COLUMBIA STREETLA 6-8665PRE MED SOC.

-Lecture by Dr . R. L . Noble

on "Plants in Cancer Research" IWed . . noon in Wes . 100 .JUDO CLU B

Crests are at the College Shop .

regard-'

Men's honorary fiat

inducts new members1

TAKEN FROM the DKE area a tthe Mardi Gras Fri ., night : . aukelele and a small dru mwith handle. Sentimenta lvalue. Please call Pam at C A4-9826 .

WOULD THE PERSON w h otook my coat by mistake fromoutside the Chem 102 lab ,Fri ., a .m. please contact Ian atRE 3-5793 . I have yours withcar keys in pocket, '60 lie .No. 115-967 .

WANTED: girl to share suit enear English Bay. Ride canbe arranged . Phone MU 5-7691 .

PERMANENT RIDE wantedfrom English Bay by two girl s(staff) . Arrive 8 :30, leave 5p.m . Ring Miss Layland, local585 .

SPECIAL STUDENT RATE S

Ft1 MAGAZINE CALLS ff$' . . . "the most hellishly moder nold fashioned company in the world! "

. . . AND THEY`RE RIM?

We believe in the old fashioned virtues that pioneered asprawling trading empire- across" Canada . Virtues suchas dependability . . ..determination . . . integrity . . . andthe spirit of adventure .We are looking fro- aggressive young men . . willing toaccept a challenge . . men who' will fit into aprogressive management team:If YOU are willing to accept a challenge, then join amodern company as a Junior Executive in Retai lMerchandising.YOU'LL FIND WE'RE MODERN IN GIVING YOU

• continuous and rapid advancement opportunities• a good starting salary• interesting and challenging work• formal management training

Come and discuss the many fields open to Graduate sthis year. YOU can have a brilliant future with theHudson's Bay Company !The'8srf representatives will be on campus to interview Personnel Jan. 26 aid 27


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