Y Blood Clinic - University of British Columbia Library · day, II' yell want to find ou t where...
Transcript of Y Blood Clinic - University of British Columbia Library · day, II' yell want to find ou t where...
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VOLUME XXX VI
VANCOUVER, B.C ., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14,1953
PRICE 5c; No. 8
Blood Clinic Closes Prematurely
SWIMMING POOL to be built at UBC is pictured a tleft of Memorial Gymnasium in artist's sketch above . The
$279,000 pool will seat 6500 for the British Empire Games .
Work has started by Marwell Construction Co. of Van-
CONTROVERSY OVER
couver, and is expected to be completed by next June .Selection of UBC as the pool site last spring touched off aflurry of protests from Vancouverites, which caused the sit eto be temporarily moved to Riley Park, Vancouver.
BEG Pool Construction Begins
Virtually swamped with blood, the Red Cross blood donorclinic was forced to close the armouries at 11 :30 Friday morn-ing after having obtained all the blood their facilities coul dhandle .
Grossly under-estimating the?, ----- -response of UBC students, the tween Classe sRed Cross had scheduled a clini cat Kamloops for this week an dconsequently were unwilling todivert too much equipment t othe campus clinic .
Equipped to take only 300pints daily, the clinic was 'takenby surprise as students gave a naverage of 370 pints daily . In-stitution of the 300-pint clini cwas considered over-optimisti cby many, remembering the 10-day fall drive last year whichdrew only 1,520 donors to th eArmouries .
Last week, In four and a hal fdays, 1922 students parted wit htheir blood.
Students Rejected
Bottles Run Out
By MICHAEL AME SAbout eight months from now
UBC students may put on bath-ing suits, take a long run anda jump ino the water, and yel l"Whee, at long last . "
And as they are splashin gabout and blowing out streamsof water they can rejoice thatUBC finally has the BritishEmpire Games swimming pool .
It is certain now. UBC hasthe pool and no one, not evenPercy Norman and his people' scommittee, can ever take i taway 'agate;
fo rCivil Liberties union, Garnet tSedgewick award, g iven yearlyto the B.C . citizen who contri-butes most to civil liberties ,
Marney Stevenson, presiden tof C'LU, said Monday' she wil laccept nominations at any of the ,Union's Tuesday meetings ,
Previous receivers of awar dinclude Jack Scott, columnis tand Prof . Hunter Lewis, of thi suniversity, for his work in In-dian civil liberties .
Award will be presented i nsprite;
After the BEG, 5,700 of theseats will be dismantled andsold, and the roof, costing abou t$250,000 will be added .
NO MORE MONEY'John Springer, student repre-
sentative on the university poolcommittee, promised studentswill "definitely not" be aske dto provide any more money forthe pool .
Construction of the pool ,which is to be done by the Mar-well firm of Vancouver wit hlocal labor and materials, wil lbe under the supervision of uni-versity architects Sharp, Ber-wick, Thompson and Pratt .
The pool will be 50 by 16 5feet. It will be three feet si xinches deep at one end, 16 feetsix inchs at the other .
phet's the ,v wntll(1 not get AMS
Club, and his committee loudl yprotested until it was take naway from' UBC and given toRiley Park, Vancouver .
But no Vancouver contractorscould offer to build the pool fo r$300,000 or less, so the contrac twas given to Paddock Company .PARKS BOARD
Vancouver Parks Board saidit would not be responsible fo rthe pool's operation if an Ame-rican firm built it, so back toUBC it came, where it 'will bemaintained at no cost to Van -
couver ratepayers ."But $21,000 of the $300,000
was wasted," Springer said,"in paying architects Gardine rand Thorton for plans for a poolat Riley Park . "
Percy Norman and his com-mittee are now demanding asecond pool to be built In Van-couver out of surplus fundsfrom the BEG pool .
"But there is no surplus,"Springer said . "The surplus i sthe wasted $21,000 . "
" i ;iggestt
little hook eve r1,uhlished . "
That's the ui' knante lacke don to the IJ13C Directory rai dStneltiet 1{andbook which goe srnt sale swound the campus to -day, II' yell want to find ou twhere the women's jehe i slook in tin' Directory, If yo uwant to look up any rude orregulation-elook in the Direc-tory .
And il' ynu want to find th ephone number of that cute lit •t le blonde who y ;)wns so be;i -
LARGER CLINIC IN SPRINGThe larger showing, although
only 33%a of the student body ,was considered, heartening indi-cation of what can be expectedin February's spring drive .
Competition for the Canadia nIntercollegiate Cup will spar kthe spring drive, when Red Crosswill bring out a clinic capable ofhandling 3000 students .
Motion of thanks was given toJoyce Thompson and June Wal-ker, co-ordinators of the join tHome Ec-Nurses sponsored drive ,by the undergraduate committe eyesterday ,
tifully in Math ('lass-lurk h ithe Directory ,
The Student Ilandheek ,must . for every URC student ,contains the m me, addrets an dphone munber of every si ndent un the camt)us . Informa-tion on student adtu ;nist'alr)u ,publications, clubs, athletics ,campus songs and yells, a cal-endar• of the year's events an dthe constitution of the Alm alVlaler Society acre all include din this year's book .
Editor Roy El dnos Itns p :tck -
LSE To Discuss
Budget, By-lawsLSE wilt hold a general meet-
ing in the double- committeeroom of the Brock on Thursday ,at 3 :30. On the Agenda will b ethe new LSE by-laws and theproposed budget reallocations ,The proposed budget and newby-laws will be posted in th eAMS office bulletin board b yWednesday morning .
Ati 3~
4RMICRO-BIOLOGISTS Society
will meet Wednesday at noonin Westbrook 201 . All bacterio-llgy students welcome .
CCF CLUB will hold Its week-ly meeting in Arts 100 at noontoday. Ernest Regier will speakon "Surplus Products . "
~
~
sFJAll SOCIETY will hold a
concert in the Auditorium todayat noon .
PSYCHOLOGY CLUB orga-nizational meeting in HM2 a t12:30 today . Election of officersand commitee heads. Plans forthe coming year to be discussed .
44
At
4(FILM SOCIETY will hold its
second general meeting in Arts206, noon, Friday . Filmsoc orien-tation party wil be held Satur-day night, the details of whichwill be discussed at the meeting .
4F
~
~PLAYERS' CLUB will hea r
rides to the univer-the University Bou-
entrance free of conges-that. traffic snarls can be
avertedWhilr' asking student co -
operation, RCMP officials poin tnut that under 1t provincial sta-tute, drivers are forbidden tostop anywhere along the Uni-versity Boulevard except a straffic signs dictate .
ed the IiI It' heels hill ()I' use-fitI
iul'n .rnu .ttJun
un
(' ill
slife . Added features includesecliuu' : nil
Ilse
library,
th ehealth it'rl'iee. a
o d
campu slai~(Im+u'h .; .
Alt thi .; is your ; for 2 :,cents, Oely 3000 books hav ebeen printed and it's firs tcome, first served . The book swill be sold in the quad, i nfront of the library anti in th e13rock starting att noon today ,
hart, hurry, hurry , .
Nominations OpenNorninahoes ;ire now ope n
Legality Of AMS Action
anti I think illegally . . "
TOTEM LEGAL
people die of preventable (Iis -1 eases each year in Calcutt a;done .
"l was Ingot enough,' decl,,r•
All students and student nr .ed law representative John Fr'a- ganizations
throughot .it
I h eser, but "it certainly wasn't world have been asked to sen dcunvetttional,"
their contributions of money orMeeting moved a complaint to cquipnu'nt to Dr . M . L . liswas ,
council regm'dit :': "the manner 11-N, Indian MV1it'ror Steel, Cal -n which pictures were fallen,"
cull ;) ,
Eng. 200 Should Choose
AUS Exec.-Goldsmith
Two methods of strengthening the declining Arts under -Lockers, showers and heating graduate society were suggested at yesterday 's undergraduat e
plan in the gymnasium will be societies committee meeting .used for the pool.
Discussion of the society 's fate
THE TWO-BIT
STAKING STARTEDUniversity has signed a n
agreement with BEG, and stakin gof the site started Tuesday .
The $279,000 contract for th epool was awarded to PaddockEngineering Co . of Los Angeles ,and Marwell Construction Co .of Vancouver will start break-ing ground in three to four days .
An engineer supplied by developed after Jim McNish, was outlined by Allan Golds- ty competition. Physical Educe . 'The pool, which will be at- Paddock will remain at the pool USC president, read minute 19 smith, AMS treasurer, who first lion came third with 52% .
tached to Memorial Gymnasium, six weeks after it is completed of last Monday 's Student Coen- outlined the role Council fel tAUS should play on the campus . FACULTY TOTALS
will seat 6,500 for the games, to instruct the, regular engineers ell meeting which requested USC
Blood collection amounted tohave a constantly recirculating who are to take care of it .
to investigate the "feasibility of AUS is necesasry as a mediu m
system which changes the water
UBC was the original site, strengthening the Art Undergra . through which the USC can get 421 pints Monday, 386 pint s
at many students, he stated . He Tuesday, 331 Wednesday, 47 3every eight hours, a 72-degree but Percy Norman, coach of the duate society .
the
Thursday, and 311 on Friday.favored the. plan of electing a n
around, we wouldn't get the pie-
Only clubs such as the German ing them join in campus life, ,„
I,tven to Manx)ks for all poster stit r es taken
he continued .
or' Psychology club, which cater stated Jim McNish'
requested by undergraduate s o"Your AMS card is not good mainly to Arts students would
'Phis opinion contrasted with cieties .without a picture on it and this be affected by the first plan .
that, of John Fraser, of law, and
Announcement. to Ihis effectis the only opportunity, " Gold• AUS NECESSARY
Jean Taylor, AU;S president, was made by Jim Mctiish, Un -smith said students were told at , Second plan for strengthening who said Arts students were dergraduate committee presi -regist'atinn .
club members first anti Artsnten dent to yesterday's undcrgrado -I{e added, "I understand
.,J
sccuttd .
ate society mecling,
Mctiishstudents were told by phutot;ra- Aid
To
India .
USC decided to send a delega stated Gerry Hodge, Mcunon klion with concrete recuntrncnda• ex-vice-president, has proteste d
cards if they didn't have pic Planned By WUS tinny which would be developed the failure of those requestin gI,nre; taken ." H(' denied that
A move to bring help in des at next Monda y ' s USC meeting . blood posters to pick them up ,council member's ever said there' la , ralcl ,y poor health condition swas compulsion 'Kith regard to in an Indian province has bee n
Sedgewiek Award
having pictures taken,
launched at UBC .Illank AMS cards for students
International Stndenl Service .whn slid bott have their picture's Itas
launcher)
the
campaig ntaken are stow available, it was alter a request from medica lstated at the meting .
students and
practilinncrs i nGoldsmith was answered by! Calcutta, West Bengal .
applied science representative, 'I•he need for better medicalwho said, "it seems to the that and hospital facilities is clearl ythe Toleie has been snbsiclized-- Shown b,y the fact that 13,(IINI
WONDE R
temperature, and no roof.
Vancouver Amateur Swimming ; Council moved the minute at extcitive throu gh represents- Other factulty scores were,{ PARLIAMENTARY FORUMthe same time as it refused to lives of each English 200 class , Agriculture, 50% ; Home Econo- will hold a debate on the topicallow AUS to dissolve . AUS This plan was used 4 years ago miss 45%, ; Applied Science, : "Conscription in peacetime" i nexecutive asked to be dissolved and resulted in a strong AUS . 41'/- ; Commerce 32% ; Arts 31% ; Arts 100 Thursday noon .Friday, Oct, 2 ,
E
Law 3 1"x, ; Pharmacy 25% ; Mc-, . ,. . ..
xplained By Goldsmith
"This is merely Frost, un-I dicine 15"to ; and Graduate Stu
Hikers/~
Suggestions were made in the dergraduate society turning into
Stllh Clutter Gates-
107v,
'
"We had to be a bit cagey," said Allan Goldsmith, AMS USC discussion that AUS be a Sophomot r, undergraduate sot
Bothersome
given control of certain clubs ciety," said Jean Taylor, AUS
Student hil,ch hikers are stilltreasurer, at an undergraduate societies meeting yesterday, in r,ow under the Literary and Set- president .
Notice
refusing to co-operate with thedefending the 50-cent levy on student cards made this year. entific ekecutive. or that an AUS
Advance Notic edefending
RCMP in keeping clear of th eAdmitting that a forced charbg ear--
executive be elected by members
Majority of Arts people ar
e onAMS cards was contrary • tNeven ,f they refused to pay for of the English 200 class,
not in club~- -the AUS is one Set By MameeksBlancaand University Boole
used intersection .administrative p o 1 i cy, Gold-
Two weeks tutee must, hemitt outlined the dilentnt a
council faced in deciding thepolicy .
Students in former years hadindicated that they wanted pi ctares in the Totem, but wante dno extra levy to be made fo rthem . Cost approaching $1,(1(1( ►is necessary to cover Insertio nof student photos ,AMS CARD S
Administration demanded tha tAMS cards be g iven to students
pictures and it' word of that got
way of reaching them and help.:
i „ RCMP has asked student s
FORESTRY FIRST AGAI NForestry, traditional leaders
of the spring blood drives, ledall the campus faculties with a67% of the faculty donating .
Total blood donation by theuniversity has now topped the16,000 pint mark. This corres-ponds to a $400,000 donation b ystudents to the people of British Dorothy Somers speak on "Th e
Columbia .
Canadian Theatre today" in Ph y
Over 64% of the Nurses gave, SICS 201 at noon today .to take second place in the facul-
XMUSSOC will sponsor a get -
together banquet in Broce Hall .Friday evening . The dinner-dance is free to all paid-up mem-bers, but will cost non-members$1 .25 . Membership fees may b epaid at the door .
who thumbsity to kee pIcvar(1lion so
Handbook Finally Hits Campus
J
PAGE TWO
THE UBYSSEY
Wednesday, October 14, 1953
MEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESSAuthorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa .
Student subscriptions $1 .20 per year (included in AMS fees) . Mail aubacrip-tions $2 ner year. Single copies five cents . Published in Vancouver throughout theUn .versity year by the Student Publications Board of the Alma Miter 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
For Display AdvertisingPhone ALma 1824
Phone ALrna 325 3EDITOR•IN-CHIEF ALLAN FOTHERINOHAMManaging Editor . . . . .Peter Sypnowic hExecutive Edior, Jerome Angel
City Editor, Ed ParkerWomen's Editor, Helen Donnelly
Photo Editor, Bob Kendrick
Senior editor this issue .. Charlie Watt
Reporters : Pete Pineo, Bruce McWilliams, Ken Lamb, Ab Kent, Ray Lotte,Ken Lamb, Pat 'Carney, Bob Bridge, Gary Woodhouse, Gene Leatherdale, JacquteTrafford, Val Garstin, Mery Manning, Mary Lou Slems, Rosemary Kent-Barber .Sports: Michael Glaspie, Stan Beck, Geoff Conway, Ken Lamb, Duncan Thrashe r
Good And Bad Publicity
Txa UI YSSEY LETTERS TO McGill Student Counci lTHE EDITOR Halves Bookstore Profits
Frances Murphy
Dance School
Bayview 3425PRIVATE INSTRUCTIONRhumba - Tango - Samb aFox Trot - Waltz - Jive
Old TimeBeginners - Brush Up
Advanced Course sIf no answer CEdar-6878
Alma Hall 3679 W BroadwayBAyview -3425
37 YEARS OF SERVIC ETO THE UNIVERSITY OF
BRITISH COLUMBIA ,ITS FRATERNITIE SAND SORORITIES .
THERE'S A REASON
STATIONERY AN DPRINTING CO. LTD .
roblems,' sales in the student-operatedThe student council, which bookstore, which means more
operates the campus bookstore, money earned for the students ,cafeteria and other eateries ,
said every effort to aid the Mon-treal university in "the presen tamergency " would be of direct ,benefit to the students .
The move was brought about 1948 PLYMOUTH, HEATER ,seat covers, excellent conch -
by Quebec government's refusal' lion . DE . 5248 M eves, or Bo xlast year to accept financial aid D 444, A &t SINGLE UREA (
9to universities from the federal
ed Tux, size 39 and tails, siz egovernment. This move cut off
37, all in good condition to fi ta $615,210 grant to McGill
medium height . TelephoneIn previous years money earn-
S. B. Gervin for appointment ,
ed by tite bookstore and other RCA VICTOR PORTABLE I Nstudent-operated businesses was
attractive aluminum plasti cturned straight back into stu•
case, for immediate sale, 40' ,dent societies .
saving. Phone FR . 9421 ,COUNCIL SURPLUS
ONE PR, CCM 'SPECIAL' IC Eskates, size 9, as new, $20 .
The council now has an un- 1938 FORD SEDAN, RADIO &restricted surplus of $31,293,
heater . Sacrifice . FR . 9421 .most of which was realized last PIPE AND TOBACCO POUC Hyear from the student-operated
Finder please return to Aggi emen's common room .
businesses .
FOUND, DISSECTING Instru -McGill University, in an at-
ments in Chem. Bldg. Phonetempt to meet the financial PA SFR . 4704.
SENGERS FOR8 i30 FO Rproblems caused by the cut, has S days a week . Comng fromraised fees in all but one faculty
Broadway and Cambie . Leaveby $50 .
message on pub. notice boar dMeanwhile, the council has
in North basement of Brockinstituted a two-year plan ROOM JoeAN D QuanB
.OARD, THREEwhereby students will receive meals, laundry included, v4da rebate on text books purchas-1 per month .
4082 W. 8th,ed at the campus bookstore .
AL. 1966 .If bookstore profits are four
percent of total sales, each stu-dent will get back that percent -age of what he has spent at th ebookstore .
Estimated profits for last yea rwill amount to almost 51/2 .
The council hopes to increase s
MONTREAL—(CUP)—McGill University students, wh ooperate the campus bookstore, are turning half of last year ' s$11,000 profits over to the university to help it out of "financia l
problems . "
The officials of the Re dCross are full of praise for thegenerosity of the students a sare we .
Thank you once again .Joyce Thompson
JOYCE THOMPSO NJUNE WALKE RCo-Chairme nBlood Drive Executiv e
dated to the students who don-ated their blood; the- blood !which will mean life to many 'patients in hospitals all ove rBritish Columbia .
It was unfortunate tha tmany donors were turnedaway due to lack of equipment .We would like to thank th eRed Cross for doing the won-derful job they did under thecircumstances . They have as-sured us that they will do bet . 'ter in the Spring Drive .
CLASSIFIE D
1035 Seymour St . ,Vancouver, B .C .
One of the basic rules in the newspape rworld is the maxim : Good news is worthnothing ; bad news is worth everything.
Wars, kilings, catastrophes and plaguescapture the headlines while the good news(what there is of it) passes by virtually un-noticed. This is even strange in these day swhen good news is so rare. Plane crashes rateheadlines because they are so rare ; auto-mobile ' accidents do not rate headlines be-cause they are so common.
And yet the n :casional bit of good news ,rare as it may be, still does not get the heavy ,black'stype which is the city editor's sign ofapproval A perfect example of this was therecent blood drive on the campus .
At a time when the Red Cross is repeat-ing its everlasting appeal for blood donors ,UBC students swamped the clinic in the ar-mouries in such quantities that the usuallyultra-efficient Red Cross was forced to close
the clinic for lack of blood donor equipment .At a time when Arts students could bepersuaded to spare 15 minutes to have theirgraduation photos taken, students willinglylined up for half an hour in order to givetheir blood. Students who would not attendan AMS meeting to see how their money wa sspent missed lectures and kept the bloodclinic open two hours beyond closing timeto make sure that the Red Cross would tak etheir pint of blood.
To most people this would be tremendou shuman-interest news . But not to our news-paper friends downtown . While the abovehappenings were recorded in an inch or tw oof type ,the main campus news was devotedto the deeds of a group of Applied Scienc estudents who bravely pilfered a door from acampus building .
As UBC-town relations at the momen tare not at their highest level, the ignorin gof the amazing blood drive story was unfor-tunate .
This university is probably unique in it srelations with the downtown press. Most uni-
North American society appears to res t
heavily (whether rightly or wrongly) on theconcept of progress . We do not look back toa since past Golden Age, nor do we feel withSpengler that we are at a peak and declin eis inevitable . Rather we look ahead to a nincreasingly Utopian future .
Our mania for progress, however, seemsto be purely materialistic, and has little effec ton the society as a whole . Apart from thethreat of new weapons of war, the 'necessity 'of trading in a serviceable car for a late rmodel with more chromium trim, or the'need' for new television equipment, we do
not become too concerned .There can be no progress without change ,
but we as a whole resist all change othe rthan of a purely material nature . By al lmeans let us have new and better TV sets ,but let us not be so sensitive as to stubborn-ly resist all change of a political, social of
Students on this campus do not receivedirect benefit from the profits made by th eunversity hook store through the sale o fstudent text books . Profits from the boo k
store, are turned over directly to the admin-istration, instead of going into student funds .
On other campuses of comparable sizeprofits are turned hack to the students . A n
adjoining article in this issue tells of the Mc -
Gill bookstore which has given hall' of it s$11,000 yearly profit to the university admin-
istration tll ilt ' l I ) I col id
financed ilrohll`1115 "
versity towns are proud of their affiliatio nwith their schools and are behind the uni-versity . The most generous term that couldhe applied to Vancouver's attitude towardthis university is 'indifference'.
The Vancouver's press attitude towar dUBC's academic record is one of high regard .The faculty is also greatly respected down-town. Unfortnuate as it is, the only timemany people see any mention of UBC is on
the sports page. The only activity in whichUBC's record is not a good one is the activit ywhich receives the most publicity . Deplorableor not, some people still judge a universityby its football team .
It seems UBC has a penchant for attract-ing bad publicity .' During the British EmpireGames swimming pool controversy UB Cofficials stood aside, said nothing and wentout of their way not to become involved i nthe argument while the pool was given tothe university, taken away and then give nback .
Spokesmen for the university practicallyhid in a corner in an attempt to avoid anycriticism and yet when the pool was finall yawarded to the campus, it is UBC which i sthe target of the letters to the editor in h edowntown papers. Because UBC had theonly feasible site for the pool, it is taking thecriticism which was caused by the petty poli-tics and buck-passing at the City Hall.
The same readers who write to the down-town papers blasting "the rich kids of PointGrey who are getting the pool" are probablyunaware that 1,922 of those "rich kids" donat-ed a pint of blood last week . Or that UBCstudents gave $500 in one day to the Marc hof Dimes. Or that students pay $1 a year inorder to enable foreign students to study atUBC .
While stolen toilet-seats and losing foot -ball teams rate the headlines, blood drives arerelegated to the back pages .
It's a tough world .
cultural nature ,
Our present political organization andour present social conventions are not soinfallible that there is no need for progress i nthese areas . Much as we like our system,there is no need to fear criticism and distrustchange. We should desire criticism and stud yproposed changes if progress is to continuerather than become stagnant .
We should certainly avc.id the extremeset by Senators McCarthy and Jenner i nfighting things different as un-American . Ourfear of communism should spur us to im-provement rather than merely activate de-fense mechanisms which make us distrustfu lof all change .
Time does not permit us to stand still .Let us not forget our idea of progress or wemay yet have to agree with Spengler tha tdecline is inevitable .
University of Washington bookstore doe san annual business of $1,000,000 and return sall profits to the students on a dividend basis .
Meanwhile UBC students pay hig hprices for textbooks which in some casescan be bought more cheaply elsewhere. Theadministration operates our bookstore an d„lives all the profits .
In a series of ensuing articles it will b e
ey.plained why UBC students should operat etheir own bookstore and turn the profits hac kinfo AMS funds .
Party Line?Editor, The Ubyssey :
Allow me to congratulatethe SCM Executive on thei rrecent discovery that some re-presentatives of the Commu-nist IUS are human beings .However, their conclusion thata 'real desire for reconcialia-tion cannot be, therefore, to -tally absgnt "from their moti-vation" seems to be rather lessself-evident. We have seen incountless instances that Com-munist spokesmen for anyorganization, students or other -wise, do follow the Party-lineratb than their consciences .Negotiations are begun, walk -outs staged, agreements honor -ed or broken as it suits the,Party, not as the men on th eother side of the table wouldhave It . Granted that some ofthem probably feel uneasy .Some even get mad enough t ojump the fence to our side ,which Is a commendable deci -sion. But then, I think, theylose the right to negotiate fortheir organizations, so thateven this does not achieve any-thing. And I do not reall ysuspect the SCM of any arden tdesires to assure peace by sub-mitting to the whims of theGlorious Party-Line ,
V. PAPEZIK ,4th Geology .
Dissatisfied Dono rEditor, The Ubyssey :
I think that it is high timethat somethng' is done abou tthe organization of the UBCBlood Drive . We have `beentold that the Red Cross is i ndire need of more blood, ye tthree times in three days Ihave been refused !
I am a Bacteriologist studen tand as a result am receivingTABT shots. Monday mornin gI went to register and was tol dthat I couldn't give blood whil ehaving shots. That afternoonwe were told that the head o fthe Redthe Red Cross had giv -en permission for us to 'bleed, 'Tuesday I went again and wasaccepted, but just as I wa swaiting for the needle, thenurse told me that I wouldhave to come back some othe rtime because I had neglecte dto have breakfast !
Again, I tried this morning ,and was informed that I couldnot give because of the TABT .They denied knowing any-thing about the head doctor' sdecision, but said to come bac ktomorrow !
I know that I am only on eof many bewildered students 1
who have had the same expe-rience. And although I wastold to return tomorrow, I Ihave no intention of giving upa fourth hour just to give a ,pint of blood, All I can say i sthat I feel very sorry for som epoor soul who may 1pse his lifejust because a few people can' tget their facts straight .
— Irate Arts Student
Another RecordEditor, The Ubyssey :
The Executive of the Fal lBlood Drive would like to ex -tent( their thanks to all thos ewho helped make this drive agreat success, especially mem- '1hers of Radsoc, Mamooks andUbyssey .
The final success of the !drive of course, must be ere -
Co-ed PulchritudeNeeded By WUSFor Homecoming
Haven't any of you women atthis university gat any goodlooking female friends'
WUS is anxious to sponsor aHomecoming Queen candidate ,but so far not one measly nam el-,as been turned in .
Thi 's is your chance, girls, t ohave a Queen that truly repre-sents you . Since the Queen wil l
be chosen by a panel of judges ,and not by a horde of Eng ineers ,the WUS candidate stands just a sgood a chance as the Engineer's .
So write your friend's name ,or even your own if you want ,on a slip of paper, and trot ove rto the AMS ()trice . Nan Ad:meSOH will tyelconuyou lilt Wideopen arms .
TV Sets And Chrome
Whose Bookstore ?
Soft cashmere-treated Lambswool . . ,
full-fashioned . . . hand-finished . . . shrink-proo f
. . moth-proof. $6.95, $7 .95, $8 .95 . jewelle d
and others higher. At good shops cterywhere .
Pf 1
1
Wednesday, October 14, 1953 . PAGE THREETHE VBYS$B Y
UBC StudentsHard Workers
UBC students work twice a sfast as people expect .
At least this is what one loca lcompany has discovered wit h13 students working with th efirm during the summer . Thesestudents were able to completean estimated 30-hour job in ex-actly half the time thus savin gthe company a considerabl esum in wages and costs .
Placement service further an-nounced a great range of parttime and semi-permanent jobsopen to students this year . Menhave been placed in warehous ework, as parking lot attendants ,as filling station attendants, indelivery work, as taxi drivers ,and a variety of others. Womenhave found openings in depart-ment stores, in clerical work, a sbaby sitters and as typists .
Placement service registra-tion for part-time and casualwork is now 145 men and 25women, but these figures do no ttake Into consideration the ap-proximately 150 men and wo-men working around the cam-pus under the self-help plan .Of the 145 registered, 24 havebeen placed in jobs likely to becontinuous .
NFCUS Delegates
To Oppose Affiliation
DEATH HITS TWOU. OF WASH/NUM
WASHINGTON, (CUP)—A n18-year-old mechanical engi-neering student was killedand two workmen receivedinjuries in two separate acci-dents here .
Jens W . Petersen,' a third-quarter freshman at Univer-sity of Washington, was kille dwhen his car left the road 23miles from Leavenworth .
Two workmen who weretearing down a campus build-ing, were sent to hospita lwhen a wall of the buildingcollapsed on them .
•
'Studying' in the Library
Two UBC student leaders are attending the 17th annualNational Federation of Canadian University students at McGil lUniversity from Oct . 12 to 16 .
Council president Ivan 'Feltham and Vaughn Lyon, UBCNFCUS chairman, have left this week for Montreal .
Expected to cause some excitement at the meeting is theproposal that NFCUS affiliate with International Unoin orStudents, a communist-front group.
Both Feltham and Lyon are ?s --
-strongly opposed to such an of- 'filiation, and , have been backe dby the general meeting here o nOct. 1, when students votedagainst the proposition .
TWENTY-SEVEN YEARSThroughout the 27 years of
its operation, NFCUS has bee nactive in securing "better deals"for Canadian university stu-dents .
CWUS Plans To AskCanadians For Funds
Needed For
Homecoming,
Parade
During recent years NFCU Shas participated In internationa lstudent groups, sending observ-era or delegates to conference swhere student problems arediscussed and solutions pro-posed . Contact
Gerry Ducios
AMS OfficeStudents GoEast UnderNFCUS Plan
World University Servjce com-pleted its plans to bring ex -change students from Europ elast week with the arrival ofWolfram Kretschmar from Ham -burg .
Kretschmar's arrival here tomajor in Zoology brings to fou rthe number of exchange studentsat UBC. Others are Roland Magi ,ny, here from France to takecivil engineering; Vladimir Pie-shakov, from 'Yugoslavia, an dHarro Hahn, from Germany, wh oare both Physics students .
WUS, which recently changedits name from International Stu-dent Service, receives $1 of eac hstudent's AMS fee . Part of thismoney goes toward providing ex-change students with room andboard at Acadia Camp, hospita linsurance, $20 per month pocke tmoney, and textbooks .
Plashakov and Hahn wil lspeak before various organiza-tions soon, enlightening them ,and explaining the customs o ftheir homelands .
Three UBC students, Betty ,Segel, Bruce Gifford, and Mu ..rlel Trimble, were sent to Ger-many last week. A fourth ,George Fujisawa, will be leav-ing for Japan in a few days .
UBC representatives Iva nFeltham, Vaughn Lyon and Joan's.MacArthur, left tbday for th eWUS national conference at Mc -Gill University .
Educated Indians
lumnpsemar
MONTREAL, Que., Oct. 12—Canadian world university ser-vice next year hopes to raise$20,000 from Canadian studentsacross the country for materia lrelief for the universities of thedepressed area .
This target figure for the nex tyear's efforts of WUSC was de-cided upon at the eighth annualnational assembly of the organi-zation held this week-end at th eUniversity of Montreal . Thefigure represents . an averagefifty cent contribution from allCanadian students . Forty per -cent of money that the organiza-tion raises this , year has beenearmarked for one major pro-ject . The project is a healthcentre for the University of Ne wDelhi in India .
OrientationNow StartedInternational House will again
institute its Orientation weeklectures for students unfamilia rwith Canada .
Although not completely re-stricted to Foreign students, theOrientation week is mostly forthose students unfamiliar withCanadian customs . The lectureswill be held in Physics 200 dur-ing noon hours from Oct . 13 toOct . 16 .
Speakers will include Profes-sors Geoffrey Davies and Davi dCorbett and Mr. McCeliph .
First lecture will be taken byProf. Davies, who will speak on" Canadian Foreign Policy . "Prof. Davies has recently re -turned from a three-month visitto several European countries .
"Education in Canada" is thesubject to be taken by Mr. Mc-Celiph, who is head of the B . C .Department of Education. Hewill discuss Canadian universi-ties and schools .
Prof. Corbett, authority pnthe Canadian civil service, wil lspeak on "Canadian Domesti cPolicy" for the third lecture .
A representative of the Natio-nal Film Board will for thefourth lecture discuss t h egrowth of the national film in-dustry in Canada .
Entries DueFor Parade
Homecoming queen candidatesmust be entered by 5 p.m. Fri-day, Oct . 16, said Howie Beck,chairman, today .
Information which has to bein the homecoming committee's
FOREIGN BOOKSWe are specialists in the dires timport of technical' and aimstlfie literature, manuals, text-books, dictionaries. ma galas,etc., from Germany, Switser•land, Sweden, Austria, Prance sItaly and Holland. Ask us forant information about moder nbooks from these countries .We can give you all details ,price — and we obtain yourbooks quickly (
Continental Book CentreThe ,Home of the European
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WUS Exch'ge
Student' Here
Jacquell'ne Zack, 3rd HomeEc., and Godfrey Chowne, 4thCommerce, will attend the Uni-versity of Toronto and ThomasHolt, 3rd Arts, will study at Mc -Gill under the plan.
Participating u n i v e r s i t i e swaive their fees for studentsstudying under this exchangeplan, leaving the tsudent respon-sible only for his living costsand incidentals .
Dick Underhill, acting AMSpresident, announced that al-though there are 60 scholarshipsopen under this plan, "very fewUBC students take advantage o fthem." The most there has everbeen is about seven leaving thecampus for other Canadian
opens this week in the Mari-times and will travel rightacross the country .
It was decided that the pro-ceeds of tjte sale should be usedfor the summer study programplan for next summer. Theprovision was made for its beingused for local contingencies .
The conference saw a newWUS film featuring Dr . RalphBunche of the U.N. This filmwil be exhibited on the Cana-dian campuses during the year .The meeting was addressed byDouglas Aitken, InternationalJournal Secretary of WUS, wh oattended the conference whileon a brief visit to Canada .
The delegates were also Intro-duced to the new travellingsecretary of WUSC, Lewis Par •indam, Mr. Parindam is a Ma-layan, who for the past fewyears has held the position ofadvisory and relief secretary ofthe British World UniversityService ,__es es
I schools .
Old Jalopies
SPECIAL PRICE UNTIL OCTOBER 15th
SA E MONEY
ON THIS CONDENSED VERSIO N
OF THE COLUMBIA ENCYLOPEDI Ai n g organization 's
It is estimated that this pro-ject will cost upwards of $5,00 0and could be finished within on eyear should sufficient money beraised for it.
It is planned that it will houseequipment for examining stu-dents on a regular basis, containa dispensary and an x-ray ma -chine .
The national assembly alsodecided that the organizationshould attempt to hold a semi-nar (similar to the one held i nIndia this summer' in the sum-mer of 1955, either in Africa ,
hands by that time includes the ; Asia, or the Middle East, wit hcandidate's name, address and' preference for the former . Ittelephone number, to be sub-' is also hoped that various studymitted by the organization spore projects in Europe and possibl ysoring the candidate . in Asia may be arranged for the
summer of 1954.of accept -
also be
"Indian students are above
Sponso rname and signatureance of candidate mus tturned in .
Candidates will appear i nthree parades: Wednesday noo non the campus, Saturday at 12in downtown Vancouver, andat half-time of Saturday's foot -ball game .
Organizations sponsoring en -trees in the parade must submi ttheir notice of intention to Par-ade Marshall Gerry Duclos n o
Above Hard Work 'later than 5 p.m. Monday, Oct .
19, along with the names of tw opersons who will be responsible
hard work," the UN club was for floats ,
Speaking on "The CollegeSystem" in India, Farris declar-ed that 'the educated suffer fro mintellectual snobbery .'
Reports were heard on th elast seminar in India from thoseof the delegates who had bee nto it and the assembly was ver yfavorably impressed . The WUSCplans to continue to expand andco-ordinate its scholarship pla ninto a national one and th estanding committee of the orga-nization was set up for tha tpurpose .
It was also decided to con-tinue to press the governmen tfor the formation of the Canad acouncil and for the institutionof national acholarship for for-eign students .
The assembly agreed to holdthe Indian handicraft sale again ,this winter and a large numberof universities have begun t oarrange for it . It will be atMoGill .
It is planned on December 9 ,and will stay for four days . I t
told Friday when Jane Banfiel dand Ken Farris addressed the Champs Announc emeeting after their return from a fseminar in the new eastern na Dance Scheduletion, Soft shoes and cool clothes
are the order of the day for afull program of activities draw nup by the Dance Club .
Executives of t he. groupThursday announced a scheduleof folk dancing in Hut G4 at Gammas GetMiss Banfield and Farris wer e
UBC's representatives on the noon Tuesdays and Wednesda yCanadian delegation of univer nights . Square dancing is held; ',~0 U nsity students who were hosted Friday noons in the women 's
the summer months by gym ,their Indian counterparts .
Farris went on to say that In-dian students, "after recei''in gtheir degrees at a very early age ,refuse to do manual labor . "
PUBLICATION DATE OCTOBER 15th
Pre-publication offer
7.95
Thumb index edition
8.95
De luxe boxed edition
15.00
• A valuable aid for the professional man, for the minister, writer, student ,
teacher .
O Should be in every clubroom, committee room .
• For radio and TV stations, newspapers, magazines .
Ideal for a personal or business gift .
during
Pacifi cChampions, won
'three years in a row .
Miss Banfield, speaking of thestudents themselves, said sh ewas surprised at the lack of ex-
change between male and femalestudents .
A wealth of concise, handy reference in one convenient volume! More than 1,100 large
pages packed with up-to-date information . More than 31.,001) articles, many on Canada .References to science, the arts, world affairs .
REMEMBER: After October 15th the price will be 8 .95 for the regular, 9 .95 for the
thumb indexed edition .
BERKELEY, Calif,—Member sThe club boasts the title of ; and house mother of Alph a
North West Grand Gamma Delta sorority here ar efor the past ; being pumped full of polio -
preventive gamma globulin ,while a pretty 19-year-old siste rsuffering fr ,om a "very serious "attack of polio, has been sent t ohospital ,
The shipment of gamma glo-looks a t
Goldsmith Like sAMS Card Pic s
andChuckles quick
HBC Books, Main Floor"They shower( great concern
when myself raid another gir l
played softball with the boys . "
Indians, she ,aid, place grea tstress nn examinetiuns end prio rto vvtalin .; them sheletl ; "Ares ,thcoist'l\es ;irh ;ludo-in ;
hulin to the sorority is "twicethat allocated for the whol ecity of Berkeley this year," The ,Dally California, student new s
A141S cards, greeted a remar kfrom Al Goldsmith, white hedelivered a report on the cardpicture to 1 .TSC yesterday . that paper, reported .the pictures "were quite good ."
The 47 girls in Alpha Gantm a''You m u s t realize," the Delta have received 101)1) c .c .' s
Ireesnrcr continued -that with of the globulin, which was trans -time Itit'tert'a the u;t4v material Sewed from stale banks to theisn ' t sod . ''
campus hnspilal,
nbonnt'
QL!ampnu .r'lCORPORATED 2M° MAY 1670 .
PAGE FOUR
THE UBYSSEY
Wednesday, October 14, 195 8
Most Successful Season Ever Predicte dAs Birds Swamp Oregon College 20-6
FULLBACK JOHN HUDSON is stopped by two Oregon Wolves defenders in Satur-day's game which UBC won by 20-6 score for second non-conference victory . Captain BobBrady prepares a block in background for up-coming visiting defender .
Crashing Line Led By ElliottAnd Kushnir Spark Birds Wi n
ALBERT NOT SAD ,
Braves Win; Others LoseEx-Brits 11 : UBC Chiefs 8
UBC Braves 11 : Rowing Club 0Kate Il : UBC Tomahawks 0Ex-Brits over UBC Redskin s
by defaultBy GEOFF CONWAY and
KEN LAMBAlthough emerging from
their league opener on th eshort end of an 11-8 count ,the Chiefs served notice o nthe Vancouver Rugby Union
that they are a definite threa t
to retain the silver-ware in awide-open first division sche-
dule .
In Saturday's contest an ab-sence of conditioning combin-ed with defensive lapses—both
due to a deficiency in practice
time—lost the game.However, an abundance o f
capable material was display-ed in all the contests that rug -
by mentor Albert Laithwait ecan afford to pick and chosein his welding of a first dirt -
sion contender .The Chiefs drew first bloo d
in Saturday's feature contes twhen fleet winger John New-ton pulled in a pass on hi sown 40syard line and race dsixty yards for a try. Bob Mor-ford's convert attempt wentwide.
'
Smiling Albert . . .Ex-Brits wasted little tim e
in tying the game. Jack Smit hconnected for three points
with a quick drop kick fro m
Fees NeededIs CryBy Dick Penn
the quarter line, and RussHenschel duplicated the fea tto give Brits the half-time lead .
Newton set up the secondVarsity major with another
long run and a pass-in to DougMcMillan who spun over the
line. Morford completed thedifficult convert to give UBC
a short-lived lead .
Tom 'Christie's conversion of
an Ex.Brit try, garnered whe n
the Chiefs lost possession of
the ball in a one-yard scrum ,
ended the game .
The second division Braves ,
lone Saturday victors, wer eonly able to field 13 me n
against the Rowing Club ; bu t
they were enough to rack u p
a 11-0 win on tries by Mik eBell and Rennie Edgett, and
a conversion and penalty boot
by Richy Forde .The inability of the fourt h
UBC fifteen, the Redskins, t o
field a team—after enthusias-tic turnouts to practices ha dled to hopes of entering a fifth
team in the league—could per-haps he blamed on the Thanks-
giving weekend and resulting
Football Score sEVERGREEN CONFERENC E
Whitworth 28 — CPS 7Eastern 35 — Western 19PLC 7 — Central 6UBC 20 — OCE 6 (non-conf)
STANDINGS
W L T Pf Pa Pts2 t0 0 70 14 41 1 04262 21 1 0 39 1 9
0 27 42
.0 14 1 40 12 330 7 28
THE YARDSTIC KUBC OCE
Rushing Plays 52
Yds. Gained 318Yards Lost 6Net Rushing Yds. ..
31 2Forwards Attempted
1 3Forwards Completed
8
Forwards, Intercept .
0Yds. Inter . Return
0Net Passing Yds. . _ _ 1581st Downs, Rush___
1 81st Downs, Pass 5Total 1st Downs 23Penalties : 3Yds . Lost, Pen.__
1 5Fumbles 3Punts 2Punt Yardage 105Punt Returns 5Yards Returned
40Kickoffs 4Kickoff Yardage 170Kickoffs Returned _ .
2Yds. Kicks Return ._
1 0
OCUSHIONSMETATARSALARC H
0 SUPPORT SLONGITUDINA LARCH
©ABSORBSHEEL..SHOCKS
The Blue and Gold's line, head -
ed 'by stalwarts Kushnir, Ellio t
and O'Flanagan, held them to a
four-yard gain in 'four attempts ,
as the gun sounded to end th e
first quarter .
.Ross Rayment, playing right
half took the ball from Flemons
on the next play and crashed
through the Oregon squad for a
51-yard gain to the opposition
24-yard line. Hutch scooted over
left guard for the major score on
the next play. Fieldgates' con-
vert attempt went astray an d
the Birds led 6-0 .Following the TD, Pinion
again proved his worth to th e
Coach Don Coryell, apparent-ly satisfied with Flemon's wor k
in the first half decided to res t
him and sent in Gerry Stewar t
to call signals in the final hal fof the tilt .
The Varsity squad marcheddown to Oregon's 20 where Ste -
wart sent a ,beautiful spiral pas sto Fieldgate in the end zone for
Oregonian squad by taking Field-
gate's kickoff on his own 10 and
running it to the UBC 35 befor ebeing hauled down . The Wolves
marched to the UBC 20 butfumbled and Kushnir recovere dit for the 'Birds .
With time running out In thefirst half Flemons threw a long
pass to Fieldgate who wastackled hard on the Oregonseven and fumbled the ball . Theball bounced out to the 12 beforeKushnir managed to pounce on
it. Two plays later 'Birds were
on the five but the gun soundedto end the second quarter .
ed it the five as the quarterended .
Hutch took a pitchout fromStewart and went over for UBC'sfinal major of the day. Field-gate's attempt was good; thescore : UBC 20 - OCE 0.
QUICK KICKS: The UBC linelooked and played completelydifferent from last week's til tagainst Central . . . Wolves' cap -tain Ray Cummings suffered asevere ankle injury in the fina lquarter , . . the Oregonians werecompletely surprised after the
Bra•
Pe n
Varsity Wins On Campus ;Second Squad Loses Away Y
Completely reversing its form and bearing no resemblanc e
to the team that lost to Hales last week the Varsity soccer team
rolled to an impressive 9-2 win over Sapperton here on Sunday .
The win left Varsity's leagu erecord at a win and a loss .
EVERYBODY SCORESVarsity out-hustled the Sap-
perton XI all through the gam eend it paicl oft' handsomely. Do n
Gleig and Bud Dobson were bril-liant throughout as they bot h
contributed two goals to the Var-sity cause ,
The win, however. was a rea l
team effort as Glasgow, Butter -
field, Campbell , Fredrickson ,
Matthews, all added singletons .
PALMER SCORES ONEAll was not rosy on the socce r
front however, as the UI3 CChiefs, badly weakened by th eloss of many players over th e
holiday weekend lost a close taw
The good doctors fro m
School served notice las thave
to the B .C . Penitentiary
gums by a 2-1 score .For some unknown reaso n
none of the Pen g uins appeared t o
he away on holidays and the y
took full aciv,ti lage of the Chiefs the playoff sshort-handedness .
down to defea tPalmer scored the lone Chief' same .
tally .
Table tennis and golf entrie sAn important practice for are due and Dick Penn would
both teams has been scheduled appreciate it if they were all i n
fur Thursday noun,
, its the cud of the week .
lastin
year, wenttheir firs t
ncsdav that theyintttntion Of keepingIcyball crown by tramping over, .f
Zcles 1l-2, 11 . 6 .
ICE HOCKEY enthusiasts are
They may not have it all their asked to attend a meeting a t
own way however, as Betas, noon today in Room 212 of th e
Itlst year's runnert :ps, Phi Dells, new gym . Coach Mitchell will
and Psi U all won their first two be on hand to discuss exhibition ,
'tame :; handily and should 'mike games to be played this year .
the race quite interesting .
DICK PENN CALL SA mild upset was registered more however if the fees whic h
when Forestry "A" who made are now payable were also al l
in by the cud of the week .
Wednesday — Meds . "A" vs .
Forestry "A" : Chem. Eng. "B "
vs . Eng. "B" ; Ex-Magee vs . An-
glican Col . ; Beta "A'' vs . ATO
"A" : Psi U "A " vs . Zele :, Fns .
-C" vs . Newman -Li" .
EUBC SKI team is holding an '
organization meeting at noon ,
Thursday, in Arts 102 . All stu-
dents interested in Sk i
are requested to attend .
;It
At
AtBASKET BALLERS are re-
minded that scrimmages star t
1VIed, today at 3.30 for prospectiveWed- , members of the three universit y
every squads. All teams will be play- ,
their Vol- j ing a full schedule this year .
He would appreciate it muc h
PORT
exodus of
CEN Eracing'
TeamWhit .
East .Cent .West. _:___ 1 1PLC _
1 1
UBC 0 1
CPS 0 1
32
180
5512 5
115
13095
84
124
4035
190002
704
10 1
over last year 's team .
' 4
Cricket Team
Shows Promise
By Duncan Thrasher
UBC's cricket team, which
wound up its season some two
months ago did not exactly se t
the league on fire but they ; the second UBC , major score
were certainly an improvement Stewart passed toHutch to mak e
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UBC Thunderbirds 20 .Oregon Wolves 6
By RON SAPERAA hard charging, blocking and tackling UBC line opened
up huge holes in Oregon College of Education's front defence s
Saturday afternoon enabling the Thunderbirds to register thei r
second win this season via a 20-6 victory .
A tie game would equal UBC ' s all lime record of two wins ,
one tie which was set in 1951 .
The line was working so wel lthat quarterbacks Gordie Fle- as they marched down to th e
mons and Gerry Stewart could Oregon five-yard stripe . Bill
have taken all day to throw Stuart going over left tackl e
2 their passes while the Wolves' went over the goal-line but
2 masterminds were repeatedly fumbled and Oregon recovered ,
2 thrown for losses .
giving them a touchback and a
0
Halfback Jack Hutchinson first down on their own 25 .
0 ~ once again eluded opposing Oregon left halfback Chuc ktacklers as he twinkle-toed for Pinion, playing his final year of
large ground gains and scored college ball, easily proved to be
two of the Birds' three touch- the star for the Wolves . Follow-
downs .
ing Stuart's costly fumble, Pin -
Birds first scoring opportunity ion took a handoff and raced 4 1
came late in the first quarter yards to the UBC 34.
UBC ALMOST SCORES
STEWART TAKES OVE R
the score 13-0 .An Oregon drive in the latte r
Because a number of the play- part of the third quarter wa sers had to leave town for sum- stalled when a fourth clown pass, gam when UBC captain Bobmer jobs the chub was never at was incomplete on the home 34 . dy asked about his injury . . .top strength . But in spite of an A running 30-yard pass by "Never happened before, " saidever-changing line-up they fin- Hutchinson to end Bill Bouldinj one of the visitors . . . Coachesished fifth in the seven team first took the ball to the Ore gon 3 Coryell and Mitchell gave thedivision cricket league .
and a series of ground runs mov-team the weekend off as a prize .
SUPP
ORT.
3
W~~ every Sl'0rt
n r
~
CUSNIO SN
0ES
qRCN"
BASKETBALL. "Suction-grip ouHolt, '.mout htoe, Arch-Coshian feature ,
Mon', rite, Blac k
THEIWASHAEIE SHOES