How many ... This are going Year? to go ...

CANADA'S OLDEST COLLI:GE NBW'BPAPKB t Vol. XCIII HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA, MARCH 23, 1961 No. 19

Basic Problems Munro Day, 1960: Insoluble But MUSIC~ CENSORSHIP~ By Violence

"The solution to the world's AND AWARDS MIXED problems will be decided by guns", says Dr. F. F. Claire­ mont. IN ANNUAL REVELS Dr. Clairemont of the Dal­ housie Economics Department Music was the keynote of celebrations as Dalhousie stu­ was speaking to last week's dents listened to the Royal Canadian Artillery Band, laughed SCM lecture. at the Limeliters, and generally obstructed the course of the The basic conflict had been com­ annual revue. Also on hand were 10 society candidates for plicated by the cold war, he said, campus queen, described by one leering observer as providing but the problems would not be solv­ ed by peace or by any spirit of the final necessary touch to a 3-day orgy of wine and song. mutual understanding. "We, as a The first indications of the week­ Jude to Monday night's enthusiastic Christian nation, have stood by, end, which left students on Wednes­ student reception of the first pro­ while total involvment was requir­ day morning wishing for a repeat fessional group to entertain at ed," he claimed. of the storm that cancelled all class­ Munro Day activities, the Limeliters. He said for national redevelop­ es the day after Munro Day last In spite of a strongly voiced hint ment the forces of caste in India year, appeared on Saturday evening that they tone down the insinua­ and of tribe in Africa would have in the gym with The Black and Gold tions and downright suggestions of to be overcome. Nationalism, he em­ Revue. Added entertainment for the their songs, the three-man group phasized, was identified with an at­ Eve Smith, Commerce Queen, is crowned Campus Queen by last year's rowdy audience was the example of provided an hour of entertainment tack against poverty and backward­ retiring queen, Liz Cogswell. Miss Smith, whose list of activities in­ a student being escorted to the local of the quality rarely experienced at ness. There was no freedom where cludes being president of Delta Gamma and a member of Pi Beta Phi, has jail by two obliging policemen. Dalhousie. there was poverty, he claimed. organized various committees on the campus. She is a senior student at The two and a quarter hours of A member of the trip commented Where there was poverty, Dr. the university and will graduate this year in Arts. the slickly presented and quietly after the show that the group had Clairemont stated, there was no -Photo by Bisseett. censored revue proved only a pre- never before been told to calm down hope and no "vision of tomorrow." the overtones of their act. To establish a democracy these paths" toward economic rehabilita­ On a more serious vein, Dr. Kerr forces must be destroyed. A consoli­ tion. on Tuesday afternoon told students gathered for the band concert in the dated national state with control of Dr. Clairemont questioned wheth­ the villages was necessary, he said. THOMPSON, ROSS CARRY gymnasium that Dalhousie could er we needed theology to answer look forward to the future with Marxism, he .said, was denied by questions of underdeveloped coun­ the social structure of individualism. confidence. tries. Christianity, he said, had been After thanking students for their However, this was changing and had identified as the white man's re­ already begun to change, he claimed. outstanding co-operation during the ligion, and it was going to be "ardu­ CAMPUS ELECTIONS past academic year, Dr. Kerr out­ Dr. Clairemont said there had ous" to overcome this legacy. He lined the university's plans for the been "tremendous changes" in world suggested that we, as Christians, economy since 1945 with the break­ Dick Thompson, Commerce, carried off 525 votes in t!te future, pointing out that three de­ must attach ourselves. We must velopments were in sight: a wing up of the classic empires. India and interpret the gospel as a means to Student Council elections, to beat opponent Otto H~enlem, China were "moving along different will be added to Shirreff Hall in the effective social action. Education for Council President by 159 votes, followmg the near future; Forrest campus will be poorest tu~·nout of students a:t the polls in years. . . extended across Carleton Street, and Sandy Ross, Medicine, took the post of v1c~pres1dent the Faculty of Health Professions SUB COMMITTEE FORECASTS with a comfortable majority of 356 votes over She1la Mason, (including Pharmacy and Nursing Arts. Science) has been created. retary-treasurer, Sharon Blackburn. MATHESON HONOURED President Thompson said he was At the ceremony following Dr. very pleased with the election re­ Delta Gamma - president, Beth PROMISING FINANCIAL FUTURE Creighton; secty.-treasurer, Eleanor Kerr's address, Dave Matheson pre­ turns. "The bacis aim of the new sented Dean C. L. Bennet with an Council," he said "will be to increase Bainbridge. DGDS- president, Laurie Borne; honourary Gold D in recognition of It's forecast that the Student Union Building committee student awareness of Council activi­ all the services that he has perform­ ties, and to encourage increased vice-president, Libby MacKeen. sec­ should have $70,000 by next October-almost half of the retary-treasurer, Carol Quigley. ed for the student body. participation in those activities." A few minutes later Mr. Matheson student objective of $150,000. Because of irregularities in pro­ Dalcom Executive-President, Bar­ The fund now stands at $50,000. rie Annis; vice-president, James was himself awarded the Malcolm cedure, the DAAC elections were de­ Honour Award, the highest honour clared void. The new elections will Cochrane; secretary, Judy McMahon, Some $20,000 is netted each year question of a SUB campaign and the comptroller, Brian Rodney. bestowed upon a graduating Dal­ be held tomorrow. housie student. from student levies, interest on ex­ brief will be considered by the whole Other successful candidates for isting funds, donations from associa­ Board at its .spring meeting. Medical Society - President, Jim Other awards given at the cere­ various posts were Council senior Holland; vice-president, Mort Ruck­ tions and alumni and fund raising Details of the brief were reported mony included: projects. girl, Hilary Bonnycastle; senior er; secretary, Judy Hammerling; The MacDonald Oratorical Award: in the last issue of the Gazette, and boy, Ken Clark; junior girl, Carol senior CAMSI rep., Dale Dauphinee; Next years SUB committee will be have also been sent to each member Keith Jobson. Quigley; junior boy, Dennis Ash­ junior CAMSI rep., Ralph Lilly; The Connolly Shield: King.s under the co-chairmanship of Jim of the Board. worth; sophomore rep., Gail Young; president national CAMSI executive, Cowan and one other student whose If the Board accepts the brief, the The Neil MacKinnon Award: Dave med repr., Mike Jennings and Larry Bill Kingston; sports chairman, Logan. name will be announced. It will con­ SUB committee will swing into ac­ Valet; law rep., Harold MacKay; Gordon Mockler. sist of 25 members, plus a new tion over the summer. The propos­ The Climo Trophy: Don Tomes. commerce rep., Ken Myra; engineer­ Result of the referendum on the The Little Award: Ted Wickwire. executive. ed campaign would run from next ing rep., Al Robertson; NFCUS study break: for 530, against 275. October until Munro Day, 1962. The Marjorie Leonard Award: Pam -A brief containing particulars of chairman, Sharon Connolly. Dewis. the proposer SUB is now before the Meanwhile, Dalhousie Alumni or­ DAAC-president, Barbara Wood; ganization has informed the com­ Panhellenic Award: Linda Stoker. Dalhousie Board of Governors. If vice-presenident, Helen Horne; sec- The Bennet Shield has not yet accepted, the SUB campaign is ex­ mittee that its next campaign will be for the proposed building. Its Welfare May Cost been awarded. Contrary to usual pected to become the major project practice, gold and silver "D's" were on the Dal campus next year. A last campaign was for the New Men's Residence. SEM PRESENTS not awarded publicly. Board committee has been set up to At the final fling of the dance on consider the brief, and the whole However, whether the Board ac­ Personal Freedom cepts the SUB brief or not, the com­ March 26 Tuesday evening, Eve Smith, Com­ "Shadow of Hiroshima" plus merce Queen, was crowned Campus mittee has arranged for a special The trend in Western countries to­ issue of the Gazette next fall to ex­ "No Place to Hide"-(2 films) Queen by Liz Cogswell, last year's HILLEL PRESENTS Introduction by Hans de Boer ward welfare states could result in a queen. plain the purpose of the SUB. Some loss of personal freedom, says a 10,000 copies will be published and -a frl"quent visitor to Hiro­ Thanks to a drawing at the dance, shima. J apanese victims of prominent Halifax Roman Catholic. Pat Curry and Dave Hartigan will THREE-ACT COMEDY sent to each Dal alumnus. Father Labelle, head of the Saint The committee also expects to atom bombed Hiroshima will accompany Miss Smith and Yvon spl"!tk to us. Mary's Philosophy Department, told Arsenault on a SUB pre-paid double­ The Dalhousie Hillel Foundation stage a number of secondary money­ the Dal-King's SCM last week that date for this Saturday evening. will this week presen t a three-act raising projects, such as the Pete April 2 "Cheat Death or Beat Death" the drift to socialism was leading to comedy by Sidney Harris-"The Late Seeger .show last year. "the depersonalization of the indivi· person could only get along when Ch ristopher Bean." Gul"st Spl"akl"r: Stewart Clarke -United. dual." There was a tendency, he said his gifts were allied to power. Directed by Helen Roberts, the to adbicate our responsibility and Men sought security in a social or­ play concerns the activities of real "D" AWARDS April 9 "let the government do it." This re­ der and this was the appeal of and fraudulent artists claiming "Can a Christian Say Yes to sulted in a loss of dignity, he claim­ Marxism, Father Labelle said. How­ pain tings left to a small-town Doc­ All those who h ave been award­ Karl Marx?" ed, and a falloff of creativity. ever, the Utopia that Marx predicted tor by a then-undistinguished and ed "D's" aecording to the list Guest Speaker: Dr. Clairl"mont Father Labelle was speaking at "was a fiction". The social optimism n ow-famous artist, once his patient. published in the Munro Day pro­ April 16 one of the regular SCM Thursday of the 19th century had proved Curtain goes up on the comedy at gram ar c requested to Sl"e Miss "Can t he Christians of Today lectures in a series on Christianity illusory. the Beth Israel Synagogue auditor­ Robb in thE' Bu"'in l"sc; Office any Compete with Communism?" and Communism. There was no longer room for ium, March 25 and 26, 8:30 p.m. timE' after 1\tonday, March 27, to Guest Speaker: Dr. A. E. Kerr He said in the tendency toward several kinds of social order. Today. Studen t tickets (.75) are available r l"ePiVI" their awards. -United. more centralized power, the masses there had to be one order or there from campus Hillel member·S. , ______....,; . were .swept along, and even a gifted C O N T INUED O N PAGE 6 Page Two DALHOUSIE GAZETTE Thursday, March 23, 1961

Canada's oldest eollege newspaper. '1;1 Member of Canadian University T/t4 ~ Press. Opinions expressed editor- The American Influence ially are not the official opinion ETTERS I of the Council of Students. Official publication ol Students of Dal­ On The Canadian Ec1onomy ... elt"ellent performance... AZET'E housie Unlverwib, Halifax, Nova Sir: Scotia. by PETER GREEN A brief re-reading of the review Editor-in-Chief ...... , ...... DENIS STAIRS of Wonderful Town, pr.inlted in the Managing Editor ...... MIKE KIRBY last edition of the Gazette, relnind­ Associat e Editor ...... GEORGE MARTELL 1\lr. Greene, a Haligonian for most of his life, is a. cd me with a shock that I had Business Manager ...... BOB DAVISON senior Commerce student at this university and is neglected to discuss the thoroughly News Editor ...... Betty Archibald majoring in Economics. He points out the important, enjoyable performance of PenelOP€1 r Associate News Editor ...... Dave Nicholson and "sometimes dominant and distortive," role the Stanbury to an adequate or de­ Feat ures Editor ...... Bob Ryan U.S. plays in the Canadian economy. He sees this served extent. My only apology Associate Feature Editor ...... Jim Hurley trend as likely to continue as the U.S. becomes "in­ for giving readers a false impres­ Boys' Sports Editor ...... Joel J.acobson creasingly dependent on Canada for raw materials." sion of the leading character in the Girls' Sports E ditor ...... Bobble Wood He calls for a general reappraisal of Canada's econ­ play is simply that, having seen Associate Girls' Sports Editor ...... Sharon Blackbur!l omic relationship toward the . Miss Stanbury's very competent Feature Columnist ...... Peter Outh1t acting in previous plays, I simply Features ...... Rolf Schultz, Ian MacKenzie Students' Council Reporter ...... Ian MacKenzie took for granted another e:x,pert performance by a consistently good Copywriter ...... Bria~ Backman In the course of economic development which has made Cartoonist ...... Jun Hurley Canada one of the most highly industrailized nations in the actress. CUP ...... Sandra Greenleaf world, the Canadian economy has been closely geared to I found Miss Stanbury's portrayal News Reporters: P hilip Amy.s, Joan Stewart, Henry Muggah, Pe~er of Ruth both a pleasing contrast to Spencer, Bill Dennis, Mary Doody, Jan Martell, Jm1 external world forces. the innocent Eileen and also a Bates, Ralph Ferguson, Marilyn Withrow Dominant in the Canadian econ­ for Canadain expot'ts. In this latter character study with its own claims Sports; Reporters: Gerry Irwin, Blair Green, Brian Creighton, Jamie to attention. What would have been Richardson, Wayne Beaton, Albert Bartlett, Linda omy, which has perpetuated Can­ area, a complementary dualism has Lee, Linda Stoker, Linda Ramsay, Jean Hattie, Kay developed in which the United sophistication in a small town con­ ada's traditional staff. us as a primary vincingly became a form of big­ T ucker. States iniluence has induced Managing Typist .. , ...... Penelope Stanbury producer for the export market. growth in areas of our economy city gullibility in a girl Wlho should Typists ...... Judy Lorway, Ellen Matheson, Nancy Crease, The American penetration is felt that complement the U.S. economy have received more than the second Winna Miller, Joan Smith with greatest impact in the U.S. (primary and semi-processed ma­ glance that men never seemed to Circulation Manager ...... Sally Ross capital investment, particularly di­ terials) and has discouraged de­ give her. Circulation: Chris Banks, Joyce Wyman, J ane MacLean, Sharon Connolly, rect investment which invo!lvcs con­ velopment in areas that are com­ trol of industry, and the dominant petitive. This has not worked to Miss Stanbw·y's competent sing­ Charlotte Davidson, Heather Corst on. ing and dancing pvoved to be en­ Photo~rraphy ...... Dave Bissett, Joe MacDonald, Bob Risley importance of the U.S. as a market Canada's advantage as observation of the growth rates of our second­ joy>able side-effects stemming from ary industry reveals. a thoroughly excellent performance that took in i1s stride the various be j u~t as easily obtained by an enterpris­ demands of paying the reporter NFCUS Appears Weak ing Students' Council Ol' University Adver­ Business Cycles with the Conga line, the provincial tising Bureau. Certainly no other concrete v.riter, and ,the burlesque of an Since the end of World War 1 African hunter's unfaithful wife. service (with the exception of the visit of the Canadian economy has been At Local Level Soviet students, which, as we have said, was highly sensitive to cyclical business I hope that I have not misled any nationally organized) has been evidenced on fluctations emanating from the of those readers (if there were any this campus. United States. The patterns of in the first place) who had noot Just two weeks ago, the Students' Coun­ technology, corporote decision-mak­ seen the play and who were there­ We have seen no comprehensive effort to ing, business confidence, and con­ fore not aware of the general ex­ cil of St. Francis Xavier University uncere­ sumer behaviour are so highly moniously ejected the St. FX branch of the acquaint students with the NFCUS Travel cellence of the leading lady. Plan. The Federation offers an excellent in­ inter-woven that business cycle BETTY ARCffiBALD. National Federation of Canadian University transmission is far more complex Students from its campus. Whether or not surance policy at rates unmatched by regu­ and effective than would appear their decision to withdraw their membership lar commercial schemes, but we can recall from trade investment statistics. only one adequate drive to inform the Stu­ from the organization because of its "use­ The "general parallelism" af . .. sloppy ... lessness" will be ratified by their Student dent Body of its existence in four years; by business fluctuations has been re­ Sir: Forum this week remains to be seen. that rating, at least half the students here vealed by the depression of 1920- Apathy seems to come and go on do not know that it is available. Moreover, 21, the Great Depression of 1929...:33, this Campus without apparent r ea­ But the controversy brings to mind a while the Gazette received news releases and the downswings of 1937-38 and son, but one section in which it has similar withdrawal of four large universities 1953-54. However, while Canada been dominant for years is in the this year from the Federation's National has been highly sensitive to Amer­ dress of a very large majority of in 1955: McGill, Toronto, UB C, and Mani­ and Regional Executives, no reports have ican fluctuations, Canadian down­ students, and most noticeably so toba. All four rejoined the Federation with­ been forthcoming from the local committee swings have been milder and usual­ among the undergraduates. in the next two years, but not before their about activities here. ly shorter than those in the United dissatisfaction with its operations, or rather, states. For example, the U.S. re­ Lt is tha~t AI'Its and Science and In view of all this there appears to be no cession of 1948-49 was hardly re­ otner unctergraduaff.e studentts are lack of them, had been expressed. question about the validity of Student Coun­ flected in Canada. dominated by the traditional, slop­ At present, five French-Canadian univer­ pily-dressed Engineers, whose de­ cil complaints at St. FX. Yet the Federation sire seems to depict a rather assin· sities are considering resignation on the ds t he sole organ of national student expTes­ For eign Investment ine out-door, he-man type? ground that a proposed NFCUS education sion in Canada, and as such it is an invalu­ American investment in Cana­ Is it that undergraduates h ave a brief implies advocation of Federal Govern­ able institution. It performs significant func­ dian industry has grown steadily compex which makes them feel so me.nt interference in a field coming solely tions on the national and international since the 1920's; the U.S. has thus inlerior to graduates and profes­ within provincial jurisdiction. scenes; it has the potential to perform sign­ replaced >the U.K. as the main sional-school students, that they foreign capital supply source. Ag­ must reflect it in t heir attire? These political disturbances within the ificant functions on the university campus gregate non-resident investment in Federation would seem to indicate critical level. Canada is in excess of $24 billion. Is it thident control you must decid e Jth e question for of Canadian industry shot up from yourself. curricular year. Political squabbles, orga~ tion, to oonclude with Peter Green, Atlantic 17% to 28%, while th e U.S. share Regional President of the Federation, that i~ational rivalries, the occasional cheering rose from 15% to 25% over the A white shirt and a tie is aoll that sports enthusiast, jazzy dance bands, the same period. Sta>tistics taken from is necessary for the males, with th e the fault lies with the local committees. Per­ possrble exception of the Engineers, haps one of the most important and effective clink of glasses, the anxious plaints of stu­ Canada -United States Economic Re­ lations, a report prepared by I. for whom there is lLttle hope. For NFCUS endBavors, foT example, is its ac­ dents with socia;l problems-all recede before Brecher and S. S. Reisman for the 1he girls . . . oh, our piltiful Mari ­ tivity in the field of international student the impending, annual trial of strength. Royal Comn1ission on C anada's ltime women ... if Vogue, Chate­ relations-it sends delegates to the Inter­ Gazette Editors accordingly wish to take Economic Prospects, show th at the laine, and other leading fashion this opportunity to thank all t hose who have lJ.S. controlled 68% of capital em­ magazines can make no impression national Student Conference, it arranges ployed in p etroleum, 55% in min­ on their appreciation of style .. . exchange visits with students of other coun­ actively participated in publishing the paper, ing, 45% in pulp a nd p aper, 51 % as it seems they have none .. . tries (particularly the Soviet Union), it as well as those among the r eading audience in chemicals, 95% in automobiles well, thC'l'e seems to be no hope a,t and parts, and 84% in rubber. all. operates a travel plan in order to assist stu­ who have taken time to show their interest Apathetic ... Who? Me? dents in going abroad~but all these opera­ by commenting upon or criticizing its con­ What have been th e historical tions are carried out almost entirely through tent and policies. Without t he former, there factors wh ich h ave conspired to " A BLUE SUIT" the efforts of the National Executive. Simi­ would be no campus newspaper; without the facilitate th ese massive f oreign in­ CONTINUED ON PAGE 6 vestments? P rofessors Brech er and lady, the Federation's education briefs, latte1·, our efforts would seem empty and Reisman write that "Canada has which are gradually winning more and more unrewarding. had a long tradition of freedom of "vital" industries, are controlled student financial assistance from govern­ We wish also to thank the Students' flow of capital and income across by foreign interests, w e are ultim­ ment coffers, are largely the result of the Council for its co-operation, financial and its border. Canada h as had a long ately subject to the decisions and history of stable and orderly gov­ and a "Be quiet" attitude on the efforts of the Ottawa executive in combina­ otherwise, as well as all the speakers and ernment . . . a skilled labor force p art of government in economic tion with Regional and National NFCUS members of campus organizations who have . . . a highly developed educational matters . Conferences. so willingly submitted to our interviews and system . . . adequate transporta­ Because large sectors of our in­ But at the local level about the only self­ questions. tion network and oth er social cap­ dustry, including large shares of ital facilities ... reasonably stable :for private foreign capital." The justification the Federation can find is the The Editors have enjoyed their year, but economic and social conditions .. . salient factors then have been a list of student retail discounts provided by one thing is still worrying them ... Why all of these factors have h elp ed to long t radition of political stability neighbourhood merchants, a list that could did those professors go? m ake Canada an attractive outlet CONTINUED ON PAGE 6 Thursday, 1\larch 23, 1961 DALHOUSIE GAZETTE Page Three on second thought Lady Slutterly Returns -Peter Outhit To Zetan Place by ROLF J. SCHULTZ VOICE OF THE TURTLE . Behind closed doors ~ small .group of whit.e-bearded, semi-baldheaded psychological reahsts had gathered to revive the Ideas of Dr. Sigmund Freud which had seriously been Now that you're calcified in a comfortable, hidden wedge neglected and caused a sudden di~ in .the sexual revolution that world had been promised by in the last seat of the last row from the professor, and that dear Mr. M.althus .. It. was the obJ~cbve of these broad-minded Aristotles of the 20th cen­ warm Spring sun is simmering the back of your neck, open the tury ~o !·evtve t~e m_bma~y ~f makmg love and to assist the psychologists of our modern in­ dustnahzed soc1e~y m brmgmg to the attention of students the long lost art of reproducinO' Gazette and see if you can recall- the mammal spectes. "' 1950. Perhaps earlier. Spring then wasn't a thing, it "Let us create a character," began Alex, the butler, dispose of the re­ long past, one group of liberty-lov­ was a feeling; a scuffed toe, knee breeches-and-•vet-socks feel­ Sir Tommy Lawrence, a wealthy mains. ing freedom fighters still has its ing. The character of rain: pelting, steady, sticky, splashing English aristocrat, who had recent- They had been approached to con- trap set in front of a small mouse­ sider the adaptation of "Lady Slut­ hole, still awaiting a reply, while on into the schoolyard mud and into the blue-brown mounds of ly retired at the ripe young age of terly" for the stage, adding to the the inside, separated only by a small, streetcorner snow, gushing in rivulets from gutter to a tor­ 52 to enjoy the benefits of others' enjoyment of a young and tender dull-brown plywood door, the mice rentious drain, then magically reappearing and on to the next social security. "Perhaps," he con- audience which was to witness the are becoming leaner and hungrier. tinued, "an overpain ted harridan m spectacle that evening. Slowly the gutter ... eyes of Doug browsed over the rna· "Hurry up, please; it's time." Spring was the crack of a baseball into a too-thin mitt. The sharp a long flannel nightie, a horrible reel terial before him and by the end of wig, with a big bulge around her the afternoon snickers filtered from A similar story may be told abou tang of pain in the catching palm was far outweighed by the good feeling "Zetan Place," a short extraction o middle, would be appropriate for a beneath the dull-brown plywood that the hand will toughen again ... grou.!)s and gangs sitting on steps city life after dark, involving an en­ walls, hanging from trees, fences, running in fields, streets, painting $tart to spoof the highbrows and the door which would have well match- ed the actions of Boris Karloff about counter between Private Eye Peter bicycles and "who'll play me alleys" ... sticks to be broken, stones to be Rum and callgirl, strip-teaser, and thrown, jumping contests, spitting contests, trading card . hipsters.' Loud bellows of coy laugh- to strike another dainty delicate ter sounded forth from behind the damsel. nightclub entertainer, the sophisti­ Everything look dreariest and felt best in March. The noonday sun archway which had been adorned cated Miss Wanda Strip, who has bursting through a schoolroom transom ... restlessness, thoughts, imag­ with a solid front of mahogany cen- The descri otion of Lady Slutterly been trying to get up in the world turies ago. There were moments of by Swellers, the bum-boy of the e.s­ more often than even the busiest ination, daydreaming ... and later on, girls. That hollow ache in the tom-cat could imagine. The fact that stomach at the thought that she might walk by across the street, or that great bliss in Londontown that eve- tate, of having lost her character ning as the followers of Freud con- as the wifely broad she once used to "Zetan Place" was withdrawn by its she had stood on this very spot only yesterday ... stirrings of feeling, author from being presented to a deeper than mere emotion and uncomprehendingly serious ... structed "Lady Slutterly's Ladder" be and now possessing a skin as But the annals of history tell also of rough and sealy as a codfish, would sex-starved audience before the mice Spring skitters under the veranda like a sodden field-mouse. In the another story. certainly meet with objections from could nible it to shreds marks the vernal silence two sparrows suddenly squall on a chimney-side. The the social elite, while the sugges- only difference in the two tales. wind which so long had blasted icily around the corner of the campus Somewhere on the rock-garden of tion in erecting a ladder to let one's library no longer stings. A sophomore slides to his knees in the slush, the Atlantic one balmy Saturday eyes catch a glimpse of youth in the And so, to the memory of those curses, plunges off across a field again to classes. afternoon, we find a union of in- flesh would certainly be a disgrace­ unfortunates who have not seen timate eccentrics, obviously with ful thought to the occupants of an either of the two plays privately and The student worries about-what? Not about girls, exactly, or even some weight over the wishes of all female colony. were thus deprived of the chance to exams ... the anxiety is of a life-is-at-stake kind, a formless, hungry others, meeting in a palace protected criticize the plots and the quality anxiety. Impatience. Determination. by a fluttering Union Jack, whose And then, one must also remem­ of the actors (which was obviously power is as strong as the lies that ber that the council desires to grad· the sole purpose of both skits), may Ahove all Spring is an empty wallet, and an uneasy mind. Wanting exist between South Africa-and the uate, but it would be very desirable it just be pointed out that the ac to belong to somPthing and not knowing what-then choosing to be alone Commonwealth. They had just fin- to establish a pretence which would tions of certain female "dancers' when company offers itself. Nobody owns me! And Spring, if I were to ished sipping their 4 o'clock tea, and hide this secret fact. Although the dressed in unsightly black tights define it, is the annual irritant that indicates the end of secureness. with uncouth .smiles they watched night of abortive performance has and wailing their bellies to the tune Glad winter is finished. Wishing summer were here. of "Peter Gun" is a form of art far LIFE. A continually failing attempt to foresee the unforeseen. more demoralizing than poking fun What is a cynic? Basically, a person who is compelled to shield him­ at sex by means of the spoken word self from the buffetings of larger emotions with verbal artifices. A cynic LOVE. The delusion that one woman differs from another. It is ironical that these belly-dancers is to be seen, for whatever truth he may divulge, but not to be imitated. should win first prize in any revue MARRIAGE. An arrangrement which takes two people to complete: a and far more ironical that the chore All of us (except, possibly, Gazette readers) carry a grain of cynicism in girl and her mother. us, which is a helpful thing. To satisfy those who harbour no doubts that ographer be one of the judges. this column is armed though not dangerous, I've compiled a brief diction­ MEETING. Where minutes are kept and hours are wasted. Perhaps the rock-garden of the ary of some of the sharper cynicisms of our time. PESSIMIST. An optimist who tried to practice what he preached. Atlantic will one day enjoy the ABSURDITY. A belief manifestly inconsistent with one's own opinion. liberty extended to other colleges, POSITIVE. Mistaken at the top of one's voice. but so long as narrow-mindedness ADMIRATION. Our polite recognition of another's resemblance to our­ persists or is encouraged in our fu­ selves. WIFE. The one who first picks her husband's clothes and then his ture leaders, Lady Slulterly will re­ pockets. main in Zetan Place. ADULT. A person who has stopped growing-except in the middle. . .. and so on. Be able to distinguish between (a) cynicism (b) realism Rumour has it that both have also BACHELOR. A cowardly, cruel, and wholly selfish man who is cheating (c) practicality, mailing all answers to the Postmaster General, House of been banned in Boston. some nice woman out of a profitable divorce. Commons, Ottawa. COMFORT. A state of mind produced by contemplation of a neighbour's I've enjoyed filling this space. Hope it made (at times) intelligible uneasiness. that a student may take a job only reading. See you later. if it is directly connected with his HUSBAND. A man who never knows when he is well off-because he line of study, and if there is no never is. Canadian to fill the job. He added that difficulties have arisen out of JURY. A group of twelve men selected to decide who has the better Lack of Help for Overseas Students the present employment crisis lawyer. The students also felt that infor­ Criticized at WUSC Conference mation supplied to them before they arrived was inadequate. They claim­ LITTLE MAN O N CAMPUS ed it was difficult to obtain infor­ LONDON-The Canadian attitude towards overseas stu mation about the universities in the dents studying here was criticized last week during a WUSC rountry, basic information about the regional seminar by an expert in that field of student relations. "Ountry itself other than geograph­ ies and statistical analyses, and "Present arrangements for the reception and welfare of many small bits of information such overseas students are regrettably poor," Lewis Perinbam, as what types of clothing to bring, associate secretary of the Canadian National Commission of and how bus stops are designated. UNESCO told delegates to the two-day discussion. Mr. Perin­ A former president of NFCUS sug­ gested that Canadians overcome bam has been connected with WUSC for the last 10 years, their general indifference to over­ eight of them as general secretary for WUSC. .seas students, a n d proposed the set­ ting up of a Foreign Student Year neglect the academic standards of "Overseas students don't expect to help accomplish this. special privileges," he said, "but the students would be a grave in­ they do have special problems.'' He justice. Jacques Gerin told the delegates criticized the tendency to mistake to the seminar that "No amount of activities such as teas for the basic Government Dept. Under Fire national organizations can replace needs of overseas students in Can­ Meanwhile, a number of overseas the good will shown by one Cana­ ada. students attending the seminar at­ dian student towards a foreign friend." He warned that no amount Mr. Perinbam said that although tacked the Department of Citizen­ of organization could undo the harm there is some work done on the local ship and Immigration for its lack of help before or after their arrival done by neglect and indifference of level, there is little co-ordinated Canadians towards their guests. effort to assist the students at the here. One of the main issues was national level, other than WUSC summer employment. Casual em­ ployment is forbidden to these stu­ He said it had always surprised him To Get There In Time "that Canada which at present dents by law although governmen t spends $100 million annually on var­ officials often turn their heads the USE A ious international assistance pro­ other way. grams, has not found it possible to John Manion of the department finance and provide adequate ar­ explained that the regulations state rangements for the reception and 3-S TAXI welfare of those who come to for Canada." Getting married this sum­ The main purpose of over.seas ex­ mer? Have Dave Bissett Service - Safety change is education and all the rest cover the proceedings. Satisfaction is just valuable by-products, he said, (Reasonable) and added that the international ex­ CALL S-S Anytime - Everytlme change of scholars is forging strong Phone 423-4969 li nks in the chain of international after exams 423-7188 co-operation. However, he said, to Page Four DALHOUSIE GAZETTE Thursday, March 23, 1961 CANADIAN UNIVERSITIES Aitchison, Kaplan ORGANISE PEACE CORPS Clash on Problem Of Nuclear Arms OTTAWA (CUP)-Representatives of six agencies met here Monday to discuss co-ordination of plans for a Canadian Two Dalhousie faculrt:y menllbers Peace Corps to work in India and Ceylon. disagreed last week on the need for nuclear dlisarmament and Canada's A Toronto-Laval group, the Canadian Overseas Volun­ role in accepting nuclear arms teers, seemed to be ahead in the field and probably will get from the United Sltates. the nod to furm the nucleus of any unified action to send out D1·. James A~tchison and Dr. volunteer students. Gordon Kaplan were taking parrt; Sitting down to discuss bhe Both COV and the Peace Corps in the Dalhousie-Kings Student scheme were the Canadian Over­ in the Unit-ed States siress that the ChriSJtian Movemerut week-end held seas Volunteers (Toronto), Volon­ service wil'! no.t be easy; a volun­ at Camp Brunswick, near Chezzet­ taires Canadiens Outre-Mer (La­ teer wihl need Ito pUJt up with irri­ cook. val), the Committee Canadian tation, frustration, new culrt:ure, dif­ Dr. Aitchison told the students Overseas Student Service (UBS), ferent food, and often unsanitary present Canada should acceplt "some the Canadian Universities Founda­ conditions - by his standards. In nuclear arms"' for moral reasons. tion, NFCUS and WUSC. IJt was addiltion, the people he will work hoped that representative of Ex­ with may find .i.t hard to acceplt the He srms can cost Y'OU around $4,000. King's scored a win over a Dal­ think for themselves rather than of England's Oxford University authorities. housie girls' debatin:g team when picking up second hand, biased So I went in under cover - for free." the y satisfied the judges that the opinions, said Miss Zinc. Ente!"lPrising Alft'ed Raedell, 24,1 in a hosp1tal, earning $22.40 a tutorial system in universities was "The way to pass exams is to attended c.tasses for six months week. He told the reporters he just not moce beneficial than the lec­ give back to the prof€SSOr his without elUlolling or paying tuition DescrLbing himself as an under­ "b11owsed around among various ture system. Suppor;ting the twtor­ notes," said Miss Cannell. However, fees. Raedell told reporters he cover Yank, the youth classes, soaking up the academic at­ ial system for Dal were Marie Zinc Miss Oxner coUllltered by saying merely donned "proper siudent at- said: mosphere." and Joan Cannell while Sandra Ox­ professors would entertain ques­ tire" and walked in. He met o

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Without this label I.{JiiK. ~I it is not a genuine KITTEN! CIGARETTE 730 Thursday, l\Iarch 23, 1961 QALHOUSIE G~ZE'ITE Page Five Portrait of A Plagerized Poet BOOK REVIEW Pictured in Pickings From S.C. M. SECRETARY AUTHOR OF BOOK Hans A. de Boer, The Bridge is Love, 256 pp., illustrated, Past Poets Evangelical Publishers, Toronto, $3.00. This book is a testimonial of life. What is our attitude figure-head fixation, and he scat­ tel'S the names of impol'ltant per­ to race and colour discrimination? What is the responsibility sons with relative abandon through­ OOOOOOOH that Ora et Laborian rag of the wealthier nations towards the poorer? What must we out the work. However, in spite of It's so elegant think about war, especially nuclec·u· war? And what must we this, the homelly principles of love So intelligent do about it? In way of answer, Hans de Boer asserts that seem rto win oUJt in de Boer's tra­ "A man alone now" velogue. man must debate his dogma less and live his life more con­ In his own foreward to the book, "The steps of a woman" sistently. The bridge to unite our troubled world of today, de Boer summarized the intent of "The face of a man" according to de Boer, is love. his work by saying: "My repo1't What shall I do now? touches on those problems which DA Hans de Boer is curren.tly the Kon!g, J a.pan and many other coun­ urufortunrutely the press often passes secretary of the SCM at Dalhousie tries of the wor'ld. By living with over in si'lence and which get little What shall I do tomorrow? University and the University of these peoples, rather than preach­ notice even in religious papers." DA DA King·s Co-Hege, Halifax. ing do•wn to them, de Boer hoped to In conclusion, ~t is inJterest.ing to What shall we ever do? actively practice the principles of note that de Boer, to effective>ly DADA DA Most of de Boer's book is devoted love presenlted in his book. bring home the point of The Bridge to a vast panorama of his life is Love, used money derived from amongst the native popula>tions of lt would appear, nonetheless, thait the sale of the book Ito help a boys' "Burning Burning Burning " Kenya, South Africa, India, Hong citizen of the world de Boer has a town lin a depressed al'ea of India.

"While the grey city sleeps" , NOTICE "green and soft, with daisies, buttercups, clover and , Meeting of Co-Ordination Com­ WUSC AT HOME AND ABROAD "green and soft, with daisies, buttercups, clover and mittee and Campus Organizations to decide upon dates and functions by IAN MacKENZIE "He leaves," for next year. Swiftly, silently, scornfully, scholarly, To many students World University Service in Canada is Slobbily, slatternly, sloppily, soddenly and MONDAY, MARCH 27 a rather nebulous organization whose primary 'aim appears "Drunken sots stagger homeward while .Men's Common Room, A&A Bldg. to be raising money to send to needy students in other parts the grey city awakes." 7 p.m. of the world. What, they ask, do Canadians get out of it? The answer •that OOiffies immed- iately to mind is th:ilt Canadians are being given the oppo!'lt:un.ilty to help IN THE UNITED STATES their fellow students in countrie-s where real sacrifice is necessary to STAINLESS STEEL gain a university education. INCO DEVELOPS WORLD MARKETS FOR NICKEL Watching a play University students are l!:old by UMBRELLA or listening to a!ll and sundry 1lhat they are the music under the future lead.evs of their counJtlries stars is a wonder­ and the world: nowhere is this more ful experience ... truo~ than in the Mpidly developing until it starts to countries of Asia, Africa and South rain. A new all­ Amerioa. By helping these students weather audito­ to help themselves, Canadiam; are rium in Pittsburgh, Pa., solves this furthering the ideal of anJ inter­ nrutionall univ8l"Siity community problem with a nickel stainless steel transcending all barriers of race, dome. Eight huge sections nest nationality and creed, and are in­ together when the dome is open. At fluencing the futoce of the world. the first sign of rain, push a button However, there are other more . .. and the sections glide quietly tang:iJble bene:frilts wihich Canadians around a track to form a stainless derive from WUSC. Of these, the steel umbrella-and on with the show! WUSC Swrnmer SeminaT, wih.ich is being held this year in Sweden, is probably the best known. This Semi'llar enablles studenJts and racullty memJbevs from univer­ sities across Canada to visit various countries, to meet people with dif­ ferent outlooks and to study their problems and how they me being overcome. Canadian Activities Another well known feaJture of WUS in Canada is the Treasure Van, which makes an annual tour of campuses across the country, bringling wilth 1t a breath of the handcrafts and culture of disbarut lands. Besides this, WUSC supports and IN CANADA sponsors conferences art: national STAIN LESS STEEL and provincial levels, dealing with SKYSCRAPER topics of national and international Nickel stainless impor.tanoe. Such a conference was steel curtain wall recently held at the University of panels were used Western Orutario on the role of the fo r the new Union fore1gn student in Canada. Next Carbide building year the Altla.n.tic Region al confer­ New ideas in architecture build in Toronto. ence will be held art: Dalhousie. At the looal level, WUSC spon­ world markets for nickel sors educational talks and pamrl IN FRANCE discussions, designed to make stu­ A NEW EXHIBITION CENTRE dents more awaa-e af what :is going Nickel strengthens stainless steel, increases its resistance to cor­ More th an 40 tons of nickel stainless on in the world around them. lit is rosion, makes is ea sier to fabricate. As an architectural material, steel were used for interior and exterior also th e functrl.Q!Il of the locall com­ applications for the new exhibition mittees to mise money for the I n­ stainless steel harmonizes beautifully with wood, glass, tile and centre near Paris. ternational Plrogram of Aotion. enamelled surfaces, withstands weathering and requires little main­ This is what WUSC does for you. You can play your pant by sup­ tenance. Today, leadin g architects in many countries are using porling your local WUSC oommiJt­ nickel stai nless steel more and more for bold new concepts in design. tee, and in domg so gain illhe &altis­ Canada is the world's largest producer of nickel. And Inco, faction of knO'Wing that you are joinin·g a bro1lh.erhood dedicaJted to through sales, research and market development operations, main­ the service of students throughout tains a continuing program for the expansion of international IN I TA L Y the world, no mabter What their creed, rnce, :oo.tionaliiity or poliJtical A MODERN markets for Inco nickel. affiliation might be. Pacing the growth in these markets, Inco continues to add new OFFICE BUILDING Extensive use was production facilities in the Sudbury, Ontario area and has deve­ made of nickel stain­ POETRY PRIZE loped an entirely new source of nickel at Thompson, Manitoba. less steel in the head­ quarters of Celestri The Clare Murray Fooshee More Inco nickel than ever before will be exported to Inco's & Co. S .p. A. in Medal, open for competition expanding world markets ... helping to build trade balances, stimu­ Milan, Italy. again this year, :is awarded for the poem judged to be the best late Canada's economic growth and create more jobs for Canadians. of those submitted eaeh year. The award is offered by the depart­ ment of Engl:ish; judges are ap­ pointed by the department. The competition is open to THE Dalhousie undergraduates who A have not previously held the (~\ medal. The committee has the INTER NATI ONAL NICKEL If A 0 I • a I I right to withhold the award if the poems submitted are not COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED deemed of sufficient merit. Page Six DALHOUSIE GAZE'ITE Thursday, March 23, 1961

Welfare- and goods which compete with U.S. American Influence- ter­ would be no stability of order at all. ial supplies of Latin America. '!1he In the present drift to the wel­ initiative of O·thers, mostly Amer­ American tariff is anoroher instru­ fare state, Father Labelle empha­ icans, for decisions regarding the ment to ensure the flow of Cana­ sized, there was "no reason" why A Trilogy utilization of our industrial plant, dian raw materials Ito 1lhe U.S. Marxism and Western Socialism our natural resources, our man­ manufacturers. '!'he export of these should not eventually merge." He power, our purchasing policies and raw materials to tlhe U.S. (and I said all that would be lost in our of the last dregs am not ru·guing that our raw ma­ civilization would be the political The Professor output levels. We are vulnerable to institutions. However, in our culture of irrationalism happenings in the U.S. and, in terial exports be bann:ed) has de­ we would lose ethical and aesthetic Pale blue eyes of evil those sectors in which foreign in­ prived us of a manufacturing base values. and a gentle, terest are dominant, are not able to of sufficient viabiity. It is unfor­ Christianity, however, still rai.sed crooked Ecstatic scientific light with pursue a clearly "Canadian'' course. tunate that there are not more its voice in protest. The concept of cases where Canada has foreign love, Father Labelle insisted, was a smile. blue fingers pawing at Unless we ru·e to become a de­ countries "over a barrel" so that dynamic factor in history, and to the 19th century crust pendent follower, an economic satel­ she could force them to accept our find a way to a moral liberation "we What a delightful day it is of brittle lite, of the U.S. we must gain a manufactured goods and impose an must take our stand on Christian greater share of Canadian industry export tariff on rarw or semi·pro­ to talk about mysticism for Canadians. This will inevitably love." He emphasized the need for the essence cessed goods leaving the country, communication and co-operation. involve removal of some artificial as she did with wood pulp SOme ,. However, co-operation was "im­ of Christ, Clean, healthy relationships barriers to grea,ter participation years ago. possible without personal respon.si­ repulsing the and more effective and rational bility and personal liberty." And to think in a lovely, dark. mecthods of concentrating and chan­ * • • precise manner neling Canadian savings. It is evident that the U.S. plays Letters- about feeling. an important, and sometimes domi­ th tariffs in­ omic relationships a!II.d dependence creasing on semi-processed goods on the United States.

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We are in the business of making credit plans available to dealers in automobiles, tr1..1cks, boats, motors, appliances, home furnishings, industrial equipment and machinery and many others too numerous to mention, We find it a fascinating and stimulating business - ~ . and one that offers its own rewards to a serious young man. • -- -- Conditions have never been more favorable for· establish­ The student well equipped for making ing a career with Traders, the most of future opportunities Sincerely-, carries a slim red volume on 'MY ~ANW which is inscribed "Bank of Montreal, Savings Department." filjjj

R. M. Willmott-h President. BANK OF MoNTREAL ~ 7~ '8ad-fn s~ THOSE INTERESTED in a Finance Corporation career You'll find these B of M branches especially convenient should contact their career counselor immediately Main Office, Hollis & George Sts. North End, 268 Gottingen St. for an appointment. A Traders Finance Corporation Fairview, 377 Dutch Village Rd. Oxford & Cork Sts. representative will be conducting interviews on the Quinpool Rd. & Harvard St. campus within the next two weeks. U4- 60 Thursday, March 23, 1961 DALHOUSIE GAZETTE Page Seven TOMES , LOGAN, DEWIS , MacRAE, WIN AWARDS

Don Tomes and Dave Logan, two ter and one of the top kickers in snared 14 for 209 yards, one touch­ games and both weTe keys to the standouts of spectively. also played iruterfac hockey. Voliley­ one percentage point when he kick­ The Climo Trophy is presented ball has been another Tomes spe­ ed 37 times for a 33.9 average; in Tomes was the recipient of l!ih.e annually to the athlete who best ciality; he has played on the var­ 1960, Tomes booted 39 punts for a Leroy LitrtJLe aJWard as the MVP on embodies arllhletic ability, good sity team for two years. 30.5 average and fourth place. the Tiger team in 1958-59 and the sportsmanship and team spirit. year before won the MacKinnon Football has been his forbe. In hockey, Tomes played one Award for integrity and sportsman­ DON TOMES has played football Tomes has performed at end and game in the 1959-60 season and ship. for five years at Daa afler arriv:ing in 1958 caught 7 passes, in 1959 stopped all but five of the 40 shots here from QEH. For the past three grabbed 15 for 243 yards and sec­ fired his way in an 8-5 win over Logan Wins McKinnon years, he has been the beam's pun- ond place in the league and in 1960 SMU. In 1960-61, Tomes played two DAVE LOGAN was awarded the McKinnon Award ~his year. As was • mentioned above, this ltr·ophy is given to the player displaying in­ tegr~t and sportsmanship and the winner is picked by a vOI!Je of the varsity football .team. Logan joined the Tigers in 1958 and was just an­ The young other player as far as most fans were concerned. Playing owt of a wingback position., Logan caught Canadians only one pass. In 1959 he started to make his presence known by catch­ PAM DEWIS, a top athlete, was A FOUR-SECTION REPORT ing 4 passes for 115 yards and 3 awarded the Marjorie Leonard • A gallery: fourteen young, successful, but not touchdowns. He proved to be an A ward for her outstanding sports­ excellent backer as well. 1960 was manship displayed during the year. necessarily complacent people. • A panel: What the year Logan reached stardom. six young politicians think and do about politics. He 1ed the league in passes caught • A short story: Ring Around October, by with 30. As Harry Wilson., f<>

~/1~i RADIO ~· LIMITIID SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA 00 QUI!IPOOL ROAD a Phone 2·7476 One of the great life insurance companies of the world Page Eight DALHOUSIE GAZ:E'ITE Thursday, March 23, 1961 Green Skips Tigers To Fourth Straight Title From The Sports Desk

ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL Dalhousie improved her athletic standing in Maritime sport during 1960-61 by taking four MIAU championships. The soccer eleven edged Mount Allison for the tri-province title; the curlers closed 1960-61 win­ ning Dalhousie's fourth straight curling championship; the ladies' field hockey team regained its title and the ladies tennis team again triumphed in their specialty. The major teams did not win any championships but put on good per­ formances for their fans. The football dozen placed third in the new AFC; the basketball squad pulled a couple of upsets in placing fourth in the five team NSIBL; the hockey team placed second and were then bounced in the semi-finals; the girls basketball sextet placed second in the MIAU girl's league; the men's volleyball team placed third in their tourn­ ament. Fortunately, none of Dal's teams are suffering any great losses for 1961-62. In football, six players will definitely not be returning-Tom Evans, Stu Macinnes, Bob Shea, Rick Dawson, Vince DeRobbio, Dave Logan. There is a possibility that Don Tomes will return as might Doug Parker and Pete Corkum. There is also a possibility that those three will not be back. Only time will tell. The basketball team, loaded with youth and promise, will lose only Al Murray, who has used his four years of eligibility. The soccer champs will be returning intact except for Cyril White, who graduates. The hockey team loses Frank Sim and possibly Pete Corkum. Curling will be minus Eric Jamieson who has used his years of eligibility. He curleu WINNERS AND STILL CHAMPIONS: Dalhousie's curling champions for 1961 swept all six matches in three years at UNB before coming to Dal Med--School. which they participated. From left are: Don Green (skip), Eric Jamieson (mate), Pete House (second) and On the girl's side, the field hockey squad loses Eve Smith, Ruth Ann Ken Gregoire (lead). CPh

41 Provincial Title <) ,::!, Second 41 .!11 = <) .:! :a ...... "' = e by BOBBIE WOOD Dal were pitted ag.ainst Mount St...... "' Poe ae Bernard, 1the Intermediate Inter­ !' ...= ...... Sports Editor ...= ... e ·~ .!11 collegiate champs, for tile final. '3 8 "CS "' I» <) .a 41 .s .$ ... The Dal Varsity Tiger-belles end­ They had disposed of Tartans, 50- "'41 = ·s= .=e -"'0 ed their season on a successful IllOte 13, and .the Dal Grads, 41-21, to gain ..."' ~ ...= ~ E:: Poe ii:"' OP.. ~ las't weekend as led by high scor­ a berth against Dal. Mount St. Ber­ TOUCH :FOOTBALL ing Donn:a MacRae and Pam Dewis, nard gave Dal a real run for their they defeated all comers to defend money, despite the final score, as Law 100 1 1 3 103 their Provincial Championship title Dal found themselves playing Meds 100 5 10 15 15 140 which they won last year. against a faSlt, aggressive team that managed to pick Dal passes out of Eng 100 3 6 5 111 Playing in rt.he senior section of the air willh maddening regularirty. A&S 100 2 4 15 119 the 14 team tomn.ament, Dal first Experience, height, and superior disposed of >the Provincia'! Not'mal Comm 100 2 1 5 5 110 shooting paid off, however, as Dal Dents ..... 100 0 2 2 102 College by a healthy 72-19 score. led 10-0 at the quarter, as the Dal The gals from un Truro way were guards, led by Slteady Joanne Mur­ HOCKEY powerless against the sharp pass­ phy had the Mount St. Bernaxd ing and shooting attack mustered fot,wards covered as if ·by blankets. Law 100 9 1 19 15 134 by the Dal team, as Dal got off to Dal exploded for 15 points in the a flying start and did not slow Meds 100 9 1 19 15 15 149 second 8 minwtes, to mak!e the half Eng 100 4 0 8 108 down ul1Jtil the final buzzer. Donna time score 35-6. MacRae of Dal was deadly on her Dal's >.eoond half output totalled A&S 100 7 2 16 5 121 set shots and hooks from the cor­ 25 whiJe the Antigonish seJUtette Gomm ..... 100 8 16 5 121 r,er in the first quarter, as she could only muster 12 to run tihe Dents ..... 100 0 100 dumped in 12 points. Pam Dewis final score to 52-20, favour the took up wh~re Donna left off in black and gold. Donna MacRae led Pharmacy . 100 5 3 13 113 the second qaurter, as she rippled Dal to their win, as she netted 26 King's 100 6 12 112 10 points through the twines, most­ DONNA MacRAE points to bring her tournament Pine Hill .. 100 2 1 5 105 ly on layups, as the Dal forwards average to 22 points per game. had little trouble in si:flting through Pam De en an outstanding guard for the 31-27 score, and then a fired up Mt. Intermediate team all season, espe­ SL Bernard crew p ulled out a 24- cially in the touranment at Acadia. 21 win over Mit . A in the dying minutes of the game to ad vance to NOTICE the finals against UNB. Meeting of Arts and Science So­ The Mt. St. Berna rd-UNB game ciety to elect officers for separate was close all the way, as the Mt. Arts Society and Science Society, St. Bernard guarding was particu­ undt>r new Students Council ruling larly good. UNB were forced to INTERFACULTY HOCKEY CHAMPS-Top row, left to right, Ron Craig, Jim Dunne, Paul Schaefer, Dave shoot from outside as their cutting TUESDAY, MARCH 28 Maddison, Ken MacKenzie. Front: Gordie Mochler, Arnie MacLean Lou Simon, Claude Brown, Brodie Lantz, plays were spoiled time and agaih Room 234--12 Noon Grant Matheson. (P ho>to by Risley). Page Ten lJALHOUSIE GAZE'ITE Thursday, March 23, 196~ Book Store OFFICERS ELECTED Thompson Ross Take Over· DAAC OFFICERS Sandy Clark has been elected president of the Dalhousie-King's ' . ' TO BE ELECTED Student Christian Movement for the Celebrates 1961-1962 term. Other officers elected were vice­ New Council Tr1es Its Hand TOMORROW 9 -1 This year sees the Dalhousie book president, Ken MacKenzie; secre­ store celebrate its 31st anniversary. tary, Penny Clouston and treasurer, President Douglas Cudmore and vice-president Bill Dick­ Election of officers for the DAAC Cliff Fielder. son officially handed over the reigns of office to incoming will be held tomorrow from 9 a.m. Founded in 1930 by a group of Heads of committees elected were, president Dick Thompson and vice-p1·esident Sandy Hoss at to 1 p.m. following the discovery of professors who felt the need of the Marilyn Withrow, study; Dave Jones irregularities in proceedings during students for a university book store, books; Lawrence Peck, publicity; a moving Munro Day ceremony in the Women's Common the regular Council elections. the store was originally run by a Hugh Farquhar, worship. Room of the Arts and Administration Building. Soft drinks The irregularities consisted of the student manager, assisted by Roy Other cabinet members elected were served. slowness of notice of nominations by Atwood, with a supervisory commit­ were, Gaye Cramm, social convenor; Before the outgoing council mem­ A primary complaint was that our the managing committee of DAAC to tee of three faculty members. Gerry MacLean, camps convenor; bers departed to look after affairs budding young doctors were not be­ the returning officer, and the failure Between 1931 and 1944 the profits and Harvey Newman, Law repre­ other than those of state, they in­ ing properly and fully r epresented of the Arts and Science society to of the store were put into long­ sentative. dividually snored, fumed and day­ by the Gazette. There was also some submit nominations to the DAAC term investments. In 1942, for ex­ One cabinet position remains to be dreamed through a modicum of mor­ feeling that future editors of the for approval. ample, Bob McCleave, then a young filled. bid motion. Student Directory should be given a "On account of this confusion we studen t assistant, successfully mov­ protracted tour of the med campus have asked the managing committee ed that a $500 War Bond be bought -a move designed to make him of the DAAC to resubmit nomina­ with the profits. aware that there is one. Apparently tions to the Council," said Council 6 CANADIAN STUDENTS CHOSEN some 90% of med students were ex­ President Dick Thompson. He also However, in 1944 it was felt that cluded from the last directory. said the Council executive felt thf' with th e war taking away so many reasons for excluding some of the capable young men, the only hope The reaction of other council TO REPAY RUSSIAN VISIT members to these earth- hatlering candidates from the ballots were not for store's survival would be to sell sufficient. out to Mr. Atwood. OTIAWA (CUP)-The names of six Canadian students announcements was confined to the odd grunt of "Jack of co-ordination·· The slate of candidates is Presi­ F ollowing the sale, the committee who will visit the Soviet Union for one month beginning in and other unprintable platitudes. and Pete Mad orin; vice-president of trustees was left with interests Steve Brown, Peter Nicholson and yielding approximately $100 per an­ Part of the reciprocal exchange ingrad. Also included in the pro­ During the course of the meeting num. Up to that time it had been Wilf Harrison; secretary-trea~urer, between Soviet and Canadian stu­ gram will be visits to factories, col­ someone inadvertently lost the John Grant and Craig Martin. the practice t o contribute this dents, the six are: Diane Lloyd, lective farms, nurseries, and other DAAC, much to the glee of the amount out of yearly profits to buy Saskatchewan; David Edgar, British points of interest. medicos. Despite the new brooms magazine subscriptions for the uni­ Columbia; Stuart Smith, McGill; Earlier this year four Soviet stu­ wielded by the new council, Dal was Canada Council Gives versity common rooms. Jules Belanger, Mon treal; Frank dents toured Canadian universities. still wilhout its male athletic so­ Griffiths, Columbia University; and It was felt no better use could be The forthcoming trip is a return ciety (amateur). Fifth-columnists re­ made of this money, and the prac­ Bruce Rawson, president of NFCUS. visit of an exchange which has been ported that it had been signed up $10,000for NFCUS Meet tice has been con tinued ever since. Griffith.s, a former University of negotiated over the last few years. for the New England conference Toronto student who is studying A national selection board chose the Thus the sole function of the com­ A number of recommendation.s Ottawa

by BUlAN BACKMAN

Bagpipes, jazz, sentimental and dance music, lisps, (" 'N J till tawk punny"), legs, tights, and satire, mark up another holl ering success for Dalhousie University's annual contribu­ tion to the unveiling of campus talent, the Black and Gold Revue. Several hundred Dalhousians at­ plcte with guns, kilts, moonshine tended the pre-Munro Day show to and a Scottish narration seasoned watch rapidly staged acts. Judges and pickled with Irish jargon. • David Brown, Burpee Hallett and On the satirical .side, Tep frater­ Carol Ann Coulson later awarded nity's "Blunderful Town" and the first place to the dance sequence lisping "Added Hit" posed for the "Baby, You Know What I Like." audience's consideration an examin­ Choreography for the number was ation of the athletic standard with "There's something extra special about a by dancer Janet Murray. Second "too intellectual and too little sex­ place was awarded to Phi Rho fra­ ual" football players and some well­ du MAURIER cigarette; two things, in fact. ternity's folk singing quintet, with aimed darts at the canteen. Most One is the choice Virginia tobacco. The other is Tau Ep's "Blunderful Town" and agreed, however, that some of the Phi Delt's "The Founding of Dal­ "punnyest" moments of the show the "Millecel" super filter. Together, they give housie" tied for third place. came with Jerry Blumen thal's ef­ forts to foster a lasting set of ton­ you the best cigarette ever." The fraternities were biggest con­ sils. tribu tors to the scheduled 20-act program, listing nine numbers. Impressive debut was made by the Three were lost, however, after fail­ Dalhousie Dance Band, and a variety of folk song interpretations prompt­ ing to get staging consent. ed memories of an earlier folk at -m- zAi:nd 1oo(y .... W- 1F With typical assistance from his Dal this year. audience, Master of Ceremonies Wilf Among remaining acts, P enel ope Harrison keot the show moving at Stanbury I e c t u r ed bravely and a fast pace-in spite of beer cans. charmingly on the arts of losi ng a du MAURIER bottles, at least one left-over dinner man to a Munro Day-Eve audience a really milder high grade Virginia Cigarette hen , jeers and cheers. little con cerned w ith the credit, H ighpoint in the show came with while Maura Mo1·ton calmed spec­ VB·71 "The Founding of Dalhousie,'' rE'- ta tors with "Some Slow Numbers.'