University of British Columbia - Totem Yearbook (Vancouver, British Columbia Canada)

 - Class of 1951

Page 55 of 248

 

University of British Columbia - Totem Yearbook (Vancouver, British Columbia Canada) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 55 of 248
Page 55 of 248



University of British Columbia - Totem Yearbook (Vancouver, British Columbia Canada) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 54
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University of British Columbia - Totem Yearbook (Vancouver, British Columbia Canada) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 56
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Page 55 text:

Jn iermiuion ikemembered . . . the audience that got in the way of the short girls' chorus . . . the person that upset a patron's dinner by step- ping across the head table . . . the traffic ticket Cook received for parking in a lane while pick- ing up decoration materials . . . the five free haircuts that long- haired co-chairman Graham won in the raffle draw . . . the reception of flying sandwiches, ice cubes and sugar cubes and the collapsing teepee that greet- ed table decoration iudges Jo Jean and Mrs. Chant in one fraternity corner . . . the appar- ent satisfaction Johnny of the Commodore got out of wearing a feather in his hair all night . . . the entertainers who forgot their passes and almost didn't get in the door . . . the clown that knocked over band leader Ole Olsen in the process of making the grand gesture . . . the person that iumped on the chair to make an impromptu speech and sailed right through the wicker bottom. Not remembered . . . who drank the liquor left over from the patrons' cocktail party . . . who dropped Di Cox on the floor . . . what took up all the time at committee meetings. upset election at the pepmeet of the preceding Tuesday. The gala pepmeet was featured by the free- for-all that broke up the presenta- tion of the king candidates, the parade of queen floats, Al McMillan and some members of his band and, something new in the way of pep- meet entertainment, Chief of the Capilano Tribe, Ioe Mathias. The decorations chairmen, Marg Braim and Phil Cook, claimed to have the only inebriated totem poles in captivity, and placed them in a prominent position above the or- chestra that they might set the tone of gaiety for the whirling couples on the dance floor below. The rest of the decorations were for the most part authentic, UBC's Totem Park and anthropological museum having supplied the models on which they were based. The two girls' choruses made up in spirit and skill what they lacked in authenticity, and, if they didn't look exactly Mic the Indian maidens and totem poles they were sup- posed to represent, they looked good enough to the male members of the audience, judging from the leers on said faces. Credit for their success must go to Di Cox. Nflbsa

Page 54 text:

After wandering all over the glohe in past years. the Mardi Gras finally came home this year with a Totem Land theme. lioth gay and frowning totem poles disguised the posts in the Com- modore Caharet. creating a potlatch set- ting for the nights of january 18 and 19. as the Greelt Letter Societies pulled off another annual success. Charity came closer to home also as twoethirds of the proceeds were turned over to the War Memorial Gymnasium. The remaining third was given to the Community Chest, the chief recipient in the last four years. The committee of 18 Greeks, headed hy Io lean Iohnston and Iohnny Graham, was faced with an increase in costs and a decrease in student spending. Ticket chairman Frank Moore reported a turn- out of more than 1,700 students and THE MARDI GRAS friends in all to see the show and to dance until the wee small hours. Queen candidates from each of the nine sororities drew cheers and whistles. in what was claimed to he the hest selection of campus pulchritude in many years. Red-haired Ian McColl of Gamma Phi Beta won the title of Queen in a balloting that was close all the way. Crowning ceremonies were performed by UBC Presi- dent Dr. N. A. M. MacKenzie, who also had the pleas- ure of the victory waltz that followed. Playing opposite her as King of the Mardi Gras was Phi Delta Theta's Pete Wtillqer, voted in at an ar' i'Winners of the best decorated table was Sigma Chi. Top: Queen of the two-day Greek Letter affair, Jan McCall, being escorted across the stage at the Commodore. Top of page 51 is Di Cox, choregrapher and soloist, and below, two braves fight it out. The all-men's chorus, which provided many a laugh and antic, are in the bottom picture. 50



Page 56 text:

i'Dances held in Brock Hall every Saturday night were staged by ca mpus organizations to increase coffers. Dance above was Pan-Hellenic Alumni Association which turned proceeds over to the Women s Dorms. aiurclag ight sbancea from opu ar As sure as there are exams every year, there will be a dance in Brock Hall every Saturday night. Students trudge to the campus for the dances which have become traditional with U.B.C. Dances varied from hard time to square dances. They were sponsored by campus clubs to increase their deficient budgets. This seemed to work for every- one except the Arts Undergraduate Society who lost money on the two dances they staged. The first one they sponsored Treasurer Iohn MacKinnon had to get Fort Campers and Dorm Residents to come to Brock Hall so that there would be more than four couples there. Their Paddy Day dance was a comparative suc- cess with over ZOO couples there. Even at that they lost money. i'Swing your partner was a familiar ring to Brock Hall. Here couples danced until their feet dropped, to square dance records piped from Rad Soc offices. 52 i'Film Society enioyed one of the best dances of the year. During dance movie proiectionist added a touch of reality to the evening by playing movies on north wall of the lounge. During the fall term, football dances were held, but after Christmas they changed to basketball dances. Dances were not open to every student as Clubs often sponsored Saturday night does for their own members. But the majority of time students had to pay admis- sion prices to gain access to Brock Hall. Club which sponsored the most 1 dances was the Dance Club. Aim ' on campus was to have every- one dancing. Next to them came the Radio Society with music piped from the South Basement. Rad socers had little trouble making a finan- r K Q cial success. '4-

Suggestions in the University of British Columbia - Totem Yearbook (Vancouver, British Columbia Canada) collection:

University of British Columbia - Totem Yearbook (Vancouver, British Columbia Canada) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 123

1951, pg 123

University of British Columbia - Totem Yearbook (Vancouver, British Columbia Canada) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 150

1951, pg 150

University of British Columbia - Totem Yearbook (Vancouver, British Columbia Canada) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 225

1951, pg 225

University of British Columbia - Totem Yearbook (Vancouver, British Columbia Canada) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 212

1951, pg 212

University of British Columbia - Totem Yearbook (Vancouver, British Columbia Canada) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 6

1951, pg 6

University of British Columbia - Totem Yearbook (Vancouver, British Columbia Canada) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 114

1951, pg 114

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