{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0119048":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isReferencedBy":[{"value":"http:\/\/resolve.library.ubc.ca\/cgi-bin\/catsearch?bid=1209674","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"University Publications","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2015-07-15","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"[1956?]","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/ubcyearb\/items\/1.0119048\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" 1\n\\\n\u20ac\u00bb   A(V>\n19   5   6\nPublished at the University of\nBritish Columbia by the Publications\nBoard of the Alma Mater Society\nVANCOUVER, B. C\nCANADA OF  THE\nCOLUMBIA \u2022>*\u2022>>\u25a0\u2022.. t* Administration . . .8\nGraduates . ... 18\nCampus Life   . . . 44\nAthletics 72\nOrganizations . . 104\nFaculties 780  The President's Message\nA LITTLE more than eleven years ago I came to\nthe University of British Columbia. Those years\nhave been exciting, interesting and happy years for\nme and for my family.\nThis is very largely because the University of British\nColumbia is such a vital and stimulating place. I doubt\nif there is any other institution of this kind anywhere\nin the world that has grown and developed at the pace\nwe have done during these years. This has made our\nUniversity an interesting place for young people to\nlive and work in, for it has presented them with an\natmosphere of growth and development, provided a\nsense of accomplishment and held out an illustration\nof the possibilities of human effort and intellect in\nbuilding what is still a relatively new society.\nOne of the reasons why I enjoy University life is\nbecause it gives me an opportunity to meet and know\na number of young men and women who come here\nas students; to see them grow in knowledge and\nconfidence, to see them leave as graduates and,\neven as they go, leave behind them some measure of\ntheir contribution to the life of the University, just as\nthey take some imprint of the University with them.\nI hope those of you who graduate in 1956 will leave\nthe University with the feeling that the years you have\nspent here have been pleasant and exciting ones,\nprobably among the best that you will ever live. I\nhope, too, that you will remember your University and\nthose who were your teachers and mentors with respect\nand affection, and that you will come back and see us\nfrom time to time.\nNORMAN MacKENZIE Board of\nGovernors\nTHE Board of Governors decides on the distribution  of the funds  which  include  Provincial  and\nDominion Government grants and the students' fees.\nIn the past year the Provincial Government announced a grant of $10,000,000 to the University\nfor expansion purposes. This sum will become available over a period of ten years together with approximately 435 acres as an addition to the University\nEndowment lands. This will increase the campus acreage to a total of 1000. The Board is presently considering plans which have been drawn up for a new Arts\nbuilding, a Medical Sciences building, and additional\ndormitory accommodations for students, with a view\nto getting these three major projects underway at the\nearliest possible date. March, 1956, has been set as\nthe opening date for the new Home Management\nHouse, book store, coffee bar, and post office.\nNewly appointed to the Board is Dr. Percy Bengough, who replaced Mr. R. H. Neelands. Dr. Bengough was the former president of the Trades and\nLabour Congress of Canada.\nChancellor  Sherwood   Lett,   chairman\nof the  Board of Governors.\nThe Board  of Governors are from   left to right,  Dr. P. R. Bengough;  Mr. J.  M.  Buchanan; Miss Margaret Frederickson, Secretary  to  the  President;\nThe Honourable   Mr.   Justice  J.   M.   Coady;   The   Honourable   Sherwood   Lett,  Chancellor of the University;  Dr.  N. A.  M.  MacKenzie,   President of\nfhe University;  The  Honourable  Mr.  Justice  A.   E.   Lord,   Honorary  Secretary of the Board of Governors; Miss Sheila Buchanan, Clerk to the Board;\nMr. D. J.  Baldwin;  and  Mr.  G.  T.  Cunningham.  Not  pictured  are  His  Honour Judge J. B. Clearihue,  Mr. W.  G. Murrin,  and  Mr.  K.  P. Caple.\n. \\wr\n&Sc. Miss Dorothy Mawdsley, Dean of Women, ironed out\nproblems of women students as well as partaking in\nall activities sponsored by women on campus.\nMiss  Mariorie  Leeming,  as well  as acting  as Assistant  Dean\nof  Women,   gives  much   of  her  time  to  women's  athletics.\nFaculty Administration\nDean Geoffrey Andrew, Assistant to President MacKenzie,\nactively supported club projects and took part In the University's first  Leadership Conference.\nDean Walter Gage had a ready answer to all student\nproblems be It funds, courses, or credits. In classes\nhe aided  in the mastery of mathematics.\n10 At the students' service eight hours a\nday, the A.M.S. office staff are untiring\nin their efforts to keep things running\nsmoothly. Few realize the stress and\nstrain on this group In their small corner In the south end of Brock as they\nrush to meet deadlines. Taking a moment\nout are, from left to right, Joyce Harris,\nHilda Henderson, Frances Jones and Mr.\nMaunsell,   office   manager.\nA.M.S. Assists Student Groups\nTHE A.M.S. office staff works in close co-ordination\nwith the treasurer and secretary of the Students'\nCouncil. The office handles everything from A.M.S.\ncards and Mussoc production tickets to the ballots for\nspring elections. In spite of filing, cashiering, mimeographing, bookkeeping, and the general turmoil of\ntelephones and typewriters, the staff manages to keep\nthings under control. In addition to performing all\nthe secretarial duties required by Council and other\norganizations, the staff books rooms and equipment\nfor all campus events.\nThis efficient hard-working group plays a major part\nin all phases of campus life.\nTHE U.B.C. Alumni staff take pride in the latest\nedition of the Chronicle, the Alumni magazine\nwhich is. produced four times a year. Ploughed under\nwith newsletters and notices, the staff has barely room\nto move around but with the coming expansion of the\nBrock they can look forward to larger quarters.\nThis small group has been responsible for the success\nof Alumni functions carried on throughout the year,\nforemost of which is the Annual Alumni Banquet held\neach winter. Students on campus rarely stop to think\nabout the group which occupies the office in the\nnorth end of Brock Hall. But interest will revive when\nthey join the ranks of the illustrious Alums who preceded them.\nAlums Keep Grads Informed\nGathered around Art Sager, the executive\ndirector of the association, are the five\nsecretaries\u2014Mrs. Galliparl, Thelma Pitt,\nMrs. W. Blown, Mrs. Trussed, and Margaret  Crum.\nII Ron   Bray,   \"older   sophisticated\"   student   president, is\nextremely pleased with the increased student interest in\nelections and  council  affairs feeling this is reflected in\nthe calibre of students  running  for AMS  offices.\nUNDER one of the most competent presidents the\nA.M.S. has ever seen the general business of the\nSociety was efficiently dispatched throughout the\nyear. The main projects of Ron Bray's council were\nthe quarter million dollar Brock Extension Plan, which\nwas passed unanimously at the fall general meeting,\nthe origin of the Leadership Conference held at Camp\nElphinstone, and the P.S.A. Conference at which\nU.B.C. played host to eighty-five universities of the\nwestern U. S. and Canada.\nAt the October meeting a most controversial constitutional revision proved to be the proposal of the\nelimination of the fall general meeting. However, this\nmotion was defeated. The issue of honorariums for\nStudent Council members and Ubyssey editors brought\nforth heated discussion before it too was defeated.\nTreasurer Geoff Conway's \"super\" budget received\na near-unanimous vote of approval. This year's budget\nproved greater than expected due to the rapidly\ngrowing enrollment. Council's policy was \"no surplus\"\nand as a result there was an increase in allotments to\nmost campus organizations. Conway devised a system\nby which supplementary budgets will be granted in\nJanuary to clubs with extremely active memberships.\nAlso under Treasurer's auspices a Finance Committee\nwas established to relieve the duties of future treas-\nCouncil Spreads Bi\nTaking time out for a formal portrait, council looks stern and businesslike. Left to right, back row: Bob Hutchison, Gordie Armstrong, Bob\nMcLean, Char Warren, Al Thackery, Maureen Sankey, Don McCallum, Dave Hemphill. Front row: Stan Beck, Ron Longstaffe, Ron Bray, Helen\nMcLean, Geoff Conway, and Mike Jeffery.\n1\nH\nif'*    w '\nHI\n0\u00a3 urers  and  spread  the  responsibility of handling  the\nbudget.\nAnother first this year was U.B.C's. entrance into\nthe field of socialized medicine with the Accident\nBenefit Fund. What has previously aided injured athletes has now been extended to cover all students\nduring the school term. Ultimately Student Council\nhopes for complete student health insurance.\nSecretary Helen McLean brought with her not only\ntraining for the position but a keen sense of humour\nwhich helped lighten some of the more serious\nmoments. She handled all the paper work with a\nprofessional touch and still found time to assist in\nmany Council projects and serve as a Don at the\nWomen's residence.\nVeteran Councillor Ron Longstaffe acted as liaison\nbetween W.U.S. and Council, chaired the N.F.C.U.S.\nCommittee, and supervised the College Shop as well\nas acting as Ron Bray's right-hand man.\nCoordinator Don McCallum effectively tied up\nCouncil's loose ends and straightened out innumerable\nkinks. He was active in the Brock Housing Committee\nallocating space to the various campus clubs. In spite\nof the proposed addition there will be a shortage of\naccommodation   and  an   alloted   $3,000.00  from  the\n>ck, Swells Budget\nFrom upper right hand corner and counter clockwise are: Ron\nLongstaffe, council vice-president, who is responsible for student\nrates at all downtown theatres; Helen McLean, secretary, who was\nkept busy tracking down minutes and correspondence; Geoff Conway, treasurer, who, on the strength of the surplus in the treasury,\nmarried during the term; and Don McCallum who, as co-ordinator,\nserved as chairman of the Brock Extension Committee. In a heated argument over Brock\nExtension Plan, Ron Longstaffe brandishes the blueprint fn Helen McLean's face while Ron Bray looks on\ndisinterestedly. True to form Conway\nis frantically finding the facts.\nincreased budget will be used to improve facilities in\nthe huts behind the Brock.\nHomecoming, under first member Bob McLean, was\na roaring success in spite of the \"dry\" liquor laws.\nSecond member Mike Jeffery was equally successful\nwith Frosh Orientation.\nWomen's Athletic Director Char Warren reported\nmore participation than ever before and continued\ndevelopment in this field is planned. With the increased financial aid of forty cents per head, Men's\nathletics, under Bob Hutchison, have been put on a\nsound financial basis for the first time in many years.\nIt is hoped that this will help produce teams of a\nhigher calibre in the future.\nIn addition to the regular duties required by their\nrespective offices, the \"joe jobs\" of investigation,\nchairing special committees and assisting in council\nprojects fell upon U.C.C. President Al Thackery, U.S.C.\nPresident Dave Hemphill, W.U.S. President Maureen\nSankey, P.R.O. Gordon Armstrong, and Ubyssey Editor\nStan Beck.\nA top issue of the Spring General Meeting was the\nreallocation of A.M.S. fees\u2014ten cents per student\ndesignated to a Brock Hall Art Fund, and fifty cents\nper student to a Brock Sinking Fund for the purpose\nof maintaining and improving the Brock. The all-\nimportant issue of withdrawal from N.F.C.U.S.,\nstaunchly upheld by student councillors, and hotly contested by Marc Bell, N.F.C.U.S. President, was discussed at great length. However, at the vote of the\nstudent body, this motion was passed and since several\nother large Universities have previously withdrawn,\nthis motion will serve to doom N.F.C.U.S. It now lies\nwith President-Elect Don Jabour to see that U.B.C.\ntakes the lead in building a more streamlined national\norganization worthy of the universities of Canada.\nTo sum up, council has had a most successful year.\nUndoubtedly a great deal of this success was due to\nits ability to face problems squarely and to the cooperation which existed among its members.\nListening intently, giving their careful\nconsideration to the question at Issue\nare, from left to right: Gordon Armstrong, Stan Beck, Ubyssey reporter\nVal Haig-Brown, Bob Hutchison, Don\nMcCallum, Dave Hemphill, Bob McLean and Al Thackery.\n14 Women's\nUndergrad\nSociety\nThe genial executive looks\nback on an active year. Left to\nright: Lynn Kyle, Norma John*\nston, Lynda Gates, Patty\nWilks, and Maureen Sankey.\nTHE Women's Undergraduate Society had its most\nsuccessful year ever. President Maureen Sankey\nendeavoured to include all campus organizations in\nher wide and varied programme and her enthusiasm\ncaught fire.\nTwo roaring successes were the Big and Little Banquet and the Barn Dance.   Other activities included\nUndergrad\nSocieties\nCommittee\nHi-Jinx,   Co-ed   Day,   Ladies'   Leap,  and  the   Spring\nFashion Show again featuring male models.\nIn addition W.U.S. sponsored Career Week, a series\nof five noon-hour lectures on job opportunities for\nwomen graduates. Maureen proved to all doubters\nthat \"it could be done\" and the new executive is looking forward to an even busier year come fall.\nTHE Undergraduate Societies Committee, chaired\nby Dave Hemphill, in the past considered a thorn\nin council's side, has proven its worth at last. The\nformation of the Arts and Science Undergraduate\nSociety increased student representation and enabled\nU.S.C. to expedite Student Council's wishes more\nefficiently.\nThe main duties which fell on the broad shoulders\nof U.S.C. this year included investigation of student\nmisconduct, organization of two blood drives, organization of A.M.S. elections, and a complete survey of\nparking conditions on campus.\nThe committee is composed of,\nleft to right, back row: Murray\nMcKenzie, Robin Scott, Bill Morrison, Bob Tulk, Harry Karlson,\nJohn Webster, Peter Nightingale,\nTom Wilson, Alade Akesode, and\nfront row: Mike Meagher, Dick\nSmith, Rober Montgomery, Bob\nFairbairn, Chairman Dave Hemphill, Ken Turnbull, Joan Mclvor,\nClive Hughes, Joyce Runnalls,\nBarb   McKenzie,   and   Ann   Steele.\n\/5 Mr. Maunsell\nRetires\nAFTER  eight years  as   Business   Manager  of the\nAlma   Mater Society,   Mr.  H.  B.  Maunsell  will\nretire in May.\nWhen Mr. Maunsell came to the campus, the\nfinances of the Alma Mater Society were in chaotic\ncondition. He has established a Business office that\nhas provided stability and continuity for student\norganizations. Eight generations of students have\nappreciated the contribution his efforts have made to\nthe A.M.S.\nIn March Mr. Maunsell was honoured by the\nStudents' Council on behalf of the student body at a\nbanquet in the Faculty Club. The students wish him\nwell for the future and thank him sincerely for his\nwork in the past.\nRelaxing at the dinner honouring Mr. Maunsell are student councillors and A.M.S. Office staffers. That's\npresident Ron Bray talking so confidently to Mr. Maunsell as Geoff Conway table-hops to chat with Mrs.\nMaunsell and Al Thackery. We are mystified by Don Jabour's expression as he listens to Joyce Harris' confidences.\n76 \u25a0i' ^\u25a0\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0-.jljtg-'\u00ab-VgWc3'.\u00bb'fei'r'-Vrs\nmm\nw^vvv:^^!:11\n***s\na]&*VH  '^ =^ 4>.\ni J > h\n\u25a0   \u25a0   tai-  \"* ADEOLA, Akonni O.; Nigeria\nAKESODE, Alade A.; Nigeria\nInt.  Studies,  Economics,  Pari.  Forum,\nPlayers Club, P. Cons.\nALBI, Frank Emanuel; Vancouver\nSpanish, French, \u00a31 Circulo, Int. House\nAMES, Michael M.; Vancouver\nAnthropology, Raven Editor\nANDERSON, Brigette E.; Vancouver\nEnglish\nANDERSON, E. Lloyd; Vancouver\nEnglish, Psychology\nAPTED, Edward James; Burnaby\nPsychology, Psychology Club\nARMSTRONG, G. A.; S. Burnaby\nCriminology, Psychology, V.C.F.\nATKINS, Michael Donald; Victoria\nZoology, Biology, Psi Upsilon\nBAILEY, Sherry Rae; Vedder Crossing\nBANERD, Audrey Jean; Vancouver\nGeography, Sociology\nBANERD, Adair John; Vancouver\nInt. Studies, Economic, U.N. Club\nBEEBAKHEE, Mrs. C; Trinidad\nLatin, Caribbean Students Assoc.\nClassics Club,  India Club\nBELITHER, Ann; Victoria\nBacteriology,  Chemistry, Soc.  of\nMicrobiologists\nBIRD, W. Raymond; Vancouver\nChemistry, Math., Mussoc\nBIRCH, Paul Russell; Vancouver\nEnglish, Music, V.C.F., Letters Club\nBIRCH, George Ronald N.; Victoria\nBiology, Geog., Phi Gamma Delta,\nBadminton\nBLACKLOCK, Donald J.; Summerland\nHistory,   Criminology,  S.C.M.,   C.C.F.,\nC.L.U.\nBLAIR, Alan Huntley; Vancouver\nB\/ocAem\/sfry\nBLACKENBACH, Patricia; Vancouver\nPsychology,   Criminology,   Mussoc,\nAlpha Phi\nBOLTER, Stanley Arnold; Calgary\nGeology, Sigma Chi\nBOOTH, John H.; Agassiz\nZoology, Chemistry, Fencing\nBOSSONS, John D.; Vancouver\nU.N. Club, Economics Society\nBOVEY, John Alexander\nBRICE, Majorie Ann; Vancouver\nBacteriology, Biology,\nKappa Kappa Gamma\nBRICKMAN, Anlee Joan; Vancouver\nEnglish, Psychology, Totem, Hillel\nBRODIE, Elizabeth M. L; Salmon Arm\nZoology, English\nBROOD, Donald\nBROWN, lain Hamilton; Vancouver\nHistory, English\nBUCKETT, Raymond; Victoria\nChemistry, Math.\nBUCKLEY, William A.; Calgary\nGeology, Dawson Club\nBUCKINGHAM, Ian P. B.; Sidney\nBiology, Zoology, Rugby, Delta Upsilon\nBUICK, Anna May; Okanagan\nChemistry, History\nBURGESS, Kenneth Brian; Vancouver\nFrench,  English,  Music  Appreciation\nClub\nBURNETT, Katherine A.; Victoria\nZoology,  English,  Swimming\nBURNS, Brian John; Victoria\nMath., Physics\nBURTON, Marybeth; North Burnaby\nRenaissance Studies, Phrateres,\nLetters Club, Badminton\nBURTON, Eric Walter; Montreal\nm BUTTERFIELD, F. Jas.; Ponoka\nCAMPBELL, Edith M.; Vancouver\nPhrateres\nCAMPBELL, Gordon; Vancouver\nZoology, Biology\nCARDINALL, Sandra M.; Penticton\nChemistry\nCARFRAE. James D.; New West.\nChemistry, Math., V.O.C, Psi Upsilon\nCARLSON, Ian Hedman; Vancouver\nChemistry, Psychology\nCARLSON, Robert Ivor; Vancouver\nChemistry,  Kappa Sigma\nCARRICK; Douglas A.; Powell River\nEnglish, History\nCARSTENS, Shiela Marie; Victoria\nEnglish, Cercle Francais\nCARTWRIGHT, J. W.; Vancouver\nZoology, Biology Club\nCASS, Richard Vincent; Trail\nPhysics\nCASSADY, Elizabeth A.; New West.\nBiology, Bacteriology,  Delta Gamma\nCHIN, Beverly; Vancouver\nChinese Varsity\nCLARKE, Charles R.; Vancouver\nCOLEMAN, Sidney; Vancouver\nCOLLINS, Rosemary S.; Vancouver\nBiology, Newman Club\nCOULCHER, Blane A.; Victoria\nMath., History\nCRANMER, Gloria E.; Vancouver\nCREEMER, Terrance; Vancouver\nBiology, English\nCREEMER, Albert Lee; Vancouver\nMath., Physics\nCROSATO, Reno Frank; Vancouver\nCROSS, Nan Rothney; Okotoks\nSpanish, French, Kappa Kappa Gamma\nDAVIS, Frances Ann; Nelson\nEconomics, Psychology, Delta Gamma\nDAVIS, Mary B.; Regina\nBacteriology, Chemistry\nDAVIS, Partic Austin; Victoria\nPhysics, V.O.C.\nDeFAVERI, Ivan; Vancouver\nEnglish, Psychology\nDEMMERY, Patricia Ann; Vancouver\nEnglish, Psychology\nDENNIS, Gordon Thomas; Vancouver\nBiology, Psychology\nDOUGAN, Henry J.; Qualicum Beach\nGeograpAy\nDREDGE, Neil Vernon; Vancouver\nPsychology, Math.\nDRUGGE, S. Erik; Selmo\nEconomics\nEARL, John Patrick; Vancouver\nGeology, Rowing Team, Dawson Club\nEDGETT, Warren S.; Vancouver\nEconomics, Rugby, Phi Gamma Delta\nEDWARDS, William V.; Cumberland\nELLIOTT, Donald F.; Montreal\nEnglish History\nEVANS, George L.; Sarnia\nHistory\nFARIS, John Douglas; Vancouver\nPsychology, History\nFARMER; Harold V.; Barbados\nGeology, Geography, Soccer, Dawson\nClub\nFARRIS, Evlyn F.; Vancouver\nFEDIRKO, Nicholas J.; Vancouver\nGeology\n19 FENNELL, Margaret A.; ChuChua\nEnglish  Psychology\nFENWICK, Thomas Louis; Ladner\nChemisty, C.I.C.\nFINDLAY, Barbara S.; Vancouver\nBacteriology, Chemistry,\nAlpha Gamma Delta\nFISCHER, Gretl; Vancouver\nEnglish, Raven\nFLAHIFF, Frederick T.; Vancouver\nEnglish, Newman Club\nFOOT, Robert H.; Blainmore\nEnglish,  History\nFORBES, Geo. Hector; LacLa Hache\nEnglish\nFOUNTAIN, Joyce Ruel; Vancouver\nEnglish, Psychology, Delta Gamma\nFRASER, Douglas V. A.; New West.\nEconomics, Political Sc, Dance Club\nFREDETTE, Frances E.; Victoria\nZoology, French\nFREEMAN, Edward B.; Vancouver\nGeology, Players Club, Dawson Club\nGALLOWAY, Robert D.; Vancouver\nMofA., History\nGAMBRILL, A. A., Brentwood Bay\nHistory, Int. Studies, Alpha Tau Omega\nGARVIN, Murray Lloyd; Vancouver\nGreek,   Geography,   V.C.F.\nGAVIN, Elma; Vancouver\nEnglish,  Psychology,   V.O.C,  Big Block,\nKappa Alpha Theta\nGILDERS, Cyril James Wynndel\nGeology\nGILSON, Karle B.; Vancouver\nChemistry, C.I.C.\nGOUDY, Elizabeth; Vancouver\nBacteriology,   Soc.   of   Microbiologists\nAlpha Delta Pi\nGRANT, Alan Edward; Victoria\nZoology, Chemistry\nGRANT, Hugh Joeph; Vancouver\nZoology\nGRANT, William Edward; Vancouver\nGRANT, Hugh M.; Vancouver\nChemistry Psychology\nGRIGORUK, Daniel; Natal\nHistory, English\nGROVE-WHITE, Brian C; Ainsworth\nZoology\nHACKING, Ian M.; Vancouver\nMofA., Physics, Players, Letters,\nMath. Clubs\nHAMILTON, Patrick A.\nHANDLING, F. Kaye; Vancouver\nSpanish, German, Spanish Club, Pro-Con.\nInt. House\nHANSON, Leonard C; Vancouver\nPol. Science, History\nHARDIE, E. Marion; Vancouver\nPsychology, Dance Club\nHARRISON, Donna LC; Victoria\nMath., French\nHAWRYSCHUK, B. M.; Kamloops\nHistory,  Latin,   Newman,   Dance,\nAlpha Omega\nHAZELWOOD, Gordon A.; Van.\nEnglish, History\nHEMPHILL, David; Vancouver\nMath., Physics, Tennis, U.N., Beta Theta PI\nHEWSON, Patricia M.; Vancouver\nEnglish, History\nHILBORN, Kenneth D.; Vancouver\nBiology, English, Jazz Soc.\nHILL, Marlene A. M.; Albion\nBacteriology, Alpha Omicron Pi\nHILLMER, Robert I.; Penticton\nEnglish, Psychology,  V.C.F.\nHOGG, Elizabeth Rose; Vancouver\nPsychology, Criminology, Alpha Delta PI\nHOGAN, I. Ruth Fernie\nMath., English\nHORTH, Bernard; Sidney\nHistory, Economics HOWARD, John L: Winnipeg\nZoology. Botany, K.O.C., Biology Club\nHUGHES, Blyth A.\nHUNTER, Bryant; Ocean Falls\nHUNT, Lorraine L; Vancouver\nV.C.F.\nHUSBAND, John K.; Vancouver\nIMAYOSHI, C. Jean; Summerland\nK.Cf.\nIRWIN, Carol Alice; Calgary\nEnglish, Psychology,\nKappa Kappa Gamma\nJOHL, Darshan Singh; Vancouver\nPhilosophy, U.N., India Students\nJOHNSTON, Joan; Cloverdale\nEnglish\nKAMACHI, Yoshihiro; New West.\nGeology, Zoology, Dawson Club\nKANE, Ernest; Lulu Island\nBiology, Psychology\nKELLY, Colleen C; Vancouver\nEnglish, Psychology, Big Block,\nAlpha Delta PI\nKEMP, Beverly Helen; Vancouver\nInt. Studies,   Gamma Phi Beta\nKIDD, Robert Stuart; loco\nEnglish, Players Club\nKISSKA, Stephen; Vancouver\nKRAJINA, Milena I.; Vancouver\nFrench, Russian, Int. House\nKUNDERT, Rita; Vancouver\nKYLE, Marilyn Audrey; Vancouver\nEnglish, Criminology, Alpha Delta Pi\nLAM, Diana Margot; Vancouver\nEconomics, Sociology, Pep Club\nAlpha Gamma Delta\nLARSON, Marjorie F.; Vancouver\nCriminology, Psychology, Special Events\nPhrateres\nLAWS; Donna Margaret; Vancouver\nPsychology, Sociology,\nAlpha Gamma Delta\nLECHUCK, Gaorge; Trail\nMath., Economics\nLEE, Arthur; Vancouver\nMath., Zoology\nLEE, Norman Addison; Vancouver\nMofA., Physics\nLEEDHAM, Lelia R.; Vancouver\nSociology, Mussoc\nLEGACE, Mae Yvonne; Lake Louise\nEnglish, History, Skiing, Alpha Delta PI\nLENNOX, Shirley; Vancouver\nLESIK, Michael David; Vancouver\nGeology, Slavonic Studies, Photography,\nDance Clubs\nLIGHTBODY, Walley P.; Vancouver\nJazz Soc.\nLIND, Earl Peter; Calgary\nPhysics, Hamsoc\nLONEY, Thomas William; Calgary\nGeology, Geography, Sigma Chi\nLONEY, Richard Cooper; Calgary\nGeography, Mussoc, Delta Upsilon\nLOUIS, Kenneth; Vancouver\nLYMAN, Eva Georgia H.; Vancouver\nFrench,   Russian,   V.O.C,  Camera  Club\nMADHOSINGH, Chandra; Trinidad\nMARRION, Alice Esther; Vancouver\nMARTIN, Gerald James; Vancouver\nMcDONALD, Philip Rae; Vancouver\nEconomics\nMcGURK, Erma Grace; New West.\nEnglish, Newman\nMcKAY, W.\n21 MacKENZIE, Ian M.; Vancouver\nCamera Club\nMacKENZIE, George A.; Vancouver\nRussian, Slavonic Studies\nMcLEAN, Kenneth L.; Vancouver\nPhysics, Math., Christian Science\nMcLEOD, M. lain\nMcNAB, Nancy Isobel; Montreal\nSlavonic Studies, History, Delta Gamma\nMcQUEEN, Shirley A.; Salmon Arm\nChemistry, Math.\nMENDUM. Melville J.; Vancouver\nMENSEN, Esther D.\nMILLS, Annette B.; Trail\nMIROSLAW, Teddy; Vancouver\nMISNER, Moira J.; Victoria\nMIYAGISHIMA, R. T.; Vancouver\nMONTGOMERY, W. H.; Vancouver\nMOODIE, Allan Gordon; Vancouver\nMOONEY, Malcolm Geo.; Hope\nMOOR, James Gordon\nMORGAN, Shirley Ruth; Vancouver\nAlpha Delta PI,  V.O.C.\nMORROW, Maxine Freda; Chilliwack\nMOSSOP, Roger Bowen; Vancouver\nMUNRO, Gordon Ross; Vancouver\nMURRAY, L Margot;\nSan Jose, Costa Rica\nMURSKY, Gregory; Vancouver\nNELSON, June E.; New Westminster\nHistory,  English, Delta  Gamma\nNICHOL, Dennis Wm.; Oliver\nPhysics\nNICHOLLS, Derek S.; Vancouver\nFrench, Math., German Club\nNOBLE, Kenneth D.; Vancouver\nHistory, English, Badminton,\nBeta Theta PI\nNORCROSS, Elizabeth; Duncan\nFrench, History, Cercle Francais,\nLetters Club\nNORMAN, F. Mary Jean; Oyama\nEnglish, History\nNOVAK, Nellie Elaine; New West.\nGeography, History\nNYLANDER, June M.; Vancouver\nCriminology,   Psychology\nOBERHOFER, Mathew; Vancouver\nMath., Physics, Radio Ham, Newman,\nSigma Chi\nO'BRIEN, Terence C; Langley\nHistory, Pol. Science, Zeta Psi,\nPro. Cons., Part. Forum\nO'BRIEN, William J.; Victoria\nEnglish, History\nO'FLANGAN, Gerald P.; Ottawa\nUbyssey,   Radsoc.   Phi   Delta  Theta\nORNSTEIN, Neil M.; Vancouver\nPsychology, History, Hillel, Pari. Forum,\nSigma Alpha Mu\nOSTENSOE, Leif O.; Lillooet\nGeology,  Geography\nOXSPRING, Harvey Kane; Vancouver\nEconomics, Pol. Science\nPALLESON, Edward R.; New West.\nPALLESEN, Patricia E.; Calgary\nAlpha Delta Pi\nPALMER, Rodney Ian N.; Kamloops PARKER, Donald Ian; Victoria\nPATEY, Joan M.\nPAULSON, E. Marie; Spiritwood\nPEARSON, Thomas R.; New Denver\nPEERS, Michael C; Vancouver\nPENNY, Harry Lee; Vancouver\nPENTLAND, Gertrude D.; Vancouver\nPERLSTROM, Roy Hilmer; Vancouver\nPETERSON, G. Denise; Vancouver\nPEYMAN, Druce G.; Vancouver\nPIPES, Marilyn E.; Vancouver\nDelta Gamma\nPOLLARD, Daveen Kent; Kelowna\nPOLSON, Beverly Ann, Vancouver\nEnglish, History, Mussoc,\nAlpha Gamma Delta\nPOMEROY, D. Anne; Victoria\nPOOLE, Hope M.; Chapman Camp\nPOWELL, Eric Douglas; Vancouver\nPRENTICE, Elizabeth R; Vancouver\nPRIEGER, John S.; Bruno, Sask.\nPURCELL,  William  B.;  Vancouver\nMath., Chemistry, Newman\nRADCLIFFE, F.\nRAE,   Catherine  Anne;  Woodfibre\nRAMSBOTHAM, A.; Burnaby\nREDEKOP, Ervin H.; Aldergrove\nREIMER, Ernest M; Abbotsford\nRICHARDSON,  N. S.;   Penticton\nEnglish, History, Mussoc\nROBERTSON, Donald G.; Vancouver\nROBERTSON, C. Beth; Calgary\nROBERTSON, Ivan L; Osoyoos\nROBERTSON, S. E.; Burnaby\nBacteriology, Phrateres\nROBINSON, David N.; Vancouver\nROBSON,   Marilyn  J.;  Vancouver\nMath., Biology, Phrateres\nROSE, Pamela Esme, Vancouver\nKappa Alpha Theta, Tennis Team\nROSS, Dorothea M. N.; Vancouver\nROSS, Sheila Anne; Vancouver\nROWLANDSON,  G. C; Victoria\nRUDDICK, Mary A. E.; Vancouver\nMaths, English, V.C.F., Mamooks, Totem\nRUNGE, Phyllis M. C. J.; Vancouver\nRUNNALLS, Donna R., Steveston\nRYAN, Larry T.; Burnaby\nSALTER, Nancy-Jean; Ottawa\nCriminology, Psychology, Alpha Delta PI\nPre Social Work Club\n23 SANDILANDS, K. N.; Vancouvei\nSANDYS-WUNSCH, John; Duncan\nSAVORY, Gerald Newton; Chemainus\nSCHAFFER, E.\nSCOTT, John C; Trail\nSCRIMGEOUR, K. G.; Vancouver\nChemistry\nSERAPHIM, Ada J.; Clayburn\nSHARMAN. C. A.; Calgary\nSHKURATOFF, Alex M.; Winlaw\nSIEMENS, Alfred H.; Vancouver\nGeog., History, V.C.F.\nSIRLIN, Irving A.; Vancouver\nSKELTON, Ann E.; Cloverdale\nSKY, Milton; Toronto\nPol. Science, Econ., Zeta Beta Tau,\nSwim Team\nSMITH, Brian Ray D.; Victoria\nSMITH, Norma E. L\nSMITH, R. R.; West Summerland\nSMITH, Roderick L.; Vancouver\nUbyssey\nSOMERVILLE Ronald L; Vancouver\nChemistry\nSORTWELL, Edwin T.; Vancouver\nPsi Upsilon\nSOUKOREFF, W. W.; Grand Forks\nSPALDING, David J. R.; Vancouver\nSTAINES, Gordon H.; Regina\nSTANILAND, J. P.; New Westminster\nSTEFANI, E; Graz, Austria\nSTEINER, George; Vancouver\nfloe, Pre Med Soc,  I.H.A.,  U.N. Club\nSoc, Micro.\nSTEVENS. Melvin C; Vancouver\nSTEWART, Janet M.; London, Ont.\nSTOLAR, G. P.; Fort William, Ont.\nK.O.C\nSTRASDINE, G. A.; Edmonton\nSUGIMOTO, Minoru; Grand Forks\nSWEENEY, Joan E.; Powell River\nSWINARTON. S.; Fort MacLeod\nGamma Phi Beta\nSYMONS, Chrystal P.; Vancouver\nEconomics, Anthropology\nTANG, Eulung Eugene; Vancouver\nPhysics, Chem.\nTAYLOR, Marion C; Calgary\nBacteriology, Mussoc\nTERMUENDE, Robert W.; Surrey\nGeology,  Camera,  Dawson  Clubs\nTHORNLEY, T. Allan; Ladysmith\nEnglish,   CCF.,  S.C.M.\nTOPPINGS,   Earle W.; Vancouver\nHistory, English\nTREVOR, N. M.; New Westminster\nEconomic, Pol. Science., Pari. Forum\nTUURA, Harvey O.; Vancouver\nHistory, Economics, Liberal\n24 VAN CAMPEN, Arnold William;\nHilversum, Holland\nVAN EEDEN, J. H.; Vancouver\nVAN TETS. Gerald F.\nVEA, Asbjorg Sylvia, Vancouver\nWALLACE, Marion D.; Vancouver\nMusic, History, Ec. Soc.\nWALLACE William C; Vancouver\nGeography, Lambda Chi Alpha\nWALPOLE. Joy C; Vancouver\nCAem., Zoology\nWARD, John F.; Victoria\nZoology, History, Rugby\nWASSON, Garth C; Vancouver\nZoology, Pre-Med. Soc.\nWATT, Robert; Burnaby\nMofA., Physics\nWHITE, Robt. C; Vancouver\nHistory, English\nWHITTLE, Alberta A.; Burnaby\nMath., Chem., Big Block,\nKappa Alpha Theta\nWILSON, Jean F.; Vancouver\nEconomics, Psych., Alpha Gamma Delta\nWILSON, S. M.r New Westminster\nEnglish, Psych., Totem, Gamma Phi Beta\nWONG, Roderick; Vancouver\nPsych., Soclologyy, Jazz Soc.\nWOOLRICH, Mary L; Vancouver\nSoc, Psych., Newman, Alpha Delta PI\nWRIGHT, Norman R.; Vancouver\nBiology, Zoology, Rugby\nWRIGHT, Stuart C; Victoria\nYATES, Keith; Burnaby\nChemistry\nYOUNG. Michael D. W.; Victoria\nZACHARIAS, R. C; Chilliwack\nEnglish,  History\nZIPURSKY, Irvin; Vancouver\nPsycA., Biology, Sigma Alpha Mu\n.\u2022\u2022\u2022\n%\u2022\nARSCOTT, Trevor George; Jamaica\nSoffs\nBALDWIN. R. Wm. W.; Vancouver\nDelta Kappa Epsilon\nBUDDE, J. F. K.; Herford, Germany\nCAMPBELL, Stanley S.; Burnaby\nAnimal Husbandry, Soccer\nCHASTER, Gerald David; Duncan\nSoils\nCLAY, Leslie Kenneth; Burnaby\nCOULTHAND, T. U\nAgriculture EBBETT, Thomas William; Vancouver\nGOBERDHAN, Lincoln C; Trinidad\nPlant Pathology\nGOODALE, Lonald Ross; Squamish\nAnimal Husbandry, Newman Club\nHETENYI, Albert William\nLandscape Horticulture\nKILLICK, Kenneth D.; Vancouver\nKIRK, Hugh D.; Colonsay, Sask.\nPlant Breeding, Baseball, Sigma Chi\nKOVACS, Audrey; Abbotsford\nMacKENZIE, Richard N. Tappen\nAgronomy\nMacLENNAN, D. A.; Sunset Prairie\nSoils\nMacQUILLAN, A. M.; Vancouver\nBact., Dairying, V.O.C,\nSoc. Microbiologists\nOMROD, Douglas P.; Langley\nRADFORD, Brian Trevor; Lynnmour\nRUSSELL, Eric G.; British Honduras\nSHAW, John Gordon; White Rock\nSJERDAL, Albert R.; Kingman, Alta.\nSTEWART, Earl W.; Salmon Arm\nSUTHERLAND, Marie; Vancouver\nSWIERSTRA, Einke; Pitt Meadows\nTUCKEY, Ralph C; Alera Lake\nPoultry Nutrition\nWATKINS, Ronald J.; Vancouver\nPoultry Nutrition, Phi Gamma Delta\nWEISS, G. Milton; Kelowna\nPlant Nutrition, Biology Club\nWIEBE, Walter; Abbotsford\nPlant Science\nWILLIAMS, Thomas F.; Victoria\nAgronomy, V.C.F., S.C.M.\n.\u2022*..\n'\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\nArchitecture\nEASTON, Charles H.; Vancouver\nHARTLEY, Gordon D.; Vancouver\nJAWARDA, B. S.\nMacLEOD, Robert K.; Vancouver\nRugby, V.C.F.\nMIRKO, Ivan George; Vancouver\nNELSON, Ronald Keith; Vancouver\nDelta Upsilon\nPEARCE, Donald R.; Vancouver WENSLEY, B. James; Edmonton\nYOUNG, Clifford M.; Vancouver\n\u2022   w w   \u2022\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022-\nADAMS, F. Ronald; Vancouver\nMechanical\nADELMAN, Leon Edward; Vancouver\nChemical. Hillel\nARMSTRONG, John E.; Vancouver\nMechanical\nBABA, Tony Takashi; Vancouver\nCivil\nBARRON, Kenneth Edward; Trail\nElectrical, Hamsoc, A.I.E.E., E.I.C.\nB.C.P.E.\nBAZELEY, Edward G.; Fort. St. John\nMechanical,  Camera, A.S.M.E., S.A.E.\nBELLOW, Donald Grant; Cloverdale\nMechanical\nBLACKERY, Andrew J.; Vancouver\nElectrical\nBOULANGER, M. N.; New West.\nElectrical, A.I.E.E.\nBOULDING, John David; Vancouver\nElectrical, E.I.C, A.I.E.E.\nBOWKER, Arthur James; Vancouver\nMechanclal, Film Soc\nBROCK, Robert Martin; Harrogate\nForestry, Dance Clubs\nBROCK, Patrick W. G.; Vancouver\nGeology\nBRODER, John Patrick; Vancouver\nMechanical\nBROTHERTON, Walter W. Vancouver\nMechanical\nBURCH, Barry John; Burnaby\nChemical\nBURNHAM,  Harvey  Ross;  Kamloops\nElectrical\nBURTON, Edward Harry; Victoria\nMechanical, A.S.M.E., Psi Upsilon\nBUTTERFIELD, John A.; Ponoka\nMetallurgical, Soccer, Dawson Club.\nSigma Chi\nCALDWELL, Chas Bruce; Alberni\nElectrical\nCAPLE, N. Roderick B.; Vancouver\nCARLYLE, James Weldon; Vancouver\nCARTER, William A.; Chapman Camp\nElectrical\nCHORNEY, Henry M.; Myrnan\nMechanical\nCIANCI, J. Donato; Vancouver\nCOBURN, John Wyllie; Vancouver\nCORNISH, George H.; Calgary\nElectrical\nApplied Science\n27 COSTANZO, Peter F.; Vancouver\nMechanical, A.S.M.E.\nCRAMB, John Allan; Powell River\nElectrical, A.I.E.E., Sigma Phi Delta\nDARKE, H. Kenneth; Trail\nGeology, Dawson, E.I.C\nDEMPSTER, George Gavin; Vancouver\nAlpha Delta Phi\nDENHOLME, James Leon; Vancouver\nMechanical, V.O.C\nDODGE, Donald Phillip; Barriere\nCivil\nDOTTO, George; Vancouver\nA.I.E.E., I.R.E.\nDRAB, Allan Julian; Chemainus\nPsi Upsilon\nDRENNAN, Joseph A.; Duncan\nElectrical, Newman Club\nDRUMMOND, Kenneth Jas.; Burton\nGeology, Rowing Team\nEASTWOOD, Joseph; Vancouver\nChemical\nELKINS, Frank George; Vancouver\nMechanical\nERICKSON, Philip T.; New West.\nMechanical\nFEATHERSTONE, Harold; Vancouver\nMechanical, Sigma Phi Delta\nFINLAYSON, Malcolm J.; Vancouver\nMetallurgical, Sigma Phi Delta\nFLETCHER, David M.; Vancouver\nGeology, Beta Theta PI\nFLYNN, Robert Allen\nFONG, Nelson; Vancouver\nElectrical, Tennis, Badminton,\nChinese Varsity\nFRAME, Clifford H.; Trail\nMining, Hockey, Dawson Club\nFREDRIKSEN, Roland T.; Vancouver\nElectrical, A.I.E.E.\nGISBORNE, Bert.; Ladysmith\nMechanical, S.A.E., A.S.M.E.\nGREENAWAY, John M.\nHANSLIP, Gavin; Victoria\nElectrical, A.I.E.E.\nHARDY, John Allan; Vancouver\nHARRIS, T. Michael; Abbotsford\nPhysics,  Dance,  Rowing\nHARVEY, Peter; Prince George\nElectrical\nHARVEY-SMITH, F. P.; Vancouver\nMechanical, Rugby,  V.O.C.\nHAY, David George; Port Alberni\nHAYWARD, Herbert M.; Vancouver\nMechanical\nHIPP, Thomas Michael; Burnaby\nElectrical, A.I.E.E.\nHODGSON, Stanley G.; Vancouver\nHOLLAND, Fred Charles; Vancouver\nAlpha Delta Phi\nHOMER, Lawrence John; Duncan\nDance Club\nHONKAWA, Takeo; Aldergrove\nHUVA, John; Summerland\nMechanical, Dance Club\nIRWIN, William Grant; Trail\nMechanical, Psi Upsilon\nJACKSON, A. W.\nJARVIS, Donald Graham; Vancouver\nMetallurgical, Sigma Phi Delta\nJEFFREY, William Neil; Vancouver\nJOHNSON, Alan Harold; Vancouver\n28 JOHNSSON. Eskil L; Calgary\nA.S.M.E.\nJONES, Harold Mervin; Vancouver\nJUNAS, Walter M.; Vancouver\nElectrical, Delta Kappa Epsilon\nKEELE, Kenneth Dennis; Alert Bay\nKEITH, James Allan; Nanaimo\nKENDRICK, Robert W.; Vancouver\nChemical\nKIRKLAND, Robert W.; Vancouver\nMechanical, Alpha Delta Phi\nKITSON, Michael R.; Duncan\nCivil\nKOSKELA, Erkki; Vancouver\nMining\nKUHN, Arthur; Vernon\nLARSON, Raymond S.; Salmo\nA.I.E.E.\nLAUBA, Andu; Vancouver\nMechanical\nLAURIENTE, Thomas William; Trail\nCivil, Curling\nLePAGE, Norman Allen; Vancouver\nChemical, Christian Science Organ.\nLOEWEN, John J. F.; Vancouver\nCivil, Fencing, Pari. Forum\nLYALL, William Ronald; Vancouver\nCivil\nMAH, Edward John; Vancouver\nMAR, John; Port Alberni\nMARR, Allan; Vancouver\nMASON, Grenville Robt.; Vancouver\nEngineering, Physics\nMATTERSON, B. Dall; Ladner\nMacDONALD, Donald W.; Pt. Alberni\nMcGRAW, John James; Vancouver\nGeology\nMcKAY, J. R. Monte; Vancouver\nMcKAY, John Stuart; Trail\nElectrical, V.O.C, Sigma Phi Delta\nMcKEE, John Hugh; White Rock\nMechanical, A.S.M.E.\nMacLEOD, John M.; Vancouver\nPhi Gamma Delta\nMacPHERSON, Alastair; Ladner\nMechanical, S.A.E., A.S.M.E.\nMELDRUM, Nurray; Vancouver\nMELENKA. Roy Edward\nMOLLOY. Jos. R.; Gaspe Co., P.p.\nMOONEY, Francis T.; Vancouver\nMORGAN, Donn Leach; Vancouver\nMULDER, Terrence Erick; Chilliwack\nMURARO, Theodore Wm.; Kimberley\nNEWTON, Kenneth C. G.; Penticton\nDawson Club\nNISHIZAKI, Susumu Roy; Kamloop\nMechanical\nOLSEN, William Chas.; Vancouver\nPhysics, Phi Gamma Delta\nO'SHAUGHNESSY. R. F.; Nanaimo\nMechanical, Phi Gamma Delta\nPALMER, John William PARKINSON, William D.; Vancouver\nPAVLOFF, Vladimir N.; Vancouver\nChemical\nPERRY, Kenneth James; Vancouver\nPRESTON, John Gait; Vancouver\nMetallurgical\nPREVARSKI, Michael; New West.\nPRINCE George S.; Vancouver\nPRITCHARD, James D.; Victoria\nRILEY, Peter Julian; Celista\nROBLIN, Robert F.; Vancouver\nROBSON, William L P. Salmon Arm\nChemical\nRODD, Dennis Gwyn; Maple Bay\nROMAN, Michael; New Westminster\nChemical\nRUSSELL, Gordon John; Vancouver\nRYLL, Arthur Withold; Vernon\nSAUNDERS, C. R.; New Westminster\nSAWATZKY, Ronald K.; Lulu Island\nSCRATCH LEY, E. W.; Vancouver\nSHERWOOD, William L; Victoria\nSMITH. Kenneth L; Victoria\nSMITH Kenneth Ronald; Nanaimo\nSMYTHE, William D.; Ottawa\nSPEER, Earl Wesley; Vancouver\nSPINDLER, George Bray; Vancouver\nSPINNEY, Ralph H.; White Rock\nSTERNE, Ronald Alfred; Vancouver\nChemical\nSULTAN, Ralph Geo. M.; Vancouver\nSUTHERLAND, John P.; Vancouver\nChemical\nTALBOT, Richard John; Vancouver\nCivil, E.I.C.\nTAMAGI, Tamotsu; Kelowna\nTANAKA, Edward H.; Vancouver\nElectrical. A.I.E.E.\nTAYLOR, William H.; Lulu Island\nE.I.C.\nTHACKER, James J.; Victoria\nPhysics\nTUFTS, Francis Chas.; Vancouver\nZeta Psi\nUNWIN, Ernest Arthur; Victoria\nElectrical, A.I.E.E., I.R.E., Beta Theta PI\nVALDE, Glenn Edwin; Squamish\nWALSH, John; Vancouver\nMechanical, Newman, Dance, S.A.E.,\nA.S.M.E.\nWARK, Robert John\nWATSON, John A.; Vancouver\nCivil\nWATTS, Donald George; Creston\nDance Club\nWERNER, Joseph; Vancouver WHITE, Paul Samson; Toronto\nMining, Delta Kappa Epsilon\nWHITEMORE, Bruce C; Vancouver\nMetallurgy, Dawson\nWHITLE, Donald Jas.; Burnaby\nChemical, Psi Upsilon\nWILCOX, Robert J.; England\nMechanical, A.S.M.E.\nWILD, Alexander; Vancouver\nChemical\nWINKELAAR, John D.; Drumheller\nElectrical\nWOOD, Patrick O'Hara; Woodfibre\nYEE, Harry Thomas; Vancouver\nYIP, Hoy Wing; Vancouver\nZENNER. Gerhard P. H.; Vancouver\nElectrical\nALLAN, Beverly A.; Creston\nBREZDEN, Jessie Pearl: Vancouver\nCAMERON. M. Jean; Yukon\nCOPLAND, D. Lorraine; Cloverdale\nDAWSON, B. June; Vancouver\nDERRICK, Mrs. E.; New Westminster\nDONG. Lily; Alert Bay\nFIELD, Irene May; Vancouver\nGILES, Deirdre Anne; Vancouver\nGRAY, Helen C; Victoria\nKUNDERMAN, E. B.; Vancouver\nLONG, Marjorie Lois; Vancouver\nV.C.F.\nMARSHALL, Lilian E.; Victoria\nMAWHINNEY, Donna C; Nanaimo\nMcCULLAGH, Mrs. Joan; Vancouver\nMcKENZIE, Carolyn I.; Vancouver\nMcKINNON. Patricia  M.; Vancouver\nS.CM.\nMILLER. K. Ruth; Victoria\nREEVES, Linda V.; Burnaby\nSMITH K. Marion; Oliver\nSPEIRS, Margaret E.; Cloverdale\nSTALKER, A. Rosemary C; Vancouver\nSTEVENSON. A. Dorothy; Vancouver\nWILLOUGHBY, Ann D.; Kamloops\nWINKELAAR, Mrs. I. B.i New West.\nKappa Alpha Theta\n31 Commerce\nABRAHAMSON, Carol Lee; Kemano\nTransportation, Alpha Omicron PI\nALEXANDER, Wm. Roy; Trail\nAccounting\nANDREW, Peter Robert; New West.\nNewman Club\nARMSTRONG, William S.; Vancouver\nAURIOL, George Robert; Vancouver\nTransportation,  Cercle  Francais\nBANFIELD, John Allen; Vancouver\nFinance, Phi Delta Theta\nBAXTER, Allen; Vancouver\nAccounting, Psi Upsilon\nBENDRODT, Eric H.; Vancouver\nBENNETT, Keith John; New West.\nBeta Theta PI\nBERG, R. P.; Vancouver\nBOURNS, Charles David; Vancouver\nProduction, Mamooks, Lambda Chi Alpha\nBOYLE, Ernest Edward; Vancouver\nBRASSO, Henning Peter; Calgary\nMarketing\nCASTLE, Gary C; Vancouver\nCHALKINS, David Bruce; Vancouver\nZeta Psi\nCOLLS. John Michael; Trail\nCONNELL, John Gavin; Vancouver\nCONWAY, Geoffrey R.; Victoria\nAccounting,   Badminton.   Ubyssey,   Beta\nTheta PI, Sigma Tau Chi\nCOOK, Lawrence E.; Grand Forks\nCOWIE, James Fraser; Regina\nZefo Psi\nDALGLEISH, Neil S.; Kamloops\nMarketing\nDARKE, Ernest Wilfred; Trail\nAccounting\nDAVIS, Arthur Maurice; Vancouver\nDAVIS, Kenneth Brian; Vancouver\n^ccounf\/ng\nDAWSON,  Robert Muir; Vancouver\nMarketing, Baseball, Alpha Delta Phi\nDELONG, Henry Thompson; Trail\nAlpha Delta Phi\nDeVITO, Leonard James; Trail\nMarketing, Delta Upsilon\nDREW, John David; Vancouver\nDelta Upsilon\nDUTTON, Ross Wilson; Vancouver\nAccounting\nDYKE, Lome David R.; Vancouver\nJazz Soc, Geography Club, Delta Upsilon\nEDWARDS, John C. S.; Victoria\nFinance, Zeta Psi\nESSELMONT, William J.; Vancouver\nFARAC, Dusan Alexander; Vancouver\nFINDLAY, John Alan; Vancouver\nFLEMONS, Gordon F.; Vancouver\nFOSTER. Anthea W.; Nelson\nEconomics, Delta Gamma\nFRENCH, Basil Kenneth; Calgary\nAccounting, Delta Upsilon\n32 GILES, Jack Michael; Victoria\nGILL, Singh Sardul; Victoria\nAccounting, East Indian Soc.\nGREEN, Rowland B.; Victoria\nHEATHER, John R.; Vancouver\nHILL, Joseph Royston; Alberni\nAccounting\nHOLDEN, Douglas; Vancouver\nAccounting\nHORSMAN, J. D.; Moose Jaw\nHOUGHLAND, L Joan; Vancouver\nRetailing, Marketing,\nKappa Kappa Gamma\nHUDSON, Ralph Edward; Victoria\nHUME, Peter Ernest; Calgary\nHURST, J. N.; Cloverdale\nFootball, Phi Gamma Delta\nJOYCE, Murray Russell; Creston\nFootball, Delta Upsilon\nLACEY, Dennis S.; Mission\nPhi Kappa PI\nLAVALLEE, Bernard C; Vancouver\nLAVIS, Charles Edward; Vancouver\nAccounting\nLEE, Robert; Vancouver\nChinese Varsity Club\nLEGGE, Geraldine J.; Steveston\nTransportation, Alpha Gamma Delta\nLIGHTBODY, M. A.; Vancouver\nMarketing\nLIND, Stanley; New Westminster\nInternational House, Dance Club\nLODGE, T. O.; Vancouver\nForestry\nLYNES, K. P.;  New Westminster\nAlpha Tau Omega\nMALKIN, Toby; Vancouver\nMALONE, James C; Regina\nMANNING, Gerrard E.; Vancouver\nMARCHAAK,  William;   Edmonton\nMARTIN, Alexander; Vancouver\nMAYNARD, John K.; Vancouver\nMcALLISTER,  William   B.;  Vancouver\nMcALPINE, Edward A.; Vancouver\nFinance, Beta Theta PI\nMcDONALD, D. L.; New Westminster\nAccounting, V.C.F., Radio Soc.\nMacLAREN, Angus; Vancouver\nMcLEAN, Helen Ethel; Trail\nAccounting, Kappa Kappa Gamma\nMcLEAN, R. H.; Vancouver\nMcLEOD, John T.; Vancouver\nAccounting, Basketball, Alpha Delta Phi\nMcVEIGH, W. H.; Drumheller\nFinance\nMIDDLETON, Keith John; Vancouver\nI.F.C.\nMONTGOMERY, R. F.; Vancouver\nMORROW, Boswell R.; Vancouver\nMORROW, Bruce Kenneth; Vancouver\nMURRAY, Morag Jean; Vancouver\n33 NICHOLAS, S. Richard; Vancouver\nProduction, Economics Club\nOLIVER, Edward; Vancouver\nO'SULLIVAN, Peter Fred; Vancouver\nProduct\/on\nPALMER, Allan Herbert; Vancouver\nPAPPAS, George; Vancouver\nPEARSON, J. Ronald; N. Vancouver\nPETERSON, Jerrold K.; Vancouver\nPISAPIO, Albert Henry; Trail\nPTUCHA, John Jacob; Fernie\nRIDINGTON, John F.; Vancouver\nRIOPEL, C. R.; Vancouver\nRITCHIE, William Wyse; Vancouver\nROLFE, Clifford M.; Victoria\nROMANCHUCK, Peter R.; Westbank\nSCHULTZ, Ronald F.; Vancouver\nSCHUMACHER, S.; Drumheller\nSEYMOUR, George W.; Vancouver\nSHIPPOBOTHAM, John P.; Vancouver\nSINCLAIR, Robert S.; Vancouver\nSMITH, Melvin Henry; Victoria\nSPARE, Gordon; Hollyburn\nTAYLOR, Jean Ann; New West.\nTeaching, Kappa Alpha Theta\nTHOM, Gordon A.; Bellevue\nMarketing, Sigma Chi\nTHODESON, John ;C. New West.\nAlpha Tau Omega\nTHOMAS, John Maldwyn; Gibsons\nEconomics. K.O.C   UN Club\nTHORPE, Fred David; Vancouver\nPsi Upsilon\nVAUGHAN, Lome David; Vancouver\nWESTERLUND, B. V. W.; New West.\nAccounting, Beta Theta PI\nWIGEN, Vernon Rae; Cowichan Bay\nProduct\/on\nWILLIAMS, Bruce M.; Vancouver\nForestry\nWILLIAMS, Michael; Burnaby\nAccounting, Baseball, Kappa Sigma\nWOLF, Isy M.; Vancouver\nWONG, Shirley; Vancouver\nTeaching, Chinese Varsity\nWOO, Byng Sing; Vancouver\nFinance, Chinese Varsity\nWYMAN, Wiliam Robert; Vancouver\nFinance\nYERXA, Don Winslow H.; Vancouver\n34 APPLEBY, Philip W.; Vancouver\nforest Club\nBICKNELL, Ronald H.; Vancouver\nForest Club\nBRETT, Conrad Paul; Winnipeg\nBusiness Administration, Forest Club\nBROOKS, Percy Lome; Vancouver\nCHESTER, G. Stanley; Vancouver\nEASTWOOD, John W.; Vancouver\nFAJRASJSL, Miroslav R.; Victoria\nGOURLAY, Robert Bruce; Vancouver\nGRAY, John Andrew; Victoria\nForest, Dance Clubs\nHARPER, Alexander J.; Vancouver\nHARTMAN, Fay Herbert; Fraser Lake\nKAMIMURA, S. John; Hope\nForest, Business Administration\nKREWAZ, Joseph; Vancouver\nForest Club\nMacKINNON. D. G.; Ft. Wm., Ont.\nNewman, Forest\nONTKEAN, Geo.; Lethbridge\nPEARSE, Peter; Kamloops\nPEARSON, Wallace John; Vancouver\nPOPA, Cornel\nPREUS, Esmond R.; Vancouver\nRICKSON, Douglas E.; Vancouver\nSEEDS, Robert Wilson; Prince George\nSIGALET, John Donald; Vancouver\nTOOVEY, John William; Haney\nNewman, Forestry Clubs\nVonALTHEN, Friedrick; Vancouver\nWALLACE, Leslie William; Vancouver\nForest Club\nForestry\n..\u2022..\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\nALSBURY, Mary Diane; Vancouver\nTeaching\nBIRCH, Elizabeth Marie; Vancouver\nCurling, Alpha Phi\nBOULDING, Myrna H.; Vancouver\nRetailing, Teaching, Alpha Gamma Delta\nHome\nEconomics\n35 BOWELL, Dorothy Rae; Cloverdale\nBRACHER, Anne H.; New West.\nAlpha Omicron PI\nBROWN, Barbara Ann; Vancouver\nCARLSON, Lois M.; Vancouver\nRetailing, Alpha Gamma Delta\nCOMPTON, B. E.; Calgary\nDelta Gamma\nDIENO, Audrey Clara; Oliver\nEDMONDS, Mary Jane; Kimberley\nNewman Club\nENGLISH, Patricia J.; Vancouver\nGERBER, Elaine F.; Vancouver\nHillel\nGRAHAM, Verna Jean; Victoria\nHALPIN, C. B.; Calgary\nDietetics\nHAMILTON, Irene Janet; Vancouver\nAlpha Phi\nHARRIES, Elizabeth S.; Vancouver\nRetailing, Alpha Phi\nHORNE, D. S. K.; Lethbridge\nHUSBAND, M. Alice; Revelstoke\nDesign, Players Club\nKIMPTON, Vyvyan; Golden\nDietetics\nMATHESON, Elizabeth M.; Vancouver\nMATZEN, Irene; Harrison Hot Springs\nMcFARLANE, Ruth Anne; Vancouver\nDietetics\nMclVOR   Ivan Lorraine; Vancouver\nDesign. Mamooks, Radio Soc, Phrateres\nMYERS, Margaret S.\nORTON, Joan E. E.; Victoria\nGrass Hockey\nPOVAH, Mary Margaret; Kelowna\nRAE, Szanne; Vancouver\nROSENBAUM, F.; Moose Jaw\nSABISTON, Vivian Ann; Vancouver\nSLUGGETT. M. R. P.; Vancouver\nSMITH, Shiela Irene; Vancouver\nSNYDER, M. Maureen; Langley\nSOUTHER, Dorothy H.; Port Alberni\nTALBOT, Susan E.; Vancouver\nDietetics\nTWA,  Maureen C; Fulford  Harbour\nV.CF.\nWENSINK, Phyllis M,; Courtenay\nDietetics, Dance Club\nWIEDRICK, Phyllis R.; Vancouver\nDance Club\nWOOLIAMS, Jane M,; Summerland\nMussoc, Dance. Badminton Clubs\n26 AIRD, Hugh Cameron; Vancouver\nPsi Upsilon\nBARBEAU, Jacques R.; Vancouver\nBASFORD, Stanley R.; Vancouver\nBEAIRSTO, Robert E.; Vancouver\nBECK, Howard Leighton; Vancouver\nZeta Beta Tau\nBERGER, Thomas Rodney; Deep Cove\nBRAIDWOOD, Thomas R.; Vancouver\nU.N., Liberal Clubs, Beta Theta PI\nBRAY, Ronald Clifton; Vancouver\nPhi Gamma Delta, Pres. A.M.S.\nBUTLER, Peter Woods; Victoria\nBYRNE, B. Patricia; New Westminster\nCAMERON, Hamish C; Vancouver\nCLYNE, John Stuart S.; Vancouver\nAlpha Delta Phi\nCOLl INGWOOD, T. A.; Vancouver\nTotem\nD'ANDREA, Richard O.; Vancouver\nDONALD, William Ivor; Vancouver\nDROSSOS, Nicholas; Penticton\nPA\/ Koppo PI\nEVANS, Mrs. J. F. Elaine; Vancouver\nFAWCUS, Kenneth S.; Vancouver\nTennis, Delta Upsilon\nFRITH, Hector Nichol; Vancouver\nGENIS, James Demetri; Vancouver\nPhi Delta Theta\nGHITTER Harvey Alan; Vancouver\nGILHOOLY, Robert; Vancouver\nGROBERMAN, Joel; Vancouver\nZeta Beta Tau\nGUILE, Robert Henry; Vancouver\nPsi Upsilon\nHERBRIK, George R.; Vancouver\nHOLLINRAKE, H. A.; Pt. Credit, Ont.\nHOLMES, R. R. J.; Vancouver\nHOSSIE, David Stuard; Vancouver\nDelta Kappa Epsilon\nHOSSIE, M. R. K.; Vancouver\nHUTCHINSON, R. B. M.; Vancouver\nflefo TAefa PI\nJASICH, Anthony J.; Vancouver\nNewman Club\nJEPHSON, Ronald John; Vancouver\nAlpha Tau Omega\nKENNY, Brenton D.; Vancouver\nAlpha Delta Phi\nKIRK, Oris; Vancouver\nLEVINE, Sefton Lewi; Vancouver\nZeta Beta Tau\nLEVY. Joseph R. D.; Victoria\nLEW, Chuck; Vancouver\nMAIR, Kenneth Rafe; Vancouver MacAULAY, James A.; Vancouver\nPro. Conservative, Spectrum Clubs,\nPhi Kappa PI\nMacDONALD, D. D.; Vancouver\nMacKENZIE, Graham C: Vancouver\nU.N., Liberal Clubs, Beta Theta PI\nMacWILLIAM, Donald A.; Ganges\nNICHOLLS, Terence D.; Vancouver\nNewman, U.N. Clubs, Sigma Tau Chi\nPOOLE, Reginald; Vancouver\nRAPANOS, George Peter; Victoria\nSEMORAD, Francis J.\nSHAW, Duncan Weld; Vancouver\nSOULE, Marshall M.; Vancouver\nSPENCER, John Evan; Vancouver\nSTANFIELD, Derek H.; Vancouver\nVANDERVLIET. Edward L; Kelowna\nWATT, Kenneth Gordon; Vancouver\nWHIST, Jarl Aage B.; Oslo\nWICKSON, M. C. J.; Vancouver\nWOOD, John Finlayson; Sidney\n.\u2022\u2022\u2022.\n\u2022\u2022_\u2022*\nMedicine\nBARNETT, Robert Douglas; Vancouver\nBEBB, Douglas Evan; Victoria\nBERRY, Kenneth; Vancouver\nBOON, David A.; Vancouver\nCAIRNS, Mrs. Eva Maria; Vancouver\nCAIRNS, Alexander R. M.; Vancouver\nCHONG, Henry; Vancouver\nCLARK, Dennis M.; Vancouver\nCLARK, Nigel Wake; Vancouver\nCLAY, Michael Graham; Grand Forks\nCUNNING, Clive L; Regina, Sask.\nDAVIS, Thomas Wilfred; Vancouver\nNewman\n38 EISENSTEIN, Barney; Verdun, Quebec\nFRASER, Donald Grant; Vancouver\nFUNG, Edward Wing; Vancouver\nGAIN, Donald B. M.; New West.\nGALBRAITH, L T. Craig; Vancouver\nHALL, John Vernon Geo. Vancouver\nHALL, Thais Lorraine; Vancouver\nHERD, James A.; Vancouver\nHUTCHINS, Donald John; Vancouver\nJOHNSTON, Robert K.\nJOW, Eleanor; Vancouver\nJUBA,  Emil; Vancouver\nKARJALA, Roy John; Vancouver\nKOCH, Peter Rudolf D.; Vancouver\nKORNDER, Lee D.; Baldwinton, Sask.\nLAUENER, Roland Wm. O.; Van.\nMARTIN, John Matthew; Burnaby\nMcGHEE, John James; Trail\nBeta Theta Pi\nMcGREGOR, John C; Vancouver\nMcLEAN, Edward Harry; Trail\nMacLEAN, R. Bruce; Los Angeles\nMORRISON, George E.; Vancouver\nNELSON, Rodger A. C.j Vancouver\nDelta Kappa Epsilon\nNESTMAN, Jerry M.; Vancouver\nFootball, Kappa Sigma\nNIXON,   Rodney  Thomas;  Vancouver\nPEARCE, William G.; Hatzic\nPERETZ, Dwight Irvin; Vancouver\nPHILIPPSON, Gerald J.; Burnaby\nPRASLOSKI, Peter F.; Abbotsford\nPRITCHARD, Rinford B.; Vancouver\nQUENVILLE, Noel F.; Vancouver\nROGSTAD, Vernon J.; Sturgis, Sask.\nROSS, John R. H.; New Westminster\nRUTHERFORD, Terence; Victoria\nSCHOFER, Roy Carl; Creston\nSIMONETTA, Luigi R.; Trail\nSLEATH, George William; Vancouver\nSTANTON, Rodger Cyril; Kimberley\nSTEWART, Gerald  Noel; Vancouver\nSTEWART, Irwin F.; Cloverdale\n39 STONIER, Peter Finden; Vancouver\nTHORDARSON, Theodore; Vancouver\nPhi Kappa Pi\nTURPIN, J. E. Hartley; Vancouver\nVAUGHAN, Frank W.; Vancouver\nVAUGHAN, Mrs. K. Diane, Van.\nWATT, John Gordon; Vancouver\nWILLIAMS, Maurice E.; Vancouver\nWILLOUGHBY, John A.; Kamloops\nWONG, John; Nanaimo\nYOUNG, Robert Neill; Victoria\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022*\nPharmacy\nIr,-*: W^m.\nALLAN,  Ronald John; Vancouver\nBELLOWS. Albert L; Vancouver\nJazz, Spanish Dance Clubs\nBORSATO, Friedrich A,; Vancouver\nFilm Soc.\nBRETT,  Helen Joy; Vancouver\nAlpha Omicron Pi\nCUNNINGHAM, M. A.; Royal Oak\nfee Hockey, Big Block Club,\nDelta Upsilon\nDAVIES, John; Burnaby\nBaseball\nDAVIES, O. Gordon; Vancouver\nDance Club. Delta Kappa Epsilon\nDEMARCOS, Earl C; Vancouver\nDYKEMAN, J. M.; Vancouver\nDelta Kappa Epsilon\nHADFIELD, Rosemary E. Victoria\nIDDINS,  Kenneth J.; Langley\nJANIEWICK. Peter J.; Chilliwack\nKARLSON, Harry; New Westminster\nDelta Kappa Epsilon\nLATIMER, John A.; Alberni\nLEONG, Gwendolyn F. Q.; Vancouver\nLe VAE, Austin John; Vancouver\nLITTLE, Edward Brian; Vancouver\nLUM CHOY, Ging; Vancouver\nMcCALLUM, Douglas F.; Vancouver\nMcDONALD, Kenneth G.; Vancouver\nDelta Kappa Epsilon\nMORRISON, William S.; Needles\nMULLA, G. Elizabeth; Vancouver\n40 NACHTIGAL, Arthur C; Rosedale\nNIMI, Peter Keiichi; Vancouver\nNOLAN, Donald Andrew; Vernon\nPsi Upsilon\nORTYNSKY, Orest Jos.; Vancouver\nAlpha Omega\nPARKER, John E.; Vancouver\nPAYZANT. Keith W.; Vancouver\nPHILLIPS, George 67; Vancouver\nQUAN, Louise G. H.; Victoria\nRANAGHAN, Mary R.; Vancouver\nSETO, Wah Kuey; Vancouver\nSHARPE, Elaine Alice; Vancouver\nSHATZKO, Paul; Vancouver\nSIMON, Alois J.; Burnaby\nSPEVAKOW, Robert L; Vancouver\nSTACK, Ernest S.; Vancouver\nSTOCKLEY, David C; Kelowna\nSTUART, Sonia C.j Victoria\nWOODSWORTH, J. L; Port Moody\nAlpha Delta Pi\n\u2022 \u2022.,\n'\u2022\u2022\u2022\nALDERMAN, R. B.; Calgary\nHistory, Phi Kappa Pi\nDeBUYSSCHER, R. A.; Cranbrook\nMath., Delta Upsilon\nEYRES, Charlotte A.; Chilliwack\nEnglish, Majorettes\nFOUGNER, Edward L; Vancouver\nFootball\nGIBSON. William G.; Arrow Park\nStudent Christian Movement\nHOHN,  Mae  Irene; Haney\nEnglish\nHORTON, Sheila; Vancouver\nHistory\nJONES, Magretta C; Lillooet\nKENT, Stephanie Joan; Vancouver\nPsychology, Delta Gamma\nKNlGHT, Joseph I.; Mission\nKRONQUIST. Rodger A.; Vancouver\nLEAH, Audrey M.; Vancouver\nBiology\nPhysical Ed\n41 McCALLUM, Elizabeth M.; Victoria\nMacFARLANE, Reginald T.; Ladner\nMcKELLAR, James R.; Vancouver\nMINETTE, June M.; Kelowna\nMORFORD, W. Robert\nMUNDLE G. E.; Calgary\nPENTLAND, Louisa L; Vancouver\nPETERSON, Karen E.; Comox\nRUNNALS, Joyce E.; Steveston\nSPENCE, Donn E.; Vancouver\nSTREET, Richard H.; Kamloops\nTUCKER, Thomas J.; Vancouver\nBiology. V.O.C.\nWALTERS, Harold A.; Vancouver\nYOUNG,  Lois  M.  Irene\n.\u2022    \u2022.\nHappy faces, grim faces, determined faces . . . but all are\nheaded for one goal. At the Fall Congregation yet another class\ngraduates to the business world, to graduates studies, to the\nprofessions . . .\n42 Our\nHeritage\nIn recognition of the many students who\nserved in the two wars and in remembrance of those who died, the Memorial\nService is held each year in the U.B.C.\nMemorial Gymnasium, which was dedicated\nto those who gave their lives for freedom.\nThe view looking out towards Howe Sound\nis felt by many to be the beauty spot of\nthe campus. Here the Women's Dorms and\nthe huts of Fort Camp set an attractive\nforeground for the mountains and the sea.\n\u2022*\u00a3\n43 r\n.^\u25a0\u2022SSSSSS;\n\u00a753**\nS&fcjl\nBSrW.\nWk\nri>\n&%\u00a3^>?\n.\u00ab\u00a3\u00ab*\n\u00ab\u2022\u00bb:**\n\u00absr\n%\n':\u25a0?-jP *  '\n%*-.\nW\n-vim. 5 ' a\u00bb\nt\u00a3a^Mk' 3E\u00bb*i-r\n,^*>\ni  !\nn I\nSLa- v \u25a0\u25a0 T^'S*4**\n*\u00a3&...\n7T--~S^'T\u00bb*.\u2014?\u2022\"\nag**-1'. '^K\n'\"^C\njw;\n\u25a0i**aic\n,tmi*lV<J. .... J\n\u2022ME^W^E?-\nIStV\n\u00ab ; 7* ,>l\n\u25a0AJ-\u00a3<7\ns^^s^m*\n&\u2022:\n8^*3\n^\u25a04 i\nS^0M\nS    .  \u25a0 ,,S,*fevA\u2122Ji'\n<- s*;\n?**W Brock Branches Thn\nf=S&&*=\nX\nif\nI\n*\n-t-+\nHf\nAn artist's conception of the approved Brock Expansion plans show\nthe latest building to be donated by the students to the University.\nThe plans are the creation of University Architects directed by the\nstudent committee and  approved  by the faculty.\nSINCE the Great Trek of 1922, the students of\nU.B.C. have established a tradition of active\ninterest and substantial contribution to the permanent\nfacilities of the University. The Women's Gymnasium,\nthe Armoury, the War Memorial Gymnasium and the\nBrock Hall have all been financed by student donation.\nSince the war, five dollars of the eight-dollar student\nfee has been allocated to the War Memorial Gym\nnasium Fund. The debt will be retired in the fall of\n1956, but the students decided this year to continue\nthe five dollar fee for seven more years to finance an\naddition to Brock Hall. The original Brock Hall was\nbuilt in 1940 as a memorial to Reginald Brock, Dean of\nApplied Science, who was killed in a tragic air crash\nin 1935. The new wing will provide facilities in keeping\nwith the expanding needs of a growing student\npopulation.\n46 gh Student Finances\nThe new wing, to be built on the north side of the\nexisting building, will contain a dance and lounge\narea, a games room with billiard and ping-pong tables\nand special facilities for such campus organizations as\nthe Film Society, the Camera and Photography Clubs,\nMamooks and the Totem staff as well as meeting\nrooms and smaller club offices. The Alumni Association will have offices in the $3,000,000 extension and\na new College Shop and Barber Shop are planned.\nThe planning for the extension was done by a\nstudent committee under the chairmanship of Don\nMcCallum, a member of the 1955-56 Students' Council. His work will be continued by one of the hardworking members, Ben Trevino, the newly-elected coordinator. Construction will commence this summer\nand it is hoped to open the wing by March,  1957.\nFiremen gingerly ascend the ladder to gain access to the smoke-\nFilled second storey of Brock Hall during the tragic fire that\nravaged the popular student union building last year. Since then\nBrock has had a face lifting and now expanding student needs have\nresulted  in  a  new addition.\n47 Club Day had everything this year,\nincluding the new campus magazine\nRaven, being sold to a cute coed by\nEditor Michael Ames, and a real live\nIndian drum (with a Raven design,\nnaturally), being pounded by pubster\nJean Whiteside.\nPlaying the biggest numbers game in B.C.\nare these students waiting for opportunities\nto register during the busy September registration week. Those with the right numbers\ngo  first.\nFrosh Queen Kay Hammerstrom w\nders just whether she really sho\nhave as she gives her name to\nFrench instructor in the Armou\nduring     the    September    registrat\n48\nRain, Rage\nIN the wee small hours of the morning of Tuesday,\nSeptember 13, 1955's crop of freshmen began\nthe long vigil of registration. Armed with umbrellas,\nblankets and thermos bottles they waited in line for\npriority numbers which were given out on the hour.\nThen beginning at 9 a.m. groups of drenched freshmen\nwere allowed into the Armouries to begin the annual\nstruggle to avoid Saturday classes.\nAfter timetables had been arranged, upperclassmen\nconverged upon the new students and wheedled them\ninto purchasing copies of the \" Raven,\" \"A\" cards\nand subscriptions to the \" Totem.\" Then the last straw\nwas having their pictures taken for A.M.S. privilege\ncards. Finally, after the hard-hearted Seniors had taken\nall their money, the exhausted registrants were allowed\nto escape into the crisp fall air. ush week. Over 4200 students signed\nip September for another term In\nhe ever-expanding university. Admin-\nstrators already are worrying about\nhe 1985 enrollment estimates.\nWho wouldn't mind wearing a Frosh hat\nafter It has received that personal touch\nthrough being adiusted by this smiling lass.\nSeniors,  line up.\nRegistrants\nThe remainder of the week saw large groups of\neager freshettes appearing on the campus daily to\nwatch the registration of the Faculties of Law, Commerce and especially Applied Science! They seemed\nto be fascinated by the colour red although during\nthe following week the converse proved to be true.\nFrosh were interested in other items also as was\nproved by their large attendance at the Students'\nCouncil programme, various campus tours, and the\nCairn ceremony. At a special meeting for the girls\nDean Mawdsley informed them they had no worries\nas there are four boys to every girl at U.B.C. This\ninformation was received with great glee! At last,\nworn out with the week's activities the Frosh all\nretired to dig out pajamas and sack skirts in preparation for the coming Frosh Week.\n49\nIt's getting more difficult to sell\nAthletic Cards every year. This freshette seems to be on the verge of\nbeing talked out of her money, however, by this big strong athlete,\nMaurice Cunningham. \"D\u2014 those Engineers,\" muttered this poor\nunfortunate as those terrors of the Campus\nwetted the bottom of his britches. This\nwasn't the whole story, though, as many of\nthe Redshirts wound up in the pond themselves as the Frosh struck back.\nRevenge Wrought By Frosh\nFOR the first time in the history of U.B.C. the\nFrosh were relatively well organized with the result\nthat more than a few Redshirts were dunked in the\nold oaken tub on the Main Mall. Pajama-clad freshmen displayed courage and determination as they\nturned the tables on the Engineers and caused their\nfaces to turn as bright as their sweaters. Freshettes\ntoo did not cower before the lords of the campus\nand only a few had the misfortune to be locked in\nthe stocks or handcuffed to members of the opposite\nsex. But a tiny group of girls were invited to sit in\non an E.U.S. meeting and claimed that they had taken\nthe punishment for the rest of the Frosh class!\nActivities during the week were many and varied.\nThe annual Big-Little Sister Banquet, Big Block Smoker\nand the play \"Her Scienceman Lover\" were held,\nalong with tea dances and a splash party at the pool\nfollowed by a dance at the Gym. Finally, at the end\nof an extremely exciting week, the Frosh elected a\nradiantly lovely Queen, Kay Hammarstrom, to reign\nover the Frosh Reception.\nAnything goes during Frosh Week, even locking poor girls in the stocks. Smiling Danica\nd'Hondt doesn't seem too worried, though,\nas these two Engineers penalize her for wearing a skirt much too long. Don't tell us these\nfellow aren't enjoying their workll\n50 51 Homecon\nA take-off on the Varsity \"Snarl\" cards\n\u2014life can be trying\u2014won the Alpha\nDelta Phis and the Alpha Gamma Deltas\nSecond Prize.\nNIneteen-fifty-five Great Trekker, Aubrey Roberts, adds\nanother item to his long list of accomplishments. Alumni\nAssociation President Peter Sharp holds the ball for the\nimportant   kick-off.\n52\nThe artistic float of the Pharmacy Faculty was judged to\nmerit First Prize. Ellen Arnet and Maurice Cunningham\ntake care of both the giant prescription and the award. HERALDED as the most impressive social event of\nthe Fall season, the Homecoming weekend of\nNov. 5, turned out to be colorful, exciting, and, above\nall, very enjoyable.\nA two-hour Pep Meet began the festivities: Coach\nFrank Gnup related his Thunderbird Football story,\nand the cheerleaders presented their \"parlor\" card\ntricks.\nParade Chairman Keith Liddle was granted a favorable decision by the City Council and the Home\ncoming Parade was again held early Saturday morn.\nFloats poked fun at a variety of things\u2014interplanetary\ntravell, the \"Dry\" Homecoming, the football team;\nthe five best floats were \"floated as part of the half-\ntime entertainment of the football game.\nThe Homecoming game was disappointing to the\nspectators because the highly-favored Thunderbirds\nwere downed by the Central Washington Wildcats\n28-6. Grads Irving Knight and Jerry Nestman and\nundergrad Bruce Eagle starred in some thrilling plays.\nAlumni were honored, wined and dined, and also\nchallenged to prove their worth athletically. The 1955\nGreat Trekker Award was presented to Aubrey\nRoberts, Chairman of U.B.C.'s Development Fund, for\nhis outstanding services to both U.B.C. and Vancouver. The Alumni Association luncheon at Brock seated\nMayor Fred Hume, Attorney-General Robert Bonnor,\nLily Dong was a very surprised belle when chosen to reign\nas Homecoming Queen\u2014but her numerous supporters were\nnot  surprised.\nand Magistrate Gordon Scott as head-table guests.\nTwo smorgasbord dinners were held at Brock, one on\nFriday for the class of '35, and one on Saturday for\nthe class of '30.\nThe Sixth Annual Phys. Ed. golf tournament between\nAlumni and undergrads for the Hamilton Cup, ended\nin a tie between grad Doug Whittle and 2nd. Year\nPhys. Ed. student Albert Brabrant, who both scored\n83. In the evening basketball game, the grads were\neven unable to tie Pomfret's second-string undergrad\nteam, losing 53-38.\nThe Homecoming Dance, although sans liquor and\nsans stags, provided the fitting climax to the gala\nweekend. Highlight of the evening was the choosing\nof the Engineers' Queen candidate Lily Dong for\nHomecoming Queen, and Danica D'Hondt, Arts candidate, and Kay Hammerstrom, Frosh nominee, for\nher princesses.\n53 King and Queen of the Mardi Gras, Maurice Gibbons and Paf\nShippobotham, reigned happily over their ethereal domain of\nJollity Unlimited.\nMardi Gras\nA hit on TV (the Almanac Show) and at\nthe ball were these tall chorines. From left:\nJanie Wright, Dorothy White, Sheila MacDonald, Thelma Sharp, Dorothy Hobbs,\nSheila Hardy, Pauline Agnew, and Dorothy\nDilworth.\nMASQUERADE ball designed for those who\nwant to get away from it all and for those who\nare contemplating interplanetary tours, this year's\nMardi Gras was truly out of this world. The annual\ntwo-night costume party at the Commodore featured\npretty \"Mar-maids\", flying \"saucerers\", sundry spacemen, and assorted airy characters. Sponsored by the\ncampus fraternities and sororities, the 1956 Mardi Gras\nwas recorded as the biggest financial success in its\nsixteen-year history, as over $3000 was raised for the\nVancouver Muscular Dystrophy Research Fund.\nA pep-meet held in the Armoury the Thursday noon\nprevious to the grand affair, found both Queen and\nKing candidates making their bid for the golden crown.\nThe nine sorority \"Regal Beauties\" were paraded atop\ngleaming convertibles and introduced to the audience\nby Betty-Anne Thompson. King contestants were aided\nand abetted by their fraternity brothers, who drove\nthe Prince Charmings to the stage via buggy, Model\nT space-car, and milk machine, and then combined\ntheir talents to amuse the spectators. Entertainment\nwas also provided by night-club stars Barney Potts,\nLorraine McAllister and Norma Robertson.\nVoting for the Mardi Gras King took place immediately after the noon-hour rally, and tall, twinkle-eyed\nMaurice Gibbons of Beta Theta Pi captured the regal\nhonours. On the second night of the Mardi Gras,\ncaptivating, red-haired Pat Shippobotham of Alpha\nGamma Delta was crowned Queen of the Mardi Gras.\nEntertainment at the Mardi Gras was provided by\nthe two perennial  favourites: the tall  and the  short\n54 Outer Space\ngirls' chorus line, and the male \"line-up\". The star-like\nchorines previewed on the TV show, Almanac,\ndelighted both TV and Mardi Gras audiences with\ntheir choreography. The male group, as star-struck\nnetherworld professors, were amusing as they attempted\nto sing their repertoire of such real-gone songs as\n\"MacKenzie's Hide-away\".\nRaffle ticket winners were picked by Mardi\nGras Queen Pat Shippobotham, assisted by\nMartin Chess, at the Mike, and Brian\nWilliams.\nManeuvering on the crowded ballroom floor\nwas a bit difficult for these two outer-space\nrobots,  Evlyn Farris and John MacKay.\nCostumes   worn   by  this   group   are   as   fantastic   as  the   entertainment   being  watched.\n55 Shaw Anniver\nIN commemoration of the birth centennial of George\nBernard Shaw, U.B.C. presented, the third week in\nJanuary, a week-long series of discussions and lectures,\nclimaxing in the Canadian premiere of Shaw's play,\n\"Back to Methuselah\". Designed to stimulate interest\nin all facets of Shaviana, the Shaw Centenary Festival\nwas organized by Dr. M. W. Steinberg of the English\nDepartment, B. C. Binning and the Fine Arts Committee, and Dorothy Somerset, Dramatic Director.\nLecturers were of major importance in the Shaw\nCentenary, viewing their penetrating and provocative\nideas about the one-man art and music critic, journalist, to large, appreciative audiences. Dean S. N. F.\nChant introduced the noon-hour lecture series with a\nwitty discussion on \"Bernard Shaw\u2014A Goad to the\nIntellect\". Monday night found Lister Sinclair, Canadian poet, playwright and actor, relating incidents and\nfacts, and reading \"Highlights of Shaviana\".\nGeorge Woodcock, critic, lecturer, and radio writer,\nprovided the second noon-hour audience with an insight into \"The Quintessence of Shaw\". On Tuesday\nnight Professor David Corbett, Department of Economics, dealt with the serious aspects of the prominent\nFabian, under the title \"Shaw's Politics\".\nOn Wednesday, second \"performances\" were given\nby Lister Sinclair and George Woodcock.   Mr. Sinclair\nAbove: The first murderer, Cain, Michael Matthews, implored by\nEve, Danica D'Hondt, not to harm Adam, Rodney Eve. Below:\nDorothy Somerset coaches Serpent Sharon Scadding in ways to be\nwily and writhing. Centre: Pygmalion's puppets try to show that they\nare \"real and life-like\". The Male Figure is Lee MacKenzie; Female\nFigure,   Margaret  Kouznetsov. Celebrated\nspoke to a noon-hour audience on his impressions of\nShaw as critic, paradoxical writer and serious reformer.\nHis topic, succinctly apt, was \"Sinclair on Shaw\". In\nthe evening George Woodcock discussed \"Shaw, the\nPlaywright\" and his primary concern of making people\nthink.\nThe movie version of one of G. B. S.'s immortal\nplays, \"Caesar and Cleopatra\", was presented Thursday noon by the Film Society.\nA stirring climax to the Shaw Centenary Festival\nwas the Players' Club and the University Workshop\nproduction of Shaw's drama \"Back to Methuselah\"\nFrday and Saturday nights. One of the world's longest\nplays, requiring three evenings to perform, \"Back to\nMethuselah\" was condensed into a longer-than-average\n(four hours) performance, with one major intermission.\nSub-titled \"A Metabiological Pentatuech\", the play\nis based on Shaw's philosophy of Creative Evolution\nand his ideas of the implications and complications\ninvolved if humans could live for three hundred years.\nThe different acts depicted the various stages of life\nfrom the beginning of creation to the year 31,920 A.D\nThe unusually large cast for \"Back to Methuselah\"\u201443\nstudents\u2014was directed by Dorothy Somerset, Joan\nChapman, and Robert Read, and four assistant\ndirectors.\nAbove: Prominent Canadian author, playright and critic, Lister\nSinclair, spoke enthusiastically on Ireland's own G. B. Shaw. Centre: A\ncosy after-rehearsal chat finds Eve Newitt, Danica D'Hondt, Marion\nPoggemiller, and Patti Brown, discussing life throughout the centuries.\nBelow: She-Ancient, Barbara Johnson, instructs the Newly-Born, Carol\nBowen, while various youths and maidens listen intently. NET-WIELDING Nurses overran the campus during\nthe Fall Blood Drive to capture unsuspecting\nstudents in all parts of the campus. The Engineers too,\ndid their small part as U.B.C. went far over their\nquota of 2000 pints of healthy red blood. The campaign sponsored jointly by the Nurses and Engineers,\nwas one of the livliest seen in a long time.\nCompetition ran high as the Greek guys and gals\nstaged a fast and furious battle. Percentage-wise, the\ngirls came out on top as many sororities attained\n100%. The men of intellect compared very favourably\nwith the men of science as Union College, the\nAnglican Theological College and Artsmen finished\nwith high percentages. The addition of a kissing booth\nin the Armouries no doubt influenced increasing male\ndonations.\nFrosh Undergraduate Society and the Aggies united\nto sponsor the Spring Blood Drive in which U.B.C.\nonce again topped the schools in the Evergreen\nConference. Interest in both drives was increased this\nyear as students donated generously to compliment\nthe organizational genius of the two Blood Drive\nCommittees.\nThe struggle over, smiling Theo Carroll looks\nforward to the \"pause that refreshes\", Coca-\nCola.\nBLOOD DRIVE\nBy the look of things, the life span of this pert co-ed\nis rapidly approaching its end. Others faced the ordeal\ngleefully.\nTwo nurses strap down terrified donor who appears to have had a change\nof heart. But most students felt it was much easier than registration\nnightl Ron  Longstaffe  looks  like a  lamb being  led to slaughter as  notorious\nEngineers   transport   him   to   auction   stand.\nThe  Veep's  expression  has  changed  to  one  of  mortification:\nhis  usual  air of dignity  has  bean   ruffled.\nMARCH OF DIMES\nCOIN jangling redshirts collected over $400 as the\nannual campaign for the Polio Fund got under\nway. All morning lectures were invaded, stragglers\nbetween classes were nabbed, and would-be scholars\nwere accosted in front of the Library. The Engineers\nsponsored a Chinese auction which realized $19, a\npole-climbing contest, and a chariot race against the\nAggies to round out the day.\nIn the annual Nurses-Home Ec football game the\nNurses went down to a I6I\/2-O defeat despite the\nstellar performances of Lily Dong, Di Richardson and\nquarterback Anne Steele. Joyce Lecision, Sharon\nArden and Joan Lennox were outstanding for winners.\nEngineer Jack McLean was the illustrious winner of\nthe Splitting Contest over several well-known competitors. But the redshirts did not fare so well in the\nchariot race against the Aggies, who, attired in white\ntogas and wearing crowns of laurel, raced down the\nMain Mall shouting their victory cry.\nThe highlight of the day was the auction for the\nright to paste Editor-in-Chief Stan Beck or Vice-President Ron Longstaffe with lovely pies made by the girls\nof Home Ec.\n59\nEditor-in-Chief Stan Beck is snapped while inwardly vowing, \"No more Redshirt Editions of\nthe   Ubyssey\". Ann-Louise Ritchie, Loraine Mulverhill, and Noreen Thompson reveal\nthe latest trends In party clothes.\nCAMPUS guys and gals alike were delighted when\nW.U.S. sponsored an extremely successful fashion\nshow on February 23. Twelve lovely co-eds modelled\nstyles from the semi-formal to the very casual. Full-\nskirted party dresses, boxy suits and tweedy coats were\nshown along with Bermuda shorts to round out the\nwardrobe of a typical Varsity gal.\nAt intermission a variety of entertainment was presented as student performers revealed their talents.\nThe climax of the show was the crowning of Sally\nGrimmett by A.M.S. President Ron Bray as 1955-56\nTotem Queen. Sally, a third-year Arts student, was\njudged by the Totem staff to be the most photogenic\ngirl from among several competitors.\nCo-eds Model Stylish Outfits\nTypical    man-about-the-campus    is    Phil    Green-\nberg   as   he  shows  off  latest  styles  for  males.\nCommentator   Louise  Van   Allen,   attired   in   a   very  becoming   outfit,\nis snapped taking a  breather from her duties.\n60 Totem   photographer   John   Robertson   and   friends   are   seen   partaking   of  some   liquid   refreshment.\nAn  informal  air  prevails  as  levi-clad  Aggies  whoop it  up  at  one\nof the year's biggest social  events.\nFrolicking Farmers Show Spirit\nJohn  Savage  appears to  be  enjoying  himself  but in  the  background\nDon  Gold  seems to  be  moonstruck!\nSTRAW hats, levis, full skirts, and corncob pipes\nwere the vogue at the Farmers' Frolic held in the\narmouries on January 27. Square dancing, box lunches,\nand soft drinks were the order of the evening as\neveryone got into the swing of things. Informality and\nlightheartedness was much in evidence at intermission\nwhen a giant sing-song was held. The appearance of\nthe Aggie Rube Band provided many a laugh and\ninterrupted the eating of box lunches.\nThe dance was well publicized by the Bucking\nBronco contest held on the Main Mall at noon on the\nday of the Frolic. The Engineers, after being victorious\nover the Aggies in both the Chariot Race and the\nSpitting contest, added more laurels to their crown.\nHigh scoring Bronco Bucker was scienceman Doug\nCraig who set an all-time record of sixteen seconds.\nA.U.S. President Bill Baldwin was a close second. A\ngroup of destructive Aggies added to the publicity by\ncremating a large number of copies of the Ubyssey to\naggravate pubsters and redshirts alike.\n61 The Tri-Services also participated in the Remembrance Day Service. Two members of the Pipe\nBand flank Dame McLeod who is about to place\nthe Memorial wreath.\nSPONSORED by the Inter-Fraternity Council, Traffic\nSafety Week emphasized the growing need for\ncourtesy, control, and caution in driving. To advertise\nthe universality of Traffic Safety and promote the week,\nbrilliant stickers were pasted on every U.B.C. car.\nThe Traffic Safety week started off with a noon-\nhour demonstration of motorcycle racing and precision riding by the nine-man City Police Motorcycle\nDrill Team, led by Sargeant Howard Ryan.\nA grand pep-meet\u2014\"The Traffic Jamboree\"\u2014was\nhighlighted by the appearance of Miss Chicago of\n1955, Florence Gallagher, on a cross country tour to\npromote good driving. President N. A. M. MacKenzie\ngave a lively discussion on various aspects of safety.\nTwo experimentally-inebriated students were checked\non the Drunkometer to climax the show.\nAwards were presented to Alderman R. K. Gervin;\nBob Ports, the best driver on the campus; and Sandy\nRoss, the worst driver on campus who received his\naward with his arm in a sling.\nA mock accident staged by campus R.C.M.P.'s\ngave a gruesome picture of an ail-too frequent occurrence. Then the week was concluded with a parking\nand obstacle contest set up by Bill McKinley of Mc-\nKinley's Driving School.\n62\n,.iffi At U.B.C. to promote\ntraffic safety Florence Gallagher (Miss Chicago) Is\ninterviewed by CKNW's\nJack Kyle in Radsoc's quarters.\nSafety\nservices\nONE of the more glamorous and spectacular\nevents on the U.B.C. campus took place on\nMarch 2nd, when the Sixth Annual Tri-Service Parade\nand Ball was held. The three services, Canadian Officers Army Corps, University Naval Training Division,\nand the Reserve University Squadron, joined forces to\npresent a most colourful ceremony in the Armouries.\nThe Honourable Frank M. Ross, Lieutenant-Governor\nof B. C, presided over the afternoon ceremonies.\nAfter inspecting the lengthy parade, which was commanded by R.C.A.F. Flight Cadet John Gordon, the\nLieutenant-Governor presented commissions and scrolls\nto the ninety-four graduating cadets of the three\nservice detachments. These commissioner training certificates presented to the graduating members testify\nto the completion of their training at U.B.C. The\nLieutenant-Governor also presented Chief Justice\nBrigadier Sherwood Lett, Chancellor of U.B.C, with\nthe Canadian Forces Decoration for long and meritorious service with the Armed Forces of Canada.\nThe Annual Tri-Service Ball was held on Friday night\nat the H.M.C.S. \"Discovery\". The three military contingents played host to all the active and reserve\nofficers in the Vancouver area. The Ball, officially\nopened by Lieutenant-Governor Frank M. Ross and\nMrs. Ross, was a suitable climactic finish to the\nlavish day.\nAt the annual Tri-Service Formal\nfhe Army, Navy, and Air Force\ndance with  their girls.\nDuncan Shaw of the Air Force\nand Marilyn Walker typify the\nmany couples at the dance.\n63 This valiant \"Leader-Ship\" maneuvered through swiftly-flowing\nwaters, rain, and seagulls transporting students to and from the\nConference.\nTwo Successfu\nDelegates from many parts of B.C., Washington, and the Yukon\ngathered this year at the High School Conference. Here a boy\nfrom Kimberley and a girl from the Yukon get friendly over a map.\nAN IDEA originally developed by a few American\ncolleges was put into effect at U.B.C. and found\nto be an overwhelming success. The First Annual\nU.B.C. Leadership Conference, organized by Maureen\nSankey and a committee of five, was held the first\nOctober week-end at Camp Elphinstone, Howe Sound,\nwith eighty-five student club, council, and society\nrepresentatives and ten faculty members attending.\nDelegates took part in five of seven discussion groups,\nand although the leaders did most of the talking and\nexplaining, students offered sharp ideas and suggestions. The seven discussion topics and group leaders\nincluded: Faculty-Student Relations by Dean Andrew\nand Dean Gage; The Role of Publications on Campus\nby Stan Beck; Financial and Budget Operations by\nGeoff Conway; Current Student Affairs by Ron Bray\nand Ron Longstaffe; The Place of Athletics on Campus\nby Bill Esselment; Campus Participation and Problems\nof Small Clubs by Don Jabour; and Leadership Qualities by panelists Jacques Barbeau, Murray McKenzie,\nTerry Nicholls and Art Sager.\nThe conference was rounded out with a program\nof K.P. of \"FAG\" duty, recreation\u2014volleyball, baseball, football and swimming, and evening entertainments which included games such as musical chairs and\nimpromptu skits, sing-songs, and poker.\n64 Conferences\nSponsors of the ever-growing High School Conference are standing\n(left to right): Dave Hemphill, Sylvia Tremaine, Gordon Dewhurst,\nBernie Wohlleben, Pat Quinn, John Hards, Sally Robertson, Bob\nStevens, Doug Forrest; and seated: John Helliwell, Dave Manson,\nRobbie Auld, Russ Brink, Nancy Ross, Julie Meilicke, Fred Schrack,\nNick  Blom,  Marietta  Prentice, and  Peter  Fraser.\nREPRESENTATIVES from 90 different high schools,\nsome as far away as Whitehorse and Washington,\ncame to U.B.C. on March 2 and 3 to take part in the\nNinth Annual High School Conference. This year the\nConference placed emphasis on the variety of courses\nin all fields offered at U.B.C. and the many bursaries\nand loan funds available.\nThe delegates were officially welcomed Friday morning by A.M.S. President Ron Bray and Dr. N. A. M.\nMacKenzie, President of U.B.C. Other addresses were\ngiven by Dr. W. A. Bryce of the Chemistry Department, speaking on \"The Value of a University Education\", and Dean W. H. Gage, talking on \"Scholarships\nand Bursaries\". Panel discussions designed to inform\nthe visitors about the various faculties and the curriculum helped to round out the lectures.\nOn Friday afternoon the High-Schoolers were later\ntaken on a tour of the University\u2014the layout, main\nbuildings and classroom lectures being the outstanding\nhighlights. Friday evening found the visitors at an\nAcadia Camp dinner, after which they watched the\nOlympic Basketball trial games.\nOn Saturday a guided tour of the campus and an\nelaborate faculty panel discussion engaged the attention of the delegates. A banquet Saturday night, at\nwhich the Hon. Ray H. Williston, Minister of Education, was the guest speaker, and a dance sponsored by\nW.U.S., completed the Conference.\nThe usual \"after-all-the-plans-are-made-and-the-work-is-completed\"\nrelaxation is indulged in by these Committee members: John\nRidington, Maureen Sankey, chairman, Mike Jeffery, Betty Anne\nThompson,  and  Gordon Armstrong.\n65 Phratereans Go Colour Crazy\nRetiring sweetheart Peggy Gladman and new sweetheart Valerie Taylor\nare seen with runners-up Linda Mcllwaine and Marnie Daly just after\nthe big moment.\nMODERN art was the theme of the Phrateres\nspring formal as multi-coloured balloons and\nstreamers gailey decorated Brock Hall. Bright and\noriginal names were found for the programme dances\nand often confused the revellers who had speculated\nwrongly over the tempo. The crazy colours set the\nmood for an exciting and enjoyable shindig.\nPre-dance coke parties were held by each of the\nseven sub-chapters at the homes of various members.\nSurprises were plentiful as original boutonnieres were\npresented to the boys advertising different sweetheart\ncandidates. Artists' pallets, mock faces and sprigs of\nholly were only a few examples of the ingenuity of the\ngirls.\nThree days before the formal three finalists were\nchosen at an all-Phrateres pep meet. At intermission,\nthe candidates were presented one by one after which\nvoting was conducted. At the bewitching hour of\ntwelve o'clock, last year's sweetheart, Peggy Gladman,\nannounced that Valerie Taylor had been chosen sweetheart for 1956. The runners-up, Marnie Daly and Linda\nMcllwaine, were presented with wrist bands of gardenias. Valerie was crowned with a coronet of white\nflowers and given a silver bracelet to provide a fitting\nclimax to the evening. The spring formal once again\nproved to be one of the year's best.\nThe result of many weeks of hard practice was sliown when the chorus\nperformed at intermission. High kicks and leaps were executed with\nprecision,  much to the delight of the male population.\n\"After the ball Is over Engineers Gallop With God iva\nTHE thirty-seventh annual gathering of the clan of\nApplied Science was ordered by her Lord Sultan\nto be held at the Inn of the Commodore on February\n22 and 23. The Engineers, fearing punishment if they\ndid not comply with the wishes of Sultan, met at the\nspot designated. The result was the biggest and best\nbash in the history of U.B.C.\nPairs of \"26 shoes\" were presented to the Engineering Physicists, winners of the competition for the best\nmodel. The third and fourth year Civils received an\nhonourable mention for their sewage disposal plant.\nThe Physicists were also winners of the table decorations contest on the first night of the ball. On the\nsecond night the third year Civils took the honours,\ncopping the prize for their tiny outhouses.\nThe second year Nurses provided a chorus line\nwhich was very enthusiastically received by the virile\nmen of science. The \"Kissometer\" was another attraction which received much attention as Redshirts showed\ntheir dates one of the greatest inventions of the last\nfifty years. After the evening was over, everyone\n\"sauntered\" into the street and \"Godiva's Gallop\" was\nbrought to a quiet close.\nThe second year Nurses took time off from their duties at the\nexpress order of Big Brother Sultan to provide an interesting\nintermission  diversion  from  the  Kissometer.\nAn Engineering Physicist receive a welcome\nprize, but no doubt It will disappear\nquickly  among  thirsty  redshirts.\nJubilant   Engineering   Physicists show off their winning  model,   the  operation   of which   is\nunderstood by only a small number of sciencemen.\n:,       .\n.\nSl^isarl\nd. \u2022 \u00a3 WOmW,:^M.\n\u25a0*&     7-\nOPEWTWC MECHANIC*!.\n\/UULKOrnCWtOTROIJ\nj'Sfc\nir-1\n*\"* I\nb QU E E\nl3z:;x^! v_. ^<\n. \u25a0 .\n.x LILLY DONG\nHomacorninq Queen PAT SHIPPOBOTHAM\nMardi Gras Queen\n,   N    \\ '\n>C   V    V\nSALLY GRIMMETT A\nTotom Queen     I ;-~:\nN- - 7\nX     <\nC^\n-\n\\    X\n;   \/1 .'   \/ \\ I \\ \/ t \/ i \/ s  i'    ;\ni v    \/ \\ o\nVALERIE TAYLOR  ft\nPhrateres Sweetheart I\n\/ex\n'\u25a0\u25a0  '       \/\nK   \"X\n! KAY HAMMARSTROM\nFrofih Q\nueer;\nBmn\nBfe\nA A \/\\ \/\\ A A\n**** i\n.\"\u25a0'X\n\/ 1\nA\nr\nj^   AA' \"\n\"\"^l\n\u25a0>\nrA\nIs A\nk\"~~ \"v\n. i\n^L^kf^H\n#  A\nA>1                    *\n'-<\" Av             ;y\n>fe                                        A\n1 A ;                                         ;\nS\n^Ll '-\u2022*frC'-:^^f'\n4\ni\"'AJ\n\u25a0\u2014 i\ni\ny\nF^V\nII j\n<             \/                                                                                                         A\ni   --.-A]                                   :    ,\n^1\n\"i\naa^ COOKIE DIESTEL\n^\n\\\n      i\nfk-d       Sweetheart\n\u25a0 \u25a0 ~x\n\\\naJA     of Sigma Chi\n._-A\n,\n\"A'A\"\n\\' 7 : \\\n*\u00a3$\u00a3*$ P jl$&^i^H ^^ ^v - fti\nf  >d. a?\\ ,aa aa; x^'-'Sn\\\nA\nJ\nA A\n\\A\\i\nJEAN FRANCIS\nfeA\nli\nK-A\nmt*                                                                                                                          ^Ol\n-\u25a0\nFootball Queen\ng\nji-\nA.~A,\n1                                                   Jf\n^F^^M             .                                                                .                                                     IsalaH*                 9Bi^B\nO\n; *      -jl\nW J    ^^\n\u25a0\n\\          \u25a0\n*1\n_^ r ^\nA ^\nT\n^ i\nfl\n^^Hil^L\nN- )\n\u25a0'\ncA\n\\\nsHfll         \"      GtVa^H\nlx\nN\nBP^^ ^\nKa\n\u25a0BfAlB\nLeMMs: \u25a0     *\u25a0>\u25a0 ..VjjjjjjjjE\n'\"\"\"\"A\np\n^A\nA\u2014--' )\n\u25a0 i\nfeA                     H^ia\nmm*9                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                L^BST      \u25a0-              H^sH :^m\n?*7-*^-^.^^^.i-7\n^f^l^s^mmm\n.'\u25a0swswTja\nsis\u00bbig\n.r-'^sft-;.\n\u25a05CS\n.,,\u00a3*\n- - *X' **\nEE?^..\u00a3i\u00a3dai\nr^^g^f\nSr^SS^iS^\n3\u00a3s\u00ab*j3\n\u00abS5SeS\n:^B^?\n'\"'-\" .-.-.\u25a0\" ** **$-\u25a0\u25a0 -'\u25a0-     A\u00abiv^\"A'-jr*\n\u25a0*..\u25a0** \u2014 r .lii'\" ^\"5:\n. .&&&-'\n^3*? I\n1  -ai'-\n=^\u00abS\n\u00bb\u00bb#\n\u2022**\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0- -\" v>\nt?\nVi\no\na&K?\nSB**' r  \"   \u2014*\"!\u00ab<-.\nJ*>yfl,,,~\nk\\*3$T-'\n;-\"t*^,\"\"T--\u00ab*.'r-\nsag^^stf\n\u00bb=^55eto.\n<-\u00ab~*s%i?^a\n'i^fii^\ni!\u00bb*\u00bb#\u00bbJ?'\nissssst'\n\u25a0A-t.A-AtA\n7- <\u00a3\u00bb3\nE~S3* *-.\n\\m      -\"    -\"'..' -i*\nU\u00bb*?t!A\n~V-3S\u00bb\n_   ir^^\u00bbfige*r Close integration of M.A.A. and staff Is illustrated in this social gathering. Back row,\n(left to right): Jack Pomfret, Bob Morford, Frank Sealy Bob Hunter, Peter Madill, Fred\nRowell, Laurie West, Mike Glaspie, Ron Bray, Bob Osbourne. Middle row: Johnny Owen,\nFrank Gnup, Gordon Laurie, Dwayne Erickson, Doug Whittle, Bruce Allardyce, Max\nHowell, Chick Siew, Joe Dang, Lincoln Goberdan, Ted Dubberley, Bob Hutchison, Bill\nEsslemont. Seated: Tom Toynbee, Bus Philips, Albert Laithwaite, Ed Luckett, B. S. Jawanda,\nBruce Ashdown, Jack Butterfield, John Chant, John Davidson, Frank Reid, Bob Hindmarch.\nStaff, MAA Closely Integrated\nRESPONSIBILITY for the administration of U.B.C.\nathletics falls upon the capable shoulders of genial\nBuz Phillips who has continued to efficiently co-ordinate\nambitious M.A.A. endeavours. With the increasing\ninflux of students each year and the departure of\nfootball coaches to greener pastures the Physical Education Department has had several additions to its\noverworked staff this year. Much publicized was the\narrival of the new football coach Frank Gnup, who\nwe hope will continue to live up to his press notices\nin the future as he has done in the past season. Another new arrival was Peter Mullins who took over as\nhead track and field coach and assistant basketball\ncoach, subsequently revitalizing track and field to its\nbest season in five years and coaching the Braves\njunior basketball team to the Provincial Junior Championship.\nThe athletic budget is managed and distributed\nby the Men's Athletic Association composed of an\nelected President and Treasurer and appointed team\nmanagers. President of this year's M.A.A. was Bob\nHutchinson. Treasurer was Bill Esslemont, who did an\nexcellent job of apportioning funds as this year's athletic programme has expanded a great deal in scope\nwithout a great increase in total expenditure. This\nwas accomplished despite the lack of student support\nin spectator sports such as football which usually\nhelps defray expenses.\nM.A.A. recommendations and proposals are passed\non to the Men's Athletic Council, composed of M.A.A.\nexecutive members, three faculty members and Buz\nPhillips who gives the administrators final seal of approval or rejection whatever the circumstances decide.\n74 Gathered together to talk over the ever-\npopular topic of women's athletics, are\nstaff members. Top row (left to right):\nMiss Trevis, coach of Grass Hockey and\nArchery, Mrs. Goodwin of Modern Dance.\nLower row: Mrs. Penny, coach of Women's\nRules Basketball, Miss Montgomery, coach\nof Badminton, tennis and golf, and intramurals supervisor, and Miss Eckert, men's\nrules   Basketball   and   Volleyball   coach.\nW.A.D. and W.A.C. Combine For\nSuccessful Year\nHIGHLIGHTING W.A.D. activities for the year\nwas the sponsoring of the Pacific Northwest\nGrass Hockey conference, in which a total of 250 girls\nfrom 18 different American and Canadian colleges\nwere entered. Then in February, Chris Symons, vice-\npresident, organized the first Volley-Ball Play Day to\nbe held at U.B.C. in which U.B.C. and the Vancouver\nand Victoria Normal Schools entered teams. The\nfollowing week-end a U.B.C. invasion was made on\nthe Island by both the Grass Hockey and Volley-Ball\nteams.\nGuided   by   President  Char   Warren,   this   year's\nparticipation in women's athletics on campus increased\ngreatly. The reinstallation of the Archey Club is indicative of the ever-growing interest. Also the Badminton, Tennis and Ski teams took part in several international meets.\nThe finances of W.A.D. were handled by Treasurer\nBetty Best, while Secretary Barb Stafford compiled\nthe minutes. Chris Symons, vice-president, instigated\nmajor changes in the W.A.D. constitution, concerning\neligibility rules, and P.R.O. Berta Wittle did a tremendous job on advertising of campus athletics.\nHard-working members of\nW.A.D. are from (left to\nright): Barb Stafford, Chris\nSymons, Joanne Farmer,\nSylvia Downs, Thelma Sharp,\nJoan Orton, Char Warren,\nBetty Best, Norma Gut-\ntormson, Mary Jean Levlrs,\nBerta Whittle, Sue Rae.\nMissing from picture is\nJoan Crocker. They, with\nthe W.A.C and staff, made\na successful year of Women's Athletics on campus. The women's Big Block members are, back row\n(left to right): Joan Orton, Elma Gavin, Sheila\nMoore, Bertha Whittle. Front row: Char Warren,\nJoan VanAckeron,  and  Colleen Kelly.\nALL those black sweaters with the gold block\nletters are not sold in the College Shop but\nare exclusive to the members of the Big Block Club.\nMembership in the Big Block Club is gained through\na selection committee composed of Big Block members and was chaired by Athletic Director Buz Phillips.\nCandidates for membership have all been actively engaged in campus athletics either as active participants\nor team managers. John McLeod was the 1956 president.\nThe biggest project of the Club this year was the\nrevamping of the method of selecting the Big Block\nwinners. In the fall the annual Big Block smoker was\nheld in Lions Gate Hall. The Club also helps throughout the year by ushering at all campus sports functions.\nTHE Women's Big Block, headed by president\nColleen Kelly, is an honorary club composed of\ngirls outstanding in varsity sports. The Club's initiation in the spring welcomed, five new members\u2014Elma\nGavin, Berta Whittle, Trudy Mounce, Joan Orfbn,\nand Louise Heal. Having only five members, the\nactivities were necessarily limited. They served in the\nRemembrance Day Services and ushered at important\nbasketball games.\nThe 1955-56 Big Block awards were given at the\nannual W.A.D.-W.U.S. Banquet in the form of blazers\nwith an additional crest. The awards are presented on\nthe basis of ability, sportsmanship, enthusiasm, and\npractice attendance, and show that the girls receiving\nthem maintain the high standards set by the University\nin every field of sport.\nMost of members of the Big Block Club are shown below. They are back row (left to right): Bill Hughes, Ernie Kuyt, John McLeod, Bill Esselmont,\nJohn Banfield, Bob Morford. Fourth row: Dip Persad, Ian Todd, Mike Chambers, Al Ezzy, Roger Kronquist. Third row: Chick Siew, Jim Pollack,\nPhil Keuber, Skip McCarthy, Dick Macintosh, Laurie West. Second row: Stan Glasgow, Ted Hunt, Tom Toynbee, Ken Fawcus, Bill Bice, Buz Hudson,\nRon  Stewart.  Front row: Gary Sinclair,  Jack  Butterfield,  P.  S. Jawanda,  Stew  Madill,  Mo Cunningham,  Malcolm Anderson,  and  Don  Spenee. Spring Big Block Awards\nWOMEN\nBIG  BLOCK and Small  Block Awards for   1955-56 which were presented   March\n29th,  to the outstanding  women  athletes  on  campus,   in  the  extramural  competitions.\nBASKETBALL (Boy's Rules)\nBIG BLOCK: Louise Heal, Anne Snowsell, Trudy Mounce.\nSMALL BLOCK: Marion Matheson, Pat Goodwin.\nSKIING\nBIG BLOCK: Louise Backstrom.\nSMALL BLOCK: Sheila Turnbull, Pat McFeeley, Sue Rae.\nTENNIS\nBIG BLOCK: Lee Davenport, Silvia Downs.\nSMALL BLOCK: Joan Crocker, Shiela Kingham, Pam Rose.\nBADMINTON\nBIG BLOCK: Char Warren.\nSMALL BLOCK: Joan Crocker, Mary-Jean Levirs.\nSWIMMING\nSMALL BLOCK: Kathy Burnett.\nGRASS HOCKEY\nBIG BLOCK: Char Warren, Berta Whittle, Sheila Moore, Joan Orton.\nSMALL BLOCK: Marg retta Jones, Eleanor Yeats, Betty Best.\nMANAGERIAL BIG BLOCK\nJoan Orton (Grass Hockey).\nJoan Buker (Swimming).\nFOOTBALL\nBruce Eagle\nIan Stewart\nOscar Kreutziger\nRoy Jokanovich\nRon Stewart\nCharles Kules\nJerry O'Flanagan\nRalph Hudson\nBob Homola\nDonn Spenee\nRoger Kronquist\nPhil Reader\nAl Ezzy\nSWIMMING\nDoug Kilburn\nGerry Van Tets\nICE HOCKEY\nHowie Thomas\nBob Giegerich\nGordie Mundle\nMaurice Cunningham\nHugh McCulloch\nGeorge Nagle\nMEN\nCROSS COUNTRY\nJack Burnett\nGRASS HOCKEY\nJohn Davidson\nMike Daniel\nRUGBY\nBob Morford\nTed Hunt\nPeter Grantham\nDerek Vallis\nDick Macintosh\nDonn Spenee\nMike Chambers\nDave Morley\nPeter Tynan\nDon Shore\nCleve Neil\nJack Maxwell\nTom Anthony\nGary Sinclair\nBill Bice\nRoger Kronquist\nSOCCER\nClive Hughes\nRalph Phelps\nFred Green\nTed Trevor-Smith\nFrank Sealy\nBruce Ashdown\nBud Fredrickson\nIan Todd\nJack Butterfield\nErnie Kuyt\nBASEBALL\nMike Williams\nBASKETBALL\nMike Fraser\nBarry Drummond\nEd Wild\nJohn McLeod\nJim Pollock\nLyall Levy\nTed Saunders\nMANAGERIAL BIG BLOCK\nPeter Madill\nLincoln Goberdahm\nChick Siew\n77 Coach Albert Lalthwalthe was tackled by the flu\nwhen this shot of the varsity Chiefs was taken.\nLeft to right: Max Howell (backfleld coach),\nClive Neil, Mike Chambers, Dave Morley, Bob\nMorford, Bill Bice, Peter Grantham, Don Shore,\nDoug Muir, Chick Siew (manager). Front row\n(left to right: Hugh Barker, Roger Kronquist,\nJack Maxwell, Dan Spenee, Peter Tynan, Gary\nSinclair,  Ted  Hunt.\nRugger Rugged, Chief.\nDave Morley, expert varsity place-kicker, shows excellent\nform as he makes a conversion from the sidelines. Dave\nhas been the margin of victory in many games by scoring\nplacements from impossible angles.\nrVHE 1956 Rugger squads set up a fast-moving pace\nin the pre-Christmas play, during which the\nembryo team fell into hard training, basing their attack on speed rather than weight. With both the\nMcKechnie and Miller Cup play-offs in mind, emphasis\nwas given to a wide, open, offensive type of game.\nAs the season advanced, Coach Laithwaite found\nenough talent to stock the Varsity team with such\nexperienced players as Peter Grantham, Dave Morley,\nBob Morford, Clive Neil, and Derek Valles. In his\nfirst season of play, Pete Synam positioned scrum-half,\nwhile fly-half Ted Hunt developed into what proved\nto be an outstanding asset to the rugger's group of\nfifteen.\nIn game against Nor-West, Chief's Jack Maxwell brushes\naside a world-be tackier as Tom Anthony rushes in to back\nup the play.\n78 Braves rugger squad, under the tutelage of Max Howell,\nhave yet to lose a game this season. Back row (left to\nright): Howell (coach), Perlestrom, Ward, Brockington,\nShields, McGavin, Martin, Fitzgerald, Powers, Heath (manager). Front (left to right): Barker, McKellar, Tasaka,\nAnderson,   Mulberry,   Allardyce,   Clement,   Hutchinson.\nMauled By Bears\nVarsity's Miller Cup schedule was never completed\ndue to repeated cancellations, however, they did place\nfourth in the intra-club series. In March, U.B.C.'s last\nchance to retain the McKechnie Cup after having lost\n8-3 to the Norwestors, depended on a victory by\nVictoria over the latter squad.\nAlso in March, the California Bears edged Varsity\nin two straight games of a total-point four-game series,\n15-0, 11-9. The last two games were played on the\n22nd and 24th of March, in which Varsity had to\novercome a 17-point deficit.\nThe Braves retained the Bell-Irving Cup, with an\namazing seven consecutive victories, and halfway\nthrough the Carmichael Cup play, held an advantage\nof two wins, no losses.\nTypical scramble for the ball after a line-out was captured in this photo of the Braves playing against Ex-\nBritannia. Identified Braves are Roy Perlestrom (?), Pete\nShields  (centre), and Gerry McGavin  (right).\nFormer varsity star George Puil now\nplaying for Vancouver Reps prepares to\nboot the ball as three of the Chiefs close\nin on him. Left to right: Don Spenee,\nMike Chambers, and Pete Tynen.\n79 Locker-room shot of Birds: left to right\u2014back row, Coach Frank Gnup, Frank Gosich, Roy Okanewich, Jerry O'Flanagan, Bob Homola, Frank\nTarling, Roger Kronquist, Johnnie Mann, Oscar Kreutziger, Buz Hudson, Bud MacFarlane, John Hurst, Ron Stewart, Ken Doolan, Bruce Kelsey,\nJoe Danj, statistician. Second row, Phil Reader, Danny Lazoski, Charlie Kules, Al Ezzy, Bob Samis, Bob Hindmarch, assistant coach. Third row.\nJohnnie  Owen,  trainer,  Doug  Fromson,  Tony  Pantages,  Bruce  Eagle,   Ian  Stewart,   Donn  Spenee.\nThunderbirds Improve Steadil)\nCOMPARATIVELY speaking coach Frank Gnup\nguided the Thunderbird football squad to a\nsuccessful season in his initial year at the helm. Birds\nwon one game, tied one, and lost seven. Put beside\nlast year's won none, lost eight record, football enjoyed a successful season\u2014comparatively speaking.\nBirds,   in  a   pre-season  exhibition  game  with  Vancouver Cubs, lost the services for the rest of the sea\nson with a dislocated shoulder, star quarterback\nGordie Flemons. This virtually destroyed the Birds'\nchances of beating their all-time conference record of\none victory in a season.\nBest game of the year was the annual Parapalegic\nBowl charity game against McGill Redmen which\nended in a scoreless draw. Thunderbirds had probably\nthe finest defensive team in the entire league but\nlacked the offensive power necessary for a winning\nteam. This was rather an about face as in the past\nU.B.C. has been strong offensively but weak defensively.\nTOTEM BOX SCORE\nWon    Lost\nTied\nConference\n1          7\n1\nExhibition\n0          0\n1\n1          7\n2\nIan  Stewart  desperately  closes  in  on  an\nenemy   ball   carrier.\n80 Vaunted Bird defense\nmoves in to smear West\nWashington Viking's offense, valiantly striving to\nmove the ball from the\nshadows of their own goal\nline.\nThrough Season\nCoach Frank Gnup, ably assisted by Bob Hindmarch, made a fine impression in his freshman year\nas Bird football coach, working wonders with the\navailable material which lacked the depth of experience acquired in high schools by our American\nopposition. Outstanding Birds were Al Ezzy, winner\nof the Dr. Gordon Burke Inspirational Award, and\nBruce Eagle, playing his first season on the Birds. All\nmembers of the football team are to be congratulated\non their fine sportsmanship and their courage in facing\noverwhelming odds, and not withstanding their won-\nlost record are a credit to this university.\nAnguish  shows  on  faces of  Irving  Knight and  Oscar  Kreutziger  as\nBird  offense  fizzles  through  efforts  of  a   bruising  tackier.\nLettermen Hudson and O'Connel back up\nanother touchdown as UBC snatches an early\nlead in the '55 Homecoming game against\nCeneral  Washington Wildcats.\n81 To the left is the 1955-56 edition of the U.B.C. Thunderbirds,\nwho recorded its most successful\nseason since entering Evergreen\nConference competition. Top\nrow (left to right): Stew Madill,\nJim Pollack, Barry Drummond,\nNorris Martin, John McLeod,\nMike Fraser, Ted Saunders,\nLyall Levy, Ed Wilde, Gordon\nGimple. Bottom row: Jack Hen-\nwood, Pete Madill (manager),\nJack Promfret (coach), Johnny\nOwen   (trainer),   Herb   Forward.\nMen's Basketball\nTHUNDERBIRD basketball under the coaching of\nJack Pomfret, featured a strong, well balanced\nsquad built around all-star forward John McLeod. It\nwas a season of many firsts for U.B.C. After a 1-3\nrecord in exhibition play Birds entered the annual\nTotem  Tournament  distinct  underdogs  but  surprised\neveryone by copping the trophy with two straight\nvictories, becoming the first varsity squad to do so\nsince the tournament's conception. During the Christmas holiday season, in further exhibition play, the\nBirds became the first Thunderbird squad in ten years\nto lose to a Vancouver Senior A team. In conference\nplay, Birds had their best season in history, finishing\nwith a 7-1 I record, five more conference wins than\nany other previous Thunderbird team.\nIn the B.C. Olympic Trials playoffs Bird's tied for\nfirst place with a 4-2 record but in a two-game total\npoint series with C-FUN tied the first game but lost\nthe second by 7 points.\nTwo first-string Birds forwards, John McLeod and\nguard Ed Wilde, were named to the B.C. Totems\nwhich will represent B.C. in further Olympic Trials\ncompetitions on a nation-wide scale. Totems are corn-\nJohn McLeod shows form that has won him league all-star honours\nthree years in succession and a berth on the B.C. Olympic trials\nsquad. On left backing up McLeod is first string guard Barry\nDrummond (14). Below, Alberni's Elmer Spiedel cuts in to support\nunidentified team mate's attempt to block McLeod's devastating\nhook shot. Intense concentration and frustration\nregisters on the faces of these U.B.C.\nand C-FUN players in the final game\nof the Olympic regional basketball\ntrials. Pictured are C-FUN's Ron\nStuart (88) and Jim Carter (II),\nalong with U.B.C.'s Ted Saunders\n(12), and Mike Fraser. C-FUN won\n6?-42.\nLong arm of the referee calls a halt\nin play as C-FUN's Jim Carter grapples for possession of the ball with\nU.B.C.'s Norris Martin. Supporting\nMartin are Herb Forward and Jim\nPollack. Face mirrored in background\nbelong  to  Bird's Ted  Ball.\nprised of a nucleus of the regional play-off winners\nand bolstered with star players from other B.C'.\nsquads.\nMike Fraser, Barry Drummond, and Jim Pollack\nrounded out the first string while Gordie Gimple,\nHerb Forward, and Stew Madill provided some of\nthe fine bench support.\nDick Penn's Jayvee's had one of their poorest\nseasons compiling a 3-14 record despite the efforts\nof players such as Dave Milne and Frank Tarling, and\nwere unable to gain a playoff berth in the Vancouver\nSenior A league.\nU.B.C. Braves, under the coaching of Peter\nMullins who took over from Jim Carter, came from\na poor start, where they lost their first five games, to\na flying finish capturing the Vancouver Junior A title\nand going on to win the Junior Championship but was\nforced to withdraw from further championship competition because of approaching examinations. Standout performer for the Braves was Lance Stephens.\nTOTEM SCORE BOX\nTHUNDERBIRDS\nWon\nLost\nExhibition\n3\n4\nConference\n7\nII\n10\n15\nJAYVEES\nWon\nLost\nLeague\n3\n14\nBRAVES\nWon\nLost\nLeague\n12\n5\n83\nA \"Pillar of Strength\", both offensively and defensively, U.B.C.'s Jim\nPollack thwarts a scoring attempt of Western Washington player,\nwhile John McLeod waits possible opportunity to snaffle rebound. mm\n\u25a01*1\nII\nThe finish of the heat for the Grand Challenge Cup showing the\nU.B.C. crew beating the Russian Eight by one and one-quarter\nlengths.\nSweetness of Victory\nPhoto from the Henley Bridge of Crew training for the Henley Regatta. Bow, Fil\nKueber, Ace Hughes, Bob Wilson, Tom Toynbee, Herman Zloklikovits, Laurie West,\nMike Harris, stroke Glen Smith, cox Carl Ogawa, spares Ken Drummond, Doug\nMcDonald.\n84\nLAST summer, the greatest rowing\ncrew in the university's history\nmatched strokes with two of the world's\nforemost rowing powers at the Royal\nHenley Regatta, writing what is probably the most remarkable success story\nin Canadian sport. Starting with but a\nfew awkward rowers, U.B.C.'s eight\ndeveloped to a well-knit unit of champion oarsmen in two short years. From\nAmerican competition, through the\nEmpire Games, to the World Championships on the Thames River, the\nThunderbird crew threatened and\nmatched the world's best, and well\nestablished the University of British\nColumbia in rowing records.\nAt Henley, they trimmed the defending champion Russian crew by a\nlength and a quarter, and in the final\nrace, pressed \"Mighty Penn\" from\nstart to finish only to be defeated in\nthe sprint by one-third of a shell\nlength. But their year-long struggle for\nsupremacy was not unrewarded, for\nthey proved to the world and to themselves that they were real champions\nand not the \"Cinderella Crew\" that\nhad had a lucky race in the B.E.G. '^\u2022^V*\ntei*\nfa  \u00bb.    \/'*\u2022\nrutin\nTIME.\nTINE\n^.- >*\n,, \/\n*=**>\n\"v r-\nClimatic   finish   of  Henley   Regatta   with   \"Mighty   Penn\"   narrowly\ndefeating  U.B.C.  by a  third  of a  shell  length.\nBitterness of Defeat\nCrew poses for the cameraman (left to right): Fil Kueber, Ace Hughes, Bob\nWilson, Laurie West, Herman Zloklikovits, Tom Toynbee, Mike Harris, Glen Smith,\nand cox Carl Owaga. Rustic beauty of Henley paints the background.\nNot only were they winners, but\nthey were leaders. Throughout their\nlong and arduous training schedule,\nthe Varsity eight passed on that\nrelentless drive and spirit to an enthusiastic but untried Junior Varsity crew\nthat journeyed fifteen hundred miles\nto the Newport Harbour Sprint Championships and thoroughly trounced\nsuch perennial winners as U.C.L.A. and\nthe University of California for the\nWestern Intercollegiate J. V. title. This\nyear, with the famed eight broken up,\nthese same J.V.'s will be filling in the\nvacant seats and it will fall on their\nshoulders to carry the U.B.C.-V.R.C.\ncolours into the Olympics.\nBut the records of the two crews did\nnot go unblemished. The same Varsity\ncrew which later went to Henley, finished third behind Washington and\nStanford in the Newport Varsity races.\nHowever, they bounced back and\neasily catured the Consolation Race by\nthree lengths. The meet was somewhat\nof a disappointment for the boys in\nspite of the victory, U.B.C. having\nbeen rated as a top contender for the\nchampionship.   Both   the   Junior   and\n85 Rowing coach Frank Read, the man\nresponsible for inspiring and training\nthe crew, addresses the student body\nat  the  fall  assembly.\nVarsity crew member Doug McDonald\nsupervises the adjusting of the slide\nof the shell by two members of the\nJayvees, Dave Manson and Don\nArnold.\nRowers Stroke On\nSenior crews lost close decisions to Washington\nHuskies in the fall after only two weeks training, but\nthe \"big eight\" retaliated by sweeping past the\nHuskie Crew in the spring return match on Coal\nHarbour.\nThe year-long rowing season provided much excitement for local crew enthusiasts, but in addition, it\nbrought world recognition to our university. Congratulations will always go to the crew of B.E.G. and Henley\nfame, but just as good wishes should go to the new\nThunderbird crew.\nLounging after a hot race are these J.V. members of last year's\ncrew. Back row (left to right): Bill Hughes, Phil Kueber, Wayne\nPretty, Dave Webster, Dave Helliwell, and Bill McKerlich. Front\nrow: Don Arnold, Doug Corbishley, Jim Carney, Dave Manson, and\nDick McClure.\n86 The team which has only suffered one loss in their thirteen-game season is composed of, back raw (left to right): Ed Luckett (coach), Harry Farmer,\nRalph Phelps, Ernie Kuyt, Bud Fredrickson, Olive Hughes, Jack Butterfield, Harry Nicholson, Phil Ney, Rhodan Gopal-Singh (manager), and front row:\nIan Todd, Stan Glasgow, Frank Sealy, Fred Green,  Bruce Ashdown,  Dave Wood, and Ted Trevor-Smith.\nVarsity Soccer Tops in League\nVARSITY soccer team, playing in the tough Mainland \"First\" Division, was provided with one of\nthe best squads in years, having been unbeaten in\ntwelve games before finally bowing to Mount Pleasant\nLegion.\nThe original defense of Clive Hughes at goal, Ian\nTodd and Ted Smith fullbacks, and Bud Frederickson\nat center-half, led the league in goals against until\nChristmas, by virtue of four shutouts in seven games.\nJack Butterfield partnered Ralph Phelps on the half\nline. The high-scoring forward line was lead by high\nscorer Bruce Ashdown. The other forwards Fred Green,\nFrank Sealy, Phil Ney and Dave Wood notched their\nshare of goals to put the Varsity team on top. The\nclub's valuable utility men were ex-goalie Ernie Kuyt\nand Stan Glasgow.\nThe U.B.C. Chiefs competed in the Fourth Division\nMainland League, winning a third of their games.\nSparking the attack were ex-Bird player Trig Carlson\nand center-forward Jergen Von Schilling. Neville\nGow, Lloyd Edwards, and Chick Siew formed the remaining Chief's line. The team was captained by Bill\nSmith at right half. Dave Price and Les Shelton gave\nable assistance on the half-line.\nGoalie John Isberg had a good season due to the\nstonewall tactics of backs Alan Jagdeo and Dave\nMilne. Rupert Papin, Oscar Kreutziger and Jim Sher-\nritt were the utility men.\nBoth soccer teams were ably managed this year by\nRodan Gopalsingh.\nOne of the main\nreasons for the soc-\neer team's success\nEs the fine play of\nvarsity captain Bud\nFredrickson, completing his fifth\nand final season of\nplay.\n87 Men's Grass Hockey Club (left to\nright) standing: John Davidson (manager), Dr. M. McGregor (coach*?\nBack row: Chris Huntly, Chris New,\nNirmal Dial, Carlos Kruytbosch, Lew\nParmley, Cave Juntly, John Hat-\nfield. Middle row: Walter McLean,\nGranville da Costa, Gordie Forward,\nHarvey Borden, Bhagwaut Jawanda,\nColin Pryce, Jim Taylor, Gerry\nDavidson. Front row: Hamish Simpson, Sammy Qadri, Doug Howie,\nMike Daniel (capt. Varsity), Frank\nSmeele, John Chant (capt. U.B.C),\nTony  Hester,  Bert Manhin.\nGrass Hockey\nTHIS year's activity has been greatly hampered by\nthe poor weather that has prevailed. About one-\nthird of the games have been cancelled throughout\nthe season, with Varsity missing more than U.B.C.\nThis year, due to the deliberate levelling of the two\nteams, Varsity and U.B.C. have continually occupied\nthe first and second places in the league. The only\nserious competition was meeting the two teams coming from the Cardinals and North Shore.\nUnder the able coaching of Dr. Malcolm McGregor,\nthe present and past captains, Doug Howie and John\nChant, showed inspired play while working from the\nspringing form of center half, Carlos Kroytbosch and\nDave Huntly at halfback.\nThe surprise find of the season was goalie Chris\nHuntley whose brilliant saves enabled U.B.C. to\nachieve the highest morale of any team in the league.\nThe ending of the season found the Varsity and\nU.B.C. teams tied for first place.\nTHE U.B.C. Cricket Club is now in its thirtieth year\nof competition and big things are expected of\nthe team this summer. The calibre of play of many of\nVarsity players has been outstanding through the\nyears, and continued to be so through the summer of\n1955. Two players, Dip Versad and Lloyd Edwards,\nwere seriously considered to represent B. C. in the\nInterprovincial Cricket Tournament held in Vancouver\nlast summer, and both played for the All-Vancouver\neleven against Victoria with marked success.\nThe team has a busy schedule ahead for the summer season and hopes to carry off all league honours,\nand bring home some trophies to add to the U.B.C.\ncollection.\nCricket\nMen's  Cricket   Team   (left   to   right)   back   row:\nDave   Harper,   Al   Price,   Alan   Jaydeo,    Rupert\nPapin,  Frank Sealy,  Rodan Gopalsingh.\nFront row: Sam Ali, A. Senchaud, Stan Glasgow,\nChick Siew,   M.  Papin. A battle of Experience\nvs. Youth as Pacific\n\"Northwest champion\nKatherine Modrell\ncrosses swords with\nJunior U.B.C. Champion Helga Petri.\nWith hero worship In\nher eyes and trophy in\nher hands Helga Petri\nadmires the technique\nof B.C. Champion Foil\nand Sabre artist John\nLowen.\nFencing\nTHE Fencing Club this year boasted in its active\nmembership Kathline Modrell, the Pacific Northwest champion, and Helga Petri, the Junior Northwest\nchampion and also the Junior champion of U.B.C.\nAt the U.B.C. sponsored provincial trials on February 17 and 18, John Loewen won the Open Foil and\nOpen Sabre events. Loewen being the only contender\nto reach the finals in this tournament from the U.B.C.\nclub, put on the best show of any individual in the\ntrials.\nWe can only hope that in the future the U.B.C.\nFencing Club will continue to educate our enrollment,\nboth male and female, in the noble and ancient sport\nof the blades.\nTHE U.B.C. Weightlifting Team had another good\nyear with Rae Wigen as captain. Their only loss\nwas to a team composed of B. C. and Western Canadian weightlifting champions.\nIn the individual competitions, Bill O'Donnell won\nthe B. C. Junior Heavyweight Championship and tied\nthe records in the Two-hands Snatch and Two-hands\nClean and Jerk. Vern Case was held to second place\nin the thrilling B .C. Junior contest but set a new\nMiddleweight Clean and Jerk record of 245 pounds.\nHe went on to win the B. C. Second Division Middleweight Championship.\nThe future looks bright. Each year improves and\n1956 will certainly be no exception.\nWeightlifting\nU.B.C weightlifting squad (left to\nright) front: Vern Case, Bill O'Donnell, Andy MacGregor. Back: George\nGundy,  Guy Chance,  Phil  Ferber.\n89 Lined up after a hard fought game are (left to right) back: Eric Dornberier, Bob Giegerich, Mike Tompkins,\nMo Cunningham, Glen Shaw, Ian Alexander, Hugh McCulloch, and George Nagle. In front are: Nino Mello,\nMike Church, Pat Dohm, George Hayes, Howie Thomas, Dr. Bruce McKay (coach), Gordie Mundle, Ted Babie,\nand Art Pearson.\nIce-Men Close To Cup\nTHE Hamber cup came close to being returned to\nU.B.C. after five long years in the Alberta trophy\ncase but the Birds lost out by one overtime goal in\nthe two-game total point series at Powell River.\nPreviously, the Birds lost a 6-4 decision against the\nPowell River All-Stars but gained 2000 supporters who\ncheered them on in the Hamber Cup series.\nThe pucksters had no league this year but participated in exhibition matches with Commercial League\nteams and made a trip to the Interior.\nIn the Colorado series the team was devastatingly\nbeaten by the American universities. Injuries, lack of\npractice and experience, and loss of players who could\nnot make the trip, told on the U.B.C. team as the\nstrong Denver and Colorado University teams swept\nthe series.\n\"Doc\" McKay, a popular coach, groomed the team\nthis year and hopes are high that next year the Birds\nwill overcome the \"Golden Bears\" to capture the\nHamber Cup.\nA snazzy finish to a tricky play.\nMike Church, George Nagle, and\nArt Pearson show their championship style.\n90 We would climb to the highest mountain to\ntake pictures, but we were not able to soar\nto the heights that the Men's Ski Team has\nreached. They placed third in the Intercollegiate Ski Meet.\nSkiers\nCross Country\nTHE U.B.C. Thunderbird ski team made their best\nshowing in recent years at the Inter-collegiate\nMeet, as they copped third place with 268.5 points\nout of a possible 300. Only in 1950, when they copped\nthe title did the Bird do better. University of Washington won the meet for the second time in as many\nyears. The hosting University of Alberta squad posted\ntheir highest finish in the history as they finished in\nsecond place.\nBest for the  U.B.C.  stars was  Harvey Abell  who\ntook sixth  place.  Birds placed their only win  in  the\ndownhill event when Don Sturgess beat out Jack Hasse\nwith a time of 1:19, four-fifths of a second faster than\nHasse who won the three-way combined. In the six-\nmile cross country event, U.B.C. finished third. Varsity\nwas well below the top spot in the Giant Slalom match.\nOn their way to the annual meet at Stephen's Pass,\nthe skiers were delayed by snow and their train did not\narrive in time for them to participate in the meet.\nWomen's\nSki Team\nHAVING organized one of its most diversified\ntraining programmes this year, the Women's\nSki Team went into active training early in January\nin preparation for the Intercollegiate Ski Meet held\nin Whitefish,  Montana, on February  19th.\nBefore attempting the actual ski runs on Mount\nSeymour, under the able coaching of Bob McLean,\nthe team took part in dry ski exercises which were\ntaught by Dick Street early in December.\nThe five women chosen to represent U.B.C. in\nMontana were: Pat McFeeley, Louise Backstrom,\nNgaire Coe, Sheila Turnbull, and manager Sue Rae.\nThe varsity team took fifth place, while Louise Backstrom placed eighth in the individual times.\nWaving good-bye before having departed on their long iourney to\nthe Whitefish Hills of Montana where they represented U.B.C. at\nIntercollegiate Ski Meet, are the five varsity skiers (left to right):\nback\u2014Sue Rae, Pat McFeeley, Ngaire Coe, and in front\u2014Louise\nBackstrom, and Sheila Turnbull.\n91 Swimmers..\n... Syn\\\n\"And  they're off\".  It's Gerry Val Tets and  Dick Street off\nlo a good start In the back stroke.\nAFTER a red-hot start by a star-studded swimming\nteam, the splashers were hit badly when half\ntheir team was declared ineligible due to Christmas\nmarks. A strong well-balanced squad beat Western\nWashington 44-39 in the thrilling first meet of the\nseason. Captain Doug Kilburn backstroked his way\nto victory while Ken Doolan and Dan Francis captured\nthe diving honours.  These two have topped the con\nference diving champions in  1953 and  1955 respectfully.\nFive more meets completed the season in which\nthe team consistently lost to Western Washington,\nWashington Huskies, and Idaho. Milt Sky's late entry\ninto the league boosted U.B.C.'s score. Gerry Van\nTets and Denis Fieldwalker completed the team which\nwas ably coached by Peter Lusztig.\n1953 Diving Champ In the Conference, Ken Doolan, executes a\nbackdive to win the first meet of the year.\nBob Bagshaw went on to win two firsts in the meet against\nWestern Washington\u2014the 220 and 440 freestyle events.\n92 ronized\nAfter having attended the\nSynchronized Swim Clinic\nin January, the Women's\nSwim Club have proven\ntheir ability in performing\nimaginative displays. Here\nthey exhibit a star formation: Peggy Gladman, Valerie Hopper, Sandra Scott,\nBeverly Kennedy, Barrie\nBoucher,   Margaret   Smith.\nFIFTEEN enthusiastic mermaids hustled down to the\nCrystal Pool every Thursday noon, to practice\ntheir strokes and stunts with the U.B.C. Synchronized\nSwimming Club. Under the coaching of Miss Helen\nEckert and the managing of Joan Buker, these girls\nwere preparing for the B.C. Swimming Championships\nwhich were held on March 24th. In January, they\nattended  the   Synchronized   Swimming   Clinic,   where\nthey gained experience in the finer arts of water\nballet performance, and in composing imaginative\nand original displays. Swim team members are: Barrie\nBoucher, Peggy Gladman, Valerie Hooper, Margaret\nYoung, Theo Carrall, Bev Kennedy, Margaret Smith,\nMarg Watts, Sandra Scott, Kathie Burnett, and Pat\nSimmons.\nHere the team is going through \"Weave the Basket\"\nformation, one of the stunts which they performed at\nthe B.C. Synchronized Swimming Championships. Pictured are Pat Simmons, Kathie Burnett, Sandra Scott,\nMarg Watts, Margaret Smith, Bev Kennedy, Theo\nCarrall.\n93 Among the twelve bad*\nminton enthusiasts who\nrepresented U.B.C. in a\nmatch against University\nof Alberta are, top row\n(left to right): Ian Lamont, Gordon Wamsley,\nChuck Forbes, Pete Godfrey, Tom Merrill, team\nmanager Gordon Laurie.\nCenter row: team manager\nM. J. Levirs, Joan Van\nAckeron, Joan Motowylo,\nShirley McKelvey. Bottom\nrow: Gwendy Lamont, Marilyn   Bassett,  Sheila  Sands.\nBadminton Takes City \"A\" Title\nTHE extent of the U.B.C. shuttle squad's experience is unlimited, for this season they entered two\n\"A\" and one \"B\" team in the city badminton leagues,\nplacing first in the \"A\" division. Representatives were\nsent to the three major tourneys held in Vancouver\nwhile ten Varsity players entered in the Western\nChampionships held in Seattle. In March, twelve\nU.B.C. players travelled to Edmonton, where they\ncombatted the Alberta team which holds the Western\nCanadian crown, and the first \"A\" team battled the\nVictoria league winners for the B. C. championship.\nThis year's president was Ken Noble, Secretary\nJoan VanAckeron, Treasurer Pete Godfrey, and\nSocial Convenor Joan Crocker, heading a record\nclub membership of 150. The two \"A\" team members\nare: Ken Noble, Pete Godfrey, Chuck Forbes, Ian\nLamont, M. J. Levirs, Joan Van Ackeron, Joan Crocker,\nChar Warren, Gordon Laurie, Gordon Wamsley,\nSheila Sands, Marilyn Bassett, Joan Motowylo, Gwendy\nLamont and Ted Merrill.\nForming the top mixed doubles\ncombination of the second \"A\"\nteam is Gordon Laurie, team manager, and Marilyn Bassett. The second team placed third in the\nleague while the first team took the\n\"A\" league title. The \"B\" team\nplaced   fourth   in   the   \"B\"   league.\n94 AFTER only two years membership on campus the\nTennis Club sported a most brilliant season.\nLast May the Tennis Team, made up of Joan\nCrocker, Lee Davenport, Sylvia Downs, Sheila Kingham and Pamela Rose, left for Seattle to play the\nUniversity of Washington. The outcome was in favor\nof U.B.C. who gained victory in five out of seven\nmatches. During the summer, tennis history was made\nwhen the team entered the Vancouver League matches.\nPlay was among all the city clubs, and U.B.C, after\na hard-fought season, took a well-deserved third place.\nThe fall term saw an increased membership in the\nclub and an interest which is still maintained. Aided\nby the helpful coaching of Miss Pat Montgomery, the\nTennis Club can again look forward to a successful\nseason across the border and in British Columbia.\nThese four perl\nlassies who will\nagain form the U.\nB.C. contingent into the City League\nthis summer are\n(left to rlqht):\nSheila Kingham,\nmanager Sylvia\nDowns, Joan Crocker, Lee Davenport.\nTennis Goes On Tour of States\nTHIS year, for the first time in history, the U.B.C.\nMen's Tennis Team went on tour of Pacific Coastal\nStates, including Washington, Oregon, and Northern\nCalifornia. After their entry into the Evergreen Conference held in Bellingham, they battled the Montana\nState netmen in a challenge match in May.\nRoss   Peters   exhibits   his   strong   backhand,   while   trying   out   for   the\nU.S.A. tour held in March.\nWith the exception of 1955, the U.B.C. team has\nwon the conference silverware four years in a row.\nThis year, under the guidance of manager Dave Hemphill, the tennis squad hopes to again bring the cups\nhome to U.B.C.\nPictured are four tennis enthusiasts who practised every Thursday in the field house in order\nto gain a berth on the tour. Lett to right:\nGeorge Morfitt, Doug Norman, Andy Smith,\nand  Ross  Peters.\n95 Winners of the City \"B\"\nWomen's League are Thunderettes: Top row (left to\nright): Louise Heal, Ann\nGordon, Ann Snowsell, Pat\nGoodwin, Trigger Dean and\nJune Minnette. Bottom row\n(left to right): Marion\nMatheson, Trudy Mounce,\nColleen Kelly, Coach Bill\nSavage at the left. They\ntrounced Eilers 48-32 in the\nfinal    game.\nScoring another basket for U.B.C. is\nThunderettes' centre, Ann Snowsell,\nwhile Trudy Mounce, guard, sets for\nthe rebound. Varsity overwhelmed\nSunset 54-39 In this game.\nThunderettes Capturi\n\"HE U.B.C. Thunderettes' basketball team won the\ncity \"B\" league by overcoming former title holder\nEi ers in a 48-32 margin. Coached by Bill Savage, the\nteam's outstanding players on the offensive were Trudy\nMounce and Colleen Kelly. Other first string players\nwere center Ann Snowsell, forward Pat Goodwin, and\nguard Louise Heal who remained the highest individual\nscorer of the year with an outstanding total game's\nnetting of 27 points. The team then faced the Newton\nsquad for the Lower Mainland title, to vie for the\nchance to combat the Vancouver Island winners for\nthe B.C. crown.\nThe Junior basketball team, despite their hard training,\nand the enthusiasm of Coach Bill Savage, placed third\nin the Junior Women's League. Top row (left to right):\nBridget McKenzie, Joyce Winch, Vickie Case, Donna Mae-\nllwaine. Bottom row (left to right): Lynne Ross, Beverly\nSnowden,  Linda  Macllwaine.\n96 CITY WOMEN'S \"B\" LEAGUE\nSTANDINGS\nP\nW\nL\n1.\nEilers                                12\n9\n3\n2.\nU.B.C.                            12\n9\n3\n3.\nSunset                               12\n8\n4\n4.\nSimpsons-Sears                12\n0\n12\nThunderettes* guard, Trudy\nMounce, struggles for control of a jump shot, in\nanother victorious game\nagainst Sunset who came\nlast in the league. Trudy\nMounce and Colleen Kelly\nprovided U.B.C. with the\nnecessary tight defensive\ngame in overcoming the\nEilers squad to capture\nthe City \"B\" crown.\n1itynB\"League Play-offs\nAlso coached by Bill Savage in the latter half of\nthe season, the Junior Women's team placed third\nin their league, despite their hard training and enthusiasm. The team hosted a basketball night at U.B.C.\nin which both the U.B.C. teams and Victoria Normal\ncompeted. On the week-end of February 25th, the\nJuniors planned a basketball play day with Victoria\nCollege.\nThe Women's Rules basketball team journeyed to\nTacoma on the week-end of February 25th to compete\nin an intercollegiate basketball meet where, coached\nby Miss Penny, they copped top honours. Previously,\nthey played several practice games against both York\nand Crofton House, in preparation for their Tacoma\nonslaught. Their success was largely due to hard wo-1-\nof both the coach and manager Norma Guttormson.\nThe Women's Rules travelling\nbasketball team which took\ntop honours in the Intercollegiate basketball tournament\nheld in Tacoma are: Top row\n(left to right): Margaret\nLeson, Sheila Kingham, Coach\nMiss Penny, Sheila Moore, Lee\nSmith, Glenda Morris. Bottom\nrow (left to right): Barb\nSaunders, Norma McCurdy,\nNorma Guttormson, Barb Anderson, Buzz Ortengren, Julie\nCulaus.\n97 Victorious after another season of\nstrenuous inter-city league play, the\nVarsity senior team pauses for a\nbreather during their regular Saturday practice. Top row (left to right):\nCoach Miss Trevis, Elma Gavin, Eleanor Yates, Berta Whittle, Greta\nJones, Sheila Moore, Betty Best, and\nJoan Buker. Front (left to right):\nJoan Orton, Charlotte Warren, Elizabeth   Dean,   and   Colleen   Kelly.\nWomen's Grass Hockey\nGRASS HOCKEY on the campus thrived under the\npeppy and enthusastic coaching of Miss Alice\nTrevis. Both teams showed their improvement as Varsity topped the Vancouver League and U.B.C. placed\nwell up.\nIn November the teams showed their endurance as\nwell as their ability when teams from the Northwestern\nUnited States came to Vancouver to play in the Pacific\nNorth-west Grass Hockey Conference. Playing in zero\ntemperatures did not stop the girls from winning their\ngames.   The climax of the three-day conference was\nthe banquet and dance held in Brock Hall.\nU.B.C. is proud of Berta Whittle and Betty Best\nwho were chosen to play for Canada at the International Hockey Conference in Sidney, Australia.\nSuch well-worn phrases as \"How much paper have you\ncollected\" or \"Have you sold your wax yet?\" indicate\nhow hard everyone has worked to raise funds to send\nthe All-Star team which will travel this May.\nThe Junior U.B.C team\nplaced fourth in the\nseven-team league and\nfeel that their efforts\nwere not In vain. Players are, top row (left\nto right): Dorothy de\nla Giroday, Nancy\nRoss, Jean Shepherd,\nHeather Brown, Chris\nSymons, Linda Macll-\nwaine, Pat Smith.\nBottom (left to right):\nJoanne Farmer, Ann\nWood, Bridgie MacKenzie, Marilyn Ashby,\nLucille   Rush.\n98\n\u25a0  l\/mW                                                                   mmm\"\"\"*^*^.             *                                       1\n--   %                             \\     1\n1       t      v v     <m^\\A Brand new and proud of it,\nare the U.B.C. Women's Volleyball team members. Lefl\nto right: Glenda Morris, Shirley Croswell, Louise Heal,\nJune Minette, Diane Somer*\nville, Maureen Thompson, Shirley McKelvey, Marnie Keith\nMurray,    Joan    Crocker.\nVolleyball Gains Popularity\nBOTH newly formed on campus this year are the\nVolleyball and Archery teams. Coached by Miss\nEckert, Volleyball had a very successful season\u2014by\ntaking part in two Play-Days with teams from Victoria\nCollege, Victoria Normal, and Vancouver Normal, in\nwhich they placed second. Manager was Chris Symons.\nThe Archery team, because of their late organization date, was not able to compete in the cross-\nCanada Telegraphic meets between universities. However, next year, under the guidance of coach Miss\nTrevis, U.B.C. will be able to enter a strong team,\nheaded by high scorers of the season, Donna Har-\nridson and Yvonne Piegle.\nArchery\nClub\nAnother bullseye Is shot during the many\nnoon-hour practices of the newly-formed\nWomen's Archery team. Here Glenda Genl-\ntleman and Joanne Johnson look on admiringly as manager Joan Crocker removes her\narrow.\n99 Top-dogs in U.B.C.\ngolf are, (left to\nright): Ron Barr, Al\nFilmer, Don Carlow,\nGordon Spare, John\nRussell. Absent, but\nstill one of the loudest barkers, is Glen\nLochart.\nGolf and Track\nMEMBERSHIP of the U.B.C. Golf Team is\ndecided by selecting the top five contestants\nin the 72-hole University Open. Winner in 1955 and\nrepeating in 1956 was John Russell.\nExhibition matches are comprised of five-man teams\ncompeting on matched play totals. Last year's team\nmembers\u2014John Russell, Max Swanson, Harold Rice,\nGordie Spare and Doug Rae, played eight exhibition\nmatches losing four to larger non-conference universities and conference competition, winning three and\ntying one.\nIn conference play a team has three members competing on a medal play basis. John Russell was unable\nto play so his place was taken by former conference\nteam member and team manager George Barnes.\nAllan Rae and Gordie Spare rounded out the threesome. Unfortunately U.B.C. lost the championship for\nthe first time in 5 years, placing third. Western\nWashington, who U.B.C. had beaten twice in exhibition matches, were the winners.\nPETER MULLINS, new track and field coach, first\ndisplayed his squad in a mile relay exhibition\nagainst the McGill Redmen. Trailing at the half-way\nmark, The Birds, composed of Allan Hale, Warner\nFredricks, Jack Maxwell, Doug Clement, overcame the\nRedmen's early lead for the victory. Main emphasis of\nthe squad however, was in cross-country competition.\nIn the Inland Empire A.A.U. meet U.B.C. made a new\nfirst in its track history, finishing in third spot ahead\nof all other Evergreen Conference squads.\nAt the annual Royal Rhodes competition U.B.C. captured the War Admiral Nelles Trophy for the first\ntime since 1951. Mainstays of the relay team were\nJack Burnett, Jim Moore, John Butterfield, Allan Hale,\nCole Harris, Peter Ocks, and Bern Barton.\nJohn Russell, U.B.C. Open champion and one of the top amateurs in B.C., displays form that won him golfing recognition.\nComing through at the finish line In record time, track stars practise\nfor forthcoming summer track meets. Volleyball Is one of the most popular\nof intramural sports. Here two P.E.\nteam-mates leap high to block a\nsmashing placement of their Aggie\nopponent.\nIntramural Activity Increasing\nINTRAMURAL sports this year, under the direction\nof Bob Hindmarck, continued their expansion. Each\nyear more and more teams participate in the various\nphases and 1956 was no exception with over 50% of\nthe student body actively participating. Teams play\nvolleyball, swimming, cross-country track, golf, badminton, skiing, ping-pong, boxing, touch football, track\nand soccer.\nSoccer this year was cancelled because of the soggy\ncondition of the playing field, but all other games went\noff as scheduled. Newest addition to the intramural\nprogramme (besides Bod Hindmarck) is touch football. As usual the fraternities dominated the team\nstandings but each year the undergraduate teams become stronger and fraternity supremacy may soon be\nat an end.\nINTRAMURAL STANDINGS\n>-\not\nr-\n_i\n_i\n<\nID\nz\nZ\no\nz\nID\nZ\ngo\n2\no\nl\/l\nz\nID\no\na.\nID\n2\n_J\nTeam\n_i\n_i\n2\n1\/1\no\nU-\n-1\nZ\n0\nX\ni<\n0\na\nac\nO\n<\n52\nZ\nO\n5\n>\nin\no\n(D\nm\ni\/>\na.\nm\n\\-\n1.   Beta\n48\n34\n25\n17\n0\n20\n6\n0\n150\n2.   P.E.\n22\n26\n25\nII\n0\n25\n0\n15\n124\n3.   D.U.\n20\n10\n15\n13\n5\n15\n0\n34\n118\n4.   Phi Delta\n20\n12\nII\n33\n8\n17\n8\n0\n109\n5.   Forestry\n20\n18\nII\n0\n5\n13\n8\n15\n97\n6.   Fort Camp\n18\n19\n20\n0\n6\n0\n24\n8\n95\n7.   Engineering\n22\n10\n0\n25\n12\n0\n10\n0\n79\n8.   Alpha Delta\n12\nII\n5\n20\n8\nII\n0\n0\n75\n9.  Zeta Psi\n16\n18\n7\n5\n7\n9\n7\n0\n65\n10.   Fiji\n14\n10\n13\n0\n9\n0\n10\n6\n62\nAggies again capture the spotlight. In\nthe semi-final game against Phys. Ed.\nPhys. Ed. won but lost to the Betas\nin the final.\n101 The success of the Women's\nIntramural Competitions\nwas due to these 22 hardworking team managers\nwho, under the able guidance of Miss Pat Montgomery, organized all the\nintramural activity for the\nyear.\nWomen's Intramural.\nTHE purpose of the Intramural programme this\nyear was to promote women's athletic competition\nwithin campus groups. Under the guidance of Pat\nMontgomery and the organization of the Intramural\nmanagers, participation increased greatly over that\nof last season.\nThe women were organized into teams representing\nfaculty, ex-high and residence groups, plus 15 clubs\nunder the A.M.S. Competition began late in the fall\nand continued through to March.\nGrass  hockey,  tennis,  volley-ball,   basketball,   bad\nminton, bowling and archery enthusiasts strove to\npile up the points for their particular club, in order\nto capture the impressive Intramural Sports Cup.\nIndividual points were given, which counted towards\nsports crests awarded to outstanding participants.\nAlpha Gamma Delta took top honors in all of the\nMen's Rules Basketball, Badminton singles and doubles,\nwith Alpha Delta Pi coming in a close second in both\nArchery and Bowling. The Delta Gamma team won\nthe women's rules Basketball competitions in three\nstraight games.\nGrass hockey, another new\nattraction to Women's Intramurals, proved to be a popular sport, as illustrated by the\nintent looks of the participants   pictured   here.\n102  .W1\nHUft\n:*,:\u25a0\njjl7 ^v?   *\u25a0\nV\"\u00bb7\u00ab.'\n?-\"j'sv    ,-\n11*   i :>\n\u00ab**-*.--\n'\u00a3;- \u00a3~;*\n-^J^   v   \/'\nt%\u00a3T?.* N\"*f:\nflr.\n7   'i^:-._\"3\n'\u2022* i:\u00a3\u00a325\u00a3\u00a3&&^\nt*^'V-jaS\n\u2022s^J*e-%Fz\nS\u00bbj3v\u00a35-;\u00a3'~\nPW Guiding the numerous clubs\non campus was the fob of\nthe Committee Executive\u2014\nEd Frazer, Darrell Anderson, Dick Rio pel who stand\nbehind the president, Al\nThackery.\nu. c. c.\nIT might not be fair to say that the University Clubs\ncommittee of the past school year was exactly\nrevolutionary, but it was certainly different. The Committee Executive, composed of Dick Riopel, Brenda\nFlinn, Ed Frazer and Darrell Anderson, left politics to\nthe politicians and concentrated on guiding the clubs\nthrough their myriad of problems.\nA new budgetary system was instituted in which\n25% of the total club's budget was retained in a\nreserve account. This allowed active clubs with a\nfinancial shortage to call upon the account when the\nneed arose. Those clubs which were not maintaining\nan active and constructive program were therefore\nrestricted in their A.M.S. grant. The club's committee\nalso enforced the eligibility rules, and thus many clubs\nwere forced to elect new executives during the midterm.\nThe two large projects which the club's committee\ndirectly sponsored were both unparalleled successes.\nThe Club's Day sponsored in the Armouries in September attracted thousands of students and resulted\nin a record club enrolment. The Honorary Club's\nSociety Banquet was held in March and Honorary\nClub Society Pins were bestowed upon six worthy\nmembers of the Alma Mater Society by the Honourary\nPresident, Professor Stanley Read.\nJohn Bossons\nJohn Ridington\n106 U.C.C. Awards\nSIX students and one  professor  received the coveted  honorary\nClub's Society gold pins for outstanding contributions to U.B.C.\nThe  pins,  presented at the annual  University Clubs'  Committee\nBanquet, were awarded to Dr. M. Steinberg for his work in organizing\nthe   Shaw   festival,   John   Bossons,   Al   Forrest,   Wally   Lightbody,\nHavelock Rolfe, Campbell Robinson and John Ridington.\nJOHN BOSSONS\nJohn Bossons, Arts 4, won as President of both the Economics\nand the United Nations Clubs. As well as this he has participated\non numerous committees.\nAL FORREST\nAl Forrest, Arts 3, gained recognition as editor of the \"Social\nChallenger\" and also through his membership and work with the\nC.C.F. and Civil Liberties Union Clubs.\nHAVELOCK ROLFE\nHavelock Rolfe, Commerce 3, won an award after 5 years' executive work with the Music Society. He has contributed much to the\nsuccess of Mussoc shows.\nCAMPBELL ROBINSON\nCampbell Robinson, Applied Science 3, won an award for his\nwork in the Radio Society. He was successful in originating the\nU.B.C. Digest with Radsoc.\nJOHN RIDINGTON\nJohn Ridington, Commerce 4, member of Mamooks and V.O.C.\nplaced as a winner through his five years' activity with the two clubs.\nWALLY LIGHTBODY\nWally Lightbody, Arts 4, has made his greatest contribution in\nJazzsoc. He organized and now leads a 16-piece band and has been\nactive in all club activities.\nsf x.\nWally Lightbody\nHavelock Rolfe\nCampbell Robinson\n107\nAl Forrest Pep Club\nTHE main purpose of this club has been to promote\nstudent spirit and during the '55-'56 term this\npurpose was successfully carried out.\nA highlight of the club's activities was the two-hour\nHomecoming Meet in which only campus talent was\nused. This included Frank Gnup and his team, the\nGlee Club, the Cheer Leaders, and Delamont's and\nLightbody's bands. Also featured was the blue and\ngold card display that Gary Anderson and Pat Hewson\ncarefully prepared for the Homecoming game.\nThe float entry for the Grey Cup parade, designed\nby Ron Howard and assembled by Pete Fraser and his\ncommittee, gained recognition for U.B.C.\nDon Jabour, president of the club, was aided by a\nvery capable executive. June Nylander was secretary\nwith Bugs Thompson arranging for publicity. The well\norganized Pep meets were under the direction of Phil\nGreenberg. The cheer leaders were directed by Mo\nMcNeil, and the drum majorettes made a successful\nreturn to the campus under Charlotte Eyres. The large\nsale of booster buttons, beanies and scarves were the\nresult of the hard work of Merrill Leckie. The lively\nhalf-time entertainment for all football and basketball\ngames was arranged by John Butterfield.\nTalking over the future plans of the\nPep Club during registration are\nthese three pretty members. They are,\nleft to right: June Nylander, Pat Hewson and Joan Gray.\nShowing pretty legs and dazzling\nsmiles, the cheerleaders line up to\ngive us an idea of the enthusiastic\nsupport they gave the U.B.C Thunderbirds this season. They are, left\nto right: Joan McRae, Mo McNeill,\nLorraine Matson, Ann-Louise Ritchie,\nBugs Thompson, Pam McLean, Patti\nWilks and  Barb  Leith.\nPreparing not only their stance but\nalso their smiles for the lucky photographer are these U.B.C. Maior-\nettes. They are, left to right: Charlotte Eyres, Ann Gordon, Maureen\nGregory, Avis Fichtner, Barbara Viel,\nSharon Wright, Barbara Benables,\nJuanita  James  and  Jackie  Moore.\n108 Mamooks\nMAMOOKS started the year by giving classes in\nlayouts, colouring and lettering to all interested members and also to several representatives ot\nother clubs on the campus.\nAs a result of a statement by Mrs. Newberger, wife\nof the American Senator, that all Canadian women\nare rumpsprung, a survey for the vindication of Canadian women was carried out by members Gerry\nHodge, Ernie Ledgerwood and Bill Laughton. The\nresults, as revealed in the U.B.C, proved that the\nCanadian women definitely are not rumpsprung.\nMamooks also, in an effort to point out the lack of\nstudent interest in elections, sponsored the Tiki\nGraham campaign for U.C.C., in which Tiki, a dog,\nwon over 400 votes from unsuspecting U.B.C. students.\nJohn Ridington, president of this year's Mamooks,\nwon the U.C.C. award for outstanding work in this\nclub.\nThe hard working executive were: Ernie Ledger-\nwood, vice-president; Gerry Hodge, secretary-treasurer; and Dave Stewart, purchasing agent.\nExamining closely the finished Mardi Gras\nposter are Mamook members, left to right:\nJohn Ridington (President), Dave Stewart and\nErnie Ledgerwood.\nNorma Alpen, Dave Stewart and Dave Pears take a momentary break\nfrom their work. During the year, Mamooks posters were a major\nfactor in the successful publicizing of events.\nSmiling faces of Marna Alpen, Gerry Hodge,\nand Betty-Ann (Bugs) Thompson put the flnai\ntouches on the posters for the oncoming tennis\ndance. \u25a0m*\ns\n\u2022*\ni\n'3$'              flR\n.*    4.\ni\nQ      % 1\nIt     *\nm tf 9.\nMembers of the Glee Club\npose with director Harry Pryce,\nHelping to organize this year's\nclub was president, Bruce\nSommer.\nMussoi\nMUSSOC'S twenty-seventh year on campus was\none of the most successful in the group's history, with new highs in membership and activity.\nAnnual spring production was the tuneful \"Maid of\nthe Mountain\" by Harold Fraser-Simson, Frederick\nLonsdale and Harry Graham.\nMusical and dramatic directors were TUTS' Harry\nPryce and CBU's James Johnston. Grace Macdonald\nof the B.C. School of Dancing trained the dancers.\nThe Glee Club, under Mr. Pryce, produced its first\nindependent Christmas Concert in many years, gave\nTrying to escape from Devils Island is\nTonio (Jerry Lecovin) while guards Barry\nDryvynsyde (left) and Ken Mahon (right)\nhold him back. Scene is from Mussoc's\nproduction  \"Maid of the Mountains\".\nSinging \"A Bachelor Gay\" with the girls'\nchorus  is John  Northy.\nno Appearing on the stage is the\nwhole cast of \"The Maid of the\nMountains\". Director Harry Pryce\nstands with the orchestra.\nPresents ...\na  spring  concert  and   made  various   recordings   for\nRadsoc's UBC Digest.\nSocial events included the Fall Banquet, the Fall\nFormal, occassional informal parties and the \"Maid's\"\nProduction Party.\nStew Paul was president and production manager\nof the Club; Barney O'Brien vice-president; Joy Daly\nsecretary; Barry Dryvynsyde, business manager; Have-\nlock Rolfe, advertising manager; Bruce Sommer, Glee\nClub president; Betty Clarke, executive advisor.\nGiving the eye to a  pretty peasant girl\nis Bob Clarke.\nWorking hard are backstage crew (left\nto right): Neil (Redbird) Fennell, Joy\nDaly, and Ken Wilson.\n77\/ The maid   (Marlon  Poggemiller)   presents a firm front to husband  (Walter Shynkaryk),  a  liberal-minded  drunk.\nPlayers Presen\nIN traditional manner, U.B.C. thespians swung into\naction at the beginning of first term with the\nproduction of Eric Nicol's \"Her Scienceman Lover.\"\nThis play is done annually with the express purpose\nof opening Freshman eyes to the evils and pitfalls\nof university life.\nUnder the active leadership of John Maynard,\npresident, Roger Mossop, Sharon Scadding and\nWalter Shynkaryk, the U.B.C. players then proceeded\nwith a round of activities making 1955-56 an exceptional year in the club's annals.\nFirst history-making venture was the cancellation\nof the customary fall one-act plays in favour of\ncollaboration with the English Department and the\nUniversity Workshop in the production of Shaw's\n\"Back to Methuselah.\" This colossal undertaking\nevolved into a \"smashing success,\" the play being\nthe highlight of the Shaw Centennial Festival held\nduring the third week in January.\nAssembled together for a curtain call are members of \"Papa Juan\" cast.\neeaejejl\nLovers Joanne Johnston and John  Maunsell stea Three Productions\nOther presentations which offered club members\nvaluable experience in all phases of theatre included\na reading of Earle Birney's \"Damnation of Vancouver\";\na noon-hour showing of \"Hands Across the Sea,\"\nand another noon-hour production, Moliere's \"Sgar-\nnelle,\" directed  by club member,  Peter Brockington.\nHighlight of second term activities was the delightful comedy \"A Hundred Years Old.\" Ably\ndirected by Sam Payne, and starring David Hughes,\nthe cast brought alive this warm-hearted story of\nwhat can befall when an entire family is brought together for the patriarch's one-hundredth birthday.\nDuring the month of May, this play will be taken\non an extensive tour of both British Columbia and\nthe State of Washington.\nFamily group pose with Papa Juan on his 100th birthday party.\nThey are, Howard Johnson, Lee MacKenzie, Dave Hughes and\nDanica D'Hondt.\nTaking time off from their work to have pictures taken are members of backstage crew. They\nare (left to right): Ian Currie, Gareth Shearman, Arthur Johnson, Mike Matthews, John Von\nBuckenhout  and  Nigel Turner.\nment  together while  grandfather Juan  sleeps Discussing the club's weekly radio programmes are members of\nRadsoc executive. They are, back row (left to right): John Greening,\nprogramme manager, and Bill Balletine, production director. Front\nrow: Campbell Robinson, business manager; Ruth Hogan, secretary,\nand  Don  Fraser,  president.\nTHE  Radio  and Television  Society,  or  Radsoc,   is\nWestern Canada's only university training ground\nfor radio personnel.\nOperating from its up-to-date studios in the south\nBrock basement, the group supplies 18 hours of programming weekly over the Campus network, produces\na 15-minute show \"UBC Digest\" every Saturday for\n13 B.C. radio stations and compiles a TV film for\nKVOS-TV spotlighting the term on the campus. All\nare part of the year's work.\nURS serves UBC directly by publicizing noon hour\nmeetings with the sound car, and negotiating for\ntime and placing spots on local radio stations for such\nevents as Homecoming and the Mardi Gras. It also\nco-operates with CKWX in airing the 'Birds home\nfootball games while URS-TV aids CBUT-TV in telecasting the 'Birds basketball contests.\nDon Fraser is president of the organization with\nCampbell Robinson business manager, Bill Ballentine\nproduction manager, John Greening programme manager and Gary Zivot administrating engineer.\nRadsoc was recognized by CKNW this spring when\nthey asked Radsoc to staff and run the CKNW\nstation for three weeks in July while their staff take\ntheir holidays.\nRadsoc\nExplaining carefully the operation of Television to Bob Bergen is\nJohn Greening. Emanuel Constaninidis also concentrates on this\nsubject.\n114 START of the U.B.C. Ham Radio Club actually\nbegan in May, 1955 when Student's Council approved a loan of $250 to the club. With this loan\nthe club purchased a 180-watt transmitter kit, which\nwas assembled during the summer by president Ed\nFrazer (VE7AG) in time for use on Club Day.\nThe club experienced its most successful Club Day\nin recent years, signing over 35 members.\nThe club was completely reorganized this year. The\nold name, \"U.B.C. Amateur Radio Operator's Association\", was changed to the \"U.B.C. Ham Radio\nSociety\", nicknamed \"Hamsoc\".\nSeveral members, led by technical officer Bob Mills\n(VE7AQM) were active in experimenting with electronic apparatus and different types of transmitting\nantennas. Contact was made with over 50 countries,\nincluding Russia and other Iron Curtain countries.\nDuring the year Hamsoc also provided communications service during the North Shore floods in November; sent messages for students to almost any par-1-\nof the world; organized a \"University Ham-Radic\nNet\" in which most western Canara and U.S. universities met regularly \"over the air.\"\nBill Katarius was treasurer and Earl Lind (VE6GC)\nsecretary of the club. Other executive members were:\nDon Johnson (VE7KV), Al Goodacre (VE7AIZ), Dave\nHeaslip (VE7AOH), John MacDonald, Jim Smith\n(VE7FO) and Nigel Turner.\nExamining closely their equipment are Hamsoc executive (left to\nright): Bill Katarius, Treasurer; Earl Lind, Secretary; Ed Fraser,\nPresident;  and  Al   Goodacre,   special   events  officer.\nHamsoc\nExperimenting with electronic equipment is Bob Mills, technical\nofficer; while other members of Hamsoc look on intently. They are\nstanding (left to right): Ed Frazer, Dave Heaslip, Nigel Turner and\nJim  Smith.    Seated   (left to  right):   Bob   Mills,   Bill   Katarius.\nJHJut WJrur\nW2WXrV3GHD\nWJTL8'\n115 Hardwork Jazz Society executives are,\nstanding (left to right): Roy Hornosty,\nDave McMillan and Jack Reynolds.\nSitting: Eleanor Toren, Wally Light-\nbody and Ann Kemp. Wally Light-\nbody, club's president, planned and\ncarried through big year for Jan-\nsoccers.\nJazzsoc Jumps and Jives\nOVER the past four years the Jazz Society has\ngrown to a membership of two hundred and\nsixty. Today it takes its place as one of the top four\nclubs on campus.\nFormed with the purpose of educating students t->\na further appreciation of jazz, the Jazz Society this\nyear presented a series of lectures covering the history of jazz music from its birth in New Orleans,\nthrough all its radical changes, up to the period of\ntoday.   These   lectures   were   supplemented   with   a\nseries of ten concerts by Vancouver musicians demonstrating the different forms of jazz.\nThis year in addition to the small group of progressive musicians who played together in the past, the\nJazz Society sponsored a sixteen piece dance band.\nLed by president Wally Lightbody, and backed with\nthe solid support of veteran musicians Roy Hornest,\nJack Reynolds, Amy Emery, Ted Golf, and Jim Carney, the band played for many campus dances as\nwell as presenting a concert to a packed audience in\nthe auditorium. Also working with the band was a\nvocal group, the Four Squares and singer Denny\nHamilton.\nPerforming at Jazz<oc's fall concert in the Brock Hall is versatile  singer,  Ken   Hamilton.\n\"Jazzsocers\"   entertain   the   fans  at   one  of   their   many   jam   sessions, Executive members of dance club are\n(left to right): Marion Thompson,\nDave Sproule, Chris Heath, Don\nMorris (pre-ident), Kay Piro Carl\nAnderson, Jim Morgan, Fred Johann*\nson   and   Norm  Leggatt.\nDance Club Swings and Sways\nWITH 480 members, the Dance Club is the\nlargest club on the campus. Its main purpose\nis to promote interest in all phases of dancing and\nto provide a medium through which those seriously\ninterested in dancing may pursue that interest in a\nsection for advanced work, such as demonstration or\ninstruction.\nThe club is divided into two sections: Ballroom and\nSquare Dancing.\nIn the ballroom section, professional instruction is\ngiven to the members of the Instructors' group by\nMr. Vincent of the Vincent-Visini Dance Studio. Ths\ninstructors, in turn, provide instruction to the genera!\nmembership  in  noon-hour sessions.\nThe square dance section is instructed by members\nwho have made a study of square dancing and calling. This section has done many charity demonstrations throughout the year and are training for this\nyear's competition with hope of bringing the cup\nback to U.B.C.\nDuring the year the Dance Club sponsored two\ndances, one in November\u2014\"The Harvest Semi-\nFormal\", and one in February\u2014\"A Young Man's\nFancy\". Due to lack of experienced members, the\nannual spring show was not produced.\n\"Dance  with  me,   Henry!\"   Demonstrating  the  mambo  are  dance  club\nmembers,   Marion   Nastich   and   Ken  Wilson.\n\"Hey Ma, look at\nme!\" Dancing the\nCharleston are\nKathy McDowell and\nNorman Leggatt. Film Society\nUnder the  guidance of  President  George  Pearson,   members of\nFilmsoc  work  hard  at taking  movies.\nTHIS year marked the tenth year of continuous\noperation for the Film Society. Variety was again\nparamount in their program of feature presentations\nwhich included \"Hamlet\", \"The Snake Pit\", \"The\nDesert Fox\", \"On the Waterfront\", \"Julius Caesar\",\nand \"Seven Deadly Sins\".\nA week-long series of World War II propaganda\nfilms produced by the U. S. State Department were\nalso shown again this year. Both this series and the\nTuesday noon-hour series of Magoo and Chaplin films\nplayed to overflow audiences.\nClimaxing the year's social events was the entertaining spring banquet. Skits and dancing followed\nthe smorgasbord dinner.\nFilmsoc trains its own members who are led by\nGeorge Pearson, president, and his executive, Tony\nChapman, Bill McAllister, Ann Day, Mark Underhill\nand Karen Sperrings. Its services included filming of\nthe Thunderbird football games, campus newsreels (the\nfirst of which was on Homecoming), and, in co-operation with the Audio Visual Services, a complete projection service on and off the campus.\nPointing to the signs\nwhich advertised the\nshows that were presented by Filmsoc this\nyear is Rick Murray.\nStanding next to him\nare: Ann Day, Larry\nChapman, George Pear- \u2022\nson (kneeling), Bill McAllister, Gordon Ysbister,\nCarol Chambers and\nBrian   Ysbister.\n118 Under Pres. Sally Robertson (centre) Phrateres\nheld a successful year\non Campus. Other executive members are\nstanding (left to right):\nSharon Wright, Esther\nMarion, Ann Geddes,\nCarole Dunsmuir and\nJeannette Glover. Sitting (left to right):\nJoan Mclvor, Pat Warren, Astor Mukai, Sally\nRobertson, Arlene Dill,\nMarilyn Robson, Peggy\nGladman and Joyce\nThrower (incoming President).\nPhrateres\nTHETA Chapter of Phrateres international at U.B.C.\nis an organization open to any woman on campus\nwho sincerely wants to promote friendship among\nstudents on campus and to help in social services.\nPresident this year was Sally Robertson; Vice-president, Joyce Thrower, and Sub-chapter Chairman Aster\nMukai.\nTheta  Chapter is divided  into seven  sub-chapters\neach of which has its own executive and plans its own\nactivities. These activities include potluck dinners,\ncard parties and social and service projects.\nThe highlights of the Phrateres year were the Fall\nFormal \"Ticket to Adventure\" and the Spring Formal\n\"Colour Crazy\" in January. Phratereans were also\nactive in service projects this year\u2014serving at teas,\nselling ice cream bars, rolling bandages and making\nrag dolls.\nWith money raised during the year a scholarship of\n$100 is awarded each year to a woman entering\nU.B.C. for the first time.\nCamera Club\nWITH a membership of over sixty, the Camera\nClub proved very active on campus. The club\nthis year instigated a comprehensive program including a series of weekly lectures by downtown professionals.\nThe spring term witnessed much activity in connection  with  the  Ben   Hill-Tout  Memorial   Prize  contest,\nwhich ended with an exhibition of the entries in the\nLibrary Art Gallery.\nA portrait session was very popular and resulted in\nan almost record turnout of the club members.\nFor the coming year the outlook is excellent with\nnew and adequate accommodation promised in the\nBrock Extension, and an opportunity to set up a\nproper darkroom and studio which the club now lacks.\nThe hard-working executive were: Earle Hindley,\npresident; Robin Brammall, secretary-treasurer; and\nGus Kroll, publicity manager.\nAir of concentration cover the\nfaces of the members of the\nCamera Club as they photograph   model,   Julia   Coulas.\n119 Discussing plans for a conference at\nReed College, Portland, are members\nof U.N. Club. Standing (left to right):\nLarry Rotenberg. Heb Hebenton, Russell Brink, Brian Hurst, Cole Harris and\nVerne Flather. Sitting: Anne Skelton,\nJohn Bossons (president), Evelyn Farris,\nand Margaret Mary Leeson.\nUnited Nations Club\nALONG with the rest of the world UBC celebrated the tenth  anniversary of the founding  of\nthe United Nations last October.\nSpeaking   at   U.N.   Model   Assembly   is\nRussian delegate, Jack Giles.\nAt UBC the U.N. Club held a flag-raising ceremony\non the main Mall, conducted a panel discussion on\nthe tense Arab-Israeli issue and held a model U.N.\nAssembly. The discussion on the Arab-Israeli crisis was\nbroadcast across Canada. The model U.N. Assembly\npassed a motion censuring France for her colonial\npolicy in North Africa.\nLater 10 delegates were sent to the weekend conference on the Middle East at Reed College in\nPortland.\nPresident of the U.N. Club was John Bossons, who\nwas a delegate to the World University Service\nseminar in Japan.\nPeter Krosby was vice-president, Joan Irvine, secretary, Evelyn Farris, treasurer. Cole Harris was in\ncharge of programs, Heb Hebenton, Larry Rotenberg,\nAnne Skelton and Russel Brink, special events; Margaret Mary Leeson, magazine editor and Brian Hurst,\npublicity.\nDelegates  from   the  different  countries\nline  up for the  U.N.  Model  Assembly.\nI       \"    I Preparing plans for a forthcoming debate are executive members of Parliamentary Forum. They are\n(left to right): Dave Harder, Laurie Bra ha n (president), Phil Govan, Bill\nMarchak, and Terry O'Brien.\nParliamentary Forum\nAS in past year the principle aim of the Parliamentary Forum has been to foster an interest\nin public speaking, debating and political activities.\nThe past year has been a great success.\nThe Public Speaking Group was busy and very\nsuccessful in its endeavours. They twice defeated\ndebating teams from the Inter-City Debating League.\nThe Debating Group, consisting of senior speakers,\nwas organized on a new system this year. Early in the\nyear trials were held for the McGoun Cup teams and\nLiberal Club\nWITH a large membership and a hard working\nexecutive the Liberal Club carried out an\nambitious and successful program during the year\nBesides the normal activities of participating in Mock\nParliaments and sponsoring public meetings, the Liberals conducted a vigorous and colorful Mock Parliament election campaign.\nNotable  speakers  appearing   on  the campus  wera\nsixteen speakers selected. This group was nurtured\nin all the arts of debating by faculty advisors.\nThe Debating Group has been busy promoting\ndebates between the faculty and students, with enjoyment for all.\nDebates for the coveted Legion Cup were held in\nTacoma, Wash. This year also saw some lively Mock\nParliament sessions, with political groups under the\nguiding hand of the Parliamentary Forum Steering\nCommittee presenting some lively and informative\nround-table discussions.\nProvincial Liberal Leader Arthur Laing, the Hon. R. O.\nCampney, Minister of National Defence, and Elmore\nPhilpott, well-known newspaper columnist and M.P.\nfor Vancouver South.\nConsiderable time was spent in dealing with resolutions for the November convention of the Young\nLiberal Association of B.C. held at Pinewood Lodge,\nthe February convention of the Canadian University\nLiberal Federation at Ottawa, and the Senior Liberal\nAssociation convention in Vancouver. U.B.C. Liberals\nwere represented at both the Pinewoods and Ottawa\nconventions.\nMembers of Liberal Club discussing\nparty's role in politics are (standing):\nisy Wolfe, Joe Erickson, Malcolm\nAnderson, Ed Greathed, Clem Lambert and Ken Mackenzie. (Sitting):\nSallye Delbridge, Derek Mason, Darrell Anderson (president), and Donna\nRunnels. Liberal Club this year were\nwinners  of  the   Mock  Parliament.\n121 C.C.F. executive discuss party\npolicy. From left are: Don\nBlacklock, Paddy Henderson,\nBill Marchak (President) and\nDon Allison.\nVs* \u2022 v\u00bb# \u2022\u25a0   \u2022\nTHE Campus CCF Club activities included discussion groups, political speeches, a club paper\nand Mock Parliament.\nProminent political figures invited to the campus\nincluded Arnold Webster, leader of the opposition in\nthe provincial house and Angus Maclnnes, M.P. Mr.\nWebster called for increased government use of the\ntalents and skills possessed by university students to\ninsure better government.\nIn  the  Mock  Parliament,  the  CCF  proposed  that\nthe trans-Canada gas pipeline be built as a federal\nproject. The bill was defeated on the grounds that\nprivate interest had already laid extensive plans and\nwould soon begin construction. Another CCF demand\nwas expressed by a bill to recognize the Communist\nGovernment in China but was presented by another\ncampus political party.\nThe club paper, The Social Challenger, has reflected critical student thought on Social Credit tactics and Liberal grain and immigration policies.\nSocial Credit\nTHE SOCIAL CREDIT CLUB on campus this year\nwas made up of 15 members. The enthusiastic\nexecutive consisted of Mel Smith (president), Gerry\nGoeujon,   Howard   Johnston   and   Mike   Audain.\nActivities of the club included Mock Parliament\nparticipation, guest speakers and study groups. The\nnational leader, Solon Low, spoke to a general meeting of students. Other speakers for the year included\nthe Hon. P. A. Gaglardi, provincial minister of highways and also the Hon. Roy Williston, minister of\neducation. Several group discussions on Social Credit\npolicy were also held and attended by Noel Murphy,\nprovincial organizer.\nThe most important event of the year was the\nannual trip to the Legislature which was made on\nFebruary 27th.\nThe increase in interest in Social Credit on the\ncampus was exemplified by the outcome of the official\nMock Parliament election. Social Credit increased its\npopular vote over last year by almost 100% thus\nmaking them the official opposition.\nHeavy gains were made by Socreds\nin Mock Parliament elections. Leader\nof campus party, Mel Smith (center),\nis shown here surrounded by members\nof party. Sitting, left to right: Howard Johnston, Mel Smith and Gerry\nGoeuion. Standing, left to right:\nGeorge McRae, Bob Merriam, John\nChalk, Archie Shafonsky, Mike\nAudain, Vic Neufelolt, and Mike\nGilgan.\n122 Contemplating possible provincial\nelections are members of Conservative party. They are, left to right:\nVic Allen, Dick Mcintosh, Phil Govan\nand Terry O'Brien.\nConservatives\nTHE Conservative Club began the year auspiciously\nwith a public meeting in the Auditorium for the\nNational Leader, The Hon. George Drew. Two days\nlater on Club Day the popularity of the club was\ndemonstrated with the largest registration of any\npolitical group on campus.\nMany speakers were presented during the year.\nThey included, besides the Hon. Mr. Drew, George\nHess, MP, the National President, John Hamilton, MP,\nMaj.-Gen. G. R. Pearkes, V.C., MP, Deane Finlayson,\nprovincial leader of the Party, and Douglas Jung, de\nfeated   Conservative   candidate   in   the   Vancouver\nCentre by-election.\nAn active part was taken in the Mock Parliament\nduring the year. In October the club sponsored a\nbill to remove the regulatory powers from the CBC.\nIt was narrowly defeated by a Liberal-CCF Coalition.\nThe year ended with a very successful showing in\nthe elections for the Representative Mock Parliament\nin which the Conservatives formed the official opposition.\nLP.P.\nTHE question of United States control of Canada':\nnatural resources and the need for developing\nCanadian industry was brought to the fore in a series\nof public meetings sponsored by the L.P.P.\nProposals for processing more of our forest products\nin B. C, developing public-owned hydro-power on a\nlarge scale, protecting the salmon industry, and building a steel mill in B. C. were made by prominent\nCommunist spokesmen, including Nigel Morgan, L.P.P.\nprovincial leader.\nRowdyism again marked the meeting for Tim Buck,\nnational L.P.P. leader. Both faculty and student\nleaders sharply condemned those responsible for the\ntrouble. Student Court was also called in to deal\nwith some of the offenders.\nOther features of the club's work included a series\nof classes on the principles of Marxism, and publication of the popular bulletin \"The Party Line.\"\nDespite an attempt by Tory chief Phil Govan to\nhave the L.P.P. excluded from Mock Parliament, the\nclub emerged from the elections with 157 votes and\ntwo seats in the House.\nLeaders of campus Labour\nProgressive party are, left to\nright: Keith Hollands, Jim\nMacFarlan  and  John   Hogarth.\n123 Rey Dell Torres, the famous\nbanjo player, entertained the\nstudents at one of the many\nnoon-hour shows sponsored by\n(he Special Events Committee.\nStephen Potter, the English\nhumourist, tickled students'\nfunnybones at one of the most\nhilarious and popular shows\nthe  committee has  sponsored.\nSpecial Events Committee\nSPECIAL Events Committee, though one of the least\npublicized, is one of the most active groups on\ncampus.\nThis committee, chaired by Gerry Hodge, and assisted by Isy Wolfe, Barb Brown, Jacquie Dinsmore,\nDave Stewart and Gerry-Lou Simpson is responsible\nfor bringing outstanding personalities in the world of\nart, letters and politics to the campus.\nIn the last two years the Special Events Committee\nhas teamed with the Faculty Fine Arts Committee to\nsponsor events.\nSEC tries to co-operate with as many campus organizations as possible in presenting its program. This\nco-operative spirit resulted in the co-sponsorship with\nthe Pre-Med Society of Brock Chisholm before an\noverflow audience in Physics 200. In co-operation with\nthe Jazz Society SEC presented the inimitable Modern\nJazz Quartet. The Music Department was assisted in\npresenting Aaron Copland and SEC contributed financially to the Shaw Festival so that Lister Sinclair could\nparticipate in the Festival.\nOther SEC organized events included the Vancouver\nSymphony, the Cassenti Players, French pianist Marie-\nAimee Warrot, English humorist-satirist Stephen Potter, classical guitarist Rey de la Torre, American\nwriter Mark Schorer, the Montana State University\nString Trio, University of Washington Readers' Workshop and Shivram, the Hindu dancer.\nThe Special Events Committee, who in conjunction\nwith Professor Binning of the Faculty Fine Arts\nCommittee presented a noon-hour showcase of outstanding events, was composed of Dave Stewart,\nPresident Gerry Hodge, Gerry Simpson, and Jackie\nDinsmore.\n124 mWL%\n1 fl J\n1 ^^^H                     ^&\nmBh         Hk^B^BMl    \u2022 \\:         v%    h\"t\n1     \u00ab\n1    |\n9                       ^ jrif\ni Ti\nr   1 n\nH                                                                                                                                                               isssf^^^ssssssssssssi sM.J^El\n_?5r ^Snigl\n^LH                                                                                                      mmmW        ^^B^H\nitJJ?**          _    \u25a0\nThe re-vitalized Civil Liberties\nUnion's members include (left\nto right), back row: Clive\nLytle, Ashe Davis, Michael\nCrawford, Rolf Knight. Front\nrow, Treasurer Don Blacklock,\nPresident Al Forrest, and\nKathy   Archibald.\nC. L. U.\nVARIETY was the keynote of the Civil  Liberties\nUnion,   which  grew this  year  into  one  of the\nlargest clubs on the campus.\nUnder president Al Forrest the club branched out\ninto a program of weekly public meetings, discussion\ngroups and special event projects. One series of\nspeakers: anti closed shop crusader Myron Kuzych,\nBoilermakers' Union president Sam Jenkins, and labor\nleader Tom Alsbury, received extensive publicity on\ncampus and in downtown newspapers.\nHighlight of the C.L.U. year was the presentation\nof the Sedgewick memorial award to Burnaby M.L.A.\nErnest E. Winch for his humanitarian work with mental\nand correctional institutions.\nForrest and Darrell Anderson sat on the A.M.S.\n\"watchdog\" discrimination committee for the C.L.U.\nand both felt fraternities and sororities were doing\ntheir part to eliminate any remaining traces of racial\nor religious discrimination.\nNATIONAL Federation of Canadian University\nStudents works to unite Canadian students\nthrough their common cultural, social and educational\ninterests.\nIn keeping with these aims the U.B.C. N.F.C.U.S.\ncommittee undertook the following projects during\n1955-56:\nImplementation of the Canadian Inter-University\nexchange scholarship plan; national cultural competitions; presentation of a series of addresses by prominent speakers; publication and presentation to students\nof the facilities and of the reduced rate for N.F.C.U.S.\nEuropean Summer Travel Plan.\nU.B.C. N.F.C.U.S. also made surveys and turned\nout publicity for the $5.5 million Federal scholarship\ncampaign; made surveys of text book prices with the\naim of obtaining reduced prices.\nChairman of the committee was Marcus Bell, with\nBrian Smith as vice-chairman and Barb Leith as secretary. Other members of the executive were: Al Forrest, Randall Jones, Ron Longstaffe, Anne Skelton,\nDonna Runnals, David Helliwell, Muriel Leblanc, Clive\nLytle, Terry White, John Williams, Sarah Pullen and\nFrances Thomas.\nN. F. C. U. S.\nN.F.C.U.S., one of the most controversial groups\non campus, includes members Marcel Tablank, Terry\nWhite, Clive Lytle, President Marcus Bell, John\nWilliams, Randall Jones, back row, and in front\nDonna Runnels, Ann Skelton, Sarah Pullen and Barb\nLeith.\n725 International House executives are (left to right): Elmer Hara, Gordon\nMonro, and Michail Schaedele; Sitting (left to right): Judy Leckie,\nJacob   Lunder,   Elv!   Walk,   and   Fred   Van   Andel.\nI.H.A.\nTHIS year International House enjoyed a membership of 300 members. Half of this number were\nCanadians, the rest being attributed to over thirty\ndifferent nationalities.\nOne of the main features of the club was the holding, every Friday evening, of a two-hour program at\nwhich discussions and slides were featured. This was\nfollowed by refreshments and dancing.\nThe members also sponsored a tea for all foreign\nstudents and organized a Christmas party. In addition\na semi-formal dance was held in both terms. The highlight of the year was the fifth annual International Ball,\n\"Antiks in Athens\".\nThe club is enthusiastically looking forward to the\nestablishment of an International House similar to\nthose in New York, Berkeley, and elsewhere. This has\nbeen made possible through the support of the Vancouver Rotary Club and building is expected to begin\nwithin the next year.\nTHE W.U.S. got off to a flying start under the\nchairmanship of Hans Peter Krosby. The first of\nthe year's achievements took place when a resolution\nasking for a re-allocation of the $1.00 student levy\nfrom a scholarship program only, to a split between\nscholarships and the W.U.S. International Program of\nAction, was given support at the general meeting. As\na result, $1,500 was sent to aid the University community in Pakistan.\nScholarships made possible the coming of six\nstudents from five countries, while four U.B.C. students\nwere granted scholarships to foreign universities.\nW.U.S.\nFebruary was marked by the sponsorship of the\nTreasure Van where handicrafts from all over the globe\nwere sold.\nTaking part in the work of the committee this year\nwere Professors Margaret Ormsby, T. E. Hull, B.\nBrainerd and R. Farquharson, and student members\nFlora MacLeod, Corinne Robertshaw, Marguerite\nWiebe, Ed Grebski, John Bossons, Alfred Siemens and\nRay Paris. The foreign exchange students also greatly\naided the committee in their work.\nTalking over plans to thwart council\nmoves to cut scholarship programme\nare, members of W.U.S. Standing\n(left to right): Randall Jones,\nMashud, John Bossons. Bud Farquharson, and Ed Grebski. Sitting (left\nlo right): Joan Irvine, Flora MacLeod,\nTama Yagai, Peter Krosby and Margaret   Ormsby.\n126 Members of Indian Club pose with their honorary patron,\nDr. W. Black. Standing (left to right): Darshaw S. Johal,\nand Bollier S. Johal. Sitting (left right): Kesar S. Bhatti,\nand   Gurdev  S. Jhooty.\nIndian\nStudents\nTHIS year the main activities of the club included\ncommemorating Indian Republic Day, sponsoring\nwell known speakers showing films, and holding evening\ngatherings.\nA highlight of the year was the Indian Republic\nDay banquet, to which eminent figures from the\neducational, business and political world were invited\nas guests of honour. The evening entertainment included Indian songs and Ukrainian, Polish and Indian\ndances.\nTHE purpose of the Chinese Varsity Club\u2014to\npromote inter-racial friendships\u2014is carried out\nby a varied social and cultural program.\nSocially the aim this year was well fulfilled by the\nplanning of the Social Convenors Lily Dong and Hoy\nYip. The calendar included such events as the Frosh\nInitiation, Basketball Dance, Bridge Contest, Skating\nParty, Matric Social and Post Exam Party. A dual\nfunction, held in co-operation with the Nesei Club,\nalso proved successful.\nSportswise the club was represented by Shirley\nChong and Yat Yip, who submitted reports from the\nChinese\nVarsity\nChins-e students gather together outside their hut to have\ntheir photo snapped. Back row (left to right): Roland Chu.\nYat Yip, Hoy Yip, Bill Lee, Yesh Kamashi. Front row: Alice\nGee,  Shirley  Chong,   Bill  Con,   Bev Chin,   Phyllis  Lum.\nSeveral evening gatherings were held throughout\nthe year at which documentary films were shown,\nIndian songs sung and speeches given. Later on in\nFebruary a full length Indian film \"Meenar\" was shown\non the campus.\nThe executive this year were: Dr. Black, honorary\nchairman; Darshan S. Johal, president; Gurdev S.\nJhooty, vice-president; Balrir S. Johal, secretary; and\nKesar S. Bhatti, public relations officer.\nintramural   meetings   and   who   organized   the   teams\nwhich played in the intramurals.\nOn the cultural side, Literary Chairman Alice Gee\nand Ronald Chew arranged noon hour talks and films\nwhich were open to all students.\nThis year the club was proud to have as honorary\nmembers professors Leslie Wong and Dean Geoffery\nAndrew. The executive, led by president Bill Con, included Yosh Kamachi, vice-president, Beverley Chin,\nsecretary, Ralph Long, treasurer and Gordon Yuen,\npublicity director.\n127 Latin\nCircle\nInformality is the keynote of this picture of the Spanish Club.\nMembers are, standing (left to right): Chico Romero, Bruer Caswell and J. Charles Seigneuret. Sitting (left to right): Alberto\nAlsina,  Miles Frechette,  (president)  Lorraine Pohl and  Franco Albi.\nKNOWN as El Circulo Latin Americano among its\nSpanish-speaking members, the Spanish Club\ncontinued its pursuit of understanding the Spanish\nlanguage. The many members of the club tried also\nto develop general student appreciation for Latin-\nAmerican  culture.\nHighlight of the social functions for the year was\nthe Picasso Panic. Panic was staged in conjunction\nwith the French Club and was produced  in  March.\nAnother main feature of this Spanish-speaking club\nwas a weekly gathering where students brush up on\ntheir Spanish and become familiar with Latin-American customs.\nWth the help of the hard-working executive and\npresident Miles Frechette the club once again had\na successful year.\nw\nKlub.\nITH an increase of nearly fifty members, more\ninterest than ever flourished in the Deutsche\nThe club's various activities ranged from informative speeches by guests, professors and exchange\nstudents to gay song and dance parties; from cosy\nfireplace get-togethers to winter sports. Successful\nefforts to teach and learn the language were made\nby enthusiastic students in tape-recording and informal\nconversation sessions. Close friendships between\nCanadian and German students resulted.\nThe club's aim has been to introduce German\ntraditions and culture. The members have gained\ngreater  appreciation  of German   literature,   art  and\nGerman\nClub\nmusic. Other highlights of the club's programme\nwere the many discussions on European travelling and\nthe enjoyment of the traditional German sausages\nand beer.\nThe hard-working executive of the club includes\nGustav Kroll, president; Fred Schrack, vice-president;\nJuta Kovamees, secretary; Michael Hadley, treasurer;\nLorraine Pohl, publicity; Traudie Richter and Max\nSwanson, activities. Advice and suggestions from the\nhonorary president, Dr. J. Hallamore, also have been\na great support.\nMembers of the German club preparing to tape record their voices\nare (left to right): Fred Schrack, Juta Kovamees, Arno Ulmer, Mike\nHadley, Jacob Regehr, Ron Jones, Gus Kroll (president), Eva Lyman,\nTraudie   Richter,   Lorraine  Pohl  and   Max Swanson.\n128 French\nCircle\nTaking time off from arranging plans for their next soiree to have\ntheir picture snapped are members of the French club. (Left to\nright): Roland Beauvale, Elizabeth Norcross, Tom Widdowson,\nMidge  Seraphim,   Bob Jackson   (president),  and   Morris  Huberman.\nN  SPITE of a slow start, due to the fact that the\npresident,  Robert W. Jackson,  and vice-president,\nMorris   Huberman,   were   late   in   returning   to   the\ncampus, the Cercle Francais enjoyed a very successful year.\nMany members interested in improving their conversational French took part in causeries held every\nMonday in the club hut.\nFurther interest was promoted by the holding of\nsoirees   in   members'   homes.  The  first  of these   was\nheld at the home of Morris Huberman where the\nVicomte de Laigue, Consul for France, spoke on\nsome aspects of life in present-day France. Two more\ninteresting soirees were held and for the final soiree\nof the year, the president entertained the club at\nhis home.\nThe traditional Picasso Panic, for which Spanish,\nSlavonic, German and French clubs combined, took\nplace on March the tenth, and featured a song-fest\nin all four languages.\nOther members of the executive included Ada\nSeraphim, secretary; Tom Widdowson, treasurer;\nLouise Liddell, social convener; Elizabeth Norcross\nand Roland Bonvalet, members at large.\nMORE Campus activity than ever has flourished\naround Alpha Omega society this year. The\nsocial calendar began with a get-acquainted party,\nwent on to a series of informal lectures and finished\nwith a \"Last Fling\" party before exams. The highlight\nof the social activity was the annual banquet in\nFebruary held at the Gai Paree.\nAlpha  Omega  is open to all  students on  campus\nand  is  dedicated  to the  study  and   appreciation   of\nAlpha\nOmega\nSociety\nUkrainian culture. Activities of the club include discussions, lectures and concerts as well as the many\nsocial events.\nUnder   the   capable   leadership   of   president   Ted\nMakar, the club had another successful year.\nLooking happy after a successful year are members of Alpha\nOmega club. They are (left to right): Julian Kirstin, Gregory\nMursky,  Paul  Symchycn,   Peter  Petrasuk and   Michael  Lesik.\n129 M-mb^rs of the Student\nChristian Movement smile\nfor the Totem photographer. From left (back row):\nHoward Johnston, Bob\nPurdy, John Sandys-Wunsch,\nJack Dummett and Harold\nVaughn-Thomas. (Middle\nrow): Len Lythgoe, George\nLandis, Terry Penner and\nSandy Mills. (Front row):\nWilma Unwin, Donna Run-\nnals, President Thora Haw-\nkey and Paddy Henderson.\nS.C.M.\nTHE Student Christian Movement is a campus\nbody organized for the purpose of providing a\nfellowship and common meeting-ground for those who\nshare the conviction that in Jesus Christ is found the\nsupreme revelation of God, and for those who are\nearnestly seeking for and testing the Christian way of\nlife. The movement attempts, through speakers, panels,\nand discussion and Bible study groups, to show how\nChristianity is and can be meaningful and relevant\nin our fast changing world.\nHighlights of the programmes presented during the\nyear included Dr. Temple Kingston's highly successful\ntwo-lecture series on Christianity and Existentialism, a\nlecture by Rev. E. H. Johnston on the \"New Look\" in\nChristian Missions, a six-lecture series on mental\nhealth, and Rev. Bob Miller's address on \"Religion\nWithout God.\"\nThis year's executive were Donna Runnals, President;\nGeorge Landis, Vice-President; Terry Penner, Len\nLythgoe, Thora Hawkey, John Sandys-Wunsch, Howard\nJohnston, Wilma Unwin, June Reimer, Harold Vaugh-\nan-Thomas, Walter McLean, and Sid Rowles. General\nSecretary of the U.B.C. group is G. H. S. (Sandy)\nMills.\nHillel Club\nAN extensive and varied programme was enjoyed\nby 100 members of U.B.C.'s B'nai B'rith Hillel\nFoundation this year. Their primary aim has been to\nprovide knowledge on a university level of their Jewish\nheritage.\nUnder   the   direction   of   the   student   executive,\nJerome Angel (president), Larry Rotenberg, Elaine\nFromson, Neil Ornstein, and Isy Wolfe, Hillel presented guest speakers, Hebrew lessons, seminars,\nJewish musicals and a book of the month club at\nnoon hours and on Sunday evenings.\nSocial Chairman Phil Greenberg sparked the social\ncalendar with an Israeli Dance and Choral group,\ncocktail party, a barn dance and a spring semi formal.\nRabbi Goldenberg was appointed new counsellor\nof Hillel this year.\nGathered around Rabbi Goldenberg\nare members of the Hillel Club.\nBack row (left to right): Gary Gut-\nman, Dale Pomislow, Phil Greenberg,\nJerome Angel (pre:ident), Neil\nOrnstein and Isy Wolfe. Front row\n(left to right): Elaine Fromson,\nRabbi Goldenberg, Lucille Rubens,\nand   Larry   Rotenberg.\n730 \"*\nifi^Ar\n^gk^^j i\ninn\n\"^ssssssssssflei\nLXae    W-%1    S\n(M      w              ^\u00abK^\n[^\u25a0JpBjIl\nrvf -      >H' \u25a0                \/ MB\n[\/   \u00bb\/\ni\u00bb  ?        .'4k\nB^*jl\ni jii9    kV   *      !hl '^^jjfS^l\nsLI    *        > Jk\u00bb\nftfcfcw \u00a3^-*>*lHr\nK                           vSr'\"a>F8\nSSSSsV                                      eVI,  ; V   fV ^B\n'.\nBT\n-assefl  ssssV **!\nB^BH      ^HfcVr-'    ^aaifc-I   J  lh'jJm\nTj0fl  BjB^^^Bft                 eeflfl       \u25a0\u25a0kf     Jl\nif' -.1       Bl\nmT * f*^BfcJa(    ^\nlej       BJw\nBbX ^j*W   M -5iflj3r\n^^\u25a0t^Bfl JQfl\nBB>       \\   ^^\u2014T        1                  Bell ^^JmrnW-AmmmmWrnW   *'\nT7\nX^H\ngggx^^'\nRf\n\"\"'%.\u25a0\nfmaltftf'\nJn\nafl                          Va*t     J\ndS$&mW^^\\mk\n\"^\u25a0tJS^M\nPosing for the camera at\none of their regular meetings are members of the\nVarsity Christian Fellowship. Back row (left to\nright): Danny McDonald,\nBert Hillmer, John Peters,\nPhil Ney, Tom Williams\nand Jake Nickel. Front\nrow (left to right): Alf\nSeimens, President Dorothy\nManson, Lorraine Hunt,\nTed Ellis and Christine\nMorrison.\nV.C.F.\nHIGHLIGHTING this year's programme was the\nSki weekend spent at \"the Firs,\" Bellingham.\nAfter a day on Mount Baker, the group discussed \"The\nContemporary Christ,\" profiting from the stimulating\nmaterial presented and the ensuing group discussions.\nAmong other activities enjoyed by all were the\nskating parties; the International Students' Dinner; the\nCarol Service, held with the aim of emphasizing the\nNewman Club\nTHE Newman Club for Roman Catholic students\non the campus had an active year during 1955-56\nwith 165 members.\nActivities of the club were spiritual, intellectual\nand social.\nCommunion breakfasts were held once a month\nand mass was said on campus during lent and on holy\ndays.\nDiscussion groups were conducted every two weeks\nand a course in basic theology was given by Fr.\nHanrahan.\nspiritual significance of Christmas; and the Moody\nInstitute of Science film entitled \"Time and Eternity.\"\nSupplementing this programme were a series of\nnoon hour lectures, arranged by Ted Ellis and his\nspeakers committee, presenting the basic beliefs of\nChristianity. Pertinent topics such as \"Adolescenrs\nSeek Security,\" and \"Christ and Modern Medicine\"\nwere also dealt with.\nAlf Siemens, president; Dan McDonald, treasurer,\nand Phil Ney, coordinator for the 1957 all-campus\nMission, contributed much to the success of this year's\nprogramme.\nSocially, the \"Roman Holiday\" formal was the highlight of the year. Other dances were the post-exam\n\"sobbing\" parties and a Halloween party. There was\nalso a ski trip to Mount Baker.\nIn January a party for the senior citizens of St.\nVincent's Home was held, under the direction of\nCharlie Connaghan.\nPresident of the Newman Club was Ralph Kitos.\nFirst Vice-president was Jacolyn Brown, second vice-\npresident, Diana Ramsden; corresponding secretary,\nRosemary Collins; recorring secretary, Bob Chisholm;\nand treasurer, Neil Smith.\nDiscussing religious activities with thi\nReverend Father Oliver are these five\nexecutive members of the Newman\nClub (left to right): Ralph Kitos\n(president), Jackie Brown, Bob Chris-\nholm, Rev. Father Oliver, C.S.B.,\nRosemary Collins  and  Neil  Smyth.\n737 Representing the Letters Club are\nmembers, back row (left to right):\nGavin Rumsey, Lawrence Humphrey,\nMaurice Gibbons, Paul Birch, Ted\nEllis and Ervin Redekop. Middle row\n(left to right): Ada Seraphim, Anne\nRae, Rita Butterfield and Elizabeth\nNorcross. Front row (left to right):\nLothar Meunster, Mary Beth Burton,\nProf. Thorlief Larson, Ian Hacking\n(President), and John  Diakoneski.\nLetters Club\nTHE Letters Club delights in the best literature\nof all ages. Composed of twenty, third and fourth\nyear students, the club met bimonthly at the homes\nof alumni to hear its members read provocative papers\nand lead discussons on various subjects.\nVariety was the keynote of the year with topics\nranging from Heather Spears' \"William Blake\" to\nDick Mundell's \"Utopia;\" from Ada Seraphim's paper\non Shelley to that of President Ian Hacking on Dylan\nThomas. Other members dealt with less frequently\nencountered subjects, such as, a discussion by Elizabeth Norcross on French Canadian Novels and one\nby Paul Birch on Book Illustrators.\nNot content with the masters, the club held an\noriginal contributions night, to read and criticize the\ncreations of the members. A delightful story of a\nChinese Philosopher won the title of prose laureate for\nJon Wheatley, while Heather Spears was acclaimed\nPoet Laureate for her \"Four Sonnets.\"\nAll in all, the Letters Club has again lived up to its\nmotto that \"the study of literature is a joy.\"\nDESPITE a late start this year, the Music Appreciation Club has again become quite active. The\nmembers were able to purchase the workings of a\nthree-speed record player and, with the help of Doug\nHenderson and Gaynor Smith, Ken Burgess installed\nthis player in the old \"hi-fi\" set.\nPresident Ken Burgess and Vice-President Paul Seder\nshared equally the club's duties, arranging programs\nand conducting meetings. Members were encouraged\nto participate in choosing the selections to be played\nand these extended anywhere from the beginnings of\nopera and early but great instrumental works of\nVivaldi and Bach right through to the works of the\nmodern masters such as Sibelius and Copland.\nMembers were also encouraged to hear such outstanding people as Aaron Copland, Ray de la Torre\nand Professor Adaskin and his wife.\nMusic\nAppreciation\nListening intently to a recording of Aaron Copeland\nare members of the Music\nAppreciation Club. (Left to\nright): Ken Burgess (president, Paul Seder, Brian\nDawson, D. Calimente, N. T.\nKoener, Sonny Gee, Doug\nHenderson, Martin Bartlett,\nStan Monks and B. G. du\nTemple.\n732 Describing the artistic attri.\nbutes of this painting is John\nWilliams, president of the\nVisual Arts Club. Other members are (left to right): Gay\nHarvey, Ann Copeman, Tony\nFaure, and Trixie Sutherland.\nVisual Arts\nTHIS Club's main objectives are to promote interest\nin, and provide outlets for, creative and critical\nactivity in the visual arts on the campus.\nWith this end in view, the executive\u2014President,\nJohn Williams; Secretary, Trixie Sutherland; Vice-\nPresident, Tony Faure; Public Relation's Officer, Gay\nHarvie; and Social Chairman, Ann Copeman, have\nsponsored a number of fine films as well as several\nprominent speakers.\nDuring the fall term the films dealt chiefly with the\nlife-stories of the men composing the famous Canadian \"Group of Seven,\" while films on Matisse and\nUtrillo were shown in the spring term. Several of Norman McLaren's drawn sound films highlighted these\nnoon-time film showings.\nSpeakers, through Professor B. C. Binning were\narranged to correspond with exhibitions in the Fine\nArts Gallery. Lawren Harris presented a short lecture\non his paintings, and Gilber, Blakstad and Kelly held\na panel discussion on their views in regard to art.\nA question period followed both programmes, and\nmany discussions ensued among the Club's fifty members and numerous guests.\nBearded and non-bearded literary critics stop\nfor a rest In Brock lounge. They are (left to\nright): Gerry Gilbert, Gwenlyn McGarvey,\nPresident Ian Currie, Nancy Miskiman, Mike\nMatthews  and   Barry  Hale.\n733\nFEELING a need for a critical communication of\nliterary ideas and accomplishment, students have\nbanded together this year for the first time to form\na Critics' Circle. Under their president, Ian Currie,\nthese connoisseurs of literature received great benefit\nfrom trading of ideas and initiating new ones.\nFor their regular meetings each member prepares\na short essay on literary figures. Great arguments\nensue as different views and attitudes are put forth.\nThere are many illustrious sponsors including Dr. N.\nMacKenzie, Dr. Steinburg, Earle Birney. Discussion\ngroups are also held at the homes of English and\nother interested professors.\nCritics' Circle Happily displaying  his catch is Tony  Lillington,   president\nof the Rod and Gun Club.\nPURPOSE of the Varsity Rod and Gun Club, which\nwas formed in December, 1955, is to promote\nstronger interest in all aspects of hunting and fishing\nwith emphasis on conservation of wildlife and natural\nresources  in  B. C.\nAt its start the club consisted of only a half-dozen\nenthusists, but grew rapidly to a membership of over\n60. The V.R.G.C., primarily, is not a group of experts,\nbut of students interested in wildlife and the outdoors. Sportmanship is one of the major points\nstressed.\nTony Lillington was president of the club with John\nDixon secretary-treasurer; Bill Ratcliff, head of the\nfishing section and Pete Andrews, head of the hunting section. Ted Leather was in charge of the membership committee.\nTom Toynbee, an expert saltwater fisherman, but\nrelatively inexperienced at river fishing, caught the\nwinning fish in the club's first annual Steelhead Derby.\nRay Pletcher took second prize.\nVarsity Rod and Gun Club\nReady for one of their frequent hunting trips are (back row): Bill\nAgnew and Gareth Shearman. (Front row): Jack Greenwood, Tony\nLillington, John Dickson,  Barry Adams and Ted  Phillips.\n734 ANOTHER winter season has arrived and VOC'ers\nare exhibiting renewed bursts of energy. After\nan eventful summer of swimming, hiking, and square\ndancing, they have settled to the hustle of winter\nactivities.\nIn the fall, a damp, but enjoyable, long hike was\nmade to Ben Lomond with the hikers invading the\ncommunity centre for the week-end. Later at the\nhome mountain, Mt. Seymour, an annual Hallowe'en\nparty was held with turkey dinner, decorations, and\n\"strangers\" in costumes.\nFor those who remained home for the Christmas\nholidays, a gala celebration was held in the cabin on\nMt. Seymour on New Year's Eve. January ushered in\nfavourable skiing conditions and all took off for the\nslopes whenever possible. To keep in condition, nights\nof indoor badminton, skating, and swimming were\nplanned.\nThe climax of the social season \"Down the hill\" is\nthe annual masquerade party. This year, as before,\neveryone showed up in their craziest creation and had\na wonderful time. All in all, they have had a busy and\nprosperous year under the president, Peter Read and\nare looking forward to having another \"outdoor\"\nsummer.\nAt top: Talking to prospective members about V.O.C.'s\nplans for the coming year are: Mo McNeill, Don Olson\nand Larry Kennedy.\nBelow: Typical scenery witnessed by V.O.C. members are\nbeautiful Castle and Guard mountains.\nVarsity Outdoor Club\nRelaxing after a day of skiing on Garibaldi are members of V.O.C.\n735 Peggy Andreen\nJohn Ridington\nJohn Bossons\nHonourary Activities Awards\nGerry Hodge\nJohn Maynard\nPEGGY ANDREEN\nPeggy Andreen, the new Students' Council secretary, was on Council as Sophomore members in 1953.\nShe is president of the women's Honourary Fraternity\nand a member of the Medical Undergraduate Society\nExecutive.\nJOHN RIDINGTON\nJohn Ridington has been active in Players' Club,\nMamooks, V.O.C. and the organization of the Leadership Conference. He is a member of the men's\nHonourary Fraternity.\nJOHN BOSSONS\nJohn Bossons, a member of the men's Honourary\nFraternity, was this year president of the United\nNations Club and the Economics Society. He was a\nmember of last year's Open House Committee and\nattended a W.U.S. seminar in Japan.\nGERRY HODGE\nGerry Hodge who has been Special Events Chairman for two years and will continue in that position\nnext year, has been a member of the Brock Hall Art\nCommittee and Mamooks and is art editor of the\nRaven.\nJOHN MAYNARD\nJohn Maynard who has held several executive\npositions, including the presidency of the Players'\nClub, was co-producer of the Shaw Festival. He is\nalso a member of the men's Honourary Fraternity.\n736  Cluttered  copy  desk trademarks  Ubyssey office  as  Pat  Russell,  senior\neditor,  hands an assignment to reporter Dave Nuttal.\nBeck Sets New Higl\nSEVERAL pubsters ran for positions on the Students'\nCouncil. This year's editor-in-chief, Stanley Beck,\nwas first to place his nomination papers for the A.M.S.\npresidential campaign, and narrowly missed wirrning\nover new president, Don Jabour, by twenty-two points.\nTwo other Ubysseyites, Valerie Haig-Brown and\nKathie Archibald, ran for Secretary and First Mem-\nber-at-Large, respectively.\nThe editorial board underwent many changes\nthroughout the year. In September the positions were\nslated as: Stanley Beck, Editor-in-Chief; Sandy Ross,\nCity Editor; Valerie Haig-Brown, Assistant City Editor;\nJean Whiteside, C.U.P. Editor; Rod Smith, Managing\nEditor; Mike Ames, Feature Editor; and Mike Glaspie,\nSports. Senior Editors were: Dolores Banerd, for Monday; Bob Johannes, for Wednesday; and Pat Russell,\nfor Thursday.\nAfter Christmas, Sandy Ross became Managing\nEditor, and later, the Acting Editor-in-Chief when Stan\nwas busy with his election campaign. Jean Whiteside\nbecame city editor; Harry Yuill, the Business Editor;\nand John Robertson, the Photo Editor, after a short\nphotography strike was held.\nNew Senior editors were Al Forrest on Mondays,\nRosemary Kent-Barber on Wednesdays, and Dave\nFerry on Thursdays.\nTop left: Harry Yuill, Business Manager, did a tremendous |ob soliciting\nadvertising for the paper.\nBottom  left:  Always  on  call  are  reporters   Marilyn  Smith,   and   Marie\nGallagher. Wonder what's so exciting about this call!\n738 Dwayne  Erickson,  Ted Trevor-Smith,  and  Bruce Allardyce of the sports\nstaff surround their chief, Mike Glaspie.\nCampus Papers\nTwo new columns, \"Rim of Hell\" and \"Campus\nBeat\", reportedly written by Tony Gambill, better\nknown as Mephisto, and Al Forrest, appeared in the\npaper this year. Other new additions were \"The Tie\nBar\", written by Rod Smith and Sandy Ross, and the\nthrice-weekly, never-to-be-trusted weather predictions.\nOther enthusiastic Ubyssey members not only wrote\nfor the campus newspaper, but reported collegiate\nnews in the Vancouver dailies. Kathy Archibald and\nCarol Gregory acted as social correspondents for the\nVancouver Province and Sun, respectively, wfiile Al\nForrest and Rosemary Kent-Barber reported news and\nfeatures for the Sun and Province.\nMost of the reporters were assigned to special\nduties, as Ted Milliward for Hillel House; Rosemary\nKent-Barber, Homecoming, features and rewrite;\nShirley King, features; Pat Russell, elections; Al Forrest\npolitics and features; Murray Ritchie and Marilyn\nSmith, parliamentary affairs; Bob Edger, art; Dave\nNuttall and Dave Robinson, desk duties; Carolyn\nForbes, \"Tween Classes\". Mike Ames caused \"slight\"\ncommotions with some of his reviews, especially about\n\"Methuselah\".\nMarie Gallagher, Harry Yuill, Bruce Taylor, Marilyn\nSmith, Rosemary Kent-Barber, and Shirley King spent\nTop right: Stan Beck led the Ubyssey in a policy of catering to the\n\"Man on the Mall\". The result was one of the best papers ever.\nBottom right: Dave Ferry, Senior Editor and staff reporter, looks up from\na difficult task. Ubyssey reporters are always busily rushing to meet\na deadline. N *\na busy two days in Ellensberg, Washington, for the\nEvergreen Conference, where they made a hit with\ntheir \"Booster Scarves\". They were the only representatives of a Canadian University at the conference.\nWithout heckling fraternities about their discrimination, or having a column like \"My Dog Has Fleas\", or\nrioting frequently with the engineers, or kidnapping\nthe ill-famed Joe Blotz, the pubsters have spent a\nrelatively sobrious semester under their red-headed\nmanager, the only riotous incident being one involving\nsome engineers and some fish last autumn.\nRight top: Ubyssey desk reporters Murry Ritchie and Dave\nRobertson pound the typewriters to meet that ever-present\ndeadline.\nLeft top: This year's Managing Editor, next year's Editor-in-\nChief,  Sandy  Ross,  scans a  hot-off-the-press  Ubyssey. Marge McNeil (left) and Carol\nGregory collaborate on a feature\narticle.\nRosemary Kent-Barber, a senior editor, wrote some of\nthe  top  human  interest  stories.\nSenior Editors Bob Johannas and\nPat Russell confer as to the accuracy of Pat's material.\nPIQUE magazine, likely the best humour publication\nthis campus has produced, appeared for the first\ntime in early March. In sharp contrast to Raven, it\nfeatured light articles by professors lampooning their\nclasses; and humorous stories, songs, photographs,\nand cartoons by students; all presented in \"slick\"\nstyle  under a  bright, gold and blue cover.\nThe magazine was the inspiration of Maurice Gibbons and Rae Haines, the editors of this first edition,\nbut Pique's success was largely due to the attractive,\nairy, almost professional layout, designed by three\narchitecture students\u2014Barry Rand, Roger Smeeth, and\nKeith Ewing. Gerry Grubb, the circulation manager,\norganized the corps of beautiful girls who sold over\ntwo thousand copies of the magazine. To make sure\nthe humour was not too risque, and the English not\ntoo wretched was the task amiably and efficiently\nexecuted by Patron of the Arts, Professor de Bruyn.\nNext year Pique should be more sprightly than ever.\nThe long noses of the Pique managers belong to Maurice Gibbons,\neditor, Gerry Grubb, Professor de Brun, Howard Smeeth, Keith Ewing,\nand  Barry Rand. Newcomer to the pub this year\nis photographer Wally Hatcher,\nwho turned in some top flight\npictures.\nRuss Trachuk, a graduate student, lent his spare\ntime to take some unique pictures. This is Russ'\nfirst and last year with the photography department as he leaves soon for the University of\nSaskatchewan.\nVeteran Bob Steiner returned to the pub\nthis year to snap for Totem. Bob uses\neducational psychology to make people\nsmile  at  the  Bobble.\nPhotographers Snap Campu\nPhotographer Jim Risk, dressed in his darkrom regalia, plants\nhimself in the darkroom prepared to rush through important\npictures.\n742\nPHOTOGRAPHERS are the most sought-after members of the Publications Board and\u2014occasionally\n\u2014the hardest working. Many assignments crop up unexpectedly and, often as not, for conflicting times and\nplaces. But cheerfully or not the cameramen go on\ntaking pictures.\nAs this year's head of the photography staff,\nJohn Robertson coordinated old and new members\nand arranged photography times and schedules\nbesides taking numerous pictures himself, dividing his\ntime between Ubyssey and Totem.\nReturning photographer, Brian Thomas, snapped\npics mainly for the Ubyssey, Commerce Annual and\nCommerce Faculty section for Totem.\nTwo new photogs for this years' staff are Wally\nHatcher and Tom Spouse. Both first year Commerce\nmen,   Wally  and  Tom   have  improved  a  great  deal\n' iS5;;\" throughout their first year in the photography business\nand will probably be \"shooting\" again next year.\nTwo other new photogs, Russ Trachuk and Jim Risk,\nare both doing graduate work for their M.A.'s. Russ has\nbeen doing experimental work in biochemistry, while\nJim has been working in the Research Institute in\nchemistry but both take time out for photography.\nJim specializes in the developing process.\nBob Steiner returned to campus this winter after a\nthree-year absence, to go into Teacher Training. Bob\nwas especially helpful around deadline time with his\nprofessional-like pics.\nThe busy boys are anxiously looking forward to their\nnew quarters in the Brock Extension after tolerating\ntheir crowded conditions for a good while now.\nBecoming an oldtlmer now, Brian Thomas displays the\nneat left-underhand twist which makes him an expert on\nthe enlarger.\nife, Athletics, Activities\t\nAnother newcomer to the pub is Commerce\nman Tom Spouse, who kept both Totem\nand The Ubyssey happy with important pixs.\nSmiling, smooth-operating Photography Editor John Robertson takes time out from his\nbusy coordinating activities to make a pretty\nco-ed stand on her head for a picture. You\ncan  tell  John   likes  his  work.\n143 News and Viewl\nEDITOR Lee Davenport started work for the 1956\nTotem last summer when she met with engravers,\nCleland-Kent, and printers, Wrigley Printing Company,\nto discuss theme, engraving, printing, deadlines, and\nother Totem business. Lee tells with pride that the\nengravings made for her choice of an Indian theme\nare taken from authentic west coast North American\nIndian life.\nOther Totem staff represents an almost complete\nturnover. The only returning staff member, Anlee\nBrickman, worked together with freshman Barbara\nScott on the campus life section.\nAlice Ruddick, graduate section editor, finished her\nwork before Christmas much to the envy of other staff\nmembers.\nA new system of listing undergraduate pictures was\ninitiated by editor Barbara Biely, in an attempt to\nreduce mistakes made in other years. Supporting Barbara in the process were Maureen Magar, who had\nthe biggest job of sorting the hundreds of pictures of\nArts students; Flora McLeod,  Medicine and Nursing;\nEditor Lee Davenport chose Indian motif and\nshattered tradition with the new sepia and\nbrown cover.\nOn the Grass Hockey field personally inspecting campus sports, Women's Athletics section\neditor Joan Crocker and staff member Sheila\nKingham confer as to the merits of the\nteams.\nFaced with the fantastic job of sorting 2,200\nArts Undergraduate pictures Maureen Magar\nstill  manages to  muster a  smile.\n144 . Totem '56\nFay McNish, Agriculture and Commerce; Judy Boyd,\nArchitecture and Applied Science; Eleanor Lamond,\nGraduate Studies and Teacher Training; Bernice Kurtz,\nSocial Work; Doris Van Sickle, Pharmacy and Physical\nEducation; Mary Livingston, Law and Home Economics, and Len Gamble, Forestry. Editors Bernice and\nEleanor had the usual difficulty with Teacher Training\nand Social Work Students being off campus when\npicture-taking time came.\nSection editor for Publications, Dorothy Davis,\nstruggled with photogs for her pictures of those\u2014\nclosest to home but hardest to get\u2014Totem, Ubyssey,\nRaven and Photographers.\nSylvia Downs chased club presidents asking for copy,\nwhile Sylvia Tremaine chased photogs, planned pictures and made layouts for them.\nSylvia Wilson challenged the Greek Societies section, running into opposition when asking members to\nsupply original copy.\nAthletics sections editors, Joan Crocker and Ron\nHurst, tried to co-ordinate games and photographers\nAll these Totem gals smilel Here's Flora\nMcLeod, head of the Medicine and Nursing\nsections.\nTom Collingwood proved valuable to Totem\nas layout editor. Here he checks with Barb\nBiely,   Undergraduate   Editor.\nSally Grantham took over the Administration\nSection with its many headaches and finished\nin  record time.\n745 Barb Scott and Anlee Brickman coordinated\ntheir efforts to finish the Campus Life Section\nin  record  time.\nRon Hurst, Men's Sport's Editor, worked\nspasmodically as the sports section, per usual,\nwas  last  to  be  finished.\nToten\nbut had trouble with cancelled games.  Sheila Kingham\nhelped the pair with the copy.\nAdministration Section Editor, Sally Grantham, was\nkept hopping writing Student Council copy, identifying the Board of Governors' pictures, and getting the\nPresident's message.\nA marvellous help to this year's Totem staff was\nlayout manager, Tom Collingwood. A former production manager at a city advertising agency, Tom helped\nLee guide this year's green staff members in efforts at\noriginal layouts.\nThe year ended with everyone rushing to meet\ndeadlines and Lee, prodded on by the engravers\u2014\nCleland-Kent Western Ltd.,\u2014and the printers\u2014\nWrigley Printing Co. Ltd.,\u2014urged staffers on to hurry\nand \"get that copy in.\" Co-ordinating photographers\nJudy Boyd had reason to grin. She was editor\nof Applied Science and Architecture Sections.\nLen Gamble, Forestry editor, checks\nFay McNish s pictures amid the usual\nfumble characteristic of the Totem\noffice.\nDorothy Davis of\nthe Publication Section had a hard\ntime getting pictures of those closest   to   home.\n746 The  Graduates  Section   under  Alice  Ruddick\nwas finished   before  Christmas.\nPlugs On\nwith the groups to be taken demanded patience and\nperseverance. But, finally the book was ready and\ndiscussion turned to the 1956-57 Totem.\nJoan Crocker, who will take over as editor, has\nbegun to line up staff, select a theme and reorganize\nthe editorial system. Next year will see the addition\nof two senior editors and a business manager as well\nas numerous junior editors.\nAs always the year ended with the publications\nbanquet held in March at the White Spot. Here the\ngroup gathered for the last time to talk over the '56\nyearbook and discuss plans for 1957. As many of this\nyear's staff are returning to U.B.C, next year's should\nbe an experienced one.\nThe Totem staff now sits back and waits for the\ncomments of the student body.\nPharmacy and Physical Education was done by Doris Van\nSickle and Graduate Studies\nand Teacher Training by Eleanor Lamond. You can tell from\ntheir smiles that their sections\nare  completed.\nTyping   madly   Sylvia   Wilson,   of  the   Greek\nSection, rushes to beat the deadline.\nSylvia Downs and Sylvia Tremaine cheerfully\nassumed responsibility for the Activities Section and had usual trouble with uncooperative clubs.\n747 The Raven\nEXPRESSION of campus literary fervour, silenced\nsince the 1954 death of a one volume \"Siwash\",\nblossomed once more this fall in the form of a\nmoderately successful \"Raven\".\n\"Raven\" suffered first inspiration in the brain of\ngaunt anthropologist, Michael Ames. Ames, cut off\nfrom a journalistic career through a labour dispute\nwith the 1953-54 Ubyssey editorial board, and feeling\nhis talents were going to waste, elected himself E.I.C.\nof a then non-existent literary rag.\nHis proposal for a new magazine met with fervour\nwith such unexpressed literary talent as Gerry Brown,\nDoug Howie, Gretl Fischer, Sandy Manson, and\nMaurice Gibbons.\nThis original group of six, plus solicited writers,\npoets and artists, worked hard over the 1955 summer\nand produced the first edition of what was to become\nthe first quarterly in U.B.C.'s history. The history of its\nname lies in a legend of British Columbia's coast\nIndians, revolving about \"Yehl\", or \"The Raven\".\nOn campus, the magazine's success was only\nmoderate. Ames, however, points with pride to the\nsplash made in the downtown press and educational\nand literary circles. The magazine is listed as a quarterly in seventy English speaking libraries and has\nbeen the address of many letters of approval and\nenquiry.\nAt top, the usually genial Raven editor, Mike Ames, looks pained\nat unwelcome news. Below: all-out sales campaign urged unknowing\nFrosh to purchase the \"campus culture\" magazine. Jean Whiteside\nhelps Mike. Below (left): Len Davis, Business Manager, Doug Howie\nand Cathie Archibald, Associate Editors, scan Raven and noticeably\nshow their opinion of the rival  magazine,  Pique.\nGretl Fischer, Dolores Banerd, and Maurice Gibbons helped editor\nas deadline time came near.  Sigma Tau Chi members are, left to\nright, back row: Ralph Sultan, John\nRidington, Ron Bray, Bob Morford.\nMiddle row: Gerry Hodge, Don Jabour,\nBob Hutchison, Ron Longstaffe, Robin\nScott. Front row: Akade Akesode, Terry\nNicholls, Geoff Conway, John Bossons,\nStan  Beck,   Monty  Mackay.\nHonorary Fraternities\nSIGMA TAU CHI was founded in 1943 and now\nhas a membership of 170 men, all of whom gave\noutstanding service to student activity while on the\ncampus.\nDelta Sigma Pi is an organization whose purpose is\nto recognize outstanding women and give them an\nopportunity to meet to discuss campus activities and\nproblems. Initiation is a candle-lit ceremony held in\nthe fall. Each campus organization in which women\nparticipate is asked to send two representatives to\nthis ceremony.\nIn the spring a joint meeting of Delta Sigma Pi\nand Sigma Tau Chi is held at the home of Dr. and\nMrs. N. A. M. McKenzie. At this time some prevalent\ncampus problems are discussed and thus student and\nfaculty opinions may be exchanged,\nThe honorary fraternities have as their purpose the\nrecognition of outstanding women and men on the\ncampus. Invitation to membership is one of the highest honors a student on this campus may receive.\nDELTA SIGMA PI is the women's honorary sorority\nat U.B.C. and Sigma Tau Chi is the men's honorary fraternity. Membership in each is by invitation\nand members are chosen on the basis of these three\nprinciples\u2014scholarship, leadership, and service. Each\ncampus organization is asked to submit names of possible candidates for membership in the fall. These are\nevaluated on a point system.\nWm9mm\\\n\u25a0 ^Bj 1\n\u25a0                             A^mW\nBufl\nill\n4 1\n4Mb 1\ntmrt        taH\ni' \u25a0  .'' ':.\nPv*\nWm\nW&M\nSj^-'-aPBef-      .^-7;;:v.\"\nL^mm\n\u25a0                                 'I\nMembers of Delta Sigma Pi are, back\nrow: Margaret Wiebe, Peggy Andreen,\nMaureen Sankey, Ann Sutherland, and in\nthe front row: Carol Abrahamson, June\nDawson, Betty Clarke, Betty Anne\nThompson,   Helen   McLean.\n750 Pan-Hellenic\nTHE Panhellenic Association began a busy year last\nMarch when they entertained two hundred girls\nat a Punch Party. This was the first of the many Panhellenic activities which culminated with the annual\nI.F.C.-Pan-Hell sponsored songfest in February.\nHelp Day in the fall was a great success. Under\nthe guidance of I.F.C. and Pan-Hell five hundred\npledges scattered to the various welfare centres\nthroughout the city to paint, wash windows and floors,\nplant trees and chop wood.\nThe Greek sponsored Mardi Gras, a gigantic two-\nnight costume cabaret, netted $3,126 for the Muscular\nDystrophy Society.\nThe Panhellenic Association plan and direct the\ninter-sorority activities and policies. These activities\nincluded scholarship competition, intramural blood\ndrive, bridge, and bowling competition, and participation in the projects of W.U.S.\nInspecting tentative plans for proposed $80,000 Panhellenic house are\nPan-Hell execs. Back row: Elaine Fromson, Sheila Swinarton. Front row:\nJoan  Irvine,  Ann  Cassady,  Carol  Abrahamson.\nInter-Fraternity Council\nTHE Inter-Fraternity Council acts as a liaison\nbetween the fraternities and the faculty and\ncoordinates the policies, ideas and problems which\ninvolve the fraternities on this campus.\nI.F.C. coordinated fraternity support of many\ncharity drives this year. Using its small surplus, it was\nable to pay the transportation of an African student\nto come to U.B.C. Help Week, under the able direc-\niton of Gerry Peterson, saw the fall pledges working\nin such places as the Alexandra Neighbourhood House,\nMarpole Community Centre, and the Deaf and Blind\nSchool.\nThe Traffic Safety Week did much to promote safer\ndriving on the campus, which was once a serious\nproblem. The annual blood drive, Community Chest\ndrive, and Kinsmen's Apple Day were given full support by I.F.C.\nBesides the annual Mardi Gras and the songfest,\nwhich were held in conjunction with the Panhellenic\nAssociation, I.F.C. held a Stag Party where all members of the fraternities got together to put a final\nend to the year's activities.\nInter-Fraternity Council leaders, Bob Kirkland, Keith Middleton, Charles\nDiamond, and Eric Bendrot guided I.F.C. through a quiet but constructive year, highlighted by I.F.C.-sponsored Traffic Safety Week\nin   February.\n757 Alpha Phi\nALPHA PHI Women's Fraternity was founded at\nSyracuse, New York, in 1872. Beta Theta chapter\nwas affiliated at UBC in  1929.\nEvery Christmas Alpha Phi's go carol singing with\nthe boys of Beta Theta Pi. The proceeds go to the\nAlpha Phi Cortisone Fund of the Canadian Arthritis\nand Rheumatism Society.\nAlhpa Phi's have been active in sports and student\naffairs. Teams were entered in all intramural sports.\nPat Blankenbach served on W.U.S. and Maxine Nelsen\nwas on W.U.S. and was vice-president of the Home-\nEc Undergraduate Society. Again this year Alpha\nPhi received the Panhellenic Scholarship cup awarded\nto the chapter with the highest average. Outstanding\namong many activities were the annual hard times\npledge party and the formal held at the Thunderbird\nRoom.\nThis June many Alpha Phi's will be eagerly anticipating the International Convention which will be held\nthis year at Mackinac Island, Michigan.\nFollowing exams the Alpha Phi's spend the traditional ten days basking in the sun at sorority camp.\nFirst row: Babcock, Pat; Barbarie, Joan; Berry, Joan; Birch, Betty. Second row: Blankenbach, Pat; Brown, Bonnie; Cameron, Jean; Cameron,\nMargaret Mae; Dwyer, Lori; Emsley, Marilyn; Ecreman, Joan. Third row: Ghezzi, Linda; Goodwin, Pat; Graham, Jean; Grooves, Linda;\nHadden, Sharon; Harries, Beth; Hyndman, Barbara. Fourth row: Kerr, Marilyn; McLean, Mary; Marlcle, Sharon; Nelson Maxine; Nielson,\nShirley; Summerfieid,  Ruth; Van Ackeran, Joan.  Not pictured: Hamilton,  Irene; Stuart, Sonia.\n752 Alpha Omicron Pi\nUNDER the able leadership of president Carol\nAbrahamson, Beta Kappa chapter of Alpha\nOmicron Pi enjoyed an active year.\nHighlights of the fall term included the pledge\nparty, the initiation banquet held at the Georgia\nhotel, the annual \"Family Tea,\" and an informal post-\nexamination party.\nIn September the active chapter helped the alumnae\nwith their fashion show and auction which is sponsored jointly by Alpha Omicron Pi and the B.C. Dress\nDesigners. The proceeds go to the Canadian national\nphilanthropy of Alpha Omicron Pi which is the Spastic\nParalysis Society. In January the active chapter gave\na lively party to the children at the B.C. Preventorium.\nAlpha Omicron Pi participated in many sorority\nactivities including the bridge tournament, song fest\nand intramural events. Thanksgiving weekend found\nsome of the girls staying at the chapter house in\nSeattle and a cordial invitation was extended to the\ngirls to attend the Seattle spring formal. Beta Kappa's\nspring formal, the highlight of the second term, was\nheld at the Astor hotel.\nFinal examinations over, Alpha Omicron Pi's relaxed\nat camp in Ocean Park.\nFirst row: Abrahamson, Carol; Bracker, Anne; Brett, Helen Joy; Burnett, Patricia. Second row: Carr, Marilyn; Donald,\nBetty; Duxbury, Marjory; Etherington, Sandra; Haahti, Miriam; Hill, Marlene. Third row: Kowlulc, Mary Beth; Leonard,\nTani; McKay, Kathryn; Mackay, Marilyn; Magar, Maureen; Millar, Sandra. Fourth row: Myron, Christeen; Netherton,\nEvanne;  Paulson, Nein; Potter, Jean; Sparke, Lynne; Young, Irene.\n153 Delta Gamma\nTHE national philanthropic project, in which local\nDelta Gamma's take an active part, is sight\nconservation and aid to the blind. This year, as in the\npast, active members read several hours a week to a\nsightless University student. The members also sell and\nserve tea at the annual C.N.I.B. tea and sale of blind-\ncraft.\nOne of the highlights of the year was the International Weekend held in February with the chapter\nat the University of Washington visiting U.B.C. Members were active in such campus activities as W.U.S.,\nMardi Gras committee, the Player's Club, and intramural sports.\nFirst row: Bain, Wendy; Bowell, Dorothy; Brooks, Dru; Carpenter, Janet. Second row: Cassady, Ann; Compton, Barbara; Dalgleish,\nAnne; Daly, Joy; Davis, Ann; Emery, Pru. Third row: Foster, Anthea; Fountain, Joyce; Fowler, Betty; Gates, Lynda; Giegerich,\nDaryl; Grubb, Gerry; Hobbs, Dorothy; Huckvale, Virginia. Fourth row: Kent, Stephanie; Kincade, Ann; Lauener, Madeleine; Lumsden,\nAnne; McNab, Nancy; MacWilliam, Susan; Meilicke, Julie; Mitchell, Kathleen. Fifth row: Nachtrieb, Sheila; Nelson, June; Pipes, Marilyn\nRichmond, Sally; Sloan, Davida; Stephens, Sharon; Thomas, Joan; Turvey, Elizabeth.    Not pictured: Donaldson, Verna.\n154 Gamma Phi Beta\nTHE main yearly activity of Gamma Phi Beta is\ndirected towards the maintenance of the sorority's\ntwo summer camps for underprivileged children. These\ncamps, which are both owned and fully operated by\nthe sorority, are located in Denver, Colorado, and\ntwenty miles from Vancouver at Sechelt. Annually,\nduring the space of the summer, over one hundred of\nVancouver's less fortunate children migrate to the\nSechelt camp to spend two weeks soaking in the\nsun, sea, and healthy food, under the guidance of\nGamma Phi's from all over the continent.\nAside from camp activities, this has been a busy\nyear for Alpha Lambda chapter. The main socia\nevents of the fall term were the  \"Kickoff Cabaret\"\nheld in conjunction with the Kappa's and a rousing\nHard-times Party put on for the pledges. Highlights\nof the second term were the annual Formal, held at\nthe Thunderbird Room, and an afternoon party entertaining the camp children which was held in February\nat Sunset Memorial.\nFirst row: Agnew, Pauline; Bennett, Nancy; Christie, Donna; Darcovitch, Olga. Second row: Davidson, Joan; Downs, Sylvia; Eisenhut\nKatie; Gibson, Ruth; Grantham, Sally; Gray, Joan. Third row: Grimmet, Sally; Grimson, Juliet; Hill, Carol; Holman, Shan; Jones, Helen;\nKemp, Beverley; Loree, Alixe; McCartney, Maureen. Fourth row: Maddex, Laverne; Marchese, Angela; Matheson, Betty; Parmley,\nJean; Prentice, Marrietta; Richmond, Virginia; Robertson, Bunty; Schaffer, Mary. Fifth row: Schwenk, Barbara; Shallard, Meryny;\nSneath, D'Arcy; Stewart, Janet; Swinarton, Sheila; Tremaine, Sylvia; Williams,  Daphne; Wilson, Sylvia.\n755 Delta Phi Epsilon\nT,t> (fj ff\nDELTA PHI EPSILON sorority was founded at New\nYork   University   in    1917.   Today   chapters   can\n>e found on campus both in the U.S.A. and Canada.\nDelta   Gamma   chapter  at  the   University  of  British\nColumbia was founded in  1946.\nThe chapter participates in Song Fest, intramural\nsports, blood drives and other campus as well as inter-\nsorority activities.\nThe organization of P.O.P., the annual fall formal\nat which the pledges of each sorority are presented,\nis a national Delta Phi Epsilon custom.\nEach year the chapter gives a tea to raise funds\nfor Irvington House Heart Fund which is the national\nphilanthropic project. The local project is the annual\npresentation of a bursary given to any female undergraduate requiring financial assistance.\nFirst row: Diastel, Henrietta; Cohen, Sandra; Fromson, Elaine. Second row: Garfinkel, Rachelle; Lordon, Fay; Kron,\nRuthy; Miller, Maxine; Moscowitz, Rosalee; Ornstein, Joan. Third row: Riback, Faith; Sanders, Sandra; Silber, Jeanette;\nSimon,   Linda;  Toban,  Sandra; Youngson,   Loretta.     Not  pictured: Taylor, Barbara.\n756 Kappa Alpha Theta\nKAPPA ALPHA THETA fraternity is a pioneer\nsisterhood. Founded at DePausa University in\n1870, Theta became the first Greek letter society\nknown among women. Theta now has 8 I active college\nchapters in North America and a national spirit of\nfellowship is maintained by Theta alumnae chapters\nin every major city in Canada and the United States.\nIn addition to several local projects, the U.B.C.\nThetas support two national Philanthropies; the Institute of Logopaedics at Winchita, Kansas and the Foster Parent's Plan for War Orphans.\nBeta Upsilon participated enthusiastically in many\ncampus activities this year including intramural sports,\nPanhellenic competitions, float competition in the\nHomecoming Parade, and entrance in the annual\nGreek Society song festival.\nA busy social calendar was climaxed with the annual\npost-exam camping holiday. Thetas look forward to\nspending an active week of sunshine and fun at the\nTheta National Convention to be held this year at\nBanff.\nFirst row: Anderson, Sheila; Bickle, Mary; Boak, Anne; Boughton, Alison; Braidwood, Allisen; Brown, Joyce. Second row:\nCoe, Ngaire; Gavin, Elma; Hall, Sue; Horon, Sheila; Knox, Marylen; McGibbon, Joan. Third row: Molofy, Gloria;\nPerdue, Aileen; Ranaghan, Roma; Ray, Wenda; Rose, Pamela; Skelton, Anne. Fourth row: Taylor, Jean; Tolmie, Anne;\nWainwright,  Joan; Warren,  Lou;  Webster,   Margaret;  Whittle, Berta.    Not pictured: Smith, Shirley.\n757 Alpha Gamma Delta      ik\nON CAMPUS the Alpha Gamma Delta's have\ntaken an active interest in intramural sports\nand student affairs. To aid the B.C. Spastic Paralysis\nSociety the Alpha Gams raise funds through their\nannual cabaret. The theme of the 1955 cabaret was\n\"Alpha Gam on Broadway\". Another philanthropic\nproject is filling Christmas stockings for the children\nin the Coquileetza Indian Hospital at Sardis.\nA varied round of social activities were enjoyed\nthis year including the pledge party, the spring formal\nat Canyon Gardens, the Graduates breakfast and tea\ngiven by the Mother's Club, a re-union dinner with\nalumnae, and an Xmas fireside party.\nThis year Alpha Gam candidate for Mardi Gras,\nPat Shippobotham, was crowned the   1956 queen.\nFirst row: Allison, Barbara; Bassett, Marilyn; Best, Betty. Second row: Boulding, Myrna; Brownlow, Diane; Calhoun, Marilyn; Carlson,\nLois. Third row: Cooper, Violet; Croker, Sheila; Findlay, Barbara; Gilley, Wilma. Fourth row: Gold, Alice; Guttormson, Norma;\nHindmarch, Jeanie; Home, Dorothy; Humber, Sandra; James, Marlene; Kennedy, Pat; Kirkland, Marilyn. Fifth row: Lam, Diana;\nLaws, Donna; Legge, Gerry; Leith, Barbara; McDonald, Sherrill; McCallum, Elizabeth; McNeill, Maureen; Peterson, Denise. Sixth\nrow: Poison, Beverley; Ritchie, Ann Louise; Sheed, Nancy; Sharp Mary Jo; Shippobotham, Pat; Stafford, Barbara; Stevenson, Dorothy;\nWilks, Patti.\n758 Alpha Delta Pi\nBETA KAPPA chapter of Alpha Delta Pi celebrated\nit's twenty-fifth year on the U.B.C. campus this\nspring. The original chapter of Alpha Delta Pi was\nfounded at Wesleyan Female College in  185\nThis year, as their philanthropic project, members\nworked at Kerrisdale Community Centre. In addition\nto this work the girls served at a tea held to raise\nmoney for muscular sclerosis research.\nCampus activities included intramurals, the spring\nand fall blood drives, song fest and general student\naffairs. Summer camp completed a successful and\nactive year.\nProminent members on campus this year were:\nColleen Kelly, president of the Women's Big Block\nClub; Lynne Kyle, treasurer of W.U.S.; Betty Anne\nThompson, a member of the women's honorary\nsorority.\nFirst row: Boyd, Judy; Chilcott, Beth; Cleasby, Barbara; Daly, Georgina. Second row: De La Giroday, Dorothy; Dilworth, Dorothy;\nDriscoll, Jill; Eckstein, Lois. Third row: Goudy, Elizabeth; Hogg, Betty; Kelly, Colleen; Kennedy, Maureen. Fourth row: Kidd, Ruth;\nKyle, Lynne; Legace, Yvonne; Martin, Lois; Morgan, Shirley; Morrison, Nancy; Muir, Marion; Pallesen, Paddy. Fifth row: Rae, Sue;\nSalter, Nancy; Setter, Lorna; Sharp, Thelma; Smith, Patricia; Sutherland, Marie; Thompson, Betty-Anne; Thompson, Joan. Sixth row:\nVan Sickle, Doris; Venables, Barbara; Viel, Barbara; Vinee, Myrna; Walker, Beverly; Whiteoak, Dorothy; Woodsworth, Janice; Woolrieh,\nMary Lou.\n759 Kappa Kappa Gamma\nTHE first chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma was\nfounded on October 13, 1871, at Monmouth\nCollege, Illinois. In 1929 Gamma Upsilon chapter was\nformed  at  U.B.C.\nThe Kappa's most important activity this year was\nthe annual Cabaret held in conjunction with Gamma\nPhi Beta sorority. This Cabaret is one of the sources\nwhich enables the sorority to offer scholarships to any\nwoman on the campus.\nTeams were entered in intramural sports, Panhellenic\nbridge and bowling tournaments, and the Kappa's\nrecorded 100% at the Blood Drive. The long-prepared-\nfor Song Fest was a challenge to keep up to last\nyear's second  place.\nSocial activities this year included the Spring Formal\nheld at Canyon Gardens, the \"Beer Bust\", the pledge-\nsponsored \"Kappa Klondike\", and four fraternity exchanges.\nSorority philanthropies are basically directed towards scholarship assistance and a fund for the upkeep\nof European orphanages.\nFirst row: Anderson, Bev; Ayling, Anita; Berryman, Janet. Second row: Brice, Ann; Brown, Sallee; Campbell, Kathy.\nThird row: Crawford, Moira; Cross, Nan; Crotty, Jan. Fourth row: Delbridge, Sally; Farris, Evlyn; Gregory Carol. Fifth\nrow: Haig-Brown, Valerie; Hardy, Sheila; Houghland, Joan; Irvin, Joan; Irwin, Carol; Johnson, Barbara. Sixth row: Johnston,\nAnne; Lander, Barbara Ann; McDonald, Sheila; McLean, Helen; McNaught, Mary Ellen; Malcolm, Sharon. Seventh row:\nOrtengren, Bernice; Thompson, Noreen; Turnbull, Norah; Turnbull, Sheila; Valentine, Ann; Van Allen, Louise.\n760 SIGMA CHI fraternity was founded on June 28,\n1855, at Miami University. Since then its chapters\nhave spread to all major universities in the United\nStates and Canada. In January, 1949, Delta Omicron\nchapter of Sigma Chi was installed on the U.B.C.\ncampus and is now firmly established and highly\nrespected for its activities on the campus.\nSigma Chi\nDelta Omicron participates in intermural sports and\ncampus activities. High scholastic standing and the\npromotion of Christian and democratic principles is\nexpected of every Sig.\nAmong social activities are the \"Toga Party,\"\n\"Miami Triad,\" and the \"Sweetheart Ball.\"\nThis year's officers were: Gordon Thom, president;\nKen Mulligan, vice-president; Stan Bolter, annotator,\nand Tom Loney, social chairman.\nFirst row: Bartosch, Reg; Bolter, Stan; Bryce, Len; Butterfield, Jack; Clark, Wes; Clayton, John. Second row: Collison,\nEd; Dunlop, Keith; Donaldson, Bob; Fitz-Nemeth de Fridenlibe IV Paul; Grouix, Bob; Irvine, Bob. Third row: Kirk, Hugh;\nLoney, Tom; Melvin, Al; Morgan, Vic; Mulligan, Ken; Mundle, Gordie. Fourth row: Oberhofer, Matt; O'Brien, Barney;\nReiner, Dick; Roblin, Bob; Smyth, Bob; Spins Grant. Fifth row: Strang, Ian; Taylor, Neil; Thom, Gordon; Thomas, Howie;\nTruswell,  Bill;  Webb,   Dennis.  Not  pictured:  Armstrong,  Lyall; Barnett, Doug; Duncan, Denny; Praslowski, Peter.\n76\/ Phi Delta Theta\nFirst row: Alsgard, Stewart; Amighetti, Leo; Banfield, John; Second row: Barron, David; Buchanan, Ronald; Bell, Michael; Brownlee,\nJames; Clarke, Denis; Corbet, Burke; Campbell, Colin; Catherwood, Robert; Clasby, Ralph. .Third row: Doolan, Kenneth; Drummond,\nBarry; Ezzy, Albert; Erickson, Sivert; Eltherington, Lome; Fraser, Russel; Fay, G. R.; Forster, George; Frazer, G. P. Fourth row: Fitzpatrick, D. R.; Gandossi, Bruno; Gordon, John; Hudson, Ralph; Housez, Vernard; Helliwell, David; Hughes, Ronald; Jackson, J. K.;\n762 Jabour, Donald.    Fifth row: Kronstrom, Lawrence; Kendall, Thomas; Laird, Allan; Liddle, Keith; Lockhart, Glen; Maclean, Robert; Mc\nCarthy, John; Mitchell, P. J.; Montaine, Lome. Sixth row: MeGraw, Robert; Murphy, Tom; McMillan, David; McLennan, John; Manson,\nDave; Mair, Robert; McKerlich, William; Oliver, James; Peto, Howard. Seventh row: Ross, Alexander; Ross, Rae; Rae, Doug;\nRedman, Donald; Richards, John; Shippobotham, John; Sharp, Peter; Stewart Ronald; Stewart, Ian. Eighth row: Stowe, David;\nSundquist, Sven; Simpkins, Michael; Smith, Christie; Tarling, Frank; Tompkins, Michael; Watson, Paul; Warren, Mike; Woollett, George.\nNot pictured: Bailey, Roger; Harthstone, Campbell; Henderson, Matthew; McDermid, John; Yuill, John, Beta Theta Pi\nFirst row: Anderegg, Marco; Blackburn, Bob; Bossons, John; Braidwood, Tom. Second row: Brasso, Henning; Clark, Jack; Colls, Mike;\nConnell, Gavin; Conway, Geoff; Coopland, Ashley; Coopland, Gary; Cox, Don; Davis, Clay. Third row: Dagg, Bob; Eagle, Bruce;\nFairbairn, Bob; Frith, Hector; Gamble, Len; Gibbons, Maurice; Grantham, Pete; Haltalin, Ken; Hastings, Dave. Third row: Hebenton,\nSholto, Jeffrey, Mike; Johnson, Mike; Killam, Dave; Lauener, John; Lazarotto, Ernie; Legg, Ted; Legg, John; Lewall, Dave. Fourth row:\nLou-Poy, Ron; McAlpine, Bruce; McAlpine, Ted; McCurrach, Sandy; MacKenzie, Graham; McKimm, Terry; MacLeod, Ken; Mader, Stan;\nMiller, Dave. Fifth row: Morfitt, George; Noble, Ken; Nordman, Vol; Patterson, Bruce; Peters, Ross; Russell, Ken; Sherrin, Bob; Scott,\nRobin; Smillie, Howie. Sixth row: Stewart, Ron; Sultan, Ralph; Thackray, Al; Unwin, Ernie; Ward, Bob; Wesson, Brian; Westerlund,\nBruno; White, Harry; Yuill, Harry. Not pictured: Bennett, Keith; Grebski, Ed; Hakstian, Bob; Hemphill, Dave; Homola, Bob; Pyper,\nGerry; Smith, Duncan; Wright, Bill.\n763 Sigma Alpha Mu\nON November 26, 1909, eight young college men\nfounded Sigma Alpha Mu at the College of\nthe City of New York. From this small chapter S.A.M.\nhas expanded until its chapters are found on almost\nevery important campus in Canada and the United\nStates.\nMu Xi chapter at the University of British Columbia\nwas formed in the fall of 1948. For one year it functioned as Sigma Alpha, a \"colony\" of the international\nSAM. Then its members were officially initiated and\nMu Xi duly established as the 48th chapter of Sigma\nAlpha Mu fraternity.\nMu Xi was very active this year. Socially a number\nof house  parties  and  Commodore   \"invasions\"  were\nheld and the season was climaxed by the annual formal\nheld in March. The Sammies also participated in intramural sports and were active in campus affairs. An\nenterprising cultural program was undertaken with\nspeakers being invited to fraternity gatherings at least\nonce a month.\nScholarship was not overlooked and it is noteworthy\nthat SAM's average has always been above the\nmen's average and that they have invariably rated\namong the top ten.\nThis year's officers were: Sam Huberman, Prior; Irvin\nZipursky, Exchequer; Bob Porte, Recorder; Mike Dales,\nHistorian.\nFirst row: Austin Harvey; Bobroff, Leonard; Buckwald, Irving, Burnstein, Mitchell; Creamer, Albert; Dales, Michael. Second\nrow: Huberman, Morris; Huberman, Samuel; Krangle, Gerald; Miller, Harry; Morris, Gerald; Ornstein Niel. Third row:\nPorte,  Robert; Segall, Hervey; Sigal, Cecil; Stein, Albert; Wise, Leonard; Zipursky, Irvin.\n764 Kappa Sigma\nIN THE I Ith century a group of friends attending the\nUniversity of Bologna met to form a small society for\nsocial and intellectual companionship. This society\nflourished and continued through the centuries following. In 1869, at the University of Virginia, the ideals\nof this society led to the establishment of the first\nchapter of Kappa Sigma. As the years passed Kappa\nSigma flourished and expanded until now it is one of\nthe largest fraternities in North America.\nEpsilon Epsilon chapter of Kappa Sigma maintains\na fraternity house at 1955 W. 16th for the accommodation of brothers and as the focal point for the\nfraternity's social and functional activities.\nThe feature of the social year was the annual spring\nformal. Another social success was the sorority pledge\nbreakfast party which is held annually by the chapter\nfor all the new pledges of the nine sororities.\nFirst row: Basarab, Bill; Bourne, Bob; Burgess, Bob; Carlson, Bob; Charne, Pat. Second row: Dallas, Dennis; Erickson, Keith; Grundy, George;\nKirkwood, Dave; Lynn, Gerry; Mahone, Ken; Nestman, Jerry. Third row: Pappas, George; Savory, Gerry; Schram, Dick; Shields, John; Spenee,\nDon; Towers, Ryan; Williams, Michael.   Not pictured: Blomgren   Gene; Ferby, John; Gale, Bob; Puhach, Mike.\n765 Phi Gamma Delta\nA\nFirst row: Arkley, Fraser; Armitage, Ron; Armstrong, William. Second row: Balcom, Graeme; Birch, Ronald; Bishop, John; Bray, Ron;\nCameron, Nick; Cant, Eric; Dixon, John; Edgett, Rennie; Flynn, Robert. Third row: Forward, Gordon; Gartside, William; Golf, Ted;\nHansen, Bruce; Harris, Michael; Horton, Dave; Hughes, Clive; Hughes, Bill; Hunter, Robert. Fourth row: Hurst, John; Husband, Bryan, Husband, Kimball; Kueber, Philip; Lindsay, Barrie; McAllister, Ian; McKay, John; McKenzie, Murray; McLeod, John. Fifth row: MacSorley, Clare;\nMadill, Peter; Madill, Stewart; Mason, Derek; Mitchell, John; Murray, Donald; Nelson, Arnold; Parker, Ian; Peterson, Jerrold. Sixth row:\nPollock, James; Schultz, Allan; Shaw, Tom; Shearing, Roderick; Spare, Gordon; Thomas, Bill; Toyynbee, Thomas; Treasurer, Bernard; Vaughan,\nLome. Seventh row: Verchere, Dave; Verchere, William; Wallace, Fraser; Watkins, Ronald; White, Ian; Wild Edwin; Williams, Brian,\nWilliams,  John; Young,  Andrew.  Not  pictured:  Hume,   Philip;   Kules, Charles; Niel, Clive.\n766 Delta Upsilon\n-gr\nFirst row: Arthurs, Barry; Bendrot, Eric; Buckingham, Ian; Budd, Lome; Castle, Gary. Second row: Cathro, Bob; Cook, Don; Cunningham, Maurice; Debito, Len; Debysscher, Bob; Dreidger, Elwood; Dyke, Lome; Esko, Sam. Third row: Esselmont, Bill; Fawcus, Ken;\nFlather, Barrie; French, Basil; Gray, Jerry; Hamilton, Jim; Holm, Arnold; Holt, Bob. Fourth row: Hood, Jim; Horsman, Jim; Jenkinson,\nWilliam; Johnston, Ivan; Joyce, Murray; Kirk, Denis; Konquist, Roger; Larsen, Rod. Fifth row: Lew, Chuck; Loney, Dick; LongstafF,\nJohn; McBurney, Jerry; MacDonald, Dave; MacDonald, John; MacDonald, Ted; MacKinnon, Doug. Sixth row: McQueen, Bob;\nMathews, Stewart; Mayuk, Don; Morrow, Bruce; Mortimer, Ed; Nelson, Ron; Rovers, Jerry; Ryckman, Ernie. Seventh row: Schultz, Ron;\nStafford, Jack; Tallon, Bernie; Taylor, Nick; Tomlinson, John; Valentine, Peter; Verchere, Bruce; Weinberg, Bob.\n767 Phi Kappa Pi\nTHE motto \"Philuminoi Kanadioi Pivamentha,\" \"In\nbrotherly love, as Canadians, we benefit one\nanother,\" strongly emphasizes the aim and spirit of\nthe Phi Kappa Pi fraternity. Alpha lota chapter of Phi\nKappa Pi became, in  1919, the first fraternity on the\nUBC campus. The chapter was formed by ten men\nwho wished to perpetuate a friendship formed overseas. Close contact is kept with Canadian chapters\nat Alberta, Manitoba, Toronto, McGill, and Dalhousie.\nThis year the second annual Active-Alumnae banquet was held and proved a great success with many\nnotable alumnae attending such as Magistrate Gordon\nScott, Orson Banfield, and Chief Justice Sherwood\nLett.\nHighlights of the social calendar this year were the\nannual \"Klondike Nite,\" the Halloween masquerade,\nand the fraternity's annual formal held in the Thunderbird Room at Capilano Canyons. The rental of a\ncabin on Mt. Hollyburn for skiing trips during the\nyear was undertaken and provided many entertaining\ntrips for the members.\nThe fraternity house on West I Ith is the centre\nof all activities. Nearly all parties take place there.\nThe large modern house is a residence for all brothers\nwho wish to stay there.\nFirst row: Alderman, Richard; Second row: Badovinac, George; Casselman, Alan; Cook, Ron. Third row: Drossos, Nick;\nEstlan, Harry; James, Charlie; Jones, Don; Kruyytbosch, Carlos; Lacey, Dennis. Fourth row: MacAullay, Jim; Muncaster,\nIan; Nwanze, Peter; Palmer, Frank; Racich, John; Saunders, Alex. Fifth row: Sewart, Neil; Thomas, Dave; Thordarson,\nTed; Wharton, Lee; Yardley, Keith; Young, Robert.\n768 Delta Kappa Epsilon\nDELTA KAPPA EPSILON was founded at Yale in\n1844 as a protest against the injustice of the\nsociety system then existing at that university.\nPhi Alpha chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon was\nchartered in 1949 after the petition to establish a\nchapter at U.B.C. had been submitted by a local fraternity known as Beta Chi.\nThe members of Delta Kappa Epsilon have enjoyed\na very complete social programme this year, including exchanges and a barn dance. The big party of the\nyear was the DEKE formal held at Canyon Gardens.\nIt was attended both by active members and by an\nenthusiastic number of alumni.\nThis year delegates attended the DEKE convention,\nduring the Christmas season, which was held at Rochester, New York.\nThe purchase has been made of a new house at\n4435 W. 12th and the support of the alumni along\nwith the keen enthusiasm of the active members has\npaid off in a wonderful asset.\nFirst row: Baldwin, Bill; Carkner, Bob; Cartwright, Ian; Cvetkovich, Joe; Davies, Gordon; Davis, Art. Second row: Dyke-\nman, Murray; Eidsvil, Hal; Grey, Jim; Ing, Ray; Junas, Walter; Karlson, Harry. Third row: McCallan, Skip; McDonald,\nKenneth; Mason, Dave; Murdoch, Jack; Peel, Sandy; Scantland; Jim. Fourth row: Smith, Darrel; Sobiski, Bob; Spencer,\nBruce; Taylor, Jim; Weston, Bill; White, Paul.    Not pictured: Fleury, Howey; Johnson, Ken; Niro, Frank; White, Bob.\n769 Zeta Psi\nFOUNDED at the University of New York in 1847,\nZeta Psi established a chapter at the University\nof Toronto in 1879 making it the first international\nfraternity. Sigma Epsilon, the U.B.C. chapter, was\nchartered in  1926.\nDuring the year the Zetes have been an active\ngroup on campus with members working on the Mardi\nGras committee, IFC executive, CUS executive, the\nUbyssey, and many other clubs including the Big\nBlock club. In competition for the Housser Cup the\nZetes placed first in the Help Week campaign and\nmade their usual contribution to the harmony of the\nannual song-fest.\nThe social season this year again featured the\nApache party in the fall and the spring formal held\nat the Panorama Roof. As well there were the usual\nexchanges and the annual Presidents Dinner.\nThis was the last year for Zeta Psi in the old house\non 6th Avenue. In September the fraternity will move\ninto the new house now being built on Fraternity Row.\nFirst row: Anderson, Malcolm; Boyle, Ted. Second row: Brown, Ralph; Bush, Pat; Cowie, Jim; Coyle, Dick. Third row: Crowdy, Jim\nDover, David; Edwards, John; Ferry, Dave. Fourth row: Filleul, Chips; Fosbrooke, Doug; Fyfe, Stan; Gillis, Dale. Fifth row: Grant,\nBill; Grant, John; Green, John; Griffin, Bill; Herman, Bob; Horsey Ted; Kinney, Pat; Lochhead, Ian. Sixth row: McAllister, Mike; Mair,\nRate; Malliin, Toby; Manning, Mike; Moseley, Graham; Northfield, John; O'Brian, Terry; Patterson, Al. Seventh row: Ritchie, Bill;\nSkelding, Jim; Tanner, Terry; Tufts,  Frank; Turner, John; Wilson,   Ron; Wooster, Tony; Wyman, Dick.    Not pictured: Norris, Mack.\n770 Zeta Beta Tau\nZETA BETA TAU was founded at New York\nCollege in 1898. With the formation of the\nchapter at McGill in 1913, Zeta Beta Tau became\ninternational. Alpha Phi, at U.B.C, became affiliated\nwith the national chapter in  1942.\nZeta Beta Tau is very active in many campus\nactivities. Besides having a sports programme it\nmaintains a notable cultural programme, Alpha Phi\nparticipated in the song fest, entered a creative float\nin the homecoming parade and took part in a large-\nscale campaign in aid of the polio fund.\nUnder the supervision of social chairman Sid Coleman, a large number and variety of excellent parties\nwere presented. Among them were the annual Bermuda Shorts party, a Masquerade, a Pyjama Party,\nand the spring formal held at the Hotel Astor.\nProminent members in extra-curricular activities\nwere: Stanley Beck, Editor of the Ubyssey; Martin\nChess, Mardi Gras Coordinator; Charles Diamond,\nI.F.C. vice-president; Jerome Angel, Phil Greenberg,\nand Gerry Lecovin.\nFirst row: Beck, Howard; Beck, Stanley; Beiser, Morley. Second row: Breen, Harvey; Bronstein, Joe; Chess, Martin.\nThird row: Coeman, Sid; Diamond, Charles; Freeman, Larry. Fourth row: Genser, Joel; Greenberg, Phil; Groberman,\nHerby. Fifth row: Kaplan, Robert; Lecovin, Gerald; Levy, Lyall; Loomer, Herby; Nagler, George; Palansky, Syd. Sixth\nrow: Promislow, Dave; Saperstein, Manuel; Schloss, Morton; Schwartz, Charles; Sky, Milton; Smolkin, Barry. Seventh\nrow: Sirlin, Irving; Spevakow, Bob; Sunshine, Stan; Winestock, Alvin, Wyne, Mel; Zimmerman, Mel. Not pictured: Albert,\nHenry; Angel, Jerome; Biely, Gordon; Goldbloom, Ted; Groberman, Joe; Levine, Sefton; Promislow, Barry; Stark, Marvin.\n777 Sigma Phi Delta\nSIGMA PHI DELTA, an international social and\nprofessional fraternity of engineers, was installed\nat U.B.C. in 1932, eight years after its founding at\nU.C.L.A. At present there are eleven active chapters\nthroughout Canada and the United States.\nSigma Phi Delta is the only professional fraternity at\nU.B.C. and membership is extended only to students\nand faculty members of the faculty of Applied Science.\nThis year Sigma Phi is honoured to welcome Dr. A. W.\nMarris as a faculty member. The professional aspect\nof Sigma Phi Delta is mainly exemplified by technical\nsymposiums given by active members and alumni at\neach bi-monthly meeting held at the fraternity house.\nIn spite of a demanding engineering course the\nmembers of Sigma Phi Delta maintain a fairly extensive\nsocial program which was highlighted this year by the\nspring formal held annually at Canyon Gardens. Other\nparties completed the social program with the spring\nbanquet, the final function of the year, being held\nimmediately after exams.\nSigma Phi's are active in intra-mural sports and\nI.F.C. sponsored activities. As an example of the\nlatter, Sigma Phi Delta received a quantity of \"refreshments\" from I.F.C. for the highest per capita sale of\nraffle tickets.\nIn spite of the number of activities in which Sigma\nPhi Delta participates, the members maintain a high\nstandard of scholastic achievement. Sigma Phi Delta\nwon the inter-fraternity scholarship cup for the third\nconsecutive time this year to bring the total to more\nthan that of any other fraternity.\nFirst row: Bellow, D. C; Blackery, A. J.; Cramb, J. A.; Davidson, D.; Decourcy, D. E. Second row: Featherstone, H. A.;\nFinlayson, M.; Garrett, T. W.; Greene, R. E.; Greifenberger, A.; Hoverman, W. H. Third row: Huva J.; Jaris, D.;\nNishizaki,  R.;  Parkinson, W. D.;  Roberts,  D.; Woolveron,  R.\n772 Alpha Tau Omega\nFOUNDED at Virginia Military Institute, Richmond,\nVirginia, in 1865, Alpha Tau Omega has expanded\ninto 117 chapters from coast to coast. Epsilon Pi on\nthe U.B.C. campus was affiliated into the international\nfraternity in 1947.\nUnder local I.F.C. sponsorship during \"Help Week\",\nA.T.O.'s internationally initiated public service, the\nchapter's pledges helped renovate Ki-Van Boys' Club.\nActive participation on the campus in intramurals,\nHomecoming, the Mardi Gras and the Song Fest was\ncomplemented with a series of house projects, parties,\nand   alumni   stags.  The  house   at  4506   West   Ninth\naccommodated   out-of-town   members   and   was   the\nscene of many social activities.\nThe outstanding event of the year was the first\nCanadian Conclave of Alpha Tau Omega which was\nheld from February 24 to 26. Epsilon Pi hosted four\nchapters from Washington and Oregon. Formal meetings were held and the conference was climaxed with\na banquet and the \"Shipwreck\", the annual costume\nball. The weekend was an unqualified success and gave\nthe U.B.C. chapter an opportunity to further its fight\nagainst the discrimination clause and to gain support\nfor the international congress this summer.\nFirst row: Aitken, Bob; Connell, Dave; Dezell, Cliff; Findlater, Bryan; Gambrill, Anthony; Hurst, Ron; King, Harvey. Second row: Kirwin,\nJack; Leckie, Merrill; Lynnes, Ken; Robertson, Gordon; Ross, Bob; Stevens, John; Stevens, Robert. Third row: Swanky, Oscar; Taylor,\nAlex; Tern left, Gary; Thodeson, John; Wasylik, Joe; Wilson, Bob; Young, Mike. Not pictured: Jephson, Ron; Martin, Alex; Mason,\nMalcolm.\n773 Psi Upsilon\nFirst row: Achtem, Ellis; Aird, Cam. Second row: Archer, Len; Atkins, Mike; Bailey, George; Baxter, Al; Bose, Bob.\nThird row: Bremner, Dave; Burr, Larry; Burton, Ed; Butler, Rich; Carfrae, Jim; Carmichael, John; Corbold, Brian; Danard,\nMaurice; Drab, Al. Fourth row: Duggan, Bob; Easter, Cal; Elliott, Don; Gee, Jack; Girling, Pete; Griffiths, Barry; Guile,\nRobert; Holmes, Don; Irwin, Grant. Fifth row: Jeannes Trev; Kendall, Mike; Liebelt, Al; Lys, Ros; Malone, Jim; Malone,\nTed; Meeker, Henry; Middleton, Gil; Middleton, Keith. Sixth row: Morgan, Bob; Morrin, Mickey; Morrison, Bill; Mus-\nkeyn, Ted; Nolan, Don; Palmer, Garry; Peters, Terry; Phillipson, Gerald; Preston, Jack. Seventh row: Price, George;\nQuinn, Bob; Robinson, Hal; Sanford, Keith; Scarrow, Hart; Sherratt, Jim; Sherrin, Derby; Singh, Sucha; Smitheringale,\nBill. Eighth row: Sortwell, Ted; Stanton, Rodger; Stickland, Mike; Sweistra, John; Thorpe, Fred; Tomlinson, Fred; Wagner, Willard; Whittle, Don; Wright, Bill.\n774 Alpha Delta Phi\nFirst row: Armstrong, Gordon; Armstrong, Jim; Baker, Colin; Bell, Gery. Second row: Bell, Marc; Bradshaw, Pete; Clyne, Stu; Connell, Pete;\nCrawford, Brad; Dempster, Gav. Third row: DeLong, Tom; Fawsitt, Bud; Foote, Clint; Frederickson, Bud; Glaspie, Mike; Gourlay, Bruce;\nGuns, Brian; Hill, Gary; Holland, Fred. Fourth row: Holland, Jack; Howard, Ron; Hunt, John; Hunter, Al; Jefferson, Pete; Kenny, Brent;\nKirkland, Bob; Longstaffe, Ron; McCallum, Don. Fifth row: MacDonald, Don; MacDonald, Jim; McDougall, Graeme; McGrath, Dave;\nMcLeod, John; McNulty, Don; MacTagart, Al; Mair, Bob; Mann, Jim. Sixth row: Martin, Norris; Molson, John; Montgomery, Roger;\nPeretz, Dwight; Pusey, Ron; Jules; Samis, Bob; Shalman, Denis; Sheppard, Barry. Seventh row: Shields, Pete; Sinclair, Bob; Stanfield,\nDerek; Sydneysmith, Sam; Trevor-Smith, Ted; Watson, Bill; Welsford, Duthie; Wickson, Malcolm; Williams, Bryan. Not pictured: Alexander,\nErnie;  Bryan,  Pat;  Forrester,  Ray;  Mortgomery,  Bill;  Oliver,  Ed;  Owen, Dick.\n775 Lambda Chi Alpha\nLAMBDA CHI ALPHA fraternity was founded at\nBoston University in 1909 and since then has\nbecome one of the largest college fraternities with\n145 American and four Canadian chapters.\nZeta Xi chapter of Lambda Chi Alpha gained its\ncharter on this campus in 1950 and has developed\ninto a strong and progressive chapter during this\nshort while.\nThis year was highlighted by the acquisition of a\nchapter house in the Shaughnessy district, which was\nthe culmination of a three year struggle to find\nsuitable accommodation for fraternity activities and\nout-of-town members.\nThe fraternity maintains a well balanced and interesting social life which is subsidized to a large extent\nby the yearly dues of its members. Because of the\nstrength in its International body, Lambda Chi Alpha\nnot only had a sound and stable financial backing, but\nalso affords its members much pleasure when travelling or studying in the United States or in Canada\nas every member can stay in the fraternity houses\nfree of charge. As well, a pre-arranged social program can be expected.\nLambda Chi's are very active on campus, and take\npart in intra-murals, IFC activities and Song Fest.\nFirst row: Allen, Victor.    Second  row: Bourns,  David; Carfrae,  Walter;  Cullen, James;  Girvin,  Gerald;   Hicks,   Milton.\nThird  row:  Hunter, Darrel; Johnston,  Robert; Kroll, Gustav; Oakley, Philip; Sager, Gerald; Savarie, Louis; Taylor, George.\n776 Phi Kappa Sigma\nPHI KAPPA SIGMA was founded at the University\nof Pennsylvannia in 1850. Since then chapters\nhave sprung up in most of the major universities across\nNorth America.\nDuring the spring of 1955 a \"skull\" club was formed\nat U.B.C. which was organized by Harold King who\nwas author of \"Hail U.B.C.\" Last September seventeen newly initiated Phi Kaps formed the nucleus of a\nvigorous organization.\nAlpha   Omega   of  Phi   Kappa   Sigma   has  a  very\nsimple aim and that is to enjoy and succeed in all\nphases of campus life but to avoid becoming a social\nmachine.\nActivities this year included spring and fall formals,\nseveral informal parties and a skiing party up Grouse\nMountain. Members also participated in intramural\nsports and the annual Song Fest.\nThe active alumnae association of Phi Kappa Sigma\nare now engaged in negotiations for a house to be\nready for occupancy by the fall.\nFirst row: Bentz, Barrie; Chant, John; Downing, Chuck; Frechette, Myles. Second row: Gold, Don; Johannes, Bob; King,\nDave; Ledgerwood, Ernie; Lee, Bob; MacGillivray, Rod; Third row: MacKenzie, Norm; MacKenzie, Pete; McKitrick,\nMuzz; Meekison, Pete; Spring, Bob; Watts, Bob.\n777 Greei\nA colourful group were the members of Phi Delta Theta who sported\nstraw hats and red bow ties to lend atmosphere to their rendition of\n\"The   Easter   Parade\".\nA striking group are the members of Kappa\nKappa Gamma who captured first place in the\nSong Fest this year. Song leader was Bev\nAnderson.\nShown at the annual party for their camp\nchildren are members of Gamma Phi Beta. The\ncamp, at Sechelt, B.C., is owned and maintained by the sorority. Each sorority and fraternity have international philanthropic projects for\nwhich they raise money and organize functions\neach  year.\nAll set to go\nChristmas Caroling\nare Ken Noble, Beta\nTheta Pi, with Marilyn Emsley and\nBarbara Hyndman,\nAlpha Phi. The two\ngroups get together\nannually and proceeds from their\nefforts go to the\nCanadian Arthritic\nSociety.\nYou may recognize some of the tonsils. Depicted\nis what is the equivalent of the sororities\n\"skreech day\"\u2014pledge day for the frats in the\ncafeteria.\nWith a pleased\ngrin on his face\nGraham Mackenzie\nreceives the Housser Cup for the\nBeta Theta Pi's.\nThis group has won\nthe cup seven out\nof eight times. The\ngentleman on the\nleft is the original\ndonor of the cup,\nG. E. Housser.\n778 Activities\nHolding what appears to be a monopoly on the fraternity Song Fest cup\nare the members of Beta Theta Pi\nwho have taken first place for six\ntimes in a row. Leader of this year's\nteam was  Ken Noble.\nThe sun always shines in Vancouver, of course, but what is not\nalways so well known is that\nwhile we Westerners bask in brilliant sunshine those Toronto people are just covered with snow!\nThe sunburned, sun-glassed girl in\nthe foreground  is  Pauline Agnew.\nDeep concentration Is shown\non the faces of the Alpha\nGam's who placed second in\n{his  year's  competition.\nm?i\n1 tftttHH*?\n\"Drink to me only with thine eyes, and I will pledge\nthee my beer bottle\" sang the angelic choir of Zeta\nPsi as they gagged their way through the annual Song\nFest. Their original interpretation of \"selections from\nLucien de Lammermoor' ended the most polished and\ncolourful  festival  in  U.B.C. history.\n\"Gee, Mom, this university life Is real\nswell,\" burbles happy\ninitiate as he dunks\nhimself in the barrel of\nbeer. This Is a tradi-\nlional ceremony with\nsome fraternities, and\nwho could blame them?\nShown are one of the\nmany couples who attended \"Pledges on\nParade\", an annual\nformal held at Brock\nHall In honour of the\nfall pledges of each\nsorority. The dance is\nsponsored by Delta Phi\nEpsilon.\n779 -c a*\nZ40^1\nJ    ~*J\u00a3&\nV V V b v- V\nm^m?*\ny ? y\nr-iSfc*^-^\n_\u00a3\u00a3>    'SCTn.\n-^:,\nsc-'- r-^v*'\"'-* -^^^i^*-^\"--- v-^f*i7\"^ m^m*m^ University Architect's conception of the proposed Arts Building.   Oh, to be an Artsman in  19571\nFaculty of ARTS and SCIENCE\nDean of the  Faculty of Arts and  Science, S.  N.  F. Chant.\nYET one more Arts class will graduate and another\nwave of freshmen surge over our Campus before\nthe new Arts Building becomes a reality in September\n1957.\nHerein will be facilities for the departments classified strictly as 'Arts.\" Plans include classroom accommodation for three thousand students and offices\nfor an increased staff.\nNew this year were the Honours Courses offered\nin Renaissance Studies and Medieval Studies. The\nlanguage departments, those of History, Philosophy\nand Slavonics and the School of Architecture arranged\ngroupings to make these courses possible.\nThere will be some faculty changes with the opening\nof the fall semester.  Mr. John  Deutsch, formerly of\n782 the Department of Finance in Ottawa, will replace\nDean Angus as head of the Department of Economics\nand Political Science, while Dr. C. S. McDowell will\nreplace Dr. Hooley as head of the Department of\nChemistry.\nWhat, in the beginning, seemed like a basement\nsuite dream became a reality when a thousand Arts-\nmen ratified the constitution of their own undergraduate society.\nUbyssey writers termed it a \"resurrection,\" A.M.S.\nhowled \"It won't work,\" but quietly, like the deep\nrunning stream, the determined Artsmen forged ahead.\nThey adopted an \"ASS\" as their mascot, and assumed\nthe title A.S.U.S.\u2014the Arts and Science Undergraduate Society.\nThe aims of the A.S.U.S. are first, to raise the\nstatus of the Arts and Science, to give representation\nto the neglected two thousand Artsmen in the U.S.C,\nto co-ordinate the diverse activities of the Arts and\nScience clubs and groups, to honour deserving Arts\nand Science students, and secondly, to devise a more\nrepresentative form of government for the campus\nat large.\nThe Art's candidate Danica d'Hont placed second\nin the Homecoming Queen contest, and won the\nhearts of the campus for the society.\nThe society successfully defended the humanities in\na debate, arguing that \"Engineering inventiveness is a\ncurse to humanity.\"\nThe same success is expected to attend the fight of\nthe organization in the securing of a B.Sc. degree for\nthe science students.\nThe Annual \"Arts Week\" started this year, as the\nArtsmen try to awaken the people to the importance\nof the Arts in the community.\nThe Artsmen are on the march! As Akesode puts it,\n\"Say what you will, we are back to stay.\" Yes, bigger\nand better things are in store for the A.S.U.S.\nNot speculating on the fit, but contemplating the\nAnthropological significance of these masks is Gloria\nCranmer, while Michael Kew searches for another fascinating   relic.\nWhat does the weatherman predict for our \"Evergreen\nPlayground\"? Geography majors Don Pearson and Bill\nStaveley record the temperature and humidity readings\nnecessary   to   answer   that   question.\nThe Arts Undergraduate Executive spent most of its\ntime proving to the rest of the Campus that A.S.U.S.\nis now a permanent fixture. Standing, left to right:\nPhil Greenberg, Al Forrest, Tom Wilson, Jim MacFarlane, Walter Shynkaryk. Seated: Kathie Archibald,\nAlade   Akesode,   Liz   Baird,   and   Sally   Robertson.\n7&3 784\nABBOTT, William T.\nABLETT, John Francis\nACHESON, Anthony G.\nACKLAND, Robert Wm.\nADAM, Margaret J.\nADAMS, Everard F. S.\nADAMS, Griffin G.\nADAMSON, William R.\nAGNEW, William John\nAIKMAN, Gordon Lynn\nAIRD, Charles A.\nALAFI, Seraphine\nALBINSON, Joan Emma\nALEXANDER, Desmond C.\nALEXANDER, Ian Mclean\nALEXANDER, Joan E.\nALLAN, Peter\nALLAN, Diana Arlene\nALLAN, Barbara Jean\nALLAJtDYCE, D. Bruce\nALSINA, Alberto\nANDERSON, Charles M.\nANDERSON, Garry R.\nANDERSON, Gwendolynne\nANDERSON, Kenneth Wm.\nANDERSON, Lawrence M.\nANDERSON, Marion Gail\nANGLE, Norah Anne\nANSELMO, Albert J.\nAPPLEBY, Wendy P.\nAPPLETON, Lome David\nARBOUR, Hinda R.\nARCHIBALD, M.Thomas\nARGUE, Dennis Patrick\nARMOUR, Mary Elspeth\nARMSTRONG, Kathleen P.\nARMSTRONG, Michael M.\nARNDT, Rolef Arthur\nARNASON, Esther I.\nARNAUD, Joseph\nARNETT, Patrick I.\nARNOLD, Robert S.\nASAI, Yuji\nASHCROFT, Norman T.\nASTON, Glen Raymond\nATKINSON, Elizabeth A.\nAUDAIN, Michael James\nAULD, Donald Robert\nAUTOR, Ken\nAVERY, Ronald Edward\nAXEN, David Arnold\nBABCOCK, Arthur T.\nBACKMAN, Gordon A,\nBACKLER, Brian Edwin\nBADER, Lawrence Wayne\nBAGSHAW, Robert Jones\nBAIKIE, Myrtle Edna\nBAILLIE, Donald A.\nBAKER, Doreen C. 4 4 4\nBAKER, James Donald\nBALKWILL, John A.\nBALLANTYNE, Rosalie J.\nBARAGAR, Elizabeth\nBARKER, Hugh John\nBARR, Patricia Joy\nBARRETT, Audree B. A.\nBARRON, Darlene M.\nBARTLETT, Martin F.\nBARTOSH, Reginald W.\nBARTON, Bernard C.\nBARTON, Marilyn E.\nBASIREN, Frank E.\nBATEMAN, G. W. James BATTLE, C. Tucker\nBAUGH, Robert Alan\nBAUMGART, Rita M.\nBAYER, Loreen Alberta\nBAZETT, Isobel G.\nBEADELL, S. W. Allan\nBEAUREGARD. Albert E.\nBECK, Allan Stewart\nBEEDOM, Elaine G.\nBEEVORPOTTS. C. Robert\nBELL, Monte Stephen\nBELL, Barbara Joan\nBELL, Jo Mary\nBELL,  Lawrence Irving\nBELL, Leon Alexander\nBELL, M. Vera Sydney\nBELL, Sidney\nBELL, Ronald Murd\nBENE, Julius Frank\nBENTLEY, George J.\nBERGE, Howard Raymond\nBERZINS, Agris\nBETTS, Sarah Isabel\nBEVAN, John H. R.\nBICKNELL, R. J. Penny\nBIDESHI, Ralph R.\nBIELY. Barbara M.\nBIRDSALL, Julia\nBISMANIS, James Klaus\nBLACK, Roberta Clara\nBLACKMAN, Melville D.\nBLANCK, Sharon M.\nBLACKENBACH, Judith L.\nBLANEY, John Patrick\nBLAZEN, Frank George\nBLOM, Nicholaas August\nBLOOD, Donald Arthur\nBLOWER, Kenneth\nBLUNDELL, William M.\nBOBBITT, William W.\nBOGUSKI, Louise Anne\nBOHME, Reinhard D.\nBONIFACE, Judith W.\nBOOTH, James Jerome\nBOOTH, Murray A.\nBORCH, Gerald Harden\nBORDEN, John Harvey\nBOSSONS, Julie A.\nBOTHAM, Peter Elliott\nBOUCHARD, J. A. Emile\nBOUCHER, Barrie Knox\nBOURNE, Barbara\nBOULDING, Richard M.\nBOWDEN, Shirley Ann\nBOWEN. Margaret C.\nBOWKER, Frederic O.\nBRALL, Renate A. G. I.\nBRANDES, Isabell F.\nBRETT. C. June E.\nBREWER, Robert E.\nBRIDGE, Loraine A.\nBRIDGEMAN, Don\nBRISTOW, David W.\nBROCKINGTON. Peter M.\nBRODIE, Norman W.\nBROMAN, Roy Dallas\nBROUGHTON, James F.\nBROTHERTON, D. Graham\nBROWN, Deborah Susan\nBROWN, James\nBROWN, James\nBROWN, Jay\nBROWN, Murray Price\nBROWN, Robert Allen\nBRUNDRETT, Donald A.\nBRUSIC, Joe John\nBRYANT, Brenda Ann\n785 Sllmm\\9m\\\n186\nBUCHAN, Elizabeth A.\nBUDD, Barbara May\nBUDD, Gillian E.\nBUDD, Murray Bertram\nBUCKLEY, Ernest Bruce\nBULMER, Gordon Ross\nBURCHELL, Elizabeth J.\nBURKE, Philip N.\nBURNETT, Diana J.\nBURNS, M. Elizabeth\nBURTCH, Charlia\nBURY, Richard Gwynne\nBURTON, John David\nBURTON, Elizabeth T.\nBUSHELL, Ronald G.\nBUTTERFIELD, E. Diane\nCALLAGHAN, Robert S.\nCALVERLEY, Roderick K.\nCAMERON, Bruce J. R.\nCAMERON, Donald Allan\nCAMERON, Ronald Uoyd\nCAMPBELL, Ardyth J.\nCAMPBELL, Edward D. M.\nCAMPBELL, H. David\nCAMPBELL, Julia Anne\nCAMPBELL, Kay Gordon\nCAMPBELL, N. Larry\nCAMPBELL, William Roy\nCAMPONE, W. Mervin\nCANNON, Dale Leslie\nCAPLE, Charles Garry Ken\nCAPEWELL, James\nCAREY, G. F. Douglas\nCARLILE, Thomas W.\nCARLSON, E. Gail\nCARLSON, James Eugene\nCARMICHAEL, Pollaine\nCARTER, B. A. Trallee\nCARR, Kenneth Lome\nCASE, Victoria Ann\nCASHORE, John M.\nCHALLENGER, David J.\nCHALK, H. John R.\nCHAMBERS, Donald John\nCHAMBERS, Carol E.\nCHAN, Wai Chi\nCHANG, Morley Wing\nCHAPMAN, Glen Robert\nCHAPPELL Peter Wm.\nCHARLTON, C. Arthur\nCHARNLEY, Frances M.\nCHARLTON, John R.\nCHERRY, Maureen Laura\nCHILCOTT, Eleanor J.\nCHISHOLM, Judith\nCHONG, Jean Wanda\nCHOW, Wone M. May\nCHRISTIANSEN, Linda A.\nCHRISTIE, Kayla Flora\nCHU, Lawrence P.\nCHURCHMAN, Dorothy E.\nCLANCY, Deana Joan\nCLARE, Barry Dean\nCLARK, Ian Sidney Rex\nCLARK, John Paton\nCLARK, Melvin Wilfred\nCLARKE, Robin D. F.\nCLAY, Gordon K.\nCLEMENTS, Geoffrey L.\nCOBB, Roland William\nCOCKRILL, Jack Arthur\nCOLBY, Joseph R.\nCOLLINS, John Michael\nCOLLVER, Helen M. C.\nCOMESOTTI, Thomas Leo\nCONKIN, John Barrie\nCONNAGHAN, Charles J. COOKE, Richard John\nCOPPING, Harold G. A.\nCORBETT, Stanley G.\nCOSTERTON, Henry F.\nCOSTELLO, Mary Ann\nCOULAS, Dorothy Julia\nCOULTHARD, Douglas J.\nCOUTTS, John Gordon\nCOWLISHAW, David V.\nCOX, Andrew Leonard\nCOX, Edward Charles\nCOX, Ian Frederick\nCOX, Shirley A.\nCRAIGIE, Ross Keir\nCRAIG, Andrew Adair\nCRAPKO, Boris Dimitri\nCRAWFORD, William H.\nCREELMAN, Eugene L.\nCRERAR, William G.\nCRISALL, Sylvia Grance\nCRICHLOW, Benjamin A.\nCROMIE, Victoria Ann\nCROOKALL, E. Keith B.\nCROSBY, Raymnd A.\nCROSS, Rginald Grant\nCROSS, Dennis W. R.\nCROSS, Thomas Alan\nCROWDY, James H.\nCUMBERLAND, B. Gail\nCUMMING, Stuart\nCUNNINGHAM, Robert L.\nCUNNINGHAM, Clifford\nCURBELLO, Va'encia N.\nCURRIE, Donald James\nCUTHBERT, Rudolph\nDABOVIC, Melana\nDALE, Joan Dennison\nDALY, Margaret Anne\nDANG, Joe Kum\nDANIEL, Daphne M.\nDAS, Jagessar\nDAVENPORT, John R.\nDAVID, William G. L.\nDAVIDSON, A. George\nDAVIDSON, Anthony\nDAVIDSON, Gerard R.\nDAVIDSON, G. Dennis\nDAVIDSON, Jeanne S.\nDAVIDSON, K. Walker\nDAVIDSON, Robert M.\nDAVIES, Earle D.\nDAVIES, Christopher M.\nDAVIES, Albert E.\nDAVIES, David Murton\nDAVIES, H. Asahel L.\nDAVIES, Leonard\nDAVIES, Robert Charles\nDEANE, Patricia A.\nDEANS, Terrence W.\nde ATH, Dale B.\nde CEW, Frances Gale\nDEGRUCHY, Philip John\nDELANE, Owen Melvin\nDELL. William Murray\nDEMBICKI, Malia Anne\nDENDEWICH, Richard E.\nDEPAOLI, Alberto\nDELVIN, D. Terence\nDEVOE, Joanne G.\nDHALIWAL, Kabal S.\nD HONDT, Danica\nD HONDT, Ignace W.\nDICK, Kenneth A.\nDICKIE, David Grant\nDICKIE, Paul M.\nDICKIE, Robert C.\nDICKSON, Judith Lynne\n9\n%m%%^%\n187 x\/jjrJi    tm\n188\nDIEWERT, Mary Ruth\nDILLON, Charles L\nDION, R. Ross E.\nDIXON, Thomas Alan\nDIXON, Jamie Richard\nDOBB, Theodora C.\nDOBELL, Alan Rodney\nDOBSON, Carol Jane\nDOCKSTEADER, Deanna J.\nDODDING, Richard John\nDOERGES, Raymond H.\nDONAIS, Edward L J.\nDONALDSON, Ailsa M. (Bonny]\nDONALDSON, John Clare\nDOUGLAS, Richard A.\nDOWLING, James T.\nDOWNE, Audrey Loretta\nDRAYTON, Robert M.\nDRENNAN, Cecilia E.\nDRESSLER, John Henry\nDREWNOWSKI, William\nDRINKWATER, Diane\nDRUERY, Donald W.\nDULABA, Arthur W.\nDUMOULIN, Michael L.\nDUMARESQ, David J.\nDUNCAN, Katherine H.\nDUNHAM, Charles B.\nDUNMORE, Barbara Gail\nDUNSMUIR, Carole A.\nDU TEMPLE, Barry G.\nDYER, Thomas Michael\nDYRNDAHL, John Harold\nEADES, Robert Edwin\nEDGELL, Patricia Mary\nEDWARDS, Paul Selwyn\nEHRHARDT, Karl Robert\nEILERS, Eleanor Jean\nELLIOTT, Frank D.\nELLIOTT, Rosemary D.\nELLIS, Ella Beverly\nELLIS, Mary Jean\nELSTONE, Alfred O.\nENGELBEEN, Sharon\nERICKSON, Ture R.\nERICKSON, W. Dwayne\nERICKSEN, Alan C.\nESCOTT Bernice Mae\nESKO, Edwin A.\nESKILOSED, Verne E.\nESHPETER, Elton B.\nETTLES, Ronald C. R.\nEVANS, Noel David H.\nEWING, Heather Joan\nFARRIS, Ann\nFARRIS, E. Wendy\nFENNELL, Neil Stewart\nFERBER, Phillip G.\nFERGUSON, Robert A.\nFERNANDEZ, Edgar J.\nFERRIE, Adam E. J.\nFIANDER, Bonita Joan\nFIELD, William Arthur\nFIELDING, Raymond A.\nFIELDWALKER. Denis G.\nFILMER, Allan Edward\nFILLING, M. Elaine\nFISCHER, Peter H. H.\nFITZPATRICK, Marilynn\nFLACK, Josephine Anne\nFOLVIK, Sylvia Janis\nFORBES, Carolyn\nFORMAN, William S. B.\nFORRESTER, John D.\nFORRESTER, Roy\nFORSTER, Doleres T.\nFORSTER, Roberta A. FOSSEN, Paul Orvin\nFOURNIER, J. Lawrence\nFOWLER, Marilyn P.\nFRAIN, Judith Mary\nFRANCIS, William F.\nFRASER, Janet Ann\nFRASER, Bruce Fredric\nFRASER, D. Alastair\nFRASER, William John\nFREDHEIM, Allen E.\nFREEDMAN, Kenneth W.\nFREEMAN, Helen Mary\nFREHLICK, Raymond S.\nFRENCH. Mary J.\nFRESCHI, Bruno Basil\nFREUNDLICH, Robert\nFRIEDRICH, Werner E.\nFRIER, M. Laurie\nFRISBY, Blake E.\nFROSETH, B. Elaine\nFUKUI, Shizuko Dorothy\nFULLERTON, Gerald J. A.\nFULLYLOVE, Norman E.\nFUNK, Joan Venice\nGADDES, Charles Wm.\nGAGEL, Albert\nGAGNON, Jeanne Anne\nGALBRAITH Margaret E.\nGALLAGER, Donald\nGALT, Alexander R.\nGAMMON, Murray M.\nGARDNER, Philip H.\nGARRARD, Patrick W.\nGARRIOCK, Douglas R.\nGARSIDE, Donald Gary\nGATHER, Norman\nGATZ, Gerald Edward\nGAUER, Gary Brian\nGAUCHER, C. Maurice\nGAZZARD, Judith Anne\nGEE, Sonny Bing\nGEMMILL, John A.\nGENTRY, Joseph L.\nGEORGE, Gordon Albert\nGIBSON, Gordon E.\nGIBSON, Janice Irene\nGILBERT, Gerald F. H. A.\nGILCHRIST, Claire L\nGILGAN, Michael W.\nGILLESPIE, Anita C.\nGILLELAND. Ann\nGILLIS, J. Donald M.\nGILMOUR, Dorothy M.\nGINTHER, Gary Grant\nGISBORNE, John\nGLADMAN, Donald J.\nGLASGOW, Robert M.\nGLASIER, James Arthur\nGNITT, Mary Rose\nGOEVJON, Gerry\nGOLD, David M.\nGOLD, Sidney\nGOLIS, Andy James Gus\nGOLDSTEIN, Lola Rae\nGOOCH, Bryan N. S.\nGOODWIN, Georgina H.\nGOORDIAL, Sonny\nGORDON, Jane Hamelton\nGORMAN, Barry Francis\nGOULD, Donald Harris\nGOWER, Mary G.\nGRAHAM, Judith L.\nGRAHOLM, Leonard\nGRANGER, Maurice Roy\nGRANT, George Allison\nGRANT, Norman R.\nGRANT, Barbara Louise\n789 790\n'  i\nJ\u00a3?L '^\\4.aA Wi\nGRANT, John Lendrum\nGRANT, Michael Edwin\nGRAY, Ann Elizabeth\nGRAY, Gordon J.\nGRAY, Hugh Donald\nGREATHED, Mary M. J.\nGREEN, Harold Robert\nGREEN, Sidney Bruce\nGREENWOOD, Stanley R.\nGREGORY, L Maureen\nGRIFFIN, John Raymond\nGRIFFITHS, Gordon B.\nGRIFFITHS, Gary Wood\nGRIFFITHS, David John\nGRIFFITH, Clyde M.\nGRIGG, Harvey Merrill\nGRIMMETT, Roger T.\nGRINSTED, Rosemary H.\nGROOME, Rona'd W.\nGROOM, William L. J.\nGROSSMITH, Patricia E.\nGRUBB, Noel Anne\nGUNN, George Donald\nGUNN, Brian Mitchell\nGUSTAFSON, Albert C.\nGUTRATH, Gordon C.\nGUTMAN, Gary Peretz\nHAALAND, Aaron C.\nHAAXMA, Deanna\nHAAVE, Marvin Leroy\nHALE, Barrie Lynn\nHALL, Arthur Roy\nHALL, Karen Kaur\nHALL, Joseph David\nHALPIN, Sheila W.\nHAMBLY, Linda\nHAMILTON, Kenrick W.\nHAMMARSTROM, Karen L\nHAMM. Lome Paul\nHAMRE, Carole\nHANAFI, Nizar A.\nHANDFORD, G. Murray\nHANSON, H. Merwin\nHARDER, Lorna\nHARDIE, Roderick G.\nHARDING, Earnest A.\nHARDS, John E.\nHARGRAVE, D. Ann\nHARLING. John Lyle\nHARMER, Kenneth\nHARMEL, Lloyd Raymond\nHARMSTEN, Keath\nHARPER, Paul Staton\nHARRIS, George L. D.\nHARRISON, Dave\nHARRISON, Horace W. R.\nHARRISON, Brian K.\nHARROP, Sheila\nHARVEY, Kenneth Al'an\nHARVEY, Lee John K.\nHATCHER, Walter E.\nHAUGHAN, Jean Graco\nHAVENS, Kenneth J.\nHAVENS, John Renford\nHAYDEN, Winifred Ivy\nHAYES, Iris Evane\nHAYES, James Hugh D.\nHEALY, Michael John\nHEATH, Timothy Robin\nHEATH, Christopher P.\nHEBB, Peter Harvey\nHEDLEY. Joslin Anne\nHEMBROFF, W. Vaughan\nHENDERSON, E. Patricia\nHENDERSON. Leah E.\nHENDERSON, Ralph S.\nHENDRICKSON, Marina N. HEPTING, Edward D. H.\nHEROD, Walter Wayne\nHESSEL, Wolfgang H.\nHETHERINGTON, Hugh P.\nHETHERINGTON, R. A. M.\nHEWITT, David Andrew\nHEYWORTH, James R.\nHICKMAN, Brian D.\nHIGGS, Geoffrey\nHIK, John\nHILBORN, Donald W.\nHILL, James Clifford\nHILL, Victor J.\nHIRTLE, Herbrt Bruce\nHI ROTA, Jackson Y.\nHO SZE, Cheung\nHOAR, George E.\nHODDINOTT, Simon B. R.\nHODSON, Thomas Edward\nHODGINS, Allan L. J.\nHOFER, Barbara Joan\nHOLDING, Grace D.\nHOLDSWORTH, Joyce E.\nHOLGATE, William J.\nHOLMAN, Marie\nHOLMES ,lvan\nHOLMES, Curtis Baker\nHOLMES, Maureen Jane\nHOLT, William H. C.\nHOME, George\nHOOD, Wayne C.\nHOOGSTRATEN, Eugene T.\nHOOPER, John E.\nHOPKINS, Derek T.\nHOPPER, Valerie Diane\nHORITA, Robert Eiji\nHORNQUIST, John Henry\nHORREY, C. Douglas S.\nHORTON, Elizabeth I.\nHOSKYN, Arnold W.\nHOWE, John Wilson\nHOWE, Pamela Mary\nHOWEY, Myrna E.\nHOWIE, David H. S.\nHOYLAND, Barbara\nHRUSHOWY, Christopher\nHUDSPETH, William J.\nHUGHES, Barrie James\nHUGHES, David John\nHULSE, Richard S.\nHUMPHRIES, N. Joyce\nHUNT, James G. C.\nHURST, Brian Desmond\nHURST, Richard Gary L.\nHUSTON, Mrs. Margaret\nHUTTON, Roberta G.\nHYDE, Robert A.\nIACOBUCCI, Frank\nINGALLS. Gordon M.\nINGLEDEW, M. Nancy\nINOUYE. M. Harry\nIRVINE, Robert J.\nIRVINE, Lance Laverne\nIRVINE, Douglas F.\nISBISTER, Bryan R.\nISBERG, John Herman\nISHERWOOD, Donald Roy\nIWATA, Robert Keisuke\nJACKSON, Allin Ross\nJACKSON, Edwin H.\nJACOBS, Muriel\nJACOBSEN, Roy Bjarne\nJAGDEO, Allan H.\nJANES, Marilyn J.\nJAY, Marilyn Sinclair\nJEFFERY, J. Terrance\nJENKINSON, Janet Anne\n797 7.92\nJENSEN. John Arthur\nJEZIERSKI, Andrew T.\nJOHNSSON. Carl L\nJOHNSON. Donald G.\nJOHNSON, Eric John\nJOHNSON, Jo Ann B.\nJOHNSON, Margot F. J.\nJOHNSON, Marilyn C.\nJOHNSON, Neil Oscar\nJOHNSON, Robert W.\nJOHNSTON, James R.\nJOHNSTON, Kenneth G.\nJONES, Charles Dennis\nJONES, Dennis A. R.\nJONES, David A.\nJONES, George R.\nJONES, Glyn Murray\nJONES, James Donald\nJONES, John Dixon\nJONES, K. Valerie\nJONES, Ronald K.\nJONES, Tom\nJONSSON, Roy Hans\nJORDE, Crystal\nJUNG, Stanley Fan\nKADOTA, Gordon R.\nKAGNOFF, David Brian\nKALLHOOD, Clarence B.\nKAMIKAWAJI, Sally S.\nKANTOR, Rowena Ydelle\nKANDIE, Robert A.\nKARPICK, Frank F.\nKAVIC, Lome John\nKAWASE, Tadataka\nKEARNS, Lionel John\nKEARSLEY, Michael A.\nKEE, Susie\nKEIBIN, Valerie\nKELLER, Allen W.\nKEMP. Karen A.\nKEMBER, Barbara Jane\nKENNEDY, Beverley G.\nKENNEDY, C. Dianne\nKENNELLY, John P.\nKENNY, George Allan\nKENT, Barber Nigel B.\nKERR, Evelyn E.\nKEYS, Harriet May\nKIDD, Shirley Muriel\nKIDD, Stuart Edgar\nKILBRIDE, Roderick M.\nKINCEID. David\nKING, Donald Emerson\nKING, David Albert\nKING, Elizabeth Ann\nKING, Judith Margaret\nKING, Joan Beverly\nKINGSLEY, Jerry A.\nKINSEY, Elizabeth D.\nKIRBY, Jack Harold\nKIRK, David Bruce\nKISH, Elizabeth Jane\nKISS, Mart\nKLASEN, Olaf\nKLASSEN, P. Eddie P.\nKLINCK, Barbara E.\nKNIGHT, Alan D.\nKNOTT, Frances Leslie\nKNUTSEN, William G.\nKOBILAN, John\nKOCH, Charles Peter\nKOHN, Gerald\nKONKIN. Nick\nKOOL, Ivor Albert\nKORSCH, Martin\nKOZAK, William A. P.\nKRALL, John Steve KRAATZ, Dieter Heinz\nKRAMER, Horst Gunther\nKUJAWA, David\nKULICH, Jindra Milos\nKURTZ, Bernice\nKWAN, Ronald\nLAANELA, Hugo\nLA FONTAINE, Roger H.\nLAKE, Robert Alan\nLAMONT, James Matthew\nLAMOND, Eleanor\nLAMONT, John Craig\nLAMPERSON. George W.\nLANCE, George A.\nLANDRY, George Albert\nLANG. Carol R.\nLANGLANDS, Mary\nLANGTRY, Hector M.\nLARKWORTHY, Mary Lou\nLAUGHY, G. W. Gerald\nLAUZON. Molly\nLAWRENCE, Joan Carol\nLAWRENCE. William F.\nLAWRIE, Gordon P.\nLECKIE, M. Judie\nLEE. Alfred Sing\nLEE, Donald\nLEE, Marie\nLEE, William L. H.\nLEE, Raymond Charles\nLEECH, Robert Ernest\nLEESON, Margaret M. L.\nLEESMENT, Peeter Enn\nLEGGATT, Morman N. T.\nLEGROS, Larry Victor\nLEGDON, Antony F.\nLEHMAN. Clayton G.\nLEKICH, D. Denise\nLEON, Julio Alberto\nLEONG, James\nLESTER, Mary Patricia\nLETH, Patricia\nLEW, Edward\nLEWALL, Edward F.\nLEWIS, Albert Maurice\nLEWIS. Donald Scott\nLEWIS, Glen Elmslie\nLEWIS, Rondeau Mae\nLEYLAND, Aunna M.\nLIEN, Arthur\nLILLINGTON. Anthony C.\nLIM, Kai\nLIM, Gary Minfoo\nLIN, Leo Kin Chung\nLINDNER, William Max\nLIVINGSTONE, Mary S.\nLLEWELLYN. Donald M.\nLLOYD, Elizabeth L.\nLOEWEN, Abram\nLOGAN, Vernon B.\nLONG, Robert Allan\nLONGSHORE, Susan\nLONGLEY, John C.\nLOOMER, Claire\nLOO, Charlie\nLOVEDAY. Gloria J.\nLOVE, Robert Davidson\nLOVICK, Patricia K.\nLUCAS, Donella Ethol\nLYNCH, Gary M.\nLYNDON. William F.\nLYON, Norman Barry\nLYONS, William Irvin\nMADDEN, John C. W.\nMADHOSING. Chandra P.\nMAH, Allan\nMAHON. Ian Stuart\n193 194\nMALLORY. Douglas T. G.\nMALKIN, Yale George\nMALLORY. G. Malcolm\nMALSBURY, Patricia E.\nMALSBURY. John\nMARANDA, Theodore A.\nMARGELLOS, James M.\nMARKS, Wendy Sharon\nMARLEAU, J. Gerald\nMARSHALL, Noreen F.\nMARTIN, L. Bartlett\nMARTIN, Peter G.\nMARTIN, R. Douglas\nMARTINSON, Riho\nMARTINSON, Lawrence S.\nMARUSY, William\nMASKALL, Donald W.\nMASON, Donald W.\nMATHESON. Edith E.\nMATHESON, Marion A.\nMATHIESON. lain\nMATSU. Midori Joan\nMATTHEWS, Michael P.\nMAXWELL, John Lewis\nMACALLEN. Philip B.\nMAYNARD, Temple G. J.\nMAZE, Denis E. P.\nMCANDREW, Murray A.\nMCBEAN, Peter Athol\nMcBEE, Glynna J.\nMcBRIDE, Harry\nMcCANN EL, Michael K.\nMcCLELLAN, Carole L\nMcCOMB, Jane P. C.\nMcCOMBS. Arnold M.\nMcCOLL, Heather Mary\nMcCONNELL. Wesley\nMcCORMICK, David\nMcCRAE, George G.\nMcCURDY, Norma Mace\nMcDIARMID. Donald R.\nMcDIARMID, John D.\nMcDONAGH. Patricia M.\nMacDONALD, Barbara A.\nMcDONALD. D. Marilyn\nMcDONALD, Godfrey W. D.\nMacDONALD, G. Douglas\nMcDONALD. Teresa J.\nMcEWEN, Joan Darby\nMcFARLANE, Elizabeth\nMcFARLANE, Robert A. B.\nMcGAVIN, Gerald A. B.\nMcGillivray, j. w.\nMcGILLVERY. Alanna J.\nMacGILLIVRAY, K. J.\nMclLWAINE. Linda F.\nMclLWAINE, Donna Mary\nMclLROY, Douglas P.\nMclLWAINE, James D.\nMaclNNES. Richard B.\nMclNNES, Marion C.\nMclNNES, Allan B.\nMaclNTOSH, James M.\nMacKAY, Peter A.\nMcKAY, Gilbert C.\nMacKENZIE, L B. E\nMacKENZIE. Norman A.\nMacKENZIE, Sheila J. M.\nMacKERROW, Gordon\nMcKIE, Kenneth James\nMcKIBBIN ,R. Warren\nMcKINLAY. David C.\nMacKINNON, Archibald\nMcKINNON, Donald S.\nMacLEAN, Janice K.\nMcLEAN, Robert Dean\nMcLEAN, Pamela F. McLENNAN, Glen E.\nMcLELLAN, Gordon Dale\nMcLENNAN, Franklin T.\nMcLENNAN, James D.\nMacLEOD, Flora Ann\nMacLEOD, Ronald John\nMcLORIE, John Patrick\nMcMANUS, Richard F. G.\nMcNAUGHTAN, Joan E. M.\nMcNEE, John Preston\nMcNEILL, Murray E.\nMcNICOL, Robyn\nMacPHERSON, Donald S.\nMcPHERSON, Audree, M.\nMacPHERSON, Ian R.\nMcQUEEN, William H.\nMcRAE, Bruce A. Henry\nMcRAE, Mary Katherine\nMcRAE, David Gordon\nMacWILLIAM, John Reed\nMECKLING, Clarence G.\nMELENDY, Warren A.\nMERCER, Joan E.\nMERCIER, Francis J.\nMERLER, Grazia M.\nMESSER, William\nMICHAELSON, Hugh\nMILLAR, Marilyn Anne\nMILLER, Avril Elaine\nMILLER, Dorothv Ruth\nMILLER, Mendell E.\nMILLER, Peter Paul\nMINER, Timonthy .\nMINAKER, Donale Anne\nMINNISS, Margaret E.\nMITCHELL, Gordon W.\nMITCHELL, Gorgina C.\nMITCHELL, Gordon\nMTCHELL, Peter V.\nMITCHELL, Warren J. A.\nMIYAZAKI, D. Rumiko\nMOFFAT, George Baird\nMONKS, Harold F.\nMONEY, Susan Jane\nMOONEY, Sheilah\nMOORE, Harry Cyril B.\nMORAS, Bruno\nMORES, Margaret\nMORRIS, C. William\nMORRIS, Donald Lee\nMORRIS, John H.\nMORRISON, Deirdre L.\nMORRISON, Sharon L\nMORTON, Dorothy Mae\nMOSSOP, Helen M.\nMOTOWYLO, Alma Joan\nMOWAT, Hugh Fraser\nMOUNCE, L. B. Jack\nMUI, Joseph Hak Kan\nMULHERN, Dana Muriel\nMULVIHILL, Loraine C.\nMUNCASTER, Ian\nMUNRO, Donald Deane\nMUNRO, Frances M.\nMUNRO, John Miller\nMURAKAMI, M. Lily\nMURALT, Caroline V.\nMURPHY, Ross M.\nMURRAY, Alice Heather\nMURRAY, Norman Brian\nNAGLE, Arthur Clyde\nNAIRNE, Kathleen L\nNAKASH1MA, Akira Luke\nNAKAMURA, Akira\nNAKAMURA, Min\nNAYLOR, Sharon A.\nNEITSCH, Robert E.\n795 796\nNESBIT, Wayne V. R.\nNESS, C. G. Peter\nNEUMANN, George John\nNEUMEYER, Alvin E.\nNEVILLE, Dennis F.\nNEWCOMBE, Barbara M. C.\nNIAMATH, Kent G. E.\nNICKERSON, J. Linden\nNIEMI, Dennis\nNIGHTINGALE, Ed W.\nNIKKEL, J. Robert W.\nNISHI, Ronald Yutaka\nNOBLE, M. E. Gail\nNOEL, Barbara Joan\nNORMAN, E. James W.\nNORTH, Marlene Lois\nO DONNELL, William J ,\nOGINO, Saburo Eugene\nOHASHI, Genichi\nOHAGAN, Maureen T.\nOIEGERICH, Michael\nOIN, John Halvorson\nOLDFIELD, L. Anne\nOLIVER, Frances Lynn\nOLSEN, Eric Peter\nOMAN, Allan Everett\nORLOFF, Olga V.\nORNSTEIN, Joanne\nORR, Pamela Ann\nOSBORNE, J. Raymond C.\nOSTBY, Raymond Tormod\nOSTENSOE, Erik A.\nOTA, Ray\nOUNSTED, Basil Gordon\nOVERGAARD, Paul J.\nOXENBURY, Donald H.\nOXTOBY, Frederick E.\nPAINTER, Joe H. P.\nPAJALA, Ronald C.\nPALANSKY, Sydney D.\nPAPIN, Rupert E. H.\nPARKER, J. E. Lynn\nPARKIN, P. Elinor\nPARSONS, Sidney James\nPATON, David John\nPATTEN, Robert Lee\nPATTERSON, John David\nPAUL, Norma Jane\nPEARCE, Patricia Rae\nPEARCEY, Patricia Joan,\nPEARS, David Leonard,\nPEARSON, Ernest W. D.\nPEDIN, Hilga\nPEITZSCHE,  Frederick\nPENEFF, Penio S.\nPENNER, Irma\nPEPPER, R. Douglas\nPERCY, James N.\nPERKINS, Mary E.\nPETERSON, Lloyd C.\nPHILLIPS, Richard  E. D.\nPHIPPS, John D. S.\nPIEGLE, Yvonne Merle\nPIERCE, William John\nPINCOTT, Geoffrey H.\nPIZARSKI, Ted A.\nPLANT, Alfred  Keith\nPLETCHER, Raymond D. J.\nPOLLARD, Robert N.\nPONAK, George John\nPOPOVE Philip A.\nPOPOFF, Peter G.\nPOPLACK, Josephine R.\nPORTE, Hershey J.\nPOTTER, John Denis\nPREGLER H. Bernard\nPRETTY, Donald Waynne. PRICE, Leslie Philip\nPULOS, Evinia\nPURDY, R. Robert\nQUINN, Patricia E.\nRAE, Gary Clinton\nRAI, Harinder Jit\nRAMADEEN B. Michael P.\nRAMSDEN, Bob\nRANKIN, Dennis Basil\nRATLEDGE, Eric B.\nREEVE, Lorna Kay\nREEVES, Donovan\nREGGIE, Frederick J. E.\nREIBIN, Valerie\nREID, Ruth Helene\nREILLY, Brian William\nREILLY, Robert John\nREMPEL, Beverley J.\nREYNOLDS, Harry D.\nRICHARD, Anne I.\nRICHMOND, Evelyn Lois\nRICHMOND, Carl Eric\nRIDEWOOD, Thomas W.\nRIDDELL,  Ronald  C.\nRIDSDALE, David\nRILEY,  Ross Edgar\nRINALD, Melvyn\nROBERTSON, David\nROBERTSON, Janet Anne\nROBERTSON, Lila M.\nROBERTSON, Robert C.\nROBERTSON, Thomas R.\nROBERTSON, William D.\nROBERTSON, Robnrt B.\nROBINSON, Ronald Paul\nRODD, Sylvia May\nRODENCHUK, William S.\nRODGERS, Douglas H.\nROGERS, Herbert L. R.\nROGERS, Norman M.\nROME, Tovie Leon\nROMALIS, Garson\nROSE, Daniel Joseph\nROSE, Gordon Edgar\nROSE, Jeremy G. S.\nROSE, John Philip\nROSS, Glenville J.\nROSS, Murray Johnston\nROSS, Nancy Lynn\nROSSITER,  Lorraine\nROWSON, B. Rae E.\nRUBENS, Lucille M.\nRUDMAN,  Urban\nRUHL, Donald W.\nRUNCEWICZ, Janina M. Z.\nRUSH, Lucile Frances\nRUSHTON, John Arnold\nRUSSELL, Eleanor M.\nRUTHERFORD, Norman R.\nRUTHERFORD, Margaret\nRYAN, Lloyd Warren\nSAKIYAMA, Noboru\nSAMANICH, N. Lawrence\nSAMIS, John David W.\nSANDERSON, Barbara G.\nSANDNER, Stanley L\nSANDS, Sheila Nancy\nSASGES, Roland J.\nSAUNDERS, George\nSAVILLE, Edward W.\nSCARDINA, Richard J.\nSCHIESSER, Bernhard H.\nSCHMIDT, Marvin Daryl\nSCHOFIELD, E. Jill\nSCHOBERG, Stuart G.\nSCHULTZ, David Charles\nSCOTT, Althea Irene\n797\n\u2122a\u00ab 798\nSCOTT, Alan Charles\nSCOTT, Barbara M.\nSCOTT, Gordon Reid\nSEALE, Elizabeth Anne\nSEAL, Michael Ronald\nSEALY, Frank Copeland\nSEARL, Ralph Oswald\nSEMKE. Wallace Earl\nSEMKE. Ronald\nSEWELL, Gordon Clark\nSHAFONSKY, Archibald\nSHANNON. Lloyd G.\nSHARKEY. William\nSHAW, Mary Elizabeth\nSHAW,  Robert Wayne\nSHEARMAN, Gareth Rui\nSHEFTEL, Harriet D.\nSHEWCHUK. W. William\nSHIELDS, Patrick L.\nSHIELDS, Richard V.\nSHILVOCK. William T.\nSHLES, Doris\nSHRANK, Estella Mary\nSHRIMPTON, Norman R.\nSIDDOO, Hardav Tara\nSIEUCHAND, Alexander\nSIEBERT, David Dale\nSILLS, Gregory Reuben\nSILBER. Arnold\nSIMMONS, Edmund H.\nSIMSON. Robert C.\nSINCLAIR,  Kenneth A.\nSING, Louise Ming Gee\nSINCLAIR. Carol Ann\nSINGH, Karan C.\nSINTON, John Edward\nSITKO, Phyllis Jean\nSKELTON, Priscilla M.\nSLUGGETT. Sylvia K.\nSMEDLEY, Robert Wm.\nSMEDLEY, C. Albert\nSMITH, Carman J. M.\nSMITH, David Rodney\nSMITH, George Robert\nSMITH, Margaret Jane\nSMITH, Marilyn B.\nSMITH, Noel S.\nSMITH, Sheila F. M.\nSMYTH, Ian Alexander\nSNOWDON, Beverley J.\nSOBERS, Godfrey\nSOLWAY. Monica A. O.\nSORENSEN. David Gary\nSOTUEDT. Kenneth H. A.\nSOY, David Michael\nSPARK, Dennis Arthur\nSPIBEY, James Richard\nSPILLER, F. Richard\nSPRING. William F.\nSPROULE. David Arnold\nSPRUSTON. Nelson T. A.\nSTALEY, Gerald J.\nSTALEY, David Lome\nSTANGER, David P.\nSTANGE, Mary K.\nSTANGE, Wilfred H.\nSTANWOOD, G. Bruce\nSTAPLETON. Lawrence W.\nSTARLING, Hazel\nSTARLING. Douglas W.\nSTATHAM, Margaret E.\nSTEBBE, Harold Oscar\nSTEELE, David Gordon\nSTEINBERG. David C.\nSTEINBACH, Sally Jean\nSTEINER. Kurt David\nSTENTON, Donald E. STEPHENS, Victoria K.\nSTEPHENS, Gerald G.\nSTEVENS, George Colin\nSTEVENS, John Paul\nSTEVENSON, C. Betty\nSTEWART, David K.\nSTEWART, E. Anne\nSTIBBS, Leroy George\nSTIBBS, Walter Ian\nSTINSON, James Samuel\nSTIRZAKER, Colin V.\nSTOKES, Terrance W.\nSTONE, Diane Isobel\nSTORY, Robert H.\nSTOVEL, G. Laird\nSTRACHAN, Robert A.\nSTRAND, Alf Henry\nSTRATTON, Donald Reis\nSTRICKER, W. Ronald\nSTUART, Graeme Irvin\nSTUBY, Elizabeth A.\nSTYLES, Rose Dever\nSTYFFE, Sylvia Violet\nSUN, Chun Lan\nSURVJNATH, Bashwar N.\nSUTHERLAND, Beatrice\nSWANSON, Brock A.\nSWANSON, John Harold\nSYMONDS, John R.\nSZANTO, John Roy\nTAIPALUS, Diana\nTAIT, Thomas Albert\nTANNER, Mary Moray\nTANKARD, Patricia A.\nTANIZAWA, Edward T.\nTANG, Joseph K.\nTASAKA, Tom Atsushi\nTAYLOR, Austin Bruce\nTAYLOR, Thomas Scott\nTAYLOR, Valerie F.\nTAYLOR, Noreen Ronda\nTHOMAS, John C.\nTHOMAS, Janet Marion\nTHOMPSON, Frederick W.\nTHOMPSON, John Bruce\nTHOMSON, Gordon M.\nTHORDARSON P. G. Roy\nTHORNTON, Trump Wm. H.\nTHRIFT, Shelagh K.\nTOBLER, Heidi V.\nTOFT, Patricia Alayne\nTOLLESTRUP, Jon F.\nTOMBERG, Lilie\nTOMLENOVICH, John N.\nTOREN, Eleanor R.\nTORY, Boyd Hall\nTOWGOOD, Dennis A.\nTREADGOLD, Miles C.\nTROUNCE, Barry Vernon\nTROW, Benjamin M.\nTRYTHALL, Willoughby\nTSAO Sai Hoi\nTUCKER, Gwendolyn E.\nTULK, Robert Edward\nTURNBULL, Kenneth W.\nTURNER, Carole Susan\nTURNER, Hector M. Jr.\nTURNER, Myrna Ruth.\nTURVEY, N. A. Jocelyn\nU YUE Wai\nUNDERHILL Charles S.\nVALDOVINOS Cesar C.\nVAUGHAN, Judith Ann\nVAUGHAN, I. Llewellyn\nVEITCH, Lawrence B.\nVENNELS, William H.\nVENNES, Arthur Edward\n799 200\nVERNON, F. David S.\nVIERTEL, Role\nVINNEDGE, Robert C.\nVOTH, Cornelius G.\nWAKABAYASHI, Charles\nWALKER, James Arthur\nWALKEY, Ronald Brian\nWALLACE, William D.\nWALSKE, James Herman\nWALTERS, Guy Martin\nWANNOP, William Brian\nWARD, Bruce Iverson\nWARD, Thomas S.\nWARNE, George E.\nWARREN, Robert D.\nWATERFIELD, E. Barbara\nWATERS, Diane E.\nWATKIN, Daniel T.\nWATSON, Dick\nWATTS, Margaret E.\nWAY, Robert Leslie\nWEBSTER, George Byng\nWEICHERT, Dieter H.\nWEIR, Patricia C.\nWELCH, Wm. Vincent\nWELTERS, Mitchell F.\nWESTLIN, Mary Ann L.\nWESTWOOD, Patricia M.\nWETMORE, Mary Madelyn\nWHALLEY, June J.\nWHITBREAD, Mary H.\nWHITE, Gerald  Robert\nWHITELEY, Denis A.\nWHITESIDE, Evelyn Ann\nWHITTICK, Ray John\nWIEBE, Paul Arthur\nWIEDRICK, Arnold G.\nWIGGS, J. David\nWILKIE, Allan Harvey\nWILKINS, Deborah Ann\nWILKINSON. June Lois\nWILKINSON, William J.\nWILLIAMS, David S.\nWILMHURST,  Ronald A.\nWILSON, Alexander R.\nWILSON, Dave William\nWILSON, Gordon K.\nWILSON, K.\nWILSON, Lome Arthur\nWILSON, Margaret Ada\nWILSON, Muriel Ann\nWILSON,  Marilyn  Lois\nWILSON, Patricia Mary\nWINCH. Elaine Joyce\nWING, David E.\nWINRAM, Dean Philip\nWINTER, Keith John\nWITKAMP, Willem C. R.\nWITTUR, Glen Eric\nWOLFE, David Allan\nWOLFMAN, Wilfred S.\nWONG, Lynn\nWONG, Gerald Yu Ting\nWONG, Wayne Gregory\nWONG, David Siuwai\nWOOD, Anne Pauline\nWOOD, David Eldon M.\nWOODMAN, Alan David\nWOODSIDE, Thomas H.\nWOOSTER, George W.\nWORSLEY, Beverley Ann\nWORTHINGTON, G. Louis\nWOSK, Lenore Sheila\nWRIGHT, John Max C.\nWRIGHT, Marilynn A.\nWRINCH, L David\nWRINCH, Mary E. WRINCH, M. Jo Ine\nWURM, Oleg M.\nYASUI,  Fukashi\nYEE, Stanley\nYESAKI, Mitsuo\nYIP, Roderick Wing J.\nYOSHIDA, Koya\nYOUNG, Alan Moore\nYOUNG, Clifford W.\nYOUNG, Ross Maitland\nYOUNG, William W.\nYUILL, John A.\nYUSEP, Elmer Alex\nZAHAR, Roger Charles\nZAHAR, Jeanette T.\nZARBOCK, Alexander L.\nZIMMERMAN, Melvin\nZOCHER, Michael\nAARON, R. Lorraine\nABRAMS, Mabel H.\nADLER, Janos G.\nAGNEW, Pauline\nAHO, Edward William\nAITKEN, Robert\nAKUNE, Roy I.\nALI, Samadh\nALLISON, Barbara Rose\nANDERSON, Victor John\nANTON, Douglas P.\nAPTED, John Lakeman\nARBANAS, Lillian\nARCHIBALD,  Kathleen A.\nARNOTT, David A.\nAUSTIN, Harvey\nBABER, Cecil\nBAGSHAW, Ralph C.\nBAILEY, George R.\nBAINBRIDGE, Roberta\nBAIN, Ronald B.\nBAIN, Wendy E.\nBAKER, Diane E. E.\nBAKER, Donald N.\nBALE, David J.\nBALLENTINE, William R.\nBANERD, Dolores M. S.\nBARATELLI, Allen Dale\nBARBERIE, D. Joan\nBARBER, Dorothy M.\nBARCLAY, Estrup Paul\nBARCHARD, William G.\nBARNER, Maria Lynn\nBAYNES, Richard G.\nBAYNE, Clarence  S.\nBELL, Caroline A.\nBELL, J. Philip\nBENNETT, Sharon June\nBENTZ, James Barrie\nBERAR, Abtar\nBERG, Brian Alexander\nBERRYMAN, Janet L.\nBILLUNG, Meyer W.\nBLACK, Douglas P.\nBLACK, Ronald Martin\nBLACKWELL, Gordon K.\nBOAK, Anne M.\nBOLLANA, Mario\nBOODOOSINGH Lai A.\nBOONE, John A.\nBOOTHMAN, William J. H.\nBOTTA, E. Peter\nBOWMAN, Diane M.\n207 202\nBOYCE. Norbert P.\nBOYLE, Sandra A.\nBRADSHAW, Peter L\nBRAHAN,  Lawrence C.\nBRAIN, Denis G.\nBREMNER, Earle\nBREWSTER. Charles E.\nBRIGDEN, Ernest G.\nBRINK, Russell M.\nBRISKER,  Murray\nBRISTOW, James F.\nBROAD, Patricia J.\nBROTHERTON, Eunice R.\nBROWN, Ernie\nBROWN, Gerald R.\nBROWN. Heather E.\nBROWN, Jacolyn Marie\nBROWN, Raymond John\nBRYAN. Robert Wayne\nBUCHANAN, Donald\nBUCHANAN, Donald\nBUCKINGHAM, Robert R.\nBULMER, Garnet A.\nBURR,  Lawrence H.\nBUTTERFIELD, John S.\nBYRNE, Peter\nCADELL, Theodore  E.\nCAMBELL, Charles C. R.\nCAMBELL, Dennis M.\nCANNON, William Roger\nCAPIRO, Grant\nCAREFOOT, Jackson E.\nCARISNAN, John James\nCARR, Earl D.\nCARSON, Burt Grant\nCARUTH, Daniel A.\nCARUTH, Mary K. E.\nCATHERWODD, Gordon A.\nCATTO, Ronald Richard\nCHAMBERS, Michael P.\nCHAN, Donald Eugene\nCHANT. John F.\nCHARNE, Patrick J.\nCHEN, Larry Truman\nCHERTKOFF. M. Ruth\nCHILTON. Mrs. Jillian\nCHILCOTT, M. Elizabeth\nCHRISTIE. Marion E.\nCHUEDEN. Heine G.\nCHUHAYWICH. Elven S.\nCLARIDGE, Derek\nCLARK, Ronald N.\nCLARKE, Denis C.\nCLIBBETT, John A.\nCLINTON, Alfred\nCOCHRANE. John G.\nCOE, Ngaire E.\nCOLLINSON, Ernest J.\nCOLLINS, Edward A.\nCOLLVER, Ross D.\nCONNELL, David Ford\nCOOK, Donald Charles\nCOOPER, H. A. Michael\nCOPPING, Romney Peter\nCOULTHARD,  Richard G.\nCOUTTS, Dorothy Mae\nCREAMER. Carl Clifton\nCRESSWELL, John G.\nCRICHLOW, Eugene\nCROCKER, Joan E.\nCROKER, Sheila S.\nCROSWELL, Shirley\nCUMMINGS. David A.\nCURRIE, lan D.\nCUTHILL, Trevor F.\nCYNK, Jean Shirley\nDALGLEISH. Anne A. S. DALY. E. Joy\nDAVID, Elizabeth A.\nDAVIDSON, Joan A.\nDAVIES, Robert K.\nDEEKS, Drusilla\nDELBRIDGE, Sallye B.\nDENHOLM, Vernon Rene\nDENNIS, Walter J.\nDE PFYFFER, Ralph M.\nDETTWILER, Werner\nDEY, Wm. George\nDIEMERT, Albrt G. H. J.\nDILL, June Arlene\nDILL, Lilian E.\nDINSMORE, Jacqueline\nDINGWALL, lan M.\nDIXON, Evert Lewis\nDOERING. Juergen G. W.\nDOHM, Patrick Donald\nDOLMAN. Richard John\nDONAGHY. David\nDORMAN, John Garth\nDORNSIERER, Eric E. B.\nDOROSCHUK. M. Betty\nDOUGLAS, Joyce\nDOYLE, Lawrence R.\nDRENT, Jan Jansz\nDRUGGE, Nils Lonard\nDRUMMOND, Barry H.\nDUNSTER, Stanley J.\nDYCK, Peter\nEAGLESHAM, Doris F.\nECKSTEIN, Lois K.\nEDGAR, Robert A.\nEDGAR, David James\nEGERT, Eugene\nELDER, Thomasine Ada\nELLIOTT. Peter W.\nELLIOTT, Valerie Joy\nELI UK, S. Douglas\nEMERY, Arnold William\nEMERY, Prudence M.\nENGLESBY, Ralph E.\nERICKSON, Sivert L\nESTLIN. Harry Gray\nEUSTIS, Richard D.\nEVANS, Robert K.\nEVE, Frank Rodney\nEWERT, Henry Waldo\nFANSTONE, George E.\nFARIS, Donald L.\nFARIS, Ronald L\nFARRELL, Leagh\nFAURE, Anthony A.\nFIFE, Carole J.\nFINDLATER, Bryan L.\nFIRTH, Keith W.\nFISHER, Robin Lacey\nFITZGERALD, Michael\nFLATHER. Verne D.\nFLEURY, Harvey A.\nFOLI, Karle\nFOLDS, Gordon H.\nFORDE, David Henry\nFORSTER, Ralph\nFORSYTH, Thomas M.\nFORWARD. Gordon E.\nFOSBROOK, Douglas J.\nFRASER, Kenneth C.\nFRASER. Leo\nFRASER, Derek R. T.\nFRASER. George Peter\nFRECHETTE, Myles R. R.\nFRIESEN, W. Glenn P.\nFROESE, Wilfred John\nFROST, Ronald E.\nGALBRAITH, M. E. Pat\n203 204\nGALE, Edward\nGALLAGHER, L. Marie\nGALLIE, DaJe W.\nGALLIFORD, G. Elaine\nGANDOSSI, Bruno F.\nGEDDES, Margaret A.\nGENSER, Joel Joseph\nGERRATH, Joseph F.\nGIBSON. M. H. Norah\nGIKAS, Robert A.\nGILBERT, Roland S. A.\nGILL, Mrs. Blanche D.\nGILLILAND, Robert C.\nGILLIES, Norman A.\nGIRARD, Charlott S. M.\nGISLAISAN, Gudjon Jim\nGLADMAN, A. Margaret\nGLOVER, L. F. Jeannette\nGODDARD, Margaret A.\nGODSALVE, Gwendolyn F.\nGODSALVE, Joan Marie\nGOLD, Barbara Alice\nGOLF, A. G. J. Ted\nGORDON, Gerald Leslie\nGORICK, Paul Charlie\nGOSELTINE. Robert P.\nGOWER, John Michael\nGRANT, Larrie\nGRAVES, Ronald Dennis\nGRAY, Andrew V.\nGRAY, James K.\nGREATHED, Edward D.\nGREEN, Shirley Ann\nGREENBERG. Debbie\nGRUNDY, George\nGUNNELL, John Berry\nHABKIRK, Robert John\nHADDEN. Sharon W. L.\nHADLEY, Michael L.\nHALLISEY, Cornelius J.\nHAMILTON. Robert A.\nHANLEY, Peter\nHANNAH, Theodore H.\nHANNAH, Ronald H.\nHAQQ, Tennyson A.\nHARA, Elmer H.\nHARDING, David R.\nHARFORD, Donald B.\nHARKER, Judith\nHARRIS, Colebrook\nHARRISON, Richard T.\nHARRISON, Donna M.\nHARVIE, Elizabeth Gay\nHATCHER. Daniel R.\nHAWBOLT. E. Bruce\nHAWKEY. Thora E.\nHAYWARD. John S.\nHAZELL. Paul L.\nHEISE, Donald Henry\nHELBECQUE, Raymond G.\nHELLIWELL, John F.\nHENRY, George M.\nHENWOOD. Jack\nHERMAN,Robert Bruce\nHEYWOOD, Ann Louise\nHESLOP, Thomas B.\nHIGHAM, Eleanor E.\nHILFORD, Louis\nHILL, Gary Raymond\nHINTZ, Jacob J. V.\nHODGE, J. F. Gerald\nHODGINS, Gladys W.\nHOGARTH. John\nHOLLANDS. Mary\nHOLMES, Alan Donnan\nHOLSWORTH. William N.\nHORSWILL, William J. HOSEIN, Lena\nHOWELL, Frederick G. W.\nHUBBLE, Sidney Wayne\nHUDSON, Geraldine M.\nHUGHES, Raymond H. A.\nHUGHES, Trevor J.\nHUMBER, Sandra S.\nHUNTER, Robert B.\nHYNDMAN, Audrey A.\nIDLER, John W.\nIRWIN. J. Richard C.\nIWASAKI, Cedric Eiji\nJACK, George R.\nJACOBSON, Eugene Axel\nJAMES, Marlene H.\nJAMES, Theresa A. R.\nJANZEN, Erwin J.\nJANZEN, Andrew\nJEWELL, Ross\nJOHANNES. Robert E.\nJOHAL, Singh Balbir\nJOHANSEN, Joyce S.\nJOHNSON, Arthur W.\nJOHNSON, Charles M. F.\nJOHNSTON, David M.\nJOHNSTON, Howard E.\nJOHNSTON, J. Brice\nJOHNSTON, James\nJOHNSTON, Jean M.\nJOHNSTON, M. Anne\nJONES, Beaulah L.\nJONES, G. L Rodney\nJONES, John Rusell\nJORDON. Selwyn C.\nJOUGHIN, J. E. Phillip\nKARAS, George N.\nKARPOWICZ, Jadwiga\nKATARIUS. John Wm.\nKEATES, Keith John\nKEHLER, Margaret\nKEMP, Elizabeth Ann\nKENNEDY, David M.\nING, Ray\nKENT-BARBER, Rosemary\nKIDD, Ruth M.\nKIER. Digby R.\nKILLAM, David L\nKILVERT. Alan Roger\nKIMURA, Gregory Shuji\nKING, Shirley M.\nKING, Wm. Harvey\nKITCHEN. Richard A.\nKLASSEN, J. Frances\nKNIGHT, George F.\nKNIGHT. Rolf\nKNOWLES, Dick\nKNUDSEN, Robert M.\nKONRAD, Abram\nKONRAD, G. George\nKORE, Runjeet\nKOVACH, John L\nKRISTMANSON, F. A.\nKULLA, Kenneth J. V.\nLAMBERT, Francis E.\nLAMONT, Gwendy K.\nLAMONT, Lionel Eain\nLANDER, Barbara A.\nLANE, George A.\nLANG, Larry\nLANGFORD, Michael\nLARSEN, Rodney K.\nLA RUE. Rae\nLATHAM, Curtis F.\nLAVALLEE, Nelson P.\nLAW, Alan G.\nLEATHERDALE, B. Gene\nJ.EE, Antonio Chun H.\n205 206\nLEE, Edmund M.\nLEE, Henry\nLEE, Robert E. D.\nLEE, Robert C. N.\nLEES, Shirley Roberta\nLESLIE, Barbara Joyce\nLEVIS, David M.\nLEVY. Lyall A.\nLEW, Franklin\nLEWIN,  Lawrence\nLl, Yun Hei\nLINDENBACH, Carl H.\nLISLE, Thomas\nLITTLE, R. Edward\nLLOYD, Gwenda K.\nLONGSHORE, Stephen\nLOO, Henry Hinfun\nLOOMER, Lome K.\nLORZ, Harold W.\nLORING, Lindsay B.\nLOVETT, Harry Almon\nLUMSDEN. C. Anna\nLUM, P. Phyllis\nLUM, Lorna Kate\nLUNDIN. Klaus L\nLYON, Robert Donald\nLYON, Ronald G.\nLYTLE. Clive B.\nMACK. Mary I.\nMADER, Stanley H.\nMAHARAJ, Dollx R.\nMAIN, Douglas S.\nMANHIN, Bertram W.\nMANN, John Graham\nMANSON, A. David C.\nMASON, Bruce K.\nMASSENDER, James L.\nMATHUS, Arnold P.\nMATHIESON. G. Irvine\nMATTHEWS. Stewart W.\nMATZ, Detlef\nMATTSON, Dorothy B.\nMAXWELL, James W.\nMcALPINE, Robert B.\nMacALPINE, Milton lan\nMeARRAVY, GwynethM.\nMcCARTHY. John P.\nMcCAUGHRAN. Donald A.\nMcCOULL, Denis Cecil\nMcCULLOCH, Alexander\nMcDONALD, Donald M.\nMacDONALD, Douglas B.\nMacDONALD, D. Grant\nMacDONALD, Elwin C.\nMacDONALD, Neil W.\nMacDONALD, Sheila\nMacDONALD, Sherrill A.\nMcEachern, John w.\nMcFARLANE, K. Wayne\nMacFARLAN, James D. L.\nMcGAW, John H. D.\nMcGHAN, Eileen Alma\nMacGILLIVRAY, Rod A.\nMcGregor, lan r.\nMcHARDY, Robert A.\nMcKELVEY, Shirley A.\nMcKENZIE, John W.\nMacKENZIE, Deidre J.\nMcKERLICH, William  A.\nMcLAREN, William D.\nMcLEAN, Peter Jay\nMcLENNAN, John D. W.\nMacLEOD, Flora M.\nMcLEOD, William Byron\nMacMILLAN, J. Harvey\nMacMILLAN, A. lan\nMcMULLEN, Jean A. McNAUGHT, Mary Ellen\nMcRAE, Joan F. K.\nMcTAGGART, John E.\nMacWILLIAM, Susan A.\nMERCER, John W.\nMERLO, Rino Joseph\nMEYERS. Elvin W.\nMICHELL, Beverley J.\nMILLAR. Sandra J.\nMILLER, G. Yvonne\nMILLER, Maxine L.\nMILLWARD, Clifford\nMINAMIMAYE, George J.\nMINETTE, Ronald John\nMISKIMAN, Nancy J.\nMITCHELL, Margaret K.\nMIYAGAWA, Pat\nMOLNAR, Andrew F.\nMOLL, Maureen A.\nMOOR, Donald Robert\nMORGAN, Frederick J.\nMORGAN, James A.\nMORGAN, Robert W.\nMORRISON, Gary E. C.\nMORRISON, Nancy E.\nMORRISON. Russel L.\nMOSELEY, E. Peter G.\nMUIR, Maxine R.\nMULBERRY, John L.\nMUNDAY, Lennard Ray\nMURATA, Gene T.\nMURRELL, George Osric\nMUTH, Kenneth L.\nNACHTRIEB, Sheila A.\nNAGLE, Barry E. J.\nNASTICH, Marion\nNASSICHUK, Walter W.\nNEEDLER, George T.\nNESMITH, Cecil Leslie\nNEWITT, Angela D. G.\nNICKERSON, Richard A.\nNIELSEN, Wayne H.\nNIRO, Francis A.\nNORDSTRAND, Earl V.\nNORMAN, Douglas R.\nNORTHEY. John L\nOBRIEN, Ross J.\nOCHS, A. Peter P. E.\nODONNELL, John W.\nOKPARA, Paul M.\nOLSON, Sherman\nORTENGREN, A. Bernice\nOSHAUGHNESSY, Patrick\nOSTERBERG. Arne A.\nPADMOROFF, Andrew T.\nPARKER, Barry R.\nPATTERSON, John Donal\nPEARCE, Lancelot S.\nPEARCE, Richard Mott\nPEARSON. Arthur MC. D.\nPEDERSEN, Roy A.\nPENNINGTON. John T.\nPETER, Garry Dale\nPHILLIPS, Dorothy I.\nPICK, George F.\nPIDDOCKE. Stuart M.\nPIRO, Katherine A.\nPLATO. Edward H.\nPOHL, Lorraine Adina\nPOLINSKY, Erwin E.\nPOMEROY, Glen Burt\nPORTSMOUTH, Joan K. M.\nPOWERS. Kenneth A. H.\nPRITCHARD, Joan\nPUNACH, B. D.\nPYBUS, Ralph B.\nQUINN. Robert A.\n207 208\nQUINN, Michael James\nRACKHAM, Robert G.\nREDFORD, James D.\nREES, Stanley Dowden\nREIMER, M. June C.\nRICHARDS, Leo B.\nRICHMOND, Virginia B.\nRICKER, Karl E.\nRITCHIE, Murray Lloyd\nROBERTSON. Margery F.\nROBINSON, Raymond M.\nROBINSON, Stanley C.\nRODERIQUE, Eastmond M.\nROSEN, Norman F.\nROSS, Geraldine Hazel\nROSS, Rae Alexander\nROSS, Robert\nRUSSELL, M. Patricia\nRYDER, Lorna Maria\nSAFRUK, Bernice Helen\nSANDERS, Sandra I.\nSANDERSON, John J.\nSAUER, Charles\nSAUNDERS, Edward A.\nSAWATZKY, Jacob\nSCHLOSS, S. Morton\nSCHULZER, Michael A. M.\nSCOn, Mrs. Judith Eve\nSCOTT, Marvin E.\nSEDDOH, Emmanuel K. T.\nSEED, Nancy H.\nSEIGNEURET, Jean C.\nSHALLARD,  Meryn A.\nSHELTON, Leslie R. W.\nSHERRY, George\nSHIELDS, Roy\nSHORTHOUSE, Sylvia A.\nSILVERMAN, J. Michael\nSIMMONS, Patricia A.\nSIMON, Linda Jane\nSIMPKINS, Michael C.\nSINCLAIR, Sharon S.\nSKEET, Dorothy M.\nSKEET. Elizabeth M.\nSLOAN, F. Davida\nSMART, Donald V.\nSMITH. David Harry\nSMITH. Gordon Le Roy\nSMITH, William Thomas\nSMOLKIN, Barry David\nSOE, Christian\nSOFKO, George J.\nSOLLY, Geoffrey M. C.\nSOLIGO, Ronald\nSOMMER, Daniel Bruce\nSOODOR, Ain\nSOUTHER. Harold Alan\nSPARROW, W. Gerald\nSPARROW, David M.\nSPARKE, Cecil R. E.\nSPERRINGS. Karen L\nSPRING. Robert H.\nSTEELE, M. Elizabeth A.\nSTELZL, Edward S.\nSTEPHENS. Hugh L.\nSTEPHENS, Sharon J.\nSTOBBE, Vernon  Harvey\nSTRACHAN, Robert D.\nSTRANGE, Gwen\nSTRAUSS, A. Kenneth L.\nSTUCKEY, William T.\nSTURROCK, Douglas N.\nSUMMERFIELD, Ruth V. M.\nSUNDQUIST, Sven I.\nSUTHERLAND, Hugh Roy\nSUTHERLAND, Geo. Ross\nSWEETEN, James R. SYMCHYCH, Paul S.\nTABATA, Sachiko\nTAHEISHI, George\nTATLOW, Fred J.\nTAYLOR, C. Nicholas\nTAYLOR, James A. F.\nTAYLOR. Neil Harry\nTEATHER. Edward C.\nTEMLETT. Gary J.\nTERMANSEN. Poul Erik\nTHOMAS, M. Joan\nTHOMPSON, Joan A.\nTHOMPSON. Kitty M.\nTHOMPSON. Phyllis R.\nTHOMSON. Charlotte A.\nTODERAS. William J.\nTOFT, Bernard Leon\nTOLMIE, B. Anne\nTREVOR, John F.\nTREVINO, Benjamin B.\nTYERS, G. Fank O.\nUNWIN, Wilma Maureen\nVALUMS, George\nVAN AVER. Janet A.\nVAN ALLEN. M. Louise\nVAN   DAALEN,  Edward\nVAN WERT, Kenneth\nVAUGHAN, Thomas T. O.\nVERCHERE, Bruce\nVERSTEEG, Pie ter\nVINCENT, Norman Robt.\nWAINWRIGHT, Eleanor. G.\nWALCHLI, Frederick J.\nWALDIE, Jean V. M.\nWARE, Donald R.\nWARREN, Patricia A.\nWATKINS, David T.\nWATSON. Mervin J.\nWATSON, Paul A.\nWATSON, Richard A. R.\nWATTS, Robert A.\nWEBB, Edwin Joseph\nWEBB, Dennis C. J.\nWEIR, Donald C.\nWEST, Donald T.\nWEST, Laurence K.\nWESTON. William C.\nWHARTON. C. Leigh\nWHEELER. Norah J.\nWHITE, Robert Duncan\nWHITON, Geoffrey A.\nWILLIAMS, Daphne S. S.\nWILLIAMS, Garnet E.\nWILLIAMS, L. Kibben\nWILLIAMS, Roy G.\nWONG. Tom\nWONNACOTT. Jane C.\nWONG. Bobbie\nWOOD, John Martin\nWOODBRIDGE,  Donnelly\nWOOTTON, Honora Jane\nWRIGHT, Robert\nWRIGHT, Robert\nWYNE, M. Melvin\nYADA, Ken Frank\nYAMAMURA, Akira Eddy\nYAROSH. Walter\nYATES, Eleanor E. A.\nYAWNEY. Henry W.\nYEANDLE, William R. B.\nYIP. Yat W.\nYORSTON, Barbara S.\nYOUNG. Emily Adwena\nYOUNG. James H.\nYOUNG, Mervyn Warren\nYOUNGSON. Loretta R.\nYUAN, Lilian C.\n209 270\nZAIONCHKOVSKY, Nichol\nZLOTNIK, M. Michael\nZOGAS, James H.\nZRAL, Dinnif Howard\nABBOTT, Donald N.\nAINSCOUGH, Brian D.\nAITCHISON, John P.\nALA, L. Gordan\nALEXANDER, A. Ernest\nALEXANDER, K. Grey\nALLAN, Ernest Albert\nALLINGHAM, Anthony\nALSGARD, Stewart B.\nANDERSEN, Sidney B. J.\nANDERSON, Alice S.\nANDERSON, Graham L.\nANDRESSON, Edda\nANTHONY, Thomas M.\nARIOTTI, Piero E.\nARMITAGE, Richard E.\nASAHINA, Kinji R.\nASTBURY, Fred Ralph\nAVISON, K. Anne\nAYLING, Anita D.\nBAKER, Gerald H.\nBAKKER, Arie\nBALTMAN, Louis\nBARR, Matthew Ronald\nBASKETT, Morris\nBASSETT, Marilyn\nBEAIRSTO, M. Janice\nBEAUMONT, Audrey J.\nBECKETT, E. Eleanor\nBEISER, Morton\nBELL, Gerald M.\nBELL, Michael David\nBEST, Betty Jean\nBIRNIE, Thomas A.\nBLACKABY, Henry T.\nBLUMENAUER, Donald  R.\nBONVALET, Roland C. G.\nBOXER, Alvin\nBOYD, Judy\nBOYD, William T. M.\nBRADSHAW, Gordon H.\nBRAIDWOOD, Allisen\nBRAMBLEBY, Kenneth M.\nBRAND, Lorraine E.\nBRANTON, Kenneth Geo.\nBROOKS, Shirley D.\nBROWN, Joyce M.\nBROWN, Sallee R.\nBROWNLOW, Diane H.\nBUELL, Audrey E.\nBURGESS, Lucille B.\nBURNS,  Peter L\nBUTLER, Richard  K.\nBUTTERFIELD, F. James\nBUTTERFIELD, Rita Y.\nCALHOUN, Marilyn F.\nCALLAN, Donald  M.\nCAMERON, Olive Mary\nCARKNER, Robert T.\nCARLEY, A. Lois\nCARLSEN, C. Trygve\nCARLOW, Donald Ross\nCARLSON, Paul Erik\nCARNEY, Robert James\nCARTWRIGHT, R. lan\nCHANG, Violet May\nCHENG, Man Ching R. CHISHOLM, Robert D.\nCHIU, Wing Gay\nCHOWN, Mary F.\nCHU, Andrew Kai Mu\nCIANCI, Mrs. Penelope\nCINITS, Eddie\nCLARK, John Amot\nCOLLETT, Catherine M.\nCONSTANTINIDIS, E. A.\nCONSTANINI, Albert G.\nCOX, Raymond Lee\nCREIGHTON, Thomas N. B.\nCROIZIER, Ralph C.\nCROTTY, Janis\nCULLEY, Grace Elaine\nDA COSTA, Granville A.\nDANIEL, Michael John\nDANIEZ, Michael\nDAVIDSON, Roy A.\nDAVIS, Claytus J.\nDAVIS, Dorothy D.\nDE LA GIRODAY, Dorothy\nDEPAOLI, Livio\nDEWOLF, Marilyn Dawn\nDIAKONESKI, John\nDICKSON, Harry H.\nDIESTEL, O. R. H.\nDODD, W. Alan H.\nDONALDSON, Verna C.\nDONNELL, Marie-Clare\nDOWNS, Sylvia M.\nDRISCOLL, Mary Jill\nDRYVYNSYDE, Barry O.\nDUECK, John\nDUXBURY, Marjory H.\nEDWARDS, David Lloyd\nEDWARDS, Kathleen\nEISENHUT, H. Katie\nELLIOTT, Dale M.\nELLIOTT, John W.\nELLIS, H. Theodore\nELTHERINGTON, Lome G.\nEMMONS, Helen J.\nEMMONS, Patricia R.\nENDICOTT, William Geo.\nEPP, Geroge Henry\nESCOTT, Audrey H.\nEVANS, Martha L\nFEDOROFF. Michael\nFETT, Zona Joyce\nFILLEUL, Francis M.\nFLEMING, William A. E.\nFORMAN, Joan Elma\nFORREST, Alan S.\nFOSSETT, Renee E.\nFOSTER, Eric\nFRANCIS, Joseph D.\nFREEMAN, Byron W.\nFROMSON, E. Elaine\nFRY, George J. H.\nGAMBLE, Leonard J.\nGAMBLE, Denzil D. W.\nGANZE, L. Benno\nGATES, Leroy Orville\nGATES, Lynda J.\nGATZKE, Arnold L.\nGAVIN, Elma Marie\nGEDDES, James H.\nGEIGER, Shirley E.\nGENTLEMAN, Glenda E.\nGHEZZI. Linda A.V.\nGIBBONS, Maurice\nGIBSON, James R.\nGIBSON, Ruth E.\nGILLEY, Wilma Grace\nGILROY, Marjorie E.\n\u00a9IRVIN, Gerald Wayne\n211 272\nGOODACRE, Alan K.\nGOODWIN, Patricia\nGORDON, Joanna E.\nGORDON, William R.\nGORDON, Bryan C. H.\nGOTTSCHLING, Kurt N.\nGRANTHAM, Sally Anne\nGREENBERG, Philip\nGREGORY, Carol E.\nGRIMMETT, Sarah Anne\nGRUBB, Geraldine J.\nGUNS, Thomas Brian\nGURNEY, Lyman Wm. Fox\nHAERING, Peter C.\nHAIG-BROWN, Valerie\nHALL, John I.\nHALL, John\nHALL, Susan Diane\nHAMORI, Charles\nHANSEN, Joy K.\nHARA, Tom Hirofumi\nHARDIE, Sheila E. F.\nHARRINGTON, Edwin C.\nHART, Barbara\nHARVEY, Brian C.\nHATTRICK, Andrew J.\nHAWTHORN, Alan St. Geo.\nHEBENTON, G. Sholto\nHELLIWELL, David L.\nHERON, Robert P.\nHILL, John Richard\nHOECHSMANN, Klaus F.\nHOEN, Ernst Leon W. B.\nHORTON, Thomas Bevan\nHOSEIN, Syad M.\nHOWIE, Douglas S.\nHUCKVALE, Jane E. V.\nHUGHES, David Martin\nHUMPHREY, Lawrence G.\nHUNTER, Darrel\nHURT, Bruce E.\nHUTCHINSON, Duayne T.\nHUTCHINSON, Jack\nHYNDMAN, Barbara I\nINGRAM, Herbert G.\nIRELAND, L. Charles\nIRVINE, William G.\nIRVINE, P. Joan\nISAAC, Alice K.\nJACKSON, Robert Wyat\nJAMBOR, John L.\nJAMES, Laura Margaret\nJEFFERY, Michael C.\nJENNINGS, Wayne R.\nJEWITT, Bernice L.\nJHOOTY, Gurdev Singh\nJOHNSON, Donn\nJOHNSON, Barbara M.\nJOHNSON, George A.\nJOHNSON, Michael D.\nJOHNSON, Philip W.\nJOHNSTON, John Ivan\nJOHNSTON, Robert L\nJONES, Helen F.\nJORY, William Mervin\nKAN, Elizabeth A.\nKELLY, John Douglas\nKEMP, C. Lindley\nKENT, Michael H.\nKERR, E. Marilyn\nKINCADE, C. Anne\nKINGHAM, Sheila Grace\nKIRKLAND, J. Marilyn\nKISSKA, Lester\nKOOP, Abram Henry\nKRON, Ruth\nKUBASEK, Michael P. KUHN, William Alfred\nKUSNIR, John\nKUYT, Ernst\nUMBERT, Elizabeth M.\nLANDIS, George B.\nLANGLANDS, Robert P.\nLAUENER, P. John\nLAURENCE, David L.\nLAVALLEE, Henry W.\nLAWLESS, Darrell M.\nLEDGERWOOD, Ernest F.\nLEE, Hong Charles\nLEE, lan S.\nLEE, Jack\nLEE, Luke\nLESTER, Geoffrey A.\nLESSARD, Wilfred\nLEUNG, Jock\nLEVIRS, Mary J.\nLEWALL, David B.\nLEWIS, Geo. Richard\nLIDDELL, Louise M.\nLIFSZYC, Eva\nLLOYD, Gordon F.\nLOCKIE, Douglas A.\nLOCKEY, Bruce J.\nLOCKHART, T. Glen\nLUNDBERG, Eric H.\nLYTHGOE, Leonard F.\nMADDEX, E. Loverne\nMAIER, Robert Walter\nMALIC, Stanley\nMALCOLM, Sharon A.\nMANSON, Dorothy\nMARCHESE, Angela L.\nMARKLE, Sharen\nMARSHALL, Sonya S.\nMARTIN, William E.\nMARTINUSEN, Henry H.\nMASING, Ulv\nMASON, David Bruce\nMASON, Derek L\nMASON, Joan Eastoe\nMATTHEWS, John Trevor\nMAY, John Walter\nMAYOH, Thomas F.\nMAYUK, Donald E.\nMcAllister, ira m. w. s.\nMcCARTNEY, Maureen D.\nMcDONALD, David A.\nMcDOUGAL, Graeme E.\nMacDOUGALL, Heather M.\nMcGIBBON, Joan M.\nMcGOWAN, Alvin L\nMcG RAW, Robert W.\nMaclNTOSH, Richard M.\nMcKAY, Mary Winifred\nMacLEAN, Mary E.\nMcLEAN. Walter F.\nMcLENNAN, Arnold L.\nMcLEOD, Alan Ralph\nMcLUCKIE, William G.\nMcMARTIN, D. C.\nMcNEIL, Maureen N.\nMacPHAIL, John Donald\nMacRAE, Donald K.\nMEEKISON, William G.\nMEILICKE, Julia P.\nMIKI, Tsuneo\nMl LIN, Stella S.\nMILLER, David C.\nMIWA, Dorothy Y.\nMOCEK, Miroslav\nMOFFAT, William J. S.\nMOHAMMED, Solomon\nMOLSON, John Brian\nMOLSON, Hugh D.\n273 274\nMOLOFY, Gloria N. A.\nMOONEY, J. Geraldine\nMOORE, James William\nMORIN. Gerald Michael\nMORRISON. Glenn M.\nMOSCOVITZ, Rosalee\nMOUNCE, Trudean\nMUENSTER, Lothar J.\nMURPHY, Tom Alfred\nMURRAY. Flora M.\nMURRAY, James Gordon\nMURRAY, J. Rykert\nMUTHER, Thomas F.\nNAKATANI, Ruth M.\nNEUFELDT, Victor A.\nNEY, Philip Gordon\nNICHOLS, Lavem M. C.\nNIX, Frances Joan\nNWANZE, Peter Chuka\nOLDFIELD, Edward L.\nOSHAY, M. Maureen\nOVEREND, Dennis Brian\nOWEN, Richard F.\nPAHL, Edward\nPAPE, Siegfried Willy\nPARIS, Raymond M.\nPARKER, Howard M.\nPARKER, Mabel Anne\nPASTUK. Leonard I.\nPATTERSON, Bruce F.\nPEERLESS, S. John\nPENNER, Terrence M. I.\nPENRICE, Jame A.\nPETERSON, Melvin W.\nPICKERING, Betty Ann\nPIKE, Mary Patricia\nPLOTNIKOFF, Peter W.\nPOGGEMILLER, Marion D.\nPOST, Mrs. Margarete B.\nPOTTER. Valerie  D.\nPRENTICE, Marietta  E.\nPRYTULAK, Myroslaw\nPULLEN, M. A. Sarah\nPURCELL, Patricia M. A.\nPURVES, Roger A.\nPUSKAS, Albert\nRATZLAFF, Harold C.\nRAY, Wenda R.\nRAY, Charles Julian\nREBMANN, Huber A.\nREID, Kenwyn Garth\nRIDDLE, Katharine A.\nROBINSON, John Arthur\nROBISON, Donald G.\nROGERS, Robert G.\nROMEREIN, Paul R.\nROSS, Alexander C.\nROSS, Donald N.\nROSS, P. Lynette\nROTENBERG,  Larry A.\nRUMSEY, Gavin  M.\nRUSHTON, David lan\nSAMIS, Robert B. E.\nSVAGE, Lauren Wm. C.\nSAXON, Barbara A.\nSCHWARTZ, Charles S.\nSCHWENK, Barbara Rose\nSEGALL, Hervey David\nSELIVANOFF, George A.\nSHARP, James Harry\nSHARPE, James G.\nSHIPPOBOTHAM, M. P.\nSHOEMAKER, VIVIAN G.\nSHRIMPTON. D. Malcolm\nSHYNKARYK, Walter Wm.\nSIMONSEN. William N.\nSIMPSON. Hamish I. F. SINGH, Sucha\nSISKA, Margaret\nSLACK, Judith F.\nSLOLY, Jennifer Ann\nSMITH, Barbara Joan\nSMITH, Donald A.\nSMITH, Gordon E.\nSMITH, Norma June\nSMITH, Patrick John\nSNOWSELL, Shirley A.\nSNOWSELL, James Allen\nSOO, Freddie G. W.\nSOUKOREFF, Fred Wm.\nSPALL A. Elizabeth\nSPARKS, William F.\nSPEARS, Marion H.\nSPERLING, Lois M.\nSTAMHUIS, Arend Jan\nSTANLEY, Constance L.\nSTEIN, Albert Eugene\nSTENTON, C. Ernest\nSTEPHEN, I. Marie\nSTEWART, lan Hugh\nSTEWART, Ronald Hugh\nSUNSHINE, Stanley L.\nSUTTER, Mary Alice\nTALLON, George B.\nTHOMPSON, Marion F.\nTHOMPSON, Roberta B.\nTHORNE, Wm. Barry\nTHROWER, Joyce A.\nTODD, Roderick Dundas\nTODD, Ian St. P.\nTODD, Mary Elizabeth\nTOMLINSON, Frederick\nTONKS, Michael J.\nTREMAINE, Sylvia M.\nTREVOR-SMITH E. S.\nTURNBULL, Sheila Ann\nTURNBULL, Norah M.\nTURNER, Nigel A.\nTURVEY, M. Elizabeth H.\nUCHIDA, M. Jane\nULMER, Arno L.\nURQUHART, Robert R.\nVALENTINE, Janet Anne\nVENNEWITZ, Carla\nVITALIC, John\nVON ROSEN, Else\nWACHTER, Blair Tolmie\nWALKER, Harry Edgar\nWALKER, J. Beverley\nWALKER, Leonard Geo.\nWALKER. Michael R. B.\nWARREN, Michael P. F.\nWARREN, Mildred L\nWATERMAN, R. Michael D.\nWEEKS.  Gerald   M.\nWEINBERG. Robert L.\nWESTWICK, Henry\nWHAUN, June Mordina\nWHALE, Nannette E. S.\nWHITE, lan George\nWHITEOAK,  Dorothy L.\nWHITESIDE, M. Jean\nWHYTE, Terence T.\nWICKSTROM, Ronald W.\nWIDDOWSON, Thomas B.\nWILKIE, Grace D.\nWILKS, Patricia M.\nWILLIAMS, F. Michael G.\nWILSON, Harold David\nWILSON, Thomas A.\nWINTONYK, William\nWONG, Carole Anne\nWOODHOUSE, Edward A.\nWOODWARD, Eunice E.\n275 WOOLLEY H. Ewart\nWOOLLETT. George N.\nWRIGHT, lan G.\nWRIGHT. William John\nWYPER, Glenn Allan\nYATES, Denise A. S.\nYERBURGH, Richard E.\nYIP, Wing Simm\nZAJAC. Ihor\nZIEGLER, Wilfried H.\nZUCKER. Harriet\n276\nIs \"Engineering Inventiveness\na Curse to Humanity?\" Arts-\nman Alade Akesode asks Engineering President Ralph Sul-\nton.\nArt's cutie, Danica d'Hondt,\nastride the Art's mascot, entices fellow Artsmen to the\nfirst   A.S.U.S.   rally.\nDr. Turner explains some of\nthe more difficult phases of\nMusical Harmony to his Music\n105 class. AT the beginning of the 1955-56 school year the\nstudents of the School of Architecture withdrew\nfrom the Engineers' Society and formed their own\norganization,  the Architects'  Undergraduate Society.\nThe Architecture Club which formerly represented\nthe Architecture students on the campus is now\nexistent for the purpose of providing extra-curricular\nactivties for students not necessarily belonging to\nthe School and in particular those who will be entering the School next year.\nUnder President Ron Howard the new society got\noff to a good start in the fall with a stag and an\ninformal party\u2014both of which the residents of Angus\nDrive will long remember.\nIn the hopes of setting a glorious tradition for\nfuture students parties, a \"Bad Taste Ball\" was held\nin the Spring. Led by Andrew J. Cochrane, a new\nhigh in low taste was successfully established. The\nsocial term concluded on a more serious note with\nthe annual graduation banquet held in conjunction\nwith the Vancouver R.A.I.C. Chapter.\nAside from social activities much was accomplished\non the long-awaited Common Room, designed by\n4th year student Barry Rand.\n1\nL\u2014,aW\\ 7\n1          jT^*a\\          J\nUUM EST]\nM\n*          j\nw\n1; &}\u25a0  M\ny\n7\nlii-i-\n\u2022\u25a0v, \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\ni  .\nV\nw,\n-\nMr. Fred Lassere, Director of the School of Architecture.\nSchool of ARCHITECTURE\nAndrew   Cochrane   puts   his   hand   to   sculpturing   while   Derek   Mann\nand  Joe  Naito direct  their efforts towards working  In  plaster.\nRon Howard, President of the Architecture Society, and\nCasey Shakun bend industriously over their board to do the\njob usually expected of architects. This plaster creation made by Danny Lazosky\nto represent man, was one of the focal points\nof the display \"Architecture: Man and His Environment\".\nJohn S!gur|onsson, Wolfgang Thiersch, Toralv\nSkielvik, and Karin Mannchen gaze despondently\nat one of the structures for their display in the\nLibrary Art  Gallery.\nThe highlight of the year was a display \"Architecture: Man and His Environment,\" directed by\nRoger Smith. For three weeks the University Art\nGallery was transformed into a spatial experience that\nvisually presented some of the factors that influence\nthe architect in creating a pleasant architectural\nenvironment.\n.\u2022\u2022\u2022.\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022'\nFourth Year\nALLEN, A. L\nARAJS, U.\nEWING, R. K.\nFEISTMANN, J. G.\nGRAHAM, G. R.\nJONES, N. S.\nMANN, D. S.\nMANN, R. C.\nNAITO, J.\nPINCKSTON. D. I\nSMEETH, R. W.\nWILES, F. A.\nUYEYAMA. K. J. BAXTER, Robert W.\nDAGG, Robert M.\nHAAVE, Lawrence C.\nHICKS. Milton S.\nHOLUBITSKY, Orest B.\nHYS, Elizabeth Emily\nJORGENSON, Daryl C.\nKATNICK, Jack Miro\nLATIMER, Charles W.\nMcCOWAN, Roy James L.\nMacKENZIE, Herbert S.\nMcLEOD, Barry A.\nPERSON, Dennis Albert\nSKIESNA, Harris\nSOLEWAY, Robert O.\nWARD, Donald M.\nWHITE, Daniel E.\nWILLS, Charles Edwin\nWONG, Patrick\nYIP HIN FONG\nYUSDA,  Eugene\nZAPOROZAN, John\nANDEREGG, Marco\nBOUCOCK, William  E.\nBROCKINGTON David H.\nBROWNE, Dennis H.\nGOLDSWORTHY, Raymond\nGORONZY, Edwin John\nHOMOLA, Robert Bohoan\nJAMES, F. Trevor\nJONES, Roland F.\nKINOSHITA, Gene\nKIRK. Denis H.\nLARDEN, Trevor N.\nLAZOSKY, Daniel E.\nLEE, Albert\nLOVETT, Eric Tupper\nMATSUBA, Donald M.\nMUNZEL, Alexander O. H.\nRAPANOS, Dino P.\nSAGER, Gerald Erie\nSHERRIN, Robert F.\nYUEN, Gordon\nArchitecture\nCHARLESWORTH, Harold\nDIETZE, Siegfried  H.\nDOUGLAS, Martin\nKLEYN, Lodewijk B.\nMANNCHEN, Karin\nPLAVSIC, Vladimir\nREDWOOD, Hugh C.\nSIGURJONSSON, John F.\nSKJELVIK, Toralv\nSPIRA, Gilbert A.\nTHIERSCH, Wolfgang B.\n279 WITH his varied program of sports and social\nactivities as well as studies, the Aggie undergraduate leads a well-rounded university life. Playing\nin Aggie teams of Basketball, Soccer, Volleyball, Badminton, Tennis, Ping Pong, Touch Football, Track and\nField and even Chariot Racing keeps the Aggie strong\nand spirited. He balances the sports program with a\nwide selection of social activities which include fall\nand spring banquets, at the Commodore and Stanley\nPark Pavilion respectively, two chicken barbeques, a\nfaculty barn dance, a home cooking sale, a Christmas\nparty, and the most popular dance on the campus, the\nFarmers' Frolic. The Aggies sponsor an Apple Sale in\naid of the crippled children and a Blood Drive.\nBesides taking part in the many activities of the\nAgriculture Undergraduate Society, Aggies learn how\nto squeeze more eggs out of a chicken, raise bigger\nand better crops and breed better cattle. Their study\nof Bacteriology and Chemistry will enable them to\ncontinue to improve the quality of food Canada and\nthe world eats.\nDean of the Faculty of Agriculture,  Blythe Eagles.\nFaculty o\nBearded Aggie, Lome\nLeach, is a picturesque\ndesperado at the Fall Barn\nDance at Alma  Hall.\nJohn   Palmer  and   Don  Craig  examine  a  forage  harvester. Bronco   Busting   Contest   on   Aggie   Apple   Day   sees   an\nEngineer  getting  taken  for  a   ride.\n\\GRICULTURE\n\"Which came first, the chicken or the egg?    wonders the photographer\nas he snaps this timely picture of a chicken hatching.\nMeasuring  the  respiration of guinea  pigs  is C.  B.  Bailey.\njwt-\ni;.<c Agriculture\n222\nBROWN, Donald M. E.\nBROWN, George A.\nBUTTKUS, Hans August\nCAMPBELL, lan George\nCARLSON, A. A. Wendy\nCLARK, Frederick\nCOCKRILL, Donald E.\nDOYLE, Kenneth Joseph\nDRIEHUYZEN, Martin G.\nDYBLE, Christopher L.\nEVANS. Richard H.\nFENTIMAN. Douglas N.\nFORDE. St. Clair M.\nFURNISS, Alan B.\nGIBNEY, Patrick G.\nHAY, George William\nHUDSON, J. T. Ross\nJACKSON. Valerie R.\nKELLY, Hollis Lionel\nKOZIER, Leonard John\nMORROW, Margaret E.\nPARKER, Marina M. R.\nPHELPHS. Ralph Howard\nREED, David Gwilym\nSCLATER, James E.\nSMITH, Kenneth Robert\nSPRONG, Bob\nSTEVENSON,   Elizabeth\nSTEVES, Harold L.\nSTYLES.  Ernest  Derek\nTWEEDY. David Graham\nVAN ANDEL, Fokke H.\nWEAVER, Radcliffe S.\nWILLIAMS, Paul Hugh\nWILSON, Robert H.\nAYLARD, Kenneth W.\nBARRON. David Wallace\nBRYSON, Malcolm Bates\nCASE, Vernon W.\nCATHERWOOD, R. John\nCHALLENGER. G. Richard\nCLEMSON. Jan\nDAVIS. William L.\nDUMMETT, John A.\nFARMER, Joanna M.\nFRIESEN. John\nGODDARD, Raymond A.\nGOLD, John W.\nHARTMAN. John\nHATFIELD, John P.\nHOSPES, Donald E.\nIDE, Peter Robin\nKALYK, Harvey Nick\nKREUTZIGER. G. Oscar\nKROLL. Victor A.\nMcCALLAN. John H.\nMcCURRACH. John A.\nMEERTS, Johannes J.\nMOLYNEUX. Alfred E.\nMUFFORD, Barry K.\nNOBLE.   Douglas  Edward\nOSBORNE. Vincent E.\nOSBORNE, James Robert\nPETERSON, Peter Neil\nPETO, Howard  R.\nROBSON, Michael F.\nSMULDERS.  Edward   G. G, STANDEN, Joan E.\nTAYLOR, Kenneth G.\nTEBBUTT,  Kenneth Wm. t\nTENNANT, Stuart John\nTOTHILL, Jevington B.\nTRABOULAY, Leonard M.\nVAN TOM ME, Hector R.\nBAUMBROUGH,   Harold\nBOWLAND, Frederick H.\nDENT, William J.\nDOBB, John Llewellyn\nEBBETT, Thomas Wm.\nELLISON,  Mary E.\nGROVES. Tom David O.\nGRUGER,  Ronald  Paul\nGUBBELS,  Gerard  H.\nHAQQ, Samuel A.\nHOES, J. A. Johannes M.\nHOGENKAMP,  Harry H. .\nHYNARD, M. David\nKENDELL,  Michael D.\nKOVACS. Audrey I.\nMOYER, Rudy H.\nPATTERSON, Alan N.\nROELANTS. Hendrik W. M.\nSCHAEDLE, Michail\nSOULE, Lawrence\nWATERS,  Geraldine Ann\nWEBSTER, John M.\nWINDT, Thomas Alan\nWONG, Richard\nARNOLD, Donald J.\nBALLY, Gene Sookdeo\nBRADBURY,   Ralph   Wayne\nBREAULT, Steward F.\nMAULE, Christopher J.\nPHILLIPS, Theodore J.\nRAMSAY, James L.\nSAVAGE, John Lawrence\n..*\u2022.\n*\u2022\u2022\nDry Farmers' Frolic is previewed by tea-\nsipping Aggies. John Webster, Nick Kalyk and\nLink Goberdhan pour tea for Alan Furniss,\nElizabeth Stevenson, Margaret Morrow and\nTrevor Arscott.\n223 Working  on  various  lathes,  milling  machines and  other  assorted  mechanical   monsters   is   this   class   in   the   Mechanical   Engineer's\nmachine shop. Each member of the class is engaged in making an eight-inch bench saw.\nFaculty of APPLIED SCIENCE\nHenry C. Gunning,   Dean of the Faculty of Applied Science.\nTwo   graduate   students   supervised   by   Dr.   E.   V.   Bohn   make   some\nprinted   circuit   connections   on   their  Analogue   Computer. This entangled mass of humanity Is participating\nin the Engineers-Aggie Chariot Race during the\nEngineers' March of Dimes Campaign. The Engl,\nneers here are attempting to prevent the Aggie\nChariot  from   reaching  the  finish   line.\nThese two industrious fellows, Bob Wilcox and\nRon Adams, are preparing apparatus for a steam\ntrap   test.\nAs John Broder waits expectantly, Abe Zelikovski\nand Bob Roblin manipulate the efficiency test for\nan oil-fired furnace.\nTHIS year, as usual, the Engineers have provided the\nlarger portion of the hell-raising on campus. The\nfall A.M.S. General Meeting saw the Redshirts turn\nout en masse to defeat a major part of President Ron\nBray's amendments to the A.M.S. constitution. \"Big\nBrother\" Ralph Sultan made himself rather unpopular\nat this meeting by seeming to dictate to his \"sheep\"\nthe correct way to vote.\nOn a more serious side, the Engineers have been\nvery active in many campus activities. The Blood Drive,\nthe March of Dimes, and Frosh Orientation were\namong the activities supported and directed by them.\nOn the social side, the Engineers have not been\nmuch more active than usual. In between their labs\nand studying they managed to fit in two parties with\nthe nurses and one with the Home Economics students.\nThe annual Smoker failed to produce any riots but was,\nnevertheless, a success. Also, the annual Engineers'\nBall held on February 22 and 23, with the marvellous\narray of technical models, was the Engineers' event of\nthe year.\nThe academic scene saw the Mechanical Engineers\ndoing research into making the Trump Fruit Tree Spray\nmore efficient, the Civils continuing analysis of flow-\ncontrol structures on the Fraser River model, while the\nElectricals took a trip to Seattle to tour the Boeing\nAircraft plant, the studios and transmitter of King-TV,\nand the Cyclotron and Electrical Engineering Building\nof the University of Washington.\n225 Applied Science\n226\nABELL, Harvey C. N.\nADDISON, Richard\nALEXANDER, Charles W.\nALLEN, Leonard C.\nAMSDEN,   Michael   P.\nARNASON, William J.\nATHERTON, T. Percival\nAUBIN, Charles W.\nAULD, Robert G.\nAULD, Edward George\nAUNE, Harry T.\nAVISON, Andrew T.\nAYLEN, Peter Eric J.\nBALKARAN, Andrew C.\nBARNES, Gordon W.\nBARTLETT, Peter E.\nBARTON, Keith E.\nBAYNES, Duncan C.\nBDINKA, Norman Frank\nBEARDSELL, Kenneth A.\nBELL, Donald F.\nBELL, W. N. Peter\nBERNSTEIN, Lawrence A.\nBEULAH, Peter Frederic\nBLACK, Donald Sherman\nBOAS, Henry Kurth\nBORISUK. James\nBOSTON, Noel E. J.\nBOTEL, William G.\nBOTHNER, Vyrn  Malcolm\nBOWDEN, David Paul\nBRAKE, George M.\nBREVNER, Fitzroy J.\nBROWN, ALan C. M.\nBROWN, Peter M.\nBUCHANAN,  Robert J.\nBUICK, Brian Douglas\nBURNETT, John C. D.\nCALDERWOOD, Wm. M.\nCARPENTER, Ted L.\nCHARLTON. Robert S.\nCHICALO, Jack E.\nCHIN, Larry Leung\nCHRISTENSEN, Aksel\nCHURCH, Michael G.\nCICCONE, Ronald A.\nCLARK, Stanley R.\nCOOK, Ronald\nCOLTMAN, Donald Edwin\nCORBISHLEY, Douglas\nCRAWFORD, W. James P.\nCOUSINS, William  F.\nDANYLUK, Richard\nDAU, Karl\nDAVENPORT, William G.\nDAVEY, John Frederick\nDAVIDSON, Omar Stieni\nDAVIES, Robert M.\nDAVISON, G. Morris\nDAYSON,  Philip  L.\nDEATON,  Ronald John\nDENT, Alan G.\nDEVLIN, laian R.\nDIXON, Donald F.\nDOLPHIN, Daniel R.\nDOVEY, Robert Joseph\nDOYLE, Ronald Glen\nDRDUL, Alexander J.\nDRUMMOND, Glen\nDRUMMOND,  A.  Darryl\nDUBBERLEY, Edward J.\nDYE, Kenneth M.\nEASTON, John Charles ELCOX, Robert Edward\nENGER, Gerald Roy\nERNSTSOHN, Felix\nERWIN, David\nETHERIDGE, George H.\nEVANS, Dew! G. S.\nFERRARD, David Louis\nFILER.  Frederick V\/m.\nFINDLAY, Allan Gordon\nFINNIGAN. Andrew P.\nFITZCLARK, John S.\nFLOSTRAND, Lyle Arne\nFORREST, Douglas R.\nFRASER, David J.\nFRASER, John Wm.\nFREDERICKSON, Jack R.\nFREMONT, John N.\nFROMSON, Douglas A.\nGALLAHER, Donald F. M.\nGAMMIE, Alexander P.\nGENBERG, Peter\nGIEGERICH, Robert M.\nGILBERT, Leslie R.\nGILBERT, Robert Owen\nGRAHAM. Ronald L\nGRAY, Albert Andrew\nGROVES, William D.\nGUSTIN, Stanley E.\nHACK, Kenneth F.\nHACKARAY, John Alfred\nHADWIN, Donald F.\nHAHN. Joachim E. T.\nHAIGH. Ronald Wellyn\nHAIMILA, Norman E.\nHARDING, Hugh J.\nHARDING, Patrick J. R.\nHARDY. William L\nHATTON, James Eric\nHECTOR, James Stewart\nHERRING, Robert E.\nHESLOP,   lan   McGregor\nHEUCKENDORFF, A. Colin\nHIGGINS, M. Robert\nHOLLAND, Jack H.\nHOLZMAN. Donald  Karl\nHOOGE, Helmut H.\nHORNER, Ronald W.\nHOVERMAN, William H.\nHOWARD, Charles D. D.\nHOYE, William Robert\nHUNTER. Perry A. J.\nHYNDMAN, Donald W.\nISBISTER, Gordon A.\nIVERSON. Charles H. G.\nJANKULAK, Frank J.\nJOHANSON, Fred E.\nJOHNSTON. Thomas R.\nJURINCIC, Nicholas L.\nKEDDIS. Ivar\nKEILBART, Edword W.\nKELLOGG, F. Edward\nKINCAID. David G.\nKNIGHT, Douglas A.\nKNOWLER. J. Compbell\nKONDRATOWSKI, Zenon J.\nKOURITZIN, Alexander\nLAKER. Edwin T.\nLAM, Ken\nLAMBERT,  Michael C.\nLARSON, Peter P.\nLAWSON. Victor Bruce\nLAWSON, David  Barry\nLEE, Young Han\nLEMMON, Douglas Neil\nLIGGINS, Allan\nLIMBER, K. Orval\nLONG, Norman D.\n9 9 1 9\nmmml\n99^'\ni Ammm   -MJL .'    \/ eft\n227 228\nLOO, Tommy\nLOUIE, Edward G. L\nLOWOOD, John D.\nLUND, Earl Albert\nLYE, William  Roger\nLYNUM. Thor\nMACKUS, Frank Herbert\nMADDISON, Rodney R.\nMALKIN, H. Wyatt\nMALLORY, Donald J.\nMARRA, Ronald D.\nMARRIOTT, Alan T.\nMARSHALL, Donovan C.\nMASSEY. George E.\nMATSUSHITA. Jack S.\nMAYDELL. Victor Peter\nMcDONALD. Douglas J.\nMacDONALD. John S.\nMcDONALD Jack A.\nMcDONALD Thomas J.\nMacKENZIE, Peter D.\nMcLENNAN.  Alexander N.\nMcSPADDEN. Daryl G.\nMEEKISON, John Peter\nMETZKER, Richard\nMIKI, Henry M.\nMILLER. David Charles\nMINICHIELLO, Peter\nMITCHELL, Wm. John\nMONKS, Stanley\nMONTGAMERY, Alexander\nMORRISON. N. Wayne\nMOULDS, Gerald W.\nNADEN.  Frederick John\nNAGAI, Benso\nNAKAMURA, Minoru\nNEGORO, Takashi\nNEWMAN, James E.\nNEWSHAM, Arthur D.\nNICOLSAN, Harry Peter\nNISHIZAKI, Tsutomu\nNOHR. Larry Halvor\nNORMAN, Martin C. G. M.\nNORWICH, Joseph James\nOISHI, Tsutomu\nOKE, Edward Lawrence\nOLDHAM. William Kaye\nOMAND. James C.\nORNIK, Ladislav\nOUNPUU, Evald\nOYAMAA. Heiki\nPARKER, William E.\nPASLAWSKI, Philip A.\nPAUL, Allan\nPAVLOV, Boris A. T.\nPAYNTER, Daulton L\nPAYNE, Carl Allan\nPEDERSEN, Robert E.\nPENNER, Paul Gerhard\nPETERSEN, Walter J.\nPETERSON. Douglas S.\nPORTER, Robert Stuart\nPOWELL, James A.\nPRESS, Robert Boyer\nPULLMAN, Arthur G.\nPURCHAS. Lome David\nRAE, James A. B.\nRAINER, Johann\nRANN ALA, Raymond\nRASMUSSEN, John V.\nREDIVO, Livio S.\nREDMAN, Lyle Wharton\nREID, Warren Ernest\nRICHARDSON, William L.\nRICHMOND, Kenneth  M.\nROBERTS, Guy Lawrence\nROBERTSON, John B. L, ROBLIN, Murray K. J.\nROSS, George F.\nROWLANDS, Robert E.\nRUSSELL, James F.\nSABBAGH, Adib\nSAGE, Glen  Henry\nSAKAMOTO, Roy Y.\nSANDBERG, Walter I.\nSANDERSON, John  G.\nSAUNIER, Gilbert M.\nSAVAGE, Richard Alan\nSAVARIE, R. Louis\nSCHLAAK, Raymond C.\nSCHWEIGEL, Joseph F.\nSELBY, Joseph C.\nSHARZER, Lion J. H.\nSHARPE, John Joseph\nSHARP, Robert Murray\nSHEARING,  Cyril  Garth\nSHERLING, Norman D.\nSHORE, J. Ralph\nSIMMONS, Martin\nSLADE, Michael John\nSLADE, Rodney Hubert\nSLATER, Mark D.\nSUNN, Peter Easter\nSMITH, Edward Joseph\nSMITH, John D.\nSMITH-GANDER, Nigel C.\nSMYTH, Robert Woilliam\nSNOWBALL, Robert F.\nSOMERVILLE, Daniel W.\nSPENCER, Morley Keith\nSTABLE, Charles Neil\nSTANYER, J. Douglas\nSTERLING, Myles F. H.\nSTEWART, Alexander B.\nSTEWART, G. Kelvin\nSTEWART, Glendon R.\nSTEWART, W. Donald\nSTICKNEY, George H.\nSTURROCK, Douglas N.\nSTURGESS, Donald F.\nTENNANT, William E. S.\nTHOM, Donald Cullen\nTHOMPSON, James  M.\nTHOMSON, Donald Jack\nTOMPKINS, F. Michael\nTOPHAM, Gordon A.\nTRUEIT, Edgar A.\nTRUSSELL, Gerald E.\nTURNER, Charles H.\nVANCE, Gordon Moffatt\nVAN DER HORST, Louis\nVARNEY, Donald Bruce\nVAUGHAN,  Ronald  Bruce\nVI EL, William John\nWALKER, Ronald E.\nWARD, Ronald A.\nWARNER, Garnet Clare\nWASYLUK, William A.\nWATSON, Donald Allan\nWEBSTER, David A.\nWEGER,  Frederick John\nWHITEHOUSE, B. Allan\nWILSON, Kenneth C.\nWOHLLEBEN,  Bernard  Wm.\nWONG, Roderick\nWOOD,  Raymond J.\nYEE, William C.\nYESKE, Arthur R.\nYESTADT, Roy A.\nYINGLING, Kenneth  M.\nYOUNG, Mary June\nYOUNG, Robert Leslie\nZANON, Settimo Carlo\nZYDYK, Edward V.\n229 Second Year\n230\n\u00a3&   ^S  h$k\ntMtmSmA &\nAlZkiZmm'&B  i    mm*\nALLISON, Roy W.\nARMSTRONG, A. Gordon\nARNASON, Norman G.\nATKIN, Albert J.\nBABB, Alan Frederick\nBAILEY, James Wm.\nBAKER, Colin M.\nBAKER, Victor Thomas\nBAYNE, Allen Rowan\nBERTO, Benjamin B.\nBEST, William Albert\nBOOMER, William C.\nBOULANGER, Thomas B.\nBROOKMAN,  Ronald  Roy\nBROOKS, Noel Peter H.\nBROWN, Gary W.\nBRYAN, Patrick R.\nBUDD, William L\nBUTT, Chak Ying\nCASWELL, Bruce\nCATHRO, Robert J.\nCAUSEY, Allan R.\nCHAPLIN, Robert E.\nCHAPMAN, Anthony G.\nCHAPPEL, Mark S.\nCLAGGETT, Freddie G.\nCLARK, William Craig\nCLEGG, Robert N.\nCLISCH, Donald Fred\nCOSTANZO, Ronald A.\nCRAIG, Douglas B.\nCROWSON, Donald B.\nDAVIS, Dennis George\nDAVISON, Donald Morse\nDELANE, Gerry Dennis\nDEPAOLI, Edward\nDIAL, Nirmal S.\nDILL, Herbert James\nDINSMORE, Norman H.\nDI PASQUALE, William\nDOLPHIN, Robert L.\nDRIEDGER, Elwood W.\nDRYSDALE,  Richard  F.\nDUERKSEN, John H.\nEREMKO, George A.\nFAWSITT, Thomas E.\nFORBES, M. Jack\nFOWLER, Alvin G. J.\nFRASER, Russell G.\nFRASER, Arthur Roy\nFRASER, Michael John\nFRASER, George G.\nFRAZER, Edward J.\nFRIEND, Raymond C.\nFULTON, Clarence W.\nGARRETT, Todd W.\nGARRISON, Garry Jack\nGIBBARD, Glen A.\nGISKE, Richard Carl\nGORDON, John Robert M.\nGRAYHOLM, Erie\nGRAY, Daryl Herbert\nG,REENE, Robert Edward\nGRI, Norman J.\nGRIER, Brian P.\nGUNNING, Donald, F.\nHACKETT, Cedric Basil\nHAFER, Rodney A.\nHAHN, Edmund A. J.\nHAHN, Philipp L.\nHALDEMAN, Alfred S.\nHAMAGUCHI, Roy I.\nHANKINSON, John D.\nHASSELL. Denis J. HAWRELAK. Dick Alan\nHAYNE, George S.\nHEASLIP, David E.\nHELLER, H. Dave\nHELME, James F.\nHESKIN. Bernard A.\nHIBBERT, Paul D.\nHILDEBRAND, D. Gerald\nHORN, John Arthur N.\nHUNTLEY, Christopher\nIRWfN Robert L\nIRWIN, John C. N.\nJARVIS, Paul E.\nJEFFERY, Arthur C.\nJEWITT, John W.\nJOHAL, Major S.\nJOHNSON. Donald Geo.\nJOHNSON. Ronald W.\nJONES, Edward Peter\nKAILA, Kenneth M.\nKEECH. Roderick G.\nKEMLE, David Henry\nKEZIN, George A.\nKIKUCHI, A. Robin\nKILBURN, Douglas G.\nKING. David C.\nKLASSEN, Harvey Owen\nKLUCK, John F.\nKROEKER, Cornelius H.\nKULES, Charles Eric\nKYLLO, Martin\nLAIRD, Allan D.\nLAWRENCE, Edward A.\nLEDINGHAM, J. Brian\nLEGG, John F.\nLENEVEU, Gordon P.\nLINDSAY, Russell M.\nLIVGARD, Egil\nLOVESETH, George E.\nMANHAS,  Karm Singh\nMARTIN. John Edward\nMASON, Malcolm W.\nMcAllister, lan r.\nMcCLURE.  Richard  N.\nMcDONALD, James W.\nMacKENZIE, Stuart C.\nMcKIMM, Terence F.\nMacLAREN, Peter G. B.\nMcLEAN, John Allen\nMacNAUGHTON, Robert G.\nMEPHAM, Herbert J.\nMERRITT, Roy Stanley\nMIDDLEMASS, Robert A.\nMILLS, William E.\nMILTIMORE, Alan Ross\nMINIELLY, Keith A.\nMOORE, Zelma Esther\nMORROW. Darcy J.\nMOUL, Douglas W.\nNEILD, Peter John\nNEILSON, John Thomas\nNICKEL, Jacob S.\nNIELSEN, George O.\nNIGHTINGALE, George R.\nNIXON, John Roy\nNORDSTROM, Thomas A.\nNORDSTRAND. Ronald B.\nNORRISH, Harold E.\nOGILVY, A. Cameron\nOLIVER, James E.\nPAGE, Jonathon Day\nPARMLEY, Leslie James\nPEARSON, George E.\nPETERSON, Edwin John\nPITRE, John A.\nPLUNKETT, Patrick D.\nPOTTER, Gary W.\n237 232\n\u25a0^3\n1' iOk\n\/\nlif)\nPOWER, Gerard Thos.\nPROUGH, James Robert\nPRUDHOMME, Hector R.\nRAM, Shagat\nRANTZ, Robert D.\nRASMUSSEN, Walter R.\nRATUSHNY, Fred M.\nRAYNOR, Gerald H.\nREAD, Denis C.\nREADER, Philip J.\nREDMAN, Donald Ernest\nREID, Lome James\nROGER,  Robert Stewart\nROGERS, Robert J. L.\nROTHWELL, James Todd\nRUSHCALL, Edward M.\nRUSK, William  E.\nRUSSELL, Paul H.\nSAIMOTO,  Shigeo\nSAITO, Yoshihisa\nSAPERSTEIN, Manuel J.\nSAVARD, James F.\nSCHRAM, Richard R.\nSCHACK, Fred G.\nSEDER, Paul W.\nSHAW, Glenwood D.\nSHIELDS.  Peter A.\nSMITH, Brian  Robert\nSMITH, James M.\nSMITH, Ronald B.\nSMUIN, Donald Edward\nSOLONECKI, William J.\nSOPHER, Stephen R.\nSPENCER,  Bruce E.\nSTEEVES, John G.\nSTEVENS, Robert M.\nSTRACHAN, Peter R.\nSTRINGER, Terence N.\nSUZUKI, Toshio\nSWIERSTRA, John\nSWOBODA, P. Donald\nSYDNEYSMITH, Sam\nTHOMPSON, John David\nTHOMSON. Cecil Rolf V.\nTHOMSON, Donald S.\nTHORBURN,  Herbert  J.\nTOLLEY, Lamont C.\nTRUESDALE,   Lewis T.\nTWEDDLE, Blake A.\nTZVETCOFF, George A.\nWAKABAYASHI, Henry H.\nWALE,  Leonard  M.\nWATSON, Robert Geo IL.\nWEDLER, John W.\nWILCOX. Gordon L\nWILSON, Robert Andrew\nWINESTOCK, Alvin G.\nWOODHOUSE, Gary Owen\nWOOLVERTON, Roy W.\nYOUNGER, Gerald M.\nYUAN, John T.\nZIEGLER, Joseph\nABBOTT, Brian Michael\nADAMSON, Robert Sidney\nANDERSON, Carl Allen\nALLAN, James F.\nARCHER, Alan Richard\nASHWELL, Lewis\nASSIMES, Leonard Thomas\nBAGOT, Trever Richard\nBALCOM, Graeme S.\nBASARB, William\nBAZETT. Michael BEER, George A.\nBELL, Sidney F.\nBERKEY, Duane\nBERRY, William\nBHATTI. Kesar Singh\nBLACKBURN, Robert William\nBRADSHAW, Lee\nBRADSHAW, Albert Dean\nBROWN, Arthur\nCARLSON, Edward Paul\nCARMICHAEL, John R.\nCAWLEY, Ross Howard\nCHEVELDAVE, Harry G.\nCHEW, Bing Can\nCONNELL, Peter Stuart\nCORBET, Burke\nDANARD, Maurice B.\nDAVIDSON, Donald A.\nDAVIS, Robert Archer\nDAY, Clifford Alan\nDECOURCY, Donald E.\nDEFAYE, Phillippe John\nDEY, Walter Ross\nDIROM, lan Carter\nDRUMMOND, Alaister M.\nDUNCAN, Dennis\nDUPREY,  Donald\nDYMOSE,  Lawrence\nELDER, Howard\nEVANOFF, Steven\nFALCONER, Keith F.\nFEVANG, Ronald Keith\nFLETCHER, Norman W.\nFORNASIER, Waldo\nFRASER, Donald P.\nFRIEND, Ronald G.\nFUCHS, Hubert\nFUTCHER, Ralph James\nGARTSHORE, lan S.\nGAYTON, John W.\nGOLDIE, Charles Alan\nGRAIS, Gary Scott\nGREIFENBERGER, Albert\nHALES, F. William\nHALEY, Peter\nHARMAN, Charles K.\nHIK, William\nHOLMES, Brian W.\nHOLMES, Ronald  L.\nHOLST, Gunnar\nHORCOFF, Michael F.\nHUME, Phillip Grey\nHUNT, C. E. Lawrence\nHUNTLEY, David John\nIRVINE,  Bruce Whitmee\nIWANCIW, Michael\nJIM, Harvey\nJOHNSON, Kenneth M.\nJONES, Colin Rankin\nJONES, Kenneth Stuart\nJUZKOW, Tony Peter\nKALNINS, Janis\nKARAS, Alexander\nKEARNEY, James Edward\nKELLY. Robert John\nKEMPE, Arthur Joseph\nKODAMA. Sadao\nKWAN, Robert\nLACY, Harold\nLAIRD, Alexander\nLAURIE, Gordon H.\nLEE, David Manuel\nLEGG,  Edward   Roland\nLIEBELT, Alvin\nLIND, John R.\nLITTLE, Robert F.\nLUNDER. Hans Jakob\n233 234\nMAH, Gordon\nMALYCHUK, Nick\nMARTIN,  Robert John\nMATZEN, E. John Peter\nMASTIN, Walter James\nMAWDSLEY, Jack S.\nMcDONALD, John Murdo\nMcKENZIE,  M. Murray\nMcLEOD, Kenneth G.\nMcNEILTY, William Robert\nMEEK, John Wuinn\nMILLAR, William R.\nMITCHELL,  Ronald   R.\nMOIR,  Lewis Ernest\nMORRISON, Gary C.\nNG, Chung  Lai  Paul\nNOBLE, George  Patrick\nNOVAK, Jiri Jan\nNYBERG,  Donald  Walter\nO'CONNELL, Kevin\nOLSEN, Clifford  Leroy\nOLESEN,  Niels Jorgen\nORME, John  Edward\nOTT,  Richard   Phillip\nPAGET, Norris Raymond\nPANAIOPI,  Demetrius\nPARK, Howard\nPETERS, Terence David\nPICHA, George John\nPITMAN, Harvey\nPOPLE, Keith Neale\nPOUSETTE, Ronald D.\nPRITCHARD, John R. G.\nRAWSON,  Donald A.\nRAYER,  Frederick George\nREAD, Peter Lurland\nREGHER, Jacob\nRICH,  Michael John\nROBERTS,  Donald   Earl\nROBINSON, Campbell William\nROHLOFF, Lyn H.\nRUSSELL, Francis P.\nSCOTT, Robin Adam\nSHALANSKY, Carl\nSIMPKINSON, William\nSKELDING, James A.\nSMITH, Allan Robert\nSOMERVILLE,  Graham\nSORLIE, Bjane\nSTEWART,  Gary  Mclean\nSTROTHER, Arthur Jas.\nSYKES, Rendall F.\nTAYLOR,  George  Edward\nTAYLOR, William\nTAYLOR, James\nTEBO, Gordon Ross\nTOOP, Gerald Wesley\nTRAPP,   Robert  George\nTRENNAMAN, Roland T.\nVANSACKER,  Kenneth G.\nVERNON, Jerrold\nWALLIS,  George  Graham\nWEST, Joseph\nWIBER,  Harold\nWIDHOLM, Ole Raymond\nWlGINTON, John C.\nWILKINSON, Clifford  H.\nWILSON, George A.\nWILTSE,  Ronald  Keith\nWONG, George Timothy\nWOOTTON, George C.\nWYNNE, Thomas Emlym \"Just one more,\" says Jo Pasnak as she selects a fancy delicacy.\nMaureen Kennedy, Carol Abrahamson and Gerry Legge share the\ndelightful   treat   at  the   Commerce  Women's   Annual   Tea.\nParty dresses, soft lights and dreamy music put Commerce couples\nin the mood for dancing at the CUS Annual Formal, held ai\"\nthe   Flame.\nSchool of COMMERCE\nTHE problem of supplying educated men and\nwomen competent in special techniques and well\ngroomed in a philosophy of commercial life for a\nworld demanding specialists and needing people with\nvision is the problem of the U.B.C. School of Commerce. Headed by Professor E. D. MacPhee, the\nSchool of Commerce distinguishes between producing\nautomatons and men and women educated to deal\nwith problems with intelligence and foresight. A\nCommerceman has a good background in the liberal\narts, psychology and economics. His specialist training includes accounting, marketing and production\ntechniques. Courses in Commercial Law, Finance and\nPersonnel Administration round out his working business philosophy. For the benefit of those registered in\nthe newly-created College of Education the School of\nCommerce will be offering courses such as typing,\nshorthand, secretarial practice and office management.\nPretty Kathy Campbell, Commerce Candidate for Homecoming Queen, smiles happily as she rides in the Homecoming   Parade.\n235 Mr. E. D. MacPhee, Director of the\nSchool of Commerce, thinks of lectures\nas business appointments and expects all\nhis students to be in the classroom\npromptly.\nAn ambitious and energetic Commerce Undergraduate society, headed by Henning Brasso, president, and Gordie Flemons, vice-president, has\ninstituted some successful innovations in this year's\nstudent program. First among these was the Student-\nFaculty Mixer held in early October. This party gave\nthe students an excellent opportunity to meet their\nprofessors on an informal basis. A second innovation\nwas the publication of The Ledger, a Commerce\nannual containing highlights and activities of the\nUniversity year. The Ledger, edited by Bas French,\nis the first project of its type to be attempted in the\nSchool of Commerce. The publication was very weil\nreceived.\nThe Annual Commerce Banquet held at the Hotel\nVancouver featured Mr. John James Deutsch, new\nhead of the Department of Economics and Political\nScience at U.B.C, as guest speaker. A distinguished\nCanadian, Mr. Deutsch, then Assistant Minister of\nFinance at Ottawa, spoke on \"Canada in the World\nToday.\" The Commerce Banquet is a University function where students are able to meet distinguished\nbusiness men in very favourable surroundings. The\nUndergraduate Society's society year was rounded out\nby the Commerce Formal at The Flame in November\nand the Commerce Informal at The Forbidden City\nin February.\nRoving reporter John Maynard interviews meditating Keith Bennett and\nqrinning Terry Lodge in a laughter-provoking skit at the Commerce\nFormal.\nsw\nMaking   executive   decisions   in   their   Marketing   Lab   are   Commercemen\nAndrew  Olah,  Bruce  Morrow and  Hugh  McCulloch.\nfSp~    ~^\\\n\u2022jm?\n\\s*:\ni\ntmmmW ABE, Bobby Kanao\nAINSWORTH. John W.\nAUDET, Gerald W.\nBEADLE, Lawrence W.\nBEAUCHAMP, Robert E.\nBELL, Harvey Allen\nBICE, William Charles\nBLAND, Terrence R.\nBOBROFF, Leonard S.\nBOSSONS, C. Peter\nBRADSHAW, Norman D.\nBREMNER, David G.\nBRISCALL, C. Margaret\nBROCKS, Hani D. W.\nBRONSTEIN, W. Joseph\nBROWN, Ralph R.\nBROWN LEE, James R.\nBUCKWOLD, Irving A.\nCAMERON, Norman lan\nCAMPBELL, Kathleen R.\nCARROLL, Theodora\nCATLOW, Muriel Beryl\nCAVAYE, Richard Bruce\nCHAMPION, Alfred R.\nCHANCE, Guy K.\nCHAN, Kent Julienne\nCHIN. Raymond K. F.\nCLARK, Robert John\nCLAUSSEN, Hans Bjorn\nCOCKING, Phillip B.\nCOLLINGWOOD. Norman\nCOLLINSON, W. Edward\nCOLTMAN, Robert K.\nCOOPLAND. Gary N.\nCRAWFORD, Moira A.\nCRAWFORD, Bradley E.\nCROOK, William F.\nCROTEAU, Paul Arthur\nCUPIT, Robert Frank\nCURROR. Alexander J.\nDICKMAN, Owen E.\nDITTRICH, Gerald A.\nDOOLAN, Kenneth John\nDOOLING, Leo James\nDRUGGE, Carl Folke\nELLIOTT, Donn G.\nEVENSEN, Ronald M.\nFAY, George Robert\nFITZPATRICK. D. Ross\nGARNETT. Don Gilbert\nGEE, John Henry\nGINTHER, James L\nGIRARD, Ernest J.\nGOSSE, Malcolm H. C.\nGREENWOOD, Jack B.\nHEWLETT, Alan\nHORTON, David J.\nHOWARD, John L\nHUNTER, Alan D.\nIMRICH, Paul Jamas\nINKMAN, Paul E.\nINKSTER. W. Gordon\nIVANS, Paul\nJAMES, Harvie Charles\nJAMIESON, Edward R.\nKEE, Sammy\nKENNEDY. Wi'liam F.\nIKERNAGHAN, Patrick W.\nKIRKBY, Ronald Vernon\nKIRKWOOD, David John\nKONDROSKY, John\nKOSICH, George J.\njKOWBEL, Lawrence J.\nCommerce\n237 238\nKRAHN, Jacob A.\nKUJAWA, Daniel\nLEE, Allan J.\nLEITH, Barbara J.\nLEOWSKI, D. Arthur\nLLOYD, Edgar R.\nLOUIE. Allen W.\nMADILL, J. Peter\nMAGAR, Maureen L.\nMALONE, Edward Cyril\nMARTIN, Norris\nMcAFEE, Daniel E.\nMcARTHUR, Kenneth W.\nMcCANDLESS, Henry E.\nMcDIARMID, John N.\nMcGRATH, James David\nMacKENZIE, Kenneth C.\nMcKITRICK, R. Murray\nMcNULTY, Donald C.\nMEEKISON, Dougal M.\nMELVIN, F. Allen\nMICHAELSON, Ross M.\nMILES, William R.\nMILLER, Donald R.\nMILLER, Newburn J.\nMOORE, John\nMORRIS, David Bruce\nMUIR, J. Douglas\nMURRAY, Donald J.\nMUSKEYN, Theodore A.\nNELSON, Arnold M.\nNORTHFIELD, John E.\nOLIPHANT, Kenneth D<\nOMELANIEC, Michael\nPARKS, Lome A.\nPAYNTER, David C.\nPEEL, Alexander L.\nPIERCE, Walter W.\nPROMISLOW, S. David P.\nPUSEY, L S. Ronald\nPYPER, Gerald A. P.\nRATCLIFF. William F.\nRICHMOND, Christopher\nRODGER, William S.\nSHEARING, Roderick W.\nSHORTT, Barry A.\nSINCLAIR, Donald C.\nSMALL, Daniel W.\nSMITH, Angus C.\nSMITH, Edwin Roswell\nSMITH, Philip E.\nSMITHSON V. Daniel\nSOBISKI, Robert J.\nSPENCER, Joseph Allan\nSPOUSE, Thomas W.\nSTAFFORD, John K.\nSTANLEY, Kenneth R.\nSTEVENSON, D. Nicol\nSTREBINGER. Vera Mary\nSUSINSKI, Stanley J.\nSWANKY, Oscar E.\nTANNER, H. Terence D.\nTAYLOR, Alexander N.\nTHORLACIUS, Bui\nTOFAN, Robert William\nTOURAND, Ivor B.\nTRUSWELL, William H.\nVANSICKLE, Doris E.\nVINCE, Myrna Irene\nWARD, Robert L\nWARDLE, David B.\nWESTWOOD, Eric Neil\nWILL, James M.\nWONG, James\nWOOD, George Wallace\nWRIGHT, Peter Damian\nWRIGHT, Sharon J. M. ACHTEM, Ellis E. D.\nALBERT, Henry Allan\nAMY, Ross Gordon\nANDERSON, Gerald H.\nARKLEY, James F.\nARMSTRONG, James F.\nBARKER, Julian Todd\nBENNET, Alder Noel D.\nBISHOP, John R. W.\nBLOMGREN, W. Eugene\nCAPSTICK,  Robert\nCARLSON, Laurence J.\nCASTLEY, Gordon Allan\nCLASBY. Ralph W.\nCLAYTON, John Edric\nCONDIE, Kinley Elwin\nCOOPER, Robert G.\nCOX, Donald Frederick\nCROSS, George B.\nDAVENPORT, Lee N.\nDAVIS, John Chester\nDEWHIRST, Gordon H.\nDEYONG, Paul Louis B.\nDIXON, John C.\nDOWNING, Charles J.\nDRINKWATER, Barry K.\nDUNLOP, Robert Keith\nEAGLE, Bruce G.\nELSENER, L Frank\nFERRY, David W.\nFOOTE. W. Clinton\nFORSTER, George W.\nGODFREY. Peter T.\nGOLD, Donald A.\nGRAHAM, Robert C. S.\nGREENING, John C.\nHAMILTON, Bruce T.\nHANSEN, W. H. Bruce\nHENKE, Albert\nHOOD, James McDonald\nHUDSON, Robert\nHUGHES, Ronald P.\nHUNNINGS, Glenn Brian\nHURST, Ronald E.\nJOHNSON, Kenneth A.\nJOHNSTON, E. Palmer\nJOHNSTON, R. Laurence\nJOHNSTON, Norma B.\nJOHNSTON, Ronald M.\nJONES, S. Randle\nKENDALL, Thomas G.\nKIRKLAND, Philip J.\nKYSELA, Miroslav J.\nLAZZAROTTO, Ernie E.\nLINDSAY, T. Barrie\nLINDSAY, Robert M.\nLINN, Gerald Robert\nLINTON, Gordon S.\nLOCHHEAD, lan M.\nLOGAN, Donald Hugh M.\nLOSHUSAN, Keith A.\nLYS, Roslow P.\nMAHON, Kenneth Wm.\nMAIR, Robert James\nMANNING. Michael C.\nMcATEER, Kenneth D.\nMcBURNEY, J. Terrence\nSecond Year\n239 240\nMcCALLUM, J. Donald\nMcCOURT, William\nMcEACHRAN, David J.\nMcKENZIE, lan G.\nMcNISH, Fay F.\nMacTAGGART, Frank A.\nMERRICK, Neil V.\nMORFITT. George L.\nMORISAWA, Kenneth M.\nMOTT, Preston Sears\nMULLIGAN, Kenneth D.\nMUNCK, Jorgen Stampe\nNAGLER, George I.\nNEW, Christopher B.\nOGAWA, Carlton S.\nPALMER, Gary E.\nPASNAK, Josephine M.\nPAULSON, Gordon R.\nPELLICANO, Marie R.\nPETERS, John Ross\nPETERSON, Carl\nRACICH, John\nRANDALL, Christopher\nREINER, Richard R.\nREYNOLDS, John J.\nRICHARDS, Wayne L.\nROBINSON, George D.\nROVERS, Gerald John\nROY,  Richard  R.\nRUBBRA,   F.   Dale\nRYCKMAN, Stanley E.\nSCHAFFER, Mary\nSCHULTZ, O. Allan\nSMITH, Christie Hugh\nSMITH, Darrell G.\nSMITH, James T.\nSOLLOWY, Chas. Robert\nSOMMERS, Montrose S.\nSTEWART, J. Neil\nSTUART, C. Allison\nSTUSIAK, Alexander T.\nSUTHERLAND, T. Patrick\nTARLING, Frank Bruce\nTHEED, Gary Weldon\nTHOMAS, Melvin H.\nTOMLINSON, John  B.\nTOYNBEE, Thomas A.\nTREASURER,  R. Bernard\nVALENTINE, C. Peter\nVEITCH, John H.\nWALLACE, Fraser G.\nWALSH, William D.\nWARREN, Charlotte L.\nWASYLIK, Joseph W.\nWASSON, Brian William\nWATTS, Stuart B.\nWEBBER, Eric S.\nWEBSTER, J. Lindsay\nWHITELAW, Hadden G.\nWILD, Leonard E. J.\nWILLIAMS, John C.\nWOODS, David C.\nYUILL, Harry H.\nANDERSON, Malcolm B.\nARMSTRONG, Wm. S.\nBENDRODT, Erik Harold\nBERTRAM, Donald J.\nBORG, Ronald Peter\nBROAD, Alan Edward\nBUCHANAN, Ronald W.\nCAMPBELL, David V.\nCASTLE, Gary Charles\nCLARKE, Betty Marion\nCON, Billy CURRIE, James Edward\nCONNELL. John Gavin\nCROWTHER. John Wm. F.\nDAVIS. Arthur Maurice\nDAWSON. John Charters\nDILWORTH. Dorothy A.\nDIXON. Selma J.\nDOIG, James lan\nDONALDSON. Wm. Robert\nENG. David\nERICKSON, Keith R.\nESKO. Sandfrid I.\nEZZY, Albert Roland\nFARAC, Dusan A.\nFAULKNER, Robert W.\nFORSGREN, Norman\nGILLIS. Dale B.\nGIMPLE, Gordon Wm.\nGLASPIE, Michael B.\nGRIFFIN, William W.\nHARSTONE, Campbell\nHEATHER. Robin\nHENDERSON. Matthew H.\nHOLM, Arnold Lew\nHORSMAN, James D.\nHUGHES. Wm. Vernon\nHUME. Peter Ernest\nHURST. John N.\nJACOB. Peter R. H.\nJEFFERSON. Peter N.\nJENKINSON, Wm. Graham\nKENNEDY,  Maureen  I.\nKILLICK, Ronald M.\nKITOS. Ralph Martin\nKOSTENCHUK. Michael\nKRANE. Ruth J.\nLANGSTAFF. John H.\nLAVALLEE. Bernard C.\nLEE, Kendrick James\nLOGIE. John Dee\nLOU, Poy Ronald\nLUCAS, John Neil\nMANN, James Gilmore\nMARCHAK. William\nMcAllister. William b.\nMcARTHUR. John H.\nMcCULLOCH. Hugh John\nMcDERMID, John C.\nMcDONALD. Donald B.\nMacKAY, Rayner John\nMcMILLAN, David H.\nMcQUEEN. Robert Wm.\nMacSORLEY. Chas. Clare\nMacTAGGART. Allan J.\nMILLER. Harry\nMILLER. Lawrence H.\nMILLEY. Vernon  Robert\nMISE. G. Tony\nMITCHELL. Donald H.\nOLIVER. Edward\nPOLLOCK. M. James\nRAE. J. Douglas\nRANDALL. Michael J. G.\nRAYER. John\nRIBARITS. William J.\nRIOPEL. Chas. Richard\nROBERTSON.   Donald   Wm.\nROBERTSON. Gordon T.\nROBERTSON. John Harry\nROLFE. M. Havelock\nROSEN. Lawrence S.\nSANDFORD, Keith V.\nSAVAGE, John  Kenning\nSCHUMACHER. Stanley S.\nSHELLEY. Mary Ann\nSHERRATT, James G. A.\nSHIELDS. John Henry\n241 SIMMS, Thomas B.\nSMITH, Douglas C.\nSMITH, Melvin H.\nSMITH,  Robert James\nSORENSEN, Keith Thos.\nSPARKE. C. Lynee\nSTAUGHTON, Douglas V.\nSTEWART, Ronald K.\nSTOBBS,  Douglas Henry\nSWEET. Donald Arthur\nTAHARA, Michitaka\nTERAKITA, Robert M.\nTHOMAS, Brian V.\nTHOMPSON. Elizabeth A.\nTRIPP, Leighton O.\nWATSON H. William C.\nWEICK, Edward Ralph\nWILLIAMS, C. Brian\nWOLFE,  Isidor Morris\nVAMAMOTO, Noboru\n..\u2022..\n*\u20ac>    \u2022\u2022\nLeggy Commercemen keep their balance\nby half strangling each other while high-\nstepping  at the  Commerce  Formal.\nCome to the Gamel Cheerleader Moira\nCrawford, Commerce I, enlivens the basketball promotion campaign in Mr.\nPerkett's   Commerce  261   class.\nRetailing techniques are observed by inquisitive Marketing students on a tour of\nWoodwards,  Park  Royal.\n242 Variety in Faculties\nas\nA lab instructor feeds\ntwo gentle deer housed\nby  the  Aggies.\nMurray Joyce, Commerce and Teaching\nstudent, teaches at a\ncity   school.\nTwo Science students\ntest the height of the\nwater in an hydraulics\nlab.\nAn humane scientist\ncarefully feeds two\nguinea   pigs.\nEveryone studias in the\nLibrary. Here it is in\na blaze of light as\nstudents frantically\nwork   until   10   p.m. G. S. Allen,  Dean of the Faculty of Forestry.\nTHE Annual Banquet was the first major project\nto be held by the Forestry Undergraduate Socie'y\nthis year. The guest speaker was Mr. E. C. Young,\nForest Economist for the Weyerhaueser Timber Co.\nHis topic was \"Forest Industries Policy for the Future.\"\nThe fifteen delegates to the Annual Conclave of\nthe Association of Western Forest Clubs were the\nfirst U.B.C. has ever sent. The delegates enlightened\nthe association, whose membership is made up of the\nforest clubs of the universities on the west coast, as\nto the method of running things \"up north.\"\nThe Wood Technology department saw a change\nwhen Mr. R. W. Kennedy replaced Mr. J. Wilson as\ninstructor and Dr. E. Anderson, head of Wood Technology in the New York School of Forestry, was a\nmost interesting guest lecturer during February,\nMarch and April.\nThe publications staff of the Undergraduate Society\nwas busy with the Printing of the Forestry Annual,\nthe \"U.B.C. Forester\" and revising the handbook.\nAgain the faculty copped the spring blood drive\ncompetition. The students also gave forestry talks to\nhigh school students in Vancouver and the Fraser\nValley. The building of the Homecoming float, various\nresearch projects, intramurals, and passing exams, all\nhelped to make an eventful year.\nFaculty of FORESTRY\nCrowded condition of the reading room could be due to the\npresence of pretty librarian Barbara Thorns who Is more in demand\nas a reference than any of the professors.\n244 A wood technology lab in progress. These Third Year\nstudents are making slides showing tangential, radial, and\ncross sections of the wood samples.\nA Foresters Glossary\nBarber chair\u2014something a faller avoids.\nBoom man\u2014powder monkey.\nBull cook\u2014when oxen got too old for skidding logs\nthey used to wind up in the cookhouse. Their meat\nwas tough, and the cook, who was always blamed for\nthe poor fare, was relegated to a bed-making job.\nNow all bed-makers are bull cooks.\nButt rigging\u2014padding with which the high rigger\nprotects his tail-bone.\nCold deck\u2014you deal yourself queens while someone\nelse has kings.\nDiamond Lead\u2014when a logger's girl friend asks\n\"Have you ever thought of getting married?\"\nDonkey puncher\u2014in the old days when meat was\nscarce, the engineer had to slaughter donkeys for the\ncook. Those guys were so tough they could dispatch\nthe animal with one punch . . . hence donkey puncher.\nHang-up\u2014this is what happens to poor cook.\nHot deck\u2014when you deal yourself four aces three\ntimes in a row.\nPowder monkey\u2014boom man.\nReceding line\u2014getting bald.\nTurn\u2014each chokerman takes his turn in attaching\nchokers to the logs.\nWhistle punk\u2014according to the camp push this is\nthe only job a forestry gal is good for.\nInstructor  It.  Kennedy offers Pat Jackson  some  help  in  his\nstudy of wood  anatomy.\n245 Forestry\n246\nALDRED, Alan Harry\nBARKER, John E.\nBOYES, Alastair F.\nCOCKELL, Alan George\nDRIEHUYZEN, Heinrich\nFARENHOLZ, Alfred G.\nFERGUSON, Dene Elair\nFERRARI, John L.\nFIELD. William J.\nHARRIS, John W. E.\nHASKINS, Peter S.\nHAYNES. Noel Jonathan\nHELLUM, Andreas Kare\nHUME, Gordon Bruce\nKAYLL, Albert James\nLUDGATE, James Guy\nLUKAS, Manfred C.\nMAY, Gordon Stewart\nMacDONALD, John A.\nNEILSON, Bruce G.\nPEERS, C. R. Laurence\nPRICE, Terrance Roger\nQUINLAN, Edwin James\nREID, Robert James\nRICHARDSON, Jerry R.\nRONNINGEN, Rolf O.\nSMEELE, Franciscus J.\nTAYLOR, David Earl F.\nTUOMALA, Malrice F.\nVANCE, William  R.\nVERCHERE, David G.\nWEBBER,   Garnet  W.\nWILKINS, Michael J.\nWILUAMSON. C. Robert\nWOFFENDEN, Bill M.\nATKINSON, R. Bruce\nBROOKE, Robert C.\nHANSEN, Norman W.\nHOPLAND, Roy C.\nJANSSEN, Willem  P.\nJOY, Kerry Robt. L.\nJURAZS, Peter Ernest\nLITTLE, David Bell\nMARTIN, William F.\nNICHOL, John\nPETERSON, Everett B.\nPHILLIPS, John\nRENSHAW, L. Francis\nRICHARDS.  George  R.\nRICHMOND, Anthony E.\nROBERTSON, John Keith\nSHARP, Peter M.\nSTROMBERG, Ronald J.\nBELL, MARCUS A. M.\nDAVIDSON, John G. N.\nDEVITT, W. John Bruce\nEIDSVIK, Harlod  K.\nGILBERT, Philip G.\nHINDLEY, Earle W.\nJACKSON. James K.\nJEANES, Trevor G.\nKENNEDY, Larry L.\nLITTLETON, Dennis G.\nLOMAN, August A. McLELLAN, John F.\nMEAGHER, Michael D.\nMUNRO, R. Neil\nNYLAND, Edo\nPIGEON, Henri Joseph\nPRINGLE, Roderick C.\nRICHARDS, Douglas P.\nSAVOLA, Raymond A.\nSMITH, Richard B.\nSMYTH, Neil Patrick\nVALG. Leonid\nWINKWORTH, Alfred V.\n.**\u00bb.\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022*\nFinding themselves short of storage\nspace, the foresters recently built\nthemselves a desk. Giving their stamp\nof approval to the finished product\nare  Ez  Preus and  Dick Smith.\nHeading an active executive are\nforesters Ray Savola, Trevor Jeanes,\nBruce Atkinson, Bruce Gourlay, W.\nPearson, L. Wallace, Paul Brett in\nthe back row and Ron Bicknell, Pete\nPringle, president Ez Preus, Dick\nSmith,   Mike   Meagher  in   front.\n247 Before and After?? How the finished product originates is demonstrated by Alice Husband, Diane Alsbury, Joan Mclvor, Phylis\nWeidrick,   Sheila   Smith   and   Jane  Wooliams.\nFaculty of HOMh\nMiss Charlotte  S.   Black,   Director of the  School  of  Home\nEconomics.\nTHE Home Economics Faculty started off a busy\nyear with a box-supper for the first year students. In\nthe Homecoming Parade a \"Tea Cup\" football float\nwas entered to support the queen candidate, Annette\nHrehorka. The fall scene was highlighted by an exchange with pharmacy. The \"Home-Wreckers\" football team upheld their supremacy over the nurses in\ntheir shut-out game for the Engineer's March of Dimes\ncampaign. It was undecided whether American or\nCanadian football was being played so the three\ntouchdown score was set at I6I\/2-O. On the same day\na Chinese auction was held for home-economics donated pies to be \"given to\" council members.\nThe spring formal, \"Moonlight Sonata\" was especially successful due to a pep meet featuring skits and\nsongs from all four years and parties before and after\n248 *  J'] I s&*>\nIKS (7>^m^s\nWho's the artist in the crowd?  Is this the way they decorate the\nnew  Home  Management  building?\nECONOMICS\nThe model looks perfectly confident that her dress will be finished\nfor the Home Ec formal in February. It certainly should be with so\nmany  industrious  master-minds  at  work.\nthe dance. This years exchange with the Engineers\nwas on a French theme, with both faculties displaying\ntheir talents in a French mural painting.\nThis successful year was largely due to the efforts\nof the Undergraduate Society executive. It consisted\nof Audrey Dieno, President, Maxine Nelson, Vice-\nPresident, Jean Parmley, Secretary, Mrs. Vyvyan Bradford, Treasurer, and committee chairmen, Sue Rae,\nSue Talbot, Joan Orton,  and Joan  Mclvor.\nOn a more serious side, the 13th year of the School\nof Home Economics was marked by the opening of\nthe new Home Management House. This will enable\nfourth year girls to practice their past years training\nin ideal surroundings. At present, the staff are still\nplanning and workng to finish the interior of the house.\n249\nl^^mmmmm\n\u25a0\u25a0V      *    ^L>                 ImWmm\nid\n\\\nl       mmM\nMmmW'^\near   '\ntCZ        rM5y M\n**                   ' \"mmSSm^ d\nr     \u2022'SH^H\n,^-\nPI\nmm\n\\\\m^m LmJ\nmV         '\nBJJJJJF \u00ab\u2022.   ,\nPjjT i\nkT> '\n1  - > \u2022   '\nIN * ' \u25a0\nsm       *'\u25a0 V   \"-  \"\nL^L*JJJJJJaW\n\u25a0*         v.\nm\n1 w\nJMk.\nmffi\nmp*\n^1 Home Economics\n250\nABERNETHY, Dianne\nALPEN, Marna D.\nANDERSON, Cynthia M.\nARMSTRONG, Ariel Annne\nATKINSON, Frances C.\nBERKEY, Sherrolyn R.\nBERTS, Joan A.\nBOURNE, Carol Adair\nCARRUTHERS, Baibara J.\nCOHEN, Natalie\nCREELMAN,   Patricia   A.\nCUBITT, J. Patricia H.\nDICKINSON, Noreen C.\nETHERINGTON,  Donalda\nFALL, Joephine M.\nFICHTNER, Avis Joy\nFLACK, Judith Linnie\nFORBERG,  Myrtle  Rae\nFOX, Jocelyn Wendy\nIKUTA, Noriko\nJACOBSEN, Joan Martha\nJAMES, Juanita Lily\nKENNEDY. Patricia D.\nKOLLE, Brenda Valerie\nLAIDMAN, P. Ruth A.\nLENNOX. Joan Agnes\nLOUIE. Shirley B.\nMAIER, Anneliese\nMARSTON. Rosalie\nMASSEY, Norma Anne\nMACEACHERN, Diane F.\nMCKEE, Roberta E.\nMCKENZIE, M. Gail\nMOORE, Jacquelynn C.\nMURPHY, Karen Maurine\nOSBORNE, Verna Alice\nOVERHILL, Patricia J.\nFALLOT, Mary Jean\nPARFITT, N. Marilyn\nPERKINS, E. Lucinda\nRADATZKE, Joyce Norma\nROSE, Marie Eleanor\nROUTLIFFE, J. Anne\nRUHL, Alice Marie\nRUMEN, Olga\nSABELL, Karel\nSCHELSTRAETE A. B.\nSHEEPWASH,  Y.   Marilynn\nSHIMIZU, Reiko\nTAIPALUS. Diana A.\nTAMAKI, Ruth Seiko\nVEDSOE, Anna Ingeborg\nWRIGHT, Sheelah L\nYOUNG.   Margaret  Ann\nALTWASSER, Lynda M.\nANDERSON, Beverly E.\nARDEN.   Sharel\nASKEW, Joann\nATEN, Edwina Mary\nBERRY, Joan N.\nBIDDLE, Ann D.\nCALPER, Joan Sheila\nCHRISTIE, Donna M.\nCIRIANI, Eda Maria\nCOHEN, Sandra CONN, Joan Marilyn\nCRAIG, Anita E.\nETHERINGTON, Sandra A.\nGEE, Alice\nGROCOCK, E. Diane\nHAAHTI, Miriam H. E.\nHESLOP, Anna Marion\nHICKS, Luriann\nHOLMAN, Shirleyan\nHOMOLA, Lesia\nHREHORKA,   Annetta  J\nHULME,  Patricia  E.\nLESCISIN, Joyce B.\nLINDSAY, Eleanor Mae\nMARRION. Nancy L.\nMARTIN. Lois P.\nMASKOW, May L.\nMATSON,  Lorraine A. K.\nMINSHALL, Marilyn J.\nMUTRIE, Dorothy J.\nMYRON, Christeen H.\nOVANS, S. Marilyn\nPERDUE, Aileen J.\nPETERSON, Mae D. P.\nPOTTER, Jean M.\nPOUND, F. Jacqueline\nRITHIE, Ann L.\nSETER, Lorna A.\nSNEATH, Darcy A.\nTHOM, Diana R.\nVIEL, Barbara May\nYUAN,  Josephine  Chueh\nBROWN, Bonnb E.\nCLEASBY,  Barbara A.\nDAEM, Clara N.\nDALY, M. Georgina\nFERGUSSON,  Geraldine\nGO UGH, Sylvia  M.\nGROVE, Glenda M.\nHENRY, June M.\nLAPWORTH, Norma Rae\nMCINTYRE,  Mollie C.\nMOIR, Margaret Jean\nMURPHY, Elaine A.\nMURRAY, Kathleen A.\nNELSON, M. Maxine\nPARMLEY, M. Jean\nREADER, Dorothy C.\nSHERRY, Margaret Jean\nVENABLES, Barbara J.\nWEBSTER, Lynn R.\n251 Faculty of LAW\nLAW students were the leaders in varied facets of\ncampus life this year. Third year student Ron\nBray presided over the AMS and his successor, Don\nJabour, is a fellow future lawyer. This versatile group\nalso contributed Editor-in-Chief, Stan Beck, athelticj\ndirector, Bob Hutchison and Al Thackray who supervised all campus club activities.\nOver 200 students enjoyed the most beautiful\nbuilding and view on the campus. Their academic\nactivities include arguing two moot courts in their first\nand second years and judging one in their final year.\nThird year students have the option of arguing a moot\nbefore downtown lawyers or contributing an article\nto the faculty publication, \"Legal Notes.\"\nThis periodical is the official annual publication of\nthe Law School and is listed in \"World Index of Legal\nPeriodicals\" as one of the three Canadian legal magazines. Its circulation of over 700 is international in\nscope. Editor, Jim Mclntyre, hopes that it will expand\ninto a quarterly issue in the near future. Also working\non the editorial board are Vol Nordman, Bud Hollin-\ndrake, Don Paterson, Mike Giroday, and Morris Huberman.\nLay students also played a prominent part in campus\ndebating. John Spencer, a third year student, was\nMcGowan Cup Debating Club president. He and John\nGreen comprised part of the team which represented\nthe University in the Cup finals.\nOn the social side the faculty held its annual\nHallowe'en Dance and the Law Ball. The students in\nthe skit this year held a Royal Commission investigating alleged abuses in the Law School. Some of the\nwitnesses called were Profs. Toad, Charlie Lauterpacht,\nThrenody and Dean Custer. The latter, however, was\nnot available as he had shortly before fled across the\nborder and therefore could not be subpoenaed. It was\nrumoured that he had obtained employment in Massachusetts. Prof. Threnody also gave an interesting dis-\nsertion on his Kennedian Bar Revue.\nAll these activities were conducted under the auspices of the Law Undergraduate Society executive\nwhich consisted of President, Stuart Clyne, Vice-\nPresident, Duncan Shaw, Treasurer, Chuck Lew, Secretary, Keith Liddle, and Representatives, Hamish\nCameron, Joe Cvetkovich and Lucien Gallinari.\nActing  Dean  of  Law  M.  M.  Mclntyre\nOne of the outstanding buildings on campus,\nthe Law library looks out on beautiful Howe\nSound. The windows seem to be taken full\nadvantage  of. Taking advantage of facilities\nin the modern Law Library\nare: Malcolm Wickson, Ren-\ndina Hossie, R. J. Jephson,\nW. M. Soule. Behind the\ncounter is Rafe Mair. Note\nno  charge  for the  Ink.\nFuture lawyers? They should\nwin their case with this approach. The \"Joint and Several Tort Teasers\" are, ieft\nto right, Brian Williams, Alex\nRobertson, Don Broad, Hal\nHallet, Don Paterson, and Bob\nGuile.\nm\nft\nSpace, light and atmosphere\ncombine to make the Law\nlibrary a popular place for\nstudy. Looking industrious are,\nleft to right, Stu Cline, President of the Law faculty,\nJacques Barbeau, Bob Hutchison and Ivor Donald, House\nCommittee   Chairman.\n*t^ 254\nABRAMS, Kenneth Don\nALLAN, D. Victor\nAU KENG TONG\nBABIE, Theodore  L.\nBECK, Stanley Martin\nBECKER, Alec Joseph\nBIRKETT, T. Peter\nBRAMMALL, H. Robin\nBRAWNER, Kenneth L.\nBROAD, Donald A.\nBRUK, Bosnic John\nBURKE, Kenneth Lloyd\nBUSH,  Patrick George S.\nCAMPBELL, Colin J.\nCHESS, Martin R.\nCHURCHMAN, Vernon  G.\nCLARK, Wesley W. L\nCORBOULD, Brian  B.\nCORBETT, Peter G. P.\nCOX, Kenneth B.\nCRAIG, Ronald S.\nCROSATO, Reno Frank\nDELMAS, C. Gwendolyn\nDIAMOND, Charles\nBROZDZIK, Charles A.\nEDWARDS, Jack L T.\nERICKSON, Johann\nFASHOWAY, Joseph\nFREEMAN, Larry Aser\nFRIESEN, Nick John\nFYFE, William George\nGALLINARI, Lucien A.\nGERONAZZO, Danny\nGREEN, John W.\nGROBERMAN, Herbert\nHALLATT,  Halet  F.\nHENDERSON, Duncan Lee\nHILL, Frederick R. L.\nHORSEY, Edward F.\nHUBERMAN, Morris\nHUBERMAN, Samuel M.\nHUSBAND, John  Ross\nJABOUR, Donald Essey\nJONSSON, Carl  Roland\nKENNEY, J. Harold\nKIRCHNER, David C.\nKIRWAN,   John   Michael\nKROLL, Gustav R. R.\nKUEBER,  Philip Thomas\nLAMB, Kenneth B.\nLAMBERT, John Douglas\nLAMBERT, C. B.\nLECKIE, W. Merrill\nLEE, Jack\nLINDSAY, Robert B. N.\nLONG, Ralph\nLONGSTAFFE, J. Ronald\nLOOMER, Herbert Myer\nMILLAR, Hugh Alfred\nMILLER, David M.\nMONTAINE, Lome A.\nMORELLI, Rudoplh\nNEIL, R. Cleveland\nNELSON, Lome Thomas\nNUTTALL, David S. C.\nPAGET, James F. Noel\nPETRUNIA, John\nPETRASUK,  Peter\nPUHACH, Michael S.\nREED, George Walter\nROGERS, James Wallace\nROSBOROUGH, Frank S.\nROSS, James DougUs SCHLIZIO, Kristine\nSHRUM, Gordon B.\nSUIKER, M. Heber\nTHACKRAY, Allan D.\nTOPHAM, Lome White.\nWELCH,  John   Stephen\nWHELEN, G. Edward\nWILLIAMS. Bryan\nWOOSTER, Anthony King\n^\n\/' d v.\n\u2022\u2022..\n\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u25a0\nANDERSON,   Michael   E.\nBADOVINAC, George\nBRAIS, Helene\nCANT,  Eric George D.\nCARRUTHERS, Kenneth B.\nCHRISTENSEN, William F.\nDENT,  Norman  Gareth\nDONEGANI, Francis T.\nEDWARDSON, Alfred M.\nESSELMONT, William James\nESSON, William Arthur\nGIRODAY, Michael R. C.\nGREBSKI, Edward S.\nHUDSON, Ralph Edward\nKIRSTIUK. Julian\nLECOVIN, Gerald\nLIDDLE, Laurie Keith\nLOUGHEED, William E\nMANNING,  Mervyn\nMCCARTHY John L.\nMacDONALD, James C.\nMcFARLANE, Gordon A.\nMaclNTYRE, James M.\nNEELY,  Gerald  A.\nNORDMAN, Volmar\nNORRIS, MacAulay C.\nNYACK, Kenneth L.\nO'ROURKE, William Garry\nPATERSON, Donald Hugh\nPIPELLA, Edward S.\nPROMISLOW, Barry J.\nREMESZ, Louis Conrad\nROBERTSON, Alexander\nSCHERF, Norman H.\nSCHULTZ, Ronald F.\nSTARK, Marvin\nSTEEL,  May\nTHOMSON, Gordon W.\nTINKER,  Robert Percy\nWALDEN, Adelene M.\nWHITE, Alton Harry\nWHITLEY, W. Edward\nSecond Year\n255 Faculty o;\nRelaxing? What's this?\nWell, I guess they have\nlo once  in  a  while.\nTHIS year, the Medical Faculty, with 280 members,\ncan boast of their third graduating class since the\nfounding of the school at U.B.C. in 1950. With most\nof their time understandably taken up with studying,\nMed students still managed to spend an amazing number of hours playing football (?) on the Main Mall\nboulevard as well as supporting ther annual smoker and\nthe Medical Ball in March.\nFor all Med students the \"Great News\" is the gradual formaton of plans for two new medical buildings;\none to be built on the campus and the other near the\nVancouver General  Hospital.   The prospect of these\nnew facilities are even more interesting to students in\ntheir first few years of study as they may be ready for\nuse before the Doctors-to-be graduate.\nThe Medical Faculty suffered a regrettable loss this\nyear with the resignation of Dr. M. M. Weaver, Dean\nof U.B.C.'s Faculty of Medicine for the past six years.\nDr. Weaver has played a large part in organizing our\nMedical school as well as promoting medical education\nin B. C. and throughout Canada. He will remain a\nteaching member of the staff and Dr. Rocke Robertson,\nhead of the Department of Surgery, will carry on until\na new Dean is appointed.\nLearning   the  techniques  involved   in  operating   an   anesthetic   machine\nare  these   Interns  down  at  the  General.\nDr.    M.    M.   Weaver,    former    Dean    of\nU.B.C.'s  Faculty  of Medicine.\n256 MEDICINE\nTaking their class in the\nPathology Lab are Med\nstudents Peggy Andreen,\nDave Hastings, Gil Middleton, Peter Grantham\nand John  Hunt,\nAn architect's drawing of\nthe new Medical Building\nto be built near the Vancouver General Hospital,\nby Berick, Pratt & Thompson, the University architects.\nStudying like mad (?) at\nhome are Gil Middleton,\nPresident, Second Year\nMedicine, and Warren\nCunningham, also in Second   Year.\n257 Medicine\nARCHER, Leonard T.\nBARKER, Arthur J.\nBARNES, Lome R.\nBELL, Henry Michael\nBIRCH. John Robert\nBOXER. Lavie\nBREEN, Harvey\nBRUEHLER. Gustav\nBRYDON, Alan W. B.\nCLEMENT, Douglas\nCOOKE, Roland Harvey\nCOWLEY. Marion V.\nCRAWFORD. Michael A. H.\nCUBBAGE, John Stanley\nDALES. Michael\nFAIRBAIRN. Robert H.\nFENTON, Lawrence G.\nGLUCKSMAN. Myron L.\nGOERTZ. Edwin Peter\nGORDON, Robert Bruce\nGRIERSON, F. Joan\nHALTALIN, Kenneth C.\nHANSLIP, Arthur R.\nHARDER, David H.\nHEINRICHS, Erwin\nHORN, Akira\nJAMIESON. James D.\nKALMOKOFF, Donald M.\nKARME. Alan Brian\nKROPINAK, Matthew Roy\nLANGER, Max Michael\nLAU, Sylvia Shiu Wai\nLEUNG, Franklin C.\nMADILL, N. Stewart\nMELNYK, Clifford S.\nMETCALF. George R.\nMILNE, Glenn Davis\nMITCHELL, C. Lorna Ann\nMITCHELL, Peter James\nMORRISON, Jack Hilton\nMORROW. Kenneth A.\nPAGE. Roger Hubert V.\nPRICE, George Edmund\nROGERS. Roger Hayward\nSCHOENLE. June E.\nSIGAL, Cecil\nSMITH, Glenn William\nSTALEY, Norman E.\nSTEINSON. E. Bruce\nTHIESSEN, Nichola\nTHOMAS, William D. S\nTILSER, George Jiri\nTODD, Adrienne\nVALLIS, Derek George\nWEIR. Mervyn Clarice\nWHITTAKER. David Neil\nWICKHAM. Thomas\nYOUNG, Andrew Bryson\nALLAN. Barbara Muir\nANDREEN, Peggy    Lou E.\nBANNO, Masakazu Pat\nBENNETT, Richard B.\nBIELY, George Gordon\nBRUM WELL, harles A.\nBURGOYNE, Bud R.\nBURTON, Jeffery D.\nCHAN, Eugene John\nCOOPLAND, Ashley T.\nCUNNINGHAM, Warren J. ENTA. Tom\nFARQUHAR, Donald Jas.\nFORSENG, Evan Gerald\nGOODALL, Roger G.\nGRANTHAM. Peter Robt.\nHALAK, Joseph\nHASTINGS, David Eric\nHEINRICHS, Peter D.\nHUNT. John E.\nJANZ. Leslie Blake\nJOHNSON, John R.\nJOHNSTON, John D. H.\nKONRAD, Daniel B.\nKONG, Glen Paul W.\nMARITS, Maldus\nMARTINEK, Helena\nMcGEER, Patrick L\nMacGREGOR, Arthur Jos.\nMEEKER, Henry demons\nMIDDLETON. Arthur G.\nMITAREWSKI, Walter Wm.\nNNUBIA. Anadu\nRAVARIS. Charles L.\nRYAN, Donald Wm.\nSHERRIN, Darrell A.\nSMILLIE, Howard A. G.\nSMITH, Verne Paterson\nSO, Yan Po\nSOOKOCHOFF,   Michael\nSTEWART, Burton M. Ann\nTUPLING, George D.\nWEBBER, William A.\nWOODWARD, John B.\nBASTED, Robert M.\nBRUMMITT, John R.\nCHRISTIAN. Maynard S.\nCLARK, Michael D.\nCOSGROVE, Theodore J.\nCOUSINS, Jame Aylmer\nDAWKINS. Oswald S.\nFINNEMORE, Brian I.\nFLATHER, Barrie C.\nFORBES, Francis D.\nFREDERICKON. John M.\nGILLANDERS, David A.\nGOLDBLOOM, Theodore\nHAKISTIAN. Robert W.\nHARDWICK, David F.\nHOSSIE. Barbara  E.\nMATHESON. Donald C.\nMacDONALD. A. Edward\nMURAKMI, Ernest K.\nRANGER, Agnes Betty L.\nSTEWART. Donald W.\nSTRANG. Robert lan\nSUTHERLAND. Roy A.\nSYMONDS, John Gary\nTAM, Ennio Andrea\nTAN, Eng Seng\nTCHERKEZOFF, Alexandr\nTURNBULL, lan Marr\nWHEELER. John S.\nWILBEE, G. Stanley\n259 The Nurses' Football\nteam looks happy even\nthough they |ust losl\na close battle against\nthe \"Home-Wreckers\"\n1454 to 0. Maybe it\nwas the weather\u2014after\nall,   it   snowed.\nDirector of the School\nof Nursing, Miss H.\nEvelyn   Mallory.\nSchool\nTHE School of Nursing is composed of students\nboth on campus and at the Vancouver General\nHospital. Under the capable leadership of Marion\nSmith, the potential and past graduate \"Florence\nNightingales\" are banded together by the Nursing\nUndergraduate Society which holds four meetings\nyearly at the General Hospital.\nNursing student Rosemary\nBrook looks suspiciously healthy as she and her classmates\nlearn about the proper bedside manner. What a way to\ntake classes\u2014lying downl Don't\nlet the Ubyssey hear about it\n\u2014they might support the\nidea.\n260 The newly-capped\nsecond year students pose for the\ncamera. These\nstudents now reside at the Vancouver General Hospital. We bet they're\nnot always so angelic!\nThe Nurses always\nget their manl Here\nPublic Health Nurses Irene Fairley\nand Diane Richardson \"persuade\"\nengineer Ken Van\nSacker into giving\na pint of blood\nduring the Fall\nBlood   Drive.\nSIURSING\nAt U.B.C. the nurses obtained an honourable mention for their float in this year's Homecoming Parade\nand Lily Dong, the Applied Science candidate, was\ncrowned Homecoming Queen. Later in November\nthe annual Home Economics-Nurses football game\nwas played in aid of the March of Dimes. The Nurses\nalso had an active part in ail intramural sports and\nwound up the year with a banquet.\nMarion Smith, fifth\nyear nurse, is pulling apart Mr.\nChase for the ben-\nefit of first year\nstudents Joan Ran-\ndall, Barbara Mac-\nKenxie, Ann Steele,\nSally Purvis and\nHelen Buchanan\nwho eagerly take\nnotes.\n267 Nursing\nANDREWS, Beth\nASPOL, Reta M.\nBECK, Elizabeth M.\nBENNETT, Nancy L.\nBISHOP, Diana J.\nBOUGHTON, Alison J.\nBUCHANAN, Helen H.\nCARPENTER, Janet  F.\nCOPEMAN, E. Ann M.\nDARCOVICH, Olga\nDAY, F. Ann F.\nDERRICK,  Ethel Agnes\nDHILLON, K. Kulmindai\nFLINN, Brenda J.\nGEDDES, Beatrice Ann\nGIEGERICH, Daryl J.\nGODFREY, Penelope A.\nGUTTORMSSON, Norma C.\nHAMBROOK, Rosemary\nHOBBS, Dorothy M.\nKENT,  Margaret A.\nLEASK, Maralyn\nLOREE, Alixe\nMcDONALD, Joan A.\nMacDONALD, Sheila M.\nMacKENZIE, Barbara J.\nMcRAE, Margaret Ann\nMOHR, Beverley D.\nMONTGOMERY, Mitzi I.\nMORRISON. Christine A.\nMUIR, Marion  May\nPARKER, Phyllis Mary\nPRICE, Rosemary Ann\nPURVIS, Sally J.\nRANDALL, B. Joan\nRICHMOND, Sally P.\nROBERTSON,  Kathleen\nSTEELE, Winifred Ann\nSULLIVAN, E. Maureen\nTAKAHASHI, Kaiuko\nTHOMSON, M. Noreen\nVARAH, Elaine D.\nWARD, Eleanor\nWESTWICK, Irene\nWOOD,  Marilynn Jean\nWOOLEY, Margaret E.\n262 ANTONENKO, Irene J.\nBARLOW, Hazel\nCOSTERTON, Hilda\nDENBY, Vera Joyce\nDOBBIE, Edna May\nDONALD, Carol  Evelyn\nELCOX, Kathleen Mary\nFAIRLEY, Irene Edna\nHAMILTON, Louise E.\nHOPKINS, Betty M.\nHORROCKS, Mona June\nHULLAND, Esther G.\nJAMIESON, Elizabeth F.\nPENNY, Elizabeth M.\nLOWEN, Bertha\nLEA, Marion Jane\nRAWLINGS, Eleanor E.\nRICHARDSON, Diane H.\nRORKE, Joan Alicia\nSARGENT, Thiera\nSIEFFERT, Thelma H.\nSWEID,  Helen  Doreen\nVINGE, Dorothy Ruth\nWATTS, Mrs. Jean I.\nWEBB, Lucinda Emma\nWin,  Mrs. Irene  M.\nWOLF, Eva Belle\nWRAY, Myrtle Helen\nDiploma\nNursing \u00a3\n.\u2022 \u2022.\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\nRalph Sultan introduces these lovely nurses-\nSylvia Macintosh, Jean Francis, Lois Herd,\nMargaret Hebron, Jean Rickson, and Carol\nPartridge\u2014at the Engineers1 ball. The girls\npractised many hours at their residence at the\nVancouver General Hospital before presenting\ntheir delicious dance to fellow sciencemen.\n263 Pharmacy students  get  practical  experience  in  the  model  dispensary  which   is  fitted  out   like  the  average  drugstore.   Here   Don   Nolan   types\nprescriptions while  Pete  Janiewick  selects the  pills.  Janice  Woodsworth  carefully mixes  liquids as Ken  McDonald takes orders over the  phone.\nFaculty of PHARMACY\nDean  A.  W.  Matthews,  head  of the  Pharmacy  faculty.\nTHE Faculty of Pharmacy is situated in the east\nwing of the Biological Sciences and Pharmacy\nbuilding. Here may be found, in addition to classrooms\nand offices, a Model Dispensary, Museum, and laboratory facilities for instruction in Prescription Compounding, Pharmaceutical Chemistry, and Manufacturing\nPharmacy.\nDean A. W. Matthews is assisted by Professors F. A.\nMorrison, J. E. Halliday, T. H. Brown, and G. A.\nGroves who has returned this year after completing his\ngraduate studies at the University of Wisconsin. New\nto the faculty this session are Dr. S. K. Sim of Hong\nKong and the University of Washington, and D. A.\nDenholm, a 1951 U.B.C. graduate.\n264 Under the leadership of Gordon Davies, the one\nhundred and thirty-five members of the Pharmacy\nUndergraduate Society (P.H.U.S.) have had a very\nactive year. General meetings were held bi-weekly\nwhere the agenda included business, films, speakers,\nand discussions. P.H.U.S. projects included the installation of lockers in the building. Highlights of the\nsocial affairs were an Opening Reception at which the\nfaculty was introduced, scholastic awards were presented, and students became better acquainted. This\nwas followed by a Men's Stag and Women's Tea. On\nOctober 21, a very successful Mixer was held with\nstudents of each year providing the entertainment. The\nBasketball Bounce in January and the Pharmacy Graduation Ball in March rounded out the social year.\nThe Homecoming Parade was most successful for\nPharmacy as their cellophane-covered float took first\nprize to win the trophy. Homecoming Queen candidate\nwas Marlene Henderson.\nThe average day in the dispensary lab. Fourth year students John\nDavies, Maurice Cunningham, and Brian Little are making up various\npharmaceutical   products.\nThe \"fair sex\" in the form of Gwen Leong and Betty Mulla show Gorden Davies, president of\nP.U.S., the techniques of a good pharmacist. Not to be left out is Maurice Cunningham who leans\nover the counter to  see the  latest  concoction.\n1\n-  i\n1\n1\n\/   Iff    ; )M\nI -Bvi Wm\n[   vaMetf   fmmmmW Jlm-L-                                     '^Sm*Am\\m\\\nmj!m^dir.\n\u25a0\n:J*i\n-    , \u25a0\n-1 - if\nMil\n1    1   J   !\n\u2014'1 \u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0' i!\nk*:       1 >\nmwL s\ndAr     \u25a0\u25a0.-       a\nm**^^~\\.        -    LaVaVJeE-^^\n\"J' \u25a0    \"^\nz v* i > <s\n8P fir**C\n\u2022 * \u25a0 w\n\u25a0tit\nmmV    '-\n*\n\/ \u25a0*++%\u00a3.     ^W   j\n265 Pharmacy\n266\nANDERSON, Paul R.\nBELL, A. Russell\nBITNERS, Igor I.\nBRUCE, Patricia A.\nBURNSTEIN,   Mitchell\nBYE, Noel H.\nCALDWELL,  lan  Carl\nCIARNIELLO, Dominic\nDE BOURCIER, David J.\nEMSLEY, Marilyn D.\nFEVANG. Loroy C\nFRIESEN, Abram Jacob\nGRAHAM, Jean\nHASSAN, Mervyn Leslie\nHENDERSON,  Marlene\nHORNOSTY,  Roy Walter\nHUNDVIK. Rolf\nINNES, George C\nKIHARA, Shiro\nKORNITSKY, Joseph R.\nKRANGLE,  Gerald  B.\nKUSS, William\nLANGILLE, Donald L\nMCDONALD, John T.\nMCMILLAN, D. Bruce\nMORRIS, Lynn Roger\nPATTY, John M. V.\nRATZLAFF. Elmer H.\nROCK, Clifford Arthur\nROSS, Donald William\nRYZUK, Zona Ann\nSHAW, George T.\nSTEARMAN. Hobart F.\nSTEIN, Ronald L.\nSTIFFE, Shirley Jean\nSWANSON, James Donald\nSWINGLER, Sydney C\nTHOMPSON,  Douglas  L\nUNDERHILL. Mark Alan\nWARKENTIN. Ruth M.\nWISE, Leonard M.\nBAKER, Stanley B.\nBAMBER, Vernon F.\nBECK, Kenneth W.\nBERDUSCO, John  Peter\nBERGER, Florence\nBURNETT, Patricia A.\nCHONG, Ronald\nDEZELL, Clifford J. G.\nDIDCOTT, Phillip R.\nFALK, Jack N.\nFINDLAY, Llyod E.\nFORTIN, Leo Neil\nFRASER, Paul Peter\nFRENCH,  lan Wilfred\nFYFE, John  Stanley\nJONAS, Richard E. E.\nKILVERT. James L\nLIM, Wah Kwai\nLEE, Thomas Gin\nMACCROSTIE. Hugh Wm. H.\nMACKAY,  Marilyn  Karen\nMOODY, Wm.  Murdith\nMORRIS, Gerald David\nMUKAI. Aster A.\nNETHERTON. M.  Evanne NICKOLS, C. Edmund\nNIELSEN, Shirley M.\nOSBORNE, Harold E.\nPOPE, Audrey E.\nPORTE, Robert Y.\nROSENBAUM,  Minnie\nREVELL, Margaret Rose\nSILBER, Jeanette\nSIMOES, Louis\nSIMONSON, Eric J.\nSTEVENSON, Roberta C.\nSTEWART, David D.\nWATSON, Trevor M.\nWONG, Allan H.\nWRIGHTMAN, Gordon  M.\nYOUNG, James S.\nTop: Murry Dykeman and Ozzie Levag watch the manufacture of\npharmaceutical organic chemicals by Gordon Davies, who is partly\nhidden  by the  elaborate apparatus.\nBottom: Pride of the Pharmacy Faculty is this float with which they\nwon first prize in the  1955 Homecoming  Parade. Home of Physical  Ed majors and scene of many basketball games,\nthe  War   Memorial   Gymnasium.\nSchool of\nPHYSICAL EDUCATION\nDirector   of  the   School   of   Physical   Education,\nRobert   F.  Osborne.\nP E.U.S., an active undergrad society, has bi-weekly\nmeetings which have been high-lighted by special\nspeakers and films on various aspects of the Physical\nEducation profession. High standing in the intramurals of P.E. teams may be attributed to the extra\nsleep that many members obtain in the comfortable\ncommon room.\nSocially, the athletes had many successful times.\nThe \"Hardtimes Hoedown\" featured entertainment by\nan \"All-Girl Can-Can\" chorus line, two impromptu\ncomedians from \"down-under,\" and a song and\ndance number by staff member, Doug Whittle. The\nGraduation Banquet was held in March this year.\n268 H|R^> jflkj\nrw vbmwmhlJ\nLt fll       Ibv \u25a0\n\u25a0Vjefl LV  a^^H L^Lw.\nsOL^^\nAmbitious   P.E.  students  this  year  sponsored  the   Inter-High  Swim\nmeet.   Here   we   see   the   officials   busy   timing   the   participants.\nA human totem pole is formed by Bill Smith, Gary Sinclair,\nFred Roots, and John Mann at the top. Pretty easy say\nthese strong,  supple athletes.\nStaff of the department has seen many changes.\nFrank Gnup, who has done so well with the 'Birds'\nfootball team, Peter Mullins, who coached the Braves\nBasketball Team to the B.C. championships, and Bob\nHindmarck, a recent U.BC. graduate, who took over\nintramurals and helped coach football, are this year's\nadditions to the men's staff. Miss Pat Montgomery,\nMiss Alice Trevis, and Miss Eckert are recent acquisitions of the women's staff.\n\"Bow to your partners, now your corners\" is\nthe call as U.B.C.'s female P.E. students gracefully partake in the Folk Dancing Class.\n269 Physical Ed.\n270\nAIKEN, Leslie Wayne S.\nANZULOVICH, Melko\nASHBY, Marilyn D. O\nBLACKABY,  R. William\nBUCHANAN, James A.\nCLOGHESY, Patricia J.\nELLIOTT, William Roy\nELLWOOD, Thomas G.\nGORDON, Ann Shirley B.\nHARPER, Barbara Jean\nJAHENY,  Kenneth Earl\nKNOWLES, Gerald A.\nKROPP, Frederick V.\nMcCALLUM, Charles D.\nMURPHY, M. Lorraine\nNINKOVIC, Milan John\nPEDERSEN, Edward P.\nREDFORD, John A.\nSADLER, Keith R. P.\nSCOTT, Sandra H. L\nSHEPARD, Jean  M.\nSHORE, Donald J. B.\nSPILLER, Aiden E.\nTOMLINSON, B. Jane\nTUTTLE, Laurie W.\nWONG, Kareen B.\nThird Year\nBLACKABY, Joseph A.\nBRABANT, Alan  Francis\nBRIDGES, Lois Eleanor\nBURGESS, Arthur C\nCARTER, John Howard\nCOOPER, Violet M.\nDEAN, Elizabeth A. I.\nDOUGLAS, Marion Joyce\nGRAY, Gerald E.\nGREGORY, Dale E.\nHAMILTON, Frank M.\nHAMILTON, James E.\nKARRAS, E. Herbert\nKEITH-MURRAY, Marnie\nMATOVIC, Joseph F.\nMcDONALD, Michael\nMACKAY, Malcolm C.\nMACKAY, Graeme M.\nMILNE, David R. W.\nMULLIN, Jerrold D.\nPOWELL, Howard Secord\nPRICE. John David T.\nRUSSELL, J. Wallace\nSARICH, George\nSCANTLAND, James G.\nSHARP, Thelma L\nSTAFFORD, Barbara I.\nTHOMPSON, L. Maureen\nTOPORCHAK, Lila C.\nTOWERS, J. Ryan\nWALMSLEY, Gordon I.\nWESTON, Frances E.\nBUKER, Beverley Joan\nDAVIES, Gordon S.\nGREEN, Winford F. H.\nHEAL, Louise M. HOLT, Robert W.\nHUGHES, Clive R.\nHUNT, Edmund Arthur\nKING, Alan John C.\nMANN, John R. M.\nMCCORMACK, John A.\nMCKELLAR, James Robt.\nMELVILLE, William L.\nMINETTE, June M.\nMORRIS, Glenda Wynne\nROSS, E. C. Joan\nSHARP,   Mary J.\nSMITH, Patricia\nSMITH, William\nVAN ACKEREN. Joan L. R.\nYASUI, Roy Yoshio\n.\u2022\u2022\u2022\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\nFighting   for   possession   of  that   elusive   ball,   two   determined\nstick-wielders    battle    during    an    outside    recreation    period.\n\"We   can  tumble  too\",   say  female   P.E.  majors  Stevie   Kent  and\nDiane  Somerville.  Shirley Croswell  is holding.\n271 THE 1955-56 year at the school of Social Work has\nbeen notable for one thing: a beginning effort by\nthe students to participate in campus affairs and to\nmake themselves known. For many years the social\nworkers have long been a forgotten race in university\nlife.\nIn addition, as part of the university program, first\nyear student social workers spend two days working in\na downtown social agency while second year students\nspend three days there.\nFor the first time the school has published an edition\nof the Ubyssey, showing an active gain in interest of\nlife at university.\nThe student executive working hard for the recognition of the faculty are: President, Don Bingham; Vice-\nPresident, Eugene Raiom; Secretary, llene King;\nTreasurer,  Dolena  MacKinnon.\nCaught in one of their rare few moments on the campus\nis this group of Social Workers. Pictured from left to right\nare: A. Furnass, C. Carlisle, Mrs. Esau, B. Whaff, D. Lugtig,\nW. Lademan, E. Rheaume, D. Mckinnon, D. Bingham,\nI. King.\nSchool of SOCIAL WORK\nHeading the industrious School of Social Work\nis the  Director,  Miss  Marjorie J.  Smith.\nA   home   away  from   home  is  what  the  Social   Work   Building   offers  to   her  students.\n^^^^mMmUK^^^^^MIBL\\WSmmm^^Kfmmmmmmmmmmmm\\ ALDEN, Rosemary Selma\nANGEL, Jerome Harvey\nBAUMONT, Lloyd W.\nBOON, Joan E.\nBROOME, Mrs. Pat\nCARLILE, Collin\nCLAPPERTON, Roderick\nCLARK, Donalda Fern\nCLARKE, Cynthia Anne\nCO U PAL, Joseph Larry\nDUCKWORTH, Muriel J.\nFELSTROM, Donald M.\nFONG, Roy V. J.\nGREEN, Robert J.\nHAWTHORN, James W.\nHUNTER, Donald Rupert\nHURLSTON,  Helen  W.\nHYNARD, Mrs. Diana J. M.\nKING, E. Ilene N.\nKLOEPFER, Arthur\nKNOX, Mary Helen\nLAIDMAN, Leslie Warde\nLEUCHTE, Annemarie F.\nLORD, Sheila H.\nMcDOWELL,  Kathleen V.\nMacKINNON, Dolina F.\nMacPHEE, Katie Ann\nMEREDITH, M. Wendy\nREID, Birnie E.\nSEIN, Sein Daw\nSTEELE, Patricia A.\nSTEWART, Thomas D.\nTAYLOR, Mrs. Margaret\nTHRASHER, Dorothy Ann\nBEAUSCHENE, Noe I.\nBINGHAM, T. Donald\nCORNWALL, Charlotte E.\nDE RIMANOCZY, Mrs. M. E.\nHARDER, Use M. B.\nJOHNSON, Emily A.\nLUGTIG, Donald J.\nMcAllister, ciare n.\nSTEWART, Donald G.\nTALKER, Elizabeth\nSocial Work\n.  .  . tirsi year\n273 0 *\nAjg\nHappily   adjusting   a   pararmagnetic   resonance   spectrometer\nis  Ken   Lines,   Physics.\nConcentrating   on   his   maze   of  tubing,   commonly   known   as   polaro-\ngraphic equipment.  Is Carlos Kleimerman, an  M.Sc. Chemistry student.\nFaculty of GRADUATE STUDIES\nDean Angus, head of Graduate Studies, leaves after an active career\nat the University.\nSINCE the Faculty of Graduate Studies was\nformed in the Winter of 1949 enrollment has\nincreased steadily making this year's faculty the third\nlargest on the campus. At present there are over 300\nstudents in research, working towards their Doctorate's\ndegree, or their Master's degree in either Arts,\nScience, Applied Science, Forestry, Science in Agriculture, or Business Administration.\nThe individual's course of study is planned in connection with his particular department and is approved\nby its head.\n274 Kasturi Chopra,  Physics, carefully checks a low temperature  specific   heat  apparatus.\nTested a  rat's metabolism lately?  Doing this very thing\nare  two   graduate   students   in   Agriculture.\nNo, it's not a B.C. Electric power project. It's Just\nLyle Robertson, a post-grad, physicist, adjusting a target tube on the famous Van de Graaf generator.\nAmong the courses offered by the faculty are\nthose in community and regional planning. They are\nsupported by the Central Mortgage and Housing\nCorporation and provide facilities and background for\nresearch in the planning problems of Western Canada.\nA diploma course in Criminology is offered, also,\nto students who intend to enter employment in the\nfield of corrections. The instructions in applied criminology and modern correctional programmes are\nsupplemented by field work.\nAnother project within the Faculty of Graduate\nStudies is under the direction of the Institute of\nFisheries. Its object is to give a broad and advanced\ninstruction in various fields relating to the best uses\nand management of the fisheries resources in Canada.\nTo supply the demand for trained scientists to\nundertake oceanographic investigation the Institute\nof Oceanography was formed at U.B.C. It is supported\nin part by the Defense Research Board and the joint\nCommittee on Oceanography and represents the\ncooperative effort of the Departments of Biology and\nBotany, Chemistry, Geology and Geography, Physics\nand Zoology.\nDr. Henry F. Angus, Dean of the faculty of Graduate Studies, has watched over the faculty as it has\ngrown from a small group to an enrollment of over\n300. He retires this year to be replaced by Dr.\nGordon Shrum of the Physics Department.\nStudents in the Faculty are not all working for\ndegrees. Those workers in two of U.B.C.'s largest\nresearch projects\u2014the Institutes of Oceanography\nand Fisheries\u2014are not graduate students and they\nare not seeking degrees. Still they come under the\njurisdiction of Dean Angus.\n275 School of\nEducation\nALTHOUGH  enrollment  has  increased  over the\npast few years more high school teachers are\nstill needed than U.B.C. is able to supply.\nA qualified university graduate after successfully\ncompleting the one year Teacher Training Course obtains his Secondary Basic Teaching Certificate which\nentitles him to teach in the high schools of British\nColumbia. As well as lectures the course includes\npractice teaching: one week in November, three weeks\nin February, and two weeks out of town in April.\nUnder the leadership of Bill Wright the executive\nof the U.S.T.S. has led the future teachers through a\nyear of successful activities. Members of the executive\nwere: Peter Nightngale, Secretary-Treasurer; Bob\nBourne, U.S.C. Delegate; Pat Babcock, Social Chairman; Tom Taylor, Special Events; and Gerry Elliott,\nIntramurals.\nSocial activities included a Fall Dance at the Kerry-\ndale Hall and the Spring banquet and formal.\nUnder the heading of special events were the lecture on the \"Nature and Function of the B.C. Teachers\"\nFederation\" by Mr. C. Ovans, the Audo-Visual Technique Series by the Extension Department, and the\ndinner and panel discussion held with the B.C.T.F. in\nMarch.\nRepresenting U.B.C. at the Western Canada Student Teachers' Conference, February 28 to March 2.\nin Tuxedo, Manitoba, was Tony Emery. At this conference current problems in teacher training and education were discussed.\nNewcomers to the staff this year were Mr. J. Gibbard, giving instructions in Social Studies Methods-,,\nand Mr. Hartrick, English Methods.\n276\nTop: Director of the School of Education, J. Ranton Mcintosh.\nCentre: Warning the girl in the back row that she'd better wake up\nor else fail her Social Studies is Valri Standel. Bottom: Giving a pupil\nat   Templeton   Junior   High   hints  to   better   trying   Ii   Murray   Joyce. ADAMS, Frances Jean V.\nALLISON, Donald E.\nARNAUD, Joseph Frank\nBABCOCK, Patricia A.\nBELTZ, William G.\nBONK, S. Stephanie\nBOON, Thelma Marlene\nBOURNE,  Robert K. T.\nBOULDING, James F. P.\nBUTLER, David\nCARDINALL, Eric R.\nCASSELMAN, Alan C\nCEPELIAUSKAS, Anthony\nCHARTERS, Acia  Anna\nCOLCLOUGH, W. Hartwell\nCLAYTON, James W.\nCOLE, Stewart Harris\nCONDON, John Patrick\nCOOK, Christine\nCROKER, Patricia Ann\nCROSS, David A.\nCROSS, William Chas. F.\nCULLEN, David James\nDAY, William L.\nDEBRECEN, Julie I.\nDEMPSEY, Thomas F.\nDEVLIN, Russell Jones\nDROSSOS, John George\nDUOKOVIC George W.\nDUFF,   Marianna  Ellis\nDWYER, Loretta Anne\nELLIOTT, Gerald B.\nEMERY, Charles A.\nFARRELL, Robert W. H.\nFRITH, Mrs. E. A.\nGAMACHE, Gilberte M.\nGARTLEY, Mary M.\nGOODSHIP, Geoffrey L.\nGREENBLATT, Ruth A. H.\nGRIGORUK, Alexander\nHARSHENIN, Alex Peter\nHESTER, Anthony C\nHOLT, Leonard\nHOLT, Thomas Raymond\nJACKMAN, Maurice\nKIDDOO, Margaret V.\nKONRAD Anne Justine\nKUNDERT,  Margarete  I.\nKUZNETSOV, Margaret\nLAKIOTIS, John W.\nLAWSON, Stanley David\nLFIR,  Esther O. K.\nLEIR, Ruth Hope\nLONG,  Ernest  Patrick\nLOOMER, Mona Louise\nLOUIE, Raymond D.\nMAKAR, Tares\nMARRIOTT, Barbara A.\nMcBRIDE, John  R.\nMcCUAIG, lan B.\nMacDONALD, Winnifred\nMacNAIR, Dorothy K. M.\nMICHELL, Beverley P. M.\nMURAKAMI, Martha M.\nNIGHTINGALE, Peter W.\nNORTH, John H.\nNORTON, Gloria M.\nO'BRIEN, P. Barney\nOLSEN, Donald J.\nPALMER, Frank Edward\nPAUL, Stewart P.\nPEARSON, Mary Jean\nPYE, Marjorie A. E.\nTeacher Training\n277 REES, Philip David M.\nREID, Cecil Morton\nREIMER, Jacob Henry\nRUSSELL, Kenneth G.\nSANKEY, Maureen L.\nSCOBIE, David Robert\nSEPHTON, George C.\nSLINGER, Judith  Eden\nSMITH. David Lorin\nSMITH, Norma Shirley\nSOMERTON, Winnifred  M.\nSONES, Robert Barrie\nSTEINER, Robert R.\nSTRANGE, Patricia M.\nSTRETCH, Henrietta\nTAYLOR, Thomas M.\nTHORNTON, Howard P.\nTIFENBACH, Clarence W.\nTINKESS, James R.\nTOOLSON. Adrian  R.\nTOREN, Martin Sidney\nUNDERHILL, Nancy E. S.\nURBANOVITS, Annie I.\nWALKER, Marillyn D. S.\nWARNOCK, Joseph H.\nWATTS, Louise Dianne\nWEBSTER, Margaret A.\nWIEBE,  Marguerite Ann\nWRIGHT, Janie Diane\nWRIGHT, S. Willard\nMcNEIL, Thomas B.\n.\u2022    \u2022,\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\nOnly too pleased to smile for the photographer are these members of the Teacher Training  executive. They  are  (left to  right):  Mona\nLoomer,  Peter  Nightingale,  Bob  Bourne,  Bill  Wright,   Pat  Babcock, and Tom Taylor.\n278 ANDERSON, Don\nANDERSON, Fred\nBAKER, G.\nENDICO, H.O.\nLEE, C.\nLOGAN, D.\nMANLY, K.\nMUNDY, A.\nPATTERSON, A.\nSTILLORN, E.\nVANDRUTEN.W.\nWILSON, David\nTheology\n\u2022   an a*   \u2022   \u25a0\n'\nImposing Union College is situated\non Chancellor Boulevard on the\noutskirts of the campus. There, lead\nby Dr. W. S. Taylor, students are\ntrained in the United Church Ministry. Many other students also call\nthis  residence  home.\nThe Anglican Theological College,\nunder its principal, Reverend H. F.\nWoodhouse, provides the other\nmain residence for those studying\ntoward a theological degree. Its\ncapacity limits Its residents to\nmainly theological students but\nothers are accepted as long as\naccommodation   permits.\n279 280\nLOST and FOUND\nARMITAGE, Ron\nBARTH, Tor\nBELL, Ray\nBRIDGES, Lois\nBROWN, Bernard\nBRYCE, Leonard\nCLARKE, Daphne\nCOHEN, David\nCORBETT, Gary\nCRBEDALE, Mary\nDAVIES, John\nDOVER, David\nFRACVIS\nGEAVER, George\nGOUGH, Neville\nHALE, Alan\nHARRIS, Marilyn\nHEATHER, Robin\nHENDERSON, B. B.\nHILL, Carol\nHIPP, Peter\nHOWARD, Emond\nHUNTINGTON, Jocelyn Marion\nINGVALDSON, O. C\nIRVINE, George\nJASCOTT\nKINDSET, Edward\nKROLC, Arnold\nLAING, D. A.\nLEN, Marchano\nLONG, N. David\nLOUGHEED, William\nMAIN, E.S.\nMANSON, David\nMcCALLUM, Charles\nMacDONALD, John A.\nMacDOWEROTT, Ray\nMcGHEE, Gordon\nMcLEOD, Ken\nMERCER, John\nMEISSNER, Martin\nMUTZ, Daryl\nNAGLE, George\nNEWTON, Ken\nOBERSON. Bruce\nOMAN, Joseph\nPANTAGES, Tony\nPOULTER, Doug\nPUDDY, Donald\nRUCHINACHIE, William\nSCHILLING, Von\nSETTY, P. Venkatachala\nSINCLAIR, Gary\nSKIESNA, Harris\nSMITH, Edwin, F.\nSOMERVILLE, Diane\nSOOTTON. Arthur\nSPIERS, Jim\nSTANDELL, Valri\nSTURM, Arnold\nSVIKER, Alice\nSWRWA, Cliff\nSYDON, Michael\nTESSIER, Jules\nTOPPING, Ron\nTORNEY, Betty Ann\nTUBMAN, Robert\nWELLS, M.\nWILKINCH,  Lloyd\nWOOD, Marilynn\nWOOD, Neal Arthur\nZIVOT, Gary And So The End Of:\nStudying  in the  library.\nThe McGill-U.B-C. Parapalegic foofball game.\n(Next year Varsity takes on Western Ontario\nMustangs.)\nAnd   so  the  crowd  goes  home.\n28; Memories\nThe     frustration\nregistration.\nof\nWho cares about\nlooks? Give us comfort!\nThe endless tests to\nensure better caf coffee.\u2014The  result?\nSpotlight on dancing\nat a campus square\ndance.\n\"Smart\" guys taking\na spin on Empire\nPool early one morning.\nOur president assists\n(?) Maureen Sankey\nin crowning the Totem Queen.\n282 7955\nPep Band under Arthur Delamont added\ngreatly to campus\nspirit.\nArabs and Indians\nget together ai the\nGreek's annual effort\n\u2014the Mardi Gras.\nCostumes, in keeping\nwith the theme of\n\"Outer Space\", were\nweird and wonderful.\nPushing our \"Birds\"\non to a touchdown\nis an enthusiastic\ncrowd led by five of\nthe tireless cheerleaders.\n283 \u2022 : , . \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'<\u25a0\u25a0>\u2022 ...'.v.iS!--;.:\"3--;^-;;.   \u25a0\u25a0\nI**P>\n\u25a0t**\n^te:fe:aift\u00absss^ M men \/u?v m\nrRAOt\n^ssr>\n^rJa^\nMaking Quality Valves\nIs Our Business\n\u2014 Our ONLY Business\nNOT A DAY GOES BY that we don't put\nour trust in others, in countless little ways.\nWe trust the policeman to keep the peace,\nthe grocer to give us good meat and bread\n\u2014 and we trust, in measure, the honesty of\neveryone whose wares we buy, or to whom\nwe sell our own.\nSometimes in evidence of our good\nintent, we sign our name or make our\nmark \u2014 and this mark becomes a visible\nsymbol of our earnestness to merit the trust\nof our fellow man.\nSuch a mark does not attain its full significance as the ink is dry, but rather with\nthe passage of years. As time goes by the\noriginal trust that engendered it ripens into\nfaith in the signer's integrity, and that faith\nitself becomes an institution.\nThat is why Jenkins Bros, consider their\ntrade mark \u2014 the Jenkins Bros. Diamond\nand Signature \u2014 among the most important virtues of a Jenkins Valve. This mark\nhas become a symbol of justified faith placed\nin a body of honorable men making honest\nproducts, since 1864.\nSold Through Leading Industrial Distributors\nJENKINS\n10OK  rOI INI  ftlAMOMO ftUtK\nJENKINS BROS. LIMITED J-^t**\n617, St. Remi Street, Montreal, P.Q.\nSafes Offices:\nToronto,   Winnipeg,   Edmonton,   Vancouver\n285 Gesietner\n(Canada) Limited\nManufacturers of the\nWorld's Premier Duplicators\nFine Papers, Stencils\nand Ink\n1169 Richards St. Vancouver, B.C.\nMArine 6556 - 6557\nHEAD OFFICE FOR CANADA\u2014TORONTO, ONTARIO\nFACTORY\u2014LONDON, ENGLAND\nChallenger Watches\nare known throughout\nCanada for\ndependability and\nlong service\nSELECT     YOUR     CHALLENGER\nat\nJewelers\nSilversmiths\nVancouver, B. C.\nMAKE UP A PARTY\nFOR SATURDAY NIGHT DANCING\nAT THE\nBEAUTIFUL\nCOMMODORE\nCABARET\nReservations: PA. 7838\n872 Granville Street\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\nFor Suits, Slacks and Skirts\nWOOL\nis still superior\nMODERNIZE have the largest selection of\nall-wool worsteds in Western Canada\nMODERNIZE TAILORS\nBill Wong, Sc. '46 Jack Wong, Sc. '47\n1 WEST PENDER (at Carrall)\n286 YOUR\nFUTURE\nIN\nB.C.\nIn the past 10 years, B.C.'s industries\nand businesses have vastly increased their\nannual output. They have created more\nand better career opportunities for the\nyoung men and women of our Province.\nMany factors have contributed to this\neconomic growth - one of the most important is an ample supply of low-cost\nelectricity.\nIn 10 years, more than $290,000,000\nhave been invested by the B.C. Electric to\nbring more electric, gas and transportation\nservices to more people. In turn, these\nservices have helped local businesses to\nexpand - have attracted new ones to B.C.\nWork is constantly in progress on the\nconstruction of new projects. For B.C.\nElectric plans and builds well ahead of\ndemand and looks to the future. And the\nfuture of B.C. is your future.\nB.C.ELECTRIC\n287 CHOOSE A CHALLENGING CAREER!\nas a\nCHARTERED\nACCOUNTANT\n(C.A.)\nDo you like meeting people?\nDo you like interesting work, that takes you into ever)\nkind of office, and to mines, mills, factories, ranches,\nshipyards, retail stores, banks and financial houses?\nWould you like to have a thorough knowledge of\naccounting, auditing, and taxation?\nWould you like to combine practical and theoretical\ntraining, leading to independent professional status, or\nan executive position in industry or government service?\nIF SO-\nWHY NOT ENQUIRE ABOUT BECOMING\nA CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT?\nThere are several methods of obtaining the required\ntraining:\n\u2022 Combined B. Com.\u2014C.A. Course\n\u2022 University Degree followed by the C.A. Course\n\u2022 The Chartered Accountants' Course alone\nFor Brochure or Further Details, Contact:\nThe Institute of Chartered Accountants\n475 Howe Street PAcific 3264\nOR\nThe School of Commerce\nUniversity of British Columbia\n288 VI7\"E EXTEND our congratulations   to  each  student  of  the  graduating\n\"    class of 1956 and wish you continued success as you advance into the\nnew fields of endeavours where you will be meeting and accepting your full\nshare of responsibilities along with your fellow Canadian citizens.\n-\/\/\u25a0\nTHE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE\nOver 700 Branches ta serve you, including offices at\nLondon, England \" New York * San Francisco * Los\nAngeles * Portland, Oregon \u25a0 Seattle * Bridgetown,\nBarbados \" Kingston, Jamaica * Part of Spain, Trinidad\nf Over 1000 High Purity Chemicals\nfrom a SINGLE SOURCE\n\u2022 \u2022. everything you need in\nlaboratory chemicals\nYou're Sure of Quality\u2014when you specify\nNichols \"C.P.\" Acids and Baker & Adamson Laboratory Reagents. They are guaranteed to meet or\nexceed the most exacting A.C.S. specifications!\nAnd when you use these dependable laboratory\nchemicals, you're sure of superior packaging, too\n\u2014offering every advantage .. . better protection\n. . . more convenience . . . and greater economy.\nWith Nichols as your source, you're also sure\nof dependable supply, for we maintain full stocks\nat all times in large modern warehouses in Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver.\nfhe NICHOLS CHEMICAL COMPANY, Limited\n1917 Sun Life Bldg., Montreal 2*137 Wellington St., W., Toronto 2 \u2022 Vancouver (Barnet, B. C.)\n289 Pitman Business College\nVancouver's  Leading  Business  College\nSince 1898\nSecretarial Training\nStenography\nAccountancy\nTypewriting\nDictaphone\nComptometer\nDAY and NIGHT CLASSES\u2014Enrol at Any Time\nBROADWAY at GRANVILLE\nAINA S. KANGS, P.C.T.. Principal\nWith the Compliments of .  .  .\nTHE\nROYAL TRUST\nCOMPANY\nExecutors and Trustees\nVancouver:\n626 WEST PENDER ST.\nGeorge 0. Vale, Manager\nVictoria:\n1205 GOVERNMENT ST.\nR. W. Phipps, Mgr.\nO. B. ALLAN\nLIMITED\nJEWELLERS\nDIAMONDS\nGranville at Pender\nSILVERSMITHS\nWATCHES\nVancouver, B. C.\nTo the '55 Grads We Wish Every Success\nL^ampbell ^tudioA cJLtd.\nPHOTOGRAPHERS FOR THE FACULTIES OF\nARTS AND LAW\n581 GRANVILLE\nMArine 3625\nTAtlow 7937\nWhether   for   Home   or   Business   Office,   our\nStationery and Printing Department will\nServe You in Many Ways\nGehrke Stationery & Printing Co.\nLimited\n1035 Seymour St.\nPAcific 0171\nWith the Compliments of\nGORDON FARRELL\nCOMPLIMENTS\nBAYNES MANNING LID.\nContractors and Engineers\nVancouver\nEdmonton\nCalgary\nTo the Student Body   .    .    .\nOUR CONGRATULATIONS AND\nBEST WISHES\nBell & Mitchell Agencies\n641 Richards Street\n\u2022   INSURANCE\nVancouver, B. C.\nMArine 6441\n290 OlNCE the founding of the Company two years after Confederation,\nEATON'S has been proud of its\nclose association with Canada's\ncitizens and with the Canadian\nway of life.\nEATON'S of CANADA\n291 Fine Furniture for the Office\n\u2022 a   complete   line   of   wood   and\nmetal desks and chairs;\nfiles; filing supplies;\nvisible equipment; safes and vault\ndoors; lockers; shefving\nand partitions.\nOFFICE   SPECIALTY\nHead Office \u2022 Factories \u2022 Newmarket, Ont.\nVANCOUVER BRANCH:\n938 Howe Street MArine 5274-5\nANGLO CANADIAN\nSHIPPING CO. LTD.\nSteamship\nand\nChartering Agents\n955 West Hastings Street\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nFor 'Week-end Snapshots . . .\nThat you'll  be  proud  to say you  took yourself\n... treat yourself to our efficient developing, printing and enlarging services.  How\nabout those pictures you took on vacation? Bring in the exposed rolls for our\ncareful treatment. You'll be delighted you\ndid! And for an extra thrill, let us \"blow\nup\" a favorite negative or two. You'll\nagree that our enlargements are beauties.\nPrompt service on processing color films,\ntoo, of course.\n(\u00b0)\nEASTMAN T=r LTD.\n610 Granville\nStreet\nUTASlllHtO IM\nuj&j ijj i ls on\nLIMITED\nVICTORIA\nVANCOUVEP\nImporters of Fine British Woollens\nFEATURING\nWomen's\nBraemar of Scotland Sweaters\nLiberty of London Yardage and Scarves\nCounty Sports of London\nDereta & Sweaters by Mirsa of Italy\nMen's\nWarren K. Cook suits and sports jackets\nChester Barrie and Rodex topcoats\nDaks Slacks\nSweaters by Mirsa of Italy\nHOTEL   VANCOUVER\n292 TOMORROW'S\nOPPORTUNITIES... Save at |p\nmum cuuuui\nMORE THAN 2 MILLION CANADIANS USE THE B OF M     J\n._  J\nDIMS\nI\t\n-      Bank of Montreal\n&uuut<i4 *?in4t ScutA\nYour Bank on the Campus\u2014In the Administration Building\nMERLE C. KIRBY, Manager.\nWORKING WITH  CANADIANS  IN   EVERY   WALK   OF   LIFE   SINCE   1817\nCOMPLIMENTS OF\nB. BOE LIMITED\nPLUMBING  &  HEATING\nCONTRACTORS\n652 Seymour Street, Vancouver, B.C,\nPA6174-6175\n293 Don't Become a \"Lost Soul\".   .   .   .\nThe University is interested in YOU *\\\nafter graduation . . . wilt YOU re- ^\ntain YOUR interest in the University \u2022\nPLEASE LET US HAVE YOUR CHANGE IN ADDRESS\nU.B.C. ALUMNI ASSOCIATION\n201  BROCK HALL, U. B. C.\nOur Aim is Service\u2014to Alumni and U.B.C.\n<pyw\nTfof^Uj^\nWE HAVE first class coverage of international news through three worldwide press\nservices: Associated Press, British United Press and Canadian Press. Special representatives in Victoria, Ottawa, New York, London and other news centres provide personal and knowing reports on current events and trends. Our local and provincial coverage\nis complete, lively and objective. Staff cameramen are skilled and enterprising and world\nnews photos come to our office by wire and wireless. Sun columnists and special writers\nare widely esteemed for intelligence and colorful prose. Our general daily features have\nwide appeal for entertainment and all-round usefulness. We feel free to claim that The\nSun is a good newspaper for the intelligent reader.\nThe Vancouver Sun's opinions\nare found in its Editorials, which\nare commonly regarded as being\nwell-balanced, intelligent and\nclearly written. They are neither\nparochial on the one hand nor\ntoplofty on the other. We have\na decent respect, to paraphrase\na pregnant phrase in a famous\ndocument, for contrary opinions.\n\u00a9he ^ncouper Sun\nPHONE   TA7141   FOR   DAILY   DELIVERY   TO   YOUR   HOME\n294 J\nwni2en\nMAKERS OF THE  WORLD-FAMOUS\nJantzen Swim Suits, Sweaters,\nKnitted Suits\nSun Clothes and T-Shirts\nJANTZEN OF CANADA LIMITED\n10th Avenue and Kingsway Phone Emerald 3344\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nOne day in 1858 a blacksmith\nnamed Joseph Peavey watched a\nriver crew struggling to break up\na log jam. Seeing the need for an\nimplement to help roll the heavy\nlogs, he developed the tool which\nperpetuates his name\u2014the peavey.\nA stout wooden lever with a metal\nspike and hinged hook, it has\nbeen an indispensable aid to\nlumberjacks ever since.\nNecessity is the mother of banking invention.\nSince no two customers have exactly the\nsame plans and problems, the Royal Bank\nmust be flexible and adaptable in its approach\nto your banking needs. Existing services are\nconstantly strengthened, extended and improved to meet new demands and requirements. You can bank on the Royal to be\nconstructive, practical, resourceful in helping\nyou with your problems.\nTHE ROYAL BANK\nOF CANADA\nCanada's largest bank\n295 Like the attainment of a\ndegree, the acquisition of\nan estate requires careful\nplanning. Start now to plan\nyour future with a solid\nfoundation of life insurance.\nThe Great-West Life has\na variety of plans adaptable\nto YOUR needs for the\nfuture.\nLet us design a sound financial security plan\nespecially for you\nj. ross McAllister, c.lu.\n1101 West Georgia Street\nVancouver 5, B. C.\nMA 0421\nTA5622\n\u00bb%\nGreat-West Life\nASSURANCE   COMPANY\nHEAD OFFICE-WINNIPEC.CANADA\nCOLUMBIA\nPAPER CO. LIMITED\nWholesale\nPaper Merchants\nManufacturers of 'Totem\" Brand\nScribblers and Exercise Books\nVancouver, B. C. Victoria, B. C.\nPrince Rupert, B. C. Kelowna, B. C.\nAT\nYOUR\nSERVICE\nAND DRY CLEANERS\nDI\n7\/55\nFree Enterprise at Work . .\nThis organization catches salmon by the\nton, ships canned salmon by the carload. The salmon is wholesaled by the\ncase, and retailed by the can .. . and the\nwhole success of the operation depends\non the satisfaction and enjoyment given\nto a customer either at home or abroad\n.  .  . ONE FORKFUL AT A TIME.\nTo this end, the fishermen on the fishing grounds, the processors in the cannery, and everybody in the Nelson Bros,\norganization prepare this delicious food\nwith every care. Wherever it is purchased, it is a credit to CANADA and\nworthy to carry the PARAMOUNT label.\nNELSON BROS. FISHERIES LTD.\nVancouver, British Columbia Canada\n296 The University Book Store\nThe Book Store was established for the convenience of\nstudents and has effected a considerable saving to the\nstudents in time and money. It is prepared to supply\nall text books required for the various courses offered\nin the University, also such articles as note books,\nloose-leaf sheets, fountain pens, drawing paper and\n= instruments. =\nYOU\nCAN CUT FIGUREWORK COSTS\nwith a MARCHANT\n. . . Whatever Your Line of Business\nWhether your figurework is heavy or light . . . complex or simple . . . there's a MARCHANT calculator\nexactly suited to your needs that will do your figuring\nin a fraction of the time you're now spending.\n* A MARCHANT is so easy to use that anyone\nin your office can run it swiftly and efficiently.\n* Now, through our \"pay-as-it-saves\" plan, you\ncan OWN a MARCHANT for less than the regular RENTAL rate.\n* A test run in your own office will show that a\nMARCHANT calculator saves so much time you\ncan't afford to do without one.\nEASY TO USE   \u2022   EASY TO OWN   \u2022   EASY ON YOUR TIME\nFRANK L. BOTT & CO\nVANCOUVER    418 Abbott St.   PAcific 2423\nVICTORIA 943 Yates St.    23812\nNANAIMO 85 Front St.    2872\n297 \u20ac.\nnaineerd\nWhen you graduate to problems involving high grade sand and gravel,\nTrue-Mix concrete and other building   materials    ....    consult\nDIETHERSLTD.\nGranville Island - TAtlow 4281 - Vancouver, B. C.\n\u25a0X..-X..-X..-X..-X..-X..-X.--X..-X..-X..-X..-X..-X..-X..-X..-X..-X..-X..-X.--X..-X..-N\nCONSTRUCTION   SUPPLIES\nTRUE-MIX   CONCRETE\nCOAL\nDRAWING MATERIALS\nOF ALL KINDS\nBOARDS - SCALES - TEE SQUARES\nINKS -  PAPER - ANGLES\nREPRODUCTION SERVICE\nOZALID PRINTING\nPHOTO COPY\nBLUEPRINTING\nTHE\nHUGHES-OWENS\nCOMPANY LIMITED\n569 RICHARDS STREET, VANCOUVER\nALSO\nEDMONTON    -   WINNIPEG   -   HAMILTON\nTORONTO    -    OTTAWA    -    MONTREAL    -    HALIFAX\nUNIVERSITY\nOF\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA\nA PROUD NAME IN THE FIELD OF\nSCHOLASTIC ACHIEVEMENT\nCongratulations to YOU on being a\nStudent at such a fine\nUniversity!\nContinue associating with institutions\nof distinction by dealing\nwith\nMurphy Stationery Co. Ltd.\nSTATIONERS   -   PRINTERS\nDUPLICATING  MACHINES  and  SUPPLIES\n151 W. 5th Ave. Vancouver 10, B. C.\nEMerald 5591\nAlso in Victoria\n621  Fort Street 3-1441-3-4616\nHI-FI\nas you want it\nand at a saving\nharman\nkardon\nPrelude\nAn innovation in high fidelity amplifiers employing printed\ncircuits using dip soldered, copper-clad laminated phenolic\nboard.\nTen watts output. Inputs for phono, tuner and tape. Separate\ntape output. Full record equalization with separate roll-off\nand turn-over controls, 4 position Dynamic Loudness Contour\nControl, bass and treble controls and rumble filter. Equalization provided for tape recorder heads. Safety interlock power\ncord. 5 tubes. Complete with cape.\nModel PC-200\nAt your Radio or Music Dealer\nHYGRADE   SOUND SALES   970 Richards Street\n29.8 WESTERN PLYWOOD COMPANY LIMITED\n900 East Kent Street, Vancouver, B. C.\nManufacturers of Fine Plywoods\nWITH THE UNIQUE BALANCED CONSTRUCTION  (Patented)\n\u2022 WESTERN POPLAR (with Fir core)\n\u2022 DOUGLAS FIR (P.M.B.C. Ext)*\n\u2022 WESTERN WHITE BIRCH\n\u2022 BLACK WALNUT\n\u2022 SLICED AFRICAN MAHOGANY\n\u2022 COMB GRAIN WHITE OAK\n\u2022 KNOTTY PINE\n\u2022FIR PLYWOOD DOORS\nWESTERN PLYWOOD (CARIBOO) LIMITED\nQUESNEL, B.C.\n\u2022 STRUCTURPLY ^^^^Ve'r'Ior grade * CAR,B0<> SHEATHING (P.M.B.C. Ext)*\n^PLYWOOD MANUFACTURERS ASSOCIATION OF BRITISH COLUMBIA EXTERIOR GRADE\nSTUDENT  INDEX\nAbrahamson, Carol\n32, 150.  151, 153, 235\nAchtem, Ellis  174\nAdams, Ronald. 27, 225\nAdelman,  Leon  Edward      27\nAdeola, Altonni O 18\nAgnew,  Pauline  .52,   155,   179\nAird, Hugh Cameron 37,  174\nAitken, Bob 173\nAkesode, Alade  15, 18, 150\nAlbi, Frank E 18\nAlderman,  Richard  41,   168\nAlexander, Roy 32\nAllan, Beverly   31\nAllan,  Ronald   40\nAllardyce, Bruce  74,  138\nAllen, Vic    123,  176\nAllison,  Barbara  ... 158\nAllison, Don 122\nAlsbury, Mary Diane   .35, 244\nAlsgard, Stewart ... 162\nAmes, Michael 18, 46, 148\nAmighetti, Leo 162\nAnderegg,   Marco    163\nAnderson, Barb 96\nAnderson, Beverley        ...160,  178\nAnderson, Brigette E.      18\nAnderson, Darrell .        106\nAnderson, E. Lloyd 18\nAnderson,  Malcolm   76,   170\nAnderson,  Sheila    157\nAndreen, Peggy  136,150, 155,255\nAndrew, Peter Robert. 32\nAngsl, Jerome 130\nAnthony, Tom .... .78\nAppleby, Philip ...  35\nApted, Edward James 18\nArcher, Len 174\nArchibald,  Kathy       123,   148\nArkley, Fraser 166\nArmitage, Ron 166\nArmstrong, Geraldine Anne 18\nArmstrong, Gordon   12, 14,64, 175\nArmstrong, John  Edmund   27\nArmstrong,  Jim   175\nArmstrong, William   .32, 166\nArnet, Ellen   50\nArseott, Trevor      25\nArthurs,  Barry     .167\nAshdown,  Bruce  74, 87\nAshby, Marilyn  98\nAtkins, Michael  18, 174\nAudain,  Mike  122\nAuld,   Robbie   64,65\nAuriol, George Robert 32\nAustin,  Harvey  164\nAyling,  Anita   ..  ...160\nBaba, Tony 27\nBabcock, Pat  152\nBackstrom, Louise  ...87\nBadovinac,  George          168\nBagshaw, Bob 92\nBaker, Colin ... 175\nBailey, George  174\nBailey, Sherry .....        18\nBain, Wendy .    154\nBalcom, Graeme    166\nBaldwin,  Richard   25\nBaldwin, Bill  ...169\nBallentine, Bill   ...        114\nBanerd, Audrey Jean  18\nBanfield, John Allen      32,76,162\nBannard,  Dolores      ....  148\nBarbari, Joan   152\nBarbeau, Jacques     .37\nBarker,   Hugh   78\nBarnet,  Robert Douglas ..    38\nBarr, Ron  100\nBarron, David _      162\nBarron, Kenneth Edward  27\nBartosh, Reg  161\nBasarab, Bill 165\nBasford, Stanley   . 37\nBassett,  Marilyn  94, 158\nBaxter, Allen 32, 174\nBazeley,  Edward 27\nBeairsto,   Robert    .._ 37\nBebb,  Douglas 38\nBeck,  Stan  12, 14,59, 138, 150, 171\nBeck, Howard   37, 171\nBeebakhee,  Mrs. Chandradaye  18\nBeiser, Morley              171\nBelither, Ann ...  18\nBell, Gerry 175\nBell, Marc  123, 175\nBellows, Albert  40\nBellow,   Donald   Grant 27, 172\nBendrodt, Eric  32, 151, 167\nBennett, Keith  32,236\nBennett, Nancy .   155\nBenty, Barrie      177\nBerg, R. P 32\nBergen, Bob 114\nBerger, Thomas  37\nBerry, Joan  152\nBerry, Kenneth  38\nBerryman, Janet 160\nBest, Betty   75,98, 158\nBice, Bill 76, 78\nBickle, Mary 157\nBicknell,  Ronald  _  35\nBiely, Barbara  145\nBill,  Michael    162\nBirch, Elizabeth Marie  35, 152\nBirch, Ron  166, 18\nBirch, Paul Russell  18\nBird, W. Raymond    18\nBishop, John    166\nBlackburn,  Bob     163\nBlackery, Andrew James 27, 172\nBlacklock, Donald John\n18, 122, 123\nBlair, Alan  Huntley 18\n299 EDUCATIONAL STATIONERY\nLOOSE LEAF BOOKS - SLIDE RULES\nFOUNTAIN PENS - SCALES\nDRAWING INSTRUMENTS\nCLARKE & STUART\nCO. LTD.\nSTATIONERS, PRINTERS, OFFICE FURNITURE\n550 Seymour St. Vancouver, B. C.\nFor The Best In Dairy\nProducts\nCreamland Crescent\nDAIRY LTD.\nMArine 7371 1335 Howe St.\nCompliments\nCANADIAN WOOD PIPE\n& TANKS LTD.\nMArine 7245 550 Pacific Street\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nMACAULAY, NICOLLS,\nMAITLAND & CO. LTD.\nINSURANCE BROKERS\nREAL ESTATE AND MORTGAGES\n435 Howe Street\nVancouver, B. C.\nTelephone:\nPAcific 4111\nBRANCH OFFICE: WEST VANCOUVER\nBlankenback,  Pat  ..18\nBlom, Nick 64,65\nBlomgren, Gene      165\nBoak, Ann    157\nBobroff,   Leonard    164\nBorden, Harvey 88\nBolter,  Stanley 18, 161\nBoon,  David     38\nBooth, John H 18\nBorsato, Friedrich 40\nBose, Bob   174\nBossons, John\n18, 106, 136, 150, 163\nBoulanger,  Maurice      27\nBoulding, John David 27\nBoulding, Myrna   35, 158\nBourne, Bob  ..  15, 165\nBourns, Charles David. ...    32, 176\nBovey, John Alexander      18\nBowell,  Dorothy Rae       36, 154\nBowen, Carol  _ 55\nBowker, Arthur James       27\nBoyd,  Judy     146, 159\nBoyle,   Ernest  Edward   32, 170\nBracher, Anne  36\nBradshaw, Pete 175\nBraidwood, Thomas  37, 163\nBrasso,  Henning . .. 32, 163\nBray, Ron ...12, 14, 37, 74, 150, 166\nBreen, Harvey  171\nBrezden, Jessie Pearl. 31\nBremner, Dave 174\nBrett, Conrad Paul 35\nBrett, Helen Joy 40\nBrice, Marjorie Ann  18, 160\nBrickman, Anlee Joan  18, 146\nBrink, Russ 64,65\nBruck,  Robert  Martin 27\nBrock,  Patrick  27\nBroder, John  225\nBrodie, Elizabeth      18\nBronstein, Joe     171\nBrood,  Donald   18\nBrooks, Dru  154\nBrooks,   Percy   Lome.... 35\nBrotherton, Walter 27\nBroughton,  Alison 157\nBrown, Barbara   ..36\nBrown, Bonnie ....152\nBrown,   Heather _ 98\nBrown,   lain  Hamilton    18\nBrown,  Jackie .  131\nBrown, Joyce  157\nBrown, Patti         55\nBrown,   Ralph 170\nBrown,  Sallee   160\nBrownlow, Diane     158\nBrownlee, James . ...162\nBryce, Len    _ 161\nBuchanan, Helen     256\nBuchanan,  Ron  162\nBuckett, Raymond   18\nBuckingham, lan     18, 167\nBuckley, William A 18\nBuckwald, Irving ...         164\nBudd, Lome    167\nBudde, Johann 25\nBuker, Joan    98\nBurch, Barry John  _..27\nBurgess,  Kenneth  18\nBurgess,  Bob         165\nBurnett,  Katharine 18,93\nBurnham,  Harvey  Ross 27\nBurns, Brian John 18\nBurnstein,  Michael .164\nBurr, Larry  174\nBurton,   Edward   Harry .27, 174\nBurton, Eric Watter. 18\nBurton, Marybeth  18\nButler, Peter  37\nButler,  Richard     174\nBuick, Anna May \u201e..._I8\nBush,  Lucille    98\nButterfield, F. James 19\nButterfield, John 27, 74, 76, 87, 161\nBush, Pat .  52, 170\nByrne,  Pat 37\nCain,  Donald  ..  39\nCairns, Alexander , 38\nCairns, Mrs. Eva 38\nCaldwell, Bruce 27\nCalhoun,   Marilyn    158\nCameron, Hamish Curtis 37\nCameron, Jean  31, 152\nCameron, Margaret Mae  152\nCameron, Nick  166\nCampbell, Colin   ....162\nCampbell, Edith M 19\nCampbell,  Gordon 19\nCampbell,  Kathy 160,235\nCampbell, Stanley .         ...25\nCant,  Eric           166\nCaple, Roderick  _ .27\nCardinall, Sandra  \u201e.I9\nCarfrae, James 19, 174\nCarfrae, Walter  176\nCarkner, Bob  169\nCarlson,  lan  Hedman  19\nCarlson, Lois  .36, 158\nCarlson, Robert Ivar. 19, 165\nCarlow, Don 100\nCarlyle, James  27\nCarmichael, John  174\nCarpenter, Janet    154\nCarrall, Theo  93\nCarrick,  Douglas      19\nCarstens, Sheila  19\nCarter, Alan  27\nCartwright,   lan 169\nCartwright, John   19\nCase, Vickie  96\nCass, Richard Vincent  19\nCassady, Anne  19, 151, 154\nCastle, Gary   32, 167\nCatherwood,   Robert  162\nCathro,   Bob 167\nChalk, John       122\nChalkins, David Bruce 32\nChambers, Mike  76, 78\nChant, John  88, 177\nChapman, Larry     .118\nCharme, Pat   165\nChaster, Gerald  David  25\nChes,   Martin    53, 171\nChester,   Stanley   35\nChilcott, Beth 159\nChin,   Beverly  19\nChong, Henry.... 38\nChorney,  Henry  ...28\nChisholm, Bob 131\nChristie, Donna 155\nCianci, Donato 28\nClasby, Ralph  162\nClark, Jack   163\nClark,   Nigel   38\nClark, Wes  161\nClarke,   Betty   150\nClarke,  Charles   19\n300 Clark,  Dennis  38,162\nClay, Leslie Kenneth 25\nClay, Michael Graham 38\nClayton, John  161\nClasby, Barbara  159\nClyne, John Stuart 37, 175\nCoburn,  John  Wyllie 28\nCoe, Ngaire  157\nColeman, Sidney  19\nCollingwood, Thomas Arthur\n37, 145\nCollins,   Rosemary   19, 131\nCollison, Ed  161\nColls, John  Michael 32, 163\nColman, Sidney  171\nCompton,   Barbara    36, 154\nConnell,   Dave   173\nConnell,  John   Gavin 32,163\nConstantinidis, Emanuel  114\nConway, Geoff\n12,13, 14,32, 150,162\nCook,   Don   167\nCook,   Lawrence   Edward 32\nCooper,   Violet    158\nCoopland,   Gary   163\nCopland,   Lorraine    31\nCorbet,   Burke    162\nCorbold,   Brian    174\nCornish,   George   Henry 28\nCostanzo,   Peter    28\nCoulas,  Julia   118\nCoulcher,  Blane  19\nCoulthand, T.  L  25\nCowie, James  Fraser  32, 170\nCox,   Don   163\nCoyle, Dick  170\nCraig,  Donald   25,220\nCramb,   John   Allan 28, 172\nCranmer,  Gloria   19\nCrawford,  Brad   175\nCrawford,   Michael   123\nCrawford,  Moira   160\nCreemer,  Albert  Lee   19, 164\nCreemer,   Terrance    19\nCrocker,  Joan    95,99,145\nCroker,  Sheila    77, 158\nCrosato,   Reno   Frank  _ 19\nCross, Nan Rothney    19, 160\nCrosswell,   Shirley     99,269\nCrotty,   Jan    160\nCrowdy,   Jim    170\nCulaus,  Julie    96\nCullen, James \u201e.. 176\nCunning,   Clive   Leonard 38\nCunningham,  Maurice\n40,46,50,76, 167,262\nCunningham, Warren   255\nCvetkovich, Joe  169\nda Costa,  Graville      88\nDagg,   Bob   163\nDales,  Michael _ 164\nDalgleish, Ann  _ 154\nDalgleish,   Neil    32\nDallas,   Dennis   165\nDaly,  Georgina    159\nDaly,  Joy   .'. 154\nD'Andrea, Richard  37\nDang,  Joe    74\nDanj,  Joe   78\nDarcovich,   Olga    155\nDarke,   Kenneth    28\nDarke,  Ernest Wilfred    32\nDavenport,   Lee     95, 145\nDavidson,   D 172\nDavidson,  Joan   155\nDavidson,   Gerry    88\nDavidson,  John   74, 88\nDavies,  Gordon    40, 262\nDavis,  Ann   154\nDay, Ann  118\nDavies,   Art    169,32\nDavis,  Ashe     123\nDavis, Clay  163\nDavis, Dorothy  146\nDavis, Frances Ann  19\nDavis, Kenneth Brian   32\nDavis,   Len    148\nDavis, Mary B 19\nDavis,   Patrick  Austin  19\nDavis, Thomas  Wilfred    38\nDawson, June  31, 150\nDawson,  Robert  32\nDean,  Elizabeth   98\nDean, Trigger  96\nDeBuysscher,  Robert  41, 167\nDeCourcy,  D.  E 172\nDeLong, Henry Thompson  32\nDelbridge,   Sally    160\nDempster, Gavin   28, 175\nDemarcos,   Earl    40\nDemmery,  Patricia Ann  19\nDenholme, James  Leon   28\nDennis,  Gordon  19\nDerrick,  Mrs. E 31\nDeVito,  Leonard  James 32, 167\nDewhurst, Gordon  64, 65\nDezell,  Cliff   173\nd'Hondt,   Danica   54,55,48\nDial,  Nirmal 88\nDiamond,  Charles  151, 171\nDieno,  Audrey   36\nDiestal, Cookie  156\nDill, Arlene  118\nDelong,   Tom    175\nDilworth,   Dorothy   159,52\nDinsmore, Jacky  122\nDixon, John          166\nDodge, Donald Phillip  \u201e..28\nDonaldson,  Verna      154\nDonald, William  Ivor  37\nDonaldson,  Bob 161\nDonard,  Maurice  174\nDonawa,   William    26\nDong, Lily  31,51\nDoolan, Ken  78,92,162\nDotto, George  28\nDougan, Henry John    19\nDover,   David   170,221\nDowering, Chuck    177\nDowns, Sylvia  75,95, 146, 155\nDrab, Allan Julian   28, 174\nDredge, Neil Vernon ...    19\nDreidger,   Elwood    167\nDrennan,  Joseph   28\nDrew, John David    32\nDriscoll,  Jill    159\nDrossos, Nicholas  37, 168\nDrugge,  S.  Erik 19\nDrummond, Barry    162\nDrummond, Kenneth  28, 84\nDrummond,   Pat  157\nDuggan,   Bob   174\nDummett, Winston   26\nDummett,   Jack    130\nDunlop,   Keith    161\nDunsmuir, Carole  118\nCRANE\nLIMITED\n1300 Marine Drive,\nNorth Vancouver.\n540 Beatty St.,\nVancouver, B. C.\n\"CHINESE CUISINE AT ITS  BEST\"\nInternationally   known   and   acclaimed   tops   in\nChinese Cuisine, hospitable service and\nexotic  Oriental  decor\u2014truly  a\nRestaurant of Distinction\nReservations: MA. 1935\n155 E. Pender St.\nCollege Printers Ltd.\nCommercial and Social Printers\nand Publishers\nPRINTERS OF THE UBYSSEY\n4430 W. 10th Ave.\nALma 3253\njiterlmg Jltlforsft ^trnnrjs\nof\nGUARANTEED QUALITY\nBOGARDUS WILSON\nLIMITED\nMArine 3248-9\n1000 Homer Street Vancouver, B. C.\n30\/ BEST WISHES . . .\nU.B.C GRADS \/\nTHE KEYSTONE PRESS LTD.\nPrinters Lithographers\n860 KINGSWAY, VANCOUVER EX press 1541\n'The House of Service\"\nThe Vancouver Supply Company Ltd.\nWholesale Grocers and Janitors Supplies\n25 ALEXANDER STREET\nVANCOUVER 4, B. C.\nPhone: PA. 8321\nWith  the Compliments of\nBoyles Bros. Drilling Company Ltd.\nDIAMOND DRILL\nCONTRACTORS & MANUFACTURERS\n1275-1291  Parker St.\nVancouver, B.C.\nSCOTTISH   WOOLLENS\nA Complete Selection of the World's Finest\nWoollens for Men and Women\nWbe Cngltsf) \u00a3>f)op\n905 WEST GEORGIA STREET\n(opposite Hotel Vancouver)\nWest Vancouver: 773 Park Royal\nDutton,  Ross Wilson  32\nDweyer, Lou  152\nDyke,  Lome  David   32, 167\nDykeman, James  Murray ..40, 169\nEagle, Bruce  78, 163\nEarl, John Patrick  ..19\nEaster, Cal       174\nEaston,  Charles 26\nEastwood, John  .......     35\nEastwood,  Joseph  28\nEbbett, Thomas William  26\nEckert, Helen  75\nEckstein,  Lois   159\nEdgett, Rennie 166\nEdgett,   Warren   S. 19\nEdwards,  John   32, 170\nEdwards William  V 19\nEidsvik,   Hal    169\nEisenhut, Katie  155\nEisenstein,   Barney  38\nElkins,  Frank  28\nElliot,  Donald   F.   19, 174\nEllis, Ted  131\nEltherington,  Lome     162\nEmery,   Pru 154\nEmsley,    Marilyn 152, 178\nEnglish, Pat _ 36\nErickson, Dwayne 74, 138\nErickson,  Keith  165\nErickson,   Philip 28\nEsko,  Sam    \u201e 167\nEsselmont,   William 32, 74, 76, 167\nEtherington,  Sandra 153\nEvans, Mrs. Elaine  37\nEvans, George L. _ 19\nRodney, Eve 54\nEwing, Keith  140\nEyres, Charlotte  41\nEzzy.  Albert   76, 78, 162\nFajrasjsl,  Miroslav 35\nFairbairne,   Bob   15, 163\nFairley,  Irene   256\nFarae,   Dusan  Alex   32\nFaris, John Douglas  19\nFarmer, Harold V 19,87\nFarmer, Joanne   75, 98\nFarris, Evelyn F 19,54, 160\nFawcus,   Kenneth    37, 76, 167\nFay. S. R - 162\nFeatherstone,  Harold   28, 172\nFedirko, Nicholas J.    19\nFennell,  Margaret A 19\nFenwick, Thomas Louis  20\nFerby, John  165\nFerry,   Dave   138, 170\nField,  Irene  May  -31\nFindlater, Bryan  173\nFindlay, Barbara S 20, 158\nFindlay, John Allan  32\nFinlayson,  M 172\nFilleul,  Chips   170\nFilmer, Al  100\nFinlayson,  Malcolm  ..      28\nFischer, Gretl 20\nFitzpatrick, D. R 162\nFlahiff, Frederick T 20\nFlather,   Barail    167\nFlemons, Gordon 32\nFletcher, David  28\nFlynn, Robert Allen  28, 166\nFong,  Nelson  28\nFoot, Robert H.      20\nForbes, George  H.  20\nForbes,  Chuck    94\nForeman, Joan  152\nForrest, Doug  64,65\nForrest,  Al   106, 123, 140\nForster, George  162\nForward,  Gordie  88, 166\nFosbrooke,  Doug    170\nFoster, Anthea  32, 154\nFougner,  Edward  41\nFountain, Joyce   20, 154\nFowler,   Betty 154\nFrame, Clifford  28\nFraser,   Donald   Grant 39,114\nFraser, Douglas V. A 20\nFromson, Doug  ....78\nFraser,  Ed  106.114\nFraser,  G.  P 162\nFraser, Peter   64, 65\nFrechette,  Myles  177\nFredette, Frances 20\nFredrickson,   Bud .87, 175\nFredricksen,   Roland    28\nFreeman, Edward B. 20\nFreeman, Larry  171\nFrench, Basil Kenneth  32, 167\nFrieson,  John  221\nFrith,   Hector  Nichol   37, 163\nFromson,  Elaine  151, 130, 158\nFung, Edward  39\nFyfe, Stan  170\nGalbraith, Craig   39\nGale, Bob  165\nGallagher, Florence  62\nGallagher,   Marie   138\nGalloway,   Robert   20\nGamble,   Len   ..146, 163\nGambrill,   Anthony   20, 173\nGandossi, Bruno  162\nGarrett, T. W   172\nGartside,  Bill   166\nGarvin, Murray Lloyd  20\nGates,    Lynda    15, 154\nGavin,  Elma   20,76,98,157\nGeddes,  Ann   118\nGee, Jack  174\nGenis, James 37\nGenltleman, Glenda   99\nGenser, Joel  171\nGerber,  Elaine  36\nGhezzi,  Linda  152\nGhitter, Harvey Alan  37\nGibbons, Maurice\n54, 140, 148, 163\nGibson,  Garnet  41\nGiegerick,   Daryl   154\nGilders,  Cyril  James   20\nGiles, Deirdre Anne 31\nGiles, Jack  Michael 32\nGilgan,   Mike _...  122\nGilhooly,  Robert  37\nGill, Singh Sardul 33\nGilley,   Wilma    158\nGillis,  Dale  170\nGilson, Karle B  .... 20\nGirling, Peter  174\nGiroday, de la,  Dorothy....98, 159\nGirvin, Gerald 176\nGisborne, Bert  28\nGladman, Peggy  118\nGlasgow, Stan  76,87\nGlaspie,   Mike   74, 138\n302 Remember!\nThe\nUNIVERSITY FOOD SERVICES\noffers a complete low cost catering service throughout the campus\nFor your convenience the locations are\nFORT CAMP\nACADIA CAMP\nBROCK HALL\n(Snack Bar and Dining Room)\nINFIRMARY KITCHEN\nat Westbrook\nCAF\nBUS STOP COFFEE BAR\nArrangements may also be made for:\nTEAS, BANQUETS and WEDDING RECEPTIONS\nHOMART   \u2022   ALLSTATE   \u2022   CRAFTSMAN   \u2022   SILVERTONE\na\nLU\nit\no\nI-\nto\n5\nx\n>-\n<\nSIMPSONS-SEARS BRAND NAMES\nyour guide to wise shopping\nRETAIL STORE\nFREE    PARKING\nFOR   1500   CARS\nDAVID BRADLEY\nMAIL ORDER\n60,000   ITEMS   IN\nOUR   CATALOGUE\n2\n>\nO\nO\nX\n>\nO\nz\n-<\nx\nO\nc\nen\nCOLDSPOT\n303\nKENMORE\nELGIN The next time you need gasoline\ndrive in at the sign of the big B-A.\nFill up with B-A 88 or B-A 98.\nYou will see why B-A gasoline is\nTop-Rated by more people\nthan ever before.\nTHE BRITISH  AMERICAN OIL\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nWHAT is life? What is it worth,\nThe time we spend upon this earth?\nWhat is it for? What does it mean,\nThe  time we spend  on  this earthly  scene?\nWe arrive unknowing, with all to learn,\n(And ever receive just what we earn);\nWe spend long year 'er we mature\nIn learning the things that will endure.\nFor life itself, is on knowledge based,\nAnd how we'll live, is all encased\nIn how we learn all that we'd know,\nFor by such knowledge\u2014do we grow.\nWe grow in body\u2014mind\u2014and soul,\nEver wending towards our goal,\nAnd no matter how high we wish to go.\nIt will always depend on what we know!\nBEST  Mimeograph  Co.  Ltd.\n151 West Bastings, Vancouver 3, B.C.    -   TAtlow 3742\nMimeograph  -  Lithograph  -  Spirit - Photostat\nBritish Columbia's Most Complete Duplicating Plant\nU.B.C. Law Case Books    -    Manuals - Graphs, etc.\nGlover, Jeannette ....\nGoberdhan,   Lincoln\nGodfrey, Peter \t\nGoeujon,  Gerry \t\nGold, Don \t\nGolf,  Ted  \t\nGoodacre, Al _\t\nGoodale, Lonald Ross\nGoodwin,  Pat  \t\nGopal   Singh,   Rodun\nGordon, Ann \u201e,,\u201e.,\t\nGordon, John \t\nGosich, Frank \t\nGoudy,  Elizabeth\nGourlay, Bruce \t\nGovan,   Phil   \t\nGraham,  Verna  Jean\nGrant, Alan  Edward...\nGrant,  Hugh  M. ..\nGrant,  Hugh  Joseph\nGrant,  John  \t\nGrant,  William   Edwa\nGrantham,   Peter\nGrantham, Sally \t\nGray, Helen \t\nGray, Jerry    \t\nGray, Joan ....\nGray, John  Andrew\nGreen,   Fred  ..\nGreen, John\t\nGreen,  Maxine\t\nGreen, Rowland \t\nGreene, R. E. _\t\nGreenaway, John \t\nGreenberg,   Phil.     52,\nGreening,  John  ..\nGregory,  Carol   -\nGreifenberger, A\t\nGrey, Jim \t\nGrigoruk, Daniel \t\nGriffin,  Bill  _ \t\nGriffiths,  Barry \t\nGrimson,  Juliet   \t\nGroberman, Joel  \t\nGroberman,  Herby  ...\nGroix,   Bob   _\t\nGroove,   Linda  .........\nGrove-White,   Brian   .\nGrubb, Gerry \t\nGrundy, George \t\nGuile,   Robert   Henry\nGuns,   Brian   \t\nGutman,  Gary     \t\nGuttormson,   Norma\n 118\n.26, 74\n 94\n     122\n 61, 177\n 166\n 114\n26\n    152\n       .87\n 96\n 162\n    78\n 20, 159\n35, 175\n     123\n 36, 152\n...20\n _ 20\n 20\n  170\n\u25a0d 20, 170\n78, 163,255\n 145, 155\n 31\n 167\n ...155\n 35\n 87\n     170\n 157\n 33\n 172\n 28\n60, 130, 171\n 114\n140, 160\n _I72\n 169\n...._ 20\n \u201e..I70\n 174\n...155\n ....37\n 171\n 161\n 152\n 20\n140, 154\n 165\n... 37, 174\n 175\n.._ 130\n.75,96, 158\nHaahti,   Miriam    153\nHacking, lan - 20\nHadden,  Sheila    152\nHadfield, Rosemary      40\nHaig-Brown,   Valerie ..   14, 160\nHall, John Vernon 39\nHall, Thais Lorraine  39\nHall, Sue   -157\nHaltalin,  Ken  .        163\nHalpin,   Constance         36\nHambrook,  Rosemary      257\nHamilton,   Irene  Janet 36, 152\nHamilton, Jim   167\nHamilton, Patrick 20\nHammerstrom,  Kay         46, 48\nHandling, F. Kaye 20\nHansen,  Bruce        166\nHanslip, Gavin ..28\nHanson, Leonard C. .       20\nHardie, E. Marion .\nHards, John   \t\nHardy, John  Allan\nHardy, Sheila _\nHarman,   Bob  ...\nHarper, Alexander .\nHarries,   Elizabeth   .\n  20\n.... 64,65\n 28\n.. 52, 155\n 170\n  35\n.. 36, 152\nHarris,   Michael 28,84,85, 166\nHarrison, Donna .   20\nHartley,   Gordon      26\nHartman, Fay Herbert   35\nHarvey,   Peter           28\nHarvey-Smith   _ 28\nHastings,   Dave    163,255\nHatfield,  John        88\nHawkey, Thora       130\nHawryschuk,  Benita 20\nHay,  David  George  28\nHayward, Herbert   28\nHazelwood, Gordon A.       20\nHeal, Louise   96,99\nHeaslip, Dave...    114\nHeather,  John  33\nHebenton, Sholto    163\nHelliwell, Dave     162\nHelliwell, John  64,65\nHemphill, Dave\n12, 14, 15,20,64,65\nHenderson, Paddy  123, 130\nHerbrik,   George   37\nHerd, James Alan 39\nHester, Tony ..._ 88\nHetenyi, Albert   26\nHewson, Pat  20\nHicks,  Milton    176\nHilborn, Kenneth  \u201e .20\nHill, Carol 155\nHill, Gary  175\nHill, Joseph   Royston  33\nHill,  Marlene  20, 153\nHillmer,  Robert I  20, 130\nHindmarck, Jean   158\nHipp, Thomas Michael  28\nHobbs, Dorothy     52, 154\nHodge,   Gerry   ...        106, 122, 150\nHodgson, Stanley      28\nHogan, Ruth . ..   20, 131\nHogarth, Jim  122\nHogg,   Elizabeth   Rose  20,159\nHohn, Mae  41\nHolden,   Douglas   33\nHolland,  Fred  Charles  28,175\nHolland, Jack      175\nHollands,   Keith 123\nHollinrake,   Harold        37\nHolm, Arnie 167\nHolman, Shan   .155\nHolmes, Don 174\nHolmes, Richard   37\nHolt,  Bob   52, 167\nHomer, Lawrence John 28\nHomola,  Bob  . .  78\nHonkawa, Takeo       28\nHood,  Jim   167\nHome,  Dorothy  \u201e 36, 158\nHorsey, Ted  170\nHorsman,  James  33, 167\nHorth, Bernard 20\nHorton, Dave  166\nHorton, Sheila 41, 157\nHossie, David Stuart        37\nHossie,  Mrs. Randina     37\nHoughland, Joan 33, 160\nHousez, Vern   162\nHoverman, W. H       172\n304 WRIGLEY\nPRINTING COMPANY LIMITED\nprinters of\nSTUDENT   HANDBOOK\nTOTEM\nRAVEN\nPIQUE\nLEDGER\nFORESTER\nalways to the fore with experience,  equipment\nand skilled staff to give you complete satisfaction\nin your printing requirements\n1112 Seymour St\nPhone MArine 9257\n305 Marshall Wells B.C. Ltd.\nWHOLESALE HARDWARE\nWishes  the  Graduating  Classes  of the\nUniversity of  British  Columbia\nsuccessful careers in their\nchosen spheres of\nendeavour\n549 Carrall Street, Vancouver, B. C.\nNOW ... Two stores\nto serve you better\nWillson Stationery Co. Ltd.\n830 W. Pender\n, 522 West Hastings\nVancouver's Largest Stationer and Office\nEquipment Dealer\nKrass Portrait Studio Ltd.\nWeddings\nGroups\nChildren\nPassports\nElectronic\nFLASH\nPHOTOS\nat\nHome\nChurch\nReceptions\nYour negatives will be kept in file for\nfuture reference.\n569 Granville Street PAcific-9840\nCongratulations\nto the Graduating\nClass of 1956\n^cSm\u2122. installations\n\u2022 INDUSTRIAL\nBy\nFL00RCRAFT LIMITED\nVANCOUVER'S  LEADERS  IN  FLOOR  COVERINGS\n1964 W. Broadway B Ay view 4628\nHoward, John L 20\nHoward, Ron    175\nHowie,  Doug    88,148\nHuberman, Morris  164\nHuberman, Sam        164\nHuckvale, Virginia ...  154\nHudson,  Buzz   76, 78\nHudson, Ralph Edward 33, 162\nHughes,  Ace   82, 85\nHughes,   Bill   _ 76, 166\nHughes, Blyth A 21\nHughes,   Clive 15,87, 166\nHughes, Ron.. 162\nHumber, Sandra 158\nHume,  Peter  Ernest 33\nHunt, John  175,255\nHunt,  Lorraine  21, 131\nHunt,   Ted    76,78\nHunter,  Al   175\nHunter, Bryant  21\nHunter,  Darrel     176\nHunter,   Robert    166\nHuntley, Chris    88\nHurst, J. N 33,78, 166\nHurst,   Ron   146, 173\nHusband,  Alice   36,244\nHusband,   Brian   166\nHusband,  John       21\nHusband,  Kimball   166\nHutchins,   Donald 39\nHutchison,   Bob  12, 14, 37, 74, 150\nHuva, John  28, 172\nHyndman,   Barbara   152, 178\nIddins,  Kenneth 40\nImayoshi, Jean  21\nIng,   Ray  169\nIrvine,   Bob    .161\nIrvine,  Joan   151, 160\nIrwin, Carol Alice 21,160\nIrwin, Grant  174,28\nJabour, Don ... ...150, 162\nJackson, A. W 29\nJames,  Marlene 158\nJames, Charlie       168\nJaniewick, Peter   40,262\nJarvis, Donald Graham 29, 172\nJ a sich, Anthony  37\nJawanda, B. S. 74, 76, 88\nJeannes, Trevor  174\nJefferson,  Peter  52,175\nJeffrey, William   Neil    29\nJeffery,   Mike           12, 64, 163\nJenhinson, Bill  167\nJephson, Ronald John  37\nJohannes,   Bob   140,177\nJohl,  Darshan       21\nJohnson, Alan Harold  29\nJohnson, Barbara  55,160\nJohnson, Joanne   99\nJohnson,   Mike   163\nJohnsson,   Eskil        29\nJohnston,  Anne       160\nJohnston,  Howard   130\nJohnston,   Ivan   .167\nJohnston, Jean  21\nJohnston,  Norma 15\nJohnston,  Robert  39, 176\nJones,  Don 168\nJones, Gretta  98,41\nJones, Harold Mervin _.. 29\nJones, Helen 155\nJones, Randle 123\nJow, Eleanor 39\nJoyce,  Murray     33, 167\nJuba, Emil  39\nJunas, Walter  29,169\nJuntly, Cave  88\nKamachi,  Yoshihiro    21\nKamimura, John  35\nKane, Ernest  21\nKaplan,   Robert   171\nKarjala,  Roy John  39\nKarlson,  Harry  15,40, 169\nKatarius, Bill  144\nKeele, Kenneth  29\nKeith, James Allan  29\nKelly,   Colleen....21, 76, 96, 98, 159\nKelsey, Bruce 78\nKemp, Beverly 21, 155\nKendall,   Mike    174\nKendall, Thomas  162\nKendrick,  Robert  29\nKennedy, Beverley  93\nKennedy,   Maureen   159,235\nKennedy,  Pat  158\nKenny, Brenton  37, 175\nKent, Stephanie  41, 154\nKent,  Stevie   269\nKer,  Marilyn  152\nKidd, Robert Stuart     21\nKidd,   Ruth   159\nKillam,   Dave    163\nKillick,   Kenneth   26\nKimpton, Vyvyan   36\nKincade, Ann  154\nKing,  Dave  177\nKing,  Harvey   173\nKingham,   Sheila 95, 145\nKinney, Pat  170\nKirk, Denis 167\nKirk,  Hugh   26, 161\nKirk,   Oris   37\nKirkland,   Marilyn    152\nKirkland, Robert  29, 151, 175\nKirkwood,  Dave  ... 165\nKirwin, Jack     .173\nKisska, Stephen 21\nKitos,  Ralph 131\nKitson,   Michael  ... 29\nKnight,  Irving 41,78\nKnight,   Rolf  .123\nKoch,   Peter   39\nKornder,  Lee  Donald   39\nKoskela, Erkki  29\nKouznetsov, Margaret 54\nKovacs, Audrey 26\nKowluk, Mary Beth 153\nKrajina,   Milena   21\nKrangle, Gerald  164\nKreufzigir,  Oscar  78\nKrewaz,  Joseph 35\nKroll,  Gustav 176\nKronquist,   Rodger. .41, 76, 78, 167\nKronstrom, Lawrence ....      26, 162\nKruytbosch,  Carlos        88, 168\nKueber,  Phil  76,84.85,166\nKuhn, Arthur 29\nKules, Charlie 78\nKunderman,   Eleanore   31\nKundert,  Rita   21\nKuyt,  Ernie   76, 87\nKyle, Jack \u201e 62\nKyle, Lynn  15, 159\nKyle,  Marilyn Audrey     21\nLacey, Dennis  33, 168\nLaird, Allan  162\n306 ... integrity\n. . . The continued endorsement of an organization within a community is largely a measure\nof its integrity.\nWe are proud of our 275 years in Canada\n. . . diligent in the light of tradition to preserve\nthe reputation others before us have earned for\nthe Company.\nINCORPORATED   2*\u00b0   MAY   1670.\n307 V'\n\u25a0Sift\nGOlDiWl\nSYRUP\nActive people of all ages need the\nsustaining, satisfying food value of\nRoger's Golden Syrup. It replenishes muscular energy in a matter\nof minutes. It is delicious tasting,\nwholesome and pure.\nm\npss\n\u2022WOUVER.B.C\njjPjjCTiWo M CAMAOB^\nTHE B.C.SUGAR REFINING CD. LTD.\nPrinting\nfor every purpose\nWE\nAIM\nTO\nPLEASE\nYOU\nAnderson Printing Co., Ltd.\nCEdar 3111\n2100 WEST 12th AVENUE\nLam,   Diana    21, 158\nLamond, Eleanor 146\nLamont,  lan   94\nLamont, Givendy  94\nLander, Barbara Ann   160\nLandis, George 130\nLarson,   Marjorie   21\nLarsen, Raymond  29\nLarsen,   Rod   167\nLatimer, John  40\nLauba, Andu  29\nLauener, John  163\nLauener,   Madeleine   \u2014 154\nLauner, Roland 39\nLaurie,  Gordon   74,94\nLauriente, Thomas  29\nLavallee, Bernard  33\nLavis, Charles Edward  33\nLaws, Donna  21, 158\nLazarotto, Ernie  163\nLazoski, Denny  78\nLeach, Lome  220\nLeah, Audrey  41\nLechuck, George  21\nLeckie,  Merrill  173\nLecovin, Gerry 171\nLee, Arthur  21\nLee, Norman  21\nLee.   Robert  33, 177\nLeedham, Lelia  21\nLeeson, Margaret 97\nLedgerwood, Ernie  177\nLeith, Barbara  123, 158\nLegace, Yvonne  21,159\nLegge, Geraldine  33, 158,235\nLegg, John  163\nLegg, Ted  163\nLennox, Shirley  21\nLeong,   Gwendolyn   40, 262\nLePage,  Norman  29\nLesik, Michael Donald  21\nLe Vae, Austin John  40\nLevine, Sefton Lewi 37, 52\nLevirs, Mary Jean  75, 94\nLevy, Joseph  37\nLevy,  Lyall   171\nLew, Chuck  37, 167\nLewall, Dave  163\nLiddle, Keith  52, 162\nLiebelt,  Al   174\nLightbody,  Milford  33\nLightbody,   Wally   21, 106\nLind,  Earl   21,114\nLind, Stanley _ 33\nLindsay, Barry 166\nLittle, Edward Brian  40,262\nLochhead, lan  170\nLockhart, Glen  162\nLodge,  Terrance   Owen 33, 236\nLoewen,   John    29\nLoney,  Thomas  William.... 21, 161\nLoney,  Richard  Cooper. 21, 167\nLong, Marjorie  31\nLongstaffe, Ron\n12.13,14,59,150,175\nLoomer, Herby 171\nLoree,  Alixe  155\nLouie, Kenneth  21\nLou-Poy,  Ron   163\nLowen, John  89\nLuckett, Ed  87\nLumchoy, Gino  40\nLumsden, Anne  154\nLunes, Ken  173\nLyall, William Ronald  29\nLyman,  Eva  Georgia   21\nLynes, Kenneth  33\nLynn,  Gerald  _ 165\nLys, Ross  174\nLythgoe,  Len   130\nLytle, Clive ..- 123\nMcAllister, William  33,118\nMcAllister, lan  166\nMcAllister,  Mike   170\nMcAlpine, Bruce 163\nMcAlpine, Ted  33, 163\nMacAulay, James 38, 168\nMcBurney, Jerry  167\nMcCallan. Skip  169\nMcCallum,   Don 12, 13, 14, 175\nMcCallum, Douglas  40\nMcCallum,  Elizabeth 42, 158\nMcCarthy, John  162\nMcCarthy, Skip  76\nMcCartney, Maureen 155\nMcCullagh, Mrs. Joan  31\nMcCullock, Hugh 236\nMcCurdy, Norma 97\nMcCurrach,  Sandy   163\nMcDonald, Daniel  33, 130\nMacDonald, Dave 167\nMacDonald,   Donald 29,38,175\nMcDonald, Douglas  84\nMacDonald, Jim 175\nMcDonald,   Kenneth   40,262\nMcDonald, Philip Rae 21\nMacDonald,  Sheila   52, 160\nMcDonald, Sherrill  158\nMacDonald, Ted 167\nMcDougall, Graeme  175\nMacFarlan, Bud  78\nMcFarlan,   Jim    123\nMacFarlane,   Reginald   42\nMcFarlane, Ruth Anne 36\nMcFeeley,  Pat   87\nMcGavin, Gerry _ 78\nMcGhee, John James   39\nMcGibbon, Joan  157\nMacGillivray, Rod  177\nMcGrath, Dave 175\nMcGraw, John James 29\nMcGraw, Robert 162\nMcGregor, M 88\nMcGregor, John 39\nMcGuirk, Erma  21\nMacllwaine,  Donna  97\nMacllwaine, Linda  97, 98\nMacintosh, Dick  76\nMaclvor,  Joan 15,36, 118,244\nMcKay, John Stuart. 29,54, 166\nMcKay, Marilyn  153\nMcKay, Monte  29, 150\nMcKay, W.  21\nMcKee, John Hugh 29\nMcKellar, James  42\nMcKelvey, Shirley  94,99\nMcKelvie, Royden  42\nMcKenzie, Barbara  15,256\nMacKenzie,   Bridget   96, 98\nMcKenzie, Carolyn 31\nMacKenzie, George A 22\nMacKenzie,  Graham....38, 163, 178\nMacKenzie, lan M 21\nMackenzie, Lee 54\nMcKenzie, Murray  15, 166\nMacKenzie, Norm 177\nMacKenzie, Pete  177\nMacKenzie, Richard 26\nMcKerlick, Wflliam 162\n308 McKimm,  Terry   163\nMacKinnon, Donald  35\nMacKinnon, Doug 167\nMcKinnon, Patricia  31\nMcKitrick, Muzz  177\nMacLaren, Angus 33\nMcLean, Bob 12, 14, 33, 162\nMacLean, Bruce  39\nMcLean, Edward Harry 39\nMcLean, Helen\n12, 13,14,33,150, 160\nMcLean, John Taylor 33\nMcLean, Kenneth  22\nMcLean, Mary  152\nMcLean, Walter 88\nMacLennan, Douglas  26\nMacLennan, John  162\nMcLeod, Flora  - 145\nMcLeod, lain 22\nMacLeod,   John 29,76,166,175\nMacLeod,  Ken  163\nMacLeod, Robert 27\nMcMillan, David  162\nMcNab, Nancy Isabel  22, 154\nMcNaught, Mary Ellen  160\nMcNeill,  Marjorie  140\nMcNeill, Maureen  158\nMcNish, Fay 146\nMcNulty,  Don   175\nMacPherson, Alastair  29\nMcOueen, Bob  167\nMcQueen, Shirley Anne  22\nMacQuillan, Anthony  26\nMcRae, George  122\nMacSorley,  Clare   166\nMacTaggart, Al  175\nMcVeigh, Harold  33\nMacWilliam, Donald  38\nMaddex, Laverne  155\nMader, Stan  163\nMadhosingh, Chandra  21\nMadill, Peter 74, 166\nMadill, Stewart 76, 166\nMagar, Maureen  145, 153\nMah, Edward John  29\nMahon, Ken 165\nMair,   Robert  162, 175\nMair, Rafe 170\nMair, Kenneth 37\nMalcolm,  Sharon  160\nMalkin, Toby 33, 170\nMalone, James Charles 33, 174\nMalone, Ted  174\nManhin, Bert 88\nMann, Jim    175\nMann, John   , 78, 266\nManning, Gerrard Eric  33\nManning, Mike   170\nManson, Dave 64,65, 162\nManson, Dorothy  130\nMarchak,  Bill  33, 122\nMarkle, Sharon  152\nMar, John  .v 29\nMarr,  Allan    29\nMarrion,  Esther  21,118\nMarshall,   Lilian   31\nMartin, Alexander  33, 173\nMartin, Gerald James 21\nMartin, John Matthew 39\nMartin, Lois 159\nMartin,  Norris  175\nMason,  Dave  169\nMason, Derek  166\nMason, Granville  ,  29\nMatheson, Betty   155,36\nMatheson, Marion  97\nMathews, Stewart   167\nMattewson, Dall  29\nMatthews, Michael 54\nMatzen, Irene  36\nMaule. Chris  221\nMawhinney, Donna 31\nMaxwell, Jack  78\nMaynard, John  33, 106,236\nMayuk, Don 167\nMeagher, Mike  15\nMeeker, Henry  174\nMeekison, Peter  177\nMeilicke, Julie  65, 154\nMeldrum, Murray 29\nMelenka, Roy Edward  29\nMelvin, Al  161\nMendum, Melville 22\nMensen, Esther  22\nMerriam,  Bob  122\nMerrill, Tom  94\nMiddleton, Gil 15, 174,255\nMiddleton, Keith  33, 151, 174\nMiddleton, Ray 52\nMiller,  Dave  163\nMiller,  Harry  164\nMiller, Ruth 31\nMiller,  Sandra   153\nMills, Annette  22\nMills, Bob  114\nMills, Sandy  130\nMineite, June  42, 97, 99\nMirko,  Ivan George  27\nMiroslaw, Teddy  22\nMisner, Moira 22\nMitchell, Kathleen  154\nMitchell, John  166\nMitchell. P. J 162\nMiyagishima, Robert   22\nModrell,  Katherine   89\nMolloy, Raymond  29\nMolson, John 178\nMontaine, Lome  162\nMontgomery,  Roger  .....15,33\nMontgomery, William  22\nMoodia, Allan Gordon  22\nMooney,   Francis   29\nMooney,  Malcolm  22\nMoor, James Gordon  22\nMoore, Sheila  97, 98\nMorfitt, George   95, 163\nMorford, Bob  42,74,76, 150\nMorford, Dave  78\nMorley, Dave 78\nMorgan,  Bob   174\nMorgan, Donn Leach  29\nMorgan, Shirley Ruth 22,159\nMorgan, Vic  161\nMorris, Gerald   164\nMorris, Glenda  96, 99\nMorris,  Mickey     174\nMorrison, Bill  15,40,174\nMorrison, Christine    131\nMorrison, George 39\nMorrison, Nancy 159\nMorrow,  Bruce  236,33,167\nMoseley, Graham  170\nMorrow, Boswell  33\nMorrow, Maxine Freda   22\nMortimer, Ed 167\nMossop,  Roger Bowen   22\nMotowylo, Joan   94\nMounce, Trudy  96\nMuir, Douglas 78\n309\nYour Sign of\nGUARANTEED\nPROTECTION\nin Paint Finishes\nGENERAL PAINT CORPORATION\nOF     CANADA     LIMITED\n950 Raymur Avenue, Vancouver\nFor industrial finishes and specialty coatings to\nmeet your specific needs call on GENERAL\nPAINTS Technical Service.\nTelephone TAtlow 5311\nfor complete  information\nMakers of Monamel and Monaseal\nto reach your goal!\n*I opens your savings account-TODAY\n^TORONTO-DOMINION BANK\nTHE       BEST       IN       BANKING      SERVICE ORIENTAL GIFT SHOP\n* Chinoware * Brassware * Cloisonne\n* Baskets * Rosewood Carvings   * Wickerware\n* Art Jewellery * Jade * Mother of Peorl\nFOO HUNG COMPANY, LTD.\n129-131 East Pender Street PAcific 6635\nVancouver,  B. C.\nMail   Orders  Promptly  Filled\n|HROUGH the past years the\nname of FAMOUS PLAYERS Canadian Corporation Limited has been your assurance\nof the best in motion picture entertainment.\nWith Cinemascope, Vista-Vision and Stereophonic sound, Famous Players will continue\nto bring you the ultimate in new exciting\nscreen stories.\nSEELEY & CO\nLIMITED\n847 W. Pender, Vancouver, B. C.\nSupplying an embracive insurance market to agents\nand brokers who service the requirements of B. C. citizens\nFOR     -    -\nTELEVISION\nRADIO - PHONOGRAPHS\nRECORDS\nAND ALL    -    -\nELECTRIC APPLIANCES\nTHOMSON & PAGE LTD.\n2914 Granville Street\nCHerry Sl44\nand\nPARK ROYAL\nWest 2302\nMuir,  Marion   159\nMukai, Astor   118\nMulder, Terence Erik  29\nMulla, Elizabeth   40, 262\nMulligan, Ken  161\nMundle,  Gordon   42, 161\nMunro, Gordon Ross   22\nMuraro, Theodore   29\nMurdoch, Jack    169\nMurphy, Tom   162\nMurray,  Donald   166\nMurray, Jean   33\nMurray, L. Margot  22\nMurray, Rick   118\nMurray-Keith,  Marnie  99\nMursky,  Gregory  22\nMuskuyn, Ted  174\nMyers,  Margaret  36\nMynck,  Don   52\nMyron,  Chris   153\nNachtigal,  Arthur 40\nNagler, George  171\nNeil, Clive 78\nNelson, Arnold    166\nNelson, June  22, 154\nNelson,   Maxine   152\nNelson,  Rodger   39\nNelson, Ronald  Keith  27, 167\nNestman, Jerry  39, 165\nNew, Chris   88\nNeufelolt. Vic  122\nNewitt.   Eve   55\nNewton, Kenneth   29\nNey,   Phil    87.130\nNgaire, Co   87\nNichol,  Dennis  22\nNicholls, Derek  22\nNicholls,  Richard  33\nNicholls, Terence  38, 150\nNicholson, Harry  87\nNickel. Jake   130\nNielson,  Shirley  152\nNightingale, Peter    15\nNimi, Peter   41\nNishiiaki,   Roy   30, 172\nNixon, Rodney Thomas   39\nNoble,   Kenneth....22, 163, 178, 179\nNolan, Donald Andrew 41,262\nNorcross,  Elizabeth  22\nNordman, Vol  163\nNorman, Jean  22\nNorthfield, John 170\nNovak, Elaine   22\nNuttal,   Dave   138\nNwanze, Peter 168\nNylander, June 22\nOberhofer.  Matthew   22, 161\nO'Brien,  Barney  161\nO'Brien, Terrence  22, 123, 170\nO'Brien,  William   22\nO'Connel, Kevin   78\nO'Flanagan,  Gerald   22,78\nOkanewich,  Roy   78\nOlah, Andrew  236\nOliver, Edward  34\nOliver, James  162\nOlsen, William  30\nOntkean, George 35\nOrnstein.   Neil   22, 130, 164\nOrmrod, Douglas  26\nOrtengren,  Buzz   96\nOrtengren,  Bernice    160\nOrton, Joan   36,75,77,98\nOrtynsky, Orest   41\nO'Shaughnessy, Robert   30\nOstensoe, Leif  22\nO'Sullivan, Peter Fred  34\nOwaga, Carl   84, 85\nOxspring, Harvey Kane  22\nPullen, Sarah  123\nPalleson,  Edward   22\nPalleson,  Patricia  22\nPalmer, Allan Herbert 34\nPalmer, John   30, 220\nPalmer,  Rodney  22\nPantages, Tony  78\nPappas,   George   34, 165\nParker, Donald  22\nParker,  lan   166\nParkinson, Denzil   30\nPalmer, Garry  174\nParker, John  41\nParkinson, W. D 172\nParmley, Lew  88\nParmley, Jean  155\nPasnak, Jo   235\nPatey, Jean   23\nPatterson, Al     170\nPatterson, Bruce  163\nPaulson, Marie  23\nPaulson,  Neen   153\nPavloff,  Vladimir  30\nPayzant,   Keith   41\nPeacock, Robert   34\nPearce,   Donald     27\nPearce, William  39\nPearse, Peter 35\nPearson, George 118\nPearson, Ronald  34\nPearson, Thomas 23\nPearson, Wallace  35\nPeel, Sandy  169\nPeers, Michael 23\nPeggemiller, Marion 55\nPenner, Terry  310\nPenny, Harry Lee  23\nPentland, Gertrude  23\nPentland, Louisa  _. 42\nPerdue, Aileen    157\nPeretz, Dwight Irving  39,  175\nPerlstrom,  Roy  23, 79\nPerry, Kenneth James  30\nPersad, Dip   76\nPeters, John 130\nPeters, Ross  163\nPeters, Terry   174\nPeterson, Denise   23, 158\nPeterson, Jerrold  34, 166\nPeterson, Karen 42\nPeto, Howard 162\nPetri,  Helga  89\nPeyman,  Bruce  23\nPhilps, Ralph     86\nPhilippson, Gerald   39\nPhillips,   George    41\nPipes,  Marilyn      23, 154\nPisapio, Albert Henry  34\nPitt, Reginald Stuart   26\nPollard, Daveen   23\nPollack.  Jim   76\nPollesen,  Paddy  159\n3\/0 V\"9f\"\"\nTHIS WAS \"SERVICE\" IN 1913\nIn 1896, four years after Charles Woodward opened his store in Vancouver, he added delivery as a service\nto his customers.\nAround the early part of the century the ultimate in delivery service was the rig and \"spanking pair\"\ndepicted above.\nAs  British  Columbia  progressed  so did Woodward's, gaining a reputation for fair dealing and quality\nmerchandise and incorporating many modern services that contributed to customer satisfaction.\nIn 1955 Woodward's Leads\nthe way in SERVICE\nThe gleaming fleet of trucks bearing the Woodward name\ntoday is a symbol of the progress made in service by a company\nwhich from its very beginning placed SERVICE high on its list of\nachievements.\nVANCOUVER PARK ROYAL VICTORIA\nNEW WESTMINSTER      PORT ALBERNI EDMONTON\n311 BA. 4614\nNiohts-   \/  KE- 4,44\"Y\nNights.  | GL 212fi L\nMurphy Excavating\nCO. LTD.\nG. MURPHY\nJ. HOWE\n1466 W. SIXTH AVE.\nVANCOUVER 9, B. C.\nTHE LARGEST AND BEST EQUIPPED\nELECTRICAL REPAIR SHOP IN\nWESTERN CANADA\nDistributors  of fomous  moke  electric  motors,  oir cylinders,\nreduction   units,   motor   reducers,   speed   controls,   mixers,\ntransformers, valves, controls and allied products.\nCROSSMAN\nMACHINERY COMPANY LIMITED\n806 Beach Ave., Vancouver 1, B.C. PAcific 5461\nA Car Priced ...\nTo Fit...\nEvery Budget\nat\nBOWELL McLEAN\nON\nBURRARD\nON\nBROADWAY\nWestern Canada's Largest\nMass Merchandisers\nof New Used Automobiles\nPollock,   James    166\nPomeroy, Anne  23\nPomlslow, Dave 130\nPoole, Hope Mavis  23\nPoole,  Reginald  38\nPoison, Beverly  23, 158\nPopa, Cornel _ 35\nPorte, Robert  164\nPotter, Jean  164\nPovah, Mary Margaret  36\nPowell, Eric Douglas  23\nPresloskl, Peter  39\nPrentice, Elizabeth  23\nPrentice, Marietta  64,65, 155\nPreston, John Salt  30.  174\nPreus,  Esmond   35\nPrevarski, Michael  30\nPrice, George 174\nPrieger, John Stephen  23\nPrince, George  30\nPritchard, James  30\nPritchard,  Rinford   39\nPromislow, Dave  171\nPryce. Colin  88\nPtucha, John Jacob 34\nPuhach. Mike  165\nPureed, Barry 23\nPurdy,  Bob  130\nPurvis, Sally 256\nQuadri,   Sammy    88\nQuan, Louise 41\nOuenvllle.   Noel    39\nQuinn, Bob  174\npuinn, Pat _ 64,65\nRaclch, John  168\nRadcliffe. F. 23\nRadford,  Brian Taylor  26\nRae, Catharine Anne  23\nRae, Doug \u201e 162\nRae, Sue   75,87,159,36\nRamsbotham, Alexandra  23\nRanagan, Roma  157\nRanaghan, Mary 41\nRand, Barry 140\nRandall, Joan  256\nRapanos, George  38\nRay, Wenda  157\nReader, Phil  78\nRedman, Doug  162\nRedekop, Ervin  23\nReeves, Linda  31\nReiner, Dick 161\nReimer, Ernest _ 23\nRichards,  John    162\nRichardson, Diane  256\nRichardson,  Nancy   \u201423\nRichmond, Sally  154\nRichmond, Virginia 155\nRickson, Douglas 35\nRidington, John\n34,64.106,136,150\nRiley,  Peter Julian   _30\nRiopel, Dick \u201e 106,34\nRisk, Jim _ 142\nRitchie, Ann Louise  158\nRitchie. William  34, 170\nRoberts, Aubrey 50\nRoberts, D 172\nRobertson, Beth  23\nRobertson, Bunty  155\nRobertson, Donald  23\nRobertson, Gordon  173\nRobertson, Ivan 23\nRobertson, John  _ 142\nRobertson, Sally .... 23,64, 65, 118\nRobinson, Campbell  106,114\nRobinson, David Neil  23\nRobinson, Hal _I74\nRoblin, Robert  30,161,225\nRobson,  Marilyn  23,  118\nRobson,  William   30\nRodd,  Dennis  30\nRogstad,  Vernon   39\nRolfe, Clifford  34\nRolfe. Havelock  106\nRoman, Michael  90\nRomanchuk, Peter Roy  34\nRoots,   Fred    42,266\nRose,  Pamela  23, 157\nRosenbaum,  Florence   36\nRoss, Bob 173\nRoss, Dorothea  23\nRoss, John   39\nRoss, Lynne  47\nRoss. Nancy  64.65,98\nRoss. Peter 95\nRoss, Rae 162\nRoss. Sandy 142. 162\nRoss, Sheila Anne 23\nRotenberg, Larry  130\nRovers, Jerry 167\nRowlandson,  Gerald   23\nRubens, Lucille  130\nRuddick, Alice  23, 146\nRunge.   Phyllis   23\nRunnalls, Donna  23,130\nRunnalls, Joyce  15, 42\nRussell, Eric  26\nRussell, Gordon John  30, 100\nRussell, Ken 163\nRussell, Pat 138,  140\nRutherford, Terence 39\nRyan, Larry Telford  23\nRyckman, Ernie  167\nRyll, Arthur 30\nSabiston, Vivian Ann  36\nSager,  Gerald   176\nSalter,  Nancy-Jean  23, 159\nSamis, Bob 78, 175\nSandilands, Keith  23\nSands,  Sheila    94\nSandys-Wunsch, John  24, 130\nSanford,  Keith  174\nSankey,    Maureen 12,15,64,150\nSapustein, Manuel  171\nSaunders, Alex  168\nSaunders,  Barbara  96\nSaunders, Raymond  30\nSavage, John _ 61\nSavarie, Louis  176\nSavory, Gerald  Newton 24, 165\nSawatsky, Ronald  Kurt  30\nScantland, Jim  169\nSearrow,   Hart  174\nSchaffer, E. _ 24\nSchaffer, Mary   155\nSchloss, Morton _ 171\nSchofer, Roy Carl  39\nSchrack, Fred  64,65\nSchram, Dick 165\nSchultz, Ronald  34, 167\nSchultz, Alan   166\nSchumacher, S. S 34\nSchwenk,   Barbara   155, 140\nScott, Barbara  146\nScott, John   24\n312 Scott, Robin   15, 150, 163\nScott, Sandra  \u201e 93\nScratchley, Edward   30\nScrimageour, Gray  24\nScadding, Sharon  _ 54\nSealy, Frank \u2014 74,87\nSeed, Nancy 158\nSeeds, Robert Wilson  35\nSegall, Harvey   164\nSelmens, Alf  130\nSemorad, Francis  38\nSeraphim, Ada Joyce  24\nSeto, Wah Kuey  41\nSetter,  Lorna \u201e 159\nSeymour, George 34\nShafonsky, Archie  122\nShallard, Meryn  155\nSherman, Anthony   24\nSharp, Mary Jo  158\nSharp, Peter  50, 162\nSharp, Thelma  52, 75, 159\nSharpe,  Elaine  41\nShatzko,  Paul   41\nShaw, Duncan  38, 62\nShaw, John Gordon 26\nShaw, Tom  166\nShearing, Rod  166\nShepherd, Barry   52\nShepherd, Jean 98\nSherratt, Jim  174\nSherrin, Bob  163\nSherrin, Daryl  174\nSherwood, William   30\nShields, John   165\nShields, Peter .78, 175\nShippobotham, John    34, 162\nShippobotham, Patricia ....53,  158\nShkuratoff, Alex  24\nShore, Don  78\nSiemens, Alfred  24\nSiew. Chick  74, 76. 78\nSigal, Cecil  164\nSigalet, John Donald  35\nSimmons, Pat   93\nSimon, Alois  41\nSimonetta, Luigi 39\nSimpkins, Mike  162\nSimpson,  Gerry   122\nSinclair, Bob  ..34,   175\nSinclair,  Gary 76, 78,  266\nSlrlin, Irving Albert 24, 171\nSferdal,   Albert    \u201e 26\nSkilding, Jim   170\nSkelton, Anne  24, 157, 123\nSky, Milton  24.  172\nSleath,  George   39\nSloan, Davida  154\nSluggett, Peggy  36\nSobiski, Bob  169\nSomerville, Diane   99, 269\nSomerville,   Ronald    24\nSortwell,  Edwin    24\nSortwell,  Ted   174\nSoukoreff, William  24\nSoule, Marshall 38\nSouther, Dorothy  36\nSmeele, Frank  88\nSmith, Brian Ray  .24\nSmith, Christie  \u201e 162\nSmith, Dave 52\nSmith, Dick   15\nSmith,  Glen  84,  85\nSmith, Howard  ..._ 140\nSmith, Jim 114\nSmith, Kenneth  30\nSmith,  Kenneth  Ronald  . 30\nSmith,  Lee 97\nSmith, Margaret 93\nSmith, Marion  31, 256\nSmith,  Marilyn  138\nSmith, Mel   122. 34\nSmith, Norma .  24\nSmith, Pat ....98, 159\nSmith, Robert Roger  24\nSmith, Roderick  24\nSmith, Sheila Irene _ 36, 244\nSmillle, Howie _ 163\nSmitheringale, Bill  174\nSmyth, Bob   161\nSmythe, David  30\nSmyth, Neil  131\nSneath, D'arcy 155\nSnowden, Beverly  47\nSnowsell, Ann   96\nSnyder, Maureen  36\nSpalding, David   24\nSpare, Gordon  34,  100,  166\nSpark, Lynn  153\nSpeer, Earl Wesley  30\nSpeira, Margaret 31\nSpenee, Donn  42, 76, 78, 165\nSpencer, John  38\nSpencer, Bruce  169\nSpivakaw, Bob  41\nSpindler, George Bray  ....30\nSpinney, Ralph      30\nSplro,   Grant  161\nSpouse, Tom  142\nSpring,   Bob   177\nStack, Ernest 41\nStafford, Barbara  75, 158.\nStaines,  Gordon 24\nStalker, Rosemary JI\nStandfield, Derek  38\nStaniland, John    24\nStanton, Rodger Cyril ..,._39,  174\nSingh, Sucha   174\nSteele, Ann , 15, 256\nStefani,  Ed   24\nStein, Albert  164\nSteiner,  Bob    142\nSteiner, George  \u201e 24\nStephens, Sharon  \u201eI54\nSterne, Ronald Alfred   , 30\nStevens, Bob 65, 173\nStevens, John  , 173\nStevens,  Melvin  24\nStevenson, Dorothy \u201e3I, 158\nStewart,   Earl   _  26\nStewart, Dave  \u201e_ 123\nStewart, Irwin  39\nStewart, lan  78,  162\nStewart, Janet  T. 24\nStewart, Ron  76. 78,  162,   163\nStewart,   Neil   168\nStewart, Gerald Noel  39\nStickland,   Mike   174\nStockley,  David   41\nStolar, Gerald   24\nStonier,   Peter   39\nStowe, Dave  \u201e 162\nStrang, lan _ .161\nStrasdine, George  _..., 24\nStreet, Richard  42\nStreet, Dick  92\nDAIRYLAND\ne \u2022 e\nU.B.C. HONOR GRADUATE\n\u2022 Dairyland Milk Foods are rated tops with both faculty\nand students.\n\u2022 Dairyland's laboratory is staffed with UBC-trained bacteriologists.\n\u2022 Dairyland has always enjoyed the close co-operation of\nthe Department of Agriculture and Science.\nIn its long association with the University of British\nColumbia, Dairyland has passed the\ntest of time with honours.\nA  DIVISION  OF THE  FRASER VALLEY\nMILK    PRODUCERS'    ASSOCIATION\n3\/3 Stuart, Sonia 41\nSugimoto, Minoru  24\nSummerfield,  Ruth  152\nSundquist,  Sven 162\nSunshine,  Stan   171\nSutherland, Ann     150\nSutherland,  John   30\nSutherland,   Marie    26,   159\nSultan,  Ralph  30,   150,   163\nSwanky,  Oscar  173\nSweeney, Jean     24\nSweistra, John  174\nSweistra, Emke  26\nSwinarton, Sheila  24, 151, 155\nSydneysmith, Sam  175\nSymons, Chrystal 24, 75, 98\nTablank,   Marcel    123\nTalbot,  Richard    30\nTalbot, Susan  36\nTallon,  Bernice  167\nTamagi, Tamotsu 30\nTanaka, Edward 30\nTang, Eulung  _ 24\nTanner,  Terry    170\nTarling,   Frank   78,   162\nTaylor, Alex 173\nTaylor, Jean Ann   34\nTaylor,  Jim   88,   169\nTaylor,  Marion  24\nTaylor,   Neil   ..... .161\nTaylor, Nick _ 167\nTaylor, William  30\nTenlett,  Gary 173\nTermuende,  Robert  24\nThacker, James  30\nThackray, Allan. .12,  14,  106,  163\nThodeson, John    34, 173\nThom, Gordon  34,  161\nThomas, Bill  166\nThomas, Brian 142\nThomas, Dave      168\nThomas,   Howie    161\nThomas, John  .34\nThompson, Betty Anne\n64,  150,  159\nThompson,   Joan     159\nThompson, Maureen      99\nThompson, Noreen     ...    ..60,   160\nThordarson, Theodore  39,  168\nThornley, Allan  24\nThorpe,  Fred  34,   174\nThrower,  Joyce    ...118\nTkackuk,  Russ        142\nTodd,  lan ._ 76, 87\nTomlinson,  Fred  174\nTomlinson, John   ... 167\nTompkins,   Michael       162\nCompliments of\nMARTY'S ltd\nin the University District\n4409 West 10th Ave.\nVancouver, B. C.\nAlWAYSASKFOl\n400\nToovey, John William  35\nToppings, Earle 24\nTowers,   Ryan 165\nToynbee, Tom 74, 76, 84, 85.  166\nTreasurer,  Bernie 166\nTremaine, Sylvia 64, 65,   146,   155\nTrevor,  Neville  24\nTrevor-Smith, Ted    ...87,  138.  175\nTruswell.  Bill   161\nTucker, Thomas  42\nTuckey, Ralph ..  26\nTufts, Francis    30,  170\nTulk, Bob  15\nTurnbull,  Ken   15\nTurnbull,  Norah   160\nTurnbull, Sheila      87.  160\nTurner, John  170\nTurner,  Nigel   114\nTurpin, Hartley  40\nTurvey,  Elizabeth   ...154\nTuura, Harvey Oscar 24\nTwa, Maureen  36\nTynen,  Peter  78\nUnwin, Ernie 30, 163\nUnwin, Wilma  130\nValde, Glenn Edwin  30\nValentine, Ann 160\nValentine, Peter  167\nVan Ackeron, Joan 77, 94, 152\nVan Allen, Louise  65,  160\nVan Campen, Arnold 24\nVan  Eeden, Jacques 25\nVandervliet,   Edward    38\nVan Jomme,  Hector      221\nVan Sacker, Ken  256\nVan  Sickle,  Doris  159.   146\nVan Tets, Gerry  25, 92\nVaughan, Mrs. Diane  40\nVaughan, Frank 40\nVaughan, Lome David 34, 166\nVaughan-Thomas, Harold  130\nVea, Absjorg Sylvia 25\nVenables, Barbara 159\nVerchese, Bill  166\nViel, Barbara  159\nVince,  Myrna   159\nVon Althen,  Friedrick      35\nWagner, Willard .._   174\nWalker, Marilyn  62\nWalker, Beverley 159\nWallace, Clarke  25\nWallace, Fraser 166\nWallace, Leslie 35\nWallace,   Marion  25\nWalpole, Joy 25\nWalsh, John  30\nWalters. Harold      42\nWarmsley,   Gordon   94\nWard,  Bob  163\nWard, John   25\nWark,  Robert John     31\nWarren, Charlotte    12. 76, 75, 98\nWarren, Mike  162\nWarren,  Pat      118\nWesson, Brian  163\nWasson, Garth Curtis          25\nWasylik, Joe     173\nWatkins,  Ronald  26,   166\nWatson, Bill  ....175\nWatson, John   31\nWatson, Paul    162\nWatt, John Gordon  40\nWatt,  Kenneth Gordon _. 38\nWatt,  Robert         25\nWatts, Bob       177\nWatts, Donald George  31\nWatts, Marg 93\nWebb,  Dennis   161\nWebster, John  15\nWebster, Margaret  157\nWeidrick, Phyllis 244\nWeinberg, Bob 167\nWeiss, Milton  26\nWelsford, Duthie  \u201e 175\nWensink, Phyllis _ 36\nWerner, Joseph  31\nWensley, James  27\nWest, Laurie 74, 76, 84, 85\nWesterlund, Bruno 34, 163\nWeston, Bill  169\nWhist, Jarl  38\nWhite, Dorothy 52\nWhite, Harry  163\nWhite, lan  166\nWhite, Paul Sanson  ....31,  169\nWhite,  Robert  25\nWhite, Terry  123\nWhiteoak, Dorothy 159\nWhiteside, Jean  46,  140,  148\nWhitmore, Bruce  31\nWhittle. Berta 25, 75, 76. 98,  157\nWhittle, Donald  31\nWhittle,  Doug   174\nWhorton, Lee 168\nWickson,  Malcolm   38,   175\nWiebe, Walter  26\nWeebe,  Margaret  150\nWiedrick,  Phyllis   36\nWigen, Vernon  Rae  34\nWilcox,  Robert  31. 225\nWild, Alexander   31\nWilde, Ed 166\nWilks. Patti  15. 158\nWilliams, Brian  53,  166,  175\nWilliams, Bruce 34\nWilliams, Daphne 155\nWilliams, John  123,  166\nWilliams,  Maurice   40\nWilliams, Michael  34.  165\nWilliams, Thomas  26,   130\nWilloughby, Ann  31\nWilloughby, John  40\nWilson, Bob  84, 85, 173\nWilson, Jean  25\nWilson, Ron 170\nWilson, Sylvia  25,  146,  155\nWilson, Tom 15\nWinch, Joyce  96\nWinestock,  Alvin   171\nWinkelaar, John 31\nWinkelaar,   Mrs.  Iris 31\nWise,  Leonard   164\nWohlleben, Bernie   64. 65\nWolfe, Isy 34, 130\nWong, John  40\nWong, Roderick ....  25\nWong,   Shirley   .... _ 34\nWoo, Byng Sing     34\nWood, Ann  98\nWood, Dave      87\nWood, John ...  38\nWood, Patrick  31\nWoodsworth, Janice 41,   159, 262\nWooliams, Jane    36, 244\nWoollett, George 162\nWoolrich, Mary Lou  25, 159\nWoolverton, R. ..172\n374 Wooster, Tony  170\nWright. Bill _ 174\nWright, Janie  52\nWright, Norman Ross 25\nWright, Sharon  118\nWright, Stuart  25\nWyman, William Robert 34\nWyne, Mel 171\nYardley. Keith  168\nYates, Keith  25\nYates, Eleanor 98\nYee, Harry Thomas  31\nYerxa,   Don   Winslow   34\nYip, Hoy Wing 31\nYoung, Andrew  166\nYoung, Clifford _ 27\nYoung, Lois 42\nYoung, Michael  .....25,  173\nYoung, Robert 168\nYoung, Robert Neill  40\nYsbister, Brian  118\nYsbister, Gordon  118\nYuill, Harry 138\nZacharias, Raymond  25\nZelikovski, Abe  225\nZenner, Gerherd  31\nZloklikovits, Herman  84, 85\nZipursky, Irvin  25,  164\n315 .-a'mmm,\n\u25a0 -       \"'   ft^reuvtj]\nM-:\nt5||I\",?,,?'i\"\nf\n\u25a0 \u25a0** -...\nn\"H*\n\u2022; -\ni$^ *\nCLELAND-KENT   WESTERN,  LIMITED\nARTISTS       PHOTOGRAPHERS        PHOTOENGRAVERS\nE L E C T R 0 T Y P E R S      S T E R E 0 T Y P E R S\nVANCOUVER,   CANADA Advertisers Index\nAdvertising Director\u2014Henning Brasso\nPage\nO. B. Allan Ltd. 290\nAlumni Association .. 294\nAnderson Printing Co.   308\nAnglo-Canadian Shipping Co. Ltd. 292\nB. A. Oil Co. Ltd. 304\nB. C. Electric Co. Ltd. 287\nB.C. Sugar Refinery 308\nBamboo Terrace . 301\nBank of Montreal 293\nBaynes Manning ... 290\nBell-Mitchell Agencies 290\nBest Mimeograph Co.  304\nHenry Birks & Sons 286\nB. Boe Ltd. _ _  293\nBogardus-Wilson Ltd. ._. 301\nF. L. Bott Co. ... 297\nBowell-MacLean  ....   312\nBoyles Bros. Drilling Co 302\nCampbell Studios   290\nCanadian Bank of Commerce     _.. 289\nCanadian Wood Pipe & Tanks 300\nClarke 4 Stuart , _,.,\u201e  300\nCleland-Kent Western Ltd  316\nCollege Printers ._      301\nColumbia Paper Co.      _ _..\u201e  296\nCommodore Cabaret \u201e  286\nPage\nCrane Ltd  301\nCreamland Crescent Dairy.    300\nCrossman Machinery Co. Ltd. ..    312\nDairyland      _  313\nDiethers Ltd   298\nEastman Photo Materials Ltd.    .. 292\nT. Eaton Co.   291\nThe English Shop  302\nFamous Players   .310\nGordon Farrel         290\nFloorcraft Ltd...   306\nFoo Hung Co. Ltd. _ _ 310\nGehrke Stationery & Printing  290\nGeneral Paint Corp \u201e  309\nGestetner Ltd   286\nGreat-West Life    296\nHudson's Bay Co   307\nHughes-Owens Co. .. 298\nHygrade Radio Ltd.  298\nI.X.L. Laundry  _  296\nInstitute of Chartered Ace. 288\nJantzen Knitting Mills .   295\nJenkins Bros.            285\nKeystone Press Ltd  302\nKrass Studios _  306\nMacaulay, Nicholls, Maitland Co. 300\nPage\nMarshall Wells   306\nMarty's Ltd    314\nModernize Tailors       286\nMurphy Excavating Co. ._. 312\nMurphy Stationery Co  298\nNabob Foods   314\nNelson Bros. Fisheries Ltd. 296\nNichols Chemical Co. 289\nOffice Specialty Manufacturing   . 292\nPitman Business College ._ ...    290\nRoyal Bank of Canada   295\nRoyal Trust Co  290\nSeeleyiCo.  310\nSimpsons-Sears .. . 303\nThomson & Page Ltd.   310\nToronto-Dominion Bank 309\nUniversity Book Store 297\nUniversity Food Services   303\nVancouver Sun .  \u201e    294\nVancouver Supply Co. Ltd. .. 302\nW. & J. Wilson . 292\nWestern Plywood   299\nWillson Stationery ...._ _.     .. 306\nWoodward Stores Ltd _  311\nWrigley Printing Co. Ltd. 305\n317  Subject Index\nPage\nAdministration        8\nAgriculture        220\nAlma Mater Society 12\nAlpha Delta Phi 175\nAlpha Gamma Delta 158\nAlpha Omega 129\nAlpha Omicron Pi 153\nAlpha Phi 152\nAlpha Tau Omega 173\nAlumni Association II\nA.M.S. Staff M\nApplied Science 224\nArchery 99\nArchitecture 217\nArts and Science 182\nAthletics 72\nBadminton 94\nBasketball\u2014boys 82\ngirls 96\nBeta Theta Pi 163\nBig Block Awards 76\nBlood Drive 58\nBoard of Governors 9\nBrock Addition 46\nCamera Club 119\nCampus Life 44\nCCF 122\nChinese Varsity 127\nCivil Liberties 126\nCommerce 235\nConservatives 123\nCricket 88\nCritics Circle 133\nDance Club   117\nDeans 10\nDelta Gamma 154\nDelta Kappa Epsilon 169\nDelta Phi Epsilon 156\nDelta Sigma Pi 150\nDelta   Upsilon 167\nEducation 276\nEngineers' Ball 67\nFarmers' Frolic 61\nFashion Show 60\nFencing         89\nFilm Society 118\nFootball         80\nForestry 244\nFrench Club 129\nPage\nFrosh Week 50\nGamma Phi Beta 155\nGerman Club 128\nGolf 100\nGraduate Studies 274\nGraduates 17\nGrass Hockey\u2014girls 98\nboys 88\nGreeks 149\nHamsoc        115\nHigh School Conference     ...    64\nHillel 130\nHomecoming 52\nHome Economics 248\nHonorary Activity Awards .    .    .136\nIce Hockey 90\nIndian Students 127\nIntramurals         101\nI.F.C 151\nInternational House 126\nJazzsoc 116\nKappa Alpha Theta 157\nKappa Kappa Gamma .    .    .    .160\nKappa Sigma 165\nLambda Chi Alpha 176\nLaw 252\nLeadership Conference ....    65\nLiberal Club 121\nLost and Found 280\nL.P.P. Club        122\nM.A.D 75\nMamoocks 109\nMarch of Dimes 59\nMardi Gras 54\nMr. Maunsell 16\nMedicine 256\nMusical Society 110\nMusic Appreciation 132\nNewman Club 131\nN.F.C.U.S 125\nNursing 260\nOrganizations 104\nPan Hellenic 151\nParliamentary Forum 121\nPep Club 108\nPharmacy 264\nPhi Delta Theta 162\nPhi Gamma Delta 166\nPhi Kappa Sigma 177\n379\nPage\nPhi Kappa Pi  168\nPhotographers  142\nPhrateres  119\nPhraterees Formal  66\nPhysical Education  268\nPique  141\nPlayers Club  112\nPresident's Message  8\nPsi Upsilon  174\nPublications        137\nQueens  68\nRadio Society  114\nRaven  148\nRod and Gun Club  134\nRowing  84\nRugby  78\nShaw Centennial  56\nS.C.M  130\nSigma Alpha Mu  164\nSigma Chi  161\nSigma  Phi  Delta  172\nSigma Tau Chi  150\nSkiing         91\nSoccer  87\nSocial Work  272\nSpanish Club  128\nSpecial Events  124\nSports Staff  74\nSwimming    ........ 92\nTennis  95\nTheology  279\nTotem  144\nTrack  100\nTraffic Safety  62\nTri-Service  63\nUbyssey         138\nU.C.C  106\nU.C.C. Awards  107\nU.S.C  15\nV.C.F  131\nVisual Arts  133\nV.O.C  135\nVolleyball  99\nW.A.D  75\nWeightlifting  89\nW.U.S  15\nWorld University Service    .    .    .126\nZeta Beta Tau  171\nZeta  Psi  170 PRINTED AND BOUND BY\nWRIGLEY PRINTING CO. LIMITED\nENGRAVINGS BY CLELAND-KENT WESTERN LIMITED","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"Titled The McGill Annual from 1911-1915; The Annual from 1916-1925; The Totem from 1926-1942 and 1945-1966; The Ubyssey Graduation Issue in 1943; and Totie in 1944.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Periodicals","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Vancouver (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"LE3.B85 T6","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"LE3_B85_T6_1956","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0119048","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Vancouver : Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Unviersity of British Columbia.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/subject":[{"value":"University of British Columbia","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Totem 1956","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}