"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1208747"@en . "2016-08-10"@en . "1966"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/presrep/items/1.0115221/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0^\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0H\nliflirtitftii*!\nOF THE THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\nREPORT\nOIF THE\nPRESIDENT\nfor the Academic Tear ig64-ig6$\nBY JOHN BARFOOT MACDONALD\nVANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA, 1966 EDITED BY MALCOLM F. MC GREGOR\nDESIGNED AND PRINTED BY\nTHE MORRIS S PRINTING COMPANY LTD., VICTORIA, BRITISH COLUMBIA FOREWORD\nThe Board of Governors,\nThe University of British Columbia.\nMadam Chancellor and Gentlemen:\nI here set before you my report of the activities of the University\nduring the year 1964-1965. You will, I am sure, rejoice in the accomplishments of the Faculty. You will also, I hope, be heartened\nby the magnitude of the gifts received and by the quickening of the\nbuilding programme, which I have described at some length. As you\nknow, formidable problems remain to be solved. The experience of\nthe past year will give us the confidence that we need to meet them\nand to solve them.\nVery truly yours,\nJOHN BARFOOT MACDONALD TABLE OF CONTENTS\nForeword 5\ni. The University 9\n2. The Faculties 17\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0oy ()lh,r ]).-:,artp;< a!s of th U^^rjity 37\n4. Formal and Informal 49\nPublications of the Faculty and Staff 56 1\nTHE UNIVERSITY\nThe year under review has been a notable one in the history of\nthe University of British Columbia. It has been notable in many\nways, most of them encouraging, some saddening. The University\nwas operating for the first time in its history with a budget in which\nthe request to the provincial government had been matched by the\nsize of the grant. The increase was the largest ever received by the\nUniversity. The result has been a closer relationship between planning and progress than has been possible heretofore. The University\nis grateful to the Government of British Columbia for its recognition\nthat the University's announced goal, to attain in three years a level\nof support equal in dollars a student to the Canadian average, is\nvital and indispensable.\nThe University also has cause for optimism in the number of gifts\nreceived, in the progress made in building, in the strengthening of\nthe Library, in the launching of a very large campaign for capital\nfunds, in the improvement of salaries, and in the thoughtful consideration given at all levels to the University's academic goals. All\nthese justify a sense of accomplishment in the past and confidence\nin the future.\nOn the other hand, the sudden deaths of George T. Cunningham,\nChairman of the Board of Governors, and Dr. Kaspar D. Naegele,\nDean of the Faculty of Arts, brought mournful gloom to the campus.\nMr. Cunningham died suddenly in California on March 7. He was\nfor a generation one of the University's greatest friends and had\nbeen so recognized in November when he was acclaimed by students\nand alumni as Great Trekker for 1964. He planned to retire in June\nfrom the Board on which he had served with striking loyalty and\nunselfishness for thirty years. He will be remembered by all who\nknew him as a model citizen and for those to come his name will be perpetuated in the George Cunningham Building, the home of\nthe Faculty of Pharmacy, which he was instrumental in establishing.\nThe University was proud to confer on him posthumously the degree\nof Doctor of Laws, honoris causa.\nKaspar Naegele met his tragic death February 6, 1965, and left\nthe promise of academic leadership that he had so recently brought\nto his Faculty unfulfilled. He was a man of ideas and he thought\ndeeply about education. During his brief tenure he initiated important discussions about the future tasks of the Faculty of Arts;\nthese remain to be developed by his colleagues, upon whom his\naspirations made such impact.\nIn mid-June, Premier W. A. C. Bennett, in an address to the\nConvocation of Simon Fraser University, suggested ways and means\nof financing the building programmes that must be undertaken by\nthe three public universities. The Premier guaranteed $40.7 million\nfrom the government in the next five years, $18 million each to the\nUniversity of British Columbia and Simon Fraser University, and\n$4.7 million to the University of Victoria. He then proposed that\nthe three universities make a combined appeal to the public for an\nadditional $28 million to be pledged over five years and divided as\nfollows: 42% ($11,760,000) each to the University of British Columbia and to Simon Fraser University, and 16% ($4,480,000) to\nthe University of Victoria. But the government's contribution, said\nthe Premier, will be absolute and will not depend in any way upon\nthe success of the public campaign.\nThe three universities met the challenge promptly and the 3-\nUniversities Capital Fund Campaign was launched before August\ndisappeared from the calendar. The three Presidents agreed upon\nthe Premier's terms and the Managing Committee, under the chairmanship of Allan M. McGavin and Cyrus H. McLean, retained a\nleading fund-raising firm, G. A. Brakeley & Co. Ltd., to organize\nthe campaign, the total cost of which was assessed at 1.58% of the\nobjective. It is worthy of note that direct appeals to the corporations\nand individuals are being undertaken by some 5,000 unpaid volunteers and include a canvass of 25,000 alumni in 76 countries.\nThe 3-Universities Capital Fund Campaign is historic in several\nrespects: it is the first combined appeal to be made in North America by three public universities; the objective of $28 million is the\nhighest goal ever set in Canadian fund-raising; by mid-May, 1965,\npledges had reached $15,386,529, a record for fund-raising by\n10 Canadian universities; by August, pledges surpassed $19 million and\nthus constituted the largest sum raised in any campaign in Canadian\nhistory.\nA gift of $2 million by MacMillan, Bloedel & Powell River (B.C.)\nLtd. set the pace for Canadian forestry from coast to coast, which\ncontributed $4.5 million. From corporations outside British Columbia, many of whom, to be sure, have interests in this province, came\nnearly $7 million. The gift of $1,350,000 from Consolidated Mining\n& Smelting Co. Ltd. is remarkable in that the amount is equivalent\nto $200 for each employee. Within the three universities themselves,\n32 members of the Boards of Governors made personal contributions\ntotalling $251,950. Generous support included private pledges as\nlarge as 20% of a year's income, payable over five years, and the\npromise of 6% of a year's salary from the 48 members of a single\nunion's local.\nAs a first result of the provincial grants and the campaign the\nUniversity of British Columbia has been able to move rapidly into\na capital programme that will expend $30 million in five years\n(1964-1969). During the past year an extension to the University\nLibrary ($972,000) added substantially to the space available for\nstacks and study. The Henry Angus Building for the Faculty of\nCommerce and Business Administration and for the Social Sciences\nof the Faculty of Arts was completed at a cost of nearly $3 million;\nthe immediate effect was the demolition of fifteen tired huts, an\nexhilarating sight to those who dream of a campus without slums.\nConstruction of the Faculty of Dentistry began, along with additions\nfor the basic medical sciences ($4 million). The Faculty of Dentistry\nbegan its active life with the enrolment of eight students in September 1964. The number will rise to twenty when the new buildings\nare first occupied, in September 1966, and will eventually reach\nforty. Drawings for the joint home of the Faculties of Forestry and\nAgriculture ($4,355,000) have been finished and building should\ncommence in the autumn; the basic design of an expansion for the\nDepartments of the Biological Sciences and the Institutes of Fisheries and Oceanography ($6 million) is taking shape. The same\nmay be said of a building ($1.5 million) for Music, which is to take\nits place between the Lasserre Building and the Frederic Wood\nTheatre as part of the Norman MacKenzie Centre for the Fine Arts.\nTo sum up, we rejoice in the realization that nearly two-thirds of\nthe five-year programme was subject to active development during 1964-1965; better still, new buildings and other capital assets worth\n$7 million were in fact added to the University before the year's end.\nThe singular hospital of 410 beds, intended for teaching and research, stands apart. At an initially (1963) estimated cost of $18\nmillion, it will be the first, among Canada's twelve medical schools,\nto be operated by a university. The pride of the Health Sciences\nCentre, it will occupy forty acres on the east side of the campus,\nextending south from University Boulevard. Physicians from all\nparts of British Columbia, who will use it as a referral centre, will\nshare in its benefits. The financing arrangement is also unique. P. A.\nWoodward, with a gift of unprecedented generosity, will provide $4\nmillion toward the capital cost; the federal government, for the first\ntime recognizing the costs of teaching and research, has undertaken\nto supply $4 million, about four times the normal federal grant for\na hospital of this type; the provincial government has indicated its\nenthusiasm by pledging $9 million, half the cost, an amount far in\nexcess of normal provincial grants in Canada. Construction should\nstart in July 1966, in which case the hospital will be opened in\n1969-\nThe University was already indebted to P. A. Woodward. The\nWoodward Library, which is to serve the biomedical sciences, cost\n$953>ooo; of this amount Mr. Woodward donated $440,000. This\nLibrary is the first of the many specialized branches of the University\nLibrary that will appear on the campus during the next few years.\nThose who are impressed by the pace of expansion illustrated here\nmight well glance at other evidence of progress since July 1962: an\naddition to the Bookstore; an addition to Brock Memorial Hall;\nundergraduate laboratories and the graduate wing for the Department of Chemistry; the Ponderosa Cafeteria; the building for electrical engineering; the Frederic Wood Theatre; the ophthalmic research centre; additions for the Department of Physics; the Totem\nPark residences; the Winter Sports Centre; the Woodward Library; renovations to the Graham residence to accommodate the\nSchool for Social Work; acquisition of the Yorkeen property; and\nan extension of the steam plant.\nIt has been said many times in the last few years that the numbers\nof graduate students in Canadian universities must be increased\nsharply in the immediate future. Not only is there a need for more\nteachers, professors, and researchers; business, industry, and government are also looking to the universities for men and women with\n12 specialized education and training. With this in mind, the University\nof British Columbia has embarked upon two programmes that will\nbe unique in Canada.\nOn the campus a building is planned that will house both the\nFaculty of Agriculture and the Faculty of Forestry; more than this,\nthe two Deans, Dr. Blythe Eagles and Dr. Joseph A. F. Gardner,\nare determined to introduce integrated teaching and thus to make\nat least one third of the new quarters common to both Faculties.\nThis economical plan, which is academically sound for both fields,\nwill allow enrolment to double in the next five years, with a higher\nproportion of graduate students than is the case now.\nFurther afield, the University is exploring with Queen's and Laval\nUniversities a programme of co-ordinated teaching and research in\nmineral engineering. The aim is to accelerate graduate training in\nmining engineering and mining research, both of which are seriously\nunderdeveloped in Canada today. Dr. Charles L. Emery, Head of\nthe Department of Mineral Engineering, warns that a lack of mining knowledge and highly trained mining engineers has placed Canada's mining industry in a perilous competitive position alongside\nother countries. Each university participating in this novel academic\nadventure is undertaking work in several specialized fields. The plan\nenvisages students and members of the Faculty moving freely among\nthe three institutions, although degrees will be granted by the university of original enrolment. The mining industry is supporting the\nprogramme by offering relevant summer employment to students as\nwell as a number of graduate fellowships.\nGenerous understanding of the urgent need for many more graduate students has brought gifts to the University this year that are\nwithout parallel in Canadian history. Dr. H. R. MacMillan and the\nMacMillan Family Fund led the way in February with two grants,\ntotalling almost $7 million, that may well be the most generous ever\nmade to graduate education in this country.\nThe University hopes that by 1973 some 5,500 graduate and professional students (25 per cent of the enrolment instead of the current 14 per cent) will be registered. This ambition presupposes a\nfirst-rate library and a plentiful supply of graduate fellowships, as\nDr. MacMillan has been quick to recognize. His personal gift of $3\nmillion to the University Library, which already occupies a position\nof high priority in the expenditure of general revenues, is even now\npermitting an extraordinarily rapid increase in the Library's re-\n13 sources. By a single stroke the Library has become one of the ten\nwealthiest academic libraries in North America in terms of purchasing power, joining such giants as Harvard, Yale, and the University\nof California. In practical terms, the Library is able to compete\neffectively in the market for out-of-print books and to afford all new\nwork written in any of the languages of scholarship. By 1975 the\nLibrary's collections will have tripled in size to more than 2,000,000\nvolumes and may well represent the best in Canada. All academic\ndisciplines, be they humanistic or scientific, have their origin and\nsustenance in the printed word. The library that can meet the daily\ndemands of the academic community, in all their wide variety, is\ntruly the heart of a university. The University Library is becoming\nthat kind of library, and is already a crucial factor in attracting and\nretaining members of the Faculty whose qualifications are of the\nvery best.\nThe MacMillan Family Fund turned to the complementary necessity, graduate fellowships that will compete in substance with those\nthat now lure so many bright young Canadians to the United States.\nThe Fund will contribute $3.2 million over a period of twenty years\nto provide forty-five fellowships of $3,200 each; in addition, each\nfellowship will bring to the University an unconditional supplement\nof $500 per annum. The fellowships, to be used only at this University, are available to Canadians engaged in doctoral programmes\nwho undertake to remain in this country for a reasonable time after\ngraduation if offered satisfactory positions.\nIn July 1965, the H. R. MacMillan Family Fund donated an\nadditional eighteen doctoral fellowships of $3,200 a year, plus $500\nto the University for each, in honour of the three former presidents\nof the University: six Frank F. Wesbrook Fellowships in Microbiology; six Leonard S. Klinck Fellowships in Agriculture; and six\nNorman MacKenzie Fellowships in International Relations or International Law or in a field of History, Political Science or Economics\nconcerned with Canadian affairs.\nThe greatest challenge that Canada's leading universities can accept today is the building of distinguished programmes in graduate\nstudies. Success will come only to those universities that assemble the\nmany essential components into dynamic programmes in which the\nbest students and the ablest professors realize their highest potential\nfor productive scholarship. A learned and industrious Faculty, adequate facilities and equipment, a first-rate library, a curriculum that\n14 provides time for thought and research, these are all indispensable.\nBut they are of little moment unless the University can attract the\nbest graduate students in substantial numbers. Not only must a\nlarger proportion of the exceptional students be encouraged to enter\nthe universities; they must also be encouraged to continue their\nstudies to advanced degrees. For these reasons a rich and imaginative array of scholarships is vital.\nThe University of British Columbia has, in a single year, become\nthe beneficiary of 63 annual fellowships made available by Dr. MacMillan; an eloquent testimony to the farsightedness of the donor,\nthey constitute a landmark in the history of this University. It is to\nbe hoped that many others will follow the lead of Dr. MacMillan,\nfor nothing else can be as effective in keeping Canadian graduates\nin Canada and in meeting the desperate need that Canada has for\nhighly-trained scholars in a wide variety of fields.\nThe gifts of H. R. MacMillan and P. A. Woodward, added to\n$150,000 from the Nuffield Foundation, $240,000 from the Wellcome Trust, and several others brought private benefactions to the\nUniversity to the staggering total of $12 million. This is far more\nthan any Canadian university has received in a like period; it approaches the total of private gifts made to the University during its\nentire previous history.\nEarly in the year Guideposts to Innovation, the work of a President's Committee, was published, a document that may have far-\nreaching academic effects. It begins with a statement of the aims of\nthe University: the engendering in students of a permanent spirit of\nenquiry and creativity, the fostering of powers of evaluative judgement, the exploration of frontiers of knowledge, and the enrichment\nof society's cultural resources. There follows an examination of various aspects of the academic programme and the development of a\nseries of recommendations. These relate to policies governing admissions, the growth of the University, the quality of instruction, the assessment of achievement, the design of the curriculum, the quality of\nstudent-life, the arrangement of the University's year, the strengthening of graduate work, research and continuing education, and the\nadministration of academic affairs.\nThe report was discussed by Senate and the Board of Governors,\nby individual faculties, by students, and by alumni. It has evoked\nwidespread and thoughtful consideration of the University's role and\nit has led already to concrete action designed to improve the Uni-\n15 versity's academic programme. The recommendations are under\ncontinuous study within the appropriate segments of the academic\ncommunity.\nThe University of British Columbia has been struggling for years\nwith the enormous problems that inevitably accompany growth: the\ndemand for buildings, expanding enrolments, rising budgets, an enlarged library, development of computing science, fostering of the\ngraduate programme, and reorganization of professional schools. In\nspite of unavoidable preoccupation with growth, the University is\ninexorably dedicated to improvement in quality. The goal of excellence is never forgotten, is never laid aside, even temporarily; all who\nserve in this noble cause are continuously grappling with the difficult\ndecisions that will perforce transform a good university into a great\none.\n16 THE FACULTIES\nTHE FACULTY OF AGRICULTURE\nThe members of the faculty have continued to stress the coordination of teaching, research, and the efforts in Extension. A\nspecial meeting was devoted to Guideposts to Innovation and on\nanother occasion younger members, who have recently joined the\nFaculty, were invited to expound the types of programmes they\nwished to develop.\nThe Faculty and the University suffered a severe loss when Dr.\nA. J. Wood (Professor of Animal Science and Director of the Central Animal Laboratory) resigned in order to become Dean of the\nFaculty of Arts and Science at the University of Victoria. The work\nin Animal Science will now be reorganized. The other area that is\nunder intensive study is Agricultural Engineering, whose place must\nbe more precisely defined.\nThe Faculty, as is customary, collaborated with the Department\nof University Extension in the organization of various conferences\nfor the benefit of the rural areas of the province.\nPlanning for the new building that is to be shared by the Faculties\nof Agriculture and Forestry proceeds continuously.\nTo commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the Faculty of Agriculture the annual convention of the Agricultural Institute of Canada met here. During the meetings the Institute announced its establishment of the Leonard S. Klinck Lectureship in Agriculture in\nrecognition of Dr. Klinck's life-long service to agronomy and to\nhigher education.\nM. J. Darling joined the Department of Agricultural Economics\nas Assistant Professor. In the Division of Animal Science Dr. Warren\nGifford passed the year as Visiting Professor; Dr. J. C. Berry remained in India in the service of the Food and Agricultural Organ-\n17 ization of the United Nations. Dr. G. H. Harris, Professor Emeritus\nof Horticulture in the Division of Plant Science, retired from lecturing at the end of this year; in the same Division, Dr. Gursham Singh\nGrewal, Academic Dean in the Agricultural University at Ludhiana\n(Punjab), gave a series of lectures to Faculty and students from October to February. The Department of Poultry Sciences was strengthened by the appointment of Dr. J. F. Richards as Assistant Professor.\nDr. Leroy H. Wullstein became Assistant Professor of Soil Science\nand Jan de Vries accepted appointment as Instructor.\nTHE FACULTY OF APPLIED SCIENCE\nThe major development within the Faculty during the academic\nyear 1964-1965 was the establishment of the Department of Mineral\nEngineering in place of the Department of Mining and Geological\nEngineering. This action recognized the fairly recent appearance of\nMineral Engineering as an autonomous field of study. The new department will certainly stimulate graduate work in the field and it\nis already expected that between ten and fifteen students will enrol\nin September 1965; enquiries already received suggest a substantial\nincrease in undergraduates. Professor L. G. R. Crouch has guided\nthe Department through its first few months of life; the appointed\nHead, Dr. C. L. Emery, arrived during the summer of 1965. The\nDepartment will, from the beginning, co-operate in graduate study\nand research with Queen's and Laval; exchanges of staff and students will be encouraged.\nThe Faculty incurred a serious blow in the spring with the resignation of Dean David M. Myers, who will move to an exciting new\npost in his native Australia.\nMembers of the Faculty and students continued to receive satisfying recognition of their quality. Professor Frank Forward, now on\nleave in Ottawa, was elected President of the Canadian Institute of\nMining and Metallurgy; in February he received the Douglas Medal\nof the American Institute of Mining Engineering; in May the University of British Columbia conferred an honorary degree upon him.\nDr. J. S. Forsyth, Head of the Department of Chemical Engineering, was awarded a Senior Research Fellowship by the National\nResearch Council; he will be on leave in 1965-1966.\nTwo students, Kenneth G. McQuhae (Metallurgy) and J. R.\nYoung (Mechanical Engineering), won Athlone Fellowships. At the\n18 annual Northwest Regional Conference of the Student Chapters of\nthe American Institute of Chemical Engineers two students from\nBritish Columbia, Brian D. Thorpe and Robin W. Allen, carried off\nfirst and third prizes respectively for delivered papers.\nThe programme in Community and Regional Planning, hitherto\npart of the School of Architecture, is to find a new home in the\nFaculty of Graduate Studies.\nThe School of Nursing, with a staff whose devotion to undergraduate teaching is remarkable, has found time to plan a graduate\nprogramme and a one-year course leading to a diploma in Psychiatric Nursing; the latter has been approved by Senate. The School\nis also aware that the time is approaching when its status within the\nUniversity must be reassessed.\nIn the Department of Civil Engineering Dr. M. C. Quick (Assistant Professor) resigned and Associate Professor N. D. Nathan has\nbeen granted a year's leave of absence. Five new appointments will\nstrengthen the Department of Electrical Engineering: Dr. M. M. Z.\nKharadly as Associate Professor; Dr. Donald Paul Akitt, Dr. Robert\nWellington Donaldson, Dr. John Spencer MacDonald, and Dr. H.\nPaul Zeiger as Assistant Professors. Dr. M. P. Beddoes (Associate\nProfessor) and Dr. A. C. Soudak (Assistant Professor) are looking\nforward to leaves of absence; Dr. A. D. Moore and F. K. Bowers\n(Professors) will return after similar leaves. Dr. Zeev Rotem spent\nthe year in the Department of Mechanical Engineering on leave\nfrom the Israel Institute of Technology. Dr. I. J. Wygnanski, I.\nIgbal, and C. R. Hazell joined the staff as Assistant Professors. The\nDepartment of Metallurgy enjoyed the presence of Dr. R. Shuttle-\nworth, of the University of Leeds.\nThe School of Nursing lost three members through resignation:\nInstructors Tomiko Sugimoto, Elizabeth Walton, and Jo-Ann Wood.\nElizabeth Cawston obtained leave of absence to continue her studies.\nThe following were appointed to the staff of the School: Assistant\nProfessor Alice Baumgart, Instructors Margaret Lendrum, June\nNakamoto, Nettie Nevdorf, Helen Niskala, Helen Shore.\nTHE FACULTY OF ARTS\nThis has been a difficult year for the Faculty of Arts. Dean K. D.\nNaegele, after ten months in office, died February 6, 1965. D. M.\nHealy, Head of the Department of Romance Studies, was immedi-\n19 ately appointed Acting Dean and undertook, at short notice, the\nformidable task of administering the Faculty's complex affairs. By\nthe end of the year order had been restored and a presidential committee was engaged in the search for a Dean.\nDuring the year Theatre and Creative Writing became departments; John Brockington accepted the Headship of the former and\nRobert Harlow is serving as Acting Head of the latter. Dr. Ivan\nAvakumovic has been leading the Department of Political Science\nuntil the arrival of the newly-appointed Head, Dr. R. S. Milne. Dr.\nMargaret A. Ormsby was appointed to the Headship of the Department of History. Dr. Douglas T. Kenny will return from his leave\nof absence to the Headship of the Department of Psychology. The\nretirement of Charlotte Black left the Directorship of the School of\nHome Economics vacant and its arduous duties will be carried out\ntemporarily by Winifred Bracher. Towards the end of the year the\nPresident announced the first of a series of University Professorships: Dr. Roy Daniells becomes University Professor of English\nLanguage and Literature, without departmental affiliation. At the\nsame time Dr. Stanley E. Read was persuaded to postpone his retirement in order to provide an experienced Acting Head for the Department of English; a committee is now at work seeking a successor\nto Dr. Daniells.\nThe Departments of Economics, Anthropology and Sociology,\nPolitical Science, and Psychology are awaiting the completion of the\nHenry Angus Building, which they expect to occupy at the end of\nthe summer of 1965. Throughout this year continuous study has\nbeen applied to details of the move and the furnishings of the new\nbuilding. Those departments that are to remain in the Buchanan\nBuilding, that is, the Departments of the Humanities, will suffer\nsimilar reallocation of space and similar disturbance. It would be a\nmistake to think that the Faculty will now enjoy a sufficient number\nof offices and classrooms. The House Committee in the Buchanan\nBuilding, for example, must find homes of some sort for over one\nhundred members of the teaching staff who cannot be housed in\nthe building's offices. Many are Teaching Assistants, to be sure;\nbut Teaching Assistants in the Humanities are in autonomous charge\nof sections and it is vital that they have reasonable privacy in which\nto meet their students. The conclusion is inescapable: the Faculty\nmust have more facilities for teaching and study, and it must have\nthem soon. Reorganization in the Buchanan Building will bring\n20 some relief, it is true, to those engaged in the teaching of foreign\nlanguages, for the laboratories that have for some years formed an\nintegral instructional tool are being expanded. The relief, however,\nis more apparent than real, for facilities have long been overtaxed.\nDespite the inadequacy of rooms and offices, the House Committee\nof the Buchanan Building has insisted on setting aside three former\nclassrooms as Graduate Reading Rooms for the Departments of\nEnglish, Classics, German, and Romance Studies. This move should\nmake conditions more attractive to graduate students.\nThe Departments of the Faculty examine their programmes continuously and, as a result, each year brings new courses and reorganization. Thus, for example, work in Serbo-Croatian and\nUkrainian will soon be available in the Department of Slavonic\nStudies; the Department of Fine Arts is studying the place of Museums of Art on the campus and the advisability of establishing a\nprogramme in Museology; the Department of Classics has introduced a course in Hellenistic Greek and the New Testament. The\ncommittee studying the requirements for the B.A. degree produced\nits report, Discipline and Discovery, in the spring. The document is,\nto say the least, controversial; some are attracted, others regard its\ndoctrines as antithetical to liberal education. But, as is the way in a\nvital Faculty of Arts, all agree that it must be subjected to careful\nanalysis.\nA listing of the honours and awards won by members of this\nFaculty would be long indeed; a few may be selected as illustrative.\nDr. Margaret A. Ormsby received an honorary degree from the\nUniversity of Manitoba, Dr. Roy Daniells was honoured in the\nsame way by the University of Toronto. Congregation in May had\na special appeal, for the University of British Columbia conferred\ndegrees (honoris causa) upon H. T. Logan (Professor Emeritus of\nClassics) and Dorothy Somerset (Acting Head of Theatre), whose\nlong and distinguished services to the University are well known\nthroughout the province and across the country.\nOnce again members of the Faculty of Arts carried off a substantial number of the Senior Fellowships awarded by the Canada\nCouncil for a year's study-leave and research: Dr. Roy Daniells\n(University Professor of English Language and Literature), Dr.\nC. W. J. Eliot (Associate Professor of Classics), Dr. William E.\nFredeman (Associate Professor of English), Dr. Leonidas E. Hill\n(Assistant Professor of History), Albert M. Moore (Associate Pro-\n21 fessor of Economics), Dr. J. Lewis Robinson (Professor of Geography and Head of the Department), Ian S. McNairn (Associate\nProfessor of Fine Arts), Dr. Gerard Tougas (Professor of Romance\nStudies). John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowships were won\nby Dr. Cyril Belshaw (Professor of Anthropology) and Dr. William\nE. Fredeman.\nIn June Dr. Margaret A. Ormsby was elected president of the\nCanadian Historical Association and Dr. John D. Chapman (Professor of Geography) was chosen by his colleagues to head the\nCanadian Association of Geographers. In the same month Dean\nEmeritus F. H. Soward became President of Section II of the Royal\nSociety of Canada.\nIn May University Medals were presented to Timothy C. Pad-\nmore (First Class Honours in Mathematics and Physics) and Timothy LeGoff (First Class Honours in History), leaders of the Faculty's graduating class.\nThere are, regrettably, those who believe that in the Humanities\nthere is little that is new and exciting to attract research by lively\nminds. The perceptive know how ignorant and superficial such\ncomment is. The activity of the Humanists, as well as of the Social\nScientists, in new fields and old, is reflected not only in the mere\nlisting of publications that may be read in this Report, but also in\nthe extent to which scholars in these fields are urged to join investigating Commissions and invited to deliver papers at conferences\nthroughout the continent and overseas. The record is impressive,\nparticularly when one considers how much easier it must be for an\neastern government or organization to consult the necessary wise\nmen nearby rather than from distant Vancouver. Again, this University may justly take pride in the number of members of this\nFaculty who hold responsible offices in the learned associations of\nCanada and other countries. The fact is that the Humanities and\nthe Social Sciences experience continuous growth, partly as a result\nof persistent research and partly as a result of the steady flow of\nnew discoveries (as, for instance, in archaeology) that expand\nknowledge of literature and history in their broadest sense.\nEducation, we are constantly told, is changing in scope and content. This is certainly and properly true of the sciences, pure and\nalso applied. There are some values, however, there are some treasures of human knowledge, that do not and should not change. It is\nthe responsibility of the Faculty of Arts to preserve these values, this\n22 knowledge, for Humanists and Social Scientists must look backward\nin time to man's accomplishments and dreams. But, in the light of\ntheir experience, Humanists and Social Scientists look also to the\nfuture, alongside their friends in the fields of pure and applied science,\nfor this too is their responsibility, to maintain, today and tomorrow,\na rational sense of values and the perspective in judgement that will\nbring society nearer to the good life.\nOnce again, the Faculty increased in size, when the following\njoined the staff:\nDr. Robert Adler (Instructor in Economics).\nDr. M. Mc. Ames (Assistant Professor of Anthropology and\nSociology).\nDr. Elinor Ames (Assistant Professor of Psychology).\nMary Louise Bailey (Lecturer in Philosophy).\nTerrence Bailey (Instructor in Music).\nEllen Bateman (Instructor in Social Work).\nIain J. W. Baxter (Assistant Professor of Fine Arts).\nPadraig John Blenkinsop (Instructor in Romance Studies).\nMerna Borror (Instructor in Home Economics).\nA. Busza (Instructor in English).\nMarcia Cameron (Lecturer in Home Economics, second term)\nY. Chang (Instructor in Anthropology and Sociology).\nLi Chi (Associate Professor of Asian Studies).\nDr. John Crane (Associate Professor of Social Work).\nDr. R. K. N. Crook (Assistant Professor of Anthropology and\nSociology).\nEnzina Del Mercato (Instructor in Romance Studies).\nDavid J. Donaldson (Instructor in Economics).\nPaul Douglas (Instructor in Music).\nDr. Moira Feeney (Assistant Professor of Home Economics).\nDr. Donald G. Finiay (Associate Professor of Social Work).\nDr. Heather Franklyn (Instructor in Romance Studies).\nEberhard Frey (Instructor in German).\nR. Golledge (Assistant Professor of Geography).\nGlen Hamilton (Assistant Professor of Social Work).\nRobert Harlow (Associate Professor of Creative Writing).\nEmma Harris (Honorary Lecturer in Home Economics).\nCharles W. Humphries (Assistant Professor of History).\nHoward Jackson (Lecturer in Philosophy).\nDr. Richard C. Jenner (Assistant Professor of Economics).\nHanna E. Kassis (Assistant Professor of Religious Studies).\nDr. Robert Knox (Assistant Professor of Psychology).\nRobert J. Levesque (Instructor in Economics).\nS. Levitan (Instructor in English).\nDr. Arthur E. Link (Professor of Religious Studies).\n23 Eleanore Lund (Assistant Professor of Home Economics).\nJohn MacDonald (Instructor in Social Work).\nHorst Martin (Instructor in German).\nB. Mayne (Instructor in English).\nDr. Grady McWhiney (Associate Professor of History).\nJ. Edward W. Mornin (Instructor in German).\nDr. John H. A. Munro (Assistant Professor of Economics).\nW. New (Assistant Professor of English).\nG. Parry (Assistant Professor of English).\nTomislav Posa (Instructor in Slavonic Studies).\nD. Powell (Instructor in English).\nClifford Robinson (Lecturer in Theatre).\nJoyce Rogers (Instructor in Social Work).\nH. Rosengarten (Instructor in English).\nJames Shell (Instructor in Music).\nA. Shucard (Instructor in English).\nDr. Raouf Simaika (Assistant Professor of Romance Studies).\nJan J. Solecki (Instructor in Slavonic Studies).\nHarvey Stalwick (Instructor in Social Work).\nDr. P. Stanwood (Assistant Professor of English).\nKlaus Strassmann (Lecturer in Theatre).\nDr. Henry Thomassen (Assistant Professor of Economics).\nFrench Tickner (Assistant Professor of Music).\nKazuko Tsurumi (Assistant Professor of Asian Studies).\nDr. John Vanderkamp (Assistant Professor of Economics).\nDr. W. E. Willmott (Assistant Professor of Anthropology and\nSociology).\nDr. Roderick Wong (Assistant Professor of Psychology).\nWilliam Bliss Wood (Assistant Professor of Librarianship).\nDuring the year a number of resignations were accepted:\nDr. Elinor Ames (Assistant Professor of Psychology).\nM. Atwood (Instructor in English).\nA. R. Bowers (Assistant Professor of English).\nA. S. Brennan (Instructor in English).\nDr. W. K. Caird (Assistant Professor of Psychology).\nDr. T. P. Churchill (Assistant Professor of English).\nDr. R. K. N. Crook (Assistant Professor of Anthropology and\nSociology).\nG. Elliott (Instructor in English).\nDr. H. Fain (Associate Professor of Philosophy).\nN. V. Henfrey (Instructor in English).\nCarol Kniebusch (Instructor in Music).\nRobert J. Levesque (Instructor in Economics).\nDr. Ernst Loeb (Associate Professor of German).\nDr. George Proctor (Assistant Professor of Music).\nAnn C. Rosenberg (Lecturer in Fine Arts).\n24- Cor Schwencke (Instructor in Slavonic Studies).\nBrian Woodward (Instructor in Slavonic Studies)\nSeveral members of the Faculty took advantage of leaves of absence to pursue their studies:\nDr. Michael S. Batts (Associate Professor of German).\nDr. Edward A. Bird (Assistant Professor of Romance Studies).\nDr. John F. Bosher (Associate Professor of History).\nDr. Robert M. Clark (Professor of Economics).\nDr. Samuel C. Coval (Assistant Professor of Philosophy).\nDr. R. C. Cragg (Professor of Fine Arts).\nDr. Douglas C. Fraser (Assistant Professor of Psychology).\nAristides Gazetas (Assistant Professor of Theatre).\nDr. E. B. Gose (Associate Professor of English).\nDr. Peter Harnetty (Assistant Professor of History and\nAsian Studies).\nDr. David J. M. Hooson (Associate Professor of Geography).\nDr. Shuichi Kato (Associate Professor of Asian Studies).\nDr. D. T. Kenny (Professor of Psychology).\nDr. G. F. McGuigan (Assistant Professor of Economics).\nDr. Craig W. Miller (Associate Professor of English).\nGerald W. Pepper (Assistant Professor of Social Work).\nGeraldine Roese (Instructor in Home Economics, second term)\nDr. I. S. Ross (Assistant Professor of English).\nDr. Robert J. Rowan (Associate Professor of Philosophy).\nDr. A. D. Scott (Professor of Economics).\nDr. Donald E. Soule (Associate Professor of Theatre).\nDr. W. Tallman (Associate Professor of English).\nBoth Faculty and students enjoyed the presence of Visiting Professors:\nC. P. Fitzgerald (Asian Studies, first term).\nDr. D. G. E. Hall (Asian Studies).\nDr. Yorst Hamnitzsch (Asian Studies, first term).\nJohn D. Legge (History, first term).\nDr. Norman Pollock (Geography).\nGiose Rimanelli (Romance Studies).\nR. I. Sikora (Philosophy).\nAt the end of June 1965, Dorothy Somerset (Acting Head, Department of Theatre), Charlotte Black (Director, School of Home\nEconomics), and Dr. Joseph A. Crumb (Professor of Economics)\nbrought to a formal close their many years of devoted service to the\nUniversity.\n2S In February Terry Forrest (Lecturer in Philosophy) died suddenly.\nTHE FACULTY OF COMMERCE AND\nBUSINESS ADMINISTRATION\nFor the last five years this Faculty, under the aegis of the Columbo\nplan, has been collaborating with the University of Singapore and\nthe University of Malaya and Kuala Lumpur in the development\nof Schools of Business Administration. Teams of professors have\nserved in the Malaysian institutions under the direction of Professor\nL. G. J. Wong and ten students from Malaysia have attained the\ndegree Master of Business Administration here and returned to\ntheir native land. The project comes to an end this year and Professor Wong and his associates will resume their regular duties in\nSeptember 1965.\nMembers of the Faculty continued the planning of a doctoral\nprogramme, which has now been approved in principle by Senate.\nAt the same time the curriculum for the Master's degree has been\nstrengthened and the problems created by a sharp rise in undergraduate enrolment have been faced and solved.\nThe Division of Marketing, in which Assistant Professor J. Narver\njoined the staff, welcomed the arrival of Visiting Lecturer K.B.Haas.\nAssistant Professor J. Bray was added to the Division of Finance. D.\nB. Fields, Associate Professor of Accounting, returned from his duties\nwith the Royal Commission on Taxation. R. Heywood, Associate\nProfessor of Teacher Education (Commerce), and D. L. MacDonald, Assistant Professor of Accounting, took advantage of study-\nleave. H. Babiak, Assistant Professor of Accounting, submitted his\nresignation. Dean Emeritus E. D. MacPhee retired as Principal of\nthe Banff School of Advanced Management, although he continues\nto teach.\nMembers of the Faculty have been gratifyingly active in professional associations, especially during the meeting of the Association of\nCanadian Schools of Business on this campus in June. Once again\nthe community has drawn upon the special knowledge and wisdom\nof the Faculty. P. H. White, Professor of Estate Managment, at the\nrequest of the Government of Newfoundland, spent two months in\nthe summer of 1964 as chairman of a Commission of Enquiry that\ninvestigated all aspects of the cost of housing in St. John's. W.\nHughes, Associate Professor of Transportation and Utilities, carried\n26 out a mission for the United Nations in Malaysia during May and\nJune 1965. Dean G. Neil Perry responded to both the federal and\nthe provincial governments by serving as a Commission of Industrial Enquiry in connexion with strikes.\nTHE FACULTY OF DENTISTRY\nThe Faculty of Dentistry began the year in memorable fashion in\nSeptember by enrolling its first class of students. Only eight were\naccepted from the sixty-five who applied, a reflexion in part of the\nhigh standards that will be maintained. The Dean has continued to\naddress dental societies and schools on the subject of dental education and the need for superior students.\nThe staff of the Faculty remains small, for recruitment of highly\nqualified men is not easy. Dr. D. J. Yeo arrived as Associate Professor and Head of the Department of Public Community Dental\nHealth; Dr. H. K. Brown was added to the same department as\nLecturer. Dr. John D. Spouge, Associate Professor of Oral Biology,\nwas elected to a Fellowship in the American Academy of Oral Pathology.\nThe year ended well, for in June the Board of Governors approved\nthe contract for the first buildings that are to be used exclusively by\nthis Faculty. Regrettably, the high cost of construction has made it\nnecessary to leave parts of the buildings unfinished in the immediate\nplans. It is hoped that this restriction is temporary, for curtailment\nof space inevitably causes curtailment of the academic programme,\nwhich, in turn, affects the dental services available in the province.\nThe acquisition of funds for research is indispensable to a Faculty\nof Dentistry that is to be of first quality. So far the sources of funds\nhave been few and the amounts insufficient. It may well be that the\nUniversity will be forced to supply the equipment that the dental\nresearcher must have. Facilities for research attract good men; and\nworthwhile research has its effect upon teaching and students.\nTHE FACULTY OF EDUCATION\nThe major event of the year was the move by the Faculty from\nthe huts to the comparatively luxurious quarters in the new building.\nBy September 1965, the Faculty of Education will be able for the\nfirst time to operate as a homogeneous unit.\n27 The chief concern of this Faculty is the preparation of competent\nteachers for the schools of British Columbia. To this end, the curriculum is ever under examination and subject to adaptation, collaboration with other Faculties and with School Boards is continuous,\nand research into new methods and ideas is relentless. Education in\nthis Faculty is never a static thing. The breadth of interest and the\nreputation of the members of the Faculty may well be measured by\nthe extent to which they are invited to hold office in national and\ninternational organizations.\nAssistant Professor Stella Shopland died in April. On January i,\nthe University as a whole was stricken by the death of Johnny Owen,\na man beloved for some thirty years by all those interested in sport\non the campus.\nDuring the year the following appointments were made:\nF. Bertram (Assistant Professor).\nDr. C. Brauner (Associate Professor).\nJean Brock (Lecturer in Physical Education).\nDr. A. Clingman (Associate Professor).\nDr. J. Coombs (Assistant Professor).\nDr. L. Downey (Professor).\nM. Elliott (Assistant Professor).\nF. Fiedler (Assistant Professor).\nC. Gillespie (Assistant Professor).\nM. Golledge (Assistant Professor).\nH. Harder (Instructor).\nRoss Heatherington (Assistant Professor of Physical Education).\nV. Keenan (Assistant Professor).\nDr. L. Marsh (Professor).\nP. Olley (Lecturer).\nC. Overall (Lecturer).\nBonnie Phillips (Instructor in Physical Education).\nM. Robbins (Assistant Professor).\nHarvey Scott (Physical Education).\nN. Stacey (Assistant Professor).\nDr. J. Stephens (Professor).\nG. Stubbs (Assistant Professor).\nM. Tomkins (Assistant Professor).\nN. Turner (Lecturer).\nD. Webster (Assistant Professor).\nDr. R. Whaley (Assistant Professor).\nJ. Wolforth (Instructor).\nA number of resignations were submitted:\nLeroi Daniels (Lecturer).\n28 L. Davies (Assistant Professor).\nDr. Evan Davis (Associate Professor).\nDr. J. Ellis (Associate Professor).\nH. Goodwin (Instructor).\nDr. Robert Hammond (Assistant Professor).\nE. Loomer (Instructor).\nDr. W. Murra (Associate Professor).\nEsther Segal (Instructor).\nLeaves of absence gave opportunity for leisurely study to Dr. C.\nJ. Anastasiou (Assistant Professor), Edna Baxter (Associate Professor), R. Heywood (Associate Professor), Dr. D. C. Kendall (Associate Professor, until December 31, 1964), and Dr. H. L. Stein\n(Professor and Director of the Graduate Division).\nTHE FACULTY OF FORESTRY\nDr. Joseph A. F. Gardner, formerly Director of the Federal Government's Forestry Products Research Laboratory, became Dean of\nthe Faculty February 1. Because of a previous commitment to the\nCommonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization of\nAustralia, he spent March, April, and May in that country as Research Fellow; consequently, the leadership of the Faculty, for the\ngreater part of the year, fell once again to Dr. R. W. Wellwood.\nThe promise of a new building, which is to be shared with the\nFaculty of Agriculture, has aroused continuing enthusiasm in this\nFaculty and many hours have been devoted to planning for a future\nthat will allow Forestry to enjoy appropriate facilities.\nProfessors J. E. Bier (formerly of the Department of Biology and\nBotany) and K. Graham (formerly of the Department of Zoology)\nhave been transferred to the Faculty of Forestry. Assistant Professor\nJ. P. Tessier resigned. Dr. Joran Fries of the Royal School of Forestry, Sweden, joined the Faculty for four months.\nThe H. R. MacMillan Lecture in Forestry was given by J. C.\nWestoby, of the Forestry and Forest Products Division of the Food\nand Agriculture Organization of the United Nations; his subject\nwas \"World Forest Development, Markets, Men and Methods.\"\nProfessor J. E. Bier was elected President of the Canadian Phyto-\npathological Society. Fred Bunnell, who led the graduating class,\nwon the Gold Medal presented by the Canadian Institute of Forestry;\nhe then journeyed to the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology at\n29 Zurich with a Federal Exchange Scholarship to pursue graduate\nstudy.\nTHE FACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES\nThe announced policy of the University to stimulate graduate\nstudy and to produce more scholars and teachers competent to enter\nacademic life is already having a marked effect on the Faculty of\nGraduate Studies.\nGraduate students, it goes without saying, must be subsidized.\nConsequently, the magnificent gift by H. R. MacMillan of some\nthree million dollars for graduate scholarships to doctoral students\nhas been recognized as the most spectacular incitement ever received\nby this Faculty. That a comparable gift was bestowed on the University Library simultaneously by the same donor shows a nice\nappreciation of the needs of students and members of the Faculty\nwho are preoccupied by research.\nDean Ian McTaggart Cowan began his tenure of office by inaugurating a searching examination of the structure and activity of the\nFaculty. The future will undoubtedly see an exhaustive report with\nsweeping recommendations.\nIn the meantime, advances are already being made. The Department of Music and the School of Librarianship have been authorized\nto offer programmes leading to the Master's degree; the Departments\nof Mechanical Engineering and Soil Science have had doctoral\nprogrammes approved. Numbers of students are increasing, especially in the Humanities and Social Sciences. It is not a coincidence\nthat applications for grants from the University's research-funds\nhave increased in the past year from 138 to 203 in the Sciences and\nfrom 65 to no in the Humanities and Social Sciences. The funds\nhave been enlarged but remain insufficient.\nConsiderable effort has been expended to provide Reading Rooms\n(with fundamental books of reference) for graduate students in the\nHumanities and Social Sciences; this has not been easy, for classrooms and offices, despite new building, remain at a premium. For\nthe young scientist, his laboratory provides a home; the University\nLibrary does not fulfill the same function for the young Humanist\nand Social Scientist. Thus these Reading Rooms are indispensable\nand must be multiplied.\nThe Institutes of Fisheries, Industrial Relations, and Oceanography fall within the Faculty of Graduate Studies. In future years\n30 they will be joined by Community and Regional Planning, which\nhas just been transferred from the Faculty of Applied Science.\nThe Institute of Fisheries has built an enviable record throughout\nthe world. The Institute has been facing a formidable barrier to\nfurther progress: physical space is inadequate and staff are too few.\nIn 1964-1965 five members of the Faculty directed twenty-eight\ngraduate students (ten of them doctoral) in what may justly be\ncalled a corner of the Biological Sciences Building. The Institute\nhas been forced to deny admission to qualified students who are\nattracted by its merited reputation. In the summer of 1965, however, prospects were transformed when H. R. MacMillan made a\ngift of $750,000 to the University for the purpose of stimulating\ngraduate work and research in Fisheries. This benefaction will\nmake it possible to bring together the highly-skilled staff who are\nrequired and to expand the programme of studies into new and\nvital areas. The problem of space will be alleviated by the new\nbuilding for Biological Sciences that is scheduled for completion\nin 1968. Dr. James T. McFadden joined the Faculty as Assistant\nProfessor at the beginning of the year; the Institute is seeking other\nrecruits.\nThe Institute of Industrial Relations has been supporting eight\ngraduate students, of whom six are proceeding to degrees in Economics. Dr. Martin Meissner (Anthropology and Sociology), Dr.\nV. V. Murray (Commerce and Business Administration), and\nE. S. W. Belyea (Psychology) undertook projects in industrial relations. The Institute's nomadic life (this year in the Buchanan\nBuilding) should come to an end with the projected move to the\nHenry Angus Building, which, it is hoped, will offer a permanent\nhome.\nF. J. R. Taylor joined the Institute of Oceanography as Instructor\n(in Oceanography and Botany). Dr. G. L. Pickard (Professor and\nDirector) and Dr. R. F. Scagel (Professor) were elected to Fellowships in the Royal Society of Canada; the latter was also named\nFellow of the Linnean Society of London, and awarded the Corbaker\nPrize in Phycology (1964) by the Botanical Society of America.\nMembers of the staff continue to answer calls for advice and assistance in Canada and elsewhere. Again, a shortage of space threatens\nto hinder progress.\n31 THE FACULTY OF LAW\nFor the second consecutive year the Faculty of Law experienced\na sharply increased enrolment. The trend is healthy, for there is\ntoday a severe shortage of practising lawyers and in addition many\nposts requiring legal training are open in government and business.\nAfter spending two years devising a new curriculum, the Faculty\ninstituted the programme in September. Both students and professors have expressed enthusiasm and desirable changes have so far\nbeen minor. More attention is now being paid to writing and individual supervision.\nTwo visitors, R. E. Megarry, q.c, of London, England, and\nLouis B. Sohn of the Harvard Law School, spent several days on\nthe campus, to the very great profit of the Faculty and its students.\nAssistant Professor A. J. McClean resigned in order to join the\nFaculty of Law of Southampton University; Maurice Carr (Lecturer ) accepted a post in the Faculty of Law of Aberystwyth University. In compensation and in the face of the larger number of\nstudents the Faculty added to its ranks Associate Professor J. M.\nMaclntyre and Assistant Professors R. W. V. Dickerson, J. Noel\nLyon, R. C. Dunlop, and K. C. MacKenzie.\nTHE FACULTY OF MEDICINE\nWork has now begun on the Health Services Centre and members\nof the Faculty are engaged in planning its administration. One\nbuilding, the Woodward Biomedical Library, was opened November 12, 1964, in a fitting ceremony that expressed the thanks of the\nUniversity to Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Woodward.\nTeaching and research continued to command the Faculty's chief\nattention. The Curriculum Committee is studying new methods of\nteaching. Numerous members of the staff delivered technical papers\nbefore professional audiences in Canada and the United States.\nDr. Frank A. Turnbull, Clinical Associate Professor of Surgery,\nin the year of his retirement, served as President of the Canadian\nMedical Association. Dr. K. S. Morton, Clinical Assistant Professor\nof Surgery, was the recipient of an Exchange Fellowship to Britain,\nunder the auspices of the British Orthopaedic Association. Dr.\nDavid Osoba, Clinical Instructor in Medicine, was selected as\nMedallist by the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons for his\nwork on the thymus humoral factor.\n32 Resignations were submitted by Dr. H. F. Scherrer (Associate\nProfessor of Anatomy), Dr. W. M. King (Clinical Instructor in\nPreventive Medicine), Dr. D. J. Watterson (Assistant Professor of\nPsychiatry), Dr. T. P. Millar (Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry), Dr. T. Feir and Dr. W. Goresky (Clinical Instructors in\nPsychiatry), Dr. P. J. Doyle (Clinical Instructor in Surgery), Dr.\nE. W. Henry (Clinical Instructor in Medicine). Dr. B. Shallard\n(Clinical Instructor in Medicine) retired; Dr. T. K. MacLean\n(Clinical Instructor in Medicine) died. Dr. G. R. Gray, Clinical\nInstructor in Medicine, was elected Fellow of the Royal College of\nPhysicians of Canada. Dr. D. M. M. Kavanagh-Gray, Clinical Instructor in Medicine, and Dr. D. M. Whitelaw, Professor of Medicine, became Fellows of the American College of Physicians. Dr.\nK. K. Pump, Clinical Instructor in Medicine, won a Fellowship in\nthe Association of Canadian Chest Physicians. Dr. A. J. Elliot,\nProfessor of Ophthalmology, accepted the presidency of the Canadian Ophthalmological Society; his colleague, Dr. A. Q. McCor-\nmick, was awarded a Fellowship for studies in experimental ophthalmology at the Institute of Ophthalmology in London, England.\nThe following appointments were made: in Biochemistry, Dr.\nMichael Smith (Part-time Associate Professor); in Medicine, Dr. S.\nGrzybowski (Associate Professor), Dr. H. C. Slade (Assistant Professor), Dr. W. C. MacDonald (Instructor), Dr. H. W. L. Buck,\nDr. F. A. Olakce, and Dr. P. J. A. Bratty (Clinical Instructors);\nin Paediatrics, Dr. R. H. Hill (Instructor), Dr. A. B. Murray, Dr.\nM. Berger, and J. Edwards (Clinical Instructors); in Pharmacology, Dr. Abram J. D. Friesen and Dr. Harvey D. Sanders (Research Associates and Instructors); in Preventive Medicine, Dr.\nLewis S. Anerson, Dr. E. J. Bowmer, Dr. C. A. Brumwell, Dr. H. K.\nKennedy, Dr. G. D. M. Kettyls, Dr. A. W. Wallace (Clinical Instructors) ; in Psychiatry, Dr. C. J. Schwarz (Clinical Instructor);\nin Surgery, Dr. D. A. MacDonald and Dr. J. G. Sladen (Clinical\nInstructors).\nTHE FACULTY OF PHARMACY\nThe Faculty views with satisfaction the steady increase in the\nnumbers of those enrolling for graduate work. The availability of\nthe Woodward Library is having its effect and the prospective\nHealth Sciences Centre, in which this Faculty will be directly concerned, will also stimulate research.\n33 The Faculty is in close touch with pharmaceutical problems that\naffect the community, as is demonstrated by plans to offer, in collaboration with the Faculty of Agriculture, a course dealing with\nthe physiology, toxicology, and chemical properties of pesticides.\nOn a Saturday in February the Faculty entertained some twenty-\nfive members, staff and graduate students, of the College of Pharmacy of the University of Washington. The conference was acclaimed\nas valuable by guests and hosts alike.\nThe relationship with the British Columbia Pharmaceutical Association remains intimate. This year Professor Finlay A. Morrison\nhas collaborated with Gordon B. Hewitt of the Association in preparing a report on Continuing Education in Pharmacy. The Faculty\nalso offers a variety of refresher-courses for the benefit of practising\npharmacists.\nMembers of the Faculty are in constant demand to serve on\nnational boards and councils.\nTHE FACULTY OF SCIENCE\nThe Departments of Biology and Botany, Bacteriology and Immunology, and Zoology have devoted intensive study to an effort\nto integrate their work in the interests of a more systematic approach\nfor students. A Life Sciences Council has been established and will\nsoon make significant recommendations.\nThe introduction into the curriculum of a course in Astronomy,\nthe oldest of the sciences, removes a flaw from the curriculum and\nsuggests that a substantial programme may be developed.\nThe Faculty has been watching with interest the adjustments\ntaking place in the schools and the Curriculum Committee will be\nready for the first graduates of the new secondary programme.\nDr. C. E. Dolman, Head of the Department of Bacteriology and\nImmunology, was elected President of the Canadian Association of\nMedical Bacteriologists in December for a two-year term; in June\nhe became President of Section III of the Royal Society of Canada.\nToward the end of the year Dr. Dolman submitted his resignation\nas Head, a post whose rigorous duties he has fulfilled since 1936;\nhe will retain his Professorship.\nIn the Department of Biology aand Botany Dr. T. M. C. Taylor\nhas been on leave; Dr. J. Stein spent five months as visiting Professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and was elected\n34 President of the Phycological Society of America. Dr. G. H. N.\nTowers, Professor and Head, was sought as President of the Canadian Society of Plant Physiologists; Dr. J. E. Bier, who will be\ntransferred to the Faculty of Forestry, became President of the\nCanadian Phytopathological Society; Dr. R. Beamish succeeded to\nthe presidency of the Vancouver Natural History Society. Dr. R. F.\nScagel was elected to a Fellowship in the Royal Society of Canada\n(Section III). Three appointments were made to the staff: Dr.\nE. B. Tregunna and Dr. G. C. Hughes (Assistant Professors),\nF. J. R. Taylor (Instructor).\nThe following joined the Department of Chemistry: Visiting\nProfessors S. C. Charles, R. Lefebvre, and N. L. Paddock; Assistant\nProfessors N. Basco, C. E. Brion, B. R. James, and T. Money; Instructor J. T. Kwon; Lecturer D. F. R. Gilson. A number of resignations were submitted: Dr. A. I. Scott (Professor); Dr. J. T.\nKwon and Mrs. S. A. Melzak (Instructors), Dr. D. F. R. Gilson\nand Mrs. M. K. Jaatteenmake (Lecturers). Dr. C. A. McDowell\n(Professor and Head) visited Kyoto University, Japan; Dr. L. D.\nHaywood (Associate Professor) spent his leave in Sweden, Dr. L.\nW. Reeves (Associate Professor) worked for two months in the National Physical Laboratory of the University of Oxford, and Dr. H.\nC. Clark (Professor) resided for a similar period at the Universities\nof Punjab and Rajasthan, India. Dr. J. Trotter (Professor) was\nhonoured by an Arthur P. Sloan Foundation Fellowship.\nDr. Robert Thompson, Acting-Head of the Department of Geology, was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada (Section\nIII). Dr. J. W. Murray accepted appointment as Assistant Professor.\nThe Department of Geophysics is benefitting from the presence\nof Dr. K. Sato, Visiting Professor from the University of Tokyo.\nDr. W. H. Simons, Associate Professor of Mathematics, was\naway on leave of absence. The Department grew with the appointments of Dr. D. Drake, Dr. E. Gerlach, Dr. W. McWhorter, Dr. L.\nPatterson, Dr. K. M. Rao, Dr. E. Rogak, and Dr. S. Simons as\nAssistant Professors; and S. Promislow as Lecturer. Resignations\nwere received from Dr. S. Simons, Dr. R. Cleveland, and Dr. S.\nCleveland (Assistant Professors); and M. Buchanan (Instructor).\nSeveral changes occurred in the Department of Physics. Appointments included Dr. E. W. Vogt as Professor; Dr. R. C. Williams\nas Associate Professor; Dr. B. G. Turrell and P. J. Sykes as Assistant\n35 Professors; Dr. J. H. Williamson as Instructor; and S. D. Noble as\nLecturer. A number resigned: Dr. J. B. Brown (Professor); Dr. D.\nH. Goode, A. F. Rice, and R. H. Parker (Instructors); and S. D.\nNoble. Dr. H. Schmidt completed his term as Visiting Lecturer, as\ndid Dr. R. R. Haering as Visiting Professor, Dr. M. Bloom and Dr.\nW. Opechowski (Professors) took advantage of leaves of absence to\ncontinue their research. The Rhodes Scholarship was won by A. R.\nL. Spray, who graduated with First Class Honours in Physics;\nChristopher Jo Brealey, with First Class Honours in Physics and\nMathematics, carried off the Governor General's Medal.\nDr. W. S. Hoar became Head of the Department of Zoology. He\nreceived an Honorary Degree (D.Sc.) from the University of New\nBrunswick in May and was awarded the Flavelle Medal by the\nRoyal Society of Canada in June. Losses were incurred through the\nresignations of Dr. W. S. Holmes (Associate Professor) and Dr. J.\nF. Eisenberg (Assistant Professor). Dr. G. C. E. Scudder (Associate\nProfessor), on leave of absence, studied in England and Europe; he\nwas replaced by R. A. Ring (Acting Assistant Professor). Dr. A. B.\nActon arrived as Associate Professor and Dr. J. E. Phillips as Assistant Professor. Dr. W. Murdock worked in the Department as Acting Assistant Professor in the second term; Professor Ivan Good-\nbody, of the University of the West Indies, found headquarters here\nfor two months.\n36 OTHER DEPARTMENTS OF\nTHE UNIVERSITY\nTHE DEPARTMENT OF UNIVERSITY EXTENSION\nIn many ways this Department is nearer to the community as a\nwhole than is any other area of the University. Under its auspices\nfall courses for credit towards degrees, courses contributing to the\ngeneral education of the public, special seminars and conferences on\nsubjects of topical interest, short-term programmes offering retraining in practical fields, lectures given throughout the province on a\nwide variety of subjects.\nThe establishment of the University of Victoria and Simon Fraser\nUniversity has aroused the hope in this Department that a coordinated programme of continuing education may be devised by\nthe three public institutions that will appeal to the adult students\nof the province. This might well include the opportunity of earning\na degree by way of evening courses.\nIn the meantime the advice of the Department is constantly invited by associations seeking a continuation of professional education. Even now negotiations are under way with the Faculty of\nPharmacy and the British Columbia Association of Pharmacists in\nthe effort to produce a comprehensive programme for graduate\npharmacists.\nThe work of the Department is still impeded by the absence of\nan appropriate physical centre. It may be that desirable quarters\nwill emerge from the building programme and the consequent\nmoves that will occur. If so, the Department will operate more\neffectively and more economically.\nIn 1964 a contract was signed by the University and the Government of Canada according to which the University of British Co-\n37 lumbia will assist the University of Rajasthan, India, in the development of a Department of Adult Education. Dr. John K. Friesen\nwas named Director of the three-year project and has been on leave\nof absence in India since November i. In his absence Gordon Sel-\nman has been serving as Acting-Director of this Department.\nResignations were received from Frederick Walden (Supervisor,\nStudy-Discussion Programme), Bertram Curtis (AssistantDirector),\nWilliam Mundy (Supervisor), Douglas Kaye (Recordings Librarian), Mary Medland (Administrative Assistant), Ian Docherty\n(Co-ordinator, Fine Arts), Trevor Matthews (Supervisor).\nThe Department was joined by Thomas Brown, Gerald Savory,\nRobert Collier, and Sidney Risk (Supervisors), Malcolm Gillis (Instructor) . James Draper went to India as Adviser at the University\nof Rajasthan. Knute Buttedahl added the Acting Directorship of\nHousing to his already onerous duties in the Conference Office.\nGordon Selman was elected President of the Canadian Association of Directors of Extension and Summer Schools.\nTHE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY\nFor many years the Library has been demanding additional funds.\nSubstantial increases have been allotted recently by the Board of\nGovernors; yet these were not keeping pace with the needs of a\nuniversity that has pledged itself to train graduate students in larger\nnumbers than ever before. In February 1965, Mr. H. R. MacMillan came to the rescue with a magnificent gift of three million dollars for the strengthening of the Library's collections. Seldom has a\nlibrary been the recipient of such munificence. The Librarian now\nanticipates that the present holdings, which already number more\nthan 700,000 volumes, will be tripled within a decade. Graduate\nstudents and faculty should not lack the tools of research.\nIn September the P. A. Woodward Biomedical Library opened\nits doors. The five-fold increase in the circulation of biomedical\nbooks reflects the influence of an attractive and convenient building\nupon readers and so upon education.\nThe University Library, however, continued to be used intensively. On a typical day in February, some 17,500 persons were\ncounted as they entered the building. This figure is also a major\nfactor in the statistics kept by all the divisions engaged in pubic\nservice.\n38 During the year, internal alterations and additions almost doubled\nthe capacity of the book-stacks. The Library is thus ready to cope,\nfor a few years at least, with the accelerated flow of acquisitions\nthat will arrive as a result of Dr. MacMillan's gift.\nJune brought the retirement of Roland J. Lanning, Head of the\nSerials Division, who for forty years has given to the University his\ndiscerning and intimate knowledge of the learned journals and\nserials. Scholarship at this University will always be in his debt.\nINTER-FACULTY AND STUDENT AFFAIRS\nThis was a memorable year for students seeking financial assistance. First, H. R. MacMillan, already known as a close friend of\nthe University, made provision for forty-five graduate fellowships,\neach worth $3,200, annually for a period of twenty years. More recently, the same donor added eighteen similar fellowships in honour\nof the three former Presidents, the late Dr. F. F. Wesbrook, Dr. L.\nS. Klinck, Dr. N. A. M. MacKenzie. The stimulus given to the expanding graduate work of the University is already being felt.\nSecond, the Government of Canada passed the Canada Loans\nAct. Dean Walter H. Gage was then appointed Provincial Authority to administer the funds and was all but overwhelmed by applications. During the year more than 5,100 loans were issued to about\n4,650 students in the amount of over $3,100,000; approximately\ntwo-thirds of the loans went to students at this University.\nThe opening of the Totem Park Residences added attractive accommodation for 400 men and 400 women; dining-room, lounge,\nand facilities for recreation are enjoyed in common.\nYorkeen House has become a convenient hostel for professors,\nalumni, parents, and others who visit the campus for short periods.\n39 Registration ig64-6$\n(as of December 1, 1964)\nFACULT\nY OF ARTS\nArts\nMEN\nWOMEN\nTOTAL\nFirst Year\n695\n652\n1347\nSecond Year\n757\n510\n1267\nThird Year\n599\n384\n983\nFourth Year\n563\n312\n875\nTOTAL\n2614\n1858\n4472\nMusic\nFirst Year\n15\n22\n37\nSecond Year\n24\n24\n48\nThird Year\n21\n25\n46\nFourth Year\n17\n12\n39\nTOTAL\n77\n83\n160\nSchool of Home Economics\nFirst Year\n64\n64\nSecond Year\n....\n49\n49\nThird Year\n....\n50\n50\nFourth Year\n....\n49\n49\nTOTAL\n212\n212\nSchool of Social Work\nB.S.W.\n50\n55\n105\nM.S.W.\n27\n27\n54\nTOTAL\n77\n82\n159\nSchool of Librarianship\n12\n41\n53\nTOTAL IN FACULTY\n2780\n2276\n5056\nFACULTY\nOF SCIENCE\nFirst Year\n812\n191\n1003\nSecond Year\n752\n105\n857\nThird Year\n482\n73\n555\nFourth Year\n439\n51\n490\nTOTAL\n2485\n420\n2905\nFACULTY OF\nAPPLIED\nSCIENCE\nEngineering\nFirst Year\n305\n1\n306\nSecond Year\n224\n1\n225\nThird Year\n189\n1\n190\nFourth Year\n185\n....\n185\nTOTAL\n903\n3\n906 School of Architecture\nFirst Year\nSecond Year\nThird Year\nFourth Year\nFifth Year\nEN\nWOMEN\nTOTAL\n31\n2\n33\n22\n1\n23\n23\n1\n24\nTOTAL\n77\n4\n81\nSchool of Nursing\nBasic Degree Programme\nFirst Year\n\t\n27\n27\nSecond Year\n24\n24\nThird Year\n\t\n24\n24\nFourth Year\n\t\n26\n26\nPostbasic\nFirst Year\n\t\n12\n12\nSecond Year\n7\n7\nThird Year\n....\n7\n7\nTOTAL\n127\n127\nDiploma Course\n78\n78\nTOTAL\n205\n205\nTOTAL IN FACULTY 980 212 1192\nFACULTY OF AGRICULTURE\nFirst Year 30 11 41\nSecond Year 32 19 51\nThird Year 52 6 58\nFourth Year 39 7 46\nFifth Year\nOccupational Course 5 13\nTOTAL IN FACULTY 155 44 199\nFACULTY OF LAW\nFirst Year\n118\n2\n120\nSecond Year\n87\n3\n90\nThird Year\n63\n2\n65\nTOTAL IN FACULTY 268 7 275\nFACULTY OF PHARMACY\nFirst Year\n24\n11\n35\nSecond Year\n19\n12\n31\nThird Year\n31\n13\n44\nFourth Year\n19\n14\n33\nTOTAL IN FACULTY 93 50 143 FACULTY\nOF MEDICINE\nMEN\nWOMEN\nTOTAL\nFirst Year\n57\n4\n61\nSecond Year\n49\n6\n55\nThird Year\n53\n3\n56\nFourth Year\n37\n7\n44\nTOTAL\n196\n20\n216\nSchool of\nRehabilitation Medicine\nFirst Year\n\t\n26\n26\nSecond Year\n....\n33\n33\nThird Year\n....\n18\n18\nTOTAL\n....\n77\n77\nTOTAL IN FACULTY 196 97 293\nFACULTY OF DENTISTRY\nFirst Year 8 .... 8\nTOTAL IN FACULTY\n8\n8\nFACULTY\nOF FORESTRY\nFirst Year\n58\n58\nSecond Year\n34\n\t\n34\nThird Year\n45\n45\nFourth Year\n46\n....\n46\nTOTAL IN FACULTY\n183\n....\n183\nFACULTY\nOF EDUCATION\nElementary Division\nFirst Year\n49\n369\n418\nSecond Year\n141\n531\n672\nThird Year\n100\n392\n492\nFourth Year\n49\n141\n190\nGraduates\n22\n39\n61\nTOTAL\n361\n1472\n1833\nSecondary Division\nFirst Year\n89\n69\n158\nSecond Year\n143\n76\n219\nThird Year\n130\n54\n184\nFourth Year\n100\n38\n138\nFifth Year\n82\n37\n119\nGraduates\n157\n95\n242\nIndustrial Arts\n51\n51\nTOTAL\n752\n359\n1111 School of\nPhysical Education\nMEN\nWOMEN\nTOTAL\nFirst Year\n23\n18\n41\nSecond Year\n55\n21\n76\nThird Year\n46\n14\n60\nFourth Year\n38\n9\n47\nTOTAL\n162\n62\n224\nTOTAL IN FACULTY\n1275\n1893\n3168\nFACULTY OF COMMERCE AND BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION\nFirst Year\n272\n12\n284\nSecond Year\n205\n6\n211\nThird Year\n147\n2\n149\nFourth Year\n112\n4\n116\nTOTAL IN FACULTY\n736\n24\n760\nFACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES\nCourse leading to\nPh.D\n295\n30\n325\nD.Ed.\n7\n2\n9\nM.A.\n257\n116\n373\nM.Sc.\n172\n29\n201\nM.A.Sc.\n92\n92\nM.S.A.\n31\n\t\n31\nM.F.\n7\n7\nM.B.A.\n36\n36\nM.P.E.\n8\n8\nM.Ed.\n10\n11\n21\nM.S.P.\n6\n1\n7\nM.Arch.\nTOTAL IN FACULTY\n921\n189\n1110\nUnclassified\n126\n71\n197\nGRAND TOTAL\n10,206\n5283\n15,489\nExtra-Sessional Classes\n714\n815\n1529\nCorrespondence Courses\n569\n727\n1296\nSummer Session 1964\n3202\n3018\n6220 Registration ig64~6^\nCOUNTRY OF CITIZENSHIP\nNorth America\nEurope\n13912\nCanada\n14\nAustria\n2\nMexico\n3\nBelgium\n215\nUnited States\n1\nCzechoslovakia\n19\nDenmark\nCentral America\n7\nEire (Ireland)\n1\nBahamas\n8\nEstonia\n3\nBarbados\n5\nFinland\n1\nCosta Rica\n14\nFrance\n4\nHonduras, British\n147\nGermany \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Western Zone\n9\nJamaica\n2\nGermany \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Eastern Zone\n63\nTrinidad\n471\nGreat Britain & N. Ireland\n6\nOther West Indies\n9\nGreece\n23\nHungary\nSouth America\n2\nIceland\n2\nArgentina\n30\nItaly\n1\nBritish Guiana\n5\nLatvia\n3\nChile\n79\nNetherlands\n1\nColumbia\n14\nNorway\n2\nParaguay\n3\nPoland\n4\nPeru\n3\nPortugal\n1\nVenezuela\n1\nRomania\n4\nSoviet Union\nAsia\n3\nSpain\n2\nCeylon\n4\nSweden\n49\nChina\n6\nSwitzerland\n63\nHong Kong\n6\nYugoslavia\n63\nIndia\n2\nIndo-China\nAfrica\n5\nIndonesia\n1\nFrench West Africa\n2\nIran\n5\nGhana\n1\nIraq\n7\nKenya\n3\nIsrael\n3\nNigeria\n24\nJapan\n4\nSierra Leone\n5\nKorea\n9\nRhodesia, Nyasaland\n1\nLebanon\n1\nS. Camaroons\n17\nMalaya\n2\nUganda\n9\nPakistan\n11\nUnion of South Africa\n1\nPalestine\n5\nPhilippines\nOceania\n3\nSarawak\n28\nAustralia\n4\nSiam\n14\nNew Zealand\n8\nSingapore\n1\nSyria\n20\nStateless\n3\n1 Turkey THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\nRegistration\nTotal\nSession\nArts\n*Sc.\nH.Ec.\nP.E.\nMus.\nAs. Sc.\nNurs.\nArch.\nAgric.\nLaw\nSoc.\nWork\nEduc\nPhar.\nFor.\nMed. Dent. Com.\nLib.\nRehab.\nUnclass.\nGrad.\nSt.\nWinter\nSess.\nYear\nSummer\nSess.\nCon-.*\nX-Sess.\nGRAND\nTOTAL\n1920-21\n687\n....\n....\n....\n200\n9\n....\n51\n....\n....\n....\n....\n....\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n...\n....\n....\n....\n15\n962\n1921\n134\n550\n1646\n1925-26\n1083\n....\n....\n....\n192\n33\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n51\n....\n....\n57\n....\n....\n\t\n...\n....\n....\n....\n47\n1463\n1926\n438\n127\n2028\n1930-31\n1494\n....\n....\n....\n281\n41\n....\n50\n....\n....\n71\n....\n....\n....\n...\n....\n....\n....\n107\n2044\n1931\n441\n401\n2886\n1935-36\n1211\n....\n....\n....\n320\n93\n....\n67\n....\n25\n62\n....\n....\n--\n...\n....\n....\n....\n160\n1938\n1936\n566\n223\n2727\n1940-41\n1591\n....\n....\n....\n452\n72\n....\n153\n....\n26\n71\n....\n....\n\t\n...\n....\n....\n....\n163\n2528\n1941\n457\n187\n3172\n1945-46\n4034\n148\n....\n....\n1053\n128\n....\n376\n87\n67\n47\n....\n....\n\t\n443\n....\n....\n....\n249\nt6632\n1946\n2368\n163\n9163\n1950-51\n2951\n185\n139\n....\n931\n92\n97\n286\n325\n142\n213\n166\n142\n60\n329\n....\n....\n....\n374\n6432\n1951\n976\n430\n7838\n1955-56\n3040\n168\n123\n....\n904\n177\n91\n163\n212\n84\n120\n136\n111\n222\n529\n....\n....\n....\n323\n6403\n1956\n1810\n1038\n9251\n1956-57\n3284\n170\n101\n....\n1032\n216\n94\n153\n231\n77\n905\n142\n129\n209\n572\n....\n....\n....\n384\n7699\n1957\n3507\n1649\n12855\n1957-58\n3860\n187\n103\n....\n1157\n243\n100\n165\n248\n76\n1125\n119\n*328\n213\n605\n....\n....\n....\n457\n8986\n1958\n3947\n2406\n15339\n1958-59\n4505\n198\n130\n....\n1068\n224\n117\n156\n252\n80\n1445\n125\n*269\n213\n597\n....\n....\n....\n571\n9950\n1959\n3828\n2100\n15878\n1959-60\n4734\n207\n160\n....\n1043\n217\n112\n175\n247\n94\n1826\n141\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2191\n212\n659\n....\n....\n....\n624\n10642\n1960\n4256\n2196\n17094\n1960-61\n5314\n198\n177\n....\n1051\n198\n87\n179\n240\n102\n2188\n151\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6183\n203\n635\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ....\n....\n....\n715\n11621\n1961\n5156\n2600\n19377\n1961-62\n6412\n207\n195\n....\n987\n160\n75\n204\n225\n109\n2376\n139\n181\n210\n617\n31\n19\n124\n679\n12950\n1962\n5101\n2701\n20752\n1962-63\n6731\n196\n204\n127\n972\n188\n82\n191\n227\n117\n2415\n147\n186\n208\n616\n36\n35\n176\n744\n13598\n1963\n5463\n2941\n22002\n1963-64\nA. 4399\nSc. 2749\n214\n214\n148\n918\n181\n78\n205\n243\n147\n2740\n159\n189\n213\n633\n46\n68\n251\n919\n14714\n1964\n6220\n2930\n23864\n1964-65\nA. 4472\nSc. 2905\n212\n224\n160\n906\n205\n81\n199\n275\n159\n2944\n143\n183\n216 8\n! 760\n53\n77\n197\n1110\n15489\n1965\n2825\nt Includes Special Winter Session, 1946, Ex-Service Personnel.\n* These figures include Sopron. YEAR\nB.A.\nB.Sc.\nTHE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\nDegrees Conferred\nUndergraduate\nB.H.E. B.P.E. B.Mus. B.S.W. B.A.Sc. B.Arch. B.S.N. B.S.A. LL.B. B.S.P.\nM.D.\nB.S.F. B.Comm. B.Ed. B.l.S. TOTAL\nMay-Oct.\n1916-20\n205\n11\n216\n1921-25\n499\n....\n....\n....\n....\n....\n145\n....\n12\n58\n....\n....\n....\n....\n....\n....\n714\n1926-30\n882\n\t\n....\n....\n\t\n151\n\t\n25\n40\n\t\n....\n....\n....\n....\n....\n.... 1098\n1931-35\n1221\n\t\n....\n....\n\t\n240\n\t\n36\n67\n\t\n\t\n\t\n....\n122\n....\n.... 1686\n1936-40\n1268\n\t\n....\n....\n\t\n319\n....\n38\n102\n\t\n\t\n....\n....\n158\n.... 1885\n1941-45\n1139\n....\n\t\n....\n....\n446\n....\n44\n130\n....\n....\n....\n13\n208\n28\n.... 2008\n1946-50\n3321\n....\n198\n66\n....\n330\n1262\n5\n90\n472\n336\n115\n....\n158\n1001\n240\n.... 7594\n1951-55\n2404\n....\n178\n113\n....\n280\n972\n71\n77\n272\n435\n227\n114\n155\n398\n253\n.... 5949\n1956\n299\n....\n35\n19\n....\n39\n132\n8\n....\n25\n58\n38\n60\n20\n96\n36\n865\nOct.\n116\n\t\n4\n7\n....\n\t\n19\n....\n21\n7\n\t\n2\n....\n3\n9\n84\n272\n1957\n318\n....\n20\n19\n....\n37\n159\n14\n....\n18\n52\n34\n48\n25\n102\nfG 48\nS 1\nE 10,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .... 905\nOct.\n119\n....\n....\n3\n....\n....\n3\n2\n32\n4\n....\n5\n2\n....\n10\nG151\nS 7\nE 25\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 .... 363\n1958\n225\n70\n32\n14\n....\n35\n177\n7\n....\n28\n72\n36\n45\n18\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A228\n103\nG 92\nS 14\nE 29,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .... 1025\nOct.\n74\n19\n2\n7\n....\n3\n19\n1\n45\n3\n....\n5\n2\n1\n13\nG143\nS 17\nE 34 J\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 .... 388\n1959\n247\n78\n32\n17\n....\n33\n193\n9\n....\n29\n73\n29\n42\n24\n*63\n89\nG 25\nS 27\nE 36\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 .... 1046\nOct.\n160\n28\n3\n8\n....\n4\n20\n....\n41\n4\n....\n2\n5\n3\n* 5\n12\nG 251\nS 32\nE 60\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 .... 412\n1960\n292\n146\n34\n12\n....\n37\n169\n12\n....\n33\n63\n28\n51\n33\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A220\n116\nG 8\nS 35\nE 37\n.... 1126\nOct.\n122\n32\n6\n5\n....\n....\n24\n1\n49\n4\n....\n4\n4\n....\n20\nG 12\nS 44\nE 86\n413\n1961\n282\n151\n36\n13\n....\n49\n192\n10\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n29\n80\n30\n39\n29\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A224\n95\nG 71\nS 32\nE 51\n.... 1149\nOct.\n133\n44\n1\n9\n....\n1\n23\n3\n60\n7\n....\n5\n2\n7\n16\nG 121\nS 45\nE 85\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .... 453\n1962\n331\n185\n31\n26\n7\n57\n203\n16\n....\n24\n75\n31\n51\n26\n94\nG 6\nS 55\nE 57,\n27 1302\nOct.\n128\n43\n3\n10\n2\n3\n13\n1\n27\n8\n....\n11\n1\n2\n34\nG 11\nS 73\nE 89\n1 460\n1963\n392\n238\n32\n14\n12\n71\n171\n13\n....\n30\n60\n12\n49\n26\n117\nG 10\nS 76\nE 92\n34 1449\nOct.\n163\n49\n1\n18\n2\n2\n24\n4\n26\n10\n1\n2\n....\n2\n29\nG 171\nS 95\nE136\n581\n1964\n528\n326\n37\n19\n6\n71\n196\n14\n....\n33\n63\n35\n43\n35\n90\nG 71\nS 76\nE 98\n\u00E2\u0096\u00BA 43 1720\nOct.\n187\n66\n6\n9\n3\n....\n21\n6\n29\n15\n1\n3\n....\n5\n25\nG 13]\nS 115\nE186\n1 691\nt G - Graduate, S - Secondary, E - Elementary\n* Sopron\nTHE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\nDegrees Conferred\nGradual*\nYEAR\nPh.D.\nM.A.\nM.Sc\nM.A.Sc.\nM.S.A. M\nB.A.\nM.P.\nM.S.W. M.S.P. M.Arch. M.P.E.\nM.Ed.\nTOTAL\nTotal\nGrad. ft\nUndergr.\nDegrees\nCUMUL.\nTOTAL\nMay-Oct.\n1916-20\n11\n....\n1\n....\n\t\n\t\n12\n228\n1921-25\n....\n46\n....\n15\n4\n...\n...\n....\n65\n779\n1007\n1926-30\n....\n71\n....\n8\n7\n...\n...\n....\n86\n1184\n2191\n1931-35\n....\n113\n....\n27\n22\n...\n....\n....\n...\n....\n162\n1848\n4039\n1936-40\n....\n145\n....\n31\n27\n...\n...\n....\n204\n2089\n6128\n1941-45\n....\n98\n....\n31\n17\n...\n...\n....\n146\n2154\n8282\n1946-50\n4\n241\n....\n79\n51\n 48\n...\n....\n422\n8016\n16298\n1951-55\n37\n207\n61\n59\n57\n2\n9\n118\n...\n....\n550\n6499\n22797\n1956\n12\n22\n11\n10\n5\n1\n1\n18\n...\n....\n80\n945\n23742\nOct.\n7\n17\n10\n5\n1\n...\n....\n2\n...\n....\n42\n314\n24056\n1957\n4\n15\n10\n8\n6\n1\n1\n17\n...\n....\n62\n967\n25023\nOct.\n7\n9\n12\n4\n2\n2\n2\n...\n3\n41\n404\n25427\n1958\n8\n26\n18\n12\n4\n3\n8\n...\n3\n82\n1107\n26534\nOct.\n3\n20\n10\n10\n1\n...\n1\n3\n...\n5\n53\n441\n26975\n1959\n8\n15\n12\n12\n7\n...\n3\n20\n1\n4\n82\n1128\n28103\nOct.\n9\n10\n23\n12\n....\n1 \t\n1\n8\n64\n476\n28579\n1960\n18\n22\n25\n13\n5\n4\n4\n13\n1\n8\n113\n1239\n29818\nOct.\n9\n23\n19\n14\n4\n3\n4\n3\n1\n11\n91\n504\n30322\n1961\n3\n26\n21\n16\n4\n...\n8\n14\n1\n5\n98\n1247\n31569\nOct.\n5\n25\n29\n10\n2\n...\n....\n3 1\n1\n24\n100\n553\n32122\n1962\n12\n25\n31\n14\n6\n1\n5\n17\n2\n9\n122\n1424\n33546\nOct.\n21\n29\n29\n19\n5\n1\n2\n9\n32\n147\n607\n34153\n1963\n2d\n34\n29\n19\n5\n1\n3\n21\n5\n11\n148\n1597\n35750\nOct.\n16\n39\n28\n15\n1\n2\n2\n5 2\n1\n39\n150\n731\n36481\n1964\n26\n44\n21\n24\n6\n4\n4\n37\n1\n13\n180\n1900\n38381\nOct.\n30\n39\n48\n15\n4\n4\n1\n1 2\n2\n31\n177\n868\n39249 Registration ig64~6j\nGEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF STUDENTS\nBritish Columbia (based on census divisions) :\n1) East Kootenay and Upper Columbia River\n152\n2) West Kootenay, Columbia River and Slocan Lake\n535\n3) Okanagan, Similkameen, Kettle, and\nUpper Shuswap Rivers\n783\n4) Lower Fraser Valley and Howe Sound\n10,327\n5) Vancouver Island\n1,151\n6) North Thompson, Shuswap, Nicola, Chilcotin\nSouth, Lillooet East, Bridge - Lillooet\n362\n7) Bella Coola, Knight Inlet, Powell River\n145\n8) Nechako - Fraser, Chilcotin North, Cariboo,\nSkeena, Takla Lake\n214\n9) Atlin Lake, Skeena Coast, Queen Charlotte Islands\n160\n10) Northeast B.C.-Laird, Finlay-Parsnip, Beaton River\n90\nAlberta\n321\nSaskatchewan\n138\nManitoba\n83\nOntario\n254\nQuebec\n79\nNew Brunswick\n9\nNova Scotia\n17\nPrince Edward Island\n1\nNewfoundland\n5\nYukon\n22\nNorthwest Territories\n9\nAfrica\n35\nAsia\n206\nBritish Isles\n73\nWest Indies\n66\nCentral America\n15\nEurope\n37\nOceania\n38\nSouth America\n18\nUnited States\n144 Educational Level\nof Students Admitted for the First Time\nin ig64\nUniversity Entrance Standing\n2354\nBritish Columbia\n13\nAlberta\n25\nSaskatchewan\n16\nManitoba\n36\nOntario\n16\nQuebec\n1\nNova Scotia\n2\nPrince Edward Island\n59\nNon-Canadian\nSenior Matriculation (Grade XIII, B.C.)\n615\nBritish Columbia, full\n622\nBritish Columbia, partial\n42\nAlberta\n26\nSaskatchewan\n11\nManitoba\n43\nOntario\n11\nQuebec\n3\nNova Scotia\n2\nNew Brunswick\n48\nNon-Canadian\n72\nOne year, Victoria College\n67\nTwo years, Victoria College\n4\nThree years, Victoria College\n75\nUndergraduates above\nSenior Matriculation\n198\nGraduate\n20\nNon-Matriculation\nSummary\n2522\nUniversity Entrance\n1423\nSenior Matriculation\n344\nAbove Senior Matriculation\n20\n| Non-Matriculation THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\nHonorary Degrees Conferred\nYEAR LL.D. D.Litt. D.Sc.\n(honoris (honoris (honoris\ncausa) causa) causa)\nPrevious years\n8\n....\n1930-34\n12\n....\n1935-39\n17\n\t\n1940-44\n9\n1\n1945-49\n34\n17\n1950-54\n37\n18\n1955 May\n3\n1\n1\nOctober\n5\n\t\n1956 May\n3\n3\nOctober\n6\n\t\n\t\n1957 May\n3\n2\nOctober\n6\n1958 May\n9\n\t\nJuly\n1\n....\n\t\nSeptember\n13\n\t\n\t\nOctober\n2\n....\n1\n1959 May\n5\n\t\n....\nSeptember\n5\n\t\nOctober\n1\n1\n1960 May\n4\n2\nOctober\n2\n2\n2\n1961 May\n4\n\t\n3\nOctober\n2\n....\n4\n1962 May\n1\n\t\nOctober\n3\n\t\n1\n1963 May\n1\n1\n1\nOctober\n\t\n1\n1\n1964 May\n1\n\t\n1\nOctober\n1\n1\nTOTAL\n198\n5\n61\nGRAND TOTAL 264 Summary of Operating Revenue and Expenditure\n(Excluding Student Loan and Capital Development Funds and Endowment Capital Sums)\nApril 1, 1964 to March 31, 1965\nGENERAL FUNDS\n1963-64\nTRUST FUNDS\nI\nFor Specific Purposes\nEndowment\n%\nTeaching and\nGeneral\nPurposes\n%\nFellowships, Scholarships, Prizes and\nBursaries %\nResearch\n%\nProvince of British Columbia Grants\nGovernment of Canada Grants\nUnited States Government\nStudent Fees\nGifts and Grants (Commerce, Industry,\nAssociations, Foundations and Individuals)\nMiscellaneous\n$11,090,000 51.3\n2,897,054 13.4\n6,623,518 30.6\n1,021,825 4.7\n$ 60,790 4.4\n198,240 14.4\n7\n1,102,831 80.3\n12,343 0.9\n$ 2,100\n7,150\n501,104\n837\n0.4\n1.4\n98.0\n0.2\n$ 57,568\n3,132,536\n187,383\n1,187,707\n5,994\n1.3\n68.5\n4.1\n26.0\n0.1\n124,452 100.0\n1,210,458\n39.7\n$ 9,052,430\n38.8\n6,234,980\n22.1\n5,485,936\n23.5\n187,390\n0.7\n155,272\n0.7\n6,623,518\n23.5\n5,429,084\n23.2\n2,791,642\n9.9\n2,218,621\n9.5\n1,165,451\n4.1\n1,016,953\n4.3\n$21,632,397 100.0\n$1,374,211 100.0 $511,191 100.0 $4,571,188 100.0 $124,452 100.0 $28,213,439 100.0\n$23,358,296 100.0\nEXPENDITURE\nAcademic Faculties, Departments and\nNon-Faculty Academic and Student Services\nAdministration\nService Departments and Maintenance\nGeneral Expenses\nAthletics\nFellowships, Scholarships, Prizes and Bursaries\nResearch\nMiscellaneous\n$16,302,900\n75.4\n$ 881,966\n64.2\n1,062,296\n4.9\n8,171\n0.6\n2,995,054\n13.8\n6,233\n0.5\n233,718\n1.1\n7,026\n0.5\n69,968\n0.3\n101,841\n7.4\n303,442\n1.4\n....\n....\n209,431\n1.0\n....\n....\n501,547 98.1\n4,475,434 97.9\n6,946\n5.6\n$17,191,812\n60.9\n$14,949,806\n64.0\n....\n....\n1,070,467\n3.8\n939,675\n4.0\n....\n....\n3,001,287\n10.6\n2,643,524\n11.3\n....\n240,744\n0.9\n228,304\n1.0\n....\n....\n171,809\n0.6\n139,070\n0.6\n67,862\n54.5\n872,851\n3.1\n726,749\n3.1\n....\n....\n4,684,865\n16.6\n3,684,081\n15.8\n....\n36,655\n0.2\n$21,176,809 97.9 $1,005,237 73.2 $501,547 98.1 $4,475,434 97.9 $ 74,808 60.1 $27,233,835 96.5 $23,347,864 100.0\nReserves carried forward from 1964-65 to meet\nexpenditures in 1965-66\nBuildings including Furnishings, Equipment and\nCampus Development\nTrust Funds for Specific Purposes carried\nforward to meet Expenditures in\n1965-66\nEndowment Fund Income carried forward\nto 1965-66\n224,108 1.0\n231,480 1.1\n368,974 26.8 9,644 1.9\n95,754 2.1\n49,644 39.9\n224,108 0.8\n231,480 0.8\n474,372 1.7\n49,644 0.2\n(480,030) (2.1)\n309,973 1.3\n138,473 0.6\n42,016 0.2\n$21,632,397 100.0 $1,374,211 100.0 $511,191 100.0 $4,571,188 100.0 $124,452 100.0 $28,213,439 100.0 $23,358,296 100.0 Tht: CirTLfULIF.. 9$&\nCtcrjta Atim (jocrgc C\u00C2\u00BBrtfiinphaiTi ;\ntlw (Ji-tat Trekkrr Aw.m1. At the desk\nPhotograph by B. C. Jennings Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Woodward\nPhotograph by Gordon Whittaker Dr. Harvey Reginald MacMillan\nPhotograph by Tony Archer Driili S. Widl Ltttiag with the first diss in. Dentistry. ffiettpaph l\u00C2\u00BBj trilti StfUnA\nSisters Mary Assumpta and Ian Marie of North Kamloops take their first lesson\non the harmonica at the Summer Session for teachers of music.\nPhotograph by Gordon Sedawie Dran Dennis M. Hotly,\nFaculty ot Arts\nPhatmrr'ph l>y A.P.Hr\"\nDean Joseph A. F- Gnrdnw,\n1 ... iIty ol Forestry\nfk*t\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00A7f*pk I'Y !>\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 C. /fTTITJBfl Rod Macdonald (President, U.B.C. Alumni Association) and President Macdonald\nshare the award given by the American Alumni Council for\nthe greatest improvement in fund-raising by alumni (for 1963). Photograph by A. P. Holborne\nDr. W. Kaye Lamb and Dr. W. S. Hoar with the Tyrrell and Flavelle Medals,\npresented by the Royal Society of Canada (June 1965). Photograph by A. P. Holborr,\nf \u00E2\u0096\u00A0Mill\nModel of the new stadium, Vladimir Plavsic architect\nFaculty of Agriculture and Forestry: model of the planned new building\nPhotograph by A. P. Hotborne W\u00C2\u00ABttWfiW Library\nJtnningt The Totem Part Residences\nJ'KiHitirafh Jc The HcJiry Attgui Budding\nJ>A "Alternative titles in chronological order: Report of the President of the University of British Columbia for the academic year ending August 31st., 1929 ; Report of the President of the University of British Columbia for the academic year ending August 31st., 1930 ; Report of the President of the University of British Columbia for the academic year ending August 31st., 1931 ; Report of the President of the University of British Columbia for the academic year ending August 31st, 1932 ; Report of the President of the University of British Columbia for the academic year ending August 31st, 1933 ; Report of the President of the University of British Columbia for the academic year ending August 31st, 1934 ; Report of the President of the University of British Columbia for the academic year ending August 31st, 1935 ; Report of the President of the University of British Columbia for the academic year ending August 31st, 1936 ; Report of the President of the University of British Columbia for the academic year ending August 31st, 1937 ; Report of the President of the University of British Columbia for the academic year ended August 31st, 1938 ; Report of the President of the University of British Columbia for the academic year ended August 31st, 1939 ; Report of the President of the University of British Columbia for the academic year ended August 31st, 1940 ; Report of the President of the University of British Columbia for the academic year ended August 31st, 1941 ; Report of the President of the University of British Columbia for the academic year ended August 31, 1942 ; Report of the President of the University of British Columbia for the academic year ended August 31, 1943 ; Report of the President of the University of British Columbia for the academic year ended August 31, 1944 ; Report of the President of the University of British Columbia for the academic year ended August 31, 1945 ; Report of the President of the University of British Columbia for the academic year ended August 1st, 1946 ; Annual Report of the President 1946-1947 ; Annual Report of the President 1947-1948 ; The University of British Columbia President's Report 1948-1949 ; The President's Report 1949-50 ; The President's Report 1950-51 ; The President's Report 1951-52 ; The President's Report 1952-53 ; The President's Report 1953-54 ; The President's Report 1954-1955 ; The President's Report 1955-1956 ; The President's Report 1956-1957 ; The President's Report 1957-58 ; The President's Report 1958-1959 ; The President's Report 1959-1960 ; The President's Report 1960-61 ; The President's Report 1961-62 ; Report of the President for the Academic Year 1962-1963 ; Report of the President for the Academic Year 1963-1964 ; Report of the President for the Academic Year 1964-1965 ; Report of the President for the Academic Year 1965-1966 ; Report of the President for the Academic Year 1966-1967 ; The President's Report 1967-68 ; The President's Report 1968-69 ; The President's Report 1969-1970 ; The President's Report 1970-1971 ; The President's Report 1971-1972 ; The President's Report 1972-73 ; The President's Report 1973-74 ; The President's Report 1974-75 ; The President's Report 1975-76 ; The President's Report 1976-77 ; The President's Report 1977-78 ; The President's Report 1978-79 ; The President's Report 1979-80 ; The President's Report 1980-81 ; The President's Report 1981-82 ; The President's Report 1982-83 ; The President's Report 1983-84 and 1984-85 ; President's Report on the Library ; Toward the Pacific Century ; President's Report on the Creative and Performing Arts ; The President's Report on British Columbia's Centre of Teaching and Research in the Health Sciences ; 1995 President's Report on Social Sciences and Humanities ; Annual Report 97/98 ; Define a university ; Annual Report 99/00 ; Out There: 2000-2001 Annual Report ; What do you think?: University of British Columbia 2001-2002 Annual Report ; Influencing a new generation of global citizens: 2002/03 Annual Report"@en . "Periodicals"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LE3 .B79"@en . "LE3_B79_1965"@en . "10.14288/1.0115221"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia"@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from The University of British Columbia Library: http://www.library.ubc.ca/"@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives"@en . "University of British Columbia"@en . "Report of the President for the Academic Year 1964-1965"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .