"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1209674"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-07-15"@en . "[1952?]"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/ubcyearb/items/1.0119022/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " rf&Z Mli w * sr sg _& _89M\u00C2\u00BB EDITOR: JOAN FRASER\nASSISTANT EDITOR GERRY KIDD\nWOMEN'S EDITOR: MAUREEN CROMIE GRADUATE EDITOR ELVA PLANT\nBUSINESS MANAGER GEORGE STEVENSON SPORTS EDITOR: BILL HUTCHINSON\nFRATERNITIES: SALLY HEARD\nCLUBS EDITOR. GERRY KIDD\nUNDERGRADUATE EDITOR JOHN BANFIELD ADVERTISING: COMMERCE DEPARTMENT 9/*\nTOTEM\n1952\nPUBLISHED BY THE\nPUBLICATIONS BOARD OF THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA DEDICATION\nThe late Dr. Maxwell A Cameron, former Director of School of Education\nat the University of British Columbia, was one of the most able\neducationalists of this province. His warm sympathy and\npractical sense endeared him to faculty and students alike; perhaps\nhe will be best remembered for his unfailing good humour.\nInterest in education dominated all Dr. Cameron's life. He acquired\nhis M.A. at UBC and his Ph.D at Toronto, coming back to this\nUniversity in 1939 as acting head of the Department of Education.\nHe was appointed to the headship of the Department in 1945.\nAuthor of several books and educational surveys, Dr. Cameron is noted\nfor his Royal Commission Study now known as the\n\"Cameron Report\", which included a series of recommendations for\nextensive reforms in school administration and finance.\nIt was adopted almost in entirety by the British Columbia Legislature.\nIt is to the memory of this far-sighted leader and kindly man\nthat the Totem is respectfully dedicated. MAXWELL A CAMERON Ml\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Campus -----\nAdministration - -\nSocial ------\nActivities - - - - *\nClubs - -\nPublications - - - 87\nSports ------\nGraduates - - - - 127\nUndergraduates\n149\nFraternities - - - 207\nAround Town - - 237 QymnaHum\nA living memorial to the hundreds of UBC\nstudents and graduates who gave their lives in\ntwo world wars, UBC's new gymnasium combines superb functionalism with a classic simplicity and buoyancy of design probably\nunmatched in Western Canada.\nA dream conceived by an energetic Student\nCouncil in 1946, the million dollar structure\nwas largely financed through a series of campaigns arranged by the students. A contribution from the B. C. Government, backing the\nmammoth campus expansion programme,\nhelped complete the central portion of the\nbuilding. It was formally opened at the 1951\nFall Convention. il)e\u00C2\u00A3v%ook (Building,\nFirst permanent building of the new medical school bears the name of Dr. Wesbrook,\nUBC's first president. It will contain the new\ntwenty-six bed university hospital, the departments of bacteriology and preventative medicine and much of the research potential of the\nmedical school. Completed in the fall of 1951,\nit is used to provide classrooms for first and\nsecond year medical students, and senior\nchemistry and bacteriology students. i\nir\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0PBHfW-\nV / m \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ^\u00E2\u0080\u00947\n ~mm, J\nAAmmWk M M\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 A __.\n_B\n__\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 J^aw (Building,\n\"Let Justice Prevail Even Though the\nHeavens Fall\" . . . Behind the gleaming glass\nand white concrete of UBC's newest building,\nstudent lawyers unravel the complexities of\n2,000 years of law which forms the plastic\nframework of our society. Overlooking the\nboulevard sloping to the cliffs which drop into\nBurrard Inlet, the single-storey structure is one\nof the most striking examples of modern architecture on the campus. Its book-lined combination reading and lecture rooms contain\none of North America's most complete law\nlibraries. Cngineeting Building\nSolidly between the botanical gardens and\nthe familiar bus stop is UBC's new Engineering Building. Three storeys high and built of\nthick reinforced concrete, it contains labs, classrooms, and offices for the Faculty of Applied\nScience. Campus overcrowding forced Arts\nclasses into the building shortly after its opening in the Spring of 1951, but eventually it will\nbe wholly occupied by the rollicking redshirts\nfor whom it was built. BioL\nis<\nogical &cience\u00C2\u00A3\nThe Biological Sciences Building, with its\nrough-cut stone and concrete exterior, rises\nsharply from the old experimental fields of\nthe Faculty of Agriculture. Opened in the fall\nof 1950, the building is a centre of UBC's expanding research programme. Modern classrooms and labs for students of biology and\npharmacy are lined with gleaming electronic\nmicroscopes and complicated dissecting apparatus. A fully equipped amphitheatre, office\nspace, and part of the quarters of the new\nmedical school are also located here. *\nJ.\n!______!\n_\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nmmm M\nI\n.-.W'1\nIHM|__ t*S\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0fel\n\u00C2\u00A3r%i\ngSM\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0____-_\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0_&**?\u00E2\u0080\u00A2_\u00C2\u00A3-\n-inr *_f*\n!_ ___M 2X \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Chancellor Sherwood Lett, C.B.E., D.S.O., M.C, E.D., Q.C., B.A., l.l.D\nMembers of the Graduating Classes of 1952\ncan I believe, enter their chosen fields with\ngreater optimism and confidence than any\nof their predecessors.\nThe Dominion of Canada and the Province of British Columbia are today experiencing an economic expansion unparalleled in\ntheir history. With the increased opportunities\nfor your skills and knowledge, you will also\nfind greater scope for useful service in a wider\nsense.\nTo become a teacher, a lawyer, an engin\neer or a research worker without an \"extra-\nprofessional\" outlet for your abilities is rather\na narrow ambition.\nI hope you will always feel it a duty\nto devote some portion of your time and your\ntalents to the assistance of those who did not\nenjoy the good fortune and advantages which\nhave come to you.\nOur University has always taken a very\nspecial pride in the accomplishments of its\nGraduates. I am confident that the Graduates\nof 1952 will give us cause for greater pride.\nMy best wishes to each one of you for success in your new fields of adventure.\nChancellor.\n22 It is a great pleasure to have the opportunity of addressing the Graduation Class\nthrough the pages of the Totem. To those of\nyou who will be leaving us in 1952 with Doctor's, Master's or Bachelor's Degrees, I should\nlike to offer the best of good wishes.\nWe have entered upon a period in history\nin which the complexities of society are such\nthat it is no longer adequate to be merely professionally competent.\nTo serve your profession well, you must\nbe continually aware of the political, social\nand economic forces which relate your profession to the larger community of which you\nare a part.\nYour University degree should be evidence\nthat you have met certain minimum professional or scholastic requirements, and in addition that you have developed an appetite and\nthe capacity for continuing education on your\nown initiative.\nGood luck and God speed.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 President N. A. M. MacKenzie, C.M.G., M.M. and Bar, Q.C., B.A., L.L.B.,\n(Dalhousie), L.L.M., (Harvard), L.L.D. (Mount Alison, New Brunswick, Toronto,\nOttawa, Bristol, Alberta), D.C.L., (Whitman), F.R.S.C.\n23 Throughout the year the University as a whole has\nlooked to its faculty leaders for the clearness and steadiness of vision which distinguish its guiding figures. As\nprofessors these leaders have been liberal of time and\nadvice for the students; as members of directing bodies\nthey have contributed their careful judgment to the\nwelfare of the University; as media of University contact with the community, they have promoted the interest of its staff and students.\nRegulation of student discipline, direction of the\naffairs of the respective faculties, and determination of\ncourses of study, are duties which have received the\nattention of men and women working to uphold the\nhighest standards of a modern University.\nThese standards are the invisible threads which tie\nthe work of our greatest men in a fabric of University\ntone.\nDirectly responsible for the policy of the whole\nUniversity is the Board of Governors. This twelve-man\nboard, chaired by Chancellor Lett, faced the difficult\nproblems of 1951-52. They planned the business policy\nand dealt with the knottiest problems concerned with\nadministration.\nUnder the Board of Governors and charged with\nthe more straightforward problem of academic policy\nwas the Senate\u00E2\u0080\u0094a large group of faculty members who\nsmoothed out the host of academic problems raised by\nstudents and faculty.\nIt is these men and the faculty as a whole that students may thank for the excellent administration of the\nUniversity of British Columbia.\n24 WM\nS. N. F. CHANT, O.B.E., M.A.\nDean of the Faculty of Arts and Science\nH. J. MacLEOD, O.B.E.\nI.Sc, (McGill), M.Sc. (Alberta), A.M., Ph.D.,\n(Harvard), M.E.I.C, Mem. I.R.E., Fellow\nA. I. E.E.\nDean of the Faculty of Applied Science\nBLYTHE EAGLES\nI.A. (Brit. Col.), M.A., Ph.D. (Toronto),\nDean of the Faculty of Agriculture\nGEORGE FREDERICK CURTIS\nLL.B. (Sask.), B.A., B.C.L., (Oxon.),\nDean of the Faculty of Law\nHENRY F. ANGUS\nB.A. (McGill), B.C.L, M.A. Oxon.), L.LD.\n(McGill) F.R.S.C.\nDean of the Faculty of Graduate Studies\nMYRON McDONALD WEAVER\nA.B. (Weaton College), M.S., Ph.D., M.D.\n(Chicago)\nDean of the Faculty of Medicine\nLOWELL BESLEY,\nB.S. (Cornell), M.F. (Yale),\nDean of the Faculty of Forestry\nWALTER GAGE,\nM.A. (Brit. Col.)\nDean of Administrative and Inter-Faculty\nAffairs\nGEOFFREY C. ANDREW\nB.A. (Dalhousie), M.A. (Oxon.)\nExecutive Assistant to the President\nMISS M. DOROTHY MAWDSLEY\nB.A (McGill), M.A. (Brit. Col.), Ph.D.\n(Chicago)\nDean of Women\nMISS MARJORIE LEEMING\nB.A. (Brit. Col.)\nAssistant to the Dean of Women FRANK TURNER,\nAlumni Association Director.\nFirst winners at UBC in 1951-52 session of the UBC Alumni\nAssociation Regional Scholarship\u00E2\u0080\u0094provided through contributions to the Alumni-UBC Development Fund.\n\"The future of the UBC in the next fifty years may\nwell be determined by the support of our Alumni in\nthe next five years,\" says Chancellor Sherwood Lett,\na member of the University's first graduating class in\n1916.\n\"One phase of that support is financial and is expressed by annual giving to the Alumni-UBC Development Fund. The other phase is personal. I urge all\nformer students to join with us\u00E2\u0080\u0094by friendly interest\nand participation\u00E2\u0080\u0094in helping to solve the problems\nwhich lie ahead.\"\nThe remarks of Chancellor Lett, UBC's first AMS\npresident and first Alumni Association President, describe in part Association activities and are certainly a\nringing challenge to new and old alumni. Current President Gordon M. Letson, managing-director of Letson-\nBurpee, and a graduate in both Arts ('24) and Applied\nScience ('26), heartily agreed when making a special\nappeal to '52 grads to become active participants in the\nexpanding alumni programme.\nReferring to the Association's annual giving plan,\nMr. Letson pointed out that an average of $15,000 had\nbeen raised yearly to benefit the University and students\nduring the first three years of operation, and that although this amount may not seem large at first glance,\nit should be remembered that this annual income, for\nthat is what it is, in fact, corresponds to the income\nwhich would be derived from an Endowment Fund of\nhalf a million dollars. Chairman of this year's Fund\nBoard is Harry A. Berry, (B.Comm., B.A. '37).\nUnder the supervision of the Association's executive\ndirector, Frank J. E. Turner (B.Comm., B.A. '39) in\nthe full-time Alumni office in Brock Hall, some 17,000\nalumni are contacted. Approximately 8,000 copies of\nthe alumni quarterly, the Alumni Chronicle (edited\nby Ormonde J. Hall, B.Comm., '42, L.L.B., '48), are\nprinted each issue and it contains feature news by and\nabout grads as well as articles on the University and the\nstudents.\n26 Most of us acquiring a copy of the \"Totem\" have\nreached the end of university education. For the next\nfew years we will be fully occupied in getting ourselves\nestablished in employment and in the social groups\nwhich compose our society.\nIt is to be hoped that graduates will take a few minutes to think of what has been gained from University\neducation. We should assume additional responsibilities as Alumni of UBC to see that we and our\nfellow taxpayers recognize the value of a higher education, and to see that the necessary opportunities are\nprovided for young people proceeding to University.\nMore important, however, let us visualize the worldwide economic and social potentialities that can be\nrealized through the application of our knowledge\nmotivated by our religious philosophy. Following graduation, let us aim high and work together for things\nthat are really worthwhile. We have the opportunity to\naccomplish a tremendous amount\u00E2\u0080\u0094let's not waste it.\nMany thanks for your assistance and co-operation\nduring the past year and the best of luck to everybody\nin the future.\nSincerely,\nAMS\nPresidents\nMessage\nTHE ALMA MATER STAFF\nA large part of the detailed work of the Students'\nCouncil was carried out by the AMS staff, an efficient\ngroup of people who got out letters, did filing, routine\nreports, and accounting for the AMS.\nAll students who have taken an active part in AMS\naffairs particularly appreciate their cheerfulness and interest in campus activities.\nThis year the staff had a change in personnel with\nthe incoming of Bunny Beck and Vinnian Lewis.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 AMS Staft Vinnian Lewis, Mavis Walton, Bunny Beck, and Mr.\nH. B. Maunsell, AMS Business Manager.\n27 Student Councillors kibitzed when they took time off during a meeting.\nLeft to right: Ted Lee, Bill Sparling, Mary Lett, Phil Dadson, Jack Lintott.\nTreasurer Phil Anderson dangles one of\nhis carefully watched dollar bills before\nPresident Vaughan Lyon. Anita Jay\nthinks It's all a big joke.\nCouncillors wore gowns to meetings to add a serious businesslike air, but Terry Nicholls, Joan MacArther, and Bill\nNeen, as caught by Totem photog, didn't let gowns stop a\nlittle horseplay.\nAlthough it appeared to be wrought with seething\ncontroversy, Students' Council administered the general\nbusiness of the Alma Mater Society with efficient dispatch throughout the year. Meeting on the traditional\nMonday nights, councillors often stayed past midnight\nto solve the knotty problems presented to them.\nThe completion of the War Memorial Gymnasium\nwas one of their biggest projects. By the end of the year,\na trust fund was established for the Memorial pool, and\nplans were completed for the installation of bowling\nalleys in the gym.\nOn a few occasions bitter argument flew over the\nCouncil table. Weathering threatened impeachment, defending the Editor-in-Chief during the Armoury controversy, and wading into a \"ban fraternities\" movement, AMS President Vaughan Lyon was able, nevertheless, to guide Council through its difficulties to\nsuccess. He led the group in its campaign to remove\nUniversity fee increases.\n28 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Students' Council met in the Board Room to discuss important campus issues. Left to right: Bill Sparling, Bill Neen, Mary Lett, Jack Lintott,\nAllan Goldsmith, Phil Dadson, Vaughan Lyon, Anita Jay, Phil Anderson, Joan MacArther, Ted Lee, Dianne Livingstone, John de Wolfe,\nTerry Nichols.\nUnder one of the most competent treasurers the\nAMS has ever seen, the Society ended the year with a\nprofit. Phil Anderson carefully watched each expenditure and kept close tab on all projects sponsored by\ncampus organizations. Although considered somewhat\nconservative, Anderson's policy showed its soundness\nin the year's financial statements.\nOne of the most criticized members was Co-ordina-\ntor Jack Lintott, who had the thankless job of arranging\ndates for campus functions. Lintott found the school\nyear didn't have enough days to cover all the events\ncampus groups wished to sponsor, and several \"double\nbookings\" occurred. Lintott had better luck, however,\nwith Frosh Week which came off with much success.\nBill Neen, in addition to preparing several constitutional revisions, chaired the Undergraduate Societies\nCommittee. USC supervised arrangements for the\nundergraduate issues of the Ubyssey.\nPerpetual worry characterized Public Relations Officer Terry Nichols, who had the harried task of representing Council on the Editorial Board of the Ubyssey,\nco-ordinating campus publicity, and organizing the High\nSchool Conference. His hard work proved to be an\noutstanding example of efficient administration.\nIn addition to their regular duties, the \"joe jobs\" of\ninvestigation, chairing special committees, and assisting\nin council projects fell upon Vice-president Phil Dadson,\nSecretary Anita Jay, and Sophomore member Dianne\nLivingstone. Although busy with their own large organizations, LSE President John de Wolfe, MAD President Bill Sparling, WUS President Mary Lett, and\nWAD President Joan MacArthur also found time to do\nadditional Council work.\nStudents' Council went out of office feeling that\nthey had done their best under many handicaps to prq-\nmote the well-being of the student body of UBC.\n29 31 ROYAL VISIT\nUBC students will long remember the visit of Queen Elizabeth and her Royal Consort Prince Philip to the campus of the\nUniversity of British Columbia.\nLate in October of 1951, the Queen, then Princess Elizabeth,\nand her husband visited the campus on part of their extensive\ngoodwill tour of North America. They were to see their first\nAmerican football game.\nNearly six thousand people jammed the stadium to see the\nRoyal Couple, whose delay in schedule only served to increase\nthe anticipation of the crowd.\nFinally sirens and bright lights heralded the arrival of the\ncar parade, and as the plastic-topped limousine came to a stop\nin front of the main grandstand, students, faculty, alumni, and\nvisitors rose with a cheer in tribute to their guests.\nThe Royal Couple was welcomed to the campus and escorted\nto seats of honor in the stadium. After the Princess was presented a miniature argelite totem pole by Mary Lett, president\nof the Women's Undergraduate Society, President MacKenzie\nled the crowd in three rousing cheers for the visitors.\nThe Royal Couple then watched five minutes of football.,\nthough it was partly obscured by darkness. When the Prince\nleft the grandstand, he was presented with a football autographed by the Thunderbird team.\nNow the Princess has become Queen, and students are proud\nto think that their charming guest is the symbol of the unity of\nthe British Commonwealth.\nTo Queen Elizabeth and her husband, Prince Philip, the\nstudents of the University of British Columbia extend their\nsincere wishes for a long and prosperous reign.\nThe Royal Couple leaves the grandstand, escorted by President\nMacKenzie, as crowds strain to catch a glimpse of the party.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Princess Elizabeth signs the guest book of the\nUniversity.\nPrincess Elizabeth smilingly shakes hands with C. B. Woods, as Dr. MacKenzie\nand Chancellor Lett look on.\n33 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Upper left: Liz Fletcher,\nqueen of Frosh Week, holds\none of the symbols of her\noffice.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Engineers, just back from\nthe woods, hold a hapless\nfreshette as a hostoge for the\nreturn of their compatriots.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Frosh clamor in the registration line-up for a chance to\nget the \"ideal\" timetable.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Time off from hectic activities to watch a football\ngame.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Lower left: An enthralled\ncrowd watches the entertainment at the Frosh reception.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Below: One of the seventy organizations huckstering\nfor members on club day.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Engineers dunking Frosh\nwind up wet themselves. FROSH WEEK\nIn spite of Co-ordinator Jack Lintott's ban on Freshman Hazing, the usual spirit of Frosh Week was continued by the Engineers, with the co-operation of the\nFrosh themselves.\nThis year most of the traditional requirements were\nabandoned. No longer were seen the name-placards,\npale-lipped co-eds, or rolled-up trousers. A freshman,\nhowever, was still the unmistakable, confused being,\nand the Engineers found little trouble in routing them\nout. A few of the hardy freshmen wore their blue and\nbeanies in confidence of their prowess.\nThe Frosh were herded through the usual ceremonies of the week. They were addressed by Dr. Mackenzie, and received by the Student Christian Movement. The girls were given a talk by WAA and were\ninvited to tea by WUS, while the men were treated to\na smoked (adult entertainment only!) by the Big Block\nClub. The Big-Little Sister Banquet saw the Caf filled\nto overflowing with freshettes and their big sisters, who\nthen snake-danced over to the Brock for an evening of\nall-girl entertainment.\nThe week wound up with the Frosh Reception in\nthe Armouries, where Liz Fletcher was crowned Frosh\nQueen by Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity. The reception, the first social event of the year, attracted so many\npeople that couples were turned away at the door.\nFrosh elections saw ex-Magees in domination. Jim\nMacdonald presided over the organization with the help\nof Joyce Hart, vice-president, and Don McCallum, secretary-treasurer. Each first year English class sent one\nrepresentative to the FUS panel, making the '51 Frosh\na solid organization.\nEven before formal election of officers the Frosh\norganized themselves to deal with the Engineers. Impartial observers say that the Frosh dealt more than\nadequate retribution upon the aggressors.\nThe eagerness of the Frosh continued on as the more\ninexperienced joined clubs covering every noon hour in\nthe week. After several weeks, however, Frosh could no\nlonger be distinguished from the rest of the students\nas they disappeared into the general life of the university.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Two freshettes and the Brock totem\npole make an attractive trio .\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 The charming array of Frosh Queen\ncandidates pose with an available staircase.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Frosh executive and Student Councillors plot the coming year's activities.\ne Undergraduates started tea-for-twoing\nearly in the year; Frosh started off on\nmilk. Homecoming Weekend\nThe culmination of five years work was reached\nOctober 26, 1951, when the War Memorial Gymnasium\nwas officially opened.\nThe idea of a living memorial to those, who gave\ntheir lives for freedom in two world wars was conceived by the 1946 Students' Council. The Gymnasium\nwas to be a tribute not only to university students,\nbut to all British Columbians who were in the two\nwars.\nOne of the greatest campaigns since the Great Trek\nwas organized. Appeals went out to the provincial government, students, alumni and friends of the University. The students voluutarily raised their fees, giving\nfive dollars per person per year.\nAs construction costs mounted so did the efforts\nof the students. In the spring of 1951 campus leaders\nrealized that unless something drastic was done, the\nGym would be nothing but an empty shell.\nAn energetic pledge campaign got under way with\nthe slogan, \"Let's finish the Gym\". In response to this\nappeal, students dug into their pockets, scraped up another six thousand dollars, finally pouring a total of\n$850,000 into the project.\nThe dedication ceremony took place in the glass-\nwalled Hall of Remembrance following the Fall Convocation Exercises. AMS Council President Vaughan\nLyon presented the Gymnasium to the University on\nbehalf of the citizens, graduates, and students who\nfinanced the Building.\nAmong the thirty-five hundred who attended the\nceremony were close relatives of those who died in\nthe two wars. Spectators overflowed around the convocation platform.\nDistinguished guests included General A. G. L. McNaughton, one of Canada's greatest soldiers, Air Vice-\nMarshal Curtis, and representatives from major Canadian and American universities.\nThrough student efforts, the University has received\nthe old gymnasium, the playing fields, Brock Hall, the\nArmouries, and now the latest landmark, the War Memorial Gymnasium.\nLeft: In the foyer of the War Memorial Gymnasium, the\nHall of Remembrance, tribute is paid those to whom the\nBuilding is dedicated.\nBelow: Vaughan Lyon presents the keys to Sherwood Lett,\nChancellor of the University, and the UBC pipe band\nprovides a colorful background to the ceremonies.\n36 The 1951 Homecoming Week will be remembered for UBC's second football win and the colorful float parades by the hundreds of grads that returned to see a changed campus.\nThe week was launched with the annual\nFrosh-Soph basketball game, with the Sophomores\nwinning hands down for the second straight year.\nOn Thursday a racous pep meet in the Armouries\nended in a giant car parade into downtown Vancouver. Hundreds of students snake-paraded to the\ncourt house steps, and brought out dignitaries with\nrousing football cheers. Traffic was blocked along\nGranville from Georgia to Robson Streets as police\ntried unsuccessfully to break up the interminable\nline of cars and students.\nSaturday, October 27, 6500 screaming spectators\nwatched the 'Birds down Central Washington Wildcats 20-15 for their only Conference win of the season.\nAt half-time, the spectators were entertained by\na colorful parade of floats, majorettes and bands. The\nFrosh float, a play pen of crying babies, won the\naward. John M. Buchanan, chairman of the Alumni\nDevelopment Fund, was presented with the Great\nTrekker Award. The award, a replica of the Cairn\non the main Mall, is presented to the outstanding\nalumni of the year.\nIn the evening, two thousand people swayed to Al\nMcMillan's music at the Homecoming Ball in the\nArmouries. The Dance had been so well publicized\nthat crowds of people were turned away from the\ndoor.\nUpper right: The UBC Pipe Band leads off the half-time\nparade at the Homecoming game. Miss Mavis Coleman\nreceives the floral crown of Homecoming Queen.\nRight: Winner of the Great Trekker Award, John M.\nBuchanan, receives a replica of the Cairn from AMS\nPresident Vaughan Lyon.\nBelow: Cheered by the crowd, UBC Thunderbirds fought\nto final victory. Drum majorettes marched across the\nfield at half time in part of the parade, and after the\nfirst win of the season, an inspired crowd tore down\nthe goal posts.\n37 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Hard-working chorus girls take\ntime out to relax at one of the practices. Below: four of the girls practice the line.\n38 MARDI GRAS\nAfter eleven years the Mardi Gras finally went to\n\"Hell\". Having used themes from every place on the\nglobe, the committee went \"out of this world\" for the\ntwelfth annual Greek Letter Charity Ball.\nMardi Gras in Hades, under the chairmanship of\nRod Filer and Susan James, turned out to be another\ngreat success. Marilyn McRae and Dick Archambault,\nusing barrels of red and black paint and silver glitter,\ntransformed the Commodore into an inferno. Twin\ndevil's heads formed the stage entrances, and the orchestra played in a sea of flames.\nThe girl's choruses, under the direction of Diana\nCox, delighted everyone with their clever routines.\nSprightly \"Ladies from Hades\" and the langorous\n\"Hell's Belles\" in slight costumes of red and gold satin\ndanced with their usual skill.\nIn addition to the girl's chorus that danced, the men\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Below: Lovely chorus gals in their costumes pose before the\nshow, while emcee Rod Filer watches solo dancer Diane Cox\npractice her number.\nprovided one that sang. Led by Frank Nightingale,\nthey depicted sad-eyed angels with drooping wings who\nhad fallen from grace due to \"Cigarettes, Wusky, and\nWild, Wild Women\".\nTo publicize the occasion, a pep meet was held the\npreceding Thursday in the Armouries. Floats advertising the queen candidates drifted through the crowd,\nwhile fifteen erstwhile candidates for king, dressed in\nred flannels, sang a new version of \"Down Yonder\".\nHighlight of the meet was a magician who did an unparalleled disappearing act by failing to show up at all.\nHarry Downs of Phi Delta Theta was announced\nMardi Gras King after the voting.\nLate Friday night, after the ballots had been counted,\nthe 1952 Queen was announced. The crown was bestowed upon lovely Shary Pitts of Kappa Kappa Gamma\nby Dr. N. A. M. MacKenzie.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Jeff Dewis, Pep Meet, emcee, looks devilish, but King Harry\nHarry Downs takes his position seriously. Queen Shary Pitts\ntalks to patrons Dr. and Mrs. N. A. M. MacKenzie at the Ball.\n39 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Crowds streamed in and out of the new\nBiological Sciences Building.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Below: More people. Many went over to\nthe Physics Building to see the glass-blowing display.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Above: People watching the forestry display were\ngiven expert advice by student in charge of the\ndisplay.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Committee members at work.\nFront row, left to right\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mary Lett, President, WUS; Ivon\nFetthom, Chairman; Jane Banfield, Secretory; Bill Anstis,\nVice-Chairman and Co-ordinator of Displays.\nBack row, left to right\u00E2\u0080\u0094Philip Keatley, Finance; Cameron\nAird, Assistant Co-ordinator; Denis Creighton, Signs; Mike\nRyan, Guides; Glen Baker, Campus Services; Prof. Geoffrey\nAndrew, Faculty Representative.\nAlso on the committee but not present\u00E2\u0080\u0094Albert Plant, University Week; Ernie Perrault, Publicity and Program; Gerry\nDuclos, Campus Publicity; Dr. Gordon Shrum, Prof. B.C.\nBinning, Faculty Representatives; Vaughan Lyon, President AMS; Gerard Farry, Nanie Donaldson, Advisers;\nFrank Turner, Alumni Representative.\n40 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Above: Small boys were intrigued with the huge military displays in the armouries.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Below: Granville Street Bridge model attracted crowds.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Above: Ecology display fascinated visitors.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Below: The Kitimat model project showed the development of\nthe huge new B.C. plant.\nOPEN HOUSE-1952\nEarly in March, over 50,000 people descended on\nUBC's sprawling campus to see the year's \"greatest\nfree show.\"\nUBC students had organized another Open House.\nThe hulking Van de Graf generator buzzed and\nsputtered for the \"tourists.\" Art lovers congregated in\nthe library gallery to see the Massey Art Exhibit, while\nengineering fans thronged to see the Fraser River project, the Kitimat project, and the Granville Street bridge\nmodel.\nIn March, 1951, the Board of Governors passed a\nresolution laying the groundwork for Open House.\nStudents started to work on the mammoth project in\nSeptember, asking for contributions from all departments, faculty and student organizations, and provincial and federal institutions.\nIvan Feltham organized an executive committee of\neight students, which supervised every detail of the\nplan, involving directly over one thousand students.\nThe week preceding Open House was University\nWeek. Most of the extra-curricular clubs on campus\npresented programmes on aspects of university life\nwhich could not be displayed on Saturday.\nDepartmental displays were shown in the library,\nwith the offerings of international, political and cultural organizations. Relief maps, graphs, charts, political credos, were laid out in simplified form, allowing\nthe visitors to tell at a glance what each club or department had to offer the students.\nA liquid air display and a glass-blowing demonstration were two of the more popular attractions of the\nPhysics department. In the Home Economics building,\nhousewives led their astonished husbands into complicated cake-baking demonstrations, by color dynamics\ncharts, and through revolutionary home furnishing displays.\nOver 700 guides, recruited hastily from every faculty by Mike Ryan, directed the crowds smoothly\nthrough the buildings, and kept traffic running at a\nreasonable pace.\n41 CAMPUS CONVERSATION\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Totem pole got a facelifting, came back with the\nspring in fresh new colors.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Swammi Shivananda,\nwhose lectures prompted students to study Yogi.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Austrian students demonstrated dances and sang folksongs in the Auditorium to a capacity audience.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Pat Taylor, Rhodes Scholar, shows his approval of the\naward.\nFROSH WEEK\u00E2\u0080\u0094Frosh \"protection\" from the Engineers resulting in\nthe usual swimming lessons in the lily pond ... the Frosh invasion of\nthe Engineering Building with stirrup pumps, their power-mad\nrampage to the caf, where they soaked hapless girls . . . their introduction to Eric Nicol's classic, \"Her Scienceman Lover\".\nTALKED ABOUT\u00E2\u0080\u0094The opening of International House at UBC\n.. . imaginary house had real student members who welcomed foreign\nstudents to the campus. Club sponsored international dinners at\nAcadia Camp, Congress of Vienna Ball in late March. . . . The opening of the Fiji and Phi Delt houses, the beginning of fraternity row.\nPEOPLE, PEOPLE, PEOPLE\u00E2\u0080\u0094UBC students elected a vice-president for the first time \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Phil Dadson filled the position. Terry\nNicholls, Dianne Livingstone took over other vacant seats on Council\n. . . Les Armour was elected to EIC. Big Dave MacFarlane, captain\nof the Thunderbirds, hobnobbed with royalty after UBC won their\nfirst game of the season ... he presented the football to Prince Philip.\nCAMPUS VISITORS\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"The Messengers\", a student group who are\ntravelling around the world on five dollars, visited UBC to interest\nstudents in their movement. The six Messengers who came to the\ncampus sold postcards describing their travels to finance the remainder\nof their jaunt around the globe. . . . Swami Shivananda from India\nvisited the campus in February and packed lecture halls for a week\n.. . UBC undegrads flocked to see and hear the Swami, a serious, personable man who asked students for more understanding and less\nprejudice toward India. His series of lectures ended with a practical\ndemonstration of Yogi. . . . Austrian students presented \"Greetings\nfrom Vienna\", a programme of gay Viennese music, folk dances, and\nTyrolean yodels.. . they almost caused an international incident when\nthey were insulted by an article in the Ubyssey.\nUBC's FAMOUS TOTEM POLE\u00E2\u0080\u0094Representing the immobility of\nArts students, disappeared from its usual resting spot in front of\nBrock Hall last fall. The weather-beaten monstrosity was removed to\nreceive a face-lifting job. It returned later in the year in time for\nOpen House.\nRHODES SCHOLAR\u00E2\u0080\u0094Pat Taylor, pipe-playing student taking\nhonors in physics and biology, won the coveted Rhodes Scholarship.\nPat plans to continue his study of physics at Oxford, return to Vancouver at the end of his term.\nAUS FUNERAL\u00E2\u0080\u0094Arts Undegrad Society finally made news this\nyear. They were declared defunct by the president, who went into\nLaw, claiming that the \"AUS at UBC had done absolutely nothing for\nyears\".\n42 ARMOUR CONTROVERSY\u00E2\u0080\u0094Another chapter in the exciting life\nof the Ubyssey occurred when an AMS general meeting was called\nto discuss whether or not Les Armour should remain in office as\neditor. Every aspiring speaker on the campus had a chance to air his\nviews on Armour until AMS President Vaughan Lyon had to limit\nthe number of speakers . . . highlight of the meet was Armour's tear-\njerking speech, which won him the approval of the students who\nremained to the bitter end.\nWELL GROOMED PRESIDENT\u00E2\u0080\u0094UBC's much-decorated President received another honor during the year . . . one of a slightly\ndifferent nature than the usual academic award. Dr. N. A. M. MacKenzie was recognized as a veritable Beau Brummel in college circles\nwhen he was named Best Dressed Man in Education by the National\nFashion Council.\nArmour controversy necessitated a general meeting, resulted in Armour's reinstatement, this classic shot of the\nArmouries.\nASCENT OF F6\u00E2\u0080\u0094One of the most controversial plays ever staged at\nUBC. The English Department's presentation of the Play by Isherwood and Auden ran for three evenings. Direction and lighting\neffects were universally praised, endless interpretations of the theme\nwere debated for weeks . . .\nNEW BUILDING\u00E2\u0080\u0094Latest in a series of new buildings on the campus\nopened officially in January . . . the $110,000 building to be used for\nresearch for the B. C. Government. An ultra modern, three-storey\nstructure, opposite the Biological Sciences Building, it contains labs\nand offices for the Council.\nLSE SPECIAL EVENTS\u00E2\u0080\u0094Introduced on the campus this year, the\nSpecial Events Programme was extremely successful . . . probably the\noutstanding appearance of the year was that of Andre Segovia, the\n\"Apostle of the Guitar\", who thrilled his audience with his guitar\nrepetoire.\nTHUNDERBIRD VICTORIES\u00E2\u0080\u0094Thunderbird team came through\nwith several victories this year . . . notably two wins on the football\nfield for the first time in ages . . . and another, less touted victory over\nbookworms in the Library\u00E2\u0080\u0094when the Library closed, because, as\nLibrary officials stated: \"Rooters swarmed onto the Library roof and\ninto book-stack levels. This created a serious hazard to persons and\nto University property.\" End quote.\nAMS, ETC.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Elections, among the deadest in years . . . several of the\nseats were won by acclamation . . . Raghbir Basi was elected to the\npresidency for 1952-53. The March General Meeting . . . much debated, called the \"hottest in years\" . . . MAD proved that the Ostrum\nplan was generally accepted at UBC as they again took a 30% chunk\nfrom the AMS budget\u00E2\u0080\u0094much to the dismay of the LSE groups, whose\nallotment was slashed to ribbons. Expected fight over fraternities and\nsororities was reduced to a motion recording disapproval of racial and\nreligious discrimination by any campus organization. . .\nAND SPRING\u00E2\u0080\u0094Came to the campus with the softest of winds and\nthe warmest of days, stirring everyone's fancies away from the grind\nof exams. \"Not conducive to studies,\" said undergraduates (no, not\nstudents), as they trooped down the 1,000 steps to the beach . . .\n43\nDramatic scene from the \"Ascent of F6\" shows Don\nEricson, leading man, under the spotlight.\nSpring came again to the campus, and students deserted\nthe Library for the lawn. 45 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Top left: Comedy team brings yuks to huge\ncrowd who stood for hours in Armouries being inveigled into parting with 500 cc.'s. Top right: Red\nCross workers were caught without sufficient\nfacilities; took three days to catch up to overwhelming enthusiasm of competition-minded students.\nBottom right: Wacky Squamish Band was again\nproved tops in popularity at huge Pep Meet.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Top left: Blood Week started with car parade;\nblotting horns startled lunch-eating students, who\nresponded by lining up in alarming numbers outside Armouries. Middle: Mardi Gras Male Chorus\nmade odd noises at giant Pep rally; all gave blood\nafter entertaining. Bottom: Big Block Club turned\nout in force, as did most other campus organizations, some of which levied penalties on members\nwho overlooked demand for blood.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Opposite page, top left: Part of lengthy student\nline-up; some stood for hours waiting for harassed\nnurses to catch up. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Top right: Energetic majorettes, who performed for practically every student\npromotion stunt, led opening-day car parade around\ncampus. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bottom, left: \"UBC's most controversial figure\" let compromising Engineers lead him\ninto Armouries. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Middle: One of 3,004 donors.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bottom, right: On third day, Red Cross brought\nin 30 more beds and hundreds of bottles; managed\nto have one nurse fo revery three persons who\ngave blood.\n46 DRIVE\nEarly in January, Del Sharpe was appointed head\nof the spring Blood Drive, a position noted for its\nthanklessness. With two years' experience in Blood\nDrive promotion on the campus, Sharpe vowed that\nthis last stint on behalf of the Red Cross campaign\nwould be the biggest, most colorful of his career.\nIt was.\nSearching for a sure-fire promotion scheme, Sharpe\nnoticed that Life Magazine had covered the record-\nbreaking drive at Texas University. With competition\nas the stimulant, he set out to \"Beat Texas\".\nOn Monday, February 11, Sharpe and his enthusiastic committee sat back and watched their plan unfold.\nGaily decorated cars, most of them contributed by\nForestry Club members, honked their way around the\ncampus behind ten majorettes and the Varsity Brass\nBand. Lecture-bound students were plagued with\nthousands of \"Give Your Blood Today\" posters; loudspeakers boomed from radio cars and Radsoc speakers\nin the Brock.\nEngineers paraded through the Caf, Library and\nthe Armouries, button-holing everyone in sight and\nsigning them up for their 500 cc. contribution.\nTuesday's Pep Meet was the most colorful and inspired student extravaganza of the year. Downtown\nentertainers, notably Eleanor from the CBC and Bob\nDavidson from the Palomar Supper Club, thrilled a\nblood-conscious crowd of over 1,500 students.\nEager to meet the challenge, hundreds mobbed the\nunder-staffed Red Cross Clinic set up hastily in the\nArmouries. The Red Cross sent out a letter of apology\nto students for lack of facilities, and rushed in more\nsupplies from Edmonton to keep up with the tremendous response.\nBy the end of the week, the blood was flowing into\nthe plasma bottles faster than the Drive Committee\ncould tabulate the results, and the following Monday\nnight, every faculty had overshot its quota.\nTuesday morning, Sharpe's goal was in sight, and\nwith 50 pints to go, Flo Turple and Bill St. John, with\nmany hastily recruited aides, rushed around the campus\npledging everyone they met to give a pint sometime in\nthe future. At 6 o'clock, Tuesday evening, the giant\nchart in the Blood Drive offices totaled 3,004 pints, a\nphenomenal achievement for a school which previously\nhad given no more than 1,500 pints in any Drive.\n47 INTERNATIONAL\nHOUSE\nIn the spring of 1951, with the election of the first\nInternational House Committee at UBC, a latent plan\nstarted to become a reality.\nFollowing in the footsteps of the pioneers, Frene Gin-\nvalla, Felicity Pope, and Peter Steckl, three international\nstudents who began the work of the organization in\n1949, this new institution began its activities. Its aims\nwere to further world understanding, brotherhood and\npeace, to aid in the acquisition of a better knowledge of\nthe culture and life of all peoples for the furtherance\nof goodwill between nations and races, and to help\nforeign students derive the greatest benefit from their\nstay in Canada.\nAlthough there hasn't been a permanent building\ndonated to the students by a Canadian Rockefeller, the\nrock upon which the committee built its activities was\nstronger.\nUnder Chairman Raghbir Basi, the committee received permission to carry out its activities at Acada. As\na result the International House Committee, with a\nmembership of 85, has been operating not only among\nour 300 foreign students, but also among the approximately 400 residents of Acadia Camp. The arranging\nof organization and activities between these groups was\nthe job of Bob Loosmore, Co-ordinator of Activities.\nThe official opening ceremonies took place on October 21, when the Patron of the International House,\nMrs. Sherwood Lett, officially declared International\nHouse open, and the emblem of the association was\npresented to the House by the president of the Vancouver Chapter, Dr. Murray A. Cowie. From that time on,\nthe doors of the imaginary house have been kept open\nto all who wish to enter.\nPat Crehan, secretary of the organization, alleviated\nthe great administrative problems of the rapidly expanding group. The general program was administered by\nLukia Michas, who was the organizer of the Swedish,\nSpanish, Burmese, French, Chinese and Ethiopian dinners at Acadia on the first Sunday of each month. A\nnational menu provided the background to informative\ntalks on the life, customs and problems of these countries, given by speakers who, either as natives or as\ntravellers in these countries, had ample experience, and\ncontributed greatly to the success of these evenings.\nDr. Murray A. Cowie presents the International House\nscroll to Raghbir Basi.\nMrs. Sherwood Lett, patron of International House, chats\nwith Dr. MacKenzie at the opening ceremonies.\nThe Chinese Dinner at Acadia Camp was well attended.\nGuests listen to informative talks on China.\n48 INTERNATIONAL\nSTUDENTS\nAs a president's committee, the UBC branch of the\nInternational Student Service has been working during\nthe past five years to establish overseas relationships\nwith foreign universities. It is the only official connecting link between this university and students of other\nnations.\nActivities have included arranging an exchange\nscholarship with Hamburg University, material aid in\nthe form of money and secondhand text books to universities in southeastern Asia, and postwar European\nrelief work whereby homeless DP students have been\nbrought over to study on the campus.\nThe ISS also arranges for two or three UBC students\nto go to the annual ISS seminar which is held each year\nin different parts of the world and is attended by representatives of most major American, European, and Asiatic universities. The seminar is an attempt to create an\ninternational community of university students and professors, and through a theme of discussion, to increase\ninterest and understanding of other nations and peoples.\nThe summer seminar of 1951, held just outside Ottawa and with a \"Southeastern Asia\" theme, was\nattended by UBC delegates Ivan Feltham and Bill Ans-\ntis. The 1952 seminar is to be held in Ceylon.\nUBC has been host to ten DP students, four of\nwhom, Seva Koyander, Deena Wakhroucheff, Kveto\nJanda, and Branko Pejovic, attended varsity this year.\nThey have come from Latvia, Hungary, Czechoslovakia\nand Jugoslavia. UBC has also played host to two German exchange students. Winner of the scholarship to\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ISS members discuss scholarship nominees for this year's conference in Ceylon.\nHamburg for 1951-52 was John Snyder, who will be\nstudying post-grad chemistry at that university until\nthis summer.\nISS has also investigated exchange scholarships with\nRussia and Asia. At a student referendum in February,\nhowever, most interest was shown in DP scholarships,\nthe Russian plan being defeated. ISS policy in the future will be in accordance with the wishes of the student\nbody.\nThis year, Roy Haapala has been committee chairman; Tommy Korican, treasurer, and Agnes Wilford,\nsecretary, following the resignation in January of Clare\nMacGillivray.\nThe ISS Committee is made up of about a dozen\nstudent members, two or three faculty advisors, and\nrepresentatives from Students Council and NFCUS.\nThe members are those who have shown particular interest or aptitude in ISS affairs, and who have the time\nto devote to some very hard work.\nNATIONAL FEDERATION OF STUDENTS\nThe National Federation of Canadian University\nStudents is the co-ordinating body between all Canadian universities. Its aims are the promotion of inter-\nuniversity activities, the exchange of ideas and information, and the representation of Canadian university\nstudents in all international student affairs.\nNFCUS arranges the inter-regional scholarships,\npromotes the Canadian University Radio Federation, the\nCanadian University Press, and the National Debating\nUnion. Each year a national conference is held at a\nmember university and the problems of Canadian students are discussed.\nAt UBC, NFCUS promotes surveys on student cost\nof living with the intention of determining what sums\nare necessary in the forms of bursaries and loans from\nthe government to assist needy students.\nThe Austrian Students Goodwill Tour was sponsored this year by NFCUS workers, who tried to arrange\ninternational debates between U.S. colleges and USC.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 NFCUS members arrange exchange of UBC students to\nother Canadian universities. Here, in the NFCUS office,\nmembers examine scholarship rules as they consider\ncandidates.\niNwiai DtB\u00C2\u00ABnm! union\n.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2___0IAN UUVHISITY\nf_0IO FfMMTION\nC*m\u00C2\u00BBu_i - Ahoiican\nSTU__T tKCHANCCS\n\u00C2\u00ABN_0 *N STUOENT 5\n__ CttH-NCtt\nSTUOtM.\nBATES\nTOUKJ J\n'ENWARSJf'\nT\u00C2\u00BB Stuums\n49 _^\n^H\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\ni\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i 11\n'\n; -i i , i i ,i\n50 Women's Dorms\nForbidden territory to two-thirds of the students\nat UBC, the women's dorms provided \"homes away\nfrom home\" for campus co-eds. Lucky girls living in\nresidence found their attractive quarters finished in\nblonde wood and soft colour schemes, rooms ideal for\nstudying and gossiping.\nThe three modern buildings overlooking the sea\nactually represent the realization of a wish of the late\nDean Mary Bollert, who long dreamed of a residence\nwhere girls newly arrived at UBC could find the comfort and companionship of community life. It remained for Dean Mawdsley to contribute the time, effort,\nand patience to make this dream prominent in the\nuniversity's history, and are supervised by faculty\nwomen in the position of \"dons\".\nDr. Kay Brearley is resident don in Mary Bollert\nHall. In Isabel McGinnis, Physical Education instructor Helen Bryan occupies the don's suite, as does Nora\nNeilson in Anne Wesbrook Hall.\nA responsible ruling of the girls' affairs is carried\nout by the executive of the residences headed by Audrey\nTowler, and by the separate house executives under\nDiane Sawyer, Evelyn Tomkins, and Rae Gaetz.\nUnder his capable executive- many activities were\nplanned for this year. An old girls' dance, held in October, and a formal for \"The Ides of March\" to which\nall girls in residence at Acadia and all former dorm\ngirls were invited, have highlighted social life. Also included in the schedule have been an autumn scavenger\nhunt, Christmas breakfast parties, swimming parties,\nSunday evening coffee parties, and musical get to-\ngethers.\nThe spacious lounges are scenes of constant activity.\nThere the girls can relax and entertain their friends. Just\noff the lounge is a kitchenette large enough for snack-\nmaking.\nFriendly companionship and co-operation make residence life a happy and most memorable experience for\neach girl who is fortunate enough to have known it.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 The entrance hall is always alive with girls\nlooking for letters, answering the telephone,\nor greeting visitors.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 The dorm executive solved many of the girls'\nproblems and governed the three units.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Individual desks make it easy to study or send\nhome reports of almost everything that happens\nat UBC.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 left: The lounges provide the ideal place for\nfeminine discussions of clothes, men and other\nwomen.\n51 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Marilyn Benson, Babs Blake, and Sally Lewis modelled some of the clothes shown at the WUS Fashion Show in early spring.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Top left: WUS executive members gathered together to plan Hi-\nJinx party.\nTop right: WUS top brass showed\nvaried reactions as they attempted\nchorus for Hi-Jinx.\nOpposite: Student councillors\ncrashed WUS hen party much to\nthe hilarity of the crowd.\n52 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Mary Lett, President of the WUS Executive, and her cohorts.\nWOMEN'S UNDERGRADUATE SOCIETY\nWUS chalked up a particularly successful 1951-52\nbecause of an increased publicity programme emphasizing women's activities. President Mary Lett, with\nveep Kay Stewart and secretary Mary Frances Munro,\nplanned a lively round of special events to supplement\nthe girls' regular schedule of classes.\nFor Frosh Week, distribution of beanies, buttons,\nand big sisters was organized by WUS members to\nwelcome their little sisters. Susan MacKenzie looked\nafter arrangements for a Freshette tea. With the Big-\nLittle Sister Banquet, arranged jointly by WUS and\nWAD, the Freshettes' formal initiation was complete.\nCo-eds in pyjamas gathered one cold evening in October for the annual \"Hi-Jinks\" hen party. Though the\ntheme was a sleepy one, the party was in no danger\nof becoming dull, for the WUS Executive had planned\nan evening of entertainment that could be survived only\nby the most wide-awake. Group singing and faculty\nskits added to the hilarity of \"Hi-Jinks\".\nLeap Year '52 was warmly welcomed early in Janu\nary by co-eds participating is the Sadie Hawkins Day.\nA lively Pep Meet brought impersonations and Scottish dancers to a show disrupted intermittently by the\nspectacle of a mere man being pursued by an insistent\nco-ed. The spirit of Sadie Hawkins herself rose over\nthe Brock at the informal dance.\nThe all-girl talent show was a new event of the\nWUS programme this year. It was an excellent presentation of a variety of talent found on the campus. An\nenthusiastic audience was well satisfied with the performances of Milla Andrew, Barbara Allen, and Mary\nMcAlpine. Two Mardi Gras choruses added sparkling\nroutines to a successful show.\nLate in February a display of original designs by\nMiss Kay Murray was arranged by WUS for their\nannnal fashion show.\nThe WUS-WAA Banquet ended the year with the\npresentation of awards to outstanding girls on campus,\nas WUS followed its policy of promoting in every way\nthe interests of UBC women.\nWUS Talent Show Rehearsal\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Big and Little Sisters during Fosh Week.\n___ _\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ______ _\u00E2\u0096\u00A0____\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 H\n[ I \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 1 1H *\n5 _^_i H BB-_H_1D I w\n______________ * ^^^^^jJB 1 ^^^ -uu \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00C2\u00BB\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 _^_HP ._d_BF wST __^_^_h\n_&_^_^_3\n' /\ *\n53 e Phrateres Executive in a party mood\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 President Enid Deering\nPhrateres at UBC\nThis has been a year of hard work in social service\nand fun in social events for members of Theta Chapter\nof Phrateres International .The spirit of friendliness\nfor which Phrateres is famous manifested itself in the\nmany activities of the group.\nPhrateres is one of the most helpful organizations\non the campus. This year its members sold refreshments\nat the Frosh Reception, checked coats at Homecoming,\nsold poppies, packed hampers, gave parties for underprivileged children, and helped at Open House. The\nscholarship fund started last year swelled to $100 by\nChristmas.\nThe students that crowded Brock Hall one November evening proved that there can still be a paradise\non earth for those who will dance to it. This particular\nelysium had Chinese lanterns casting a romantic glow\nover blossoms and pagodas, and drifting fumes of exotic\nincense\u00E2\u0080\u0094truly a \"Pagoda Paradise\". In the spring, the\n\"Fiesta Formal\" blew in a gay whirl of light and colourful Spanish senioritas.\nBut not all the fun of Phrateres was found at the\nformals. Sub-chapters planned hen parties filled with\nlight laughter. The all-Phrateres bowling league kept\nsub-chapters competing. Phratereans also gave a Barn\nDance to which all boys in residence were invited.\nThe annual October banquet for old members was\nhighlighted by talks by delegates to the international\nconvention and a presentation of a plaque for the best\nscrap book of the year.\nNext year's Phrateres executive, installed at a candlelit initiation ceremony, look forward to promoting the\nfriendly spirit among -women of a growing UBC\ncampus.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Formal initiation ended pledge period for new members\nLounging in Phrateres room\n54 Patrons at the Phrateres Formal chat during intermission\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Phrateres and escorts at the Formal\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Above Phrateres' own clubroom\nin the north end of Brock Hall was\nscene of many council meetings.\nExecutives here laid plans for all\nsocial functions, while all Phratereans could use the room for\nmeetings or lounging.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Below: Cute chorus worked on\nroutine for the \"Pagoda Paradise\"\nFormal held in early November.\n55 CLUBS EDITOR: GERRY KIDD \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n57 LSE was called together every two weeks to iron out the many problems facing UBC's 67 clubs. DeWolfe instituted several new positions\nthis year to give shape and form to an organization which in previous years had been merely an \"erand boy for the clubs\".\nL.S.E. Administration\nIt has been said that there is more club activity on\nthis campus than on any other in North America.\nIn the LSE constitution there is a clause that states\nin effect that the LSE directs and controls this activity.\nA Major Club president has also stated that the LSE\nis merely an errand boy for the clubs. Somewhere between the two lies the function of the Literary and\nScientific Executive. The clubs have as much autonomy\nas is possible, and rarely suffer the interference of the\nLSE. Yet the officers of the executive are certainly not\nerrand boys of the clubs. Their duties lie in administration, finance, publicity, and co-ordination.\nJohn de Wolfe headed the sprawling, unwieldly\norganization this year, and created a co-ordinated set\nof new positions to realize his original conceptions of\nthe duties of the LSE to the student body. Anne Choma\nwas secretary; Tom Franck, treasurer; Lawrence Lynds,\nexecutive member; Terry Nicholls and Dianne Livingston publicity directors, and Alan King chairman of\nSpecial Events.\nAs the first officers in newly-created positions,\nNicolls developed a system of campus publicity rules,\nand Franck worked out an effective financial system for\nthe LSE.\nFormerly the LSE was a meeting-place where clubs\ncould tell each other what they were doing. This year\nthe officers suggested certain general projects, assisted\nthe individual clubs, and gave the clubs general projects, and gave the clubs in return the opportunity to request money or representation, or any particular favor\nfrom the LSE.\nAn attempt was made to work in the Science and\nArts Clubs, by dividing the Major-Minor LSE, or the\nbody upon which all clubs sit, into four sections: Service (the former Major LSE), Science, Arts, and General,\nwith a chairman for each. Aside from the added convenience, this division allowed a greater integration of\nmore specialized interests, without losing the scope of\nthe whole.\nThe executive this year sponsored a number of\nevents in connection with the Faculty Fine Arts Committee, and the Departments of English and Classics.\nProfessor F. L. Blunt, of London University, and\nKeeper of the King's Pictures, spoke on \"Art in Britain\nat Present\". Dr. Ernest Mundt, director of the California School of Fine Arts, held a week-long seminar discussing the problem of \"Art and the Communication\nof Meaning\". The highly controversial Massey Report\nwas discussed in all\nits multitudinous\ndetails by members\nof the faculty and\nspecial speakers\nduring a week of\nnoon-hour lectures.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 John DeWolfe tried\nto imbue in the clubs a\nsense of paternal assurance toward LSE. Some\nsay he succeeded.\n58 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Milla Andrew, industrious secretary of the Musical Society, lead\nsinger in \"Cosi Fan Tutti\", and\n\"Les Noce\", one of campus' outstanding club members during four\nyears at University.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Raghbir Basi, president of\nUnited Nations Club; executive\nmember of Civil Liberties Union,\nofficial UBC observer at International House at Columbia University, New York.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Eugene Hunt, chief engineer\nof the Radio Society, sole technical advisor to harassed Radsoc\nidea-men; noon-hour programmes\ninto Brock Hall, would never have\nbeen heard without his innovations.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Elizabeth Riley, president of\nthe French Club, the minor organization which this year reached a\nrecord of 80 members; member of\nGerman Club, and International\nStudents Club.\nLS.E. SPECIAL AWARDS\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bill Topping, president of the\nFilm Society; one of the original\nfounders of UBC Philatelic Society;\nnoted campaigner for rights of\nclubs on LSE.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Marne Wilson, vice-president\nof United Nations Club; editor of\nthe UBC U.N. Digest, assistant\nsecretary-general of Model General Assembly, U.N. Club.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bill Wynne, president of Jazz\nSociety, member of Special Events\nCommittee of LSE; liaison worker\nbetween MAD and LSE; member\nof Mamooks.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Norman Young, president of\nPlayers Club, acting stage manager and lighting manager of all\nPlayers Club productions; advisor\nto all groups staging productions\nin auditorium.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 John De Wolfe, president LSE,\nbackbone of enthusiastic Special\nEvents programme, tireless administrator of UBC's 67 problem-\nwracked clubs.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Mr. Norman Barton, director\nof Visual Education, Extension Department, honorary president of\nthe Film Society.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Dr. Roy Daniells, head of the\nEnglish Department, honorary\npresident of LSE.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Dr. William Robbins, professor\nof English, faculty advisor to\nPlayers Club.\n59 The Juillard String Quartet, famous throughout the world for its virtuosity, was one of the most popular attractions of the LSE Special\nEvents Committee. On January 17 and 18, they presented the Canadian premiere of the Bela Bartok Quartet Cycle.\nLITERARY-SCIENTIFIC EXECUTIVE\nThis year was one of great ambitions and greater\ndisappointments for the Special Events Committee of\nthe LSE.\nIn June, 1951, LSE president John DeWolfe and\nSpecial Events Chairman Allan King procured a copy\nof \"Musical America\". Dazzled by the vast array of\ntalent displayed in the periodical, they dispatched letters\nto musician's agents all over Canada and the U.S. They\nfound that dozens of fine artists, particularly in the\nchamber music field would be only too happy to con-\ncertize at UBC, often at half their usual concert fees.\nWith so much talent available, the special events\ncommittee determined to greatly enlarge its scope, to\npresent a series of evening concerts available to both\nstudents and general public. The prime object of the\nprogramme was to fill a gap in the concert field.\nIn Vancouver, popular music, symphony, and big-\nname soloists are available to the musical public. But in\nthe field of chamber music, and opera, Vancouver is\nsadly lacking. The chamber music which is available,\nis by and large, of a fairly routine composition. That is,\nthe 19th century music dominates the programmes,\nmodern and early music is almost completely neglected.\nConsequently, the Special Events programme was designed to rectify this regrettable lack. Under the assumption that universities lead community intellectual life,\nand that they should give direction to cultural activity,\nthe committee went ahead and scheduled seven concerts.\nThe committee originally planned to open the series\nwith two concerts in the fall; one by the Vancouver\nChamber Orchestra, under John Avison, the other by\nthe Renaissance Ensemble. Due to various difficulties,\none had to be cancelled and the other postponed till the\nspring.\nThe series opened January 9, with a presentation of\nMozart's comic opera ,\"Cosi Fan Tutte\". Undoubtedly,\nthe most ambitious and difficult undertaking attempted\nby a musical group,\nthe Mozart Opera\nCompany's presentation lived up to\nneither its potentialities or its advance notices. Swamped with\nillnesses, a shortage\nof stage help, the\nproduction limped\non stage much to\nthe chagrin of those\nwho had worked so\nhard to present it.\nHere, the committee received its\nfirst serious jolt: justifiably confident in\nthe prospects of a\nfirst-rate show, they\nwere snowed under\nby last minute, uncontrollable circumstances and De-\nWolfe and King carried their chins well down on their\nchests for the following week.\nThe next event of the series, however, was a resounding success.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Alan King\n60 \N\nLeft: Miss Suzanne Bloch, who played to a capacity audience in Brock Hall on March 22. Her unusual versatility astounded the students;\nshe played lute, virginals, recorder, guitar, piano and flute. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Right: The Griller String Quartet, who played a seldom-heard quartet\nby Mozart, and Sibelius' superb Quartet in D minor, to open Special Events Series in the fall.\nSPECIAL EVENTS PROGRAM\nThe world-famous Juilliard String Quartet, presented the Canadian premiere of the Bela Bartok\nQuartet cycle. On two successive evenings, January 17\nand 18, immensely enthusiastic audiences heard the\nmusical genesis, development and fruition of this century's greatest musicians. The Juilliard Quartet gave a\nstunning performance of the six quartets, combining\nvirtuoso technique of the highest order with profound\nmusical understanding.\nOn February 7th, upwards of a thousand music-\nlovers jammed into Brock Hall to hear one of the finest\nmusicians of our day\u00E2\u0080\u0094Andres Segovia. In a programme\ncompassing four hundred years of musical history, Mr.\nSegovia played works of the 16th century through\nBach, Handel, Berlioz and Pagannini to compositions\nof the present day, many of which were dedicated to\nhim by their composers.\nReplacing the previously scheduled appearance of\nthe Pascal Quartet, Nicholas Fiore and the deRima-\nnoczy String Quartet delighted a University audience\nwith the charming and beautiful flute quartets of Mozart and a magnificent interpretation of Ernst Bloch's\nB minor Quartet.\nMusic of the Renaissance and Medieval periods was\npresented to students in two succeeding evening concerts\u00E2\u0080\u0094the first by the Renaissance Ensemble, a group\nof vocalists and instrumentalists under the direction of\nJohn Reeves, and the second by Suzanne Bloch. In\naddition to singing songs of this period, Miss Bloch\nplayed the lute, virginals, and recorder, ancestors of the\nguitar, piano and flute. Students were fascinated by the\n61\nnovel sonorities produced by these ancient instruments,\nand the music itself proved delightful.\nPreparations for the final concert in the series were\nbegun in September and involved a staggering variety\nof instrumentalists and vocalists. Stravinsky's choral\nwork\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Les Noces\" was the feature of this April concert called for a full chorus, four soloists, four pianists,\nand eight percussion instruments. Philosophy students\nwho studied next door to the rehearsal hall, HM1, were\ntreated to some weird and fantastic sound effects during\nthe course of the year, but the resulting concert in April,\nproved to be an immensely exciting experience.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Students of Professor Adaskin's Music 300 class, with Music\nDepartment, presented first Canadian performance of Stravinsky's \"Les Noces\" (The Wedding) under direction of Colin Slim,\nin early April. Originators of thousands of brilliant posters and banners which cl ing to every available blank wall and notice board all over the campus\nthis year: from left, Frank Madill, Barry Baldwin, Ben Quon, Len Woo, Dick Mann, Joyce MacPherson, Pete Lozowski and Chuck Lew.\nMAMOOKS\nIn Brock's south basement, where most of their den\nis taken up with a huge drawing board, paint-spattered,\nlab-coated Mamooks turn out the hundreds of posters,\nsigns and banners which decorate the campus from the\nopening cry of Frosh Week to the melancholy gurgle\nof the last Cabaret Dance.\nLined side-by-side, the work of Mamooks would\nprobably extend two or three miles, and would graphically picture the year's activities at UBC.\nThis year, clubs, social organizations, and various\nfaculty societies either ordered materials and did the\njob themselves, or arranged for Mamooks to outline\ntheir publicity for them.\no\nmM& -t__JMfl*U\n__^__^__^__^__B_r \w\nAmmm^L.\njr an -wo_ *\u00C2\u00AB j_. =\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 __\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -_-_j_ a\njH^f MTL d_J_l\n]\nr\\tA\n' i '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nm\\ kmmW ____________ ^V J ^^\n^H _^_T\n^H _^_^E*^^_i l^__*\n*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 fir'/ 1\n__\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n1 _K\nJim Wood's unusually effective designs for the\nHomecoming Dance were one of the club's prominent\naccomplishments this year. The decoration of the awkward, barnlike Armouries has posed a problem for\ngenerations of Mamooks.\nFrank Madill, the club's silk-screen expert, supplied\nmost of the posters and banners for Aggie Week.\nDisplays of the club's finest posters and banners,\nchosen by the club committee, were shown to Open\nHouse visitors in Mamooks colorful clubrooms and\nworkshops.\nAlthough \"No!\" seems to be the most used word in\ntheir vocabulary, not many requests were turned down,\nproviding a week's notice gave the Mamooks chance to\ngather ideas and materials. Some of the more persuasive outsiders coming down to beg for signs were enlisted into the ranks of diligent poster-painters, and\nbecame permanent members of the club. \"We haven't\ntime\u00E2\u0080\u0094do it yourself!\" was the answer received by promotion and publicity men from campus organizations.\nProlific poster man Pete Lozowski was Mamooks\npresident this year, aided by two old-timers, vice-president Joyce MacPherson and treasurer Barry Baldwin.\nSecretary Janet Bishop was the only frosh on the executive.\nWith the unexpected flow of ambitious, inexperienced new members after Christmas, classes in the art\nof lettering by brush and speed-ball were formed.\nMadill, Lozowski, Woo, Cullen and Baldwin alternated as instructors every Monday, Wednesday and\nFriday afternoons.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Overworked Mamook executive eventually was forced to cons\ncript poster-searching club publicity reps to turn out their own signs.\nFrom left: Secretary Janet Bishop, Vice-president Joyce MacPherson,\nPresident Pete Lozowski, and Treasurer Barry Baldwin.\n62 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Radsoc Executive grins for cameraman.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Control man looks worried as he checks cue.\nRADIO SOCIETY\nEntrenched in a maze of offices and control rooms\nin the south Brock basement, Radsoc enjoyed its most\nactive year since the emigration of the veterans.\nA long-awaited addition to Radsoc's regular three-\nhour broadcasts into Brock Lounge was a half- hour\nnews-and-features show originating from the cramped\nstudios of URS and offered to the general public on\nSaturday afternoons over CKMO. Called \"This Week\nat UBC\", the program included interviews with prominent campus personalities, sports reports, a general sum-\nary of campus news and a particularly inspiring version\nof \"Hail UBC\".\nURS Program directors operate their studio on a\nprofessional basis, and this year prepared commercials\nfor two paying advertisers. As a free service to campus\norganizations, the regular Brock broadcasts were spotted\nwith publicity announcements for the many functions\npresented by the university's 67 clubs.\nThe club is organized in a pattern closely aligned to\nthat of downtown stations, and members have at their\ndisposal a fully-equipped radio studio, lacking only a\ntransmitter.\nPresident Ron Robinson, a second year commerce\nstudent, and a part-time announcer on CKWX, has\ndone wonders for the club in the past year, and working\non the foundations provided by the experience of an\nambitious post-war membership, has built up a closely\nco-ordinated, smoothly-running simulation of a commercial radio station.\nThe Club's huge record library has all types of records featuring everything from mountain music to\nsymphonies. The 15,000 records are carefully filed and\npreserved by the Club's librarian, who keeps every record where it is immediately available for reference or\nuse by Radsoc members. The library has been built up\nover a number of years. It was the site of many \"favorite artist\" arguments between Radsoc members.\nA news editor rewrites daily happenings from nationwide syndicated teletypes and presents a five-minute\nsummary of world news every noon. A traffic manager,\n63\npromotion manager and sales manager care for other\nfeatures of the clubs daily 3-hour program.\nDorwin Baird, a founder of Radsoc, is familiar to all\nlisteners of CJOR, and the CBC's Lister Sinclair and\nGeorge Barnes are prominent alumnae.\nDick Lazenby, famous for his fuzzy complexion and\nhis leadership of the Squamish band, is Radsoc's business manager; engineering students Campbell Robinson and Gene Hunt are program director and chief\nengineer, respectively.\nA six-week course in radio writing and broadcasting\nsponsored by the B. C. Association of Broadcasters gave\nRadsoc members a thorough background in commercial\nradio.\nThe course included training in script and advertising writing. Radsoc members were also taught the\nessentials of microphone and voice work.\nBrock loungers were amazed to hear \"paid political\nannouncements\" in the programs this year, when smart\nAMS campaigners arranged for spot announcements\nand singing commercials during URS noon-hour broadcasts. Radsoc's hard-working members contributed\nmuch to the enjoyment of Brock noon hours, and listeners awaited the \"Hail UBC\" that introduced the programme.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Radsoc'ers choose their favorite records from Club's library. Club\nmembers arranged all details of noon-hour broadcasts from\nsouth basement of Brock Hall. PLAYERS CLUB\nThe original, rarely performed \"Second Shepherds Play\", starring\nTom Shorfhouse, Lloyd Pisapio and Ted McAlpine as the shepherds, was one of the three fall plays.\n\"Tom Thumb\" was the second fall play. Louise De Wick is on\nthe \"couch\" behind Vic Mitchell, who seems a little taken aback\nby the threatening antics of Dave Moilliet.\nJoanne Walker and Bob Woodward as Beatrice and Benedick in\nthe Club's biggest and most energetic production of the year,\nShakespeare's \"Much Ado About Nothing\". The costume committee stretched a small budget a long way to cover the cost\nof Louise De Vick's and Derek Mann's authentic designs.\nUBC's oldest and most respected club spent its year\nin a whirl of constant activity. The executive members\nwere Norman Young, president; Lois Williamson, vice-\npresident; Doreen Odling, secretary; Ralph McPhee,\ntreasurer. They planned an intriguing programme for\nthe year, beginning with the traditional performance of\n\"Her Scienceman Lover\", Eric Nicol's beloved burlesque of university life.\nDue to the brutal accident of graduation, there were\nfew old members left at the beginning of the year, and\nthe ranks were filled with over forty new active members. As is customary, three one-act plays were chosen\nin which to introduce the new talent.\nThese plays were all a departure from the ordinary.\n\"The Life and Death of Tom Thumb the Great\", by\nHenry Fielding, has never before been performed in\nNorth America. It is a 17th century comedy in which\nFielding ridicules the heroic tragedies of his day. The\ncast of seventeen, starring Louise De Vick and Victor\nMitchell as Queen Dollallolla and King Arthur, was\ndirected by Peter Mainwaring, well-known Vancouver\nactor.\n\"The Happy Journey\" by Thornton Wilder was\ndirected by student Doreen Odling and featured Jane\nWright as Ma Kirby. Len Lauk was stage manager.\nAn experimental play, \"The Happy Journey\" introduced the new technique that Wilder perfected in \"Our\nTown\" and is played on a bare stage, without scenery,\nprops or lighting.\nPerhaps the most unusual of the three, however, was\nthe \"Second Shepherds Play\", a 14th centry miracle\nplay in which the roots of English comedy are plainly\napparent. Tom Shorthouse, Lloyd Pisapio, and Ted\nMcAlpine were the shepherds; Jean-Paul Riopel was\nthe sheep-stealer Mak, and Doris Chilcott played Mak's\nwife Gill; Jack Thorne was the director.\nThe three plays represented three very different\nstages in the history of English drama, and proved an\n64 enjoyable experience both for the club and the audiences.\nAnother exciting event before Christmas was the\npremiere of a play by Eric Nicol, \"Brass Tacks\", starring\nJoy Coghill. Presented in a noon-hour performance,\nthis hilarious farce drew a large audience of Nicol fans.\nOne function of the Players Club was to supply\nstage crew and technical support to other groups using\nthe Auditorium for dramatics. A notable instance of\nthis aid occurred when the English Department put on\ntheir annual play under the direction of Miss Dorothy\nSomerset of the Extension Department. A modern play\nwas chosen, an experimental drama by Auden and\nIsherwood, \"The Ascent of F6\". When a pair of young\nand original poets attempt to explore some of the most\nimportant issues of life, the result is likely to be profound and moving, and so it proved.\nThe most important event of the year was, of course,\nthe Spring Play.\nShakespeare's lively \"Much Ado About Nothing\"\nwent into rehearsal soon after Christmas. Joy Coghill,\npermanent director of the club, found there were\nenough good actors available to warrant doing a\nShakespeare play, and enough good designers and\nworkers to make a lavish production possible. Heading\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Below: Doreen Odling and Neil Carson as Claudia and Hero,\nthe other leads in \"Much Ado\". Carson is on exchange from\nWestern Ontario University.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Below, right: Norm Young looks over the efforts of the lighting crew, Derek Mann and Ray Christopherson, before the fall\nplay \"Happy Journey\".\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Left, above: The indispensable backstage crew: Derek Mann,\nNorm Young, Joy Coghill and Doreen Odling, discussing lighting for \"Happy Journey\".\ne Above: Mrs. J. Richardson, costume executor, fits two perplexed\n\"Much Ado\" players, Albert Simpson, as George Seacole, and\nDave Moilliet as Don John.\nthe large cast were Joanne Walker and Bob Woodward\nin the lead roles of Beatrice and Benedick.\nJohn Avison composed the original music, and arranged the four lovely Elizabethan ballads which were\nsung in the play by Kelvin Service. Dances of the\nperiod were arranged by Miss Marjorie Miller of the\nPhysical Education Department. Mr. Mann also designed the set, which was constructed for quick scene\nchanges. The entire production was under the supervision of the president, Norman Young.\n\"Much Ado\" was presented in Vancouver March 19-\n22. After exams were over, it went on tour of the province for two weeks. As the players are the only company to reach the interior of B. C. this annual tour has\nan important function in the dramatic activity of the\nprovince. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Practically all members of the Parliamentary Forum this year were Law students. The executive planned debates, found speakers, and\nsponsored the Mock Parliaments. Joe Nold headed the executive this year, with Jeff Turner, Ron Cheffins, John Poussette and May Southin\nas executive members.\nPARLIAMENTARY FORUM\nThe McGoun Cup debate was the chief event of the\nyear for members of Parliamentary Forum. Topic of\nthe concurrent debate between the four western Canadian universities was \"Resolved that Western Rearmament is detrimental to World Peace\". Jeff Turner and\nRon Cheffins represented UBC, and took the affirmative. They were squarely defeated by a smooth University of Manitoba team.\nDebating the negative of the resolution against the\nUniversity of Saskatchewan, who defeated UBC 2-1,\nwere Joan Snape and Tom Franck. All four of the\nMcGoun debaters were law students, coached by Parliamentary Forum founder and ex-UBC professor, J.\nFriend Day.\nEight Thursday noon debates were held, and most\nof them drew capacity crowds to Arts 100. \"Resolved\nseparate schools should receive government support\"\nwas perhaps the most controversial topic. Jane Ban-\nfield won over Armand Paris, when the motion was defeated.\nIan Seymour and Rod Young haggled over the practical and ideological aspects of a preventative war in\nanother popular debate.\n\"Resolved NATO contradicts United Nations principles\" brought Bob Loosmore and Doug Steinson together in the last Forum debate before Christmas.\nJoe Nold was one of the most active campus debaters. Here,\nhe speaks for the United States at the U.N. Club's second Model\nGeneral Assembly, defending himself from the personal attacks\nof Russian delegate Tom Franck.\n66 MOCK PARLIAMENT\nUnder the auspices of the Parliamentary Forum,\nfour Mock Parliaments were staged during the year.\nChairman of the Steering Committee was John Pous-\nsettee with Jeff Turner assisting him in the scheduling\nof the Parliaments, the approval of bills and amendments, and the compilation of the rules of procedure.\nThree Parliaments were held before March, to give\neach political club affiliated with Parliamentary Forum\na chance to play the role of the government. On March\n17, an election gave the Liberals control of the government for the final meeting of the \"House\".\nIn the individual Parliaments, the Liberals tried to\ncreate a national railroad, the CCF brought in a bill to\nnationalize Canada's steel industry, and the Conservatives fought to have Canada join a North Atlantic\nFederation.\n\"The \"Joker Bill\" of the year was brought up during\nthe Conservative Parliament, when Mary Southin's\ngroup of staunch Tories whipped through a bill legalizing \"trigamy\" a doubly evil form of bigamy.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Top: CCF Club president, Jean McNeely, tried to push through\nbill nationalizing Canadian Steel. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Top right: Traditional\n\"back bench huddle\" took up much time; served as excuse for\nfemale M.P.'s to repair makeup. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Below right: Liberal Club\nbench found no serious opposition to their government; put\nthrough bill nationalizing Canada's railways. e Below:\nStraight-laced Tories Mary Southin, Jeff Turner, Tom Franck, John\nGault, John Fraser and Doug Whitworth weren't able to persuade\ngovernment to support North Atlantic Federation.\nDoug Steinson, president of Student Liberal Club, discusses a\nmute point with John Poussette, Prime Minister of the final\nMock Parliament.\n67 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Finale of Mussoc's highly successful presentation of Sigmund Romberg's \"Student Prince\". Intricate choral arrangements took many hours\nof tedious rehearsal time, eventually served as major contribution to the most ambitious undertaking in Mussoc's 20-year history.\nTHE MUSICAL SOCIETY\ni\nFor the first five months of the school\nyear, the Musical Society was strangely silent.\nNo brilliant banners stretched across the\nquad inviting caf-bound students to the familiar classical operettas and period musicals.\nFor those who seen the AMS co-ordi-\nnators schedule, the apparent inactivity was\nexplained. For the first time in the 20-odd\nyears of the club's existence, a 20th century\noperetta, staged on a scale comparable to\nto any Broadway production, was being\nplanned.\n\"The Student Prince\", Sigmund Romberg's universally praised story of the tribulations of a young prince at a European\nuniversity, thrilled capacity crowds in the\nauditorium for three days in the middle of\nFebruary. The production was the club's\nfirst attempt at a modern musical comedy,\nand it was hailed a new era in Mussoc's\npresentation policy.\nThe success of the most extravagant and\ndifficult show in the club's history was due\nprimarily to the professional ability of Musical Director Harry Pryce and Dramatic\nDirector E. V. Young.\nAlthough this was his first year with the\nMusical Society, Harry Pryce was by no\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Two lead stars Milla Andrews and Cal Service sing\none of many love-song duets in impressive photo\nby Publications Board Photography Director Bruce\nJaffary.\n68 means a stranger to the members. His outstanding direction of many Theatre Under the Stars productions,\nand his long experience with the CBC have made his\nname synonymous with sparkling musical entertainment. Mr. Pryce is expected to be with Mussoc for\nmany years to come.\nE. V. Young has been 19 years with the Musical\nSociety, and has worked for many years with Mr. Pryce\nin Theatre Under the Stars and on the CBC. \"E. V.'s\"\ninvaluable knowledge and technical skill brought his\nstudent cast through one of their most difficult and\ncomplex efforts without a serious flub.\nGrace McDonald, as director of choreography, was\npraised in the downtown review for her excellent work\nin the rendition of the famous Drinking Song. The\nchorus, composed of waitresses, town girls, and the\nprince's classmates, was one of the highlights of the\nshow.\n\"The Student Prince\" is a story of carefree student\nlife at Heidelberg University. Prince Karl Franz, tired\nof the ceremonies and stringencies of court life, enrolls\nat the university, and arrives on the campus with his\naged tutor Dr. Engel. Joining the local student corps,\nwhich meets in a spacious inn, he becomes involved\nwith the innkeeper's niece, Kathy.\nThis affairs disgusts Lutz, the prince's private valet,\nwho cannot understand the prince's apparent love for\nthis plebian way of life. The prince is forced to leave\nthe university because of the pressure of state business,\nand upon his return, he finds the court has decided to\nmarry him off to Princess Margaret.\nThe princess has been flirting with Captain Turnitz\nof the Royal Guards, but finds no difficulty in switching her affections to the prince. Karl Franz returns to\nHeidelberg to try and dispel his memories of Kathy.\nRealizing that the prince must marry Margaret, Kathy\nleaves the university area in order to make the rough\nroad easier for her lover.\nThe opperetta ends with this dramatic blend of\nhappiness and sadness, and with the fact well clarified\nthat, for a prince, duty comes before all things.\nKelvin Service played the part of Prince Karl Franz,\nMilla Andrews was a fetching innkeeper's niece, Charles\nWatt was the Prince's tutor, Dr. Engel.\nBarbara Wither played Princess Margaret, John Yeomans was Captain Turnitz, Norman Young was the\nPrince's valet, Lutz. Gerald Lecovin was Hubert, Marguerite Stanlow was Gretchen and Marion Crickmay\nplayed the Duchess.\nMussoc secretary and club's hardest-working member, Milla\nAndrews played lead role of Kathy. Kelvin Service had difficult\nmale lead as Prince Karl Franz; missed various high notes during rehearsal, but displayed fine tenor voice at public performances.\nUniversity of Heidelberg students raise silver beer mugs in rousing rendition of Romberg's famous Drinking Song. Excellent\ntenor voice of unkown chorister shook the dust from stage\nrafters, frustrated patrons who vainly searched for name on\nprogramme.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Mussoc Executive:\nBack: John Rolfe, business manager; John\nYeomans, aJvertising;\nHal Harvey, president;\nNeil Carlson, production\nmanager; Ken Bogas,\nadvisor. Front: Ruth\nDone, vice-president;\nMilla Andrew, secretary; Donna Leather-\ndale, Glee Club president.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Left: Stage crew technicians Lyle Bagent, Jack Devreaux, Gordon\nFutcher.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Middle: Backbone of Mussoc took the form of two prominent\nlocal directors: Harry Pryce, musical director (left), and E. V.\nYoung, dramatic director.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Right: Make-up artist Keith Simpson work on Norm Dent. AMATEUR RADIO CLUB\n'*\nPresident John Moisey (seated) managed to put dying and\nhomeless Ham Club on its feet this year after few interested\nmembers had packed valuable equipment from place to place\nfor two years.\nEver since the catastrophic fire which completely\nburned out the \"Ham\" quarters on the campus in 1950,\nthe members have been shunted from tiny hut rooms\nto Engineering Building clothes closets. Late this year,\nthe club finally set up permanent quarters in the Electrical Engineering Building, and with shiny new equipment designed and constructed by club members, resumed contacts with ham operators all over the world.\nUnder the direction of an able and enthusiastic executive, code and theory classes were held for new members. Club membership this year dropped slightly from\nthe record high postwar years, but the energy of 20\ncompetent operators and technicians made this year a\nhighly successful one.\nThe club's more proficient members took part in the\nvarious international events sponsored by the American\nRadio Relay League. The annual sweepstake competition, which tests operating skill, and the Field Day, an\ninternational instructive event which is designed to prepare amateurs for emergency, were two of the more\noutstanding events of the year.\nSYMPHONY SOCIETY\nIn 1947, a group of UBC's foremost musicians not\ncontent to spend the rest of their student days playing\nexclusively for the Mussoc operettas, rebelled and formed\nthe University Symphony Orchestra. Under the direction of music professor Harry Adaskin, the orchestra\npresented a concert which so impressed one connoisseur\nConductor Colin Slim stands on legless chair to lead small portion of Symphony Orchestra in rehearsal for annual Spring Concert.\nthat he donated a considerable sum of money to further\nits growth.\nIn 1948, pianist Colin Slim took over the direction\nof the orchestra, and he has held the position ever since.\nThe orchestra has steadily improved, and lately more\nambitious programs have been undertaken. Beethoven's\n8th Symphony, Haydn's Clock Symphony, the popular\nTschaikowsky's B flat piano concerto, Greig's A minor\npiano Concerto, Bach's Second Brandenburg Concerto,\nwere a few of the highlights of the Symphony Society's\nfive major concerts since the inception of the club.\nThis year, the Society was operating under many\ndisadvantages. The graduation of many of the orchestra's leading musicians and the subsequent lack of players in the most important positions in the orchestra cut\ndown considerably the scope of programmes that could\nhave been presented.\nThe Christmas concert in the auditorium was highl)\nsuccessful, and the late spring concert coming barely\na week before exams, was well attended by book-weary\nstudents. Schubert's Unfinished Symphony, Fingel's\nCave Overture, Mendelsohn's famous mood piece and\nCoreli's \"La Folia\", featuring Zena Zadoway, soothed\nthe throbbing heads of several hundred nerve-wracked\ncrammers.\nMalcolm MacDonald headed the club executive this\nyear, and Frances Cameron was secretary-treasurer.\n70 CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION\nOne of the most unique ideological clubs under the\njurisdiction of LSE, the Civil Liberty Union is concerned with the protection of racial and religious minorities and the qualification of the civil rights of all\npersons. In the process of delivering its message to the\nstudents, the club presented a full and varied programme\nwhich placed it in a category with the most active clubs\non the campus.\nNearly every week during the school term, speakers\nwell qualified to voice an opinion on their subjects were\npresented to further the aims of the club. Dr. Savery,\nProfessor Hunter Lewis, Reverend Richard Jones and\nMr. Max Schactman, the well-known European writer\nand translator were among the speakers during the first\nterm. The spring programme was initiated with a talk\nby President Mackenzie on the responsibilities of civil\nliberties.\nThe winner of the Garnett Sedgewick Award this\nyear was Professor Hunter Lewis of the Department of\nEnglish. The award is presented annually to the person\nwho has done the most for civil liberties in British Columbia during the past year. Professor Lewis' extensive\ninvestigation into the possibilities of a new Indian Act,\nto allow reservation Indians more freedom and justice,\ngave the club members adequate cause to choose the\npopular professor winner of the coveted award.\nJack Scott, Salt Spring Island farmer and spare-time\nnewspaper columnist, and Reverend A. E. Cooke,\nfounder of the Sunday Forum, have won the award in\nthe past two years.\nThe award honors the late Dr. Garnett Sedgewick,\nprofessor of English at UBC, and an expert on Shake-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Raghbir Basi and Lawrence Lynds\nread the latest name on the Garnett\nSedgwick Award plaque in Brock Hall.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Publicity is the backbone of nearly every campus club. Here a CLU member does blackboard work\nfor a special speaker.\nspeare. Dr. Sedgewick was one of those responsible for\nthe creation of the UBC branch of the Canadian Civil\nLiberties Union.\nThe CLU again this year offered a cash prize for\nthe best essay written by a UBC student on any aspect\nof civil liberties.\nLawrence Lynds headed the club this year with\nWalter Camozzi, vice-president; Nick Papove, treasurer;\nEarnest Naccarato, secretary, and Raghibir Singh Basi,\nBob Green, John Meyer and Manfred Schmidt assisting\nhim on the executive.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Teachers training student Lawrence Lynds headed the large CLU\nexecutive this year; carried out ambitious policy of sponsoring two\nor three speakers a month on campus.\nCivil\nLiberties!\nUnion\n71 Music Appreciation Club\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Stan Cross and able executive presented an extensive program\ndesigned to satisfy varied tastes of 30 club members. Bartok and\nHindemith were high points of year's listening activities.\nUnlike most other campus clubs, whose programs\nconsist mainly of the vocal exchange of ideas and opinions, the Music Appreciation Club asks of its members\nonly the application of the out-moded faculty of listening.\nEach Monday and Friday noon, 30 men and women,\ninterested in the works of the modern and standard\nclassicists, congregated in the Brock's Double Committee room and listened. To familiarize new members\nwith the purpose of the club, president Stan Cross\nintroduced such standard favorites as Bach, Handel,\nMozart, Beethoven and Brahms. After Christmas, the\nclub heard the experimental works of Bartok and\nHindemith.\nOne of the major projects of the club this year was\nthe search for a room in the Library suitable for the\nplaying of records during the long winter evenings.\nStudents working late would be able to wander into\nthe room, relax and have selections played by club members upon request. No soundproof room was located,\nand the project was abandoned.\nDuring the second term, the members of the club\npiped the regular broadcasts of the Metropolitan Opera\ninto Brock Lounge, through the facilities of the Radio\nSociety.\nBotanical Gardens Society\nMembers of the society, interested specifically in the\ndevelopment of a Botanical Garden on the campus,\nformed a President's Committee which recommended\nplans for the enlargement of the scope of the present\ngarden.\nAn area beside the West Mall this year was set aside\nfor the display of exotic trees and plants. Native plants\nof horticultural interest are distributed throughout the\ngrounds, making the entire campus a part of the Botanical Garden.\nThrough the contributions of members and others\non the campus, the society this year acquired twenty\nmagnolia saplings, which, when ready to leave the\nnursery and face the deluges of a B. C. winter, will\nbrighten springtime on the campus with multitudes of\nattractive flowers.\nMeetings of the Botanical Society were held on alternate Fridays, and as special features of the club program, the members were taken on conducted tours of\nthe grounds and greenhouses. Dr. T. M. C. Taylor,\ndirector of the Botanical Garden, pointed out plants of\ninterest.\nWhen snow restricted outdoor plant studies, the\nclub moved into the Physics building for films and\nslides on the flora of B. C, and talks on horticultural\npractices and the scientific aspects of plant growth.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 With a critical eye set on the areas of prospective garden plots\non the campus, the president and executive of the Botanical Gardens\nSociety laid the groundwork this year for an intriguing horticultural\ndisplay in an extensive garden beside the West Mall.\n72 e Jassoc executive planned programs, sponsored'\nprominent local jazz artists, held long gab sessions.\nClub blossomed this year under inspirational leadership of prominent jazz-\nconnoisseur Bill Wynne.\nJAZZ SOCIETY\nThe advent of the modern era of jazz music, employing many techniques of the modern classicists and new\ntechniques indigenous to jazz alone, has removed jazz\nmusic from the sphere of novelty and has placed on it\na musical value that few serious appreciators of music\ncan afford to overlook. It followed that many strictly-\njazz listeners widened their musical tastes to accommodate the wider listening scope of jazz which demands\nmore than passive indulgence or acceptance.\nThis growth of jazz music and its enlarged acceptance moved the UBC Jassoc to open its doors to anyone on the campus, regardless of membership, and to\ntake jazz beyond the confines of club activities alone\nand present concerts for campus approval.\nLeft in a sorry position at the beginning of the term,\nwith no president, or club space, and a small financial\nbudget, the club revived vigorously due to the hard\nwork of the small executive under club president Bill\nWynne. This year, the club enrolled its largest membership since its inception as a UBC organization under\nLSE.\nThe fireball executive, led by jazz-extremist Wynne,\npromoted four highly successful concerts, which featured such prominent artists as CBC's Ray Norris, and\nVancouver jazzmen Doc Randle and Doug Parker.\nSome of Vancouver's leading jazz personalities gladly\ngave their services and time to the club. Monty McFarlane, Bill Bellman, Bob Smith, Jack Kyle and others\ngave noon-hour talks at regular meetings and emceed\nall the auditorium concerts.\nThis year's executive looks to the 1952-53 edition of\nthe club as being even more active. Although this year\nthe club was badly hampered by lack of sufficient space,\nit nevertheless gave all indications of becoming one of\nthe most important clubs on the campus.\nThe fanatic enthusiasm of 50 to 60 foot-tapping jazz-\ncultists revived campus interest in America's only claim\nto originality in the arts. The auditorium was jammed\nfor each concert; not merely by overflow from the caf,\nor by people finding a convenient place out of the rain\nto eat their lunch, but by serious students of modern\nmusic.\nThis led to a great improvement in the financial\nstatus of the club, and brought about a vast change in\nits membership.\ne One of biggest drawing cards was Lance Harrison, who racked\nthe auditorium with his cool and limped renditions.\n73 DANCE CLUB\nOutside it was an olive-drab army hut, squeezed uncomfortably between a score of identical and equally\nunprepossessing structures and flanked by the dust and\ncinders of the East Mall.\nInside it came alive to the soft caress of old Vienna,\nquickened to the hot pulse of the tropics, rocked to the\ngood nature of the frontier-pushing west of a half-\ncentury ago.\nThey called it the Dance Club\u00E2\u0080\u0094a name which did\nbare justice to its myriad activities.\nMostly, it was a place where awkward, gangling\nyouth could acquire the sure-footed charm of the ballroom expert.\nHard-bitten, well-pressed seniors whispered soft importances in the ears of exuberant freshettes who, almost\ninevitably, displayed the alert aptitude which goes with\nyouth and a will. Polished upper-class women guided\nstumbling freshmen with a sympathy and professional\nexpertness which ensured eventual success.\nBut, more than that, the Dance Club boasted an\ninner core of showmen who practiced, practiced, practiced until the records wore out for their part in the\nFilm Society's program for the royal visit and for their\nDance Festival late in March.\nA last minute switch in the royal program left them\nsitting at the stage-door but they managed to squeeze\ninto the November Folk Festival.\nFridays at noon the noisy wild west took over and\nthe decaying building groaned under the stamps and\nshouts of square dance enthusiasts.\nThe nucleus of the enthusiasts formed itself into a\ndemonstration team, invaded the Haney Square Dance\nFestival and even put on a half-time show during basketball games.\nWaltz devotees put in six weeks of hard work for\nthe MacMillan Waltz Festival where they earned the\nplaudits of the crowd.\nBest of all, perhaps, the Dance Club was a place to\nmunch a peanut butter sandwich in the company of\nfriends, indulge in a half hour's idle conversation, and\nrelax from the encumbered whirl of university life.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Small Latin-American styled combo played at many Dance Club\nfunctions. From left, Ho Hit-Po, Benny Guilliams and Lawrence Iton.\n74 FILM SOCIETY\nThe Film Society, largest service club on the campus,\nfrom the point of view of number of students served,\nhas provided one of the most popular forms of entertainment at the University, with its varied programme\nof Tuesday noon free shows, Comedy Film Revivals,\nand Tuesday afternoon and evening feature presentations.\nThrough these activities, the club has enabled the\nstudents of UBC to see the best in current movies with\nthe least possible drain on their pocket books.\nIn accordance with its policy of co-operation with\nother campus groups, the society has brought to the\ncampus films of special interest to various specialized\nstudy groups.\nFilmsoc presented the Moody Bible Institute series\nin co-operation with the Varsity Christian Fellowship,\ndrawing a capacity attendance, and the classic French\nfilm \"L'Eternel Retour\" for the Le Cercle Francais.\nThere are few students that at some time or another\nhave not benefited from its services. The society,\nthrough its system of projectionist training classes, supplied trained projectionists to the Faculty and outside\norganizations, and to all University Clubs. It has also\ngiven training classes to Teacher Training, so the student teachers will not leave the University without some\nknowledge of projectors.\nOne of the major projetcs of the club is the traditional Annual Screen Dance, held in Brock Hall every\nspring. This is always one of the outstanding dances of\nthe year. Students \"Dance in the Dark\" to the music of\nthe name bands that are projected on a giant screen\nespecially erected for the purpose.\nDuring the past year, Filmsoc's energetic Social\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bill Topping and live, promotion-minded executive ensured\nFilmsoc's position as one of campus' top major clubs this year, with\na bi-monthly series of top-rate movies from downtown distributing\nhouses.\nCommittee has organized bi-monthly club parties. They\nwere all overwhelming successes, proving the society's\ncredo that members not only work hard, but on occasion, play hard.\nFilmsoc is one of the few clubs that keep their\naccounts in black ink. The weekly Tuesday features\nhave attracted so many students that the club this year\nwas able to pay off the major part of the loan acquired\nfrom the A.M.S. three years ago. The 16mm. projectors,\nbought with the borrowed money, are permanently\nmounted in the auditorium. By means of the modern\nprojectors, the club is able to put on a show equal to\nthe standards of any downtown commercial theatre.\nThe quality of next year's presentations is guaranteed\nby the large number of this year's executive who will\nbe back with the group next year.\ne New projector, bought last year with AMS loan, enabled club\nlo present non-stop shows up to a par with commercial movie-\nhouses. The intricate machines, costing over $2000, presented a new\nproblem to the club executive, who, after learning to use them\nthemselves, were faced with the task of teaching not only their own\nclub members, but a number of the students in the Teachers Training course. These latter students, it was felt, should have an\nintimate knowledge of moving picture equipment, to meet the\ngrowing trend toward visual education in the grade schools.\n75 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Weekly classes in sculpture and pottery began shortly after\nChristmas in huge studio behind the Library stacks.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Architecture Professor B. C. Binning, one of B.C.'s most respected\npainters, lectured on sketching and oil painting in the popular Visual\nArts Club \"Applied Art\" Series.\nVisual Arts Club\nThe Visual Arts Club's first and perhaps most organized appearance on the campus was on Club Day,\nwhen Ron Kelly (who relinquished the presidency in\nDecember) practised pipe-smoking in front of a handsome display of paintings and sculptures. The effect\nwas impressive enough to attract sufficient members to\nkeep the club alive.\nBy late November, classes in drawing, sculpture and\npottery were organized, and were held in the library\nbasement. B. C. Binning and Lionel Thomas were instructors in painting and sculpture, and except for a\nmonth-long break at Christmas, the classes lasted all\nyear.\nOn the eve of Christmas exams, Kelly suddenly\nwent to England, and the club was dangerously close\nto extinction. Without definite arrangements for spring\ninstruction classes, Pam Steele, who took over as prexy\nearly in January, hastily threw a tight schedule together-.\nA new membership drive resulted in an unexpected increase in fees, enthusiasm and members.\nClasses were only a part of the club's spring programme. A six-week lecture series was arranged for\nFebruary and March, featuring Mr. A. Morris, curator\nof the Vancouver Art Gallery, Mr. Shadbolt, and Mrs.\nStewart-Galafres.\nLectures and films were presented in the auditorium\nFriday noons, and during Open House Week, the\nVisual Arts Club exhibits in the gallery and workshop\nof the library basement attracted a great many visitors.\nA great deal of the club's success was due to the\nassistance of Mr. Hunter-Lewis, the club's faculty advisor.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 The products of the six-week course in sculpture were, for\nthe most part, astounding. Classics students modelled Greek\ngods and Shakesperean heroes; modernists put on displays of\nweird line sculptures which seemed to begin and end nowhere;\npresident Pam Steele, shown with a sample of the work in the\npicture at the right, had produced a bust of her ideal man which\nlooked something like a slurred footprint In wet concrete.\n76 FRENCH CLUB\nAt one time, French clubs on the campus were limited to senior students, and devoted solely to the study\nand discussion of French literature. In 1947, a group\nof first and second year students united the factions\nand remodelled the result into Le Cercle Francais.\nThis extension of membership to include freshmen\nand sophomores gave the senior students a larger and\nmore enthusiastic group to work with, and was, for\nthe most part, responsible for the renewed interest in\nmodern France and French customs.\nA notable feature of the club this year was the\nmonthly soirees at members' homes. Guest speakers\ntalked in French on topics ranging from existentialism\nto French cuisine. Members converse in French, sing\nFrench songs, and play charades in French.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Elizabeth Riley (second left), and energetic executive led Le\nCircle Francais through successful year.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bruce Gifford and all-female executive headed largest German\nClub of the post-veteran era.\nSPANISH CLUB\nSpanish enthusiasts have banded together to make\nEl Circulo Latino Americano one of the most active\nminor clubs on the campus this year.\nMost of the club's 62 members are Canadians, and\nthe necessary Spanish flavor is supplied by 12 Latin\nAmerican members, helping the club achieve its prime\naim of teaching the proper use of the Spanish language.\nThe club this year enjoyed visits from various South\nAmerican consuls, viewed films on Ecuador and Brazil,\nand encouraged its members to become acquainted with\nLatin American dance steps, A dinner at Henri's in\nthe first week of March was a huge success.\nGERMAN CLUB\nWith a signed membership of thirty-five this year,\nthe German Club continued with its policy of providing a supplement to the courses of German Honor and\nMajor students. Social activities of various kinds highlighted the year.\nThe Friday noon meetings were held in the Brock;\nfaculty members spoke to the club on German culture\nand national customs, showed slides, and carried on conversations with the club members in German.\nNumerous evening parties were held at the homes\nof members. The game of \"Spiele\" was one of the most\npopular diversions, and humorous skits in German\nmade the parties adequately interesting.\nGerman dinners, featuring the more digestible Teutonic foods were prepared and served by the female\nmembers of the club at several functions.\nPat Hannon (bottom left), and Latin- American enthusiasts enjoyed interesting and informative year.\n77 PROG.\nCONSERVATIVE\nCLUB\nWith a membership of twenty this year, the Progressive Conservatives quietly upheld the policies and\nopinions of Her Majesty's loyal opposition.\nThe Mock Parliament was the centre of the club's\ninterest, and as opposition to the elected majority,\nthey fought for the extension of the North Atlantic\nTreaty. Supporters of the government were allowed to\njump party lines, and the Tories found themselves with\nseveral unexpected additions to their party ranks.\nMajor-General George Pearkes, V.C., was the most\npopular speaker presented by the club to the noon-hour\ncritics in Arts 100. Pearkes is president of the B. C. Conservative Association, and attracted much attention during his hour-long stay on the campus.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Opposition to Doug Steison's Liberal Club has never been keen\nenough to pose a danger to their position among campus political groups. However, with death of provincial Coalition, the\nyear ended on a note of fiery enthusiasm.\nCCF. CLUB\nThe most active and controversial of campus political groups, the CCF Club this year presented an impressive series of weekly noon-hour speakers, filling\nArts 100 every Wednesday noon, and presenting economic and social theories indigenous to the policies of\nthe Canadian CCF party.\nRecovering from a serious split in the Club's executive ranks early last fall, which saw Bob Loosmore\nand nearly half of the existing executive walk out after\na ideological rift, Jean McNeely quickly formed a\nclosely co-ordinated group.\nCCF spokesmen sponsored on the campus during\nthe term included three MLA's, Harold Winch, Ernest\nWinch and Arthur Turner, and MP Angus Mclnnis.\nIn the Mock Parliament, the Club brought in a bill\nto bring the steel monopoly under social ownership.\nThird-year Law student Mary Southin found very few rabid\nConservatives on campus; carried on with small executive and\ntwenty membes; sponsored George Pearkes as most prominent\nSpeaker of Pro-Con year.\nLIBERAL CLUB\nWith political interest on the campus rapidly declining, the Student Liberal Club this year found that\nco-operation and unity of policy was a greater factor\nin the club's success than a large, boisterous membership.\nAll the club's activities are carried out in accordance\nwith the basic principles of liberalism, and the Canadian Liberal Party. Members of Parliament, professors\nof philosophy, economics and political science, and professional men spoke to club members and interested\npersons at regular noon-hour meetings.\nThe club takes an active part in the periodic Mock\nParliaments sponsored by the Parliamentary Forum.\nThe valuable experience gained from speaking on current political topics to an exact dummy of the Canadian\nParliament is perhaps the most attractive characteristic\nof the club.\nJean McNeely took over after fall executive walked out on assumption that CCF Club was not following strict socialist line;\npresented prominent speakers on average af once a week.\n78 Engineering Institute\nof Canada\nAs the major club of the Engineer's Undergraduate\nSociety, the student branch of the Engineering Institute\nof Canada undertook another vigorous program of\nspecial speakers and films this year.\nOne of the main purposes of the organization is to\nmake student engineers aware of the importance and\nnecessity of national engineering association which has\nas its objective the unification and advancement of the\nengineering profession.\nThe EIC executive was the major behind-the-scene\npower in the EUS drive for the March of Dimes.\nEliminations for student speakers at the annual Vancouver Branch's Student Night ran until February 22.\nThree finalists were chosen, and spoke on February 27\nto the group of professional engineers in the Medical-\nDental Auditorium. The downtown branch presented\nbook prizes of 25, 15 and 10 dollars to the three finalists\nfor their interesting talks.\nDuring the year, one field trip of the downtown\nEIC branch was held on the campus allowed a good\nportion of the student membership to join senior members to join senior members in inspection of the Fraser\nRiver Flood Project.\nStan Wilkinson steered this year's EIC executive\nthrough one of the most successful seasons in the history\nof the organization.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Stan Wilkinson led only Engineer's club under the jurisdiction of\nLSE. EIC executive say that most important contribution made to the\ncampus this year was the promotion of the rousing March of Dimes\ncampaign.\nPsychology Club\nThe Psychology Club, formed in 1947 after it had\nsplit off from the Philosophy Club, has as its main program the discussion of the latest developments in the\nscience of psychology.\nOpen to major or honors students in psychology, the\nclub provides an interesting supplement to the formal\nstudies. Guest speakers are invited to the regular evening meetings to acquaint the members with the work\nin applied fields as well as the new improvements in\npsychological techniques. Other speakers give members an understanding of the problems which arise in\nevery-day psychological practice.\nThe exhibit for Open House was the most important\nproject of the year. The Psychology Club is playing a\nleading and active role in the display planned by the\nDepartment of Psychology. Featured in the exhibit\nwill be a \"lie detector\" designed to probe the emotional\ncontrol of the visiting public.\n79\nAl Schneider's active executive sat through many meetings comparing\ntheir inhibitions; ran the famous \"lie detector\" which embarrassed\nthousands at Open House. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE\nRegular testimonial meetings, featuring the healing\ntestimonies of club members, and the maintenance of\nthe Christian Science Study Room, a feature of every\nsimilar organization at the universities across the continent, were the main functions of the club this year.\nOne speaker, a member of the Board of Lectureship\nof the Mother Church in Boston, delivered a lecture\nduring the year to the members and interested friends.\nThe purpose of the organization is to afford members of the University opportunity to learn the truth\nabout Christian Science as taught in the Bible and in\nScience and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary\nBaker Eddy, the Discoverer and Founder of Christian\nScience.\nHILLEL\nNEWMAN CLUB\nThe Newman Club is a religious organization\nestablished to serve the spiritual, intellectual and social\ninterests of Catholic students attending non-sectarian\nUniversities. The UBC chapter was founded in 1928.\nThe annual active membership ranges around 150.\nThis year the club's religious programme included\nsix Communion Breakfasts and four closed Retreats at\nnearby Monasteries.\nBesides intellectual discussions, the club sponsors\nStudy Clubs, speakers and an annual debate.\nThe Club participated fully in inter-mural sports\nfor both boys and girls, and finished in sixth place\nin the final standing.\nThe Social Calendar provided entertainment\nthroughout the year. Social nights in the spring and\nfall and the annual Spring Formal in February highlighted the club's social activities.\nThe club publicized all its activities through the\nmedium of its monthly newspaper, the \"Newsman\".\nThe B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, formed at UBC\nto unite Jewish students on the campus, took an active\npart in University affairs this year.\nTwo dances and an informal mixer opened the year,\nand the second term social calendar featured Sunday\nnight house parties and a Leap Year Frolic. The club\nrooms behind the Brock, decorated and furnished by\nthe club members, provided a common meeting place,\na fine lunch room, and a centre for all club activities.\nSeminars on widely diversified topics of general interest were held every Wednesday afternoon. Several\nlectures and films were presented to the general student\nbody.\nTogether with other religious and allied clubs, the\nHillel students assisted in the formal recognition of\nBrotherhood Week on the campus.\nThe major project of the year was the production of\na three-act play, \"Our Town\".\n80 VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP\nThe program and activities of the University Christian Fellowship, aimed to fulfill the dictum of its motto,\n\"To know Christ and to make Him known\", and were\ncentred around five separate Bible study groups.\nThe weekly Bible discussions were climaxed each\nweek by a general meeting on Sunday. A number of\nVancouver ministers and out-of-town speakers addressed regular Monday meetings.\nSeveral \"Moody Institute of Science\" films were presented to capacity audiences in the auditorium.\nThe highlight of the year for VCF's large membership was a series of meetings addressed by Dr. Robert\nSmith, well-known philosophy professor from University of Dubuque, Iowa. Dr. Smith's five-day series in\nthe auditorium was based on the general theme, \"The\nRelevance of Christ\".\nA fall conference of several university VCF groups\nsent several lucky members to \"The Firs\" in Bellingham and the participation of eleven members in the\nInternational Missionary Convention held on the\ncampus of the University of Illinois at Urbana, were the\nhighlights of the club's off-campus activities.\nCloser to home, members of the group conducted a\nnumber of services at local churches, and held a few\nfireside and skating parties in the spring term.\n__*!\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB_-\n\u00C2\u00AB*\u00C2\u00BB,-\u00C2\u00BB i_ part\n*^S?&_*_3?*\nrf_p~.-__\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0n-iror\u00C2\u00BB_ty94*etf|\nLarge VCF membership took time out from afternoon discussion\ngroup to smile broadly for Totem photographer. Posters on wall\nin background are constitutional foundations of Fellowship\ngroups throughout Canada.\nSTUDENT CHRISTIAN MOVEMENT\nKeeping alive its tradition of balanced and widespread activities springing from the search for a true\nChristian way of life, the Student Christian Movement\nagain presented a program of vital interest to the general student body. For the first time in many years, the\nSCM carried out its vigorous program without a general\nsecretary.\nUnder President Doug Williamson's able leadership,\nthe members responded fully to the extra demands the\nlack of a full-time secretary made upon their time and\nefforts, and no curtailment of activities was found necessary.\nThe year began for SCM'ers with a resoundingly\nsuccessful Thanksgiving weekend camp at Ocean Park.\nEarly in October, the group launched into a full schedule of study groups, campus speakers, firesides, and\nparties. At Christmas, sixteen students were sent to the\ngreat Quadrennial Conference of the Student Volunteer\nMovement at the University of Kansas, where they met\nin fellowship with Christian students of all races.\nMorning devotionals, held before the members\nrushed to 8:30 lectures, were well-attended.\nThe SCM has a sizeable library of books, pamphlets\nand periodicals pertaining to the history and modern\napplication of Christianity, which is open to any member. In its perennial campaign for new members, the\nSCM offered seekers and confirmed Christians alike a\nserious discussory group devoted to the search for a\ntruthful explanation of the divine power.\nStudent Christian Movement executive, headed this year by\nPresident Doug Williamson, planned and presented full schedule\nof speakers and study groups; added many grains of thought\nlo endless controversy on Christian philosophy.\n81 First U.N. Model General Assembly, staged in conjuction with the downtown U. N. Association on the mock \"Day at the U.N.\" packed\nthe Brock Lounge; featured spirited debates and familiar Soviet walkout by AMS president Vaughn Lyon.\nUNITED NATIONS CLUB\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Top: Spring Model Assembly, held March 3, debated the question of a World Police Force; failed to pass the resolution by\na two-thirds majority.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bottom: Fireball Club executive led 250 members through busy\nyear: left to right, Ann Hutchison, Ken Farris, Raghbir Basi,\nMarny Wilson, June Stephens, Ron Con.\nA dogged determination to bring U.N. to the grassroots brought more than 250 students together every\nTuesday noon this year.\nLed by soft-spoken, energetic Raghbir Basi, who\nwound up president-elect of the AMS, they organized\nmass meetings, staged a model U.N. assembly, encouraged high school students to form a dozen student\nclubs, spoke at downtown meetings wherever they\nfound a rostrum, and distributed bushels of pamphlets.\nEarly in the summer, they started their year's work\nby sending three of their executive to Ottawa for the\nannual conference of the U.N. Association of Canada.\nTo spark their membership drive, they dressed up\ntheir mimeographed \"U.N. Digest\" with cardboard\ncovers bearing a printed U.N. emblem. A sharp letter\nfrom the U.N. secretariat warning them that the emblem couldn't be used without special permission, dampened their enthusiasm a little, but they went ahead with\nthe publication and sat back and waited for somebody\nto sue.\nNobody did.\nBefore Christmas, they banded together with the\ndowntown U.N. Association to stage a mock \"Day at\nthe UN\".\nIt started in the pouring rain with the raising of the\nU.N. flag to the University flagpole, but warmed up\nquickly with indoor afternoon and evening programmes.\nIn the afternoon, high school students presented a\n\"Security Council\" debate and UBC students staged a\n82 Right: Indian delegate to Model Assembly Raghbir Basi argues that money should be spent on aid to smaller countries, not development\nof world armies. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Top left: Siamese representative John Poussett pointed out that national revenue of Siam is 28 cents; could not\nsupport World Police Force. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Top right: Chinese delegate Ron Con asked U.N. to shed diapers, start wearing long pants; strive for\npeace. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bottom left: Peter Lowes, representative from United Kingdom, asked for Police Force; spoke for rearmament. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bottom right:\nTom Franck, USSR delegate, threatened to write expose of U.S. Delegate Joe Nold, titled: \"What I Know About Nold\".\nModel General Assembly meeting featuring Soviet walkouts (ably performed by AMS president Vaughn Lyon),\nfiery debates, and no conclusions.\nInvasion of the back-slapping precincts of downtown\nservice clubs started in the fall with a visit by Bob\nLoosmore, Marnie Wilson, and Ann Hutchinson to\nthe Rotary Club. Arch-socialist Loosmore caused several staid Rotarians to lose their Hotel Vancouver\nboiled turkey, but the presence of two pretty girls eased\nthe strain.\nPresident Basi took a tram to the Northwest Regional YMCA Conference in New Westminster and\ntried for two solid hours to explain that Christian social\nwork and world co-operation go hand in hand.\nA visit from Polish author-in-exile Madame Luts-\nlowski prompted some club members to ask whether\nthe club had been founded to help world peace or to\nmake war on the Soviet Union\u00E2\u0080\u0094but the meeting filled\nArts 100 and stirred up more lively discussion than any\nin the year.\nProfessor Soward's \"International Review of 1951\"\nwas another post-Christmas meeting-packer and the\nquiet expert's cautious optimism was a pleasant change\nfrom the blaring headlines then being made by U.N.\nsession in Paris.\n83\nTop: View from general secretary's platform shows mixed moods\nof delegates in front row, back of Ukranian delegate Roy Sadler.\nBottom: Joe Nold, American delegate, brushed off personal attacks of Russian Tom Franck; presented plans for International\nPolice Force. International Students Club\nThree years ago, in the spring of 1949, Frene Gin-\nwala and Felicity Pope layed down the first plans to\norganize the increasing number of foreign students on\nthe campus. With a goal set at establishing an International House on the campus, the ISC enrolled 120 members within three months of its inception. Today, the\nmain function of the club is promoting social contacts\nand stimulating discussion between foreign and Canadian students.\nThe year began for ISC with a tea at the International House clubrooms. Professor Andrew, AMS president Vaughan Lyon, and ISC president George Rohn\nemphasized the importance of the club, and praised\nthe work of the members during the previous year.\nShortly after, club members and guests attended an\nInternational Masquerade in colorful, authentic national costumes.\nAt the regular parties in private homes, a speaker\nstarted the evening, and afterwards the members sang\nthe songs of their respective homelands, and danced.\nSeveral groups of club members visited the studios of\nthe CBC in Vancouver, and others spoke to service\nclubs on subjects concerning their native countries.\n5_\u00C2\u00A3 A\n1?\n_____L\"W\nt^;jMB__a\n__r/\nfcil_B_B '_B^\nw ;\ _H\n5*\nW-.'\n___\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2_\u00C2\u00BB\nGeorge Rohn headed fireball ISC executive. Most of club members were interested mainly in establishing and maintaining a\npermanent International House, but found time to participate in\nvaried ISC program.\nAlpha Omega\nAlpha Omega Society was formed for the purpose\nof promoting the study and appreciation of Ukranian\nculture as a contribution to Canadian cultural development.\nDuring the past year, the society has organized or\nsponsored lectures on any phase of Ukranian life, held\nconcerts, and presented motion pictures, dances, and a\ngraduation banquet for its members. Through the\nefforts of the society, several Ukranian books have been\nadded to the Library shelves.\nInformal noon hour meetings were held every Wednesday and general meetings were held monthly at a\nmember's home. A liaison is maintained between Alumni, as well as Alpha Omega societies at other universities.\nLloyd Pelech presided over tiny Ukranian Society executive; managed to draw amazing crowds to various concerts, dances and\nmotion pictures sponsored by Alpha Omega.\nIndia Students\nFounded to sponsor a series of lectures on the comparative study of Indian and Far-Eastern philosophies,\nand to help bridge the differences of East and West,\nthe India Students Association is probably the most important club to be formed on the campus in the past\nfive years.\nThis year, it sponsored Swami Shivananda, an outstanding speaker and practitioner of Yoga culture and\nphilosophy. The Association also observed the second\nanniversary of India's Republic Day, and invited prominent campus personalities as well as leaders of the local\nEast Indian community to their banquet in Brock Hall.\nDuring the latter part of the year, the Association\nundertook to help the East Indian community in Vancouver adjust itself to Canadian culture and living.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 With hard-driving, ambitious Raghbir Basi as one of its founding fathers, the India Students Association came into ts own\nths year with a steady schedule of parties, banquets, and sponsored speakers.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n84 Above: French group \"Le Cercle Francais\" chose\na Moliere period play for its main project.\nLeft: UBC Brass Band seemed to turn up at\nevery campus promotion stunt. Here they march\ninto the Armouries during the spring blood drive\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Far left: One of the screwiest stunts of the year was\nFilmsoc's monkey-in-a-wheei-\nbarrow gag, which saw the\nclub's Bill Day toted around\nthe campus inside a wooden\ncage. It paid off in three full-\nhouse audiences for \"Kind\nHearts and Coronets.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Left: Bearded Dick Lazenby\nand Radsoc cronies took a poll\non whether they should break\nrecord of \"Little White Cloud\nThat Cried\" . . . Johnny Ray\nlost by a wide margin.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Right: Humorist Eric Nicol's latest play,\n\"Brass Tacks\" was premiered by the Players\nClub early in November.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Far Right: Hot saxophonist Lance Harrison,\none of Vancouver's more prominent jazzmen,\nentertained an appreciative crowd in the auditorium for Jazzoc's last concert in March. 87 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Les Armour\nTHE UBYSSEY\nNever before have one man's opinions aroused so\nmuch violent dissension among so many people on the\nUBC campus.\nWhen John Leslie McKenna Armour slowly and\nreluctantly eased out of the cramped and cluttered offices\nof the Editor-in-Chief on April 5th, the Publications\nBoard lost one of its most controversial members. For\nfive years, he had raised the eyebrows of his readers\nwith his opinions on every subject from education to\ncomfort stations on the Engineering lawn. Through\nhis Ubyssey column \"And All That\", he had sharply\nrapped the knuckles of national politicians, famous\ntheatrical personalities, professors, and faculty and student administrators. To many he was a political radical.\nHis sharp, insulting statements and bold defiance of\nauthority were the foundations for the hatred of many\ncampus thinkers, and his \"leftist\" meanderings caused\na perpetual flurry among University political groups.\nBut to 45 staffers of the student newspaper, he was\n\"E.I.C.\" and for three issues a week he scraped four\npages of copy and pictures out of an unintelligible\nmass of \"gobbledygook\".\nIn September, the PUB put its first issue to press\nwith a staff of six. Allan Goldsmith, who had been\nEditor-in-Chief for two weeks while Students' Council\nthought over the Editorial Board's recommendations of\nLes Armour for the top spot, was executive editor;\nElsie Gorbat and Danny Goldsmith were senior editors;\nAlex MacGillivray took over the sports department;\nJohn Brockington started the Literary Page and Sheila\nKearns fussed with hundreds of exchange issues.\nDuring the first week, the Publications Board population increased tenfold, but by early October, only the\nhardiest were left. The new staffers were barely settled\nin their positions when the first \"controversy\" threatened to put them all on strike.\nWhile covering a story on the birth of four kittens,\nphotographer Walt Sussel invaded the inviolate sanctity\nof the Women's Dorms. The Administration severely\nchastized the photographer and the girl reporter who\nhad allowed the picture to be taken, and the Ubyssey\nleaped to their aid editorially.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Allan Goldsmith, Executive Editor.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Alec MacGillvray, Managing Editor.\n88 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Senior Editors Joe Schlesinger, Myra Green, Elsie Gorbat.\nWhile the last shouts over the \"kitten incident\" were\ndying away, editorials were appearing in support of a\nStudents' Council demand for elimination of this year's\nthirty dollar fee increase. The Board of Governors remained silent, the \"heat\" increased. When editorials\nquestioned the integrity of the Board, the Senate suggested that the EIC might be open to a libel suit. Editorials explaining the financial statements were printed,\nand the editors settled down, only to be confronted two\nweeks later with the biggest controversy of the year.\nThe Kickapoo Club asked the Student Council to\ncharge the PUB with half the loss from a pepmeet,\nwhich, they claimed, was not given enough publicity in\nthe paper. The motion passed, and the Ubyssey staffers\nsuspended publication. An emergency meeting of Students' Council rescinded the motion, but four members\nabstained from voting confidence in the Ubyssey's news\npolicy. Editorials called the four \"gutless wonders\";\nCouncil labelled Ubyssey policy irresponsible and they\nfired the EIC.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Right: MacGillivray visits sports writers Edwards, Wharf, Drink-\nwater. Below: Mike Ryan; right, work at the U-desk.\n89 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Producing the Ubyssey meant three nights a week at press for\npubsters.\nThe campus buzzed with the pros and cons of the\nArmour controversy. When a petition bearing 180\nnames was presented to Council, the twelve student\nrepresentatives unwillingly called a general meeting.\nSensing the swing of student opinion toward the side\nof Armour, the Council hastily called an emergency\nmeeting a half hour before the general meeting, and\nArmour and Council agreed to a compromise.\nOver 3,000 students poured into the Armouries. For\nthree hours, long lines of speakers fired thousands of\nwords back and forth on responsibility, freedom of opinion and the press, and the fundamental purposes of a\ncollege newspaper. With time running out, a motion\nof closure on debate was passed, and Les Armour hesitantly took over the microphone in his own behalf. In\na quiet speech on the responsibility of an editor to the\nstudent body, he explained the difficulties of working\nwith a volunteer staff, and without mentioning his\neditorial policy, completely won the crowd over to his\nAl Fotheringham wrote\n\"Campus Chaff.\"\nChuck Coon, Author of\n\"Up a Tree.\"\nside. When the vote was taken, the \"ayes\" had it, and\nArmour walked back into his tiny glass cubbyhole in\nthe Brock basement.\nThe only trace of the controversy still remaining was\nthe new city editor Mike Ryan, who was part of the\nArmour-Students' Council compromise.\nWhen Christmas exam results were known, the usual\nstaff reshuffles took place. Myra Green, Joe Schlesinger,\nand Elsie Gorbat were senior editors. Pamela Steele became literary editor; Alex McGillivray moved to managing editor, with Barry Drinkwater replacing him as\nsports editor. Laughing Vic (V. Fred) Edwards was\nappointed news editor; Jean Smith, copy editor, and Flo\nMcNeil continued on as women's editor. Columnist\nChuck Coon, an exchange student from Western Ontario University, insistently chirped \"Up a Tree\", and\nAlan Fotheringham pounded out \"Campus Chaff\" to\nthe tune of \"I hate Engineers\".\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Pam Steele, Literary Editor \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Flo McNeil, Woman's Editor\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Jean Smith, top reporter, and\nShelia Kearns and Patsy Burns Terry Nicholls, Student Council\nCUP Editors. representative.\n90 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Tommy Hatcher\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Walter Sussel\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bruce Jaffary\nPhotographers\nA new era in the Publications Board Photography\ndepartment began this year with the absence of nearly\nall the experienced photographers.\nBruce Jaffary held the position of Director of Photography, and as the distributor of supplies and equipment, he was constantly between the fire of austerity\nconscious pubsters and extravagant photographers.\nTommy Hatcher, the last of the \"professional\" photographers, worked on section pages for the Totem.\nWalt Sussel, the COTC's only representative on the\nPUB, was one of the most prolific lensmen on the\ncrew.\nNewcomer Ron Meek became a competent news\nphotographer by the end of the year. Bill Welch, a\nforestry student, worked on the Totem staff.\nJoe Quan, one of the hardest workers in the group,\nwas always willing to give his time and advice, and\nhe was on call all hours of the day and night.\nTop: Ron Meek, who took almost all the pictures in the\nclubs section, was kept busy by the Totem staff.\nBelow: Joe Quan, almost always in the darkroom, was\ncalled on constantly by Totem staff, who always ran\nout of photogs.\nFar Left: Bob Steiner worked on campus until Christmas,\nleft many of his negatives behind for use in the Totem.\nLeft: Bill Welsh came into the photography department\nafter Christmas.\n91 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Joan Fraser, Editor\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Gerry Kidd, Associate Editor\nTOTEM\nTo the outside world it was Canada's biggest college\nyearbook.\nTo Vancouver's printers and engravers it was a\ncoveted contract.\nTo a handful of students in the north basement of\nBrock Hall it was a major headache\u00E2\u0080\u0094a year of sweat\nand tears and, at times, a project that came close to\ndrawing blood.\nBut its biggest heartbreaks were always coupled\nwith more than the usual quota of horse-laughs\u00E2\u0080\u0094\na factor which probably accounted for its being produced at all.\nJoan Fraser took over the Totem in the middle of\none of the hottest Julys in Vancouver's history. The\nheat and the score of problems that immediately confronted her led her to conclude privately that hell\ncould not be far off.\nFirst blow came from Treasurer Phil Anderson, who\nnoted gloomily that the last Totem dropped the AMS\n$4,000 in the hole and swore loudly that this year's\nedition would have to be designed to break even or not\nbe produced at all.\nRising costs and falling enrollment made the\ndemand next to impossible to meet without drastic\nparing. The Editor did her best all summer\u00E2\u0080\u0094but\nAMS commitments to publish pictures of every undergrad on the campus threatened to shoot engraving\ncosts into the stratosphere.\nHurried conferences with Editor-in-Chief Les\nArmour and Treasurer Anderson led her to sign a contract for plastic engravings\u00E2\u0080\u0094a new and much less\ncostly process.\nThen the engraver's union stepped in, pointed out\nthat plastic engraving was a process not governed by\nthe union, and intimated that they might declare all\nplastic engravings \"hot\". Hurried meetings with union\nleaders settled the problem\u00E2\u0080\u0094but new ones took its place\nfaster than the Totem Editor could count them.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Joyce MacPherson\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 George Stevenson, Business Manager.\n92 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Sally Heard, Fraternities Editor\nPhotographers found their lectures inevitably clashed\nwith times set for taking pictures, ad salesmen had a\nrough time with their customers, staff ran into exams.\nUndergrad pictures arrived from the photographers\nin a dozen different head-sizes, and half the students\nlooked as if their pictures had been taken in a coal pit.\nUndergrad Editor John Banfield, who later claimed\nthat work in a salt mine would have been easier,\nsorted all pictures, attached appropriate names to most\nof them, and then happily tried to forget them.\nSoft-spoken Gerry Kidd, who dropped in to the\noffice to scoff, remained to become Clubs Editor and\nAssociate Editor in rapid succession. He was kept\nbusy hounding LSE for copy, declaring a minor war\non the photo department, talking fast to printers, and\nkeeping engravers hopping.\nSports Editor Bill \"Hutch\" Hutchinson drew up a\nneat plan for 30 pages of athletics, then found that\nphotographers and athletes never met. Piece by piece\nhe fitted his giant jigsaw puzzle together, but he was\nstill working on it long after the rest of the book was\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Elva Plant, Graduate Editor\non the press.\nGreek Section Editor Sally Heard and Graduate\nEditor Elva Plant ranted, pleaded, and cajoled students\ninto handing in pictures until their sections were filled.\nMaureen Cromie handled write-up for all women's\npages, Joyce MacPherson frantically copied layouts,\ncaptioned pix.\nAl Goldsmith, the Ubyssey's Executive Editor, business manager, personnel director, and senior hatchet\nman in conferences, moved into the Totem office, used\nhis car as a messenger service between editors and production men, tabulated copy.\nBusiness manager George Stevenson made literally\nhundreds of phone calls, tracking down late copy, and\narranging appointments for photographers.\nThanks to pixies, who were the backbone of the\nbook, everything was under control by late February.\nThen Toronto cover manufacturers wired that their\nplant was on strike \u00E2\u0080\u0094 a delay that lasted six weeks.\nFinally though, covers arrived, staffers relaxed, and pubsters marked \"30\" to another Totem.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bill Hutchinson, Sports Editor\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 John Banfield, Undergraduate Editor\n93 SPORTS EDITOR: BILL HUTCHINSON 95 ADMINISTRATION\n*\nA Reconstruction Year\ne Robin H. Robinett, Director of Athletics\n\"The important thing in athletic sport is not the\nwinning, but the taking part. The essential thing is\nnot conquering, but fighting well.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094De Coubertin.\nThe athletic department of the University of British\nColumbia for this year directed its aims (1) to provide\nfor each student a program of wholesome and sound\nphysical activities which would meet his needs, desires, and interests; (2) to encourage participation by\neach student in new activities from which he would\nderive additional pleasure and benefit; and, (3) to afford\neach student the opportunity to develop himself physically, socially, recreationally, and psychologically\nthrough the medium of competitive sports activities.\nIt was guided by these ideal principles of providing\nparticipation for all instead of a select few, and of\nequalizing competition as far as administratively possible.\nThis has been a transitory year in the athletic\ndepartment, however, successful in light of the above.\nAnd it has been a most encouraging year when one\nstops to consider the groundwork that has, and is\nbeing laid, to make the athletic program of the gallant Thunderbirds one of the finest in North America.\nR. H. ROBINETT,\nDirector of Athletics.\nThe Ostrum Plan\nKnown as the Ostrum Plan, the \"new deal\" for\nmen's athletics provided sound financing and more\nefficient organization of the men's athletic programme.\nIts first year of operation saw Bob Robinett as athletic director, a position replacing Graduate Manager of\nAthletics. A five man board of faculty and students\nhandled most of the administration details, while the\nlarger Men's Athletic Directorate met periodically to\ndecide major policy. Although it was not set up until\nthe end of the year, the Men's Athletic Council, a\nstudent-faculty committee, governed financial policy.\nThe Ostrum Plan gave the MAD $3.25 per student\nfrom the AMS fes.e but this was reduced for next year\nat the Spring General Meeting when an anticipated drop\nin student enrollment would have given athletics unbalanced proportion of student money.\nOriginated by former MAD president Brock Ostrum,\nthe plan has proved its worth in this year's more effi-\nent athletic administration. The plan is to operate on\ntrial for four years, after which a complete evaluation\nwill be made.\n96 e Men's Athletic Directorate\nBack: Ford, St. John, Sparling,\nSmithergale, Springer, Jones,\nBrodie.\nFront: Plant, Jaffray, Prazlosky.\nM. A. D.\nThe Men's Athletic Directorate underwent a complete revision this year as the Ostrum Plan was put\ninto effect. Headed by energetic Bill Sparling, the\nBoard was entangled in the new problems of policy\nsetting and reshuffling caused by the Plan. A student\nvote of confidence at the general A.M.S. meeting in\nMarch gave the controversial scheme another year in\nwhich to operate and heartily endorsed the apparent\nupsurge of UBC teams.\nMr. Robinette from his post as Athletic Director, coordinated the entire organization and smoothed out\nfunctional wrinkles. The formulation of the Executive and Athletic Committees under the new set-up\nassured the students of a greater control of finances.\nW. A. D.\nLed by efficient Joan MacArthur, the Women's\nAthletic Directorate has come to the end of another\nsuccessful year. Its chief function was the administration of women's athletics, but the board was kept\nbusy with revising the awards system and smoothing\nthe many minor crisis that appeared.\nThe W.A.D. also sponsored a Homecoming float\nand entered a princess candidate, assisted in the organization of the WUS-WAA banquet, the sale of football\nregalia, a blood drive competition among girls athletic\nteams, and co-operation in Frosh orientation week.\nWith the additional funds granted them this term,\nthe executive was able to carry on a much more varied\nintra-mural program with a greater number of girls\nparticipating.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Women's Athletic Directorate.\nBack row: Jan Crafter, Elanor Ny-\nholm. Centre: Del Hartman, Dree\nStewart, Dorene Armour, Jean\nLeaper. Front row: Esther Lear,\nCynthia Clark, Joan McArthur;\nPresident Donnie Sparling, Jean\nHood.\n97 AWARDS\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Maureen Bray, winner of nine big\nblocks for hockey, badminton, and\nswimming.\nBasketball\nBIG BLOCKS\nAdeld Aselpine\nPat Donovan\nSheila Moore\nSMALL BLOCKS\nBessie Sainas\nBeverley Cook\nBadminton\nBIG BLOCKS\nMaureen Bray\nSMALL BLOCKS\nPat Burley\nJoy Mosence\nHockey\nBIG BLOCKS\nElizabeth Allen\nSheila Moore\nElinor Cave\nDree Stewart\nDawn Thompson\nPhyllis Leiterman\nBarbara Schrodt\nMaureen Bray\nDoreen Armour\nSMALL BLOCKS\nMarie Harrison\nMarg Robertson\nSkiing\nBIG BLOCKS\nTad Harper\nAnne Marie Leuchte\nSwimming\nBIG BLOCKS\nMaureen Bray\nSMALL BLOCKS\nPeggy Hinnigan\nEsther Leir\nDree Stewart\nBasketball\nBIG BLOCKS\n1. Arthur Phillips\n2. John Southcott\n3. Donald Hudson\n4. Bryan Upson\nNEW WIN\n1. Daniel Zaharko\nSMALL BLOCKS\n1. Ronald Stuart\n2. Gordon McLeod\n3. Ralph Hudson\n(4)\n(4)\n(2)\n(2)\nAmerican Football\nBIG BLOCKS\n1. David MacFarlane (4)\n2. George Puil (3)\n3. Dick Mathews (2)\nNEW WINS\n1. Cal Murphy\n2. Bob Hindmarch\n3. Jerry Nestman\n4. John MacDonald\n5. Bill Stuart\nFRESHMAN AWARD\n1. Al Ezzy\n2. John Hunt\n3. Leo Sweeny\nSMALL BLOCKS\n1. Tom Barker\n(Certificate)\n2. Peter Gregory\n3. Hugh McArthur\n(Certificate)\n4. Roy Saddler\nCricket\nSMALL BLOCKS\n1. Paul Jones\nFencing\nBIG BLOCKS\nI. Charles Barnard\nLoewen\nGolf\nBIG BLOCKS\n1. Douglas Bajus (5)\n2. Robert Esplen (3)\nSMALL BLOCKS\n1. George Barnes\n2. Gordon Christopher\nGrass Hockey\nNEW WINS\n1. Gordon Jones\n2. Hugh Buckley\nSMALL BLOCKS\n1. Peter Coombs\n2. Guy Hart Dyke\n3. Andy Sutherland\n4. Jawanda Bugwan\nSingh\nGymnastics\nNEW WIN\n1. John Letson\nSMALL BLOCKS\n1. John Hodgins\n2. Sev Heiberg\nIce Hockey\nBIG BLOCKS\n1. Harrison Young (4)\n2. Alan Hood (2)\n3. Stu Bailey (3)\nNEW WINS\n1. James McMahon\n2. Steve Gryschuk\n3. Malvin Hughes\n4. Lome Irwin\nFRESHMAN AWARDS\n1. Charles Sanderson\nSMALL BLOCKS\n1. Roger Stanton\n2. Rudolph Richer\n3. Robert Peebles\n4. Donald Anderson\nRowing\nBIG BLOCKS\nI. Harry Costillou\nNEW WINS\n1. Richard Kania\n2. John Drinnan\n3. John Warren\nSMALL BLOCKS\n1. Andy Smail\n2. Malcolm Matheson\n(1)\nRugby\nBIG BLOCKS\n1. Doug MacMillan (2)\n2. Giriard Kirby (5)\n3. Gerald Main (2)\n4. George Puil (2)\n5. Stanley Clarke (5)\n6. Ralph Martinson (2)\nNEW WINS\n1. Raymond Cocking\n2. Danial Oliver\n3. Bill Whyte\nFRESHMAN AWARDS\n1. Bill Mulholland\n2. Charles Brumwell\n3. Frank Gower\nSMALL BLOCKS\n1. Bill Wamsley\n2. John Newton\n(Certificate)\n3. David MacFarlane\n(Certificate)\n4. Stuart Clyne\n5. Jim MacWilliams\n6. Peter Grantham\nSkiing\nBIG BLOCKS\n1. Garvin Robinson (5)\n2. Frank Willis (2)\nSMALL BLOCKS\n1. Ted Hunt\nSoccer\nBIG BLOCKS\n1. Bill Popowich (2)\n2. Bill Walters (2)\n3. Bud Dobson (2)\n4. Ken Campbell (2)\n5. Mike Puhach (2)\n6. John Fredrickson (2)\n7. Don Renton (2)\nNEW WINS\n1. Irvin Knight\n2. Doug Andrew\nSMALL BLOCKS\n1. Dick Mathews\n(Certificate)\n2. Stan Glasgow\nSwimming\nBIG BLOCKS\n1. Gordon Potter (2)\n2. Peter Lusztig (2)\n3. Don Smythe (2)\nNEW WINS\n1. Alan Borthwick\nSMALL BLOCKS\n1. Dick Clayton\n2. Max Bertram\n(Certificate)\nTennis\nBIG BLOCKS\n1. Lawrence Barclay\nDave MacFarlane, winner of the\nBobby Gault Trophy and the Dr.\nBurke Inspirational Plaque for leadership.\nSMALL BLOCKS\nI. Bruce Jaffray\nTrack\nBIG BLOCKS\nNEW WIN\n1. Peter Harris\n2. Robert Piercy (5)\nCross Country\nBIG BLOCKS\n1. Max Bertram\nSMALL BLOCKS\n1. Garry Gibson\n2. Jack Lowther\n(Certificate)\nManagerial Awards\n1. Ice Hockey\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBrian Prentice\n2. Swimming\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBob Walker\n3. Basketball\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nPeter Fowar\n4. Cricket & Grass\nHockey\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nPaul Harris Jones\nSMALL BLOCKS\n1. Ice Hockey\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nNorman McLeod\n2. Basketball\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBob Kirkland\n3. Swimming\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nJohn Springer\n4. Skiing\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nGeorge O'Brien\n5. Soccer\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nPeter Prasloski\nHonorary Award\nHONORARY BIG BLOCK\nI. Frank Reid\nService Awards\n1. Diane Le Blanc\n2. Bill St. John\n3. David Hall\n4. Dick Stephens\n5. Ann Willis\nHonorable Mention\nSwimming\n1. Palle Cardell\n2. Torsten Bengtson\n3. Olaf Olsen\n98 FOOTBALL\nIt was a great football season.\nSpearheaded by Dave MacFarlane, George Puil, Cal\nMurphy, and Cece Taylor, the Jelly Anderson coached\nThunderbirds threw themselves whole-heartedly at the\nboys from below the border and to the surprise of all,\nmanaged to win two and tie one.\nThe Bird's success this year can be attributed to\nthree things: good coaching, better facilities, and the\nOstrom plan, all direct results of the strong student\ninterest in inter-collegiate competition. The fall camp,\nheld on the campus for three weeks prior to the opening of the term, was attended by thirty players, a\nmixture of veterans and high school talent, who prepared for the season under ideal conditions.\nOpening in Bellingham against the Vikings, the\nBirds threw a scare into the Conference champions but\nthe UBC boys tired badly due to lack of strength.\nMurphy scored the lone Varsity touchdown culminating a seventy yard drive.\nFirst home game saw the boys come from behind\nto tie Carrol College before four thousand spectators.\nLate in the fourth quarter, two blocked kicks, followed\nby sparkling off-tackle smashes by George Puil, knotted\nthe score. The Birds were camped on the College\none foot line as the gun went off.\nTravelling on to Spokane the next week, the Birds,\nafter twenty-two hours on a battered bus, absorbed a\n41-0 knockout punch from Whitman.\nThe next Saturday was smozzle day. The Vikings,\nin anguish after dropping a previous contest, slaughtered\nthe all too inept Birds, 52-6\u00E2\u0080\u0094a UBC record.\nOctober 13 was a red letter day in UBC football\nhistory. Thrilled with the prospect of playing for\nRoyalty, the Thunderbirds pulled all stops to trample\nEastern Oregon 13-8.\nA win! The first in two years. Spectators went\nwild, tearing down the goal posts at the end of the\ngame. Unfortunately the Royal Couple arrived late\nfor the history-making contest. After the game, Dave\nMacFarlane presented Prince Philip with the game ball.\nThen came Homecoming. Nostalgic grads joined\nwith undergraduates to cheer the Birds to their second\nstraight win as they pummeled Central Washington\n20-12.\n99 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Puil gallops\u00E2\u0080\u0094Central closes in.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Preseason work\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ugh!\ne Cal scores to culminate 40 yard push.\nThe Season's Record\nWestern Washington 41\nCarrol College _ 13\nWhitman College 41\nWestern Washington 52\nEastern Oregon 8\nCentral Washington 12\nOregon College 20\nWhitman College 21\nUBC 6\nUBC 13\nUBC 0\nUBC 6\nUBC 13\nr-\nUBC 20\nUBC 6\nUBC 6\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Confusion reigns as Bird's drive to win.\nNew Co-captains\nHindmarch\nMurphy\n100 FOOTBALL\nIn the Central game, the play of the Thunderbird\nforward wall was tremendous, though it was outweighed\nfifteen pounds to the man. This new line superiority\nallowed the smaller UBC backs to shake loose, and Puil,\nStewart and Herb capitalized on this to score. The use\nof the spread formation disconcerted the Yanks in the\nfirst half but they recovered their bearings in the last\nquarter and only sterling defensive play by such stalwarts as Barker and Nestman averted defeat.\nVisiting Tacoma proved fatal for the injury riddled\nBirds. The Loggers, showing superiority in every\ndepartment, ran and passed to a 41-6 victory. The lone\nvarsity score came in the second quarter when Cece\nTaylor blocked a C.P.S. punt and Murphy ran it over\nfrom the two. The Thunderbirds' biggest loss, however, was injury to captain elect Bob Hindmarch, who\nbroke a leg on a kick-off.\nReturning home more battered than ever, the team\ntook on the undefeated Oregon College Wildcats, and\nthe visitors completed their perfect season by hammering the tired UBC hosts 20-6.\nThe season ended on a discordant note when the\nWhitman College Missionaries literally finished off\nthe Birds 21-6 before the smallest crowd of the year.\nNot too dismayed by the years' showing however,\nCoach Andersen is looking for a better record next season as his predominantly freshman ball club has now\ngained a little experience.\nThe loss of such reliables as Dave MacFarlane, Cece\nTaylor, Jerry Nestman, Bill Stewart, John MacDonald\nand Tom Barker will be felt next year, but the return of\nPuil, Murphy and fifteen other regulars, along with a\nnew crop of high school and junior players, make prospects brighter.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Top: All was not gravy\u00E2\u0080\u0094W. Washington scores in 52-6 rout.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bottom: Screaming, jubilant fans fans tore down goal posts from\nfield after the 'Birds won a game\nLeft to Right\u00E2\u0080\u0094Front Row: Gregory, MacFarlane, MacDonald, McNichol, MacArthur, Ewing, Nestman, Mathews, Elliot, Herb, Jonston.\nSecond row: Murphy, Sweeney, Ezzy, Stewart, Hutchinson, Hunt, Murphy, Glasgow, Pureed, Blackhall.\nThird Row: Hindmarch, Ripley, Powers, Mitchell (line coach), Anderson (coach).\n101 RUGGER\nPerennially one of the strongest rugger sides in the\nprovince, Albert Laithwaite's Thunderbirds continued\nthis year to represent power and skill, sweeping the\nMcKechnie Cup from all competition.\nStarting slowly, the club did not pick up steam until early December when after tying their first game,\nthey scored two resounding victories to tie for first\nplace with Victoria Crimson Tide.\nHeld from the playing fields by the unseasonal\nsnow fall, the Birds' first post-Christmas game produced\nsome of the best rugger of the year. Playing in Victoria\nagainst the Crimson Tide, the forwards came up with\nsuperlative aggressiveness and managed to draw 8-8\nwith the Island team.\nAfter blanking Vancouver Reps 18-0, the lads were\nprepped for the return game with the Tide, and playing before a screaming crowd of varsity adherents, they\ndid everything right, trampling the hapless Victoria\nside 17-0.\nIn World Cup play, Varsity fared badly. Winning\nthe first game of the series with California on an 80-\nyard run by George Puil, they dropped the second encounter 5-3 when California's All American Les\nRichter kicked a winning convert. On the way home\nthe Birds met a mediocre Stanford fifteen on the soggy\nPalo Alto pitch and dropped a heartbreaking 3-0 decision.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Back row: Clarke, Palmer, Von Hartan, Brumwell, McLaren,\nWalmsley, Ford, Clyne, Cocking.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Centre: Owen, Mulholland, Newton, Main, Martinson,\nMcWilliams, MacFarlane, Laithwaite (Coach).\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Front row: MacMillan, Oliver, Puil, Go we., Grantham, Whyte.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Up Birds)\n102 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Newton goes down.\nThe home matches with the potent Bears showed\nfor the first time a glaring Varsity weakness as the\nAmericans outkicked the Thunderbird club at all\ntimes. Scoring an 8-3 win in the third contest, the\nBears clinched the total-point series with an 11-6 victory in the finale.\nLaithwaite's lads were captained this season by\nGerry Main, one of the team's defensive mainstays.\nA potent three line of Clarke, Newton, and Puil\ngalloped with purpose, while the rugged pack featured such stalwarts as Martinson, Walmsley and Greenwood. Kicking ace was Mulholland, with football convert MacFarlane filling in well. Bill Whyte, of baseball\nfame, punted well and turned in some sparkling tackling displays.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Crimson Tide three-line starts out fine but to no avail.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Take it, pack!\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Acting Captain Martinson receives the McKechnie Cup from Dr.\nMcKenzie.\n103 e Lawrence Barclay, Tops.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Davison and Jaffray, Doubles team..\n. _,_> _ _Jt__._\nw\u00C2\u00AB~w. .\n&E7r\u00C2\u00AB.'7_|\nw\nr*_\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ::i)77:;\nIi| mmm^mr\nIV\nH\n\ ______\nll *\n^It'\nr ____r^_\n4\n\u00C2\u00A3<_!;\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n1 ,\#\nrail..\n'-\"* ' ~. \"'4^. ,^- W J^^Bl^H\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\n1\n,mjmm vh\n_ _\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -*V>\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Track boys pose on the bench,\ne Elimination Finish.\nTENNIS\nU.B.C.\n6 to 0 Seattle Pacific.\nU.B.C.\n6 to 0 Pacific Lutheran.\nU.B.C.\n5 to 1 Seattle U.\nU.B.C.\n4 to 2 Western Wash.\nU.B.C.\n4 to 2 Seattle U.\nU.B.C.\n5 to 1 Western Wash.\nU.B.C.\n4 to 5 Wash. State.\nAs the above scores indicate, the U.B.C. tennis team had\na most successful season, downing all but one of their strong\nopponents. This loss came from one of the top tennis\nschools on the west coast, Washington State.\nLawrence Barclay, ranked number 5 in Canada last year,\nwas the number one man and was undefeated in conference\nplay.\nThe second position was alternately filled by Bruce\nJaffray and Doug Davidson, both of whom competed in\nlocal tourneys, while Nelson Fong ably filled out the last slot.\nThe team took one trip to Seattle and Tacoma and then\nplayed host to their competition at Stanley Park. The prospects for the forthcoming season look bright with new talent\non hand and all the veterans back in the fold.\nTRACK\n1951 Season\u00E2\u0080\u0094Due to an injury jinx that laid low Cinits\nand Harris just prior to the Evergreen Conference Meet, the\nVarsity track squad fared badly. Placing third, the Birds did\nnot come up to expectations promised in warm-up contests\nearlier. In three of the preliminaries, Peter Harris outran all\ncompetition to take the mile in near conference record time\nof 4.28 minutes. Sprinter Eddie Cinits ran a 10 flat hundred\nto press the circuit champion Casey of St. Martins all the way,\nand Irving Knight showed fine form in winning the 220 low-\nhurdle sprint.\nBob Piercy, quadruple Big block winner and ace U.B.C.\ndistance man, wound up his brilliant track career last spring\nwhen he placed second in the two-mile run.\nTwo newcomers, Jack Brummett and John Birch sparked\nthe Junior cross-country team while Max Bertram and Garry\nGibson carried the load for the Seniors. Bertram and Gibson\nfinished one-two respectively in the British Columbia championships.\nHopes for the 1952 season are high with the return of\nsix letter men including star distance man Jack Lowther.\nThere are many outstanding freshman prospects; dashman\nJack Maxwell and Bill Ewing, half-milers Fred Roots and\nDon Knight, and ace weightchuckers Dan Pekovitch and\nRay Zindler. If the potential of these boys is realized, the\nchance of winning the Conference meet is high.\n104 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Back Row: McLeod, Brennan, Barter, McLeod, Stewart.\nFront Row: Dick Penn (coach), Carter, Bertram, Taylor, Frith, Dempster.\nJay Wee's Basketball\nThe UBC Jayvees played to packed houses every\nThursday noon in one of the best seasons that this\nteam has had in many a year. Coached by Dick Penn,\nthe JV's finished the season with an eleven won, eleven\nlost record, which included wins over the top Senior A\nclubs in the city.\nThey defeated Clover Leafs three times, and split\na two-game series with Arctic Club. In a game with\nthe Provincial Championship Eiler team, they were defeated by eight points in a very close game.\nThe Jayvees played against Everett J.C., Mt. Vernon J.C., Western Washington J.C., College of Puget\nSound J.V., Seattle Pacific J.V., and California All-\nStars, losing a tight 45-44 decision to the latter team.\nAgainst these teams, the Jayvee's had varying success,\nbut came out on the long end of the score in most\ncases.\nThe scoring attack was led by John MacLeod, captain Gavin Dempster, and Bob Bone, but Doug Brin-\nham had by far the best scoring average until he missed\nthree weeks while he was working. Phil Barter and\nHerb Forward were also standouts.\nThis year's manager, Bob Kirkland, has done a\nwonderful job. He was assisted by Keith Liddle.\nThe two top games in the Jayvees' schedule were\nthe California All-Star game and the Thunderbird\ngame. The California tilt was close all the way.\nThe Thunderbird game provided its share of thrills\nand chills as the Bird's grabbed an overtime 67-65 win.\nAgain in this game it was John MacLeod and Herb\nForward who combined to lead the J.V.'s scoring attack. The junior varsity club took an early lead, but\nafter Coach Jack Pomfret had administered the Birds\nwith a stirring \"do or die\" pep talk, the senior club\ncame out fighting to outscore the J.V.'s in the last\nquarters.\nTeam members were: Bob Bone, forward; John\nMacLeod, forward; Phil Barter, centre; Gavin Dempster, guard; Herb Forward, guard; Hec Frith, guard;\nGeorge Seymour, Centre; Jack Herb, forward; Doug\nBrinham, forward; Lou Murphy, guard; Laurie Iton,\nforward, and Bob Humphries, centre.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Big Phil\ne Beat the Birds\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Tip off.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Gavin \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Southcott\nPhillips\nThunderbirds\nSeattle U. beat them, Eilers beat them, Alberta\nGolden Bears beat them, but Coach Jack Pomfrets' boys\nnever gave up even when practically ridden to death\nby grandstand coaches and sullen students.\nThe season of 1951-52 will long be remembered by\ncampus hoopsters as the \"hard luck year\". The record\nshowed the club to be a dismal failure, not a single\nconference win and only two victories in thirty-four\nstarts. But who other than the players, recalls the seven\nheartbreaking one-point losses, and the sensational calibre of the teams played?\nStarting the year with four veterans, the first weed-\ning-out practice saw almost three hundred eager aspirants answer the call of mentor Pomfret for material.\nSelecting three teams from this collection of the good\nand bad presented a problem of huge proportions, but\nwithin two weeks the chaff had been disposed of and\nserious preparations were under way for the forthcoming season.\nThe pre-Christmas schedule gave the impression that\nthe Birds had finally returned to the form that swept\nthe conference in 1948 as they dropped two one-point\ncontests to the Eilers, touted to be Dominion championship material. But the American opponents after the\nholiday soon squashed these hopes.\nAt home or away, the hapless basketballers couldn't\nwin a game. They dropped twenty-six straight games\nbefore beating St. Martin's University before an awestruck crowd. But after this the club continued on in its\nusual fashion.\nThe unprecedented success of the Junior Varsity\nsquad in its games made a Bird versus J.V. game a\nnecessity to fans on the campus. Throughout the season\nthe students had been debating whether or not Coach\nPomfret made a mistake in his Varsity selections, but a\nnoon-hour game convinced the sceptics that the big club\nwas composed of the best players at the University.\nStarting late in the fourth quarter, the Thunderbirds\ncame up with a rally to clip the younger club 69-67.\nWith the addition of Bob Bone and Johnny McLeod,\nthe team started off on the Olympic trail, but Alberta\nGolden Bears, led by lanky Ed Lucht polished them off.\nThe first game of the total-point series saw the prairie\nlads take a 13-point lead as Bone and Philips played\nstrong ball. The second encounter gave the Birds hope\nbut they faded in the last quarter and the Bears swept\nthe series with a 62-57 win.\nBackbone of the club for the third year was the outstanding bucket play of Art Phillips, who with his\ndeadly hook shot was always a threat. Don Hudson's\nsteady play combined smoothly with the superlative\nshooting of Jeff Craig. Lean Dan Zaharko and diminutive Brian Upson were outstanding in the guard slots.\nThe three lads brought up from the Junior Varsity, Bob\nBone, \"Gundy\" McLeod and Garry Taylor strengthened the team, but they arrived too late to help in the\nconference.\n106 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 A tight squeeze-out, Eiler's 61, UBC 60.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Buzz leaps for jump ball.\nBASKETBALL\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Above: Back row: Owen (trainer), Pomfert (coach), Hudson, Carter, Phillips, Seymour,\nMatthews, Penn (assistant coach).\nFront row: Southeall, Hudson D\u00E2\u0080\u009E Upson, Desalniers, Lorrie, Zaharko.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Right: Thunderbirds battle Seattle-Pacific, but ail-American Johnny O'Brien proves too\nmuch.\n107 HOCKEY\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Haas\nThis year the Thunderbirds had a young hustling\nclub with a sprinkling of veterans to steady them.\nHaas Young, a two-block winner and ex-Olympic star,\nled the squad in scoring, though he was closely followed by rookie Steve Cryschuk. Al Hood and Gunner\nBailey, the other big block winners, figured well in\nthe league scoring and provided the needed extra punch.\nRoger Stanton and Mac Carpenter patrolled the\nwings for centerman Jim Todd, a potent rookie threat\nfrom Edmonton. Another Alberta boy, Richer, pivoted\nthe line of Hole and Bailey. The blue-line corps was\nheaded by Chuck Sanderson from Regina, with poke-\ncheck artist Lome Irwin and reliable Jim McMahon\nably backing him up. The goal tending chores were\nshared by ex-Calgary Buff, Don Anderson, and Bill\nOlsen.\nThe team was coached this year by UBC graduate\nHerman \"Wag\" Wagner, a protege of the grand old\nman of Varsity hockey, Frank Fredrickson. Wagner\ndid a superior job as evidenced by the win record.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Back Row: Hole, Carpenter, Young, Bailey, Hughes, Devito, Richer\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Centre: Manager Prentice, Coach Wagner, Peebles, Irwin, Todd, Hoo d, Gryschuk, Sanderson, Stanton, McLeod\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Front Row: Olsen, Anderson\n108 The Thunderbird hockey team ran up an\nimpressive record in the ice-battles this season.\nEntering the Vancouver Commercial Hockey\nLeague for the first time in history, they finished\nsecond, only two points behind the PNE Indians.\nSweeping their play-off series with the Burnaby\nBeavers in straight games, the Birds tired badly\nand dropped the championship round two games\nto one.\nOnce again the squad made the trip to\nColorado and Utah. Meeting some of the top\ncollege pucksters in the United States, the Birds\nwon two, lost two, and tied two in the six game\nexhibition series. Taking on the Denver University Pioneers first, the boys dropped the opener\n6-4, but tied the second 4-4. Against the highly\nrated Colorado College Tigers, a club composed\nlargely of Canadian prairie boys, the results were\nidentical even to the scores. Travelling on to\nUtah, the boys clobbered the Mormons 8-1 and\n6-2.\nThe Hamber Trophy, unfortunately, was\nagain presented to the Alberta Golden Bears, as\nthe easterners built up a big goal lead in the\nopening clash of the two-game total four point\nseries. Only good goal-keeping by bespectacled\nDon Anderson kept the score down as the\nThunderbirds failed to solve the secret of the\nfree wheeling Albertan attack.\nThe second game was a different story as the\nclub conquered its stage-fright and began to roll\nwhen Jim Todd punched home the first marker\nat the 35 second mark of the first period. UBC\nhopes died quickly, however, as the Bears countered with a tally of their own and held the eager\nBirds to 4-4 standoff.\nProspects look bright for the re-winning of\nthe Hamber trophy next year. Many of the\nmembers of this year's club will be returning to\nthe campus, and the experience from this season\nwill stand them in good stead.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Stanton Scores\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Young Punches In Another\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 The Big Line, Young,\nBailey, Hood.\n109 Top row: left to right: Ivan Carr (coach), Mike Puhach (goal), Peter Proslosko (manager), Ken Campbell (left wing).\nFront row: Bud Fredrickson, Don Renton, Dick Matthews, Doug Andrews, Bill Popowich (captain) Bud Dobson, Stan Glasgow, Bill Walters,\nIrving Knight.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Above: Wet weather didn't stop rugger boys.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Pete Prasloski, team manager.\nSOCCER\nVarsity soccer had, generally speaking, a good year.\nAlthough the locals started out poorly, the final two\nmonths of play saw them return to the form which won\nthem the League's laurels last year.\nThe Varsity eleven, under Coach Ivan Carr and\nManager Peter Prasloski, opened the year with two\nties. They won game number three 3-2 over Dominions. Injuries suffered in that game left the team\nshort-handed, and as a result the boys dropped their\nnext two contests.\nBut a 7-2 win over South Hill put the UBC men\nback into the pennant chase, and under a severe player\nshortage they performed brilliantly.\nOther wins in the year included those over Sapper-\nton and South Burnaby. Beaten by the Collingwood\nteam in the Anderson Cup playoffs, they made up\nfor the defeat by winning two later games with the\nsame club.\nAt time of press, the UBC Thunderbird soccermen\nwere anticipating the game with the Collies for the\nchampionship of the Pacific Coast B Division.\nHigh scorer throughout the season was centre forward Bill Popowich, whose uncanny accuracy in placing the ball won many 'Bird games. Bill was ably\nassisted by Bud Dobson, Ken Campbell, Doug Andrews, Don Gleig, Mike Puhach, Bill Walters, Dick\nMatthews, and Bud Fredrickson.\nOne big highlight of the year was the fullback rating Bud Fredrickson received\u00E2\u0080\u0094he is a possible All-Star\nselection to play against the touring English team, the\nTottenham Hotspurs.\n110 CREW\nPart of the success story of UBC's Rowing\nClub is its phenomenal expansion. Almost\novernight it grew from a minor position to\none of the major campus athletic clubs,\nhaving one of the best win records of any\nUBC sport.\nThe return of Frank Read, one of the\nmost highly regarded coaches on the West\nCoast, drew a huge crowd of prospects in\nthe fall and thanks to rigid training and\nsuperlative coaching the crew managed to\nupset the strong Oregon State Shell at\nCorvallis.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Mid-winter training was pleasant\nThis spring, with the assistance of the\nM.A.D., the club was able to purchase a new\nboat, thus assuring visiting crews of an excellent shell in which to compete.\nIn May there will be races against such\nperennial American champions as University of Washington and University of Southern California to prep the Thunderbird\nscullers for the Olympic Trials to be held in\nSt. Catherines this summer.\nThe stout-hearted work of such shellmen\nas Stroke Dick Kania and Cox Gerry\nRendell have contributed much to the success\nof season, while Jim Patterson as Senior\nManager smoothed financial difficulties for\nthe team.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Tight lipped coxie\ne Coach Frank Read\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 A fast clip in the new shell brings out bugs in the boat's synchronization.\nT^3m\^A SWIMMING\ne Co-captains, Potter and Smyth.\nThunderbird splashers, coached by Doug Whittle,\nagain swept the Evergreen Conference and for the first\ntime competed as a guest in dual meets with Pacific\nCoast Conference squads.\nThough lacking the depth of previous years, the\nteam was potent enough to chalk up new records in\nthree-quarters of the events swum. The finmen tallied\nseven wins in ten starts and copped the Conference\ntitle for the third straight year. In the Canadian Inter-\nCollegiate finals, the Birds took third place behind\nMcGill and Toronto.\nThe top point getter on the club was Palle Cardell,\nthe back-stroke ace from Goteborg, Sweden; while co-\ncaptain Gord Potter, a prairie boy, proved the most\nversatile as Canadian Individual Medley champ and the\nteam's top sprinter.\nThe diving was capably handled by two local boys,\nAl Borthwick and Dick Clayton, while two loquacious\nSwedes, Torsten Bengston and Pete Lusztig proved to\nbe consistent point-getters in the breast stroke events.\nTorsten pulled the upset of the year when he beat\nWashington ail-American Dick Magnuson in record\ntime.\nTeam captain Don Smyth alternated between back\nstroke and the sprints, doing well in both. Olaf Olsen\nof Sweden and Max Bertram both shone in the distances.\nOlsen proved to be the top endurance swimmer here\nsince Jack Creedon and set four new records on the\nbooks. Bertram, switching late in the season from track,\nproved an inspiration to his mates.\nThe Junior Varsity, coached by Felix Walker, consisted of freshmen swimmers and of these Ted Roberts\nproved the stand-out. He often travelled with the Varsity to round out the squad. The swimming team won\nmore events than any other Thunderbird group.\ne Springer (manager), Potter, Cardell, Bengston, Clayton, Smyth, Roberts, Olsen.\ne Front row: Borthwick, Lutzsig, Doug Whittle (coach), Sky, Walker (assistant coach).\n112 <\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Borthwick plunges.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Sprint, sprint!!!\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Ready .\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 With pardonable pride.\n113 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Eleanor Cave\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Nyholm leaps to sink one.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Where's the opposition?\nTHUNDERETTES\nExiled from the Vancouver Senior City League\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nsuch was the fate of the University Thunderettes as\nthey practiced hard for the circuit opener. Due to an\noverdose of red tape, their application was handed in\na day late and so the girls were forced to play nothing\nbut exhibition games during the season.\nWith no crown to cop or pennant to win, the\nspirit of the team was vacillating. Lack of reserves did\nnot help the club but they managed to come up with\ncreditable record despite these handicaps.\nStarring for the MacArthur-coached quintet were\nEllie Cave, Adele Aseltine and Sheila More. Against the\nAll-Star coloured team, the Thunderettes played one\nof their best games of the year though they were defeated 54-25. This game did much to stimulate interest\nin the girl hoopsters as the Roamers were a female\nedition of the famous Globetrotters.\nDel Hartman had the difficult chore of managing\nboth the senior and junior teams, while Elanor Nyholm\ndid an efficient job of coaching the Inter B's. Thus,\nthe UBC team, also suffered from stiff competition\nand as many of its members were new to the game,\nthe club did not reach the finals.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Top left: Joan MacArthur, coach; Ellie Nyholm, Sheila Moore,\nAdele Aseltine, Del Hartman, manager.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Middle: Bess Sainas, Bev Cook.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Front: Pat Donavon, Marion Bennett, Marilyn Russell.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bottom left: Shirley Pollard, Pat France, Ellie Nyholm, Anne\nWilloughby, Mildred Storbach.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Front: Gail McGarrigle, Sally Tannebaum, Bobbie Franks.\n114 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Above: Back row: Bim Schrodt, Marie Harrison, Maureen Bray.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Middle row: June Taylor, Eleanor Cave, Phyllis Leiterman.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Front row: Dawn Thompson, Margaret Robertson, Doreen\nArmour, Sheila Moore.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Left: Back row: Shirley Pilce, Jan Crafter, Maureen Sankey,\nAnn Inglis.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Front row: June Ninette, Janie Wright, Ann Winter, Nan\nLawerence.\nGirls Grass Hockey\nThe University Women's Grass Hockey Teams\nfinished a successful season in the City League with\nVarsity taking first place, and UBC winning a playoff position. An unfortunate accident prevented Dree\nStewart, Varsity's centre forward, from completing the\nseason, but Doreen Armour competently filled the\nvacated position. Nine members of this team won\nBig Blocks due to their excellent sportsmanship and\nfine play.\nHighlight of the year for the Varsity team was a\ntrip to Washington State College early in November,\nwhere the girls took part in the Pacific Northwest\nHockey Conference sponsored by Washington State.\nEighteen teams from Washington, Oregon, and Idaho\ntook part in the conference, and all 248 girls were\nhoused in one large dormitory. Varsity, however,\ncame home unscored upon after playing Washington\nState College, University of Oregon, and Oregon State\nCollege.\nThe UBC team consisted mainly of newcomers,\nbut a few experienced oldsters sparked the team which\nfought its way to fourth place in the league.\nThere was a good turnout for practises which were\nheld on Tuesdays and. Fridays, and both teams were\nably coached by Mrs. M. Brown of the P.E. Department.\nGames were played every Saturday at Connaught\nPark with the exception of the three games played\non the campus.\nAt the end of the season the Hockey Banquet was\nheld in the Brock and members from each team came\nto this function. The Spalding Trophy was presented\nto the top team in the league, Varsity, and the trophy-\ndonated for the best sportsmanship and all-round\nplaying was presented to UBC's own goalie, Lila\nScott.\nMuch of both teams' success is due to the untiring\nefforts and able management of Doreen Armour,\nhockey manager.\nUBC team members were Janie Wright, Mary\nDowsley, Barbara Bethune, June Minette, Nan Lawerence, Janet Crafter, Ann Inglis, Anne Winter, Bosso\nShinder, Maureen Sankey, Shirley Pike, and Lila Scott.\nVarsity team was made up of Dree Stewart, Doreen\nArmour, Shelia Moore, Margaret Robertson, Dawn\nThompson, Liz Abercrombie, Phyllis Leiterman,\nEleanor Cave, June Taylor, Maureen Bray, Barbara\nSchrodt, and Marie Harrison.\n115 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 VOC'ers take time out during a tough climb; lunches rapidly\ndiminish half way up the mountain.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Climbers saw spectacular sights such as this on their memorable\nhikes.\nV. o. c\nWhen thousands of rubber-necking visitors passed\nthe Library on Open House Day they were astounded\nto see several young men in Arctic garb hanging by\nslender ropes from the roof of the building, casually\nascending the rough stone wall in their stocking feet.\nThe more extroverted members of the Varsity Outdoor\nClub were presenting one of the feature attractions\nof UBC's \"greatest show of the year\".\nRapelling off the Library Wall was mild excitement\ncompared to the every-day climbing trips of UBC's\ninveterate cragsmen. During the summer, voc'ers\nclimbed Mt. Baker, Shuksan, the Lions, the peaks at\nTwin Lakes and Diamond Head in Garibaldi. During\nthe Garibaldi trip, the chartered plane in which several\nclub members were riding crashed in one of the\nmeadows above the Diamond Head Lodge, shaking up\nall those aboard, but injuring no one.\nOne of the major projects of the giant club for\nthe past five years has been the construction of a\nskiing lodge on Mt. Seymour. Last Christmas, the\nmembers celebrated the first birthday of the finished\nlodge, and added a permanent sign on the front door\nto the effect that this was the largest, and most completely equipped cabin on any of Vancouver's three\nmountains.\nHarry Stathers headed the club executive this year,\nwith Peter Girling as secretary-treasurer and Jack\nStathers, Chief Marshal.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Centre: A string of mountainers work toward their snowy\ngoal.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Opposite: Photographers had a heyday with magnificent\nscenery like this on which to train their lenses.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Above: VOC members relax in their completed $10,000 cabin\nup Mount Seymour.\n116 Thunderbird Ski Team\nThe UBC Thunderbird Ski Team proved itself an\never powerful contender for top honours in the Pacific\nNorthwest again this year.\nThe team strength was seriously affected by several\ninjuries sustained during training in Banff. Gar Robinson, coach and number one man of the team, suffered\na dislocated shoulder on the third day of training, and\nhe was unable to ski for the remaining ten days. He\nrecuperated in time for the inter-collegiate meet at\nRossland, where he won both the slalom and downhill\nevents.\nFrank Willis, steady and dependable, raced very\nwell in Banff and led the team in the cross-country\nevent at Rossland. Ron McRae and Bill Sellens turned\nin consistantly good performances. Ted Hunt, UBC's\njumper-extraordinary, did very well at Rossland despite\na sprained ankle. Don Shore and Jack Gawthorne, who\nalso skied at the Rossland meet, were handicapped by\ninjuries sustained in training at Banff.\nThe International Collegiate Meet held in Banff,\nFebruary 2 and 3, was acclaimed one of the best ever by\nthe nine participating teams. Gar Robinson, in standout form, won the giant slalom and came fifth in the\ndownhill, copping top honours for Canadians in the\nMeet. Frank Willis turned in an excellent performance, coming fourth in the downhill and sixth in the\nslalom.\nRon McRae had an unfortunate spill in the very\nrough slalom course but he did well in the downhill.\nNarry Lovitt had bad luck in both these events but\nhis racing at Banff at Christmas proved the high\ncalibre of his skiing. Ted Hunt came eighth in the\njumping in his usual good form. Dick Anderson came\neleventh in the spectacular event, and Don Shore also\ndid well.\nUBC finished fourth out of nine in the final team\nstandings, an unquestionably good performance. Washington State College and the University of Washington\nfinished first and second, and a newcomer, Wenatchee\nJunior College, came third.\nCHRISTMAS SKI TRIP\nThe UBC Ski Team sponsored its annual ski trip\nto Banff this Christmas. The trip was arranged under\nthe direction of Coach Gar Robinson, Manager George\nO'Brien, and Frank Willis.\nOver forty enthusiasts participated in the trip, which\nis open to all UBC students interested in skiing. The\ngroup enjoyed excellent accommodation at the Banff\nSchool of Fine Arts. Weather and skiing conditions\ncombined to make it a perfect holiday.\nThe team sponsors this two week trip annually as a\nservice to UBC undergrads.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 UBC Ski team members at\nBanff.\nLeft to right: George O'Brien,\nNarry Lovitt, Ron McRae, Frank\nWillis, Ted Hunt, Dick Anderson,\nand Don Shore.\nFront and centre: Gar Robinson,\ncoach.\n117 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 The suspense is terrific.\nGym Club\n\"High bar\", \"double leg cut-offs\", \"giants\", and\n\"upstarts\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094these terms are an integral part of the conversation of the small but muscular group of physical\nculture enthusiasts who call themselves the Gym Club.\nHeaded by Sev Heiberg, the Club went all out in\nsupport of the Phys Ed Undergraduate Society's production of \"The Sultan's Daughter\". This show,\nproduced late in February, starred the adagio dancing\nof Sev and Joy Judge, the disappearing rope act of\nMorris Slutsky, the trampoline work of Al Borthwich\nand Don Spenee, and the high-bar performance of\nJohnny Hodgins and Bill Wilson.\nHampered by the lack of facilities in the incomplete\napparatus room of the new gym, the club was forced\nto practise only sporadically until the end of January.\nWith a triangular meet against Washington and the\nVancouver Pro-Rec in the offing, the Club members\npractised faithfully for weeks. Under the capable direction of Doug Whittle of the P.E. Department Staff,\nthe members' progress was excellent. The loss of\nMorris Slutsky, who dislocated his elbow just prior to\nthe meet, was a severe blow, but the team put up a\ncreditable showing.\nBorthwich, Hodgins, Gates, Hannah, and Wilson all\ngarnered points but the more intense practise and the\nconsequent superior skill of the American entrants\nproved to be too much for the University Club.\nThis year was poor, as far as the results of competition go, but it is to be hoped that a sound groundwork has been laid for the establishment of intercollegiate gymnastics as a sport with spectator appeal.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Round and round.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Finale\nThe Sultan's\nDaughter. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Pix above show some of the women's intramural sports and their stars, who enjoyed the year's full programme.\nWOMEN'S INTRAMURALS\nThe Women's Intramural Programme this year has\nbeen full and varied. The sports year began with tennis\ndoubles which were won by Liz Prentiss and Phyllis\nMcLorg. Ping pong, the only other individual event,\nwas won by Louise Fletcher. During the year the\nteams participated in hockey, volleyball, basketball,\nskiing, swimming, archery, bowling and badminton.\nDirector Jean Leiper, a teacher training student, and\nher assistant, Janet Crafter, did a remarkable job of\norganizing the women's sports and the Intramural\nAthletic Board.\nOver twenty clubs and faculties entered teams for\nparticipation, but, surprisingly, the difference between\nthe two top teams was only fifteen points. A group of\nfirst year Arts students who formed \"Arts I Grey\"\ndefeated second year P.E.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094P.E. II triumphed over the residence girls in the\nbasketball finals, with Arts I Grey taking third place.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Pharmacy scored an upset by winning the bowling.\nThe team was sparked by high scorer Doreen Armour.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094The hockey trophy was divided between Arts I and\nP.E. II.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094P.E. II won the swimming competition at the Crystal\nPool with Arts I Grey coming a close second.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094V.O.C. won the skiing meet up Mount Seymour.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094P.E. II won the archery by a good margin over all\nother teams.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Arts I Grey won a closely contested battle over\nPharmacy in the Badminton.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Arts I Grey triumphed over P.E. II in the most highly\ncontested sport, volleyball.\n119 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nGOLF\nThe big event for the golf team in 1951 was the trip\nsouth to the States. Competition was against six of\nthe top West Coast universities: Washington, Portland,\nOregon, Oregon State, California and Stanford. UBC\nmen spread goodwill along with some tough competition, winning one match, tying one, and losing\nthe others. The UBC team was picked from four\nqualifying medal rounds.\nThe annual UBC match play tournament was played\nover the University course in the fall. Medalists were\nGordon Christopher and Charlie Swanson, each with\n74.\nDuring the spring the club offered lessons in the\nField House. They were given by club members plus\nstarry guests. Bill Mawhinney was one who assisted\nat these popular sessions.\nPIPE BAND\nUnder the able instruction of Mr. Ken McLeod,\nthe UBC Pipe Band again stirred the Celtic blood of\nathletic crowds with marches, strathpeys and reels, and\nprovided Highland atmosphere at Homecoming and\nvarious Pep Meets.\nThe group, under the sponsorship of the M.A.D.,\nconsisted of eight pipers, two side drummers, a tenor\ndrum and a bass. The tartans, sporrans and tunics,\nwhich lent so much color, were purchased from club\nfunds and were worn with careless abandon on state\noccasions.\nIan Wallace, Pipe Major, and Pat Taylor, the University's, Rhodes Scholar, arranged for the invasion of\nTacoma by the band. The band was active in all\ncampus functions.\nScottish Dance Club\nUBC cannot compete with American colleges in\nthe field of baton-juggling majorettes and contorting\ncheerleaders. It has, however, one attraction for football game intervals which is unmatched south of the\nborder.\nWhen UBC's Scottish pipe band takes the field, the\nlively skirl of the pipes and the measured beat of dancing feet erases momentarily the bitter thought of defeat\non the field.\nThese lads and lassies put in quite a few hours to\nbring their rousing Scottish airs, highland flings and\nsword dance to the pitch of perfection.\nThanks to the enthusiasm of the members of the\nScottish Country Dance Club under the leadership of\nPat Taylor, UBC's newest Rhodes Scholar, this university was able to show its visitors a sparkling kind of\nentertainment unique in the North American collegiate\nworld.\n120 GRASS HOCKEY\nTaking the East Indian side by a 4-2 score, the\nVarsity senior grass hockey team returned the O. B.\nAllan Cup to the Point Grey campus for the first time\nin seven years.\nThe UBC team ended at the bottom of the B.C.\nMainland league, but it showed spirit if not ability\nthroughout the year.\nThe success of the Varsity squad was due to its\nteamwork, but outstanding goal-keeping by Harry\nPreston, the top man on the Coast, and skillful stick-\nwork by Jawandar Singh on the forward line, helped\ngreatly.\nGames against the faculty squad created interest\nwhen the weather was poor. The club was coached\nby Hugh Buckley and managed by Paul Jones.\nFENCING\nThe UBC Fencing Club, small though it be, has\nan ardent collection of foil artists in its midst. Chuck\nLowen, representing the university, won the Novice\nMen's B.C. Championship, while club coach, Sam\nAllman, entered the semi-finals.\nThe club met twice weekly in a gym hut. Here\nSam Allman and club president Harry Stastney instructed novices on the art of the parry and thrust.\nFencing, contrary to popular opinion, is one of the\nmost gruelling of sports. It requires the co-ordination\nand aggressiveness of a boxer, plus speed and stamina\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094these plus essential grace and rhythm seem a pretty\nlarge order. But UBC's fencers, men like Walt Sussel,\nJerome Angel and Lyle Bagent, have proved that they\ncan deliver the goods.\nKICKAPOOS\n\"Come to the Pep-Meet\" was the familiar cry as the\nhard working Kickapoos stirred tired students with\ndowntown and home grown talent.\nTo bolster football enthusiasm, the \"Poos\" arranged\nthree pep rallies, the Tacoma invasion, and to top it\noff, the Home-Coming parade. The snake dance\nthrough staid Vancouver's business district will be\nlong remembered by Chief Mulligan.\nSport movies at noon gave a few clues to philosophy\nmajors on campus athletics, but the club's big push\nwas the Blood Drive in the spring.\nEleanor of the CBC, along with female impersonators, and the Squamish band, put over one of the best\npep meets of the year and helped to beat Texas in\nthe \"bloody\" struggle.\nMainsprings of the hustling group were Bill St.\nJohn, Ann Willis and Ken O'Shea.\n121 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Men's Intramural programme, directed\nby Dick Penn (right), was strenuous but\nfully enjoyed even by the once-a-year\nathletes who took part in it. Biggest\ncrowd-pleasers on the schedule were the\nboxing and wrestling events and the intramural track meet, but participants caught by\nTotem photog seemed to like other sports\ntoo. INTRAMURALS\nMore Participation Than Ever\nSweeping the boxing and wrestling, and entering\nteams in almost every event offered, Physical Education\nundergraduates took the Intra-mural Championship\nwith a total of 378 points even before the soccer results\nwere announced. They were closely followed by the\nBetas and Kappa Sigs, but by eliminating the Betas\nfrom the softball competition in a close game, they assured themselves of top spot.\nUnofficial results show the standings to be: Kappa\nSigma and Betas tied for second; with Alpha Delts,\nD.U., ex-Magees and Fijis behind. These organizations\nare the top six out of a field of forty-three.\nVOLLEYBALL\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Kappa Sigs, again displaying\nthe form that made them last year's champions, took\nthe Betas in a close final. Top points also went D.U.,\nATO, P.E. and Mechanical Engineering, who made it\nto the round robin final.\nCROSS-COUNTRY\u00E2\u0080\u0094Outdistancing a field of just\nunder two hundred, Jack Brumett, a galloping pre-med\nstudent, set a new intra-mural record for negotiating the\n2.6 mile course. With the points given for the winner,\nPre-Med took top honors in the event. P.E., V.O.C,\nand North Burnaby, were also high scorers.\nSOCCER\u00E2\u0080\u0094Still undecided as the book goes to press,\nthe final will be between the Betas and the defending\nchampion Kappa Sigs. The Betas were matched against\nthe Newman Club in the semis, while the Star and\nCrescent lads downed Phi Delta Theta in a close contest. The outcome of this match will definitely decide\nwhich fraternity is the top athletic group on the campus.\nBOXING AND WRESTLING\u00E2\u0080\u0094It was in these two\ncompetitions that P.E. picked up 105 valuable points.\nWith Bill Kusner winning the heavyweight boxing\nchampionship and Dave Shunter emerging as king of\nthe light-heavies, the muscle-men assured themselves of\ntop ranking in the mitt sport. Charlie DeHeck and\nBill Popowich, also of P.E., grappled their way to top\nhonors in the wrestling events, the 150-pound DeHeck\nwinning the heavyweight crown. Del Black, winner of\nthe middle division, was judged the best boxer in the\nfirst tourney and he was awarded the Varsity Boy\nTrophy. DeHeck, who is in serious training for the\nOlympic Games, was named the best of the wrestlers.\nTABLE-TENNIS\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Lawyers came out of their\nlibrary for the event and took top honors, while Fort\nCamp placed second, followed by the Betas and ATO.\nBASKETBALL \u00E2\u0080\u0094 This was most popular of the\nintramural games. Director Dick Penn was swamped\nwith a record 56 entries when the call went out for\nteams wishing to compete, and he was hard pressed to\nfind facilities for all the teams. The Alpha Delts, led by\nhustling Tom Barker, emerged triumphant with a clear\ncut victory over Beta Theta Pi. Runners-up included\nNewman Club, Phi Delts, Agriculture, Kappa Sigs and\nEngineering 1.\nSOFTBALL\u00E2\u0080\u0094A powerful Medicine team, with one\nof the best pitchers ever seen on the campus, defeated\nPE 4, 3-2 in a close struggle to win the intramural\nchampionship. It was not until the final game that the\nMeds had a run scored on them, as they soared through\nthe schedule undefeated. They polished off PE 2 in the\nsemi.\nSWIMMING \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Swim meet eliminations brought\nforth almost one hundred and fifty erstwhile fin-men\nfor the popular activity. The Kappa Sigs, headed by\nDenny Dallas and Mike Smith, had the situation well\nin control as they topped PE and the Zebes to grab top\nplace. The finals, held at night in Crystal Pool, were\nnot well attended, but they produced some of the most\nexciting races in years.\nTRACK AND FIELD\u00E2\u0080\u0094Beta Theta Pi won the\nintra-mural track competition on its entry points, while\nPE took most of the events. The most interesting event\nwas the 100-yard final which saw Frank Vaselanek finish in an almost dead heat with John Newton and\nBob Blackhall.\nSKIING\u00E2\u0080\u0094A sunny day on Grouse Mountain drew a\nsmall but enthusiastic crowd of timbermen for the\nannual intramural downhill race. The Alpha Delt team\nplaced first, Aggies second and the Newman Club\nthird.\nGOLF\u00E2\u0080\u0094Was won by a sharp-shooting ex-Maggie\nteam, while Alpha Delts and Fijis tied for second with\nBetas third.\nBADMINTON \u00E2\u0080\u0094 This event also drew a record\nnumber of entries and was run off on consecutive Wednesday nights. Betas took top honors, placing a team in\neach of the final events. They were closely trailed by the\nRedshirts.\n123 BIG BLOCK CLUBS\nWomen's Club\nThe Women's Big Block, unlike the Men's Society,\nis not a service organization. It is set up more in the\nform of an honorary club whose function is purely\nsocial.\nThis does not mean, however, that the girls do\nnothing with their lunch hours but munch sandwiches.\nThey arranged for a well attended exhibition in which\nthe Canadian Badminton Champions, Darryl Thompson and Dave McTaggart, displayed drop shots and\nsmashes for the edification of Varsity shuttle fans; they\nsold raffle tickets to help make the boys' ball a success.\nThey peddled hats, in UBC colors, to aid football spectators, and they sat as the awards council for women's\nathletics.\nThe club was very proud to present to Joan Mac-\nArthur an honorary Big Block in recognition of her\nexcellent work in coaching Thunderette basketball\nteams.\nThis year's executive consisted of Maureen Bray, president; Eillie Nyholm, veep; Doreen Armour, secretary,\nand Jan Crafter, treasurer.\nMen's Club\nThis organization, composed of those campus athletes who have won their Big Blocks in Varsity sports,\nwas one of the most active clubs this term.\nStarting in September, the boys sponsored a \"Frosh\nSmoker\" that was a howling success. The entertainment, consisting of Dick Penn's jokes, tumblers, a female singer and an exponent of the gentile art of exotic\ndancing, sent the frosh away with some interesting\nviews on Varsity life.\nAlthough its members sold tickets and acted as ushers\nat all athletic events throughout the year, the Club did\nnot bestir again till after the Christmas vacation when\nit sponsored the \"Big Block Ball\" at the Commodore.\nWith the approach of exams, the lads calmed down\na bit and concentrated on the selection of those outstanding athletes who should be awarded a sweater and Big\nBlock in recognition of their ability and achievement\non UBC teams. With these awards out of the way,\nPresident Dave MacFarlane, Bill Popowich and Art\nPhillips could settle down to work feeling quite proud\nof the work done by the club this year.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Back row: Eleanor Cave, Dawn Thompson, Pat Donovan.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Centre row: Maureen Bray, Eleanor Nyholm, Adele Aseltine, Margaret Cross, Janet Crafter.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Front row: Dree Stewart, Tad Harper, Liz Abercrombie, Phyllis Leitermann, Barbara Schrodt.\n124 *\nMens Big Block\nMAX BERTRAM\nAL BYMAN\nKEN CAMPBELL\nSTAN CLARKE\nBUD DOBSON\nBUD FREDRICKSON\nDON GLEIG\nDON HUDSON\nJACK LOWTHER\nPETE LUTSZIG\nH. MacARTHER\nD. MacFARLANE\nDOUG MacMILLAN\nGERRY MAIN\nR. MARTINSON\nJOHN NEWTON\nBILL POPOWICH\nJOHN PLOYHART\nMIKE PUACH\nGEORGE PUIL\nDON RENTON\nBILL SPARLING\nDON SMYTH\nBRIAN UPSON\n_UaI\n125 GRADUATE EDITOR: ELVA PLANT 127 HONORARY\nACTIVITY\nAWARDS\n-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nBill Anstis, honors student in politicol science,\nco-ordinated displays for the Open House\nCommittee this year. His work saved the\ncommittee many headaches, and earned him\nthe plaudits of the campus. He is a member\nof Sigma Tau Chi.\nBarry Baldwin, now in second year Commerce,\nhas been one of the most enthusiastic members of the Mamooks Club for the last two\nyears, holding positions of president and treasurer respectively.\nBrigitta Bollo, third year Arts student, was\non the executive of the International Students\nService Club, and worked as publicity director\nfor International House Committee.\nStan Clarke, graduating this year in Arts, has\nserved for four years on the MAD executive.\nA rugger and football player, Stan ployed on\nboth Thunderbird teams. He is also a member\nof Sigma Tau Chi.\nIvan Peltham, first year Law student, chaired\nthe Open House Committee this year. His\nexcellent administration was fully proved by\nthe success of Open House Day.\nJoan Fraser, graduating this year in Arts,\nedited the Totem. She was Woman's Editor\nfor the Ubyssey last year, and is a member of\nDelta Sigma Pi.\nAllan Goldsmith, first year Law student, was\nan executive member of Radsoc when he was\nin first and second years. Past president of\nIFC, Allan was elected to Sigma Tau Chi.\nHe was executive editor of the Ubyssey this\nyear.\nAllan King, graduating from Arts this year,\nwas chairman of the LSE Special Events Committee. He arranged the most ambitious programme LSE has had to date, bringing most\ninteresting and unusual talent to the campus.\nDove MacFarlane, fourth year Commerce student, was one of the most outstanding athletes at UBC. Dave, a member of Sigma Tau\nChi, won almost oil athletic awards possible\non the campus.\nDel Sharpe, graduating this year, has been\nchairman of four blood drives on this campus.\nHis outstanding work on this year's B.'ood\nDrive won him an Honorary Award.\nNorm Young, honors English student, has\nworked with the Players Club since he has\nbeen on the campus, and has served as president of that organization.\n128 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Grad Class Executive Danny Stankovich, Bob Chattey, Stuart Mooney, and Newt Cornish take time out to pose for Totem photographer.\nGRAD CLASS EXECUTIVE\nEarly in February, Engineers swamped the annual\nmeeting of the graduates and chose Civilman Stuart\nMooney to head this year's Graduation Class Executive.\nWith the election of Danny Stankovich as Social Convener and Newt Cornish as Secretary, the Engineers\ncompleted their coup d'etat. For the Treasurer's position, however, the Commercemen beat the lobbying redshirts, and Bob Chattey rounded out the topheavy group.\nProfessor G. C. Andrew was asked to be Honorary\nPresident of the Class, and Miss R. Morrison was Honorary Vice-president.\nThe Class Executive planned all the activities for the\ngroup. The traditional Baccalaureate Service introduced\nUBC's new graduates to the formal Graduation Exer\ncises.\nOn Monday, May 12, grads thronged over to Bowen\nIsland on the annual moonlight cruise.\nClass Day Exercises were held Wednesday, May 14.\nThe class gift of a scholarship and loan fund was presented to President MacKenzie, who accepted it on\nbehalf of the University.\nGeorge Meehan presented the Valedictory Address,\nJohn Yeoman the Class Poem, Les Armour the Class\nHistory, Joan Fraser the Class Prophecy, and Howard\nCook the Class Will.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Les. Armour, Class Historian; Howard Cook, Class Willmaker; Joan Fraser, Prophet. George Meehan, Valedictorian; John Yoemann, Class\nPoet; spoke a I Graduation Day Exercises.\n129 AGRICULTURE\nBLACKHALL, ROBERT\nHERRING, STEPHEN\nSNIDER, DOUGLAS\nSTEWART, J. E.\nAGRONOMY\nATAMANENKO, GEORGE\nBONIN, STEPHEN\nBUSHEM, TESFA\nHANNA, MICHAEL\nHANSEN, H. L.\nROUTLEY, D. G.\nWHIPPLE, DAVID\nANIMAL HUSBANDRY\nBOSE, H. D.\nBAWTREE, A. H.\nBOWDEN, DAVID\nDOORNENBAL, H.\nEWERT, P. E.\nHOPKINS, T. R.\nMADRAMOTO, HARRY\nMARTIN, FRANK\nNEWALL, J. G.\nPAYNE, ERNEST\nPHILLIPS, J. C.\nRYDER, J. C.\nWONDAFRASH, A.\nBIOLOGY\nADAMKIEWICZ, LESLIE\nDAIRYING\nELLICE, JOAN B.\nNIBLOCK, M. L.\nSMITH, R. A.\nECONOMICS\nALSTON, G. B.\nESHETE, HABTU\nMANZIES, E. C.\nPERREN, JOHN\nSOON, DAVID\nFOOD TECHNOLOGY\nEVERIDGE, C. P.\nLINDSAY, J. A.\nHORTICULTURE\nBURRIDGE, ANNE\nCURBISHLY, N. G.\nFILLIPOFF, P. F.\nHARRIS, J. H.\nHUTTON, F. R.\nMcGIBBON, MAXWELL\nSALTING, C. P.\nSWANTON, RICHARD\nTAYLOR, O. M.\nUNRAU, A. M.\nWOODS, R. D.\nMECHANICS\nLONGSTAFF, CHARLES\nPARKE, GORDON\nSANDEMAN, ERIC\nWESTOVER, GORDON\nWILLIS, W. H.\n130 _\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n>\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nPLANT BREEDING\nATKINSON, T. G.\nPOULTRY HUSBANDRY\nBRYANT, L. P.\nSMITH, R. F.\nVERCHERE, F. E.\nSOILS\nARCHIBALD, W. G.\nPAYNE, HUGH\nTALBOT, ROBERT\nAPPLIED SCIENCE\nAGRICULTURE\nBIRD, D. R.\nDREIDGER, RICHARD\nMcKINLEY, HECTOR\nARCHITECTURE\nBEST, JANE\nCOTTON, PETER\nDENNIS, DONALD\nENG, GILBERT\nGREENSWOOD, LEWIS\nKERR, ROBERT\nKING, ARNOLD\nLUND, LEO\nMcTAGGART-COWAN, PAMELA\nSAI-CHEW, DICK\nSCOTT, FINLAY\nSCOTT, PHILLIP\nSIHOE, K. L.\nTERRIC, KEN\nWILSON, J. S.\nCIVIL\nARENS, A.\nBIANCO, E.\nBRANDER, JAMES\nBRAAMS, J. H.\nBUTLER, ARTHUR\nBUTTE, STEVE\nCARSWELL, ROBERT\nCHIN, WILLIAM\nCOBLENZ, J.\nCOWLIN, JOHN\nFINSAND, OMAR\nFOXHALL, RON\nFRANSEN, LEONARD\nFRIEDEL, FRED\nGREEN, ALTON\nGUMMER, GEORGE\nHAUSER, F. J.\nHERMEN, JAMES\nHERMANN, RICHARD\nHOGARTH, GORDON\nHOLBROOK, DOUGLAS\nJAMIESON, R. K.\nJONES, ARCHIE\nJONAT, WARNER\nKELSALL, H.\nKESSLER, CLARENCE\nLAMBERT, DOUGLAS\nLUCAS, KENNETH\n131 McCALLUM, BRUCE\nMcDONALD, ROY\nMcGregor, charles\nMacKAY, DOUGLAS\nMILLIGAN, A.\nMORRIS, F.\nMOSHER, WILLIAM\nMYERS, RONALD\nOLSEN, ERNIE\nOXLAND, T.\nPATTERSON, FRANK\nPAUL, ROBERT\nPELLS, FRANK\nPEGUSCH, WILFRED\nPOMEROY, JAMES\nPURDON, ARTHUR\nPOWLEY, GLEN\nPOWLAND, FRANK\nROBINSON, WILLIAM\nSINEGIORGIS, M.\nSTEWART, GORDON\nTHOMAS, H.\nTHOMPSON, ALEXANDER\nTHOMPSON, HARVEY\nTHORNE, E.\nWATKINS, W.\nWILLIAMS, C.\nWOOD, JOHN\nYOUNGER, J.\nCIVIL (Cont'd)\nCHEMICAL\n*\nBEDDOME, E. J.\nCLEGG, DAVID\nCOULTER, WILLIAM\nFIDDES, M.\nGRANT, JOHN\nHAMBURG\nLARAMY, BARRY\nMcMARRE, RONALD\nMcKINNON, WILLIAM\nMATTUCK, MORRIS\nMILLER, PETER\nPUGI, K.\nSOUTHERLAND, CHARLES\nVINCENT, ROBERT\nWELCH, JOHN\nWILTSHIRE, E.\nYIP, J. W.\nELECTRICAL\nADAIR, ROBERT\nALEXANDER, LLOYD\nASHLEY, EDMOND\nBATISTELLA, FRANK\nBELLIVEAU, PATRICK\nBENNETT, W.\nBUTCHER, JACK\nBURTON, W.\nCARRICK, STANLEY\nCARUTH, A.\nCLAYTON, GEORGE\nCRICKMAY, COLIN\n132 DECOCQ, LOUIS\nDOUGLAS, JACK\nEDDY, RONALD\nEYLFSON, O.\nFORRESTER, JAMES\nGALE, W.\nharding, n.\nharrison, w.\nhill, james\nkebe, frank\nknutsen, john\nlambe, thomas\nMcAllister, donald\nMacDONALD, WILLIAM\nMcDONALD, GRANT\nMcLENNAN, D.\nMORGAN, JOHN\nOVERTON, ANTHONY\nPERDUE, JOSEPH\nRUBENOK, ROY\nRYLL, E.\nSCOTT, KENNETH\nSHAFLIK, R.\nSNEDDON, WILLIAM\nSTOREY, JOHN\nSTANKOVICH, DONALD\nTAYLOR, LAWRENCE\nTHOMPSON, ROSS\nWILKINSON, STANLEY\nWILLIAMSON, DENNIS\nWINQUIST, DAVID\nPHYSICS\nBIBACE, B.\nGRIFFIN, D.\nHEFFRING, H.\nSHIER, RICHARD\nSMITH, DAVID\nFORESTRY\nBENNETT, ROBERT\nCOLLINS, JAMES\nCRAWFORD, STEWART\nCROPPER, ROBERT\nFAIRHURST, GEORGE\nFOX, SELWIN\nHIGGINSON, SAMUEL\nJONES, GORDON\nO'BRIEN, ROBERT\nSMAIL, ANDREW\nTHRILWALL, HAROLD\nWALDIE, W.\nWATTERS, R.\nWEBSTER, ALEX\nGEOLOGY\nATAMANCHUK, WILFRED\nBEATON, R. H.\nBROWN, D. H.\nBROWN, R. B. M.\nBULLIS, A. R.\nHODGKINSON, N. S.\nPHILLIPS, FRED\n133 mk,htLm*m*AA<\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nGRANATH, J. A.\nGRAHAM, JOHN\nHALVORSEN, CLIFFORD\nHARDY, W. J.\nHARRISON, N. A.\nHERWYMEN, JACK\nJORGENSEN, R. B.\nLaCHANCE, JOHN\nLAIRD, K. R.\nLIGHTFOOT, H. D.\nLOEN, E. J.\nMAINER, G. T.\nMARTINUSEN, N. J.\nMILGRAM, ERNEST\nMOORES, KEITH\nMOONEY, S. D.\nMcCASKELL, NORMAN\nMcGOWAN, W. M.\nPALMER, J. B.\nRANTALA, VELI\nSAWERS, N. M.\nSMITH, D. H. P.\nSUME, R. R.\nTERRIC, JAMES\nUMIKER, J. E.\nVICKER, C. S.\nWILSON, K. H.\nWHITE, R. R.\nWOOD, S. D.\nZELLINSKY, R. V.\nSCOTT, A. M.\nSMITH, W. R.\nSOUTHERN, J. G.\nSOLES, J. A.\nTRENAMAN, ROLAND\nWILSON, E. M.\nWITHERSPOON, A.\nMETALLURGY\nFISHER, J. L.\nFRIESEN, NICK\nMAGNOLA, GUISEPPE\nRUSSELL, DALTON\nSHIROKOFF, GEORGE\nSCOTT, J. S.\nWEGLO, J. K.\nMECHANICAL\nBENGSTON, STANLEY\nBERTOK, F. J.\nBROSTER, D. E.\nBURNIP, A. E.\nCAR, I. J.\nCONNOR, JOHN\nCOULTHARD, F. W.\nCRANK, A. D.\nDICKINSON, L.\nDON, J. A.\nDOWLING, G. F.\nDUNCAN, D. K.\nEWEN, W. A. B.\nGARDNER, R. J. D.\n134 .\nMINING\nAPPS, G. E.\nANTONIOLLI, ROBERT\nCHLOPAN, JOSEPH\nCLARKE, W. G.\nCORNISH, N. G.\nHORSLEY, T. L.\nMacCULLOCK, JIM\nTRIGGS, W. A.\nNURSING\nANGUS, ISABEL\nATKINSON, MARY\nBIRTCH, MABEL\nBANDING, HEDWIG\nBOLTON, MAXINE\nBOURTON, PHYLLIS\nBRAUND, ELIZABETH\nBROOKS, DOREEN\nCHOW, GRACE\nCLIFFORD, DORIS\nCOLEMAN, MAVIS\nCONN, MAE I.\nCUSSON, MARGUERITE\nDAMGAARD, AUDREY\nDAVIES, MARIAN M.\nFLETT, VERA\nFULMORE, HAZEL\nGOODALE, BETTY-JEAN\nGOULD, CLARA E.\nHUNTER, AUDREY\n-k m\W km\:\\nJACKSON, VIVIAN M.\nKER, M. ALDRES\nKERGIN, DOROTHY\nKNOWLTON, GWYNNETH\nLA RIVIERE, CATHERINE\nLITTLE, MAUREEN\nLONG, MARJORIE\nMARSH, FLORENCE\nMILL WARD, NORA\nMcDOUGALL, MARY I.\nMcMILLIN, MARY\nOLSEN, ELIZABETH\nPASK, ANNE\nPULLEN, BETTY\nPUTMAN, E. G.\nRIDEOUT, MARJORIE\nRHYNES, MARJORIE J\nRUTT, GLORIA\nSCHWOERER, PAULA\nSPE1RS, MARGARET\nSTEVENC, RUTH M.\nSTRANG, SHIRLEY\nTODER, MRS. C. A.\nUPHAM, BETTY ANN\nWALL, ANNA J.\nWEIR, PHYLLIS\nWILLIAMS, JANET B.\nARTS\nABERCROMBIE, ELIZABETH\nAIRD, H. C.\n135 i_^___i___t\nALGER, JULIANA\nANDERSON, D. C.\nANDERSON, J. M.\nANDERSON, W. J.\nANDREW, MILLA\nARNESON, M. E.\nANSTIS, W. A.\nANASTASIOU, CLIFFORD\nAXENTY, LLOYD\nBAGSHAW, E. C.\nBAHR, KATHRYN\nBAKER, S. B.\nBALMER, JOHN\nBANCROFT, R. D.\nBANCROFT, J. B.\nBANDY, P. J.\nBARNETT, R. D.\nBARNES, B. E.\nBARNES, REX H.\nBARR, MARGARET\nBARKER, ROBERT\nBAJKOV, ALEXANDER\nBAXTER, R. A.\nBEARD, J. R.\nBYRNE, B. P.\nBYMAN, ALLAN\nCALDATO, R. A.\nCAMERON, JACK\nCAMP, BENNETT\nCARLSON, N. A.\nCARMICHAEL, DONN\nCAVIN, N. P.\nCHADWICK, MARY\nCHAVE, DOROTHY\nCHRISTENSEN, PAUL\nCHRISTENSEN, K. H.\nCHRISTENSEN, GOLDIS\nCHAMBERLAIN, MARGARET\nCIRVANI, JOHN\nCLOHOSEY, M. E.\nCLARK, J. M. A.\nCLYNE, VALENTINE COBBIN, A. D.\nCOLWELL, J. M.\nCONNON, ISABEL\nCOOK, FRANK\nCOOPER, BRENDA\nCOPE, SHEILA\nCROMIE, M. A.\nCRUICKSHANK, JUNE\nCULLEN, JIM\nDAKERS, RONALD\nDAVIES, DOREEN\nDEARING, ENID\nDEMBOWSKI, P. F.\nDENMAN, BERYL\nDONALDSON, JACQUELINE\nDOROSH, A. I.\nDOVEY, B. B.\nDROSSOS, NICHOLAS\nDUFF, RONALD\nDUVERNET, MARY\nEADES, G. V.\nEASTERBROOK, CLAVIN\nEDWARDS, D. F.\nELVIN, MEMORY\nEMMONS, K. M.\nFARINA, NORAH\nFEATHERSTONHAUGH, PATRICIA\nFEDYK, J. L.\nFORSYTHE, D. A.\nFOSS, C. J.\nFORBES, A. R.\nFRASER, D. S.\nFRASER, JOAN N.\nFROESE, CHARLOTTE\nGALE, A. L.\nCHARNELL, G. S.\nGILLARD, GLENDA\nGLASGOW, BEVERLY\nGLOVER, S. W.\nGOOD, W. W.\nGORDON, D. M. M.\nGRAY, C. P.\nGRANT, R. F.\nGUILD, MAUREEN\nGUNNING, K. S.\nHALL, BARBARA\nHALLIS, P.\nHALE, L.\nHALL, T. L.\nHAMILTON, D.\nHAMILTON, M. E.\nHAMILTON, JOAN\nHANSON, K. M.\nHARPER, ALDER-ANN\nHARPER, BETTY\nHARRIS, NANCY\nHARRIS, CLIFFORD\nHARTLEY, F. C.\nHARDIE, JOAN\nHARVEY, ANN\n137 HARMSWORTH, H. P.\nHERRON, R. P.\nHESLOP, H. J.\nHERBRIK, G. R.\nHENDERSON, JOYCE\nHEWLETT, ISABEL\nHILLMAN, M. E. D.\nHILLMAN, V. L.\nHOPKINS, MONA\nHODSON, JOAN\nHOFFLIN, FRANK\nHORSEY, JULIE\nHORTON, MARY\nHUDSON, D. J.\nHUTCHINSON, A. S.\nIRVINE, DONALD\nJAFFRAY, BRUCE\nJAMES, SUSAN\nJAWANDA, B. S.\nJAY, ANITA\nJEFFERYS, E. E.\nJEFFREY, RUTH\nJENKINSON, D. W.\nJEROME, KELVIN\nJOHNSON, MARVIN\nJOHNSON, R. D.\nJOHNSON, ROSS\nJOHNSON, P. C.\nJOKANOVICH, S. V.\nJONES, TREVOR\nKAN, MO-CHING\nKEENLEYSIDE, MILES\nKELBERT, M. T.\nKELLY, MAUREEN\nKENNEDY, A. E.\nKENNY, S. G.\nKENT, V. D.\nKINLEY, FRANCIS\nKING, JOANNE\nKOHSE, EDWARD\nKOCH, PETER\nLAMBE, DOROTHY\nLANCASTER, DIANE\nLASH, SYLVIA\nLEE, KENNETH\nLEECH, PAT\nLEITERMAN, PHYLLIS\nLETT, MARY\nLePAGE, MICHAEL\nLIM, WAH\nLOWES, G. H.\nLOCK, HARRY\nLUNNEY, W. J.\nMcADAM, K. A.\nMcAFEE, JEAN\nMcBRIDE, J. R.\nMcCOMB, D. R.\nMacDONALD, W. C.\nMacDONALD, ANGUS\nMcDONALD, G. S. McDOUGALL( ANNE\nMcDAUGAL, SHEILA\nMcGRATH, DOROTHY\nMacKENZIE, I. M.\nMacKENZIE, SUSAN\nMcKEE, J. E.\nMcMillan, m. h.\nMcNEIL, A. M.\nMacPHAIL, J. D.\nMacPHERSON, E. D.\nMacPHERSON, JOYCE\nMA INGOT, G. J.\nMAKOVKIN, MRS. JOYCE\nMALCOLMSON, SHIRLEY\nMANCHESE, IRENE\nMEEHAN, G. J. E.\nMERONIUK, ALEX\nMEYERS, JOHN\nMILLARD, M. P.\nMOILLIET, DAVID\nMOFFATT, J. G.\nMOSHER, DOROTHY\nNAPIER-HEMY, J. A.\nNASTICH, MILENA\nNAYLOR, LOIS\nNELSON, N. E.\nNELSON, R. A. C.\nNORTH, R. A.\nO'BRIEN, G. W.\nODLING, DOREEN E.\nPANKOSKI, ALICE\nPARIS, R. P.\nPARKER, N. M.\nPAULINE, G. W.\nPEET, G.\nPELECH, LLoYD\nPETTERSON, GUNVOR\nPICKFORD, J. H.\nPHILIPPSON, GERALD\nPIDDINGTON, HELEN V.\nPIERCY, R. A.\nPINCHIN, R. A.\nPITTS, SHARY\nPLANT, P. ELVA\nPLEUMAN, NAN\nPOLLOCK, ROBERT\nPOTTER, CAROL\nPOP, ALICE\nPOP, KATIE\nPOWLES, DOREEN\nPRASLOSKI, P. F.\nPRESTON, W. H.\nPRICE, A. D.\nPRINS, KITTY A.\nPROKOP, E. D.\nPUIL, GEORGE\nQUAGLIA, TONY\nRANKIN, E. J.\nREDDON, J. G.\nREID, D. G. REGHENAS, RENALDO\nRENTON, D. M.\nREID, ALEXANDER\nRICHARDS, J. B.\nRICHARDSON, L. F. V.\nRICHES, ELEANOR\nRILEY, ELIZABETH\nRITTICH, MARY T.\nROBERTSON, ANNE E.\nROBERTSON, GORDON\nROBERTSON, MARGARET\nROBERTSON, RUSSELL\nROBERTS, BRIAN\nROLSTON, JOYCE F.\nROOTE, T. F.\nSACHKO, G. S.\nSARGENT, R. W.\nSAWCHUK, STELLA\nSAWYER, DIANE\nSCHLESINGER, E.\nSCHMIDT, MARGARET L.\nSCHELLENBERG, G. S.\nSCHOFER, R. C.\nSCOTT, DOROTHY J.\nSCOTT, EDITH\nSCOONES, W. A.\nSHEPPY, J. J.\nSICK, MARNEY\nSLEATH, G. W.\nSLIGHT, D.\n_?\nSMITH, DOROTHY\nSMITH, FRANCES\nSTEKL, EVA M.\nSTEACY, N. C.\nSTEINSON, DOUGLAS\nSTEVENS, G. D.\nSTEWART, I.\nSTEWART, SHEILA\nSTEWART, G. N.\nSTOKES, ROSEMARY\nSTONER/G. A.\nSTUART, S. B.\nSUTHERLAND, HUGH\nTAIT, J. M.\nTALBOT SHEILA\nTARLTON, JIM\nTAYLOR, C. R.\nTAYLOR, C. P. S.\nTEICHROEB, JOHN\nTEICHROEB, WILLIAM\nTHIRKELL, F. W.\nTHOMAS, GERTRUDE\nTHOMPSON, CONNIE\nTHOMPSON, DAWN H.\nTHORDARSON, T.\nTHORDARSON, LARA\nTIDBALL, JUNE\nTWINING, J. S.\nUSTINA, FREDERICK\nVANDERLEUR, J. V.\nV\n140 VANSTONE, C. L.\nWALMSLEY, LAWRIE\nWATSON, B. C.\nWARD, F. J.\nWATSON, KENNETH\nWEBBER, ISHBEL A.\nWEICK, CARL\nWEINSTEIN, LILIAN\nWELLS, R. M.\nWEST, D. R.\nWHEATLEY, GERALD\nWILSON, BETTY\nWILSON, FRANCES\nWILSON, SHEILA\nWITHROW, DONALD\nWHITE, DONALD S.\nWOODCOCK, LILLIAN\nWONG, FLORENCE\nWONG, JOHN\nWORTHINGTON, MARJORIE\nWRIGHT, D. A.\nYEOMANS, J. W.\nYORK, BETTY-JEAN\nYOUNG, D. M.\nYOXALL, EILEEN\nZABENSKY, REVA\nZENS, CECILS\nCOMMERCE\nANDERSON, P. G.\nANDERSON, T. E.\nASCOTT, A. T.\nBLEACKLEY, C. E.\nBRYN-JONES, DAVID\nBUTTERWORTH, E. A.\nCAMPBELL, K. M.\nCARSON, R. S.\nCHATTEY, ROBERT\nCUBBON, BOB\nDADSON, PHILLIP\nDE LA GIRODAY, PHILLIP\nDEVEREAUX, JOHN\nELWORTHY, B. J. DIANE\nFOTHERINGHAM, DAVID\nGALLBRAITH, A. J.\nGILBERT, J. L.\nGILROY, S. W.\nGUTHERIE, ARTHUR\nGYLES, THEO\nHENDERSON, DOUGLAS A.\nHENDRY, JAMES\nHUME, A.\nHUNTER, A. S.\nHALL, N. A.\nHARBOTTLE, B. E.\nHODGSON, W. L.\nHOLMES, VINCENT\nHORNER, L. K.\nJOHNSON, ROSS\nJOHNSTON, L. H.\nMcFARLANE, D. R. DEAN, SHIRLEY\nGILBERT, ALLISON\nHARSTONE, JACQUIE\nHOWORTH, ANNE\nHUGHES, NORA\nJOE, HAZEL A.\nLINDSAY, JULIA\nMcEACHERN, AILSA\nMcKINNON, MARY E.\nOXLAND, DAPHNE\nPINSKY, BERNICE\nPAULS, MARJORIE\nPORTEOUS, MERLE\nREDDITT, JEAN\nRIDLEY, BETTY\nSIMONSON, RUTH\nSLINGER, JOAN\nSTOWELL, LORA\nTUEY, THELMA\nWITHAM, MARGARET\nYATES, HILARY E.\nPHYSICAL EDUCATION\nBERTRAM, M. E.\nCROSS, MARGARET\nDsHECK, C. S.\nFEE, W. R.\nGILBERT, J. R.\nHAMMERSTOM, LOUISE\nHODGINS, JOHNNY\nHOLLENBERG, MARILYNN\n142\nMcGINLEY, FRANK\nMcKAY, B. E.\nMcKINNON, R. S.\nMacLEAN, MARY C.\nMcLEOD, D. R.\nMacPHEE, RALPH\nMcPHEE, W. B.\nMITTEN, NORENE\nNEWELL, GLORIA\nPARKIN, D. R.\nPEARSON, J. E.\nPETTY, J. A.\nPLOYART, J. W.\nPUHACH, MICHAEL\nROLFE, B. J. L.\nSPARLING, WILLIAM\nSTEWART, GLEN\nTANEDA, KAZUI\nTOOLSON, A. R.\nVAN ALLEN, ERIC W.\nWADSWORTH, ROBERT\nWOO, L. S.\nHOME ECONOMICS\nALBRECHT, DOREEN\nASHWORTH, NELLIE\nBARER, THELMA\nBRADLEY, ROSALIND E.\nBRODD, ELIN M.\nBROWN, JOAN\nCOLQUHOUN, MARGARET LEIR, ESTHER\nMcHARDY, IAN-\nMARTINSON, A. R.\nMITCHELL, H. B.\nPOPOWICH, WILLIAM\nPOTTER, GORDON\nSMYTH, D. R.\nWASSICK, ROBERT\nFORESTRY\nGARDINER, A. E.\nCLEFSTAD, R. O.\nCLEGG, T. E.\nCUTHBERT, J. A.\nDICKENS, R. B.\nDUSTING, N. R.\nGRADY, B. D.\nHLADY, E.\nJONES, P. H.\nJUDD, P. H.\nJOHNSTON, D. F.\nKETCHEN, P. M.\nLENKS, HENRY\nLOCKARD, S. M.\nLONGWORTH, G. A.\nMacKINNON, J. A.\nMURRAY, J. G.\nPARTRIDGE, F. G.\nROBINSON, A. B.\nROBINSON, E. (nee Wetton)\nSELLICK, A. B.\nSHARPE, D. L. E.\nSHARPE, W. G. '\nSHEPHERD, R. F.\nSUTHERLAND, F. E.\nWALTERS, W.\nWELSH, W. J.\nLAW\nADAMS, RAYMOND S.\nANGELL, R. D.\nBARNES, ROLAND\nBECKINGHAM, WILLIAM\nBIRKS, F. J.\nBIRNIES, R. A. G.\nBOND, J. A.\nBOOTH, A. R.\nBOWERING, HAROLD\nBLUNDELL, L. E.\nBRANCA, DELORES\nBRISTER, D. E.\nCAMPBELL, T. J.\nCASTILLOU, H. C.\nCHERTKOW, M.\nCOCKING, R. E.\nCOGHLIN, GORDON\nCOOK, H. G.\nCOOPER, W. E.\nCORBETT, DONALD\nCUNLIFFE, D. M.\nCURRIE, W. G.\nDERPAK, K. M. __$______ ' '< *A\nDIXON, HANK\nDRYSDALE, JOHN\nDUDLEY, LEONARD\nEDWARDS, DUDLEY\nEDWARDS, ROBERT\nEVANS, H. A.\nFAHLAM, PATRICIA\nFAYERS, K.\nFRASER, W. H.\nGATES, J. G.\nGILL, W. G.\nGILMOUR, W. A.\nGOODWIN, J. R.\nGORDON, W. D.\nGORDY, W.\nGOURLIE, R. N.\nGREENE, H.\nGUILD, HARRISON\nHAGGMAN, JOAN\nHEARD, LANCE\nHINKSON, ERNEST\nHOGAN, P. E.\nHOOD, PATRICK\nHORIGOREW, ANDRO\nHUGHES, RAYMOND\nHULL, AIR COMMODORE A. H.\nHUTTON, PETER G.\nJARVIS, H. P.\nJOE, ANDREW\nKARWANDY, FRANK\nKENNEDY, J. B.\nKING, G. E.\nKING, J. L.\nKITCHEN, ROBERT\nKOFFMAN, MORLEY\nKOOLE, LEONARD\nKRELL, THEODORE W.\nLeBLANC, RAYMOND\nLESTER, R. C.\nLYALL, G. C.\nLEVIS, S. A.\nMcGAULEY, EDWIN\nMcGOVERN, FREDRICK\nMacDONALD, A. T.\nMacDONELL, A. W.\nMANSON, P. A.\nMILLER, J. M.\nMILLER, CLIVE\nMOFFETT, DAVID\nMONTGOMERY, J. D.\nNICHOLS, G. D.\nNICKEL, WILLIAM\nPEDRINI, HARRY\nPOUSETTE, J. A.\nPRICE, MANLY\nPRATT, CECIL A.\nQUINN, W. J.\nREECKE, ROBERT\nROBERTS, D. J.\nROGERS, EDWARD\n144 ROBERTSON, W.\nRUSSELL, B. A.\nRYAN, TERRENCE\nSELKIRK, R. B.\nSHARPE, RAY S.\nSHERLOCK, D. G.\nSNAPE, JOAN\nSOUTHIN, MARY\nSTONE, JOHN M.\nSHEASLEY, E. G.\nSTEEVES, J. T.\nSTEVENS, DONALD\nTHOMPSON, H. W.\nTUCK, W. D. C.\nWALKER, R. P.\nWALKER, W. R.\nWARDILL, S. H.\nWEBBER, D. G.\nWHIFFIN, E.\nWINFIELD, S. H.\nWOODCLIFFE, C. J.\nWYLIE, T. M.\nYANOSIK, C. G.\nYOUNG, ROD\nPHARMACY\nADAMS, C. A.\nBARKER, E. A.\nBLOOMQUIST, H.\nBRIGHAM, F. M.\nCARRIGON, DEREK\nCLEARWATER, G. D.\nCOMMONS, K. C.\nDALBY, G. J.\nDOYLE, L. S.\nDULLER, J. A.\nEDGERTON, E. M.\nFENTIMAN, RICHARD\nFLYNN, P. H.\nFRANKLIN, D. B.\nGRANT, JAMES\nGUEST, KEVIN\nHALES, E. D.\nHOSKINS, C. G.\nHOY, ARTHUR\nJACKSON, J. E.\nJAMES, P. K. R.\nLOCKHART, ALLEN\nLOGIE, M. J.\nMcCARLEY, D. R.\nMacKAY ,F. D.\nMALYUK, PETER\nPARK, J. K.\nPENNER, HENRY\nREADY, WILLIAM\nSCHOPP, L. H.\nSMITH, PEGGY\nTHIRSK, F. W.\nTREEN, ANNE\nTROTTER, ADELINE J.\nVATNE, JOHN\n145 VAWDEN, JOYCE\nWILLS, F. H. E.\nWILSON, JOAN\nYOUNG, G. W. W.\nZAHARKO, C. M.\nEDUCATION\nAYLORD, BRUCE\nBARLOW, OLIVE M.\nBRAY, MAUREEN\nBRYSON, BEVERLY\nCALDERWOOD, W. G.\nCAMERON, ALEXA\nCOOK, D. G.\nDAVIES, GEORGE\nDAWSON, DONALD\nESO, JOE\nFARQUHARSON, R. H.\nFOX, S. H.\nFREDERICK, EUGENE\nFRIESEN, WILLIAM\nGRAY, BETTY J.\nHOUSE, GORDON\nHUGGIN, W. P.\nIRVING, C.\nMcAllister, mamie\nMcCUBBIN, ROBERT J.\nMcKEE, R. G.\nMcTAGGART, AUBREY\nMASON, A. G.\nMILLER, DOROTHY L.\nMOTTISHAW, H. C.\nPEDERSEN, EDMUND\nPERRY, E. B.\nROSCOE, MICHAEL\nSCHRODT, P. BARBARA\nSCHUETZE, H. L.\nSOLES, A. E.\nSTEPHENSON, J. C.\nTOEWS, V. D.\nUSHER, EVELYN\nWILKS, E. J.\nWILSON, MARNIE\nWRIGHT, J. H. E.\nYOUNG, HARRISON\nGRADUATE STUDIES\nTRITES, R. W.\nSOCIAL WORK\nBOON, ELAINE\nFLEMING, LORNA, A.\nFOGARTY, PAT J.\nMOLTER, EMILE C.\nMOSLIN, R. S.\nPEPPER, GERALD W.\nWESTCOTT, AL C,\n146 FALL CONVOCATION\nFor some, it is the end of years of study, research,\nfun, labour, and for others it is only the beginning.\nThe new War Memorial Gymnasium was the scene\nfor the 1951 convocation on October 26, during Homecoming weekend. Over 350 students received their\ndegrees.\nBrigadier Sherwood Lett was officially installed as\nChancellor of the University. Preceding Chancellor\nLett's installation, the Honourable Eric Hamber was\ngiven the title of Chancellor Emeritus. He will act in\nthe capacity as an advisor, with an ex-officio position on\nthe Board of Governors.\nBrigadier Lett, in his address, said that through the\ncontinuous support of the returning alumni, the University could stand on a firm financial ground with a\nstrong outlook to the future.\nThe Honorary Degree of Doctor of Laws was conferred upon Sir Alexander Clutterbuck, British High\nCommissioner to Canada; the Honorable Milton Fowler Fregg, Canadian Minister of Labor; and the Honorable Stanley Woodward, American Ambassador to\nCanada. These three men were the appropriate recipients of the honorary degree\u00E2\u0080\u0094they represented the three\npowers: Britain, Canada, and the United States of\nAmerica.\nSir Alexander Clutterbuck, in the congregation address, spoke on \"The Three Musketeers\", symbolizing\nthe three countries represented at the convocation. He\nstated the need for unity between these great powers at\nthis time of tension in world affairs.\nFollowing the solemn ceremony of conferring degrees, the Honourable Stanley Woodward spoke of the\nrelationship between Canada and the United States, and\ntheir work in the United Nations.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Sir Alexander Clutterbuck addressed the convocation\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Brigadier Sherwood Lett was installed as UBC's Chancellor\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 The Honourable Eric Hamber received the Degree of Chancellor\nEmeritus.\n147 UNDERGRADUATE EDITOR: JOHN BANFIELD 149 NEW FACULTY-MEDICINE\n&\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nSeptember 7, 1950, was a date which marked an\nevent of considerable interest and importance for the\nUniversity, for it was on this day that the first lectures\nwere held in the newly established faculty of medicine.\nMuch time and energy had been expended before this\nnew faculty was a reality.\nThe start of the medidal faculty was made by Dr.\nFrank Wesbrook, during his term as the first president\nof the University. He helped to establish a bacteriology\nlaboratory within the Vancouver General Hospital. Dr.\nWesbrook's untimely death prevented further immediate\nprogress.\nHowever, in 1943, Dr. G. M. Weir encouraged the\nB.C. Medical Association to expand its committee on\nMedical Education. Early the next year this committee\nsubmitted a brief to the University, and as a result, a\nsenate committee was appointed to study the situation.\nIn 1945, surveys were made in Canada and the\nUnited States to determine existing trends in medical\neducation. It was also decided to invite a group of experts to Vancouver to study the local situation. As a\nresult of these discussions, it was felt a dean should be\nappointed for the faculty, and in 1949 the University\nappointed Dr. Myron M. Weaver to this post.\nThe appointment of Dr. Weaver set in motion building plans, the search for faculty, and the drawing up of\na curriculum. At the same time, during the year 1949-\n1950, the first entering class was selected. Since then\nnegotiations have provided clinical facilities at the Vancouver General Hospital, and teaching facilities at many\nother hospitals.\nThus a new Canadian Medical School has been\ncreated at the University. In years to come, it will train\nstudents who by their subsequent practice or research\nwill bring fame and honor to the University of British\nColumbia.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Top right: Med students conduct experiment to record\nheart action.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bottom right: Medical Undergradute Society executive.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Below: Anatomy students examine remains of med-boy\nwho flunked out last year.\n150 *&\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Pre-Med executive\nfought for USC recognition\nand budget; sponsored big\nspring formal, nearly broke\neven.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Pre-Meds confuse sexes\nin turnabout dance.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Second year Med students fuss with fluids.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 First year boys and\nmicroscopes: \"Hey, I saw\nit move!\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Pre-Med Homecoming\nfloat won third prize.\nPRE-MEDS\nUnder the guiding hand of president Jim Wong, the\nPre-Meds have made this a year to remember, despite\nbudget and undergraduate status trouble.\nIn educational activities, medical films and outstanding doctors have been sponsored throughout the year\nto give the Pre-Meds an insight into their future profession.\nFull participation in extra-curricular activities has\nbeen the byword during the year. Early in the first\nterm, the Pre-Med creation, \"Comparative Anatomy\",\nwas awarded fourth prize in the float contest during\nthe homecoming game. As a feature of the October\nmixer, the Pre-Meds and the Nurses witnessed the loss\nof their very first patient in \"Cat-astrophe\".\nIn the intramurals sports, the Pre-Meds have been\nparticularly active this year, placing third in the stand\nings for the first term. A large share of the honors go\nto the Pre-Med boys who completely dominated the top\npositions in the cross-country race.\nEarly in January, many a Pre-Med could be seen\nhurrying to a lecture with a paint-spattered face and\nthe aroma of an old-time turpentine still. The occasion\nwas \"Operation Face-Lift\" in the little office behind the\nBrock.\nShifting into a Leap Year mood, the association then\nsponsored the Pre-Med-Nurses \"Turnabout\" mixer.\nThe capacity crowd was treated to everything from\na male chorus line in grass skirts to female Engineers\nand expert ballet dancers.\nTo finish the year in a more serious and appropriate\nmanner, the executive held a Pre-Med Ball at the Panorama Roof.\n151 \u00C2\u00A3%&\nADRIAN, JOHN\nANDERSON, DONALD C.\nBALLAM, CHARLES F.\nBECKETT, MATTHEW C.\nBOGGIE, ALEXANDER\nCARTER, HAROLD H.\nCHRISTENSEN, RALPH-.\nCLARK, NIGEL H.\nCOX, ALBERT REGINALD\nDOBSON, MARGARET\nDUDLEY, JOHN HOWARD\nFOOLKES, RICHARD &\nGALE, HENRY HAMON\nGELL, GORDON WILFRED\nGEREIN, ALFRED N.\nHARTWELL, LEAGH\nW.\nHENNINGER, JAMES R.\nHEYDON, GORDON KEITH\nHICKS, GERALD F.\nLEVIS, WILLIAM HUGH\nMARTIN, WILLIAM R. J.\nMITCHELL, WILLIAM J.\nNEMETZ, ARNOLD DAVID\nPARKINSON, RAYMOND\nPAULS, HENRY\nPURKIS, ROBERT S.\nROBIN, EDWIN PETER\nROSS, WILLIAM C\nSCHMOK, ARTHUR C.\nTAYLOR, JAMES V.\nTHOMPSON, BASIL, H. M.\nTHHORTON, NORMAN M.\nWARNER, DONALD L\nWEBSTER, HARRY W.\nWOODS, JOHN HAMILTON\nYATES, GERORGE RALPH\nAIKENHEAD, DONALD H.\nARNOLD, JOHN D.\nASPINALL, ROY J.\nATKINSON, KENNTH G.\nBRACEWELL, R. GRANT\nCAESAR, JOHN JULIUS\nCAVE, GEORGE D.\nCOOPEER, DONALD ASHLEY\nFLATHER, L W. ELWOOD\nFRACKSON, S. HARRY\nFUNG, EDWARD WING\nGORDON, MARY ETHELWYN\nHARLOS, ROLAND EDWIN\nHENNING, JAMES NEWTON\nHEWSON, ROY THOMAS\nHUTCHINS, E. KEITH\nKINAHAN, PATRICK JOHN\nKOOP, WALTER\nLE HUQUET, J. R.\nLEWCHUK, WILLIAM\nMANDEVILLE, ALEX F.\nMARKHAM, WILLIAM G.\nMARTIN, MATTHEW JACK\nMacDONALD, WALTER C.\nMcFARLANE, WlUfAM J.\nMESHER, F. S.\nNAROD, PHILLIP\nNEWHOUSE, ALAN L.\nPOSTUK, PETER\nRADFORD, HUGH W.\nRYE, JOHN H. B.\nSCARFO, JOHN R.\nSLEIGH, ALFRED D.\nSMITH, DAVID M.\nSTRINGER, DONALD W.\nSZASZ, GEORGE\nTAM, ENNIO ANDREA\nUNDERWOOD, AUDREY M.\nWESTGATE, HUGH DONALD\nWORTH, ANN JULIS\nZIMMERMAN, HAROLD W.\n152 AGRICULTURE\nUnder the able leadership of Frank Martin, president, the \"Sons of the Soil\" completed another successful year.\nGetting off to a good start on the first Friday of the\nfall term, the Society held a Salmon Barbecue. In spite\nof the rain, Professor Rand Young did an expert job of\ncooking under a large smoke-filled tarpaulin.\nOctober's activities were highlighted by the annual\nBarn Dance at the White Rose Ballroom. Although\nthe evening was reasonably orderly, everyone had a\ngood time.\nThe fall banquet was held early in November at the\nCommodore. Dr. Earl Birney, who spoke about the\njoys of raising a crop of solid rock in the Creston Valley,\nwas the guest of honour.\nFollowing short remarks by Dean Blythe Eagles,\nPresident MacKenzie, and Mr. G. E. Clarke of Abbots-\nford, the crowd got down to the more serious business\nof dancing. At one a.m., with the thought of 8:30 lectures before them, the farmers staged a mass exodus.\nThe remainder of the semester was relatively quiet.\nThe peace was broken, however, when one night a late\nworking farmer noticed that the Engineers had placed\nan outhouse in front of the main entrance to the Aggie\nBuilding. Quickly taking stock of the situation, the\nAggie students transfered the object to a more logical\nlocation\u00E2\u0080\u0094in front of the Engineering Building. The\nEngineers seemed not to have recovered from the incident for no retaliatory measures were taken.\nAt the beginning of February, the Farmer's Frolic\nand the Aggie Apple Day awakened the campus to the\npresence of the AUS. Apple eating students were contributing to a good cause, as the proceeds went to the\nCrippled Children and Gym funds.\nThe Junior Agricultural Institute of Canada added\nto the activities of the AUS by bringing many speakers\nto the campus to give talks on different phases of Agriculture. Officers of the group were Jim Ryder, president; Lois Dunlop, Elliot Rive and Geoff Alston.\nThe Agassiz field trip and the Spring Banquet\nrounded off another successful year for the most spirited faculty on the campus.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Top: Agriculture Undergraduate Society sponsored many\nsuccessful events; raised ire of Engineers. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Aggies on\njudging class.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bottom left: Aggie Homecoming Float.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Profit from Apple Day went to Kinsmen Fund for\nCrippled Children.\ne Big informal of year shook dust from Armouries' rafters. RADFORD, BRIAN T.\nASHFORD, ROSS\nBAILEY, CHARLES B.M.\nBAYNES, RAYMOND A.\nBIRKETT, BEVERLEY A.\nBOUWMAN, RALPH C.\nBRADSHAW, RONALD L.\nCRAIG, DONALD WM.\nDALGLEISH, DAWN ANNE\nDAUBENY, HUGH A.\nDEPFYFFER, ROBERT L.\nDUERKSEN, JACOB\nDUNLOP, LOIS ELAINE\nEWERT, PETER EDWARD\nFARIS, DONALD GEORGE\nFLOE, CARL\nFORSYTH, JOHN ALLEN\nGUBBELS, CLEOPHAS S.\nGUTTERIDGE, W. THOMAS\nHIGUCHI, AUGUSTINE\nJACK, EVELYN GRACE\nKENT, HENRY DORRELL\nKILLICK, KENNETH D.\nKYNASTON, DENNIS L.\nLIGHTFOOT, EDWARD R.\nMcDIARMID, WILLIAM C.\nMcDONALD, J. KENNELY\nMcFETRIDGE, DONALD G.\nMcRAE, RODERICK HAIG\nMILLING, MAE EVELYN\nMILLS, JOHN ARMSTRONG\nNORTH UP, NANCY JOAN\nPARKE, ALAN ARTHUR\nPARKIN, WILLIAM\nPAYNE, HORACE WM.\nPEPIN, HERBERT S.\nPIERCY, JACK EDWARD\nPORTER, WILLIAM F.\nPOWELL, JOHN PETER\nRILEY, DONALD NORMAN\nRIVE, CHAS. ELLIOTT\nSHAPIRO, GEORGE\nSHORE, JOAN CATHERINE\nSILVESTRINI, DENNY A.\nSIMPSON, MARJORIE B.\nSIZER, WALTER BRIAN\nSMITH, RAY FRASER\nSTACEY, DAVID LEONARD\nTHORNE, JOHN TREVOR C.\nWESTLAKE, DONALD WM. S.\nWINTERINGHAM, V, DAVE\nWONDAFRASH, AMDE\nWONG, RICHARD\nYIP, WING WEI\nANDERSON, NORMAN\nBRUMWELL, CHARLES A.\nCHESTER, ALLAN HENRY\nCHIN, LAWRENCE KWOK A.\nCHOWN, RUTH MARY\nCOE, JOHN EDWARD\nCOOPER, ANNA C.\nCROSS, CHRISTINE H.\nCROSS, STANLEY WESTON\nDAVIES, RONALD EDGAR\nEBNER, KURT EUWALT\nELVIDGE, JOHN\nFORD, JAMES MICHAEL\nFORD, RICHARD REEVES\nGILLESPIE, SHEILA C.\nGLASGOW, STANLEY K.\nGOSHKO, ERNEST M.\nHARDY, BRUCE ARTHUR\nHILTON, GERALD WM.\nHOBBS, EDWIN ERIC\nHOLOB, CORNELLIOUS\nHUMPHREYS, ROBERT M.\nJOHNSON, RAYMOND W.\nKADLA, FRANK JOHN\nKENDARICK, ZELLA M.\nKERR, JOHN ARMSTRONG\nKRONTSTROM, LAWRENCE F.\nMANTEN, BETTY JANE\nNEILSON, BARBARA JEAN\nPOPLE, KEITH NEALE\nRAE, EWING WILLIAM\nROSE, JOSEPH GUY\nSADOWSKI, JOSEPH JACK\nSTONES, ROBERT BARRIE\nTOUCHBURN, P, SHERMAN\nTUCKEY, RALPH C.\nVIAU, JOHN PHILIP\n154 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Farmer's Frolic saw\nAggies cut loose with\nsquare dances, reels, and\nschottisches in a boisterous\nevening.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Lonely Aggie looks over\nauction sale wares before\nthe rush cleared the table\nof everything but a few\ncrumbs.\nAYLARD, GEORGE R.\nBAILLIE, ARLENE A.\nBEGBIE, PATRICIA JEAN\nBICE, WILLIAM CHARLES\nB0SE, ROBERT JOHN\nCHESTER G. STANLEY\nCLAMAN, PETER CHARLES\nCLARKE, JEAN MARION\nCLAYTON, RICHARD F. S.\nCLAY, LESLIE KENNTH\nDALLYN, JACK\nDICK, ROBERT FRANCIS\nDREW, GRAHA MARTHUR\nDROSSOS, JOHN GEORGE\nELDER, LOIS M.\nHAY, KENNTH ARTHUR\nJACKSON, DONALD BARRY\nJONES, L. TREVOR\nKOVACS. AUDREY IRENE\nKUIPERS, RALPH PETEER\nLEE, YET HOW\nMARLING, KEITH E.\nMacGILLIVRAY, EE. MARY\nMIDDELVEEN, FREDERICK\nMOLYNEAUX, WILLIAM E\nRHODES, CHARLES THOS.\nSTEPHENSON, KENNETH J.\nTAYLOR, MARJORIE JUNE\nTRUSCOTT, CHARLES D.\nWONG, DANIEL\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Top: Door prize at the\nFarmer's Frolic provided\nthis couple with an apple\na day for many months.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bottom: Aggie girls'\ncooking was in big demand\nat auction sale.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Far right: Aggie girls'\ntree reminded students to\ncontribute money to help\nneedy families celebrate\nChristmas.\n155 APPLIED SCIENCE\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\" fTJ\nJ\nP __fe\n'\n) ai\nEbc\u00C2\u00A3\n1\nmw ** _^_^M\nmm M\n_^E Bl\n_\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A01\n\"\" 'i\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Engineering Undergraduate Society Executive\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Nursing Undergraduate Society Executive\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Architecture Club Executive\nENGINEERING SOCIETY\nUnder the leadership of red-shirted president Ron\nFoxall, veep Al Hicks and secretary John Stovman, the\nEngineering Undergraduate Society started the year\non a good footing with the rest of the campus.\nEUS executive consisted of USC reps Geoff Pringle\nand Rollie Ireneman, athletic rep Roger Hooten-Fox,\npublicity rep Joe Bockhold, and professional relations\nman Bill Inglis.\nThese men succeeded in making 1951-52 an outstanding year for the EUS.\nPlanning of social functions, including arrangements\nfor guest speakers, films, student talks, and dances, was\nhandled by the many engineering clubs which are also\npart of the EUS.\nNURSES' SOCIETY\nShortly before the commencement of the fall term,\nthe School of Nursing moved to its permanent location\nin the new Wesbrook Building. This was the beginning\nof a busy year for members of the Nursing Faculty.\nThe executive of this year's NUS consisted of Isabel\nAngus, President; Maureen Little, First Vice-President;\nTerry Rush, Second Vice-President; Diane Paterson,\nSecretary; Gwen Knowlton, Treasurer; Betty Anne,\nUpham, Social Convener; Joan Kingsbury, Publicity\nRepresentative; Lila Gee, Sports Representative; Vivian\nJackson, Inter-faculty Reprsentative; Dot Kergin, USC\nRepresentative; Ann Lennox, 2nd year Rep.; Ritsuko\nOka, 3rd year Rep.\nMembers of the NUS shared many activities with\nfellow sciencemen, the Engineers, and the pre-meds.\nARCHITECTURE CLUB\nThe Architecture Club was the predecessor of the\nArchitecture Department, for it was after the organization of the club, and in a great part due to its efforts,\nthat the Department of Architecture was founded.\nThe Club functions within both the EUS and the\nCanadian Architectural Students' Association, an organization whose aim is to promote friendship between\nstudents of the five Canadian schools.\nIn addition to campus activities, the club also contributes to the student issue of the Journal of the Royal\nArchitectural Institute of Canada.\nIn the Pacific Northwest, UBC's Club is working\nwith students at the University of Idaho to start a\nmagazine.\nMembership has never been more than 100, but this\nincludes everyone in the school. With this support,\nthe Club should continue to function as successfully as\nit has in the past.\n156 ENGINEERS' ACTIVITIES\n(Editor's Note: This copy was written by tiie Engineers'\nUndergraduate Society who wished to present an unbiased\npicture of life on the campus.)\nThis year the Engineering Undergraduate Society\ncarried out a new policy of co-operation and co-ordination with the main student body. The first step was\ntaken when the Engineers donned their red sweaters\nand set out to help the frosh find their way about the\ncampus. Unfortunately, some of the freshmen still managed to wander off and fall into the lily pond.\nContinuing their constructive policy, the EUS also\nattempted to elect an executive for the EUS also\nattempted to elect an executive for the Arst Undergraduate Society, and offered to help spend the Arts\nbudget.\nEngineering unity could be seen at work with the\nelection of the Engineer's candidate, Mavis Coleman,\nas Homecoming Queen; and the Engineers' float, complete with red banners, balloons and stirrup pumps, was\na main feature of the Homecoming Parade.\nThis year's EUS Smoker, held October 24, was bigger\nand better than ever, with a professional floor show and\nplenty of beer. With an attendance of over 500, Engineering spirit was very evident.\nThe smoked was followed, on November 14, by the\nEngineers'-Nurses hard times mixer, held at the White\nRose Ballroom.\nOther social functions\u00E2\u0080\u0094dances, films, guest speakers,\nstudent talks\u00E2\u0080\u0094are provided by the many Engineering\nclubs which are a part of the EUS.\nMarch of Dimes\nEach year the EUS sponsors a \"March of Dimes\"\ncampaign for crippled children, and this year they really\ndid it well. The Engineers took over the entire campus,\nparading through the library, serenading students with\n\"Godiva's Band\", and sponsoring a very special noon-\nhour show whose main features were: a chariot race\n(won by EUS), a spitting contest (won by EUS), and\na feminine tug-of-war (won by the Nurses, an EUS\naffiliate, with only a little help from a tractor).\nSquads of Engineers took over distribution points\nof the Ubyssey and \"free\" copies were given to those\nstudents who contributed to the cause.\nEngineering spirit and student body support made\nthis a record year, with a collection of |600, the highest\nper capita collection ever. Engineers felt their efforts\nat class-breaking and pocket-breaking were well rewarded as the money paid to the crippled children\nwould be converted to rich dividends of happiness and\nbetter health for the kiddies.\nEngineers went all-out in both the blood drives at UBC as they\nwent around the campus collecting people to give blood. Here\npubster Alec MacGillivray is coerced into donating.\nd\n11\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nh^ 1\nJWf\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094H\nr \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n%\n_\nmW <*'\n' -\nHI- .\u00C2\u00AB\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Engineers at the smoker enjoyed the floor show and the refreshments, handed out in person by E.U.S. president Ron Foxall.\nNurses donned their freshest, whitest uniforms for the March of\nDimes Drive. They were entertained by a personal representative from the Crippled Children's Hospital.\n157 Above: Amazed male spectators watch as hard-hitting\nNurses hold Frosh girls to no gain. Campus football\ngame introduced first year gals to rugged Varsity life.\nRight: Old heave-ho by Nurses routed Home Ec girls at\nMarch of Dimes Show. Tractor hidden in cheering crowd\nprovided extra pull for the gals in white.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Left: Miniature Fraser Rives snakes way through Varsity's back yard to facilitate study of Valley flood control.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Below left: One of the prize-winning architectural theses\nillustrating a beach resort was displayed in UBC Art\nGallery this fall.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Below: Town planners of the future lovingly display\none of their pet projects.\n158 M CKfl\n___?'__\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Engineers stormed into Law Building to get Lawyers to donate blood in February Blood Drive, while erstwhile redshirt climbs greased pole,\nand others invade Wesbrook Building.\nEngineers and Blood\nThe October Blood Drive proved again that the\nspirit of the Engineers was the most compelling force\non the campus. Donating 110% of their quota, they\nwere by far the leaders of the drive.\nIn Del Sharpe's tremendous Drive-of-Drives in\nFebruary, the boundless energy of Foxall's snake-parading redshirts was nearly overshadowed by the spontaneous co-operation of every other faculty and student\norganization on the campus. Forestry, the first faculty\nto beat the Engineers in a UBC blood drive, shot over\nits quota to an amazing 230%, well above the Engineer's 200%.\nStunts and funny-happenings award, however, went\nto the Engineers for their famous piglet expedition.\nBlood-crazed, screaming Sciencemen descended upon\nthe shining edifice of the Law-men, carrying a small,\nloud and odoriferous pig, but they were quickly repelled\nby the Lawyers' bright defensive counter-action, in the\nform of a fire hose.\nNo resistance greeted the dampened redshirts at the\nLibrary, where the pig roamed the quiet halls at will\nfor several hours, until a humane Artsman bundled it\ninto a briefcase and took it back to the Aggie barns.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Above: Engineers' stunts for\nthe Dime Drive included forcing\nthe Pharmacy students to donate,\nwhile spitting contest showed Engineers' prowess in unusual fields.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Right: Sngineers' Clubs Presidents got lined up against a wall\nfor Totem photog.\n159 Top: left to right: First prize winning exhibit by Forestry boys.\nJudges check the second prize winner, the Architecture model.\nGirl behind the Hydro-electric display doesn't seem to be\ninterested in the exhibit.\nMagnesium magic displayed by bow-tied Engineer.\nCamera-shy redshirt insisted on keeping back to camera.\nBottom row: Table crowd enjoying the party.\nSomebody's gal (far right) looks impressed with the Engineers.\n160 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0-*-'*\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Crowd dances by head table.\nBalloons hanging from ceiling\nwere spilled unexpectedly on\njammed dance floor. Girls spent\nlast half of evening picking bits\nof rubber out of spiked heels.\nENGINEERS' BALL\nThe gayest, loudest, most uninhibited two nights of\nthe spring term were claimed emphatically by the engineers, and in a hail of bursting balloons EUS President\nRon Foxall voted the Engineer's Highball the most\nsuccessful event on the crowded Sciencemen calendar.\nLaying plans for the big party early in September,\nFoxall and vice-prexy Al Hicks vowed that \"the ball'\nwould be the best in history. In October, departments\nin the Engineering faculty were asked to start plans\nfor their model projects; the Commodore was blessed\nwith a two-night reservation for 1,000 per night, and the\nfirst-year boys started saving to buy tuxedoes.\nFirst and fourth year men were given the first night,\nin the hope that the maturity of the graduating class\nwould have a quieting effect upon the wild, diapered\ninitiates. Music was soft and slow the first night; the\nresults of the model project judging were met with\nstaid but enthusiastic applause; the Foxall-led sing-song\nwas loud but quiet unharmonious, and the giant Civil\ngathering hardly asserted itself all evening.\nThe second night was boisterous. Second and third\nyear redshirts literally blistered the walls of the Commodore with songs and all forms of yips and kai-yi's,\ndanced to rousing square-dance fiddling and bone-crushing schottishes, and ended up red-eyed and bewildered\nin Chinatown.\nThe Forestry department's model of a sawmill in\naction, complete to the last grain of sawdust on the floor,\nwon first prize in the display judging. Architecture's\nscale model of Frank Llyod Wright's famous \"Falling\nWater\" home, won second prize. Civil's intricate model\nof a cement-mixing plant, which on the afternoon of\nthe first night of the ball spread quick-drying concrete\nall over the floor, came third.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Sciencemen and dates\nleap joyously for falling\nballoons.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Kissometer, one of most\npopular attractions of the\nevening, later prompted\nbattle between Engineers\nand its Artsman owner.\n161 IIHL. i\nBOVING, PETER ARVID\nBELL, DAVID JARMAN\nCARROLL, NUNRO M.\nCORDINGLEY, JOSEPH A.\nHAMBLEY, JOHN BARRH\nHARMAN, P. G. W.\nHATCH, WILLIAM R.\nKRISTMANSON, DAVID D.\nMocKENZIE, RONALD G\nNEMETZ, ALVIN S.\nPALMER, RICHARD M.\nPAULS, RONALD EDGAR\nPETROSKI, HARRIS\nREID, DOUGLAS ELLIOTT\nRHYDDERCH, TREVOR J.\nSTRANGE, WILLIAM H.\nTHOMPSON, GORDON M.\nZELT, GORDON WILLIAM\nBESTWICK, NORMAN\nBORESKY, WILLIAM E.\nBROOKS, JOHN ELLIS\nCHRISTOPHERSON, RAY\nCOUROUBAKALIS, DIMI, G.\nCRAIG, JEFFREY F.\nDUDRA, JOSEPH\nENDERSBY, STANLEY A.\nENGLISH, ALLEN, J. M.\nFARGEY, DONALD R.\nGILLEY, JAMES C.\nGLOTMAN, MARTIN\nGRANT, BASIL B.\nHARRIS, MURRAY CARMAN\nHICKS, ALAN\nHODGSON, ALAN JAMES\nHORNSTEIN, HERBERT\nINSLEY, ALAN EDWARD\nJACOBS, GILBERT FRANK\nJONES, ARTHUR L.\nMocKENDRICK, WM. G.\nSMITH, KENNETH RONALD\nSUNELL, JACK U.\nTH I ESSEN, HARRY EDGAR\nVICKERS, T. VICTOR E.\nWILLOX, GEORGE J.\nBIRD, THOMAS GEORGE\nCHAMBERLAIN, ROBERT\nDRINNAN, JOHN H.\nFRASER, WILLIAM L.\nFRASER, ROBT. MURRAY\nGOLDIE, HUGH JACK\nHARRISON, GORDON REID\nHAYWOOD, RICHARD W.\nLAING, JACK FREMONT\nLONG, ALEXANDER\nMAUSSER, WILLIAM J.\nMILNE, RICHARD VERNON\nPALMER, HAROLD\nPARK, WM. KEITH RAE\nPRINGLE, GEOFFREY N.\nSHEARER, T. CLARK\nSMITH, STANLEY J.\nSTOVMAN, JOHN ANDREW\nWATSON, ARTHUR JOHN\nBURKE, RICHARD\nCOLEMAN, RICHARD S.\nLAWRIE, DAVID MURRAY\nMOSHER, C. FRANKLIN\nNORMAN, ALVIN OSCAR\nDOWSLEY, DONALD A.\nMocDONALD, ROBERT L.\nPATRICK, DENNIS H.\nPAUL, ARTHUR JAMES\nTEREBETT, JAMES THOMAS\nCARRICK, DOUGLAS A.\nFABRO, DONALD JOSEPH\nGAIRNS, CHARLES HENRY\nPAUL, STEWART P.\nWESTERLUND, BRUNO V. W.\nDONALDSON, THORNTON J.\nHOGAN, JOHN WATERS\nKRETZ, RALPH ALBERT\nMARKLAND, KENNETH A.\nNELSON, WALTER INNES\nWILSON, PHILIP ROY\nANDERSON, E. EDVARD\nANDERTON, JOHN ERNEST\nAYLARD, JOHN DEREK C.\n162 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Architects worked long\nhours over drafting problems to complete projects at\nthe end-of-the-term rush.\n\" \"NA i\n_.\nBOCKHOLD, LAWRENCE L.\nBRODIE, ROBERT GORDON\nBROUGHTON, WILLIAM K.\nBUNN, EDMUND ROBERT\nCLOW, WILLIAM E.\nCOPE, RAY ROBIN\nCROOCKEWIT, JAN H.\nDAVIE, RONALD N.\nDELANE, HARVEY H.\nDELISLE, NORMAN A.\nDUFTON, WILLIAM C.\nENGELS, PAUL F.\nHANINGTON, EARL GEO.\nHODGSON, JOHN HENRY\nHUME, FRANK C.\nJONES, EDWARD E. S.\nLEE, DAVID\nLUND, WILLIAM JOHN\nMcDONALD, VERNON\nMcLEOD, DOUGLAS H.\nMacPHEE, C. ALLAN\nMILLAR, C. ARNOLD\nMITCHELL, NEVILLE\nMOORE, KENNETH W.\nNELSON, RICHARD IRWIN\nRAE, DOUGAL SPENCE\nRENDELL, HARRY ROBERT\nRENSHAW, ROBERT H.\nROSS, WILLIAM JAMES\nRUSH, ROBERT, WM.\nSELLENS, WILLIAM CHAS.\nSTELLIGA, DONALD JOS.\nTOWGOOD, ARTHUR WM.\nTURNER, WILLIAM JOHN\nWALE, CHARLES THOMAS\nWILLMON, GORDON J.\nWIMPERIS, ROBERT L\nWOLVERTON, J. LORNE\nBISARO, GENO\nREID, JOHN HENRY\nSIMARD, J. G. CLEMENT\nCAMPBELL, THOMAS S.\nCHOW, FRED\nGREENAWAY, JOHN M.\nHINDMARCH, KENNETH J.\nLANCHESTER, FRANK\nROBINSON, WM. C.\nSTILES, PETER MARLATT\nDORAN, FREDERICK W. E.\nFORSYTHE, D. DAVID\nLEES, KENNETH CYRIL\nLEGG, THOMAS HARRY\nMILLEY, DONAL D.\nPALMER, JAMES F.\nAPPLIED SCIENCE 2ND YEAR\nANTLE, JOHN V. S.\nARNISON, RONALD\nBAILEY, CHARLES LARRY\nBELOBABA, WALTER\nBENSON, ROBERT HEDLEY\nBERGQUIST. EDWARD A\nBRODER, JOHN PATRICK\nBROSSARD, DONALD K.\nBRYDON, JAMES ROBERT\nBUTLER, LAWRENCE S.\nCAMPBELL, IAN M.\nCARLEY, C. MORRIS\nCARSTAIRS, DAVID S.\nCHALK, RAYMOND\n163 _..___.\n___*\n^Ml-l,\nJrV-_B_i0^\u00C2\u00AB_Mfe Jw\ncook, philip thornton\ncrispin, george e.\ndarcovitch, jacob\ndavies, norman george\nday, john wm. benning\ndeakin, thomas allen\nduncan, david angus\nennis, keith\nfaulder, george a.\nfenton, vasey charles\nfinlayson, malcolm j.\nfiorentino, joseph s.\nford, lyman douglas\nforrest, john allen\nfraser, john allan\ngaensbauer, h. t.\ngalloway, leslie r.\ngane, frederick wm.\ngardner, donald a.\ngirling, peter r.\ngreenwood, hugh jokn\ngrenon, oliver joseph\ngruenthal, martin h.\nguthrie, david alan\nhardwicke, gordon b.\nharvey, smith douglas\nhillhouse, d. neil\nhooton, fox roger f.\njack, donald william\njohnston, hugh alex\njones, joseph alan\nkelley, alan daniel\nkelly, john donald\nkevill, paul\nknowles, edward e.\nlacey, wallace keith\nlake, lancelot c.\nlawrence, edward f.\nletson, john h. l.\nlindholm, ward m.\nmadeley, j. bruce d.\nmanson, stewart alton\nmatheson, donald j.\nmathews, stephen\nMccormick, william j.\nMacDONALD, ALEXANDER\nMcDORMAN, LESIE G.\nMcKAY, JOHN C.\nMacKINNON, DONALD P.\nMcNISH, JAMES A.\nMEEK, JOHN QUINN\nMERCER, EDWARD NEVIL\nMETCALFE, C. DOUGLAS\nMIDDELVEEN, JOHHN W.\nMILLER, KEITH JONES\nMIRKO, JOSEPH F.\nNEILSON, RONALD WM.\nNELMS, GEORGE LEROY B.\nNICOLLS, ELLIOTT F.\nOATES, GORDON CEDRIC\nOLLIVER, LESLIE R.\nORR, ARCHIBALD CHAS.\nPARLEE, VICTOR EARL\nPAYNE, FRANK ALDEN\nPINSON, WILLIAM EDWIN\nFLETCHER, JAMES HENRY\nPOOLE, E. GRAHAM\nPORTER, R. STANLEY\nPRINCE, GEORGE S.\nRIDGERS, ARTHUR H.\nRUTLEDGE, WM. JOHN\nSANDHU, JAGIR SINGH\nSMITH, GORDON FRED\nSMITH, JAMES WILMER\nSPINNEY, RALPH H.\nSTANDEN, PHILIP A.\nSTEVENS, GERALD DAVID\nSTEWART, MORGAN A. R.\nSWIETLICKI, STEFAN\nTHIRD, DOUGLAS GEO\nTHOMPSON, S. FORREST\nTRIGG, CHAS. MURRAY\nTURBITT, RONALD FRANK\nWADE, EDWIN MILTON\nWALTON, NORMAN\nWARD, GORDON VICTOR\nWATTS, DOUGLAS JAMES\nWEBSTER, DAVID JAMES\nWERNER, JOSEPH\nWESEEN, ARWIN POWELL\nWILLIAMSON, DOUGLAS F.\nAFFLECK, ROBERT\nALLSEBROOK, ALAN ERIC\nATKINSON, WALTER\nBAILEY, REGINALD H.\n164 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Engineers, as usual in\nthe Spring, remapped the\ncampus.\nBALOGH, MIKE\nBARAD, ALLAN\nBELLMONT, FREDERICK K.\nBELLOW, DONALD\nBENNETT, RONALD BRUCE\nBLACKERY, ANDREW JAS.\nBLEATHMAN, ALAN ROBT.\nBOLTON, RICHARD JOHN\nBORISUK, JAMES\nBROOKS, FRED JACKSON\nBROWN, ROBERT MORDEN\nBURGESS, ROBERT F.\nCLARIDGE, BARRY JOHN\nCLISCH, DONALD FRED\nCOPLAND, GORDON S.\nCORMACK, GEO. D.\nCORNISH, GEORGE HENRY\nCROMIE, MICHAEL V. A\nCRUMMY, RICHARD W.\nCSEPE, ALEX HENRY\nDARKE, ERNEST WILFRED\nDARKE, H. KENNETH\nDEETH, FRANK STEWART\nDEMOPOULOS, GEORGE\nDEVLIN, RUSSELL JONES\nDEW, CHARLES ROBERT\nDICK, GERALD ROY\nDIETIKER, WALTER\nDITTO.ROY ORIN\nDONALDSON, WM. RUSSELL\nDOUGLAS, IAN M.\nEDMONDS, ARTHUR\nELLIP, HARRY\nELVIDGE, GEORGE\nESTELLE, RALPH A.\nFALL, STEWART T.\nFLYNN, ROBERT ALLEN\nGONG, NELSON\nFORREST, DAVID B.\nFOSTER, JOHN HAROLD\nFUKUZAWA, HIROSHI ROY\nGALE, ROBERT MELVIN\nGIBSON, GARRY ANDREW\nGIEGERICH, JOSEPH D.\nGLASSNER, IRVING\nGLEIG, DONALD B. F.\nGRANT, DONALD STEWART\nGRIER, BOYD B. A.\nGRIFFIN, JAMES R.\nGRUNO, ROBERT STANLEY\nHARPER, LAWRENCE M.\nHOGG, CLIFFORD CHAS.\nHOUSTON, JOSEPH JOHN\nHOWE, LAWRENCE MARTIN\nHULSE, JOSEPH HUGH\nJOHNSON, CARL ROBT.\nJOHNSON, RAYMOND GEO.\nJONES, HAROLD MERVIN\nJUDYSKI, NICHOLAS\nKEELE, KENNETH DENNIS\nKELSEY, HARLEY EDWARD\nKITSON, MICHAEL R.\nKOMARNICKY, WALTER\nKOYANAGI, MUTSUO\nLARSON, ERNIE ANDREW\nLEE, GEORGE\nLITTLE, WILLIAM BLAIR\nMAH, EDWARD JUN\nMARANDA, LAURIE GENE\nMARTIN, HAROLD CHAS.\nMcCANDLESS, BRUCE K.\nMcDONALD, WM. H.\nH-lrfJL\n_____\n165\n3_jl& MacGILLIVRAY, A DEAN\nMcGRAW, JAMES JOHN\nMacGREGOR, EDWIN ROBT.\nMcGUIRE, JAMES DANIEL\nMac I NTOSH, DOUGLAS A.\nMcKAY, J. R. MONTE\nMELENKA, ROY EUWARD\nMIDDLETON, KEITH J. '\nMORLEY, GORDON ARTHUR\nMUSSIO SERGIO\nMYKYTIUK, LAURENTIUS\nNEWSON, EARLE KENNETH\nNIELSEN, KENT\nSHIU SAMUEL DO WING\nSMITH, ALLAN ROBERT\nSMITH, ROBT. WESLEY\nSPEER, EARL WESLEY\nSPINDLER, GEORGE BRAY\nSPURGIN, ROBIN HUGH\nSTROTHER, ARTHUR JAS.\nSULLIVAN, JOHN T.\nTAYLOR, WILLIAM H.\nTOWRISS, CHARLES A.\nTRACEY, WILLIAM ROSS\nTREMAINE, ALAN W.\nVEALE, ALAN DECOVERLY\nVERESCHACK, DAVID P.\nVIVIAN, GORDON EDWARD\nWALLIS, GEORGE GRAHAM\nWALSH, JOHN\nWALTON, RICHARD J.\nWATSON, JOHN A\nWEIDMAN, LAWRENCE A\nWEIR, CLIFFORD STEWART\nWHITE, DAVID OLANDER\nWILSON, WM. RICHARD\nWOOD, PATRICK O'HARA\nWOODHOUSE, DALE H.\nYIP, HOY WING\nYOUNG, SOO GEE\nZELIKOVSKY, ABE\nNURSING\nVERESHACK, DAVID P.\nATCHISON, MARGARET\nBACON, JANICE\nCANT, DAWN\nCRAWFORD, JOAN\nCREHAN, PAT\nFISHER, JOAN\nGEL, LILA\nKINGSBURY, JOAN\nMANZER, MAVIS\nMARSHALL, JANE\nMcKENZIE, CAROL\nPATERSON, DIANA\nPERRY, PAT\nRUSSELL, PAT\nWELTON, BETH\nWRENCH, MARY\n166 ARCHITECTURE\nRRONGER, JOHN T.\nCAPLING, ARTHUR JAMES\nGILMOUR, JAMES F.\nHALEY, R. WELDON\nIREDALE, WM. RANDLE\nJENKINS, DAVID L\nMcCOY, DONAID A.\nRENNIE, WILLIAM W.\nSTUBBS, GEORGE EDWARD\nWETHERILL, EWART A.\nARCHAMBAULT, RICHARD\nCOULTER, DONALD W.\nHOLLAND, ARTHUR M.\nHORNE, DAVID ERNEST\nLOUKES, E. PATRICK\nMacDONALD JOHN BLAIR\nMacLEOD, ROBERT K.\nMIRKO, IVAN GEORGE\nNEADS, CHARLES JOHN\nNEKRASSOFF, URY\nPEARCE, DONALD R.\nROWETT, CLYDE DANCY\nBARCLAY, LAWRENCE E.\nBARNES, A. GEORGE\nBERNARD, DONALD BRUCE\nBOLTWOOD, DENIS F.\nDODDS, ARTHUR H. B.\nEASTON, CHARLES H.\nEWING, ROGER KEITH\nGISKE, RICHARD CARL\nHARTLEY GORDON D.\nHOWARTH, KENNETH W.\nJONES, NORMAN SIDNEY\nKERR, MARY ELAINE\nKUMERMAN, PAL JONAH\nMANN, DEREK SPALDING\nMcLAREN, JOHN ALBERT\nNELSON, RONALD KEITH\nOSWALD, JOHN KENNETH\nRAND, BARRY ALLAN\nSMEETH, ROGER W.\nWILES, FRANKLIN A\nYOUNG, CLIFFORD M.\nTHIRD\nYEAR\n167 ARTS\nAfter struggling to keep alive since the end of the\nwar, the Arts Undegraduate Society finally died a\nnatural death. The president decided to go into Law,\nand other executive members abandoned Arts for other\nfaculties.\nNo one was willing to take their places, and the\nlargest undergraduate group on the campus was left\nwithout an organization. The Engineers came to the\nrescue and tried to revive their old rivals, but the Arts-\nmen still refused to be organized.\nWhen the corpse was finally buried, there was a mad\nscramble for the Arts two hundred dollar budget. It\nfinally went to women's athletics and to the clubs, in\nspite of representations by the Engineers that they actually comprised the Arts Undergraduate Society.\nToday the Arts Undergraduate Society is only a\nname. On the following pages of the Totem are the\nfaces of those who refused to be regimented.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Above: Although Arts students didn't have an Undergraduate\nSociety, its members participated in many of the affairs put on\nby other organizations. The tea dances in Brock Hall were\npopular.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Left: Sorority pledges\nwait in line to be officially presented during the\n\"Pledges on Parade\"\nformal.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 George and Bill supervised the behaviour of the\nstudents who frequented\nBrock Hall.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Above: A strenuous game of table tennis keeps\nArtsmen fit for higher mental process.\nLeft: The January snows gave many opportunity for new forms of outdoor sports.\nBill St. John and Ann Willis are the protagonists.\nSore feet from bookstore line-ups can be\ncured by vigorous shuffling. Some wore\nout a complete pair of shoes.\n168 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Below: The Canadian Officers' Training\nCorps and the University Naval Training Detachment learn the essentials of military logistics.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Right: When the Brock totem pole was\nremoved for repairs, one of the human variety\nwas assembled to take its place. The \"Thunderbird\" soon tired of flapping its wings, however,\nand only a large steel bar remained. Open\nHouse saw the return of the legitimate resident,\nin bright paint and new carving.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Right: Some worked in the\nseclusion of their rooms.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Below: Others preferred company in the Library.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Lower right: Taking a chance\non safe transportation via the\nMarine Drive speedway.\n169 3RD YEAR ARTS\nACHTYMICHUK, EDNA F.\nADAMS, BONNIE\nALEXANDER, S.\nALEXANDER, THOMAS K.\nANDERSON, FRERERICK R.\nARCHIBALD, EDWARD M.\nARNAUD, JOSEPH FRANK\nARNOLD, JACQUELINE R.\nAUERBACH, D. DOROTHEA\nAUSTIN, HAROLD AARON\nAUSTIN, JACOB\nAVISON, MARGARET LYNN\nBABCOCK, DOUGLAS ROBT.\nBACON, DENIS F.\nBADANIC, JOHN STEVE\nBALABKINS, ANTONIDA\nBALDWIN, MARION\nBALLA, BRIGITTA\nBARRIEAU, DONN M.\nBAXTER, PETER\nBAXTER, MAUREEN E.\nBEACH, ALAN WINSTON\nBEBB, DOUGLAS EVAN\nBECKETT, DANIEL C.\nBEHM, LEONA MARY\nBENNETT, LOIS ELLEN\nBERRY, KENNETH\nBETTS, GLEN JARED |\nBIELY, GEORGE GORDON\nBINNS, BARBARA E.\nBIRD, MARY\nBIRD, JOHN RODERICK\nBISHOP, PETER W. V.\nBLACK, C. ELIZABETH\nBLAND, ROBERT C. J.\nBLOCK, ARTHUR JOHN\nBOULDING, WILLIAM D.\nBOWELL, SHIRLEY ANNE\nBRADSHAW, CHARLES A.\nBRAIDWOOD, THOMAS R.\nBRAIDE, PENELOPE ANN\nBREWER, SHIRLEY L.\nBROOKE, PATRICIA ANNE\nBROST, ELROY RICHARD\nBROWNE, ELIZABETH J.\nBRUCE, RONALD P.\nBRYANS, DAVID GARTH\nBUCKINGHAM, IAN P. B.\nBURNS, PATRICK ARTHUR\nBURR, JOHN BARTLETT\nBURTON, ALEXANDER D. K.\nBUSH, HAROLD TIMOTHY\nBUTLER, PETER WOODS\nBUXTON, RICHARD B.\nCALDER, LOREN\nCAMPBELL, SHIRLEY C. J.\nCAPLE, F. JANET L.\nCARSTENS, PATRICIA J.\nCASSADY, GEORGE P.\nCATHERALL, GEORGE WILLIAM\nCAUFIELD, PETER J. ,\nCAVETT, RONALD WM.\nCHAMBERLAIN, J.\nCHIDDELL, PHILIP REX\nCHONG HENRY\nCHOMA, ANNIE\nCHRISTIE, MARY GRACE\nCHRISTOPHER, ROBERT E\nCIMOLAI, BRUNO PETER\nCLARK, ALAN MATHEW\nCLARK, COLIN W.\nCLARK, MARGERY ANN\nCLARK, MICHAEL D.\nCLARK, DAPHNE\nCOCK, ELIZABETH JOAN\nCOLLINSON, DONALD M.\nCONNOLLY, PHILIP H.\nCONSTABARIS, JOHN\nCOOKSEY, RALPH DAVID\nCOON, CHARLES J.\nCOOPER, BRENDA B.\nCOUTTS, DOREEN MARY\nCOUSINS, JAMES AYLMER\nCRAWFORD, DOUGLAS G. M.\nCREIGHTON, DENIS W. H.\nCRICKMAY, MARIAN C.\nCROSSMAN, AUDREY E.\nCROUTER, RICHARD A.\nCUMMINGS, DAPHNE JUNE\nCURR, ROBERT. J.\nDANNER, WM. EDWARD\nDAVID, ROBERT JAMES\nDAVIES, JOAN MARGARET\nDAVIES, WILLIAM HUGH\nDAVIES, ISABELLE F.\n170 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Engineers graciously\noffered to revive the defunct Arts Undergraduate\nsociety and initiate its\nmembers in the lily pond,\nbut nobody turned up and\ncrowds waited in vain for\nthe big event.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Frosh received their\nusual dunking in the lily\npond.\nDAVIS, THOMAS WILFRED\nDAY, BREND AMICHAEL\nDAY, HARRY WALLACE\nDEEBLE, DOUGLAS H.\nDEVICK, LOUISE\nDICKIE, JOAN GRACE\nDOBSON, JACK WALTER\nDODEK, SALLY\nDODSON, EARL DAVID\nDOERKSEN, JAKE\nDOLINSKY, VERONICA T.\nDOWLING, NORAH JUNE\nDRIVER, SHIRLEY MAE\nDUNCAN, RICHARD D.\nDUNCAN, EDWARD DAVID\nEDGAR, JOHN CHARLES\nELVIN, MEMORY P. F.\nENDERTON, STEWART WM.\nENGMAN, HENRY ESKO\nERRICO, ROBT. THOS. G.\nESSELMONT, PATRICIA A\nEVANS, TEGWIN JACK\nFARMER, GEOFFREY HORN\nFARNCOMBE, SCOT\nFAULKNER, DONALD A\nFERA, RONALD GABRIEL\nFERGUSON, CHAS. WM.\nFILER, RODERICK G. M.\nFINNEMORE, BRIAN I.\nFLATHER, BARRIE C.\nFLETCHER, S. LOUISE\nFORBES, ELIZABETH J,\nFORBES, WILLIAM G.\nFORMAN, ALLAN GUY\nFORTESCUE, JOHN A, C.\nFOURNIER, CYRIL\nFOXGORD, ALFRED N.\nFRASER, WM PHILLIP\nFREDRICKSON, JOHN M.\nFREEMAN, MARGARET B.\nFRITZKE, ARTHUR CHAS.\nFROST, RAYMOND H.\nFURNISS, PATRICIA K.\nGAIN, DONALD B. M.\nGALBRAITH, L. T. CRAIG\nGALBRAITH, GEORGE WM.\nGAYNER, ROBERT H.\nGEORGE, DONALD HALL\nGIBBARD, KENNETH CHAS.\nCLIFFORD, BRUCE C.\nGILL, GERALD A.\nGOLDING, RICHARD H. T.\nGOLDSMITH, DANIEL\nGOWER, FRANK W.\nGRAY, ROBERT S.I\nGREEN, MYRA LEE\nGREYSON, RICHARD I.\nGROVE, EDWARD W.\nGRUBB, E. MARGARET\nHALL, JOHN VERNOIN GEO.\nHALL, RICHARD TOMAS\nHALLAM, HUGH TREVOR\nHALLIS, PAMELA ELYNOR\nHAMILTON, PATRICA A\nHANCOCK, RONALD JOHN\nHARDWICK, WALTER G\nHARNETTY, PETER\nHARRIS, DAPHNE J. G.\nHARRISON, ESTHER\nHARTMAN, GORDON F.\nHARVEY, EVELYN F. A.\nHATCHER, FRANK S.\n171 i___i\nHATT, HAROLD ERNEST\nHENDSBEE, LYLA LEE\nHENSLOWE, PETER J. L.\nHERBERT, DOROTHY C.\nHODGERT, R. LORRAINE\nHOOD, ALAN BRUCE\nHORN, JAMES THOMAS\nHORSFIELD, BARBARA ...\nHOSHOWSKI, EUGENE\nHOWARTH, ALAN FIRTH\nHUGH, REES L.\nHUMBER, GORDON LESLIE\nHUTCHINS, DONALD JOHN\nIMAI, GORDON SHOZO\nINOUYE, KIYOKO\nJACKSON, WILFRED K.\nJACOBSEN, WILLIAM A.\nJAMES, LAURA MARGARET\nJOHNSON, ARTHUR R.\nJOHNSON, C. A DOUGLAS\nJOHNSON, ROSS A.\nJONES, GEORGE HERBERT\nJONES, GARTH\nJONES, ROBERT ARTHUR\nJONES, WILLIAM CHAS.\nJULIUS, ROBERT S.\nKALICHACK, ANTHONY, A.\nKEENAN, ARTHUR JOSEPH\nKENYON, WALTER ANDREW\nKERRIGHAN, DONNA RUTH\nKILLAM, G. DOUGLAS\nKING, ROBERT DANIEL\nKIRK, ORIS J.\nKLAPSTOCK, KENNETH\nKNOERR, DONALD ALFRED\nKUNEKEN, JULIA T.\nKYLE, LESLEY J.\nKYLE, JOHN DAVID\nLAMM, MAGDA ELIZABETH\nLANGBEIN, SHIRLEY A\nLARSON, RICHARD A.\nLAURIE, KENNETH ALAN\nLAURSEN, AUDREY P. H.\nLAWRENCE, ELIZABETH A\nLAWRENCE, WILLIAM J.\nLAY, WOO POK\nLEE, EDWARD GRAHAM\nLEIGHTON, KENNETH H.\nLERVOLD, SOLVEIG K.\nLESAGE, THEODORE WM.\nLIGGINS, M. DIANE -\nLOGIE, ROY\nLOMAS, BRUCE\nLOOSMORE, T. ROBERT\nLOVEGROVE, GEORGINA M.\nLOWES, H. ANN\nLOWTHER, JOHN JEROME\nMAH, JEANETTE E.\nMARCUZZI, LILLIAN J.\nMASON, GEOFFREY P.\nMATHESON, M. C. MURRAY .\nMATTHEWS, G. RICHARD R.\nMAYOH, HELEN MARGARET\nMcAFEE, NINA JEAN\nMcAfee, mary natalie\nMcAllister, jean a.\nMcAllister, carey d.\nMcArthur, Hubert g. '\nMccormick, lindsay l.\nMcCRAE, JOHN\nMocDONALD, A EDWARD\nMacDONALD, M. A.\nMacDONALD, NORMAN G\nMcGHEE, JOHN JAMES\nMcGIVERIN, SHEILA F.\nMcGregor, john c.\nMaclNTYRE, JAMES D.\nMacKAY, ALISTAIR R.\nMcKAY, C. HEATHER\nMacKENZIE, SHEILA E\nMacKENZIE, IAN M.\nMcLACHLAN, DONALD C.\nMacLEAN, NORMAN M.\nMcLEAN, EDWARD HARRY\nMacLEOD, ROSEMARY M.\nMacLEOD, EVANDER F.\nMcNEIL, FLORENCE ANNE\nMcRAE, MARILYN JOAN\nMacRAE, CATHERINE D.\nMcRAE, MARIE MARGARET\nMERSON, STANLEY RAE\nMIDDLEON, ROBERT M.\nMILLMAN, JOHN EARLE\nMITCHELL, ANDREW D.\nMOEN, JULIAN B.\nMOISEY, JOHN ALEX\n172 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Majorettes looked pert\nand purty all year; worked\nhard to get routines perfect for the many parades\nin which they appeared.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 UBC cheerleaders put\nsome pep into the cheers\nduring the football season.\nMOORE, SHEILA G.\nMORGAN, JOHN HERBERT\nMORGAN, VICTOR 0.\nMORLEY, ELLEN MARIE\nMORONEY, JAMES K.IJ.\nMORRIS, LOIS ALETA\nMOSCOVITZ, AARON\nMUGFORD, RICHARD N.\nMULHERN, MAURICE P.\nMUNN, ROBERT E. D.\nMUNDAY, JENIFER GRACE\nMUNRO, MARY FRANCES\nMURRAY, DORIS ARDEN\nNACCARATO, ERNEST N.\nNAMIESIOWSKI, CONRAD\nNANN, RICHARD\nNAYLOR, LOIS RUTH\nNELSON, BEVERLY ANN\nNETTLETON, DOREEN\nNEWSTEAD, JAMES D. M.\nNICOLLS, GEO. RICHARD\nNORTHCOTE, KENNETH E.\nNYLANDER, CLIVE V.\nO'CONNOR, GERALD F.\nOGILVIE, ROBT. TOWNLEY\nOKABE, HITOSHI\nORMAN, ANDREW R.\nPALMER, GERARD MORGAN\nPANKRATZ, HARRY E\nPARTRIDGE, JANET D.\nPASHNIK, VICTOR THOS.\nPAUL, YVONNE PATRICIA\nPEARCE, WILLIAM G.\nPEARKES, JOHN ANDRE\nPEARSON, SHIRLEY J.\nPEEBLES, MARJORIE H.\nPERETZ, DWIGHT IRVING\nPERRON, GEORGETTE M.\nPHILLIPS, BRIAN F.\nPHILLIPS, A. M.\nPISAPIO, LLOYD M. W.\nPITCAIRN, ALICE ANN\nPLUM, ROBERT COOPER\nPOUND, KATHLEEN L.\nPOUSETT, GORDON H.\nPRICE, STANLEY JAMES\nPROKOP, EDWIN JOSEPH\nPUIL, GEORGE JOHN\nQUENVILLE, NOEL F.\nRAPANOS, GEORGE PETER\nRATZLAFF, JOHN\nRAY, MARTIN HUGO\nRICHARDSON, RUTH D.\nRIDLEY, JOHN CHAS, T.\nRISK, JAMES BERRYMAN\nRITHALER, EDWARD P.\nRITCHIE, INA J.\nROBERTSON, MARY C.\nROBERTSON, RUSSELL B.\nROGERS, ROGER HAYWARD\nROHLOFF, ROBERT JOHN\nROOTMAN, MANUEL\nROSE, SHELAGH ANN\nROSS, JANET ELIZ.\nROTHERY, J. MICHAEL\nROWAN, JOHN FREDERICK\nRUTHERFORD, TERRENCE F.\nRYBKA, TED WESLEY\nRYE, ROBIN TILLEY B.\nSANFORD, PETER L.\nSARGENT, RICHARD WM.\nSAWYER, JACQUELINE P.\n173 SCHELTGEN, ELMER\nSCORGIE, JAMES T .\nSCOT, JOHN ALFRED\nSEARS, CHARLES JOHN\nSEDLACK, RONALD\nSERL, VERNON CLAUDE\nSHANAHAN, PATRICIA M \u00C2\u00AB\nSHEWCHUK, WILLIAM\nSHLAFMITZ, JANET RUBY\nSIMONETTA, LUIGI R.\nSIMPSON, ADELHEID D.\nSMITH, BENJAMIN F.\nSMITH, JEAN MARY\nSMITH, MARION ANN\nSMITH, PETER LAWSON\nSTALKER, MARGUERITE\nSTANLEY, VERA MARIE\nSTANSFIELD, NOEL KARL\nSTANTON, RODGER CYRIL\nSTARK, MARVIN\nST. CLAIR, HARRY W.\nSTEPHENS, ELLEN MARY\nSTEVENS, JOHN OLIVER\nSTEWARD, MARY E.\nSTEWART, ALAN EDWARDS\nSTEWART, CHAS. NEWBY\nSTEWART, GORDON A.\nSTEWART, KATHLEEN E.\nSTICHNEY, SARAH ANNE\nSTOBART, PATRICIA ANNE\nSTONE, SHEILAGH S.\nSTRACHAN, ROBERT A.\nSUNDHER, W. BOSSO\nSUSSEL, WALTER HENRY\nSUTHERLAND, SHIRLEY A.\nSUTHERLAND, SHIRLEY A.\nSWANSON, MAX\nTAIT, WINIFRED G. M.\nTAMBOLINE, BEVERLEY L.\nTAYLOR, DON NEWMAN\nTAYLOR, MARY CAMPBELL\nTEMPLEMAN, PETER N.\nTHYGESEN, JOHN\nTKACHUK, RUSSELL\nTOBAN, SHEILA ESTELLE\nTOPPING, WILLIAM E.\nTRAFTON, WALTER DAVID\nTRESIZE, DAVID K.\nTRIMBLE, MURIEL GRACE\nTROTTER, JOHN M.\nTSUMURA, EDNA\nTUNBRIDGE, VICTOR H.\nTURPIN, J. E. HARTLEY\nUNDERHILL, W. RICHARD\nUNWIN, CLINTON, L. R.\nURQUHART, ROY KEITH\nVALENTINE, G. DOUGLAS\nVANDERVLIET, EDWARD L.\nVANSTONE, CLARENCE L.\nVAUGHAN, JACK STEPHEN\nVOGEL, BETTY LOUISE\nWALKER, CARL IAN\nWALKER, FREDERICK JAS.\nWALKER, GLEN HARRIS\nWALKER, JOANNE\nWALL, DAVID E.\nWALLACE, WILLIAM K.\nWALLICK, CAROLE ANN\nWATT, JOHN\nWEINSTEIN, LILLIAN\nWHITE, ANNIE ISABELLE\nWHITTAKER, JOHN N.\nWHITFORD, DOUGLAS V.\nWIENS, JOHN HAROLD\nWILLIAMSON, LOIS\nWILLIS, ANN DORCAS\nWILLINS, ROSEMARY M. J.\nWILLOUGHBY, JOHN A.\nWILTSE, ELIZABETH J.\nWILTSE, PATRICIA ANN\nWOLSTENCROFT, JOAN E.\nWONG, JOSEPHINE C.\nWOODWARD, ROBERT S.\nWOOSTER, SHIRLEY H.\nWRIGHT, DOUGLAS A.\nWYNNE, WILLIAM E.\nYIPP, FLORENCE H.\nZINDLER, RAINER\n2ND YEAR ARTS\nABBOTT, JOHN MELVYN\nABRAMS, KENNETH DON\nADAMS, AUDREY MARILYN\nALSTON, ROBIN CARFRAE\nANDRERSEN, RICHARD\nANDERSON, JOHN ALEX\nANDERSON, MICHAEL E.\n174 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Brock loungers became\nbridge addicts a few weeks\nafter lectures started.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Leading campus personalities took time out for\ncoffee in the Brock Hall\nsnack bar.\nANGEL, JEROME HARVEY\nANTROBUS, JOHN S.\nARCHER, DOROTHY\nARMSTRONG, JOHN E.\nAULD, IAN JAMES M.\nBABCOCK, PATRICIA A.\nBABCOCK, MARY ELLEN\nBAKER, GLEN WORSFOLD\nBANNO, MASAKAZU PAT\nBANNING, DAVID A.\nBARCLAY, ESTRUP JAUL\nBARRIE, IRENE J.\nBARTLETT, ARTHUR WM. F.\nBASFORD, STANLEY R.\nBASTED, ROBERT M.\nBAXTER, MARGARET B.\nBAYLIS, ALBERT GUY\nBEKETOV, NADIA ELENA\nBELL, CAMPBELL BRIAN\nBELL, WM. ROBINSON B.\nBENINATI, GLORIA KAY\nBIRKINSHAW, BEVERLY L.\nBLEDSOE, M. YOLANDE\nBONIFACE, R. A.\nBOON, THELMA MARLENE\nBOREYSZA, BOLESLAW\nBOULTON, JOHN THOMAS\nBOWERING, WM. DAVID S.\nBOYD, THOMAS HENRY H.\nBRANDT, OTTO JAKE\nBREEN, HARVEY\nBROCKINGTON, DAVID\nBROWN, BERNARD JOHN\nBROWN, JOAN ELIZABETH\nBROWN, SALLY DIAMOND\nBRUMMIT, JOHN R.\nBRYDSON, JOHN GORDON\nBULLIS, RICHARD H.\nBURCH, BARRY JOHN\nBURKE, RAY EDWARD\nBURY, MARY GWENNYTH\nBUSCOMBE, ROBERT D.\nBUTLER, DAVID\nBYBERG, EDWARD\nBYRNE, CLAIRE ANNE\nBYRNE, PETER\nCABELDU, H. ANNETE\nCAILLET, DAVID G.\nCAMERON, HAMISH C.\nCAMERON, ANN\nCANT, ISOBEL ADAIR\nCARFRAE, JAMES D.\nCARLILE, COLLIN\nCARLSON, CARL GLEN\nCARLSON, HARRY E.\nCARLYLE, JAMES W.\nCARROLL, J. FRANKLIN\nCARTER, RICHARD JAMES\nCASPERSON, RALPH M.\nCASSELLS, S. HERBERT\nCAVIN, RONALD GORDON\nCAVEN, GWENDOLYN M.\nCHARPENTIER, MAURICE\nCHERAMY, JOHNNY A.\nCHRISTIE, MARTIN\nCHRISTOU, CATHERINE F.\nCIEBIEN, THOMAS JOHN\nCIPRICK, WILLIAM JOHN\nCLARKE, CYNTHIA ANNE\nCLYNE, JOHN STUART S.\nCOCKBURN, SANDRA MARY\nCOHEN, ABRAHAM D.\n/_*_\u00C2\u00A3_\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 _*k&_ri i../4:,i\n1% %ji_i^\nL ___.__. _*__\u00E2\u0096\u00A0!!_______.\n22. *&\nkm A J * tw L\nMIfLS.\n__\u00E2\u0096\u00A0__\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n175\n^ ^ Ok COLTART, DUDLEY W.\nCONNELL, RAE ELINOR\nCOOPER, C. KENNETH\nCOSGROVE, THEODORE J.\nCOX, RAYMOND LEE\nCRAIN, FINLAY ROSS,\nCRANMER, GLORIA\nCREE, GLADYS H.\nCROSS, WILLIAM CHAS. F.\nCUMMINGS, JOHN MARTIN\nCUTLER, KEITH HUGHES\nDACK, DAVID BARRY F.\nDACHI, STEVE FRANK\nDATTNER, SYLVIA RUTH\nDAVENPORT, DAVID C.\nDAVIES, JAMES W.\nDAVIS, MURDOCH R.\nDAVID, PATRICIA AUSTIN\nDAY, EPHRIAM ARTHUR\nDAY, WILLIAM L.\nDICKINSON, ROBERT\nDILLABAUGH, VERNON W.\nDODSON, FLORENCE MAY\nDONALDSON, WM. ROBT.\nDONE, RUTH EILEEN\nDONG, GORDON\nDRAPER, JAMES ANSON\nDUDLEY. J. ELIZABETH\nDYCK. HAROLD JACOB\nEASTERBROOK, AUDREY H.\nEBERTS, ANTHONY B.\nEDGETT, WARREN S.\nEGGEN, FREDERICK GEO.\nEINARSON, WALTER\nELKINS, FRANK GEORGE\nELLERGOT, GLENNYS M.\nELLIP, MAIMO\nELLWOOD, THOMAS DONALD\nENDICOTT, ORVILLE R.\nENNS, GEORGE DONALD\nEPP, WALTER PETER\nESKO, SANDFRID I.\nESSON, WILLIAM ARTHUR\nFARIS, KENNETH H.\nFERGUSON, ISABELLE M.\nFINGARSON, LORNE A.\nFLATEN, BARBARA ANNE\nFLETCHER, DONA LOIS\nFORD, FREDERICK JOHN\nFORREST, DOUG ELLIOTT\nFORWARD. ALAN DOUGLAS\nFOTHERINGHAM, M. ALLAN\nFOX. CYLDE F. D.\nFREEMAN, GEORGE C.\nFRITH, CLIVE DONALD\nFRITH, HECTOR GEE N\nFRODSHAM, STANLEY A.\nFROESE, JANS HERBERT\nFULTON, SYDNEY BUDWIN\nFYFE, RICHARD WILLIAM\nGALLAGHER, ROBER TM.\nGARTSIDE, HELEN CLARE\nGATES, ALAN FREDERICK\nGELL, MARIAN LOUISE\nGERWING, HOWARD B.\nGIBSON, WILMA MARY\nGILCHRIST, ALUIN G. F.\nGILL, GURDEV SINGH\nGILLARD, HOWARD E\nGILLIS, AUSTIN CHAS.\nGODFREY, RAYMOND C.\nGOLDBLOOM, THEODORE\nGOODALL, ROGER C.\nGORDON, MOSES\nGORDY, PETER LAWRENCE\nGOSHKO, ALEXANDER W.\nGOUGH, JOAN ELIZABETH\nGRAHAM, HAROLD EARL\nGRANT, RICHARD ALLEN\nGRANT, ELIZABETH A.\nGRANT, HUGH JOSEPH\nGRANTHAM, PETER ROBT.\nGREBSKI, EDWARD S.\nGRIFFIN, SHIRLEY ANNE\nGRIMSTON, J. GEORGE\nGUILE, ROBERT HENRY\nGUSTAVSON, CLARENCE S.\nHAERING, RUDOLF R.\nHAKSTIAN, ROBERT W.\nHALFORD, DAVID THOMAS\nHALL, K. MARGARET L.\nHANCOCK, RAYMOND H.\nHANNA, ROBERT A.\nHARDWICK, DAVID F.\nHARDY, JAMES EDWARD\nHARPER, JAMES LEITH\n176 HARRIOTT, ROSALIE K.\nHARRIS, CHARLES G.\nHARTMAN, FAY HERBERT\nHARVEY ARTHUR ERIC\nHEAL, DOUGLAS WALTER\nHEDGECOCK, NIGEL E.\nHEFFERNAN, DOUGLAS D.\nHEHIR, PATRICIA DAWN\nHEIDE, EDMUND\nHELLAM, NEVILLE\nHENDERSON DUNCAN LEE\nHERDMAN JOHN R.\nHEWISON, TIMOTHY JOHN\nHIBBERD, JOHN CYRIL\nHICKERNELL, JEAN E.\nHIKICHI, MITSURU\nHINKE, JOSEPH ANTHONY\nHOLLOWAY, BARBARA J.\nHOLTBY, MONICA S.\nHORI, AIKO\nHORNE, PATRICIA A.\nHOUSTON, ELIZABETH L.\nHOWARD, ANNE BERTHA\nHRUSHOWY, ERNEST .'OS.\nHSU, HSING CHEN\nHUANG, MONA\nHUROV, HELENE SHARON\nJACKSON, JOHN WALTER\nJENSEN, LOIS AUDREY\nJINNOUCHI, DONALD M.\nJOHNS, DAVID GARRET\nJOHNSON, ROBERT S.\nJOHNSSON, ESKIL L.\nJONES, KENNETH W.\nJONES, ROBERT EVANS\nKAETHLER, JAKOB ADOLF\nKARL, EDMUND ALOIS\nKARLSON, HARRY\nKEARNS, SHEILA ANNE\nKEMP, FLORENCE C.\nKENAL, ROMEO\nKENNEDY, JAMES HENRY\nKENT, GERALD SPENCER\nKERR, MERVYN GEORGE\nKEW, JOHN E. MICHAEL\nKIDD, GERALD GORDON\nKILLEEN. GERALD THOS.\nKILLAS, HARRY JAMES\nKILLEEN, JAMES WM.\nKILPATRICK, ALLAN E.\nKING, LAWRENCE ALAN\nKLASSEN, GERALD A.\nKLASSEN, JOHN\nKLASSEN. MARGARET\nKNIGHT, IRENE M.\nKONRAD, DANIEL B.\nKONKIN, KENNETH\nKRAMER, LOUANNE C\nKREUTZ, JOHN JERRY\nKUIJT, JOB\nLAHAY, WM. DOUGLAS\nLEE, ANNE ELIZABETH\nLEE, JACK\nLEITERMAN, ALISON C.\nLEUCHTE, ANNEMARIE F.\nLEVINE, SEFTON LEWIS\nLIDDLE, LAURIE KEITH\nLIPTROT, FRANCES MARY\nLIU, TZE TONG\nLOEWEN, CHARLES B.\nLOVETT, ERIC TUPPER\nLOZOWSKI, PETER\n177\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Exam pressure forced\nsome students down to the\nlibrary basement to gripe\nand smoke; others kept at\ncrowded desks in desperation, since that seemed to\nbe the only way they could\nhold a seat.\n_d_7_!__tf I_JI_\ni> \u00C2\u00AB_r\n_-_f__l. jWm\ \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n4 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nn. jj\n______?/_\nmtu\nLUCAS, BARRY G\nLYNCH, BARBARA JOAN\nMADDEN, WILLIAM K.\nMAHRER, EUGENE\nMAIR, KENNETH RAFE\nMAKAR, TARAS\nMALKIN. TOBY\nMARKS, SIEGFRIED MANHAS, MARY\nMARSH, F. MICHAEL\nMARSHALL, RONALD H.\nMARTIN, WENDELLA JOAN\nMARTINKOVA, HELENA\nMATCHETT, MARILYN F.\nMATHESON, EARL ROGER\nMATHESON, M. A.\nMATHEWS, ROBIN DANIEL\nMcALPINE, MARY ALICE\nMcARTHUR, JOAN VELMA\nMcCAULEY, DAVID A N.\nMocBEY, HELEN E.\nMcCOMBER, GEORGE C.\nMcCONVILLE, JOHN M.\nMcCURRACH, HELEN I.\nMacDONALD, HUGH ALLAN\nMcDONALD, KENNETH G.\nMcDONALD, JOHN JEROME\nMacFARLANE GEORGE\nMcFARLANE, ROBERT JAS.\nMacGILLIVRAY, CLARE A.\nMcGINNIS, SHIRLEY R.\nMcGONIGAL, B. A.\nMclLWRAITH, MARGARET\nMaclNTOSH, JOHN JAMES\nMaclNTYRE, JAMES M.\nMacKAY, RAYNER JOHN\nMcKINNON, ALEXANDER\nMacLAREN, ANNE\nMcLENNAN, PATRICIA A.\nMacLEOD, N. WM. R.\nMacLEOD, CHAS. GORDON\nMcMAHON, JAMES P.\nMcNAMEE, JAMES PAUL\nMcNEELY, MARGARET J.\nMcVICKAR, ROBERT H.\nMEACHEM, GWENDOLEYN S.\nMEADOWS, PHILIP H. R.\nMENDOZA, LEON CHAS.\nMERCER, BARBARA L.\nMERRICK, FRANCES E.\nMEYERHOFF, JOHN W.\nMIACHIKA, ANTON\nMILLAR, ALLAN GREIG\nMILLER, LLOYD SAMUEL\nMILLER, M. ELINOR\nMILLHAM, MAXINE M.\nMIMOTO, MICHIHO\nMITAREWSKI, WALTER WM.\nMITCHELL, JOAN E.\nMITTON, CHARLES ROBT.\nMITSUSHIO, MINATO\nMIYAGAWA, MICHIO M.\nMONTGOMERY, CHAS. R.\nMOORE, SYLVIA E.\nMORGAN, JOHN FRANCIS\nMORGAN, WM. WALTER\nMORLEY, CLIFFORD L\nMORRISON, JACK HILTON\nMORROW, ANN BYRON\nMORROW, LORRAINE E.\nMOUNCE, JOYCE A.\nMOUTRAY, ANNE M.\nMUIRHEAD, C. ROBERT\nMURRAY, NANCY JEAN\nNABATA, ATSUSHI\nNAGAI, MARTHA\nNAKASHIMA, ROSALIE\nNEEN, JOHN JACOB\nNELSON, BARBARA A.\nNELSON, CLAIRE LOUISE\nNEUMANN, JOHN B.\nNEWTON, LINNEA ANN\nNILSON, VERNA\nNISHIZAKI, HIDEAKI H.\nNORDMAN, VOLMAR\nNORTON, ROBERT EDMUND\nNOVAKOWSKI, MARION R.\nO'BRIEN, P. BARNEY\nOLIVER, ELIZABETH J.\nOPECHOWSKI, SYLVIA M.\nPALMER, FRANK EDWARD\nPARKES, FRANCIS A H.\nPETERSON, DONALD HUGH\nPATTERSON, CHARLES A.\nPATTERSON, F. JAMES B.\nPEARSE, PETER\n178 r:f__\ne Caf and Campus Cupboard \u00E2\u0080\u0094 where the elite\nmeet to talk about last\nnight's date, and to drink\ngallons of coffee.\nPEARSON, SHIRLEY E.\nPEASE, HELEN CALDWELL\nPHIPPS, JILL BARNARD\nPILON, BEATRICE D.\nPLECASH, JAMES MYLES\nPOTTER, ROSS CARSON\nPROUD, BRUCE\nPURVIS, DAVID G. S.\nQUISTWATER, JACQUES M.\nRANGER, AGNES BETTY L.\nREAD, DALE WELTON\nREE, GAIL ALDYEN\nREES, PHILIP DAVID\nREID, LEWIS WELDON\nREMESZ, LOUIS CONRAD\nREMPEL, THEODORE A.\nRENNIE, JOAN ANN\nRENWICK, DAVID WILSON\nRESTALL, LAWRENCE A.\nRIDINGTON, JOHN F.\nRIDLEY, WM. DOUGLAS\nRIOPEL, JEAN PAUL\nRIVETT, JOHN FREELAND\nROBERTS, THEODORE A.\nROBERTS, RICHARD HUGH\nROBERTS, W. TERVELYAN\nROBERTSON, A. CHARLES\nROBERTSON, MARGARET A.\nROBLIN, ROBERT F.\nROSS, JOHN KENNETH\nROWLES, GWENDOLYN A.\nRUNDLE, HOWARD N.\nSALTER, MARGARET C.\nSAUL, BEVERLY JOAN\nSAVORY, GERALD NEWTON\nSAY, B. MARGARET JILL\nSCATCHARD, LAWRENCE D.\nSCHAFFER, SUSAN\nSCHLESINGER, JOSEPH\nSCHOEN, WALTER J. P.\nSCHUETZE, GIDEON S.\nSCOTT, BARRY ALISTAIR\nSCOTT, PETER GILLMAN\nSHADBOLT, IRIS D.\nSHARPE, ELAINE ALICE\nSHAW, DUNCAN WELD\nSHEARER, RONALD A.\nSHEPHERD, BARBARA J.\nSHEWARD, DOROTHY M.\nSHOBROOK, LENORA J.\nSHORTHOUSE, THOMAS J.\nSINGH, HARPUJAN JOHN\nSINCLAIR, WM. GROVER\nSKELTON, CHARLES PETER\nSLACK, WILLIAM E. C.\nSLEEMAN, KENNETH J.\nSOLLOWAY, RONALD E.\nSOMMERFELDT, KEITH D.\nSORENSEN, VIVIAN D.\nSOUTHWELL, JOHN R.\nSPARLING, A. DONALDA\nSTANDFIELD, DEREK H.\nSTANOWSKI, JAN\nSTANLOW, MARGUERITE\nSTARLING, CHARLES E.\nSTARR, LEONARD\nSTATHERS, JACK K.\nSTEELE, PAMELA A. E.\nSTEPHENS, VICTOR A.\nSTEWART, CHARLES\nSTEWART, DAVID JAMES\nSTEWART, DONALD G.\n179\n{ft! _i JL ^'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'___ftH&\nSTEWART, PAUL ROY\nSTOBBS, RUTH E.\nSTOBBE, LESLIE HAROLD\nSTOBART, RODNEY\nSTOREY, ROBERT M.\nSTRACHAN, DORIS ELSIE\nSTRALENDORFF, SHIRLEY\nSTRIDE, TERENCE L.\nSTROHAN, RUTH PAULINE\nSTRONG, ROBERT DENNIS\nSUDERMAN, JACOB H.\nSUTTIS, J. A. PATRICK\nSYEKLOCHA, DELFA\nSYMONDS, JOHN GARY\nTAIT, BARBARA ANNE\nTANAKA, TSUGIO\nTATE, WILLIAM HARMAN\nTAYLOR, JEAN DAVIDSON\nTAYLOR, STEPHEN W. A.\nTAYLOR, SYBIL MARION\nTEASDALE, DONALD N.\nTENENBAUM, SALLY\nTERPENNING, JOHHN G.\nTHOMAS, MEREDITH R.\nTHOMPSON, ROBERT C.\nTHORSTEINSON, K. V.\nTHRASHER, DOROTHY ANN\nTINKER, ROBERT PERCY\nTOBLER, ERIKA SYLVIA\nTOMKINS, EVELYN M.\nTOMBOSSO, ALEXANDER\nTOPOROWSKI, JEAN P.\nTORTORELLI, RALPH L.\nTOWGOOD, JAMES GORDON\nTOWNSEND, EARL\nTRAPPITT, NANCY, L. A.\nTRUNKFIELD, CHRIS J.\nTSE, YU TIN\nTUPLING, GEORGE D.\nTURNBULL, IAN MARR\nTWAITES, BEVERLEY JAS.\nVTITMAA, ERNA\nVALE, LORNA\nVERMA, BEHARI LAL\nWADDEN, MAUREEN E.\nWAJNRYB, SERGE\nWALKER, ROY FRANCIS P.\nWALKER, TERENCE R.\nWALLACE, WM. CLARKE\nWANJOFF, PETER\nWASSICK, DOROTHY E.\nWATT, CHARLES A.\nWELSH, HELEN ANNE\nWHITE, GORDON ALLAN\nWHITTAKER, DAVID NEIL\nWIEDRICK, MERLE V.\nWIGEN, VERNON RAE\nWILBEE, G. STANLEY\nWILLFORT, AGNES LORNA\nWILLIAMS, DOUGLAS L.\nWILSON, RICHARD FLOY\nWILSON, WALTER G.\nWITT, MARION GAIL\nWONG, GEORGE T.\nWOOD, CONNLA THOMAS\nWORRALL, WILLIAM JOS.\nWRIGHT, JANIE DIANE\nWRIGHT, ROBERT LESLIE\nWRIGHT, VALERIE\nYAMNY, JACK WILLIAM\nYIP, HANEY WING\nYOUNG, ENID D. ANNE\nZAKLAN, GEORGE L.\nZELONKA, ANNA JEAN\nZILKE, EDWARD RUDOLPH\nZLOT, THOMAS A.\nAARON, BARBARA SHARON\nADAMSON, ROBT. SIDNEY\nALBERS, CARL HARRY\nALDER, DOROTHY ELAINE\nALDEN, ROSEMARY SELMA\nALLAN, BEVERLEY ANN\nALLAN, BARBARA MUIR\nALLEN, ELIZABETH LYNE\nALLEN, JAMES B.\nALLEN, ROBERT J. E.\nALLMAN, SAM ALLISON, DONALD E.\nALLWOOD, PATRICK V.\nANDERSON, H. SHELAGH\nANDERSON, HENRY WM.\nANDERSON, JUSTINE M.\nANDERSON, KENNETH WM.\nANDERSON, SHIRLEY E.\nANDREEN, PEGGY LOU E.\n180 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Frosh took the first prize\naward in the Homecoming\nParade with this float\nshowing babies in a playpen.\nFrosh executive, ably\nled by Jim MacDonald,\nplanned activitits for the\nyear.\nANDREW, DOUGLAS FRED\nANTHONY, ALAN GERALD\nARCHER, LEONARD T.\nARMSTRONG, A GORDON\nARNET, EDWARD, JOHN\nARROWSMITH, H. JILLIAN\nBACK, JOAN BROOK\nBACON, TERENCE C.\nBAIKIE, WILLIAM E.\nBAIRD, BEVERLEY ANN\nBAIRD, MacLEAN DUGALD\nBAKER, LOOE ADELE\nBALDWIN, RICHARD WM. W.\nBALL, DAVID EDWARD\nBANFIELD, JOHN ALLEN\nBARCLAY, DONALD H.\nBARLEE, JOHN WILLIAM\nBARRON, DAVID WALLACE\nBARRY, JOHN HARVEY\nBATES, DAVID NEVILLE\nBAXTER, CATHERINE A.\nBAXTER, ALLEN\nBAYES, MELVILLE ROY\nBECK, HOWARD L.\nBEECHER, DENYS LYMAN\nBENNETT, ARTHUR L\nBENSON, MARILYN ANN\nBERNSTEIN, LAWRENCE A\nBERRY, RUTH LILLIAN\nBERSON, HAROLD R.\nBERTELSEN, ELLEN M.\nBERTELSEN, ESTHER K.\nBEST, WILLIAM ALBERT\nBIASUTTI, DICK\nBIRCH, JOHN ALFRED\nBISHOP, JANET V.\nBJARNASON, WILLIAM M.\nBLACK, JOYCE BEVERLEY\nBLAKE, DENNIS GEO.\nBOE, KENNETH INGE\nBOLTON, MARJORIE A .\nBONE, ROBERT MARTIN\nBORG, RONALD PETER\nBOTH AM, LYNN NINA P.\nBOUCHLA, EFF'E\nBOUCHLAS, THALES P.\nBOURNE, ROBERT K. T.\nBOULDING, JOHN DAVID\nBOURNS, CHAS. DAVID\nBOWKER, ARTHUR JAMES\nBOYD, ROBERT\nBOYLE, ERNEST EDWARD\nBRADY, EDWARD C.\nBRANCA, RICHARD FRANK\nBRANTON, KENNETH GEEO.\nBRASSO, HENNING P.\nBRETT, CONRAD PAUL\nBREZDEN, JESSIE PEARL\nBRIDGES, J. HARVEY\nBROCK, PATRICK W. G.\nBROWN, BARRY FRANCIS\nBROWN, ELEANOR MARIE\nBROWN, HUGH A.\nBROWN, JOHN MELVIN\nBROWN, PHYLLIS JOAN\nBROWN, KENNETH GRAHAM\nBROWN, OWEN ROBERT\nBROWN, RITCHIE W. J.\nBROWN, VILMA JOAN\nBRUNDETT, ELEANOR L.\nBUCKLEY, GLEN JAMES\nBUCKLAND, HAROLD C.\n\u00C2\u00BBl W*_4 S\nl__tti_ ;:\u00C2\u00ABtfl\n181 i*it\u00C2\u00AB\nBUECKERT, LAMBERTINA\nBUNBURY, ALEXANDER C\nBURLEY, RONALD N.\nBURLEY, PATRICIA B.\nBURROWS, MARJORIE L.\nBURTON, WM. DONALD\nBUSH, PATRICK, GEO. S\nBUTT, DONALD GRANT\nBUTTERFIELD, ELIZABETH\nBYBERG, ROBERT\nBYRNE, KATHLEEN P. D.\nCADELL, THEODORE E.\nCAINE, MARY NANETTE\nCALDWELL, CHAS. BRUCE\nCAMERON, EDNA E.\nCAMPBELL, DENNIS\nCAMPBELL, JOYCE A.\nCAMPBELL, DOREEN L.\nCAPLE, RODERICK B.\nCARLSON, ROBERT IVAR\nCARNSEW, THOS. NEILL\nCAROLAN, HEATHER B.\nCARPENTER, SHARON M.\nCARR, MARILYN C.\nCARSWELL, HENRY THOS.\nCARSTENS, BETTY ANNE\nCARTER, FLORENCE E.\nCARTER, JOHN HERBERT\nCASS, RICHARD VINCENT\nCASSELLS, DOROTHY E.\nCATES, SUZANNE A\nCAVE, DONNA MARY P.\nCHADWICK, NORMAN G.\nCHAMBERLAIN, JOS. A\nCHANG, EARL\nCHAPMAN, CLIFTON WM.\nCHAPMAN, MORAG AGNES\nCHARLESWORTH, JAMES D.\nCHARTERS, SHEILA RUTH\nCHASTER, GERALD D.\nCHESS, RUTH SADIE\nCHESS, MARTIN RAYMOND\nCHILLCOTT, DORIS J.\nCHRISTIE, HELEN W.\nCIARNIELLO, DOMINIC\nCINITS, EDDIE\nCLARIDGE, RONALD WM.\nCLARK, GLENN A.\nCLARKE, BETTY MARION\nCLARKE, THELMA MAY\nCLAYTON, JAMES W.\nCLIFF, JOSEPH HAROLD\nCOLEMAN, LYMAN R.\nCOLLETT, BRUCE RILEY\nCOLLINS, PETER R.\nCOLLS, JOHN MICHAEL\nCON, RONALD JONATHAN\nCONLIN, PATRICIA ANN\nCONSTABARIS, PENELOPE\nCOOK, ROBERT LEIGHTON\nCOOK, T. BEVERLEY J.\nCOOKE, ROLAND HARVEY\nCOOPER, A. MILDRED\nCOOPLAND, ASHLEY T.\nCORNER, IAN JAMES R.\nCORNISH, ELIZABETH M.\nCOULTAS, HELEN LOIS\nCOX, ARTHUR GRAHAM\nCOX, BRIAN DOUGLAS\nCRANE, TERRANCE P.\nCROKER, PATRICIA ANN\nCROY, JANIS\nCROWE, CLAYTON THOS.\nCROWTHER, JOHN WM. F.\nCUMMING, JEAN E.\nCUMMING, STUART BRUCE\nCUMPSTON, SALLY M.\nCURRIE, ARCHIE P.\nCUSTOCK, JOSEPH JOHN\nDALGLEISH, NEIL S.\nDANARD, MAURICE B.\nDAVIDSON, DAVID GEO.\nDAVIDSON, ALAN THOMAS\nDAVIDSON, JOHN COOPER\nDAVIDSON, LAWRENCE A\nDAVIDSON, PATRICIA A.\nDAVIES, ALLAN HOWARD\nDAVIS FRANCES ANN.\nDAVIS, KENNETH BRIAN\nDAWSON, ROBERT MUIR\nDAWSON, BEVERLEY JUNE\nDECOURCY, DONALD E.\nDECAIGNY, STEVENS R.\nDEMPSTER, GEO. GAVIN\nDEVITT, W. JOHN BRUCE\nDEVITTO, LEONARD J.\n182 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Artsmen gathered ori\nmuddy field in front of\nEngineering Building to\nhelp swell the March of\nDimes proceeds during\nloud, boisterous promotion\ncampaign. Although Arts-\nmen overshot their quota\nby about 50%, the rollicking redshirts came through\nwith over 200% of $100\nlimit.\nDEVLIN, ANDREW JOHN R.\nDEWEST, IVAN FRANCIS\nDEWEY, FLORENCE\nDICK, ROBERT COSGROVE\nDICKINSON, PAUL GEO.\nDODWELL, GARY SCOTT\nDOMINIQUE, HARRY P.\nDONNELLY, HELEN A.\nDONNELLY, RICHARD F.\nDONG, LILY\nDONOVAN, PATRICIA MAY\nDOREY, LAWRENCE S.\nDORMAN, RODERICK N.\nDOWSLEY, MARY\nDRAB, ALLAN JULIAN\nDRENNAN, JOSEPH A.\nDRUMMOND, KENNETH JAS.\nDUCKWORTH, MURIEL J.\nDUDLEY, ELIZABETH A.\nDHFF, MARIANNE ELLIS\nDUKELOW, CECIL ANGUS\nDURANTE, ROY GILBERT\nDUTTON, ROSE WILSON\nDWYER, LORETTA A.\nEAST, RONALD AUSTIN\nECKERSLEY, WM. G.\nEDGELL, DRUSELLA JOAN\nEDWARDS, VICTOR\nEISENHUT, DORIS\nELDER, LORNE EVERETT\nELVIN, FAITH A. ANN\nERICKSON, H. GRANT P.\nERICKSON, JOHN ERIC\nESTABROOKS, NELSON R.\nESTRIN, LAWRENCE\nEVANS, JONATHAN W.\nEWING, NANCY LEE\nEWING, WILLIAM F.\nEZZY, ALBERT ROLAND\nFAIRWEATHER, FRED H.\nFARLEY, JACK\nFARQUHAR, DONALD JAS.\nFASHOWAY, JOSEPH\nFAULKNER, BEVERLEY J.\nFEATHERSTONE, HAROLD\nFEISTMANN, JOHN GEO.\nFENWICK, CHARLES H. J.\nFENWICK, THOMAS L.\nFINKELSTEIN, NORTON\nFINGARSON, FAYE E.\nFINLAY, ANN HUNTER\nFLAHIFF, FREDERICK T.\nFLEMONS, GORDON F.\nFLETCHER, ELIZABETH J.\nFLETCHER, V. JOAN\nFORBES, LYLE PETERSON\nFORSENG, EVAN GERALD\nFOSTER, ANTHEA W.\nFRAME, EVELYN C. M.\nFRANCE, PATRICIA M.\nFRANCIS, ROBERT S.\nFRIESEN, JOHN\nFULGHAM, EDWARD\nFUNK, PETER JOHN\nFURUKAWA, EMI\nGAHAN, RONALD BERNARD\nGALBRAITH, DONALD S.\nGARNER, JOHN OGILVIE\nGARSTIN, VALERIE\nGARTSIDE, WILLIAM M.\nGARTLEY, MARY V.\nGARTELL, BEVERLEY\n183\nJ^mt'tmm r\nGAVAN, FRANK MOORE\nGEMMELL, WM. STEPHEN\nGIBSON, GEORGE B. F.\nGIBSON, JOAN E.\nGIBSON, WM. GARNET\nGILCHRIST, STUART A.\nGILLESPIE, DONALD k .\nGILSON, MURRAY \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\nGINSBERG, LOIS C.\nGLASGOW, DAVID LAWSON\nGODDARD, WILLIAM P.\nGOLD, IRIS BEULAH\nGOLDRICK, MICHAEL K.\nGORDON, JOANNA E.\nGORWILL, JAS. RICHARD\nGORMAN, EDWARD LEO\nGOSSE, DONALD ARTHUR\nHUNT, JOHN E.\nGRAHAM, GORDON R.\nGRAY, PAMELA ADELAIDE\nGREAVES. FREDERICK T.\nGREENE, ROBERT EDWARD\nGRISMER, ELIZABETH I.\nGRISEDALE, MARY C.\nGROUNDWATER, WM. BRIAN\nGRYSCHUK, STEVE\nGUICHON, ALFRED PAUL\nGUISE, JACQUELINE M.\nGUILLIAMSE, BERNARDUS\nGUSTAFSON, ELAINE H.\nHALL, DOUGLAS GRAHAM\nHALL, HELEN MARIE\nHALL, SUSAN DIANE\nHALLETT, REGINALD D.\nHALTALIN, KENNETH C.\nHANNA, JOHN EDWARD\nHANSEN, RONALD MARK\nHANSEN, JOHN INGE\nHANSSEN, LOUIS J.\nHARDY, CHARLES G.\nHARNETT, KERRY B.\nHARRIES, GWYNNE\nHARTSTONE, CAMPBELL J.\nHART, JOYCE LILLIAN\nHARVEY, PETER\nHASTINGS, DAVID ERIC\nHAWKINS, ARTHUR JOHN\nHAY, DAVID GEORGE\nHAY, BARBARA HELEN\nHAYWARD, HERBERT M.\nHEATHER, ROBIN\nHEMPHILL, H. DAVID\nHENDERSON, DON N ETTA\nHENDERSON, MARGARET M.\nHENDERSON, MATTHEW H.\nHENDERSON, WM. T.\nHENRION, YVONNE\nHENSCHEL, PATRICIA H.\nHESHKA, WILLIAM\nHIK, WILLIAM\nHILL, JOSEPH ROYSTON\nHILTON, RUTH ETHEL\nHINKE, MARGARET C.\nHIPP, THOMAS MICHAEL\nHOLDEN, DOUGLAS\nHOLLAND, FRED CHARLES\nHOLMES, ALAN DONNAN\nHOUGHLAND, L. JOAN\nHOWARD, RONALD V. B.\nHOYOS, WENCKHEIM H.\nHUBERMAN, MORRIS\nHUDSON, RALPH EDW.\nHUGHES, DAVID MARTIN\nHUGHES, DONALD\nHUGHES, WM. VERNON\nHUME, PHILIP GREY\nGOURLAY, ROBT. BRUCE\nHUNT, W. TED\nHUNTER, MARY CORDINER\nHUNTINGTON, M. J.\nHURLSTON, HELEN W.\nHUSBAND, MARY ALICE\nHUSBAND, JOHN KIMBALL\nHUVA, JOHN\nINGLIS, C. ANNE\nINSKIP, VIOLEN MAY\nISMAN, ERLA FAE\nIWATA, ARTHUR M.\nJACKSON, ALAN WILLIAM\nJACKSON, ROBERT WYATT\nJAMIESON, EDWARD R.\nJANZ, LESLIE BLAKE\nJEFFERS, CHAS. WILLIAM\nJEFFREY, ROBT. JAMES\nJENKINS, JOHN ALAN\nJIM, HARVEY\n184 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Spring hit the campus\nall too close to exams as\nusual \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and as usual,\nstudents studied (?) on the\nlawns, went down the\n1000 steps to the beach.\nJOHNSON, ANNE C.\nJOHNSTON, CATHERINE S.\nJOHNSON, GAYLE M. M.\nJOHNSON, JOHN R.\nJOHNSTON, BRIAN M.\nJOHNSTON, M. JUNE Y.\nJOKANOVICH, STANLEY\nJONES, GRAEME H. E.\nJONES, GEORGE F.\nJONES, KENNETH STUART\nJONES, MARILYN E.\nJUSTICE, BEVERLEY G.\nKALUTICH, KOS KENNETH\nKAMIMURA, SHOICHIRO\nKAMAR, ASTA\nFATZEL, FREDK. G. W.\nKEMBEL, JOHN MAXWELL\nKEMPER, M. VERLIE\nKENDRICK, ROBERT W.\nKENMUIR, BRENDA MAE L.\nKENNY, BRENTON D.\nKETTLEWELL, H. DON\nKEZIN, GEORGE A.\nKIDD, MAUREEN E.\nKILBOURN, GARRY D.\nKIMURA, EDMUND\nKINCAID, ALAN DOUGLAS\nKING, MICHAEL JAMES\nKING, SHIRLEY ELLEN\nKING, TERESA ANN\nKIRKLAND, ROBERT W.\nKIRWAN, JOHN M.\nKITOS, RALPH MARTIN\nKLAPKIW, JOHN\nKLASSEN, ALFRED\nKNOX, MARY HELEN\nKOCH, FRANK GEORGE H.\nKONYK, ERNIE\nKOUACH, GERALDINE A.\nKRAFT, MARION IRENE\nKRONQUIST, ROGER A.\nKUCIEL, MICHEL\nKUCH, MERNE RUSSELL\nKULES, CHARLES ERIC\nKYLE, SAMUEL A.\nLAFLECHE, ELEANOR M.\nLAING, EMMA LOUISE\nLAIDLAW, THOMAS H.\nLANGFORD, DULCIE W.\nLARSEN, RAYMOND S.\nLARSON, C. YVONNE\nLATHAM, ELEANOR MARY\nLATSOUDES, KOULA\nLAU, GAU SHIU KEI\nLAUK, LEONARD EDWARD\nLAVIS, CHAS EDWARD\nLAWRENCE, NAN M.\nLAZOSKY, DANIEL E.\nLAZENBY, GEOFFREY J.\nLAZENBY, HUGH STEPHEN\nLECKIE, W. MERRILL\nLEE, BARBARA LOUISA\nLEE, DAVID MANUEL\nLEE, ROBERT\nLEGG, EDWARD ROWLAND\nLEGER, RODNEY F.\nLEGGE, GERALDINE JUNE\nLEONG, FAYE QUEN\nLERET, MARG IT\nLESIK, MICHAEL DAVID\nLEVERIDGE, DONNA RAE\nLEVEY, S. MERIELLE\n)!__.__ \u00C2\u00B0\nJta ML-HE,\n185 ' ________\nLEWIS, K SUZANNE\nLEWIS, SALLY LARKIN\nLIEBELT, ALVIN\nLIGHTFOOT, MARGARET D.\nLIGHTBODY, MILFORD A*\nLIND, STANLEY\nLIPINSKI, EDWIN\nLITRAS, CHRISTINE D. *\nLITTLE, EDWARD BRIAN\nLLOYD, EDNA N. MARIE\nLODGE, TERRENCE OWEN\nLOGAN, PATRICIA RUTH\nLOHIN, NICHOLAS\nLOMAS, GERALD WALTER\nLONG, ALFRED\nLONG, JANET M.\nLONGRIDGE, ELIZABETH\nLONGLEY, WALTER F.\nLOOMER, HERBERT MYER\nLOUGHEED, RUTH ANN\nLOURIE, SUZANNE E.\nLOVETT, HARRY ALMON\nLUCAS, JOHN NEIL\nLUMSDEN, R. E. J.\nLUNDBERG, ERIC H.\nLYALL, WILLIAM RONALD\nLYMAN, EVA GEORGIA H.\nLYNCH, WILLIAM WAYNE\nMADDEN, SHEILA C.\nMADILL, FRANK MICHAEL\nMALOWNEY, JOSEPH S.\nMANNING, JOHN D.\nMANSON, KARNA C.\nMAR, JOHN\nMARSHALL, E. LOIS\nMARTIN, ALEXANDER\nMARTINUSEN, HENRY H.\nMASON, GRENVILLE ROBT.\nMASON, KENNETH ROY\nMATTERSON, B. DALL\nMAWHINNEY, PAMELA J.\nMAWHINNEY, ANNE MARIE\nMAWHINNEY, DONNA G\nMAYNARD, JOHN KERR\nMcCADAM, E. MARILYN\nMcALPINE, EDWARD A\nMcAllister, dixie m.\nMcCALLUM, J. DONALD\nMcCALLUM, DOUGLAS F.\nMcCONVILLE, PATRICIA\nMcDERMID, JOHN C.\nMcDONALD, DANIEL L.\nMacDONALD, DONALD D.\nMacDONALD, JAMES C\nMacDONALD, WENDY M.\nMacDONALD, M. M.\nMacDONALD, LUELLA M.\nMacDONALD, NORMA A\nMacDONALD, PETER A.\nMcdowell, Kathleen v.\nMcEACHRAN, DAVID J.\nMeFEELY, D. PATRICIA\nMacGILLIVRAY, A JOHN\nMcGINNIS, JAMES C.\nMacGREGOR, ARTHUR JOS.\nMcGregor, agnes c.\nMeHENRY, PATRICK\nMaclNNIS, DONALD JOS.\nMclNNES, DOUGLAS N.\nMaclNNES, MARYLOU\nMaclNNES, IAN MICHAEL\nMoclNTYRE, J. McEWAN\nMacKEY, EDWARD L.\nMcKAY, MARY CAMERON\nMacKAY, MARTHA JOAN\nMacKAY, DONALD ALAN\nMacKENZIE, MARY HELEN\nMacKENZIE, GORDON R.\nMacKINNON, GEORGE E.\nMacKINNON, SHEILA J.\nMacKINNON, EVAN D.\nMcLEAN, TERRANCE W.\nMcLEAN, HELEN ETHEL\nMacLEAN, DUART S.\nMcLEAN, LYNNE JUNE\nMcLEAN, DONALD JAMES\nMacLEAN, IAN ANGUS\nMcLENNAN, KENNETH A\nMcLEOD, GLEN DONALD J.\nMcLEOD, KENNETH G\nMcLEOD, JOHN TAYLOR\nMcLEOD, ISABEL ANN\nMacLEOD, ROBERT V.\nMcLORG, PHYLLIS ANNE\nMcNAB, NANCY ISABEL\nMcNISH, GORDON HUGH\n186 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Homecoming Committee\nplanned all arrangements\nfor the Homecoming Weekend festivities.\nMacPHERSON, ALASTAIR\nMacSORLEY, CHAS. CLARE\nMcWilliams, bruce w.\nmead, james stafford\nmeadows, beverly joan\nmeagher, michael d.\nmeek, ronald charles\nmeekison, h. h.\nmeredith, ronald m.\nmerrill, dorothy jan\nmetcalfe, shirley d.\nmiddleton, judith d.\nmiddleton, arthur g.\nmikki, ichio\nmiller, j. dawn\nmilne, john b.\nmitchell, douglas a.\nmitchell, donald h.\nmiyazawa, jean\nmjos, margaret e. m.\nmoir, lewis ernest\nmond, i. l. julie\nmontaine, lorne a.\nmontgomery, b. t.\nmontgomery, mabel l.\nmontgomery, roger f.\nmoore, jane ann\nmorris, darryl glyn\nmorris, gerald david\nmorris, rae ford\nmorrow, boswell r.\nMORROW, Wm. JOHN\nMOUNTAIN, CHARLES GEO.\nMULGREW, FRANCES P.\nMULBERRY, GORDON\nMULHERN, MAUREEN P. A.\nMULLA, G ELIZABETH\nMULLARD, MARILYN RUTH\nMUNRO, JACK ALLAN\nMURPHY, B. L.\nMURPHY, LOUIS JOSEPH\nMUTZ, DELMA MARGARET\nMYERS, JAMES GARRY\nNAKATANI, SAM\nNAKAMURA, JOE\nNASH, ALBERT ERNEST\nNASH, MARTIN ALLEN\nNELSON, G W.\nNELSON, NORMAN\nNEWHOUSE, GORDON H.\nNEWITT, EVE MARGARET\nNEWTON, KENNETH C. G.\nNICHOLS, VIOLET BELLE\nNIMI, ROBERT KOJI\nNORDSTROM, VERA D. L.\nNORRISH, HAROLD E.\nNORTHROP, DAVID LEROI\nNOVAK, SYLVIA JOY\nOBERHOFER, MATTHEW\nOLSEN, WILLIAM CHAS\nOLSON, VIRGINIA MAE\nOLSON, WILLIAM EMIL\nORNES, WILLIAM JOHN\nORROCK, MARVIN G.\nORTNER, EDITH JOAN\nO'SHEA, MIMI SHIRLEY E.\nOWENS, EDWARD L.\nPAGE, JONATHAN DAY\nPALMER, ALLAN HERBERT\nPARFITT, ALLYN FRED\nPATERSON, NORMAN R.\nPATCH, GORDON S.\n187 fAiftS\nPATTERSON, SHIRLEY A.\nPAYZANT, KEITH, W.\nPEARMAN, JAS. DOUGLAS\nPEARSON, GEORGE E.\nPEARSON, WALLACE JOHN\nPEATFIELD, MARY P.\nPEDERSEN, ERNEST N.\nPEDERSEN, JOHN ERIC\nPENDYGRASSE, JOHN S.\nPETERS, TERENCE DAVID\nPETERSEN, PETER BRYAN\nPETRIE, MARY ANNA\nPHILLIPS, DOROTHY\nPHILLIPS, GORDON H.\nPHILPOTT, STUART B.\nPtCKETT, THOS. G.\nPIEDMONT, LEO PETER\nPIERRON, PAUL L\nPINEO, PETER CAMDEN\nPISAPIO, ALBERT HENRY\nPLATT, KATHLEEN\nPLATT, MARGARET\nFLETCHER, FERDINAND T.\nPLECASH, JOAN E.\nPLOYART, MARJORIE J.\nPOWER, DONALD CHAS.\nPOWERS, JAS. BERNARD\nPRENTER, PATRICIA M.\nPREFONTAINE, J. MARCEL\nPRENTICE, ELIZABETH R.\nPRESTON, HENRY M.\nPRICE, EVAN OWEN\nPRIEGER, JOHN STEPHEN\nPURDY, PETER JOHN\nPURCELL, WM. BARRY\nRACINE, JOAN ELLEN\nRAMAGE, THOS. EDWARD\nRAMSDEN, RICHARD A.\nRAMSLIE, SOFIE DAGNY\nRAMSBOTHAM, ALEX\nRANAGHAN, MARY ROMA\nRAPTIS, HELEN\nRAYER, JOHN\nRAY, PHILLIP WILLARD\nREEVES, LINDA VIVIAN\nREID, LORNE JAMES\nREMPEL, PATRICIA ANNE\nRENWICK, MERCEDES F.\nRENSHAW, L. FRANCIS\nRICKSON, DOUGLAS E.\nRICORD, JULIO ALFREDO\nRILEY, PETER JULIAN\nROBERTSON, DONALD GEO.\nROBERTSON, DIANA DON\nROBERTSON, GORDON T.\nROBINSON, BETTY J.\nROBSON, DONALD H.\nRODGERSON, JAMES S.\nROHRER, JOYCE KATHRYN\nROLFE, M. HAVELOCK\nROSEN, LORALYNN\nROSS, FRANK ROY\nROSS, PETER ALAN\nRUDKIEWICH, LILLIAN\nRUMBLE, KATHARINE ANN\nRUSSELL, AUDREY E.\nRUSSELL, KENNETH ROBT.\nRUSSELL, KENNETH G.\nRUTLEDGE, SHIRLEY K.\nRYLEY, FRANCES DIANE\nSAITO, YOSHIHISA\nSAMSON, BRIAN ROSS\nSAMBOL, MATHEW\nSANKEY, MAUREEN L\nSANDFORD, MERLE JAS.\nSANTOS, CARL A.\nSAVAGE, JOHN KENNING\nSAWATZKY, RONALD KURT\nSCALES, ALLEN ALEX\nSCARROW, HART R.\nSCHIBILD, DONALD A.\nSCHIBILD, MARJORY L.\nSCHUETZE, ELIZABETH A\nSCOTLAND, GORDON H.\nSCRATCHLEY, EDWARD WM.\nSEEDS, ROBERT WILSON\nSEEMUNGAL, FRANK\nSETTERFIELD, G. A.\nSEXTON, NORMAN WM.\nSHANNON, PATRICIA C.\nSHANNON, RONALD C.\nSHARP, WILLIAM B.\nSHEARS, SUSANNE M.\nSHEASGREEN, DAVID\nSHEARER, ALISON JEAN\nSHEPPARD, L. BARRY\n188 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 News and views of the\nPublications Board were\ngrabbed from the quad\nTuesday, Thursday, and\nFriday noons.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Armoured car visited the\nAdministration Office, no\ndoubt it was to pick up\nthe late fees of ten dollars\nwhich forgetful students\nwere charged.\nSHERRIN, DARRELL A.\nSHIELDS, JOHN HENRY\nSHIELDS, PETER A\nSHIPPOBOTHAM, JOHN P.\nSHORTER, THOMAS A.\nSCHRUM, LAURNA JANE\nSHUNTER, MARJORIE E.\nSINGER, DAVID S.\nSINCLAIR, ROBERT S.\nSIRLIN, IRVING ROBERT\nSKINNER, H. PATRICIA\nSKOKO, NORMAN MARK\nSKY, MILTON\nSMILLIE, HOWARD A. G.\nSMITH, ALLAN\nSMITH, CHARLES WM.\nSMITH, DAVID HARRY\nSMITH, DAVID LORIN\nSMITH, FREDERICK A.\nSMITH, KATHRYN MARION\nSMYTH, NEIL PATRICK\nSOMMERS, MONTROSE S.\nSORTWELL, EDWIN T.\nSPARE, GORDON\nSPIRO, PHILLIP GRANT\nSPRUNG, PHILIP DAVIS\nSTANDELL, VALERIE M.\nSTANHOPE, JOSEPH R.\nSTAVELEY, WILLIAM W.\nSTAUGHTON, DOUGLAS A.\nSTEELE, PATRICIA A.\nSTEIMAN, S. R. CHERIE\nSTEPHENS, JUNE A\nSTERNE, RONALD ALFRED\nSTEVENSON, A. DOROTHY\nSTEWART, IAN HUGH\nSTEWART, RONALD HUGH\nSTICKLAND, MICHAEL H.\nSTORBACK, M. MILDRED\nSTRALENDORFF, J.\nSTRATTON, SHEILA M.\nSTRUTT, GERALD C.\nSTUBBS, CAROLE ROSE M.\nSTUCKEY, WILLIAM THOS.\nSTURDY, SANDRA JOAN\nSTYFFE, WIULIAM T. E.\nSULTAN, RALPH GEO. M.\nSUMMERS, NORMA I.\nSUSSEL, HANNAH G.\nSUTHERLAND, JOHN P.\nSUTHERLAND, K. ANN\nSUTTON, WENDY K.\nSWANSON, WM. MILTON\nSWEENEY, LEO PAUL\nSYEKLOCHA, MILAN\nTAMNEY, SYLVIA L. i.\nTAYLOR, THOMAS M.\nTELFORD, KATHLEEN A.\nTERRIEN, ARLETTE E.\nTESAN, S. STANLEY\nTHOM, GORDON A.\nTHODESON, JOHN CONRAD\nTHOMSON, MARGARET A.\nTHORNE, NORMA L\nTHRASHER, PETER D.\nTIMBERLEY, DARIEN M. K.\nTITMUSS, A. DAVID\nTOMLJENOVICH, MATTHEW\nTONKINSON, PHILIP\nTRAFFORD, JACQUELINE\nTRIBBLE, CLAIRE\nTROTTER, HELEN E.\nL'\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A04/fK- ff\n_ \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n.\n-Ur\ns\ni^M\n189\nJ<\">f> TROUSDALE, VALERIE D\nTUCKER, GORDON W.\nTUFTS, FRANCIS CHAS.\nTUOMALA, MAURICE F.\nTURNER, GEOFFREY W.\nTURPLE, FLORENCE MYk.-c\nTYSOE, ELIN RUTH\nUNDERHILL, N. E. S.\nURBANOVITS, ANNIE I.\nVANDERVOORT, STANLEY\nVASEY, JOSEPH STEELE\nVENNELS, SALLY ANNE\nVERCHERE, DAVID G.\nWAGNER, WILLARD W.\nWAKELYNN, CAROLE\nWAKHRONCHEFF, D.\nWALMSLEY, WM. JOHN\nWARD, DOUGLAS REID\nWARE, RONALD PAUL\nWARN, NORMAN HERBERT\nWASEL, LAWRENCE D.\nWATERS, DOUGLAS\nWATSON, A. JOHN\nWATSON, EDWARD\nWATSON, DOREEN F.\nWATTS, LOUISE DIANNE\nWEAVER, O. KENNETH\nWEBBER, WILLIAM A.\nWEBBER, BARBARA JOAN\nWEBSTER, MARGARET A.\nWELSFORD, DAVID E.\nWERTMAN, MICHAEL\nWHALEN, WILLIAM PETER\nWHEATON, NORMAN WARD\nWHIPPLE, ELDEN COLE\nWHITE, MARILYN ANN\nWHITE, RICHARD D.\nWHITE, ROBERT CARLEY\nWHITTLE, DONALD JAS.\nWIEBE, M. ANN\nWILCOX, GEORGE L.\nWILD, ALEX\nWILKES, RICHARD ASTON\nWILLIAMS, BRYAN\nWILLIAMS ROBT. ARTHUR\nWILLOUGHBY, ANN D.\nWILSON, JUDITH ANNE\nWINBIGLER, H. E.\nWINDER, NANCY LEE\nWING, WALLACE GERALD\nWOOSTER, ANTHONY KING\nWRIGHT, NORMAN ROSS\nWRIGHTMAN, GORDON M.\nYEE, HARRY THOMAS\nYIP, GERALDINE KAY\nZICKMANTEL, HANS J.\nZIPURSKY, IRVIN\n190 COMMERCE\nIt was a full year for all the Commerce students,\nwho found themselves taking on new activities and\nimproving on the old.\nThe start of the year was marked by the first annual\nCommerce Smoker, which featured gaming wheels,\ndancing girls, and professional entertainment.\nIn October, a group headed by Ken Rosenberg built\nan impressive float depicting the typical success story\nof a Commerceman. Although the judges were not\ncompletely taken with the float, they enthusiastically\npicked Louis Morris, representing Commerce, as runner-up in the Homecoming Queen Contest.\nThe Commerce Informal in November, beset conflicting parties, rained on by a thoughtless deity, and\nforgotten by the AMS co-ordinator, turned out to be a\nrather exclusive party.\nIn December, the Commercemen played landlord\nand evicted the lawyers out of their huts. This action\nprovided more office space for the hard-working staff,\nand a common room for the bridge-playing students.\nAfter Christmas, the senior students, painfully aware\nthat they were about to be pitched out into a world in\nwhich monopoly money didn't count, organized a series\nof noon-hour lectures by local businessmen. These talks\nwere arranged by Gerry Main, who brought many top\nnotch speakers to the campus.\nNothing less than the Panorama Roof was good\nenough for the annual Formal, which was enjoyed by a\ncapacity crowd. Partly to publicize this dance, the Commerce edition of the Ubyssey was put out. This marked\nthe first time in years for a Commerce paper.\nFinally, the Commerce Banquet was held in March.\nNoel Hall was in charge of this function which attracted\nalmost 200 commercemen and 300 businessmen. Marsh\nPorter, Q.C., noted Calgary lawyer, was the guest\nspeaker.\nAll these activities were guided by the Commerce\nBob Wadsworth as vice-president, Anne Henderson\ntaking minutes, Phil Giroday making sure of a profit,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Top: Commerce Undergraduate Society Executive\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Study Room for conscientious Commercemen.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bottom left: Time out for a picturel\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Right: Hard-working Commercemen\nNoreen Mitten representing- the Commercewomen, and\nand Sally Heard and Lyle Ahrens as executive members. Ten energetic and capable class representativs\nrounded out the council.\n191 Im 1, 3Jk\nAHRENS, LYLE GORDON\nALAIR, RONALD PATRICK\nBLEWETT, PATRICK\nCAMPBELL, DAVID C.\nCOATES, PETER\nCOHEN, MANLY MORTON,\nCOX, DIANA E.\nCREASE, STEPHEN C.\nDESBRISAY, IAN GORDON\nDIBBLEE, GEORGE M.\nDONG, BILL\nFERRIE, W. MICHAEL\nFIRUS, ERIC KARL\nFLEMING, KENNETH E.\nFLEMING JOHN THOS.\nFOOTE, JOHN CALVIN\nFORWARD, PETER CARMAN\nFOWLER, ARTHUR GORDON\nGAUER, LIONEL PHILIP\nGRANHOLM, CLARENCE J.\nHACKETT, ALAN F.\nHAMILTON, NEIL ALFRED\nHEARD, SALLY K.\nHENDERSON, DOUGLAS A.\nHENDERSON, ROSE ANNE\nHILBORN, WILLIAM H.\nHUGGETT, RICHARD G.\nISAAC, STANLEY R.\nJENKINSON, THOMAS\nJEUNE, ROBERT EDWARD\nLILLY, ARTHUR WM.\nLIVINGSTONE, GRANT H.\nLOUTIT, JAMES IRVINE\nMAIN, GERALD CLAPHAM\nMARTINDALE, W. MURRAY\nMcKAY, DONALD HUGH\nMcKINNON, ROSS C.\nMOFFETT, DONALD JOHN\nNAGLER, MELVIN A.\nNEILLY, EDWIN M.\nPEARSON, J. KENNETH W.\nQUISTWATER, GEORGE WM.\nWONG, W. C. NORMAN\nRICHMAN, HARVEY E.\nROSS, JOHN BETHUNE\nRUDD, KENNETH F.\nRYAN, MICHAEL M.\nSHEPARD, GARY LEE\nSHEPHERD, C. HERBERT\nSOUTHCOTT, JOHN C.\nSPRIGGS, CHARLES WM.\nSTANLEY, HAROLD ROBT.\nSUCHY, ALOIS\nTAPP, ROBERT C.\nTAYLOR, JOAN P.\nVALENTINE, EDWARD J.\nVANCE, JOHN VERNON\nVIGAR, NEIL W.\nWALPOLE, RICHARD A.\nWICKSON, R. ROGER J.\nWILSON, JAMES GREST\nWRIGHT, DAVID JOHN\nADAM, FREDERICK W.\nALEXANDER, RONALD L.\nALLAN, CHARLES RALPH\nBALDWIN, CHAS. BARRY\nBALLANTYNE, DAVID J.\nBARNSLEY, J. RICHARD\nBATTY, MARGARET L.\nBAUER, GEORGE H.\nBEAIRSTO, ROBERT E.\nBLAINE, ROBERT EARL\nBOOTH, ELIZABETH\nBULMER, JOHN PATRICK\nBUTLER, AUDREY EDITH\nCARPENTER, MARVIN A.\nCHOWNE, GODFREY H.\nCLARKE, J. ALFRED\nCOUTTS, ARTHUR F.\nDAY, PETER LAHORE\nDESBRISAY, A. GEORGE\nDEWIS, GEOFFREY\nDUCLOS, GERARD GEORGE\nEADIE, DESMOND A.\nEDWARDS, JACK L. T.\nERICKSON, JOHANN\nESHLEMAN, VALDEN M.\nFAST, VICTOR HAROLD\nFEARNSIDE, GWYNNETH J.\nFITZPATRICK, HUGH D.\nFLETCHER, ARTHUR ROBT.\nGARDINER, WINFIELD A.\nGILMORE, ROBT. CURRIE\nGLADSTONE, SYDNEY\n192 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Here are some Commercemen\nlooking for executive positions.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Commerce students look serious\nin class; perhaps they're wondering what to do at noon.\nHARRISON, JOHN PERRY\nHEIMBECKER, GRANT C.\nHONG, EDWARD\nHORNSTEIN, JOHN W.\nJOFFE, JAY LIONEL\nKENT, RICHARD F.\nLAIRD, DONALD GORDON\nLEAR, HOWARD FRANK\nLENEC, ALEXANDER\nLEVY, JOSEPH R. D.\nLEW, CHUCK\nLUSZTIG, PETER ALFRED\nMAIR, ALEXANDER IAN\nMALKIN, PHILIP LLOYD\nMcCABE, ALEXANDER K.\nMcGINLEY, MAURICE G.\nMacKAY, KENNETH R.\nMacKENZIE, CECIL ALEC\nMacMILLAN, JOHN W.\nMacRAE, DAPHNE JANE\nMILLER, ARTHUR E.\nMILLER, ELMER P.\nNELSON, WM. CAMERON\nNICHOLLS, TERRANCE\nNIVEN, JAMES LESLIE\nOHASHI, GENICHI\nOLAFSON, I. BENNETT 0.\nO'ROURKE, WM. GARRY\nPATERSON, RICHARD G.\nPATTERSON, COLIN GEO.\nPEGG, SIDNEY LAWRENCE\nPHILLIPS, ARTHUR\nPOWELL, FRANK ERNEST\nRESTON, JOHN CAMPBELL\nRIDLEY, ROBERT MURNEY\nRITCHIE, JOHN C.\nROBINSON, RONALD THOS.\nROSENBERG, KENNETH J.\nSALTER, WILLIAM JACK\nSCOTT, VERN H. K.\nST. JOHN, DOLWAY WILSON\nSTUART, WILLIAM DAVID\nTHOMPSON, LORIMER S.\nTHOMSON, WILSON BRUCE\nTURNER, JAMES FRANCIS\nVEAR, GWENDOLYN L.\nWEATHERALL, WM. A.\nWEEKS, GRAHAM G.\nWICKSON, MALCOLM C. J.\nWONG, DING MING\nYORKE, DENNIS 0.\nATKINS, GLEN CHARLES\nATKINSON, JOHN LYLE\nBAARDSEN, ARNOLD P.\nBADOVINAC, GEORGE\nBARTLETT, ROBERT E.\nBASI, BHAGAT SINGH\nBLACK, WILLIAM A.\nBROWN, JOHN JOSEPH\nBULMAN, PETER RALPH\nCAMPBELL, JANET EMILY\nCAMPBELL, NORMAN S.\nCAREW, N. DARRELL\nCHOW, KAM WING\nCHRISTIE, VALENTINE A.\nCOOK, THOMAS ARTHUR\nCOOPER, BRIAN ALISON\nCVETKOVICH, JOSEPH\nDIXON, RAY SPENCER\nDIXON, ROBERT TRENT\nDYKE, LORNE D. R. ECCOTT, JAMES ELIOT\nEGAN, JOHN BRUCE\nELLIOTT, GORDON A.\nEMERY, EDWARD H. ALAN\nFIRUS, ROBERT LEO\nGIBBS, JAMES RONALD .\nGORDON, CHARLES ATHOL\nGREGGOR, ROBERT E\nGUGLIELMIN, ALFRED A.\nHAACK, FRED EARL\nHALL, DLEAP S.\nHALL, DAVID ALBERT\nHAMILTON, JOHN F.\nHOWL, FRANK EDMUND\nJANDA, KVETOSLAV\nJONES, KENNETH F.\nJORDAN, E. KENNETH\nJOYCE, MURRAY RUSSELL\nKILBOURNE, CHARLES H.\nKIRKLAND, IAN A.\nKNIGHT, DONALD IAN\nKNIGHT, EDWARD HOWDEN\nLAANEMAE, TOIVO\nLECKIE, PETER D.\nMACIEJEWSKI, MARYAN\nMcCAMEY, W. LAFAYETTE\nMacDONALD, DAVID A. V.\nMacDONALD, SOMERLED\nMaclNNES, DUNCAN C. E.\nMocLAREN, GLEN\nMacLAREN, ANGUS\nMocLAREN, GRANT W.\nMacLEOD, ARTHUR ROBT.\nMacMILLAN, DOUGLAS T.\nMEEKER, HENRY CLEMONS\nMEYER, RICHARD BURTON\nMORRIS, KATHRINE L.\nMURDOCH, WM. RALPH\nNEIL, RUPERT C.\nNEISH, WM. JAMES\nNELSON, JOHN HOWARD\nNEWTON, JOHN FARADAY\nNORRIS, MACAULAY C.\nO'SHEA, JOS. KENNETH\nPARKER, WARWICK H. T.\nPEDERSON, GARY\nPEW, COLIN GIBSON\nPHILPOTT, DALE C.\nPIPER, ROBERT GEORGE\nPUNT, ALBERT CHARLES\nPOLLARD, SHIRLEY JEAN\nQUON, JOE\nRAE, BASIL ALLEN\nRICHARDSON, GORDON\nSALTER, KATHRYN M.\nSCHULTZ, RONALD F.\nSIMPSON, MARY LOUISE\nSLIGHT, GORDON PETER\nWONG, PAUL\nSTANDERWICK, THOMAS W.\nSTERLING, TOMMY CHAS.\nSTEWART, WILLIAM R.\nSWARTZ, FREDRIC\nTAYLOR, GEORGE H.\nTESSLER, DAVID\nTHOMAS, JOHN MALDWYN\nTHORPE, FRED DAVID\nTYSON, E. DOUGLAS\nUNDERHILL, J. GERALD\nUSHER, DONALD GEORGE\nVERCHERE, ARTHUR WM.\nVOLKER, RUSSELL JAS.\nWALLEY, PETER THOMAS\nWILSON, MARY LOIS\nWOLRIGE, ALAN F.\n194 \u00C2\u00BB\nHOME ECONOMICS\nTucked away in the new Home Economics Building is the headquarters of one of the most unique clubs\non the campus, the \"Hec Club\". This club does not\nnot ask fees but grants membership automatically to\nall undergrads of the faculty, and it has a programme\nvarying from social services to parties.\nEvery student registering in Home Economics is\nautomatically a member of the \"Hec Club\". At the\nmonthly meetings the club prsented films, guest speakers, and discussion groups, all designed to attract girls\nintending to make a career of Home Economics, be\ntheir goal dietetics, journalism, nutrition, research,\nteaching or marriage.\nThe largest project undertaken each year is one of\ncharity. This year the girls of the \"Hec Club\" presented\na Fashion Show where a silver collection was taken\nfor the \"Save the Children Fund\".\nBut the year was not all work and no play ... In\nthe fall the club sponsored a Frosh Tea and an Exchange Dance with the boys at Fort Camp. Spring saw\nthe highly-successful Fashion Show and the highlight\nof the year, the Home Economic Formal. Then came\nthe third and fourth year banquet, during which the\ngraduating class presented their advice and old notes\nto next year's class.\nBut all these activities could not have been realized\nwithout an efficient and hard-working executive. Leading of the executive and setting the example for all,\nwas the president, Doreen Albrecht. Working with\nher were Lora Stowell, Mardy Witham, June Kirk,\nHilary Yates, Anne Challenger, Judy Slinger, Stephany\nNotzel, Marg Coe, Ann Howarth, and Rene Miles.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Top: Home Ec Club Executive\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Below: Modern Home Ec Build-\nplans activities for its members,\ning facing Chancellor Boulevard.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Right: Practical courses include\ncooking, cleaning, weaving, for\nall home economics students.\nACORN, GERALDINE, M.\nANDERSON, BETTY R.\nBAILEY, MAUD F.\nBAIN, MAVIS AUDREY\nBARTRAM, FRANCES ANN\nBERRY, DONNA PHYLLIS\nCHALLENGER, M. ANNE\nDEBRECEN, JULIE I.\nDE PFYFFER, E. HELEN\nDIXON, DIANE MARIE\nDOBSON, FAY LORAINE\nGREEN, PATRICIA S.\nGWYTHER, BARBARA F.\nHACK, JULIA MARY\nHOBSON, ISOBEL MARY\nTHIRD\nYEAR t\nKERRY, ELIZABETH ANNE\nKILBORN, BARBARA JOAN\nKIRK, JUNE EVELYN\nLILLIE, JOAN MARJORIE\nLINFOOT, HELEN K.\nMONTALBETTI, DORIS I.\nNOTZEL, M. A. S.\nPOLLOCK, JEAN M.\nSMOLENSKY, CLARISSE M.\nSPARLING, CAROL JANE\nTUFF, FLORENCE JEAN\nWALDEN, PATRICIA FAYE\nWALKER, DOROTHY ANNE\nAMSKOLD, RUTH M.\nANNESLEY, E. PATRICIA\nBANERD, BLANCHE B.\nBENNETT, RUTH ELOISE\nBIGELOW, CYNTHIA ANN\nBUSHELL, DORIS EVELYN\nCAMERMAN, ESTHER\nCHU, VIVIAN GEORGINA\nEYFORD, MARGRET A.\nGAETZ, ELIZ. RAE\nGRANT, JOAN PHYLLIS D.\nGRAYSON, NORMA JEAN\nJACOBSEN, MARY ANN\nJOHNSON, KATHLEEN P.\nLEDGERWOOD, PATRICIA\nMcCALLUM, IRENE ETHEL\nMacDONALD, LILLIAN L.\nMEREDITH, LENORE J,\nMILES, EDITH IRENE\nMILLER, LILLIAN NINA\nMILLER, MARILYN JUNE\nMUNRO, CATHERINE A.\nNEWMAN, CONNIE P.\nPENDRAY, ELIZABETH M.\nPHILIP, ISABELLA MARY\nROSENBAUM, FLORENCE\nROY, UNA DOROTHY\nSLINGER, JUDITH EDEN\nUSHER, MARGARET I.\nVANDERHOEK, NELLY\nWARREN, DOREEN A.\nWILKINSON, BERNICE G.\nALLAN, MARY THERESA\nARMITAGE, SHIRLEY ANN\nAULD, VERONICA DOREEN\nBORAKS, LILLIAN JAGNA\nBRACHER, ANNE H.\nCAIRNS, RUTH LILLIAN\nCAPLE, H. ELAINE G.\nCOE. MARGARET ALICE\nCROFT, MARION E.\nDARLING. VALERIE ANN\nFOOTE. JUDITH JANE\nFORRESTER. NORMA GAY\nFRANKSEN, ELEANOR P.\nGILES, DEIRDRE ANNE\nGILMOUR. MARY A.\nGOUDY, KATHARINE ROSE\nGREEN, MAXINE W.\nHARPER. P. DIANE\nHAWKINS. SHIRLEY JOAN\nHIGGINBOTTOM, LOUISE\nJACKSON, BEVERLY ANN\nJAGGER, BARBARA JOAN\nJOHNSTONE, MARY ANNE\nKENNEDY, MARGARET A.\nMANSON, BARBARA J.\nMcLEAN, MARY JANE\nMocLENNAN, MARY\nMcPHERSON, ELSPETH J.\nMEADOWS, SYLVIA M.\nMIYAGISHIMA, LORRAINE\nMOLSON, MARGARET E.\nNEAVE, A. ELIZABETH\nOVERAND, G.A.\nPARK, FRANCES EVELYN\nPENTLAND, ANN McGILL\nROBERTSON, LOIS\nSHARP, J. KATHLEEN\nSMITH, DONNA ROSE\nSORENSEN, SONJA\nTOWNSLEY, M. ANNETTE\nWEIR, E. CHRISTINE\nWEST, SUSAN\nWINSKILL, CAROL E.\nWOLVERTON, BERNICE E.\nZACK, JACQUELIN\n196 *\nf\nPHYSICAL EDUCATION\nThe popularity of the Physical Education course on\nthe campus has been greatly enhanced by the opening\nof the new War Memorial Gymnasium and the recent\nestablishment of the department as the School of Physical Education. The PE Undergraduate Society has also\ncreated much enthusiasm for the course through its\nvaried activities and functions on the campus.\nThe homecoming weekend was the date for the third\nannual golf tournament between the graduating class\nand the staff. It was a repeat performance for the staff\nwhen they walked away with the championship, but\nit was reported that many of them had spent long hours\npracticing.\nLater in the fall term, the society sponsored the\n\"Hoboes' Hop\", which was held in the women's gymnasium. The second year class handled all the arrangements and the proceeds are to help complete the\ncommon room for the society.\nThe post-Christmas activity centred around the preparation and presentation of this year's annual Physical\nEducation Variety Show, \"The Sultan's Daughter\".\nPlaying to good crowds for three performances, the\nshow featured many fine gymnastic displays that set\noff the well acted plot of the play itself. A traditional\n\"after party\" celebrated the completion of the show.\nThe proceeds from the show will help to buy furnishings for the proposed common room. This project\nhas been given a great deal of consideration by the student body who wish to wall off one of the unfinished\nrooms. This will provide a general purpose room, suitable for meetings, study and recreation.\nThe graduation banquet concluded the activities of\nthe society. The members of the graduating class gathered together to bid good-bye to the members of the\nstaff, under whose guidance they had received their\nBachelor of Physical Education degrees.\nTop: P.E. Undergraduate Society Executive.\nP.E. class chalk talk.\nBottom left: Swimming class held at the Crystal Pool. Centre:\nHand stand on high bar for P.E. 300 course. Right: back flip\non trampoline. ASELTINE, ADELE ROSE\nBERRY, ALAN KEITH R.\nBORTHWICK, ALAN H.\nBRADSHAW, JOHN HOWARD\nCAMPBELL, KENNETH\nCOVEY, ELLIOTT JOHN\nCRAFTER, JANET R.\n1\n;if\nHOOD, JEAN AUDREY\nKENNEDY, HELEN LOUISE\nKIRCHNER, GLEN\nLEAH, AUDREY MARION\nMELLISH, KATHLEEN F.\nSHUNTER, DAVID ERNEST\nUPSON, GEO. WM. BRIAN\nZAHARKO, DANIEL S.\nADE, BETTY UINA MAY\nALDERMAN, RICHARD B.\nCARDELL, PAUL WILHELM\nCOLE, DOUGLAS EUGENE\nCROSETTI, EBERT JOHN\nELLIOTT, GERALD B.\nFORNEY, PAUL JULIUS\nGORWILL, RUTH JEAN\nHARRISON, MARY LOY\nHARTMAN, DOLORES E.\nHUTCHINSON, WILLIAM E.\nIRWIN, F. LORNE\nKENYON, GERALD SIDNEY\nLAWSON, STANLEY DAVID\nLEVERSAGE, RONALD G.\nMAXWELL, JOHN JAMES\nMcKELVIE, ROYDEN W.\nMcquillan, patricia m.\nmitchell, william p.\nnyhaug, ernie omar\npekovich, daniel\nramslie, gunnar john\nrobinson, james a.\nrourke, wm. harold\nsclater, shirley b.\nseymour, george w.\nsheridan, margaret m.\nskinner, donald wm.\nslutsky, morris bert\nsmith, enid elizabeth\nstrange, patricia m.\ntahara, michitaka\nthompson, donald roy\ntodd, james stewart\nwarnock, joseph h.\nwhyte, william arthur\nwilson, william blyth\nwinter, evelyn anne\nBECK, RAY BERNARD\nBRINHAM, S. DOUGLAS\nDAWSON, DAPHNE JOAN\nDRISCOLL, DIANE I.\nGAWTHORN, HAROLD JACK\nGNUCCI, JOSEPH PETER\nGOLDIE, ROBERT ALAN\nGOODSHIP, JEFFREY L.\nGRISDALE, DENIS A.\nHARRISON, MARIE ORLA\nHENNIGER, MARGARET A.\nKARADIMAS, RONNIE L\nKENT, STEPHANIE JOAN\nKNIGHT, JOSEPH IRVING\nKUSHNIR, WILLIAM\nKYASHKO, WILLIAM\nMocFARLANE, REGINALD\nMcGARRIGLE, GAIL L.\nMoclNNIS, J. RONALD\nMcLEAN, ROBERT HUGHES\nMOFFAT, W. GORDON\nMORRISETTE, PATRICIA\nMURPHY, CLARENCE P.\nPEARSON, MARY JEAN\nPIKE, SHIRLEY JOAN\nROOTS, FREDERICK F.\nRUSSELL, MARILYN R. E.\nSCHAFER, MABEL JEAN\nSHORE, DONALD JAS. B.\nSMITH, WILLIAM H.\n198 .\nFORESTRY UNDERGRADS\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Above: Forestry Undergraduate Society.\nBelow: Forestry students work on microscopes.\nForestry undergrads do not have a separate undergraduate society, but all members of the faculty belong\nto the Forest Club. Bill Sharpe acted as Club president\nfor '51-'52, while Sel Fox was vice-president and Alf\nCuthbert and Jim McWilliams were treasurer and\nsecretary respectively.\nThe Forest Club Executive planned the many activities of the group this year. Early fall saw the \"Slashburn\nStag\" held at Spanish Banks. Members of both under-\n199\ngraduate and faculty attended the bonfire affair. Inspired men of the woods entered a logging truck in\nthe Homecoming Parade in October. Foresters turned\nout in droves to the Club's Frolic, held at the Gai Paree\nin November.\nLike most other faculties on the campus, the Foresters heralded the approach of spring with a big dance.\nLater on in March, the annual banquet was the big\nfeature on a forest man's calendar.\nForestry Engineering men are particularly proud of\ntheir displays this year\u00E2\u0080\u0094their working model sawmill\nwon them first prize at the \"Engineer's Highball\" and\ncopped top honors in awards class two at Open House.\nTony Robinson, who arranged the Forestry Undergrad issue of the Ubyssey, edited the Club's annual\n\"The Forester\". Norman Godfrey, Dave Wallinger, and\nNeil Hood assisted him in producing the 80-page slick\nmagazine, which hit the campus late in April.\nOne of the unique features of the course is the required training period spent at the University Research\nForest north of Haney. The calendar, which states that\nthe area is well suited for \"research in forestry and related sciences\", doesn't quite capture the atmosphere of\na combined stag party and beard-growing contest that\nprevails when the foresters literally hit the trail .\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Forestry students at work in classroom.\n1 >#k **\n|HH\n-P-H __^__H^ _T_H ______\nf \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 fl .**_*\nAm* ~*l\nmmmJBM\nT\"*^^^tel^B\nI ll\n''^r*9**^\n^^^__^_^_n\n___HB_F_Ew -\ny\u00C2\u00BB% gap-.\n^^^^^^r^^_^7-^^\n_IH?idH\nW-mmW ^\nMJ\u00C2\u00A3^M*Nr\n^^^pii^\nW^<' ^** HIRD\nBOYD, KENNETH GEORGE\nBRUELS, WILMOT FLINT\nCRUICKSHANK, GEO. F.\nGODFREY, JOHN NORMAN\nGRANT, DONALD T.\nHOUGH, WILLIAM S.\nLITTLE, JAMES DOUGLA.\nMclNNES, DAVID LESLIE\nMocQUEEN, JOHN ROBT.\nMcWilliams, james f.\nmoore, richard s.\nrobson, peter elliott\nsturgeon, john a.\narmit, ian david m.\nblagg, neil anthony\ndesaulniers, victor n.\ndixon, nuttall m. f.\ngilbert, richard d.\nhood, neil leroy\nmuri, glen allen\nmyers, john graham\nscholefield, a. j.\nwood, robert s.\nbellamy, chas. peter\ncampbell, lloyd allan\nduffy, patrick james\nharris, peter\nhope, laurence andrew\nkelly, emerson boyd\nkemp, david burnett\nkun, steve peter f.\nmarshall, donald geo.\nmarshall, james e.\nmaxwell, william f.\nMacRAE, RONALD D.\nPELTON, NORMAN RALPH\nPORTELANCE, J. H.\nSUTTON, WILLIAM GRANT\nVAUCHER, RAYMOND J.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Left: Practical work in Forestry provided many fresh air classes away from\nstuffy lecture rooms.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Rugged Foresters ready for a hard\nday's work.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Right: Students show off home away\nfrom home.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bottom left: Diesel Juggernaut provided Forestry with impressive homecoming display.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Right: Elizabeth Wetton Robinson,\nonly girl Forester.\n200 #.-\nLAW\nMushrooming from a tiny 1947 class in an army\nhut to one of North America's top schools housed in\n$300,000 worth of glass and concrete, UBC's law faculty\ndominated campus political activity, staged moot courts,\npublished a magazine, and probably put in more studying time per student than any group in the university.\nPresided over by Dean George Curtis, an energetic\nRhodes Scholar from Dalhousie, the school has become\na carefully integrated part of legal life in B.C.\nThree senior students were appointed during the\nyear to offer legal advice to the Alma Mater Society.\nTheir efforts helped keep the Society out of court.\nScholastic effort included the preparation of a dozen\nthick case-books, mimeographed and distributed (9000\ncopies of them) to universities across Canada. The\nlaw library expanded to include 20,000 books worth\nmore than $100,000. All of them were moved from the\nold law huts to the new building in less than two\nhours by energetic undergrads who refused to suffer\nthe delays of professional moving.\nThe undergrad magazine \"Legal Notes\", a slick\npaper job turned out twice a year, expanded circulation to include downtown lawyers. It provided and\noutlet for students with strong views on legal affairs\nand served as a training ground for those who hoped\nlater to write for legal journals.\nThe Law Undergraduate Society, link between\nfaculty and students, was this year headed by Gus\nCoughlin. LUS is responsible for the setting up and\noperation of the Moot Courts before which first and\nsecond year students argue while third year students\njudge. It is an integral part of the law school's training.\nLate in November a stone fragment from the Inner\nTemple of London was laid by the entrance to the\nnew law building. A gift from the B.C. Law Society,\nthe stone was presented in an official ceremony by W.\nH. Haldane, Q.C.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Top: Law Undergraduate Society Executive New\nLaw Building\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bottom left: Reception Desk in Law Building\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Moot Court.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Center: Moving the Law Library to the New\nBuilding\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Ri_ht: Laying the Stone from the Inner Temple 8122SL\nCALLAGHAN, HOWARD A.\nCAMPBELL, J. A. GRANT\nCAMPBELL, GEORGE THOS.\nCHEFFINS, RONALD IAN\nCOUPAR, ROBERT BROUGH\nDUDLEY, LEONARD C.\nFALCONER, ROBT. J.\nFEDYK, JOHN JOSEPH\nFEE, THOMAS PHILIP\nFLADER, STELLA\nFRANCK, THOMAS\nGEE, MARGARETE JEAN\nGILCHRIST, ROBT. WM.\nHERBERT, FREDERICK H.\nHUMMEL, D. M. W.\nJONES, DARRELL DONALD\nKENNEDY, WILLIAM J. J.\nKORICAN, TOMMY\nLAWRENCE, JAMES W.\nLINDHOLM, LOUIS F.\nMocPHAIL, DONALD ROSS\nNOLD, JOSEPH JULIAN\nPHILPOTT, WM. E.\nREE, ANGUS C\nRHODES, THOMAS ALFRED\nROBERTSHAW, HECTOR E.\nTURNER, GEO. GODFREY\nWALKER, CLARENCE A.\nWALKER, G. WILLIAM\nWOOTTON, A. FRANCES\nYOUNG GORDON W.\nANFIELD S DAVID\nBANFIELD, C. JANE\nBLACK, DELBERT ERROL\nBOUWMAN, ROLAND J.\nCAMPNEY, ALAN F.\nCHAPMAN, GEORGE G.\nCHICHURA, EDWARD M.\nCHRISTIE, NORMA BELL\nCHRISTOPHER, GORDON A.\nCLARE, LORNE P.\nCLARK, SIDNEY GEORGE\nCORBETT, LORNE RAE\nDENT, NORMAN GARETH\nDROST, IAN LOUDEN\nFELTHAM, IVAN REID\nFLADER, CHARLES\nFRASER, JOHN ALLEN\nGOLDSMITH, ALLAN\nGOULT, JOHN B. EAMER\nGREEN, STEPHEN H.\nHAAPALA, ROY\nHAMILTON, HOWARD J.\nHANNAN, A. K.\nHARVEY, RONALD BRUCE\nHELGASON, G. ALLAN\nHILLMAN, KEITH A. L.\nHUNTER, JOHN WILFRED\nINDRIDSON, ALVIN\nIVENS, JOHN BOYD M.\nJONES, JOHN C.\nKEFFER, JAMES L\nLEE, BRUCE ALEXANDER\nLOWES, PETER DONALD\nMAWHINNEY, DONALD J. S.\nMacDONALD, JOHN A.\nMcGEER, MICHAEL G.\nMcLELLAN, HELEN JANE\nMcLEOD, SHIRLEY E. KAY\nMOIR, REGINALD J. S.\nMULHOLLAND, WM. H.\nNEEN, WILLIAM ADAM\nPEACOCK, JOAN S.\nPERRY, KENNETH LUCAS\nPRENTICE, THOS. BRIAN\nPYNE, MELVILLE R.\nSCHACHTER, BERNARD\nSCOTT, GEORGE E.\nSHAW, JAMES KEITH\nSHEPPARD, ROBERT F.\nSIER, HERBERT NORMAN\nSINCLAIR, ROBERT A.\nSMITH, GLENN ELWIN\nSWEET, DAVID GEORGE\nTHOMPSON, WILLIAM S.\nWATSON, JOHN BEYETT\nWHITEHEAD, FRANK E.\nWISMER, JAMES STUART\nWITHRINGTON, GEORGE P.\nYOUNGSON, DAVID L.\n202 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nt\nPHARMACY\nThe Pharmacy College at UBC is now in its sixth\nyear, and although young in comparison to the other\nfaculties on the campus, it has developed since its inauguration.\nThis year the Undergrad Society had a young lady as\nits president, and in this capacity Miss Pat James aptly\nconducted all pharmacy affairs. The other committee\nmembers were Bob Alexander, vice-president; Peggy\nSmith, secretary-treasurer; Jack Duller, publicity; Ray\nCounsel., sports; Gordon Dalby, social convener; Doug\nFraser and Peter Malyik, USC Reps.; Louanne Davies,\nWUS Rep.\nPharmacy activities started on the second week of\nthe school term with the Annual Pharmacy mixer at the\nAlma Academy. Doug Franklin, master of ceremonies,\nadded to the evening's enjoyment by giving out spot\nprizes and lucky tickets. Due to the efforts of the\norganizer, Gordon Dalby, the party was a great success.\nIn the intramurals, Pharmacy made quite a name\nfor itself. They won all soccer games played, gave stiff\ncompetition in volleyball and badminton, fielded an excellent team in basketball, and readily participated in\nthe softball tournaments. All this was drawn from a\nfaculty totalling 136 students, of whom 27 were the so-\ncalled weaker sex.\nThe activities of Pharmacy reached their climax in\nMarch, when the 4th year students had their Graduation Banquet and Ball at the Panorama Roof of the\nHotel Vancouver.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Top: Pharmacy Undergraduate Council\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Pharmacy Student marking Lab Preparations.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bottom Left: 4th year Organic Chem. Lab.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Right: Pharmacy Lab. ALEXANDER, ROBERT B.\nALLEN, DAVID CLIFFORD\nAQUA, NITA JUDITH\nARMOUR, B. DOREEN\nBASS, PAUL\nCOUNSELL, RAYMOND E.\nDAVENPORT, HAROLD L. '\nDAVIES, LOUANNE C.\nDIEBEL, HARRY K.\nELSDON, DIANA JANE\nFAST, ARTHUR C.\nFRASER, DOUGLAS H.\nFRYKLIND, VERNON T.\nHATCHER, THOMAS G.\nHENZIE, WM. JACK\nHOLLINGER, ROY HESLA\nKOVRCHIK, JAMES C.\nMcCARLEY, DEAN R.\nMocEWAN, JOYCE LUELLA\nMcKIM, DENNIS C.\nNIGHTINGALE, FRANK H.\nNORDLUND, LLOYD G.\nPICKERING, WILF. E.\nROCHE, EVELYN BLANCHE\nROWELL, HEDLEY J.\nROWE, WILLIAM HILEY\nSANCHIONI, CARLO\nSAUNDERS, VERNON A.\nSCOTT, ROSS ALEXANDER\nSHARP, JAMES\nSMITHERS, DOROTHY M.\nSTAIGER, GEORGE WM.\nSTALEY, NORMAN E.\nSTATHERS, HAROLD E.\nTHIBAUDEAU, DENIS U.\nTHOMAS, NORMAN S.\nTHOMSON, ROBERT B.\nWELLS, CHARLES C.\nWILEY, FRED. WM.\nWILSON, JOAN\nYZWA, ADAM LEONARD\nANTOSZ, PAUL PETER\nASHLEY, R. CALVIN\nBEKOS, JAMES BASIL\nBLAKE, ELIZABETH H.\nBRYDEN, MARJORIE A B.\nBUCKHOLZ, HENRY\nBURDOCK, BRYAN B.\nCOOPER, PHYLLIS M.\nCORY, ALLAN M.\nDARLING, JAMES R.\nDEERING, IRMA K. N.\nDELMAS, FRANCIS C.\nDEROO, HENRY W.\nFARRIS, WALTER HENRY\nGAWIUK, MICHAEL N\nKELLEY, DORA E.\nKLASSEN, ABRAHAM\nLESAGE, VERONICA M.\nLINBURG, JACK GEORGE\nMocLEAN, JAMES A\nMORROW, BLAKE E.\nNELMES, THOS. G. OWEN\nNOEL, ROSS NORMAN\nROBINSON, DAVID NEIL\nSMITH, CYRIL BEE\nSMITH, GLENN WILLIAM\nSPENCER, ALFRED JOHN\nTADMAN, B. BLOOMA\nWARD, KENNETH L\nWARNE, JAMES ARTHUR\nWICKMAN, THOMAS\nWONG, WING SUNG JACK\nWOOD, K. CLAIRE C\nYUSKOU, WALTER\n204 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Left: Dorm girls pretend to study while listening to friends tell of day's\nadventures on campus.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Above: AMS presidential candidates stand on their platforms (?)\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Above right: Chem. students only contribution to the field of drama:\n\"Denatured Boy\". FRATERNITIES: SALLY HEARD w\n207 Anderson, Phil\nAnstis, William\nArmour, Les\nBasi, Raghbir\nClarke, Stan\nFarry, Gerrard\nFeltham, Ivan\nFranklin, Doug\nGoldsmith, Alan\nLyon, Vaughn\nMcFarlane, Dave\nNold, Joe\nOstrum, Brock\nPatterson, Frank\nSparling, Bill\nTennant, John\nTaylor, Pat\nWestcott, Al\nSigma Tau Chi\nCarlson, Irene\nChave, Dorothy\nChoma, Anne\nDonaldson, Nonie\nFraser, Joan\nGyles, Theo\nHeard, Sally\nHutcheison, Anne\nJames, Susan\nLett, Mary\nMcArthur, Joan\nScott, Lila\nSouthin, Mary\nStewart, Shiela\nWooton, Anna\nDelta Sigma Pi\n208 PAN-HELLENIC ASSOCIATION\nINTER-FRATERNITY COUNCIL\n209 FIRST ROW: Adamson, Nan; Barnes, Barbara; Birkinshaw, B.; Branca, Dolores; Byrne, A.\nSECOND ROW: Coutts, Doreen; Challenger, Ann; Crossman, A.; Dalgleish, D.; Dodson, F.\nTHIRD ROW: Driver, Shirley; Ellergot, G.; Fetherstonhaugh, P.; Holtby, M.; Kerry, B. A.\nFOURTH ROW: Kramer, Louanne; Lancaster, Diane; Marshall, Jane; Newell, G.; Pinsky, B.\nFIFTH ROW: Riches, Eleanor; Simpson, Ruth; Stevens, Vickie; Stowell, Lora; Wilson, S.\nSIXTH ROW: Wooster, Shirley, Yates, Hilary.\nMISSING: Banfield, Jane; Crumb, Pat; Mosher, Dorothy; McLeod, S.; Simonson, I.\nAlpha Delta Pi\n210 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2_ i -\u00C2\u00BB\nFIRST ROW: Abercombia, Elizabeth; Albrecht, Doreen; Bain, Mavis; Connell, Rae; Davies, D.\nSECOND ROW: Easterbrook, Audrey; Fletcher, D.; Griffin, S. A.; Harrison, M.; Letherdale, D.\nTHIRD ROW: McKinnon, Mary; McRae, Marie; Matchett, Marilyn; Naylor, L.; Nettleton, D.\nFOURTH ROW: Notzel, Stephanie; Rose, Shelagh; Schrodt, Barbara; Sheppard, B.; Stewart, A.\nFIFTH ROW: Tamboline, Beverly; Yurich, Mary.\nMISSING: Cummins, D.; Lervold, S.; Moore, S.; Sparling, D.; Spring, Pat; Wolstencroft, Joan.\nAlpha Gamma Delta\n211 FIRST ROW: Berry, Donna; Bigelow, Cynthia; Booth, Elizabeth; Brodd, Elin; Cockburn, Sandra\nSECOND ROW: Hobson, Isobel; Home, Eleanor; Home, Trisha; Kelly, Maureen; Kirk, Ada\nTHIRD ROW: King, Joanne; McAlpine, Mayli; McMillan, Muriel; Metcalfe, S.; Richardson, R.\nFOURTH ROW: Stalker, Marguerite; Thomas, Gertrude; Vear, G.; Walker, A. Windebank, C.\nFIFTH ROW: Woodcock, Lillian.\nMISSING: Achison, M.; Marshall, P.; McLean, Mary; Shankland, Beryl; Simonsen, Ruth.\nAlpha Omicron Pi\n212 FIRST ROW: Batty, Margaret; Boon, Elaine; Bray, Maureen; Butler, Audrey; Byrne, P.\nSECOND ROW: Campbell, Shirley; Clohosey, Mary; Feamside, Gwyn; Grady, P.; Hall, M.\nTHIRD ROW: Hammarstrom, Louise; Hodson, Joan; James, Patricia; Jay, Anita; Leir, Esther\nFOURTH ROW: Lewis, Shirley; Lynch, Barbara; Kearns, Sheila; Kolle, Phyllis, MacDougall, S.\nFIFTH ROW: Millard, Patricia; Moore, Sylvia; Muir, Daryl; Nelson, Claire L.; Northrop, N.\nSIXTH ROW: Pitcaim, Alice; Porteous, Merle; Rolston, Joyce; Saul, Beverly; Seymour, S.\nSEVENTH ROW: Smith, Marian; Stevens, Marilyn; Sutherland, Shirley.\nMISSING: Derry, Elizabeth; Hack, Julie; Pauls, Marjorie; Ross, Mary; Smith, Peggy.\n&-\\nAlpha Phi\n213 FIRST ROW: Andrew, Milla; Baldwin, Marion; Bissett, Ann; Bissett, Connie; Binns, Barbara.\nSECOND ROW: Boniface, Rosemary; Colquhoun, Peggy; Cox, Diana; Eades, G.; Fletcher, L.\nTHIRD ROW: Furniss, Pat; Glasgow, Beverly; Grant, Phyllis; Gyles, Theo; Hood, Jean.\nFOURTH ROW: Hopkins, Mona; Horsey, Julie; James, Susan; Lett, Mary; McDougall, Anne.\nFIFTH ROW: McKee, Jean; Mellish, Katy; Miller, Marilyn; Munro Cathy; Murphy, Joan.\nSIXTH ROW: Murray, Nancy; Novak, Marion; Plant, Elva; Ritchie, Ina; Sclater, Shirley.\nSEVENTH ROW: Smith, Frances; Taylor Pat; Welch, Joan; Wilson, Marilou; Wrinch, M.\nDelta Gamma\n214 FIRST ROW: Dattner, Sylvia; Dodek, Sally; Green, Myra\nSECOND ROW: Hallis, Pamela; Hollenberg, Marilynn; Rosenbaum, Florence\nTHIRD ROW: Shlafmitz, Fran; Smolensky, Clarisse; Srolovitz, Sarah\nFOURTH ROW: Tadman, Blooma; Toban, Sheila; Weinstein, Lilian\nFIFTH ROW: Zabensky, Reva\nMISSING: Aaron, Barbara; Aqua, Nita; Camerman, Esther.\nDelta Phi Epsilon\n215 FIRST ROW: Boulter, Pegge; Corbett, Barbara; Cree, Hugheen; Dean, Shirley; Denman, B.\nSECOND ROW: De Pfyffer, Helen; Dixon, Diane; Dobson, Fay; Elworthy, Diane, Forbes, B.\nTHIRD ROW: Forrester, M.; Gilchrist, J.; Graham, S.; Hall, B.; Henderson, A.\nFOURTH ROW: Holloway, B.; Kennedy, E.; MacCorkindale, M.; MacKenzie, S.; McLennan, P.\nFIFTH ROW: Malcomson, S.; Marchese, Irene; Munro, Mary F.; Murray, Arden; Pleuman, Nan.\nSIXTH ROW: Ridley, B.; Shannahan, Pat; Stewart, Kay; Taylor, Mary; Thompson, Connie.\nSEVENTH ROW: Usher, E.; Willis, Ann; Wilson, Betty; Wiltse, Betty; Wiltse, Patricia.\nGamma Phi Beta\n216 FIRST ROW: Arneson, Molly E.; Bagshaw, Carolyn; Bloedel, Eulalie; Browne, Betty\nSECOND ROW: Chadwick, Mary; Flaten, Barbara; Graham, Jane; McCurrach, Helen\nTHIRD ROW: McEachran, Ailsa; McGiverin, Sheila; McLaren, Ann; Martin, Wendy\nFOURTH ROW: Olsen, Janice; Rittich, Mary; Say Jill; Stewart, Sheila\nFIFTH ROW:Strachan, Doris; Stralendorff, Shirley; Yoxall, Eileen\nMISSING: Jan Caple\nKappa Alpha Theta\n217 FIRST ROW: Anderson, Deidre; Blois, Sheila; Bowell, Shirley; Braide, Penny; Brown, Sally.\nSECOND ROW: Cameron, Anne; Cooper Brenda; DuVernet, Mary; Fraser, Joan; Gell, M.\nTHIRD ROW: Glanville, Rosalie; Guild, Mareen; Harris, Daphne; Harwood, H.; Heard, S.\nFOURTH ROW: Houston, Elizabeth; McDonald, P.; Millham, M.; Nelson, B.; Partridge, J.\nFIFTH ROW: Pitts, Shary; Pop, Alice; Pop, Katy; Potter, Carol; Ross, Betsy.\nSIXTH ROW: Scott, Edith; Sick, Marney; Thatcher, Joan; Wright, Valerie.\nKappa Kappa Gamma\n218 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\n*\nAnderson, R.\nBaker, R.\nBarker, T.\nBarter, Phillip\nBlair, Huch\nChowne, Godfrey\nClyne, Stuart\nDawson, Robert\nDixon, Ray\nEccott, J.\nFerrie, Michael\nFoxall, Ronald\nFraser, W.\nFredrickson, J. M.\nGray, Patrick\nGreen, Alton\nGrimston, George\nHamilton, J.\nHerb, Jack\nHilborn, W.\nHopkins, T.\nHutchins, Kier\nInsley, Alan\nMacleod, Charles\nMacMillan, J.\nMain, Gerald\nMathews, R.\nMillham, H.\nNelson, William\nNewton, John\nPalmer, Gerald\nPeritz, D.\nRay, Martin\nRidley, Robert\nRosenberg, G.\nRosenberg, Kenneth\nRyler, James\nSellens, W.\nShalman, Denis\nSinclair, Grover\nStavey, David\nStanfield, D.\nTempleman, Peter\nThomson, J. H.\nWickson, Malcolm\nWilkinson, Kenneth\nWillis, W.\nMISSING:\nMatheson, Roger\nEmary, Allen\nAlpha Delta Phi\n219 FIRST ROW: Berquist, E. A.; Booth, A.; Clark, A.; Cockling, R. E.; Coe, J. E.; Constabaris, John\nSECOND ROW: Craig, Jeffray; Davies, J,; Dickenson, B.; Emerton, W. R.; Falconer, Robert; Fee, Phil\nTHIRD ROW: Fransen, L.; Gilchrist, R.; Gilroy W.; Hogan, Dick; Holmes, Vincent, Indridson, Alvin\nFOURTH ROW: Jephson, Ross; Le Blanc, Raymond; Lilly, A.; Long, John; McAllister, D.; MacDona.ld J.\nFIFTH ROW: McDonald, Vern; McMwnn, J.; Middleton, R. M.; Mawhinney, J. D.; Neen, W.; Potter, J.\nSIXTH ROW: Ppyer, I. G.; Reddon, J. G; Reston, John; Robertson, R.; Savage, Ronald; Stanley, Harold\nSEVENTH ROW: Stathers, H.; Thompson, W.; Trunkfield, Chris; Tufts, Ivan; Vigar, Neil, Wilks, E.\nEIGHTH ROW: Wismer, J. Stuart\nAlpha Tau Omega\n220 J.\nFIRST ROW: Bancroft, John; Bodlak, S.; Baker, G.; Cassady, G; Clark, Jim; Creighton, D.; Deeble, Doug.\nSECOND ROW: Desaulnier, N.; Duncan, Ted; Engman, H.; Ewing, B.; Feltham, I.; Franklin, D.; Gardner, D.\nTHIRD ROW: Granthem, P.; Gunning, K.; Gutteridge, T.; Hudson, D.; Jaffary, B.; Johnson, D.; Ketchen, P..\nFOURTH ROW: Kringhaug, O.; Larsen, D.; Lee, T.; LePage, M.; Little, B.; McGhee, J.; MacGillivray, D.\nFIFTH ROW: McGinley, F.; McGinley, G.; McRae, R.; McWilliams, J.; Martindale, M.; Mills, J.; Olson, H.\nSIXTH ROW: Parke, Al; Parke, G.; Pearce, D.; Reid, D.; Ritchie, J.; Ross, J.; Sharpe, Delbert\nSEVENTH ROW: Sherlock, Douglas; Southcott, J.; Taylor, P.; Walton, Norm; Webster, Alex; Webster, H;\nWhitworth, Doug.\nEIGHTH ROW: Yorke, Dennis\nBeta Theta Pi\n221 FIRST ROW: Bianco, Ernest; Burge, C. W. M.; Day, Ephriam; Dolan, Owen\nSECOND ROW: Eso, Joe; Evans, Hugh A.; Everidge, C. P.; Fitzpatrick, Hugh\nTHIRD ROW: Frederick, Eugene; Gallbraith, A. J.; Gray, Donald S.; Gregory, George\nFOURTH ROW: Horcoff, Mike; Horner, Lyle M.; MacKenzie, Ian; McLaren, Angus\nFIFTH ROW: Nelson, Rodger; Nichols, Douglas; Thorne, Trevor; Wood, Jim\nDelta Kappa Epsilon\n222\n_ Anderson, Phil\nBouck, John\nCarson, Dick\nCarter, Jim\nChristopher, Bob\nCobbin, Alex\nCobbin, Allan\nDavies, Bill\nEdwards, Doug.\nEdwards, Bob\nEpp, Walter\nFawcus, Ken\nFee, Rae\nFlather, Barrie\nFlather, Elwood\nForbes, Bill\nGiegerich, Henry\nGodefroy, David\nHamilton, Neil\nHannan, Pat\nHindmarch, Bob\nLevy, Dan\nLusztig, Peter\nJenkinson, Ton-\nJohnson, Ross\nLarsen, Dan\nMacDonald, John\nMacDonald, Ted\nNelson, Ron\nNold, Joe\nParkin, Doug\nPearce, Ted\nReid, John\nRowan, John\nRudd, Ken\nShephard, Herb\nSmyth, Don\nStewart, Jim\nTaylor, Gregory\nValentine, Doug\nValentine, Ted\nWatts, Doug\nWeatherall, Bill\nWeeks, Graham\nWest, Michael\nWestlake, Don\nRiley, Bill\n&b\nDelta Upsilon\n223 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nFIRST ROW: Anfield, David; Angell, Doug.; Bell, Wm. J.; Blackhall, Robt.; Borthwick, Alan\nWest, Donald\nSECOND ROW: Burgess, Robert; Byman, Allan; Castillou, Harry; Coates, Peter; Dallas, G. D.\nTHIRD ROW: DeLuca Earl; Grauer, L. P.; Gill, Gerald; Harris, Don; HoIIingon, Victor.\nFOURTH ROW: Homstein, Herbert; Johnson, Ross; King, L. A.; Lundy, Deane; McArthur, H.\nFIFTH ROW: MacFarlane, David; McLeod, D. R.; MacMillan, D.; Markham, W.; Miachika, A.\nSIXTH ROW: Milley, D. G.; Moirett, Robert; Morrie, L. F.; Mottishaw, Henry; Nestmman, J.\nEIGHTH ROW: Smith, M. D.; Stanway, Ross; Tarlton, Jim; Tanner, W. H. R.; Vance, J.\nKappa Sigma\n224 FIRST ROW: Bajkov, Alexander; Baldwin, Barry; Cullen, David; Fedyk, John.\nSECOND ROW: Harrison, John P.; Harrison, William F.; Hood, Alan; Jack, Don.\nTHIRD ROW: Jenkins, D. L.; Kerr, Robert; Laramy, Barry; Macleod, Norman.\nFOURTH ROW: Moisey, John; Patterson, Frank; Rendell, Jerry; Riopel, Jean Paul\nFIFTH ROW: Roberts, Brian; Steacy, Newton; Stephens, Victor; Stewart, Robert\nSIXTH ROW: Taylor O. M.;Vance, E. Rod; Wade, Edwin; Wall, David.\nMISSING: Biehl, Norman; Bekos, Jim; Bird, John; Campbell, David; Clarke, Colin; Dawson.F\nDawson, John; Holland, Mickie; Knight, Don; Loukes, Pat; McDorman, L.; Marshall, R.\nMorrison, J.; Noble, K.; Pattison, J.; Razzell, B.; Stonier, P.; Towriss, A.; Wallace, C.\nWatson, Ken; Wylie, Douglas.\nLambda Chi Alpha\n225 Abercrombie, Robin\nAlair, R. P.\nAnderson, John\nAtkinson, John\nBradshaw, John\nCook, P.\nCook, T. A.\nFiler, Roderick\nFowler, Gordon\nGilley, Jim\nGrady, Dickson\nHarbottle, Bert\nHendry, James\nHodgson, W. L.\nHogarth, Gordon\nJackes, Robert\nJensen, Colin\nKelly, B.\nKennedy, J. B.\nKennedy, William\nLambert, Douglas\nLoutit, James\nLyall, G. C.\nMair, Ian\nMorrison, J. H.\nMcKay, Bruce\nMacKendrick, W. G.\nMcLeod, Doug.\nMcNaughton, John R.\nMcNicol, J.\nO'Brien, G. W.\nOstrosser, D.\nPark, J. K.\nPaterson, R. G.\nPhillips, Art\nPloyart, John W.\nRae, Allen\nRidley, Jack C.\nRoberts, J. L.\nRush, Robert\nShaw, Duncan\nStuart, W. D.\nTurnbull, I.\nUnderhill, Dick\nVan Allen, Eric\nWalker, W. R.\nWhitbread, J.\nWillis, Frank\nPhi Delta Theta\n226 FIRST ROW: Blewett, P.; Clare, L.; Cotherall, G.; Coulthard, W.; Dean, K.; DeLaGiroday, Philip\nSECOND ROW: DesBrisay, G.; DesBrisay, I.; Drost, I.; Eadie, D. A. (Goug); Elliott, G.; Forward, Herb.\nTHIRD ROW:Forward, P.; Haack, F.; Hackett, Al; Hibberd, J. C; Isaac, Russel; Lockheart, I.\nFOURTH ROW: Lowther, J.; Johnston, H.; Killam, G.; Macdonald, D.; MacDonald, W. C; Mackay, John\nFIFTH ROW: Mackenzie, Pat; Morgan, John B.; Munn, E.; Neal, C; Nelson, B. C; Nelson, P. W.\nSIXTH ROW: Nelson, I.; Pearkes, John; Plant, A.; Pulos, Andy; Purvis, David; Ross, J. Kenneth\nSEVENTH ROW: Selkirk, Bob; Stephens, R.; Wadsworth, Robert; Walmsley, L.\nA\n$.r.A,\nau)ur\\nPhi Gamma Delta\n227 FIRST ROW: Bettershill, John; Bethune, Jim; Culkin, Bud; Harvey, Art\nSECOND ROW: Harvey, Bruce; Jones, Don; Kidd, Gerry; Kirkpatrick, Bob\nTHIRD ROW: Laidlaw, Bill; MacDonald, James; MacKrow, Jack; McPhee, Bruce.\nFOURTH ROW: Malo, Paul; Parkin, Bill; Ramsden, Rick; White, Don\nFIFTH ROW: Younger, Bob; Thordarson, Ted\nMISSING: Alderman, B.; Broski, S.; Bruce, R.; Davis, R.; Hutchinson, B.; Macdonald, Alex;\nMarsh, Mick; Mullholland, Bill; Riisk, Jim; Walley, Peter.\nPhi Kappa Pi\n228 FIRST ROW: Aird, Cameron; Anstis, William; Bockhold, Lawrence, Clarke, Jim\nSECOND ROW: Dennis Donald D.; Jefferys, Edward; Preston, William; Puil, George.\nTHIRD ROW: Roote, Trevor F.; Scott, Philip; Taneda, Kazui; Thompson, Harold\nFOURTH ROW: Wassick, Robert\na4l\nw\nPsi Upsilon\n229 I\nFIRST ROW: Harold Austin; Jack Austin; Paul Bass\nSECOND ROW: Ken Berry; Mike Bernstein; Saul Cohen\nTHIRD ROW: Harry Frackson; Howard Gerber; Gerry Kemp\nFOURTH ROW: Dave Youngson\nSigma Alpha Mu\n230 i\nFIRST ROW: Antle, John; Archambault, Richard; Barnett, Douglas; Brealey, Laurie\nSECOND ROW: Carew, Derry; Cubbon, Bob; Dixon, Bob; Donaldson, Robert\nTHIRD ROW: Fentiman, Richard; Fotheringham, David; Frost, Ray; Gleig, Don\nFOURTH ROW: Gorges, Kevin; Grant, James; Gustavson, C; Harvey, Harold\nFIFTH ROW: Kelsey, Harley; Lloyd, Tony; Manson, Peter; Miller, Clive\nSIXTH ROW: Morgan, Victor; Nekrassoff, Ury; Piper, Robert; Prasloski, Peter\nSEVENTH ROW: Strang, R. I.; Tcrris, James\nMISSING: Ades, L.; Canova, J.; Cooper, K.; Danner, E.; Duncan, D.; English, A.; Fraser, D.;\nHatcher, T.; Herbert, F.; Jones, J.; O'Neill, L.; Vatne, J.; Wood, C.\nSigma Chi\n231 FIRST ROW: Anderton, John; Bird, Tom; Beddome, John; Bishop, Dick\nSECOND ROW: Christopherson, Ray; Couroubakalis, Dimi; Diespecker, Rick; Finlayson, M.\nTHIRD ROW: Galloway, Les; Hogan, John; MacKenzie, Gordon; McCormick, Bill\nFOURTH ROW: Nemetz, Alvin; Renshaw, Bob; Stewart, Morgan; Strain, Jim\nSigma Phi Delta\n232 immltL\nFIRST ROW: Angel, Jerome; Baker, Stanley; Barad, Al; Cohen, Manly; Finkelstein, Norty\nSECOND ROW: Flader, Charles; Gladstone, Sydney; Glassner, Irv; Goldbloom, Ted; Golden, M.\nTHIRD ROW: Goldsmith, Danny; Groberman, Joel; Joffe, Jay; Koffman, Morley; Laven, David\nFOURTH ROW:Lecovin, Jerry; Levine, Sefton; Sky, Milton; Nagler, Melvin; Tessler, Dave\nFIFTH ROW: Wolfe, Jack\nMISSING: Goldsmith, Allan; Starke, Marv\nZeta Beta Tau\n233 FIRST ROW: Barnsley, Richard; Bishop, Peter; Brodie, Robert; Buscombe, Robert; Carroll, F.\nSECOND ROW: Christopher, Gordon; Claman, Peter; Corbett, Donald; Dewis, G.; Gilmour, W.\nTHIRD ROW: Gault, John; Houlton, Harold; Jones, Darrell; Jones, Ken; Lee, Bruce\nFOURTH ROW: Harris, John; Letson, John; McComb, Donald; MacMinn, George; Mair, Rare\nFIFTH ROW: Martinson, Ralph; Norris, Mac; Patey, William; Romer, Richard; Rose, Barry\nSIXTH ROW: Sterling, Tom; Sweet, David; Teviotdale, David; Wright, Douglas; Sparling, W.\nMISSING: Adam, William; McDonald, Peter; Mclnnes, Duncan; McPhail, Donald; Sandoe, John;\nTurner, Rod; Warren, John; White, Richard; Wright, David; Young, Norman.\nZeta Psi\n234 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Left: Janie Shrum, Phrateres candidate, won\nthe coveted Sweetheart of Sigma Chi title.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Upper Right: The beginning of fraternity\nrow. Figi and Phi Delt houses lead the way.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Lower Right: \"Sammy\" kidnappers broke an\nexchange party on Hallowe'en.\nBelow: Second annual Pledges on Parade\nDance sponsored by Delta Phi Epsilon introduced sorority initiates.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Upper Left: The Miami Tried Ball saw Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Delta Theta, and Sigma\nChi men join together to celebrate their founding.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Below Left: Beta Theta Pi carried away top honours in campus songfest; copped top\nNorth Western Conference title as well.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Below: Kappa Kapp Gamma\u00E2\u0080\u0094Gamma Phi Beta Cabaret had nautical theme; Totem\npixie caught chorus line practising.\nf > ADVERTISING: COMMERCE DEPARTMENT 237 PLENTY OF POWER\nFOR B. C.'S INDUSTRIES\nBritish Columbia's industrial expansion\u00E2\u0080\u0094upon which our future prosperity depends so much\u00E2\u0080\u0094rests greatly upon the available supplies of\nelectricity.\nThe B.C. Electric's continuing program of hydro-electric power\ndevelopment provides ample electricity for existing and potential\nindustries in the areas served by the company.\nThis year's program, for instance, will involve the expenditure of\n30 million dollars on additions and improvements to the B.C. Electric's\npower generating and distributing facilities. This expenditure\u00E2\u0080\u0094most\nof it directly in British Columbia\u00E2\u0080\u0094itself creates 12 million man-hours\nof work.\nB. C. ELECTRIC\n238 239 WE ARE PROUD TO HAVE HAD A PART\nIN THE PRODUCTION OF THIS\nYEAR'S TOTEM\nIDII-IMS LID\n193 HASTINGS EAST\nVANCOUVER 4, B.C. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 TA. 6929 1332\nQj^tO^\n\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*7> '\nrtya...\nTHE FOREST INDUSTRY\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094AN ASSET TO YOU\nAND YOUR NEIGHBORS\nBefore natural resources become wealth, there is a lot to be done.\nIn British Columbia, the forest industry has transformed stands\nof timber into a high standard of living for British Columbians.\nA comparison of our living standards with those of other\ncountries proves the truth of this statement.\nJust how important is the lumber industry to British Columbia?\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094the forest industry payroll accounts for almost 25% of the\ntotal British Columbia payroll.\nAlaska Pine & Cellulose Limited is proud to be a part of the\nforest industry of British Columbia.\nOperations\nLOGGING \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 PULP \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 LUMBER \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 SHINGLES\n~if*r- L ^*-\n_^ ;. \u00C2\u00ABCJ\nLASKA PINE I CELLULOSE LIMITED\n242 FREE-WHEELING SUN WRITERS\nINTELLECTUAL RAINMAKERS\nFEW newspapers in Canada, or anywhere for that matter, offer their\nreaders the daily product of a more sprightly group of staff writers\nthan the Vancouver Sun. Differing widely in makeup and outlook, these\nwriters have one thing in common; they are the stimulators of much\nintellectual activity and discussion among those who peruse and ponder\ntheir comment on the news of the day . . . somewhat as the cloud-\nseeding fellows are said to be the cause of much rain in adjacent\nacreage. Sun writers give their readers plenty to talk about . . .\nanother of the many excellent reasons why The Sun is counted among\nNorth America's more lively newspapers.\nBARRY MATHER has gained\na solidly based reputation\nas Canada's most entertaining practitioner of ironic\nunderstatement, in his Page\nOne \"Nightcap\" column.\nPENNY WISE's readers have\nthe time of their lives following her daily forays\namong markets and stores,\nunearthing special values\nand amusing things to buy.\nCLYDE GILMOUR reviews\nmovies and records for Sun\nreaders and his conclusions\nare gratefully received by\nthousands of average readers as being sound sense.\nJACK SCOTT is considered by many who are knowl-\nedgable in such matters to be Canada's outstanding\ndaily columnist. Certainly his \"Our Town\" on the\n\"Second First Page\" has been for many years the most\nclosely read and discussed feature of The Sun.\nTHE CAUSE OF THOUGHT IN OTHERS\nELMORE PHILPOTT's special field is\npolitics and international affairs. His\nintelligence and competence in his field\nis testified to by his thousands of attentive readers and by the steady demand\nfor his services as lecturer and radio\ncommentator.\nMAMIE MOLONEY eschews the madding\nroar of the city and lives in the country,\ncoping with the madding roar of a\ngrowing family and attendant household\nduties. Between times she hammers out\nher observations, wise and warm-hearted,\nof life in her column, \"In One Ear . . .\"\nIt wouldn't be natural, or indeed interesting, if a reader's\nagreement with one Sun columnist weren't likely to be\nfollowed by his hearty disagreement with the next. The\nconsequent mental ferment is good for readers and good\nfor the columnists, too; teaches them that there's two or\nmore sides to every question ... a belief firmly held\nby The Sun for a long time.\nLLOYD TURNER is The Sun's\nBusiness Editor and in that\ncapacity has many a sharp\nand pertinent thing to say\nabout trends in trade and\nfinance, shedding light on\na complex subject.\nVERA KELLEY pilots the sections of the paper devoted\nto social activities and\nwomen's affairs; her articles\nare a staple eagerly looked\nforward to by many devoted readers.\n243 uke mNew\nPlymouth\nCntgUet\niohnston\nMOTOR CO. LTD\nThe new CHRYSLER . . . masterpiece of\nelegance . . . hallmark of success! To see\nthe new CHRYSLER t* to appreciate its\ndignified beauty. To drive the new\nCHRYSLER is- to know its fine performance and\nluxurious comfort. To own it is to enjoy\nthe oft repeated compliments\n\"I SEE you DRIVE A CHRYSLER\"\nThe new PLYMOUTH goes far beyond being\nexciting to the eyel\nPLYMOUTH considers your personal comfort\nas never before in a low-priced\ncar. Drive a new PLYMOUTH . . . with your\nfirst ride you'll agree with the smooth\nperformance and Air Pillow Ride are\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nexcitingly \u00E2\u0080\u0094 pleasantly \u00E2\u0080\u0094 different.\n7th and MAIN\n244 When You're in Business . . .\nC(\"U\u00C2\u00A3k\nthe cost of learning goes up, especially for\nthose who learn by trial and error. The cost\nof one inferior valve may be almost\ninsignificant, but when there are hundreds of\nthousands likt it, those valves become a\nserious drain on operating budgets, cutting into\nprofits and holding up production.\nMore than 80 years of constant development and research\nhave given Jenkins Valves extra endurance, making them the\nlongest-lasting, lowest-upkeep valves that money can buy.\nWe invite you to consult Jenkins Engineers on any problem concerning\nproper valve selection, installation, or maintenance.\nJENKINS VALVES\nFor industrial, engineering, marine and power plant service\n... in Bronze, Iron, Steel and Corrosion-resisting Alloys.\nOBTAINABLE\nTHROUGH LEADING\nDISTRIBUTORS\nEVERYWHERE\nJENKINS BROS. LIMITED 617 St. Remi Street, Montreal\nSales offices in TORONTO, WINNIPEG, EDMONTON, VANCOUVER\n245 DAIRYLAND\ngoes to U.B.C.\nDairyland is proud of its long association with\nUniversity ot British Columbia. Not only does\nDairyland go out daily to the campus, supplying\nfaculty and students with top-grade dairy products,\nbut it has worked in close co-operation with\nthe Departments of Agriculture and Science for\nmany years. This co-operation and\nour UBC-trained staff of Bacteriologists have helped\nimmeasurably in the achievement and maintenance\nof Dairyland's high standards.\nA DIVISION OF THE FRASER VALLEY MILK PRODUCERS' ASSOCIATION\nSAM C. GARDINER\n(INSURANCE) LTD.\nAll CLASSES OF INSURANCE\n525 SEYMOUR STREET\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nSAM C. GARDINER\nJAMES C. T. McLEAN\nEDUCATIONAL STATIONERY\nLOOSE LEAF BOOKS - SLIDE RULES\nFOUNTAIN PENS - SCALES\nDRAWING INSTRUMENTS\nCLARKE & STUART\nCO. LTD.\nStationers, Printers, Bookbinders\n550 Seymour St.\nVancouver, B.C.\nJrigh School Conference\nDelegates to the Fifth Annual High School Conference had ample opportunity to see the campus on a\nnormal day during their tour on the Friday before\nOpen House. The time they spent at Open House\nthe next day was another story.\nThe Conference luncheons and dinners were held\nin various campus eateries to give the visitors basic\ntraining in varsity ways.\nThe whole program was designed to help the prospective freshmen find their way around.\nThe program committee, headed by Jack Scott,\nenlisted the aid of Phrateres, the Phys Ed. students,\nthe Teachers Training class, USC and WUS.\nThe Conference was started five years ago by the\nTeachers Training Association. This year the Conference was sponsored by the Alma Mater Society under\nthe direction of the Public Relations Officer, Terry\nNicholls. General chairman for the Conference was\nArc Fletcher, second year Commerce student.\n246 WESTERN PLYWOOD COMPANY LIMITED\n900 EAST KENT ST., VANCOUVER, B.C.\nMANUFACTURERS OF FINE PLYWOODS\nWITH THE UNIQUE BALANCED CONSTRUCTION\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 NORTHERN POPLAR\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 DOUGLAS FIR (P.M.B.C. Ext)\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 SLICED AFRICAN\nMAHOGANY\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 COMB GRAIN WHITE OAK\nWESTERN WHITE BIRCH \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 WALNUT\n* PLYWOOD MANUFACTURERS ASSOCIATION OF BRITISH COLUMBIA EXTERIOR GRADE\nWESTERN PLYWOOD (CARIBOO) LIMITED\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 STRUCTURPLY*\nQUESNEL, B.C.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 CARIBOO SHEATHING\n* INLAND DOUGLAS FIR WATERPROOF EXTERIOR GRADE\nThe billeting committee, under Don McCallum,\ncontacted schools, Parent-Teacher groups and University students in order to arrange accommodations for\nthe 164 delegates who came from points outside the\nGreater Vancouver area.\nPrivate homes in Vancouver opened their doors to\n60 out-of-town representatives. Other delegates from\ndistant points stayed with friends and relatives or\nwere placed in the Youth Training School on the\ncampus.\nAT\nYOUR\nSERVICE\nAND DRY CLEANERS\nFAirmont 1228\n247 *\nFURS OF UNQUESTIONABLE\nQUALITY\nft. \u00C2\u00AB/. POP\nLTD.\nFURRIERS\nGranville at Fifteenth\nCEdar 9155\nLARGEST FIREPROOF REFRIGERATED\nFUR STORAGE VAULTS\n^rlateeg J\epott\nSince the Massey Report made several recommendations closely affecting Canadian universities, it was no\nsurprise that the University of British Columbia should\ntake the lead in seeing that the suggestions did not go\nunheeded.\nDuring the last week of February, the Fine Arts\nCommittee and the Literary and Scientific Executive\nsponsored a series of discussions by prominent university and cultural leaders.\nPresident Norman A. M. MacKenzie, a member of\nthe five-man Royal Commission on the Development of\nthe Arts and Sciences in Canada, opened the talks with\na discussion on the purpose and scope of the report.\nAMS President Vaughan Lyon, and Personnel\nDirector Major John MacLean stressed the need for a\nsystem of national scholarships would enable one\nthousand students to attend UBC each year on government scholarships and bursaries.\nIn the third talk, movie critic Clyde Gilmour,\nhumorist Eric Nicol, Vancouver Film Society president\nStan Fox, CBC's Robert Allen, and CJOR's Dorwin\nBaird discussed the future of radio, film, and television\nin Canada. Much to the delight of the large audience, the symposium evolved into a verbal tussle\nbetween the private radio stations and the CBC. The\nCBC came out on top, thanks to CBC men Nicols,\nAllen and Gilmour.\nThe setting up of a Canada Council for the Encouragement of the Arts, Letters, Humanities, and\nSocial Sciences was advocated by the speakers at the\nfinal meeting. Poet Earle Birney, Drama Director\nDorothy Somerset, Painter B. C. Binning, and LSE\npresident John de Wolf showed how Canadian creative\nartists could benefit from grants-in-aid from the government issued by the Canada Council as suggested in\nthe Massey Report.\nChairman for the four meetings was Prof. G. C.\nAndrew who called upon UBC students to write to\ntheir Members of Parliament and other government\nofficials asking for support of the scholarship system\nand the setting up of a Canada Council,\nSince that time, Student Council has passed two\nresolutions, one asking that the government institute\nthe scholarship system, and the other urging the formation of the Canada Council. Both resolutions were\nheartily endorced at the annual Alma Mater Society\nmeeting, March 20. Copies of the resolutions have been\nsent to all student councils across Canada together\nwith the suggestion that they sponsor discussions and\nstudy groups on the Massey Report similar to the\nUBC series.\nThe UBC library staff placed a petition in one of\nits halls calling for the establishment of the scholarship\nsystem, the Canada Council, and the National library\nas recommended in the Massey Report. Close to 1500\nsignatures were obtained to the letter which was addressed to the Prime Minister, Louis St. Laurent.\nThe Ubyssey carefully followed developments. It\nprinted an appeal to all students to write letters to\ntheir MP's. Names of all local Members of Parliament\nand B.C. cabinet members were also published.\nMeanwhile the government gave a half million dollar grant to UBC, part of a seventeen million dollar aid\nprogram for Canadian universities. Recent press reports indicate that the Prime Minister has promised to\nset up the scholarship system.\n248 IN BRITISH COLUMBIA . . .\nEducation is the key to success in all lines of endeavour. Manufacturing,\nLogging, Lumbering and Mining, Agriculture and Fishing, all need their\ntechnicians ... all call for minds capable of close research and intelligent\nanalysis, or careful marshalling of the facts upon which industry moves\nforward.\nThrough our demand for BRITISH COLUMBIA\nPRODUCTS we encourage further investment and\nplant expansion, thereby providing additional British\nColumbia payrolls and greater opportunities for\nBritish Columbia's youth in the industrial and\ncommercial fields.\nBUY\nB.C*\nPRODUCT!\nBidk B.C\nPAYROLLS\nThe Department of Trade and Industry\nE. G. ROWEBOTTOM,\nDeputy Minister.\nParliament Buildings\nVictoria, B. C.\nHON. A. D. TURNBULL,\nMinister.\nDecent Pride\nin good performance\nis desirable!\nWe're Proud\nof\nPARAMOUNT\nCANNED OCEAN FOODS\nNELSON BROS. FISHERIES LTD.\nBe\nSURE\nit's\nTOASTMASTER &\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB.\nSoft\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Fresh \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Delicious\nAT YOUR FAVOURITE FOOD\nSTORE\nCai\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nladian Bakeries Ltd.\n249 HARRISON\nis the place for tun!\nJust two hours' drive from Vancouver, one of the continent's most fabulous\nresorts is waiting to welcome you to summer fun! Harrison Hot\nSprings Hotel has everything \u00E2\u0080\u0094 a spectacular mountain setting . . .\nluxurious surroundings . . . two heated swimming pools . . .\na sporty golf course . . . tennis courts . . . nearby lakes and streams\nwhere fishing is at its best. You'll enjoy\ndancing in the exotic Copper Room, and\ndelicious food in the unique Gardenia Room or\nHarrison's Coffee Shop. Make Harrison\nHot Springs Hotel the spot for that well-earned\nvacation . . . come for a wonderful weekend\n... or drive to Harrison for a day of fun\nand relaxation.\nHARRISON\nHOTEL\nHARRISON HOT SPRINGS\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nVancouver, Phone PA. 2585\n\"Canada's famous\nAll Year Spa Resort\"\nCustom-Made\nFor All Round Wear\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Visit Vancouver's\nmost popular Slack\nstore for complete\nservice and satisfaction.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Ladies, too! will\nfind that modernize\ncustom made Slacks\nlook better\u00E2\u0080\u0094fit better\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094wear longer.\nSLACKS\nMODERNIZE TAILORS\n1 WEST PENDER\n(At Carrall)\nJutflan ultomad\nHundreds of eager students packed the Auditorium\nat noon, April 9, to hear the poetry readings of Dylan\nThomas, noted British poet.\nThe visit was sponsored by the Literary and Scientific Executive in conjunction with the Fine Arts Committee of the University. It was Mr. Thomas' second\nvisit to the campus.\nProfessor Earle Birney introduced Mr. Thomas as\n\". . . the finest reader of poetry I have heard ... the\nmost original and creative poet of our generation. . . .\"\nMr. Thomas made no comment on the poetry he\nread, but the spellbound audience felt that comments\nwould have been superfluous. Poems of Hardy, Auden,\nEdith Sitwell, Yeats, de la Mare, and Robert Graves\nwere read before Mr. Thomas read some of his own\npoetry.\n\"In Country Sleep\", \"Poem\", \"The Hunchback in\nthe Park\", 'In Country Sleep\" and \"Do Not Go Gently\nInto That Good Night\" thrilled the enthusiastic\nstudents who vigorously applauded the Poet when his\nreading was finished.\nIt was largely through the efforts of Hunter Lewis\nthat the visit to the campus was arranged.\n250 JUDGE IT BY\nTHE WORK IT DOES\nWatch the NEW MARCHANT FIGUREMASTER\nin action on your own work and see for yourself\nits many advantages.\nThe Fully Automatic model, the only calculator\nwith simultaneous push-button multiplication, is\nideal for heavy-volume figure-work. The low-cost\nSemi-Automatic model is popular where the work\nis lighter. Both are available in 8 or 10 bank\ncapacities . . . choose whichever fits your requirements and business budget.\nFIGURE FASTER WITH A\nmARCHANT\n'utetoaflk\nB. C. AND YUKON DISTRIBUTORS\nJiank jQ. Mott & Co.\n309 Shelly Building PAcific 2423\nVANCOUVER 3, B.C.\nwr >\nQuality Service\nYou Can Trust\nm$\nii\nWHOLESALE\nRADIO\nSUPPLIES\nJ4yg,radi\nJ\aaio\nThe Favourite Spot for Radio\nAmateurs and Experimenters.\nVancouver's Largest Stock and\nAssortment of Radio Parts\nand Equipment.\nTAtlow 1421\n971 RICHARDS STREET\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\n251 jiterlmg jitlfrmfc\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\n.JHtrrors\n(guaranty QPualtig\nBOGARDUS WILSON\nLimited\n1000 Homer Street MA. 3248-9\nVancouver, B.C.\n^i\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\\nOSTER'S\n4r\nIINE\n2F\nURS United\nOldest Furriers\nin B. C. - Established in 1892\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nMArine 6726\n825 Howe Street\nBARNES Jewellers Ltd.\nOmega WATCHES\nForget-Me-Nof DIAMONDS\nBirthstone RINGS\nGraduation GIFTS\nUptown's Leading Jewellers\n10th and GRANVILLE CHerry 2025\npa^ cfiiiists \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 RtsoRTS \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ecufisions\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bracing Week-end and Day Cruises.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Vacation Week-ends of lovely Bowen Island Inn.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Cliff House, Whytecliff Park \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Dining and Dancing \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nPrivate and Society Dinners.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Special Holiday Excursions.\nUNION STEAMSHIPS LIMITED\nCity Office\nUnion Pier\n793 Granville St.\nFoot Carrall St.\nMA. 5438\nPA. 3411\nFor You . . .\nIMPORTED DIRECT FROM CHINA\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 CURIOS \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 CAMPHORWOOD \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 CHESTS\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 CHINAWARE \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 BAMBOO\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 RATTAN WARES\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 FINE EMBROIDERIES AND LINENS\nSCO mam\nKuo Seun Importers Co., Ltd.\n87-89-91 Pender Street East\nit. <$. 6.\nThe Undergraduate Societies Committee lost its\nbiggest single unit this year when Students' Council\nsuspended the Arts Undergraduate Committee for one\nyear.\nThe AUS went into liquidation after Don\nMawhinney, its own president, admitted that \"the\ncontinuation of the AUS would be a complete waste\nof $270.\"\nAlthough the suspension of AUS meant a loss of\n27 percent of USC membership, the committee still\nmanaged to function effectively under the chairmanship of Bill Neen.\nThe activities of USC were manifold. Quite apart\nfrom the obvious function of coordinating the activities\nof the individual undergraduate societies, Bill Neen also\nfound himself saddled with the many referendums and\nelections held throughout the year.\nNeen fought for the rights of the Undergraduate\nSocieties in Students' Council and managed to obtain a\n252 CHAS. E. LONGLEY\nCO. LTD.\nINDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL ELECTRICAL\nCONTRACTORS\nTAHow 2241-2-3\n1319 Seymour Street, Vancouver, B.C.\n\"A Complete Electrical Service\"\nCOMPLIMENTS FROM . . .\nBRUNSWICK\nMANUFACTURERS OF\nBOWLING ALLEYS\nBILLIARD TABLES\nAND SUPPLIES\n947 Granville St.\nPA. 9367\n7ft6^&eUvce\nconcession whereby the individual Societies were given\nthe right to publish one issue of the Ubyssey each per\nyear.\nHowever, the committee still found itself in the\nmidst of a crusade to hold the Ubyssey to the exact\nletter of the contract which it had signed.\nUSC was also burdened with the impossible task of\nhelping collect all the Gym pledges. It is to their\ncredit that two-thirds of the pledges were collected.\nThe Committee, ably aided by their henchmen from\nthe Engineers' Undergraduate Society, also participated\nin the Red Cross Blood Drive and the March of Dimes\ncampaign.\nUSC also showed its interest in future generations\nof UBC students by taking an active part in Frosh\nOrientation Week and the High School Conference.\nThroughout the year, members of the committee\nhave shown that even an organization whose powers\nand duties are quite nebulous can contribute towards\nuniversity life.\nA good banking\nconnection is a\n\"must\" for success\nin any profession or\nbusiness.\nBank or Montreal\nCanada's First Bank\nYour Bank on the Campus\u00E2\u0080\u0094In the Auditorium Building\nMERLE C. KIRBY, Manager\nworking with Canadians in every walk of life since 1817\n253 FOR LABORATORY CHEMICALS'\n^W/y NICHOLS _^4/\nC.P. Acetic Acid\nC.P. Ammonium Hydroxide\nC.P. Hydrochloric Acid\nC.P. Nitric Acid\nC.P. Sulphuric Acid\n*\nComplete line of Baker &\nAdamson Laboratory Reagents and Fine Chemicals\nfor educational, research and\nindustrial uses.\nIhe NICHOLS CHEMICAL COMPANY. Limited\nMONTREAL \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 TORONTO \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 VANCOUVER... Executive Offices, Sun Life Bldg., Montreal 2\n254 \"THE SYMBOL OF BUSINESS EFFICIENCY\"\nCash Registers \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Accounting Machines * Adding Machines\nThe National Cash Register Company\nOF CANADA LIMITED\n501 West Georgia St. Vancouver, B.C.\nSpecialists in . . .\nLADIES' and MEN'S\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Slacks\nSuits\nMADE ON THE PREMISES FROM\nTHE FINEST BRITISH AND\nAUSTRALIAN WOOLENS\nTWO STORES TO SERVE YOU\n49 E. HASTINGS\nVANCOUVER\n424 COLUMBIA STREET\nNEW WESTMINSTER\nWith the Compliments of\nCONTRACTORS TO\nTHE AMATEUR AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nSTAGE\nLIMITED\nTheatrical Costumiers\nand\nCostume Manufacturers\nCOSTUMES FOR MASQUERADE,\nOPERAS, PLAYS AND TABLEAUX\nMen's Formal Wear, Tuxedos.\nCutaways. Tails\n831 HOWE STREET PAcific 7620\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\n255 May we have an appointment with you in 1952?\nSeems strange, doesn't it, to be talking about your Retirement\nalready! But it's a fact that the end of a man's career ought to be\nplanned from the beginning . . . making full use of the Service,\nSecurity and Savings that only Life Insurance can give him. The\nyounger you are, the less it costs you to get started! We are a\nfriendly Company to do business with \u00E2\u0080\u0094 our rates give you really\nlow-cost protection along with a savings program you'll always be\nthankful for \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and your friendly Agent will look after your\ninterests all the way. Too, if you want to make Life Insurance your\ncareer, you'll find we are a friendly and progressive Company to\nwork for.\nINSURANCE\nCOMPANY\nKingston\nOnt.\nCLUB\nMAYLING\nFAMOUS FOR\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 CHOP SUEY AND ALL CHINESE DISHES\nS_E__B\nORCHESTRA 6 DAYS PER WEEK\nDINNER SERVED 7 P.M. TO 5 A.M.\nSUNDAYS FROM 5 P.M. TO 4 A.M.\nConcrete 0/\nVienna Sail\nOne of the social highlights of the University year\ntook place on Friday, March 21, when the International\nHouse Committee sponsored the \"Congress of Vienna\"\nBall. From nine until one, the Brock lounge took on\nan entirely new appearance. Under the stern and\nmajestic gaze of cleverly caricatured dignitaries of the\nEurope of 1815, well over two hundred students, faculty\nmembers, and downtown friends of International House\nparticipated in the dances of a past era as well as those\nof the present. Flags of all nations draped the walls,\nwhile the \"portraits\" were suitably set off by authentic\nbaroque decorations. Costumes of the East mingled\nwith period dress of the West and the formal clothes\nof our own time in a gay composite of colors as the\nguests danced to the music of the Mazurka, the Spanish\nCircle Waltz, and other more familiar measures.\nVariety and additional entertainment were provided\nby the Dance Team, which executed a demonstration\nViennese Waltz, and the Latin American Band from\nAcadia Camp, which brought the music and dancing\nof the New World into the Old-World atmosphere\nof the Congress.\n256 Choo&e your\n. . . from a\nJia&ter\n(i . \u00C2\u00BB\nirurrier\n2706 GRANVILLE (at 11th Ave.) BA. 2829\nCOMPLIMENTS\nGeneral Equipment\nLimited\nEq\njipment for\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 POWER PLANTS\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 HEATING and VENTILATING\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 PULP and PAPER MILLS\nPA.\n5932 1230\nGRANVILLE ST.\nCONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES\nTO THE STUDENTS OF U.B.C.\nCONSOLIDATED FINANCE\nCO. LTD.\n785 HORNBY\nMArine 0264\nAn unusual feature which evoked much comment\nwas the candle-light which pervaded the dining room\nduring the intermission, affording a pleasant relief from\nthe brighter lights of modern times.\nThe affair was organized and carried through by\nthe IHC Ball Committee, headed by Brigitta Balla.\nOther members of this hard-working Committee were\nAnne Choma, Pat Crehan, Bob Dowling, Anne Harvey,\nBob Loosmore, and Lukia Michas. Much valuable\nassistance was given to the group by both the faculty\nand the alumni.\nF00 HUNG CO., LTD.\nIMPORT DIRECT FROM CHINA\nBAMBOOWARE, CHINAWARE, LACQUERWARE,\nTEAKWOOD, STRAW MATS, CURIOS,\nORIENTAL NOVELTIES, ETC.\nLOCATION\nHASTINGS ST. EAST\nPENDER ST. EAST\n129-131 E. PENDER ST. PHONE PA. 6635\nBetween Main and Columbia St\nVANCOUVER 4, B. C.\n257 PMTU IS OUR BUSINESS\nWe have served your Alma Mater during your collegiate years. May we\nhave the pleasure of serving you in your Business or Professional years ahead.\nCall us at CEdar 3111\ncAnderZon Printing, Company, J^imited\n12th AVENUE AT ARBUTUS STREET\nSpeedwritlng.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 SHORTHAND \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nEXCELLENT FOR UNIVERSITY NOTES\nCheaper \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Easier \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Faster\n100 WORDS PER MINUTE\nDay School 2 months \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Night School 4 months\nDUFFUS\n522 W. Pender\nSCHOOL\nPA. 7567\nFor the Best In . . .\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 SERVICE\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 DINNERS\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 LUNCHES\nNICK'S GRILL\nYOUR CAMPUS\nFAVOURITE\n5700 UNIVERSITY BOULEVARD\nAL. 1679\nUne Scarlet J\ing,\nAn organization to eliminate the \"evils of the\nGreek Letter Societies\" aroused interest on the campus.\nThe Scarlet Ring, as the group is called, was formed\nin competition to the present fraternities with discriminatory clauses.\nA resolution to ask the Senate to withdraw recognition of all fraternities with discriminatory clauses was\ndefeated in Student Council. Therefore president\nVaughan Lyon, vice-president Phil Dadson and\nUbyssey head Les Armour formed the new fraternity\nfor the purpose of \"fellowship, stimulation of thought,\nand furthering the interests of the university.\"\nThe Scarlet Ring raises no racial, religious or financial barriers. Admission to membership is determined by 50 per cent vote instead of by blackball.\n258 * Tailcoats\n* Tuxedos\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 SUITS\nBench Tailored on the Premises using\nBritish Woolens\nPRINCIPE & ALTO\nCUSTOM TAILORS\nTA. 3543 632 HOWE ST.\n&n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nEASTMAN PHSI?fR^lc LTD.-sGTR-rLE\nANGLO - CANADIAN\nSHIPPING COMPANY\nSteamship and Chartering\nAgents\n955 W. Hastings St.\nVancouver, B.C.\nspring,\nAnd spring came to UBC, bringing with it the usual\nthings\u00E2\u0080\u0094more rain, windblown skirts, exams, cheating\npapers. . . .\nThe fresh spring sunshine burst through the overhanging clouds and pushed its way through the new\nbuds and leaves of the trees, through the windows of\nBrock Hall and down into the south basement where\nTotem editors were beating their pointed little heads\nagainst their typewriters in frustration as they tried to\nselect material from the reams and reams and reams of\ncopy which overwhelmed them.\nSpring also brought the intra-mural track meet\nwith all its glory of flat feet, pulled muscles and once-\na-year athletes.\nIt brought the weak-kneed fraternity ban, Dylan\nThomas, the California (ruff) rugger boys, and the\nnew council.\nIt brought \"Much Ado About Nothing\", the death\n264 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 LABORATORY SUPPLIES\nASSAY, INDUSTRIAL AND EDUCATIONAL\nLABORATORY SUPPLIES CHEMICALS\nCave & Company Ltd.\n567 Hornby St.\nVancouver, B.C.\nCONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES\nTO THE STUDENTS OF U.B.C.\nQr^SO\nFIRBANK'S JEWELERS\n599 SEYMOUR ST.\nPHONE: PAcific 4364\nWith the Compliments of\nGORDON FARRELL\nCHAIN\nMANUFACTURERS\nEstablished 30 Years\nCanada Chain & Forge Co. Ltd.\nGranville Island VANCOUVER\nof LSE, the stay of execution to the Ostrom Plan and\nthe horsetail hairdo.\nAnd it brought the lovers.\nAh, the lovers. They emerged from the dim dark\nregions of the caf and exposed their pool hall pallors\nto rich, invigorating air of the library stacks.\nHand in hand, eyes flashing, laughing merrily,\nthey descended the Thousand Steps.\nHand in hand, eyes flashing, panting merrily, they\ncome back up the Thousand Steps.\nAlthough they couldn't distinguish a dandelion\nfrom a wallflower, they faithfully inspected every\nspecimen in the Botanical Gardens.\nThey hibernated at library tables and ran up their\nfather's gas bills and blood pressure by frequent jaunts\nto Spanish Banks.\nThey gazed into each other's eyes with a rapture that\nonly spring or a French exam could bring.\nThey were the very essence of spring at UBC.\nSpring, with all its beauty, its freshness, its flowers,\nits hayfever.\nWESTERN CANADA'S LARGEST\nMODERN WOODWORK FACTORY!\nrtji*5?\n: "Titled The McGill Annual from 1911-1915; The Annual from 1916-1925; The Totem from 1926-1942 and 1945-1966; The Ubyssey Graduation Issue in 1943; and Totie in 1944."@en . "Periodicals"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LE3.B85 T6"@en . "LE3_B85_T6_1952"@en . "10.14288/1.0119022"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "[Vancouver] : Publications Board of the 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 Unviersity of British Columbia."@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives."@en . "University of British Columbia"@en . "The Totem 1952"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .