"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-07-23"@en . "1948-05-13"@en . "Graduation Issue."@en . ""@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0124047/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " PAGE 2\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nThursday, May 13, 1948\nStreamlined Ceremonies\nFor Bumper Grad Class\nUBC's largest class of graduating students were whisked\nthrough streamlined congregation ceremonies today as 1400\nbachelor's and master's degrees were awarded.\nTo the massed graduating class in^ '\nthc university armory, Chancellor\nErie W. Hamber proclaimed: \"I admit\nyou and all whose names have at\nthis time been presente.\"\nIn previous years, before tlie university's mushroom growth, the Mr.\nHamber had tapped each graduate\nwith his hood and repeated \"I admit\nyou.\" In succession, graduates received hoods individually from the\nPresident.\nBut because this year's class topped\nall others in the university's history,\ngraduates received hoods in advance\nand rose in a body to be \"admitted,\"\nFollowing the congregational address by His Excellency the .Governor-General, the class trooped across\nthe armory stage, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 bowed to Chancellor Hamber and President Norman MacKenzie, then took their blue\nbound diplomas from Registrar\nCharles B. Wood.\nHighlight of the colorful pageant\nof graduation was the presentation\nto His Excellency Viscount Alexander of an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws.\nA massed choir of students, faculty\nmembers gowned in variegated robes\nand the packed audience of graduates\nand parents heard Canada's soldier\nGovernor-General lauded by President MacKenzie.\nTwo UBC Students\nWin Scholarships\nTwo top honors students in the\nDepartment of Physics at University\nof British Columbia have won scholarships which will help them to\nproceed with graduate study in the\nfield of physical research.\nMorton Mitchener, 1412 Devonshire\nCrescent, Vancouver, has been awarded a $400 scholarship by Harvard\nUniversity and will travel to the east\nlate this summer to take up his\nstudies there.\nA Teaching Fellowship valued at\n$1100 has been awarded to T. H.\nEdwards, R.R. No. 1 Chilliwack, by\nthe University of Michigan. Edwards,\na married veteran of World War\nII, obtained the outstanding mark of\n98% on his graduate examination.\nHis ultimate goal is work in electronics.\nEducation Costs Blamed\nFor Boosts In UBC Fee\nThe rising cost of education was blamed for the $25 increase\nin sessional fees that UBC students will face when they return\nin September to face the 1948-49 session.\nThe added fees mean that arts, science, commerce and\nagriculture students will pay $205 and law and applied science\nstudents will have a $255 fee levied on them.\nThe announcement! of the fee boost \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\t\nI\nDouble Award Goes\nTo Ex-Student\nFormer UBC student and lecturer\nLister Sinclair, now of Toronto, took\nwas made by UBC president, Dr.\nNorman A. M. MacKenzie after a\nmeeting of the Board of Governors on Monday, April 2C.\nSTATEMENT ISSUED\nShe statement said the reason i.s\nto offset in some measure the rising\ncost of education without passing on\nmore to the student's than could be , a double awal'd at the 12th American\nj Exhibition of Education Programs at\n[ Columbus, Ohio, it was announced\nUBC, in common with many other last week at CBC headquarters.\nCanadian universities, is faced with] Sinclair took the double award for\nthe alternative of increasing revenue his original script, The Case Against\nor of restricting its facilities and Cancer, and for his adaptation of tlie\ndoing without necessary equipment. ' piayi Murder In Tne Cathedral, by\n_ IT , .. .. _, ., \u00E2\u0080\u009E T. S. Eliot,\nThe University, president MacKenzie stated, is unwilling to provide He is remembered in this part of\nless than is necessary to maintain the country for his appearances with\nits educational standards, particular- the UBC Players Club in Pride and\navoided.\nThe handsome, quier Irishman, a\nwartime Field Marshal who led Canadian troops in the Mediterranean\naddress and with other members of\nthe vice-regal party, presided at a\naet in Brock Memorial Hall.\n//\nEverything in Art\"\nDrawing Materials\nArtists' Supplies\n[\u00E2\u0080\u00A2NHF.R WEST PA *448\n621 PENDER WEST\nly in the midst of the veterans program,\nINCREASE FUNDS\nHe added that the university intends to increase in some measure the\nfunds available for financial assistance with the fees of promising students.\nPrejudice and Candida on its annual\nSpring tour.\nI His adaptation of Murder In The\nCathedral was acclaimed by adjudicators as a \"superb adaptation of a\ngreat literary work dealing with a\ntheme of noble proportions.\"\nJudges gave his cancer script a\nfirst place award \"for an adult, scien-\nThe increase will take the form of tific approach to a serious human\n$10 in the first term and $15 in the; problem, effectively escaping the\npost-Christmas session.\ncliche of fear as an appeal.\"\nSINCERE BEST WISHES\nTO THE CLASS OF '48\nBYRNES TYPEWRITERS LTD.\nDistributors for:\nROYAL TYPEWRITERS\n(Standard and Portable Models)\nALLEN ADDING MACHINES\n(Hand and Electric Models)\nFree Holiday Information\nLet us help you with suggested itineraries\nReasonably priced Resorts . . .\nThings to do and see\nKaUtU* CMott Vacation*\nRogers Building\nVancouver, B.C.\nPAcific 3367\nAsk for FREE Holiday Bulletin\nYOUR SAVINGS\nAFTER GRADUATION\n...SAFEGUARD\nYOE FUTURE\nIf you spend all you earn, your future will depend\non circumstances beyond your control.\nBut if you save part of what you earn, you can shape\nyour future as easily as you shape your present.\nA Savings Account in this Bank will help you to\nsave regularly. You can watch your future taking\nshape in your passbook\u00E2\u0080\u0094and the habit of saving will\nin itself contribute to the building of character and\nindependence.\nTHE\nDOMINION BANK\nFrederick Goertz\nLTD.\n>\nCertified Instrument Makers\nSpecialists in the Repair of\nInstruments for Engineers, Aviators\nSurveyors and Navigators\nAll Work Guaranteed\n564 Howe St., Vancouver\nMArine 3822\nEstablished 1871\nCol, Tlie Honourable\nE. W, HAMBER, C.M.G., LL.D,,\nDirector - Vancouver\nR. F. J. FORD,\nManager - Vancouver\nBEST WISHES\nTO THE GRADUATES OF '48\nBELL & MITCHfLL LTD.\nINSURANCE and REAL ESTATE\n541 GEORGIA ST,\nVANCOUVER, B, C,\nDuring Your Vacation\nCame in . . .\nand listen to your\nfavorite selections\nin our\nModem Record Bltafi\nTHOMSON & PAGE LTD.\n2914 Granville South\nBAyview 3111\nSfio^t Gaali & Black*\nJACK KIRK\nSouth Granville's Smart Men's Shop\n2561 South Granville St. CEdar 2910\nSINCERE BEST\nWISHES TO\nTHE CLASS OF '48\nMARSHALL-WELLS B.C. LTD.\nBest Wishes to the Class of '48\nCOLUMBIA PAPER CO. LTD.\n986 Homer Street\nVancouver, B.C.\nBEST WISHES FOR SUCCESS\nAND 'GOOD LUCK1\nnl\nTo the Men and Women of the\n1948 Graduating Class\nBRITISH COLUMBIA FOREST\nPRODUCTS LIMITED\nVancouver, B. C.\nvVHEREVER YOU GO,\nWHATEVER YOU DO,\nWE WISH YOU WELL\nParsons Brown\nLtd.\nNSURANCE OF ALL KINDS\n535 Homer St.\nMArine 9211 Thursday, May 13, 1948\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nPAGE 3\nMany Unique Courses Offered\nAt UBC 1948 Summer School\nMany Noted Instructors Here\nTo Teach Six Varied Courses\nSpanish House\nFor the benefit of students registered\nin regular Spanish courses offered at\nUBC's summer school, a Casa Espanola, or Spanish House will be operated at Acadia Camp in converted\narmy huts.\nIt will provide opportunity for\nteachers and students of Spanish to\nimprove their skill in the language\nand widen their knowledge of Hispanic vulture.\nThe language of the Casa will be\nSpanish and special attention will be\ngiven to beginners in courses given\nduring the summer session.\nThe Casa will operate from July 6\nThe Casa will operate from July 5\nto August 20 and charge for board\nand lodging will be $70.\nThe courses will be under (he direction of Aurelio M Espinosa, visiting professor of Spanish and noted\nHispanist; George E. McSpadden, associate professor of Spanish, and J.\nA. McDonald, assistant professor of\nSpanish.\nPhilip Freund, M.A., novelist, playwright and film script writer will\nlecture in creative writing from July\n12 to August 7. The course will consist of lectures, as much experience\nas possible in actual writing, class\ncriticism and individual consultation\nwith the instructor.\nlt will be divided into two sections,\nnarrative writing and dramatic writing.\nMr. Freund is a well-known young\nAmerican writer. He has published 7\nnovels, three volumes of short stories\nand is a contributor to such maga-\nCreative Writing\nzines as the Saturday Evening Post\nand the New York Times magazine.\nIn addition he has done a great\ndeal of script writing for the motion\npicture industry. During the war he\nassisted in the preparation of army\nfilms,\nFees for the course are $30, payable\nwith application addressed to the\nDirector, Department of University\nExtension, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C.\nAccommodation in one of the university camps will be available for\nstudents who register early.\nSummer Theatre\nThe Summer School of the Theatre\nwill operate from July 5 to August\n14.\nIt will be under the direction of\nTheodore Viehman, who has taught\nand directed at Hart House and the\nUniversity of Michigan; Dorothy\nSomerset, who has taught at the\nVancouver School of Art and the\nUniversity of Saskatchewan; Sidney\nRisk, 6 years supervisor at thc University of Alberta and founder and\ndirector of the Everyman Theatre;\nRobert F. Corrigan, assistant professor of speech arts at San Diego State\nCollege; Jessie Richardson, president\nof the Vancouver Little Theatre and\nJoy Coghill, director\nClub at UBC, 1947-48\nof the Players\nInstruction will be given to students in acting, speech, directing,\nstagecrafts and production of a play.\nUniversity undergraduates seeking\nacademic credit should consult the\nuniversity summer session calendar\nand must register through the office\nof the Registrar. A final examination\nwill be required for those seeking\ncredit. #\nThe Department of University Extension will be able to secure living\naccommodation in one of the University camps for those who register-\nearly.\nPainting. Weaving, Photography\nThree other courses in painting, , 2 weeks only. Materials for samples\nphotography and weaving are also\noffered during the session.\nPainting for pleasure will be under\nthe direction of Mr. B. C. Binning\nof the Vancouver School of Art.\nThe course will cover a period from\nJuly 7 t'o August 9 and if registration\npermits a second course will be formed and students divided into two\nsections.\nWeaving for Beginners will operate\nfrom July 12 to July 30. The course\nis for beginners and those who have\na slight knowledge of the subject.\nThe course will be held at the\nYouth Training Centre, Acadia Camp.\nClasses will meet daily, Monday to\nFriday, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.\nCandidates who find it impossible\nto attend the three weeks' course\nmay make application for the first\nwill be supplied free of charge.\nThe course will be under he direction of Mrs. W. S. Ellis and Miss\nJessie Stewart.\nFrom July 8 to August 10 a series\nof lectures entitled The Art of Photography will be under the direction\nof Mr. A. George Bulhak.\nThe course will deal with the arts\nof pictorial and commercial photography. It will cover such aspects as\ncamera techniques, handling the subject, composition. exhibition and\njudging.\nThere will !:\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 a beginners course\ndealing with camera techniques and\nearly forms of informal pictorial\ncomposition. The advanced course will\nemphasize pictorial and illustrative\nphotography.\nRegistration fee for the course is\n$10.\nSTAR CABS LTD\n*\nMArine 2121\n591 Howe Street\n24 Hour Service\n21 UBC Students Get\n11,700 In Awards\nUBC Second on Lists as Council\nGives Awards at 17 Universities\nAwards totalling $11,700 have been granted to 21 UBC\nstudents and a UBC graduate at the University of Toronto by\nthe National Research Council.\nThe awards were made to students at 17 universities across\nCanada, with McGill first and UBC second.\nPrizes at UBC were granted in thef-\ndepartments oi metallurgy, zoology,\nchemistry, geology and physics with\nsix veterans included among the lists.\nTwenty-three awards granted to\nstudent at other universities will enable them to study in Vancouver.\nAWARDS LISTED\nUBC student winning awards were;\nR, E. Carter, 2430 East Georgia, and\nD. M. Morgan, 3686 Blenheim, who\nboth received $450 metallurgy awards.\nA $450 prize in zoology went to\nHarold Godfrey, 5658 Dalhousie Rd.\n50 UNTD Members\nHere for Assembly\nFifty University Naval Training\nDivision members, fresh from their\ntraining base at Esquimalt at Victoria, paraded before Canada's Governor General at Convocation assembly this afternoon.\nThe cadets sailed from Vancouver\non May 3 and joined the RCN Pacific\nsquadron for cruises to Ucluelet,\nNanoose Bay, Prince Rupert, and\nnorthern waters aboard HMCS Ontario, HMCS Antigonish, and HMCS\nKyoga.\nUpon completion of the cruises they\nreceived training in navigation, gunnery and supply at the naval training\nbase, HMCS Naden, Esquimalt.\nA $450 bursary goes to D. A. Munro,\nUBC graduate in zoology, now studying at the University of Toronto and\na $750 award in physics was gained\nby J. C. F, MacDonald, 2665 Topp\nAve., Victoria at the University of\nToronto.\nThe following persons were granted $450 physics bursaries:\nP. E. Argyle, 2222 Balaclava; R. H.\nChow, 192 East Pender; N. J. Harrick,\nLang Bay, B.C.; J. K. Kinnear, 2867\nWest Nineteenth; R. D. Lawson, 2804\nWest Twelfth; S. R. Morrison, 1524\nKitchener; J. E. Piercy, Denman Island; J. T. Sample, 1917 Gilley Ave.,\nNew Westminster; H. E. D. Scovil,\n1053 Douglas Crescent; Miss Lorna\nM. Silver, Port Alberni, and Miss\nHelen Urquhart, Port Moody.\nM. C. Robinson, 221 Fiftieth Avenue,\nNew Westminster, was awarded a\n$450 award in geology.\nSTUDENTSHIPS GRANTED\nStudentships valued at $750 were\nawarded to A. E. Worthington, 2744\nWest Thirty-fifth, graduate student\nin Chemistry.\nStudentships of the same value in\nphysics went to Harry Brown, 1819\nAcadia Road; T. L. Collins, Acadia\nCamp; P. N. Daykin 2836 West Forty-\nsecond, and T. M. Dauphinee, Acadia\nCamp.\nALEXANDER GETS DEGREE\nAT CONVOCATION TO-DAY\nHis Excellency the Governor-General of Canada received\nan honorary Doctor of Laws degree at the Spring Convocation\nCeremony in the Armory this afternoon.\n $\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Viscount and Lady Alexander ar-\n|mVAM|| I llff Rj|n rived here this morning on a three\nWlCl|y kill J I/O 11 day visit. They arrived by steam\nship from Victoria at 7 a.m. this\nLifts Ban\nOn Vets Earnings\nAlmost 1000 veterans at UBC will\nbe affected by the announcement of\nthe lifting of restrictions on outside\nearnings at the beginning of the next\nuniversity term in the Autumn.\nThe announcement was made in the\nHouse of Commons by Veterans Minister Gregg,\nAt present, limitations of $75 a\nmonth for a single man and $75 for\nthe wife of a married veteran are\nenforced.\nIn making the announcement Gregg\nsaid that he did so before the term\nended so that any' veterans who\nfeared they might not be able to return to college would be able to reconsider.\nAt present there are 4300 veterans at\nUBC and in the main the lifting of\nrestriction will affect veterans without children whose wives are working.\nmorning and were met at 9 a.m. by\nacting-mayor George Miller, heads\nof the armed forces, and honorary\naides, Major-Gen. B. M. Hoffmeister,\nAir Vice-Marshal K. G. Nairn and\nCmdr. K. C. McRae\nAt noon their excellencies were received by the Bishop of New Westminster the Rt. Rev. Sir Francis\nHeathecote at Christ Church Cathedral.\nDELIVERS ADDRESS\nAt 2 p.m. this afternoon the Governor-General accepted the degree of\nDoctor of Laws (Honoris Causa) and\ndelivered the convocation address. It\nwas broadcast.\nThere will be approximately 20\nguests this evening at 7:40 p.m. when\ntheir Excellencies dine with Hon. and\nMrs. Eric W. Hamber. After this at\n10:15 p.m. they will appear at the\nconvocation ball at the Commodore.\n@04tqnafalcwtiLty&\nfrom\nODEON\nTHEATRES\nof Canada\nLimited\n\"Sacce44 it* yaal frdoAe. GHrdeavaotU\nrr PAGE 4\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nThursday, May 13, 1948\nThe Daily Ubyssey\nMember Canadian University Press\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Dept., Ottawa\nMail Subscribers\u00E2\u0080\u0094$2.50 per year\nEditorial opinions expressed herein are those of the editorial staff of\nDaily Ubyssey and not necessarily those of the Alma Mater Society\nof the University.\nEDITOR-IN-CHIEF - DONALD FERGUSON\nEIDTOR THIS ISSUE: JIM BANHAM\nThe\nnor\n\"I ADMIT YOU..\nn\nWith the oracularly pronounced \"I admit you\" 1400 new\ngraduates of the University of B.C. saw the end of their\nundergraduate days and the beginning of the careers which,\nlie in their futures.\nThe act of graduating amid the splendor of the variegated\nfaculty robes, the sober-faced choir, the throng of dewy-eyed\nparents and the rustle of 1400 graduate gowns and hoods is\na little stunning to most of the customers.\nIt represents the last and final chapter of college days,\nwith the suggestions of studies and exams, of cooked labs\nand copied essays, of over-due library books and raided carrels, of parties and love-affairs, of bus queues and caf queues;\nall of which will be mentally filed away and labelled \"the best\nyears of my life.\"\nPerhaps the most stunning aspect of the ceremony is the\nstark realization that student days are over and the time has\ncome to look after yourself. Carefully planned careers go\namiss, hoped-for jobs fail to measure up to expectations and\nall-pervading is a feeling of finality \u00E2\u0080\u0094 that what you are\nabout to do will make a huge difference to the course of your\nlife and that a decision must now stand a very long time.\nIn the unsure times of the present day graduates are\nindeed to be congratulated for their tenacity in winning the\nold academic fight.\nOn behalf of the undergraduates, and on our own behalf,\nThe Daily Ubyssey is proud to extend these congratulations\nand to toss in a sincere hope for good fortune in the alumni\nyears of the class of 1948.\nCLASS PROPHECY\nBy PAUL WRIGHT\n1968: Here we are again after twenty years of buffeting on\nthe stormy seas of life. Some have weathered the storms and\nthe calms, very well, while others are coming apart at the seams.\nHowever the class of '48 was well known for its stamina; there\nis really nothing the matter with us today that a few weeks in\ndrydock won't remedy. It is my purpose as class prophet,\nhowever, to refer to our present state of repair or disrepair;\nmy purpose today is to review the phophecy that was made\non that truly memorable day twenty years ago, to test its\nvalidity, and to discard those sections which time has proven\nto be incorrect.\nYou will recall the prophecy as it was read twenty years\nago today. While you, the class of '48 settled yourself back\ncomfortably in cafeteria type chairs supplied from Frank\nUnderbill's large stock pile, and soothed yourself with popsicles\npurchased from profits enjoyed by the council of that year, I\nmounted to the dias and read the following:\n\"The omens have been duly examined, the stars have been\nsearched, the entrails have been sifted, and the cards have been\nscanned ... I do now state irrevocably and beyond retraction\nthat Fortune will serve certain of our classmates in strange and\ndevious ways. The fates have decreed that Nora Clarke will,\nin 1952, lead a new suffragette movement successfully campaigning for no votes for men. Don Ferguson are newsman, will\nturn up in China as the editor-in-chief of the biggest inflation\ndollar plant in the Orient. Joan and Patricia Christian, our fair\nhaired twins, will have been the cause of thirty-seven minor\nautomobile accidents, and one hundred and nineteen cases of\nmild delirium tremens suffered by unfortunates who thought\nthey were seeing double. Gwynn Griffiths will be given a social\ncase work assignment with the African Ubangis and will make\na fortune selling lipstick as a sideline.\nAlan McGili oA the basis of his activities on behalf of international relations on this campus will be given the task of\ndesigning a United Nations flag. He will then have a nervous\nbreakdown trying to arrange a bulldog, a hammer and sickle,\nand an eagle in an interesting design. Taddy Knapp will blossom into a criminologist and will write seventeen books on the\nhabits of juvenile delinquent boys. Maxine McClung and Teena\nHoward will open rival model agencies and fashion salons. They\nwill both go out of business when the Sunbathing Association\npersuades the Canadian people that the bathing suit is unhealthily confiining.\nDon Stainsby and John Wardroper will co-edit the first\npicture magazine with harmonizing perfume. Their best selling\nedition will be one featuring North American wild flowers, but\n(Continued on Page 7)\nPresident's Message\nPerhaps the most interesting message that I can write for\nthe graduation number of \"The Ubyssey\" is one about some of\nour current plans and problems, The first of these is financial.\nWhile the Provincial and Dominion Governments and private\ncitizens as well have been generous in their treatment of the\nUniversity, the facts are that we have grown so fast and the\ncosts of labour, materials, equipment, etc. have risen so greatly\nthat we are finding it extremely difficult to meet the legitimate\nneeds of the various faculties and departments. Despite the increases in the Provincial Grant, the per capita contribution\nof each student and even on\nbehalf of each civilian student\nis considerably less than it was\nin the 1920s. The per capita\ncontributions made by the citizens of British Columbia to the\ncosts of higher education in the\nprovince are less than they\nwere in the 1920's and the percentage of the provincial revenue, which is paid to the university by way of grant, is also\nless, Fees, on the other hand,\nhave increaed botsh actually\nand proportionately. Compared\nwith other institutions in Canada, we are better off in these\nrespects than Manitoba but not\nas well off as Alberta, Toronto,\nMcGill and Western. It is, of\ncourse, difficult to make accurate comparisons between Institutions, as different in their organization and set-up as these vari\ncost $811, 455.68 plus a special award of 8125,000.00 made to the\ncontractors by Mr. Justice Sidney Smith, acting as a special\ncommissioner. (This award has been paid by the Government\nout of the five million dollar appropriation). The Power House\nis approaching completion at a cost of $331,673.18 - an increase\nof $31^673.18 over the original estimate. A wing to the Library\nis nearing completion and is expected to cost $763,174.80; the\nApplied Science Building is being proceeded with at a revised\nestimate of $744,820.54; and the buildings and land clearing\nfor Agriculture have cost to date $159,636.20. In addition\"\n$600,000.00 has been allocated to the Biological Sciences and\nPharmacy; $750,000.00 for Bacteriology and Preventive Medicine; $50,000.00 promised to the Memorial Gymnasium Fund\nin lieu of an extension to present gymnasium; a balance of\n$40,000.00 is earmarked for Agriculture; $250,000.00 for services\nto buildings in the Biological and Medical area of the campus;\n$250,000.00 toward the provision of facilities for the medicai\nsciences and a small balance of about $124,000.00 for other\nservices connected with, the Medical Faculty, This leaves a.s\nurgent needs residences for men and women, a first-class dining\nroom or cafeteria to replace the 'Caf and emergency eating\nplaces on the campus; a building for Home Economics; and\nan Arts Building. Then there are other items like a Museum,\na building for the Fine Arts, the reconversion of certain of the\nexisting permanent buildings to more modern needs and, finally,\nthe additional amounts that will be necessary before the Faculty\nof Medicine is properly housed and equipped.\nIt should also be noted that the amount allocated at present\nbuilding costs will not complete the Applied Science Building,\nthe Biological Sciences Building or the building for Bacteriology\nand Preventive Medicine and, while all of the space in these,\nbuildings and in the new wing of the Library will be used and\nused to advantage, they will all need to be finished and properly\nous universities are, but my own conclusion is that the Province I equipped in due course. No doubt other interesting needs will\nof British Columbia has been getting better university education \ occur to others as the university grows and develops. These\nfor less money contributed by the province or by any of the needs, too, will have to be met. The programme which I have\nGREETINGS\nTO THE GRADS OF'48\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Wc have served you dining your Varsity years\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 May wc continue to serve you In your Business and Professional\nvcars that will follow your graduation.\n\"Printing for Every Purpose'\nAnderson Printing Co.\nLIMITED\nPA. 5838\nHAMILTON ST.\nVANCOUVER, BC\ncitizens of the province, (except the students themselves), than\nany other Canadian province.\nThe costs of higher education are particularly heavy in the\nfaculties and departments which seem to be of greatest practical\nand direct material benefit to the province and to the people\nof it, e.g., Agriculture, Engineering and all its branches, Forestry, Fisheries and the Sciences.\nSubstantial private endowments would be a great benefit\nto the University of British Columbia, not only because of the\nincome which would be derived from these endowments, but\nbecause in my opinion diverse sources of revenue make fpr\nthe maximum freedom in operation and teaching. Apart from\nendowment, my hope is that we will be able to get at least\n$300.00 from the Provincial Government and Legislature each\nyear for every duly qualified student that enrolls with us. The\nalternatives to this are to limit the number of opportunities for\neducation which we offer, thus limiting the number of students\nwho can enroll, or provide a second rate standard of education\nfor those in attendance.\nOur second major problem is that of providing buildings\nand equipment that are reasonably fireproof and permanent\nfor our expanding student body. Most of the accommodation\nat the university is semi-permanent frame and stucco construction. These buildings are not fireproof and will have to be replaced after they have served another twenty or thirty years.\nThese, together with the existing permanent buildings, were\ndsigned to accommodate from 2,000 to 2,500 students. While\nwe will lose all of, our veteran students in due course, our normal enrollment after they leave will probably level off at between 4,000 and 5,000, and will continue to grow from that total.\nWe planned in 1944 and 1945 to add the following buildings\nat the estimated cost indicated:\nA new building for the Department of Physics $500,000.00\nA new wing to the Library 600,000.00\nA new building for Arts 500,000,00\nResidences 450,000.00\nThe Biological Sciences 500,000.00\nThe Bacteriology and Preventive Medicine 500,000.00\nAn extension to the present Gymnasium 50,000.00\nAdditions to buildings for Applied Science 300,000.00\nAdditions and land clearing in Agriculture 200,000.00\nHome Economics 100,000.00\nExtension to Power Plant 300,000.00\nIf it were decided to form a Faculty of Medicine, it was\nestimated that we would need in addition to the $500,000.00 for\nBacteriology and Preventive Medicine, $500,000.00 for the\nmedical sciences on the campus and another $500,000.00 for\nvarious purposes connected with that faculty. These amounts\nmade no provision for the necessary services, such as roads,\nsewers, water, heat, light, power ,etc, which had to be brought\ninto these buildings as they were constructed.\nThe Provincial Government very generously in the Spring\nof 1945 arranged that five million dollars should be made\navailable for this permanent building programme. At 1944 building costs the construction engineers that we employed to draw\nblock plans estimated that we could provide most of the buildings at the prices indicated. In the interval three things have\nhappened: the costs of construction have nearly doubled, a\ngreat deal of emergency accommodation in huts has been made\navailable and the pattern of our student enrollment has changed.\nThese necessitated certain changes in our building programme\nand the Board of Governors acting on recommendations from\na large committee of some 60 members, consisting of Deans,\nHeads of Departments, representatives of the Alumni and\nAlumnae, the student body, the Senate, and the Board of\nGovernors, authorized the' construction, first, of the Physics\nBuilding; second, the Power House; third, the new Library\nwing; fourth, the Applied Science Building; fifth, various buildings and a land clearing programme for the Faculty of Agriculture. The Physics Building is now completed and has actually\nindicated above will give some idea of how much remains to be\ndone at the present time to equip this University properly for\nthe work that the public expects it to do.\nFinally, a word about the proposed Medical Faculty: there\nte unanimous agreement that both the capital and operating\ncosts of this faculty will be high. There is equal unanimity that\nunless the Province can afford a first-class Medical School it\nwould be better off without one. The Government and Legislature in the session which has just ended stated that they\nwould be prepared to contribute $350,000.00 annually toward\nthe operating costs of the Medical School and indicated too,\nthat this contribution would be in addition to the amounts\nnecessary for other departments and faculties at the University\nand would not in any way interfere with their legitimate claims\nfor adequate funds for growth and expansion. This annual grant,\ntogether with the fees of the 250 students in Medicine that may\nbe enrolled, should provide us with enough money annually to\nmake a good beginning' At least another million and a half\ncapital, however, will be needed for buildings on the campus\nfor this faculty and in addition someone will have to provide\nand maintain suitable teaching facilities in connection with a\nhospital. The University, in agreement with the opinions of\na number of distinguished authorities, who came to Vancouver\nat our request and advised us about these matters, would like\nto have the teaching hospital on the University campus. Some\nothers in the province seem to prefer that these facilities should\nbe established in connection with the Vancouver General\nHospital and other Vancouver Hospitals. This, while not as\nsatisfactory from our point of view, will in my opinion, enable\nus to start a Medical School and to maintain a reasonably good\none, provided these facilities are adequate and the costs of\nestablishing and maintaining them are taken care of.\nThese, then, are some of the problems and plans which the\nUniversity administration and teaching staff are concerned with\nand which I thought might be of special interest to those who\nmay read your graduation number.\nYour Community Green Grocer\nwishes\nSUCCESS TO THE GRADUATES OF '48\nFresh fr\nnit and vegetables brought in for you daily\nFREE DELIVERY\nVARSITY PRODUCE\n10th Ave\n. and Sasamat ALma 1141\nCongratulations . .\ntrom\nServing 10th & Sasamat\nat\n4440 WEST 10th AVE, Thursday, May 13, 1948\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY .\nPAGE 5\nCoHgw7a6z7wti- CLASS OF 1948 *~\nM# 10th AVE. GmmttmG\nCongratulations\nfrom\nRADIO\nENTAL\nEPAI R\n4453 West 10th Ave.\nAlma 2244\nCongratulations Grads!\nHave Your\nGRADUATION PORTRAIT\ntaken while you still have your\nCap and Gown\nMcCaffrey Photos\n4538 W. 10th Ave. AL 2404\n(Sasamat Opposite Saieway's)\nCompliments\nand\nBest Wishes\nQeotope tSayce\nSporting Goods\n4451 West 10th Ave.\nAlma 1414\nCONGRATULATIONS\nGRADUATES!\nPaulette Shoppe\nLADIES SUITS - COATS\nSPORTSWEAR\n4365 W. 10th Ave.\nAL 3101\nCONGRATULATIONS\nSUamnock Stouty Salon.\n4403 W. 10th AVE.\nALma 0201\nMr. & Mrs. A. S. Johnson\nGraduates: Hollywood Institute of Hair Design\nHollywood, Calif.\nFeaturing:\nThe Radio Wave\nThe precision permanent Controlled by Electronics\n(Now Reduced in Price)\nTo the Class of '48 . . .\nBest Wishes for a Successful Future\nMARTY LLOYD\n4409 W. 10th Ave. Vancouver, B.C.\nCongratulations and Best Wishes from\nmORflV HOSIERY & LlnGERIE\n\"University District's Largest\nHosiery and Lingerie Store\"\n4573 W. 10th Ave.\nAlma 2807\nBEST WISHES\nto the\nGRADS OF '48\nVERN'S TOGS\n4571 W. 10th Ave.\nALma 1863\nCONGRATULATIONS GRADUATES\nTOMORROW..*\n%^\ntodcuf\n^%:e\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nJ\nV\nat\n\"\u00C2\u00AB*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0;:\nFollow the lead of more than a million Canadians who\nsave for tomorrow.. .open your BofM account today.\nBank of Montreal\nworking with Canadians in tvtry walk oj lift sinci 1817\nWEST POINT\" GREY BRANCH: Sasamat & Tenth\nA. E. WALTERS, Manager\nWE HAVE FOLLOWED YOUR GROWTH\nfrom babyhood\nWAY BACK WHEN\n... to those\nFIRST SCHOOL DAYS\nexams ... ~ \u00E2\u0080\u0094. \w\nWEREN'T SO TOUGH\n. . . then\nin spring . . .\nA Young Man's Fancy\n. . . turned to baseball\nremember? ...\nTHAT FIRST DATE\n. . . a high school prom\nAND NOW\nGRADUATION!\nBEST WISHES GRADUATES!\n. . . every success in your future endeavors\nGOULD'S GRILL\n4423 WEST 10th - ALma 3137\nBetween Trimble and Sasamat\nGRADUATION CLASS '48\nCongratulations and Best Wishes For\nYour Future Success\n\"NOW IS THE HOUR\"\nto order that\nCONVOCATION\nBALL\"\nCORSAGE\nSelection of\nRoses, Gardenias^ Carnations,\nEtc.\n(Orchids by order)\nPOINT GREY FLOWER SHOP\n(Harold H, Graham, Proprietor)\nWe specialize in Wedding Bouquets and all types of\nFloral Arrangements\n4429 W. 10th Ave.\nAL. 0660\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2;\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB<>\u00C2\u00AB\nWE WISH YOU EVERY SUCCESS\nTHE THUNDERBIRD\nWishes to Congratulate the\nCLASS OF '48\nand thanks the student body for its patronage this\nspring.\nWe hope to see the familiar faces back again in the fall\n1450 West 10th Ave.\nALma 0045\nGood Luck To\nThe Class of '48\nfrom\nKAY'S MEAT MARKET\n4460 West 10th Ave.\nALma 1794\nCONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES\nfrom\netm4\nFINE FOODS\nMELLOW WHIP ICE CREAM\n4489 W. 10th Ave.\nAL. 2596\nNGRATULATIONS TO THE '48\nGRADUATING CLASS\nFelicitations to the Faculty\n.Members for their Work, Patience\nand many long hours\nOWL DRUG CO. LTD.\nYour Friendly Rexall Druggists\n4421 W. 10th Ave. ALma 1002\nHEARTY CONGRATULATIONS\nSuccessful Students and Graduates\nWHEREVER YOU SPEND THE SUMMER\nAND WHEN YOU RETURN\nWHEREVER YOU TAKE UP YOUR\nBUSINESS OR PROFESSIONAL CAREER\nMAKE\nTHE CANADIAN BANK\nOF COMMERCE\nYOUR BANK\n66 BRANCHES IN B.C. AND THE YUKON\nOver 500 Branches in Canada and Abroad\nUniversity District, Vancouver Branch\nH. M. CORNWALL \u00E2\u0080\u0094 MANAGER PAGE 6\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nThursday, May 13, 1948\nMAKE DINING OUT AN ADVENTURE\n ^ ~s\nat ^Jlte Alkamkfta\nCool - Comfortable - Clean\nCosmopolitan Cuisine\nComer of Cypress and Cornwall BAy. 6420\nOpen Daily \u00E2\u0080\u0094 11:30 A.M. to 1:00 A.M.\nAvailable also for Fraternity Functions and Club Banquets.\nAcconuoodation for 140.\nGREETINGS TO THE\nCLASS OF '48\nClass Prophecy\nContinued from Page 4\ni p-^--\nVICTOR SPENCER\nTHE NEW FAMILY HOME\nAfter the wedding the natural place for the reception\nis a large and attractive home to accommodate your\nfriends. We provide everything:\nFOOD, FLOWERS, MUSIC FOR RECEPTIONS,\nSHOWERS, ETC.\nJftamlwfcr pfebbtitg ^ttvftvm ^onte\n2011 W. 48th Ave.\nthey will suffer a serious financial setback in a series of pictorial\narticles on polecat ranching. Cal Whitehead and Beverley\nWilson will develop a baby sitting agency to a high peak of\nperfection. Cal will design a new type of diaper called the\neternal triangle, and Beverly will specialize in teaching new\nborn infants Hamet's soliloquy before they can say 'Mama.'\nBill McKay will take a croquet team to the 1957 Olympics\nheld in Timbuctoo, and will coach this team to victory over all\ncomers. Chester Taylor will be called the fair-haired boy on\nBroadway. He will stage all the best musicals for the next fifteen\nyears, and taper off gradually in his old age till he is head\nwindow trimmer at Kresge's. Ron Grantham and Fred Lipsett\nwill discover a way to remove Ripple Rock from the shipping\nI lane, and will work for twenty years afterwards to discover a\nway to fill in the hole they make in the process. Cut Cunningham will make a fortune as a \u00C2\u00ABriminal lawyer, and will discover\nthat he can make twice as much modeling Cunningham crew\ncuts in New York. Perry Millar and Jean White will both\ncompete for position as head of the supreme court. Perry\nwill concede the victory because of old fashioned courtesy, and\nwill instead take a post as justice-of-the-peace at Niagara Falls,\nwhere he will gain the world's record for mass marriages by\nuniting, with the help of a loudspeaker, seven hundred and\nsixty-five betrothed couples at a single ceremony.\nBill Smith will invent the Smithsonian Calendar, providing\nfor a nine day week and a thirty-six hour day, to permit executive types on twice as many committees, and attend three times\nas many Board of Trade luncheons, He will have much trouble\nwith indigestion in his latter days.\nThese are the prophecies, indisputable, unchangeable, and\ntrue beyond all shadow of doubt. In general it may safely be\nsaid that all members of the Class of '48 will be either \"famous\nor notorious.\"\nLooking around us today, fellow classmates, in the year\n1968, we cannot help but be struck with the uncanny accuracy\nof this prophecy. Regard the classmate on your left\u00E2\u0080\u0094famous,\nunmistakeably famous. Glance swiftly at the classmate on your\nright. It is whispered that he is indeed notorious. Twenty\nyear ago the oracle spoke. We can question the words of the\noracle. Great terrible things were prophesied. They have all,\nwithout exception, \"come to pass.\nLast Will and Testament\nOf the Class of 1947 -1948\nTESTAMENT\nWe hereby revoke all prior wills and Testamentary depositions heretofore made by us.\nWe give, devise, grant and bequeath:\n1. To Comrades MacKenzie, Birney, and Lewis, Fellow\nTraveler Pamphlet 569 containing evasive answer for questioning clergymen.\n2. To Dave Brousson, a big job.\n3. To the War Memorial Committee, a divot-replaccr.\n4. To Frank Underhill, who has waged a lifelong and\nlosing fight against the forces of undergraduate dissolution in\nhis endeavour to run a respectable place, one green baize table,\none green eyeshade.\n5. To Grant B. Livingstone who has consistently fled a\nsix-pointed star, a black umbrella to ward off its rays.\nthe English Department, a semi-colon,\nthe Premeds, a colon,\no the Biology department, a contract for all future\nes of political belligerence. ^\n9. To the Library staff, a mounted,^oldplated model of a\nivet gun, militant.\n(signed) The Class of '48\nper Ned Larsen.\nwpek/ect\n^GRADUATION GIFT!\nBig Plans Bog Down\nTotem Production\nProduction of The Totem. UBC's\npermanent yearly record, has met\nwith difficulties and the editor has\nannounced that it will not be available until late in June.\nEditor Don Stainsby told the Daily\nUbyssey that many new innovations\nin the book this year have held up\nproduction. These same changes, he\nadded, would make the book something worth waiting for.\nCopies will be mailed as soon as\npossible to all members of the graduating classes. Cost of this procedure, however, prevents ii's being applied! universally. Undergrads can\npick up their books during the summer or in the fall at the AMS office,\nTo Agrologisf\nCouncil\nDr. J. E'. Munro, Deputy minister of\nagriculture for thc B.C. government,\nan John C. Berry, senior member of\nthe University of British Columbia,\nhave been appointed by the provincial government to the council of\nthe B.C. Institute of Agrologists.\nBEST WISHES\nfrom , .Dte*ce\n\X\nCanadian Dress Designer\n308 Arts & Crafts Building\n576 SEYMOUR STREET\nCongratulations, Graduates\nfAMCUJ\nCLOAK & SUIT CO.\nti)''-f~n When Your Spring\nFever's Chronic...\nAnd your fancy lightly turns to thoughts a little less\nthan 100% platonic ...\nAnd you cut your favorite classes and take sulphur\nand molasses . . .\nYou obviously need an Arrow Spring Tonic!\nTake your ailment to your favorite Arrow store.\nA new Arrow tie or two will make a new man\nof you (almost)!\nARROW SHIRTS\n^lES \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 HANDKERCHIEFS *\nFOK AS LITTLE AS *l-50\nPerfect from a hoy friend . . . perfect from a\nbest friend . . . perfect from a favorite relative . . .\nLutien Lrlong perfumes to make every occasion as\ngala as graduation day! Indiscrete, Tailspin and\n-n Sirocco in working - your - way - through - college to\nV\u00C2\u00A7 rich- uncle sizes.\n^~ $0 \">0\nIndiscrete Perfume from ''_&*'\n... ia \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 n i #9 \nIndiscrete Dusting I owner *u*\nIndiscrete Cologne ironi \u00C2\u00B1,\nTic Tac Toe (Lipstick Trio) *1.50\nCLERGYMEN\nWIN DEGREES\nIn the spring convocation of the\nAnglican College of Divinity in Brock\nHall, Wednesday, April 28, Rev. Douglas A. Ford, B.A., Lth., was only\ngraduate to receive \u00C2\u00BB Bachelor of\nDivinity Degree.\ne\nHonorary Doctorates of Divinity\nwere conferred on Rt. Rev. F. P.\nClark, Bishop of the Kootenays, and\nRev. Prof. D. P, Watney, M.A., B.D.\nLicentiate of Theology diploma was\nawarded to Norman Edgar Tanner\nand Certificates of Standing to Kenneth Maxwell Collison, Capel Stand-\nish Lutener and Angus Ewen Hamilton Cameron.\nParty refreshment\nCOCACOIA LTD., VAN\nAsk for it either way .. . both\ntrade-marks mean tbe same thing. Thursday, May 13, 1948\nDR DANIEL BUCHANAN\n. . , Retiring Dean\nUK. ISABEL. h. iviaiim>ua\n. . . Retiring German Head\nDR. G. G. ShDGEWICK\n. . . Retiring English Head\n....^.^\^ \u00C2\u00AB^\^nu9Cw/*&{ -.ywfc __$_sjfgi\nl)R. S. N. F. CHANT\n. . . New Dean of Arts\nFour Faculty Members\nRetire from UBC Service\nApril 1948 saw the disappearance of some of the campus's\nmost familiar faces among the faculty.\nFour senior faculty members and the university's bursar\nretired after many years devoted to lecturing and student\nadministration.\nGage, prof, of mathematics, will as- I\nsume in addition the duties of Dean\nof Administrative and Inter-Faculty\nAffairs,\nDr, J. Roy Daniells, professor of\nnEglish, has been appointed new\nhead of the Department of English.\nDr. Daniells, who came to UBC in\nSeptember 1946, graduated from this\nuniversity. He took his Ph.D. at\nDr. Daniel Buchanan, Dean of the\nFaculty of Arts and Science and head\nof the Department of Mathematics,\nconcludes 28 years of association with\nUBC.\nHe has been professor, dean, and\non occasion, acting president. He was\nhead of the Department of Mathematics for 22 years and dean of Arts\nfor nearly 20 years.\nHe is a member of the American\nMathematical Association and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada.\nDr. G. G. Sedgewick, retiring head\nof the Department of English, first\njoined the university staff in 191,\nthree years after the iniUtiltion\nopened.\nHe later studied for a time at Harvard where he obtained the degree\nAggie, Geography\nStudents Jump\nFrom Pan to Fire\nHave you ever leaned back\nafter a job was done and then,\nthat very same instant, have\nsomeone come up and hand\nyou another?\nWell, fifteen UBC students\nand graduates just through\nwith their examinations had\nthat same experience last\nweek.\nThe students were from the fac-\nultes of Agriculture and Geography,\nand their classes are in a special\ncourse on land utilization, administered by the university in co-operation with the Department of Lands.\nOn completion of a two\ncourse, the students\na\nin\nof Doctor of Philosophy in English.\nHe taught in the U.S. before returning to the UBC.\nRecently he has published a number of radio broadcasts which he\nhad been called upon to participate\nin from time to time during his long\nteaching career. Since October 1942\nhe has been chairman of the university committee on honorary degrees.\nDr. Sedgewick is said to be pne of\nthe great authorities on the Elizabethan period of English literature\non this continent.\nDr. Isabel Maclnnes head of the\nDepartment of German, first associated\nwith UBC as an instructor in the\ndays when it was still McBill University College, was appointed professor\nof German in 1943. She became head\nof the Department of German when\nit was created from the old Department of Modern Languages in 1946.\nDr. Robert H. Clark, after a brilliant academic career in Canada and\nat Leipzig, taught in American universities from 1909 to 1916. He came\nto UBC as an assistant professor in\nthe latter year. During World War\nII he directed research on a number\nof problems suggested by the armed\nforces.\nAngus MacLucas, retiring bursar,\nwho came to the university in 1916\nas a member of the book-keeping\nstaff, succeeded to the post of bursar\nin 1934, on the retirement of the late\nFred Dallas.\nA. B. Recknagel, who has been\nserving as acting head of the Department of Forestry, is leaving to join\nthe staff of St. Regis Paper Co,, New\nYork, as technical director of forestry,\nSucceeding Dr. Buchanan as Dean\nof Arts is Prof. S. N. F. Chant, OBE,\nprofessor of psychology and head of\nthe Department of Philosophy and\nPsychology.\nOntario-born Prof. Chant, director\no fpersonnel selection and research\nis\nToronto and was head of the Department of English at University of\nManitoba before coming here>\nNew hefid of the Department of\nMathematics, Dr. R. D. James, who\ngraduated from UBC in 1928. He is a\nFellow of the Royal Society of Canada\nand author of a number of important\nbooks on mathematical problems.\nDIET1WU (0LLIMS4\n'f'K.^t^P MACHINE TOOtS \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 CONSTRUCTION \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nJ V.V5^**^ LOGGING \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 SAWMILL jnd MINING EQll\n(HdTcol^\nVancouver, B.C.\nPhone KE. 4311\nweeks\ncrews will! for the RCAF from 1941 to 1945\nsurvey Crown Lands in the Peace author of \"Mental Training, a Prac\nRiver, Prince George,\nand Kootenay areas\nSimilkameen, (tical sychology.\"\nl Dynamic, popular Prof, Walter H.\nEVERY GOOD WISH\nTO THE GRADUATING CLASS\nfor\nSUCCESS, PROSPERITY\nAND HAPPINESS\nFROM\nCLARENCE WALLACE\nBURRARD DRY DOCK\nCOMPANY LIMITED\ndf&i\u00C2\u00A3(4%48\nThe Graduation Ball... a night to remember . . . you,\nlovelier than he's ever seen you, dancing like a\ndream ... and looking like one ... in a Ricky formal,\nbeautifully styled, economically priced, from The BAY.\nRomantic White . . . nylon eyelet embroidery, bare on one\nshoulder, with a crisp nylon\nnet frill caught up at the back\n... a wide, wide flounced\nskirt\nDramatic Black . . . nylon marquisette with a diaphanous\nskirt to waltz in ... a mist of\nwhite lace on the shoulder\nstraps ... at the demure\nbodice.\nCollege Shop, Third Floor\nl^tutfony l?8\u00C2\u00A3 dompang.\nINCOK^ORATHO *fm MAY IfTO THE DAILY UBYSSEY\nThursday, May 13, 1948\nLivingstone Flies\nTo Arizona Parley\nThree smiling UBC student-veterans waved families goodbye at Vancouver Airport. Tuesday afternoon,\nand buzzed off by light plane to a\nuniversity conference 1500 miles\naway, s\nThey were headed for Tempe, Arizona, and the Conference of Pacific\nStudent Presidents at Arizona State\nCollege.\n\"See you on the 12th!\" called pilot\nJim Harty, DFC, former RCAF\nbomber pilot, to his young wife and\nfive-year-old daughter Judy.\nHis companions were Dave Brousson, UBC Alma Mater Society president, and Grant Livingstone, last\nyear's campus president.\nSixty universities will be represented at the conference, with UBC\n1he only Canadian \"varsity\" to attend.\nAfter the conference, which lasts\nfrom May 7 to 9, the fliers hope to\ngo to Forth Worth to attend the\nInter-Collegiate Air Meeting at Texas\nChristian University . . . \"if our\nmoney holds out,\" grinned Jim\nHarty.\nTheir plane, a Piper super cruiser,\nwas provided and equipped by the\nUBC Flying Club.\nMath Out\nIn Changes\nNext Session\nTwo New Profs\nAdded to Teach\nAnnouncement that Mathematics 100 is no longer compulsory for all Artsmen marked\nthe highlight of this year's\nregulation and course changes.\nThe course will remain compulsory for students enrolling in Chemistry, Physics, Geography and allied\nsubjects but an extra language\ncourse may be substituted by other\nstudents. A new course, Mathematics\n90, has been added since Math VI is\nno longer compulsory in high school.\nCHARGE LATECOMERS\nLate registration fee will now be\n$10.00 inst'ead of $2.00 and a fee of\n$2.00 will be charged for course\nchanges whereas no fee was previously charged.\nTwo new lecturers, Mr. Ping-Ti\nHo of the Chinese National Tsing\nHua University and Mr. Geoffrey\nDavies of Canterbury, have been\nadded to the Department of International Studies making possible new\ncourses in Chinese external policy\nBritish Commonwealth relations.\nA new course for Home Economics\nstudents is announced by the Department of Bacteriology and Preventi-\ntive Medicine.\nNUMBER CHANGE\nNew courses in advanced Physiology and Cytology are offered by\nthe Department of Biology. The department also announces several\nchanges in course numbers in the\nfield of Genetics. Botany courses in\nForest Pathology have been eliminated and new courses in Economic\nFlora and Taxonomy added.\nGraduate courses in Electrochemistry and Organic relations will be\noffered in 1948-49. Off the schedule\nare courses in Chemistry for teachers\nand Chem. 310, a course in quantitative analysis.\nCommerce students will be offered\na Vk unit course in airline traffic.\nEXPORT\nCANADA'S FINEST\nCIGARETTE\n//\nWho Gives a Damn\na\nStudents Wax Bitter;\nResent Fee Increases\nBy DOUG MURRAY-ALLAN\nFeelings of resentment, indifference and sarcasm, were expressed by students concerning the\nrecent fee' increase, when interviewed by a Daily Ubyssey Reporter last week.\nThe majority of students felt\nthat the increase was necessary\nfrom the point of view of the\nrising cost of living, however all\nof them had comments and suggestions to make as an alternate\nto the increase.\nCUT STAFF\nOne grad student suggested\nsweeping cuts in staff, pointing\nout the prevailing conditions in\nthe Physics department. Some instructors he stated have virtually\nbeen unemployed during the past\nmonth, although they have been\nreceiving their full salary.\nGrant Livingstone, retiring AMS\npresident stated that \"this is just\nanother feature of inflation, and\nI don't think the university can\nhelp it. However I do believe that\nit is getting away from the idea\nof free tuition which was originally\nthe basis of this Provincial University.\"\nDIFFICULT FOR WORKER\nJim Sanderson, a graduating\ncommerce student said that it\nwould be very difficult for some\nstudents who have to depend on\nsummer work to get through next\nyear.\nA second year Arts student commented that \"if the increase in\nfees is paralleled by a decrease\nin the size of lectures, its all right\nwith me.\"\nLaura Haahti, third year Arts,\nstated that, \"I don't think any\nstudent is so destitute that twenty-\nfive dollars would stop him from\nenrolling. At the most about a\nquarter of an average month's\nsalary for a summer job.\"\nCHARGE OUTSIDERS\nOne student was of the opinion\nthat out of province students\nshould be charged higher fees.\n\"These students,\" he stated, \"are\nbeing supported by our taxpayers,\nand since they do not reside within our province I do not believe\nthat they should be given the\nbenefit of our educational institutions on the same basis as those\nstudents who are B.C. residents.\nOne grad student quipped \"I\ndon't give a damn if they raise the\nfees a hundred dollars, I'm not\ncoming back here next year any\nhow.\"\nOUTDOOR UIUTIIMH\nAntfudteto\nin Canada\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 HOWARD CLEVELAND '33\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 NORRIE FINLAYSON '35\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ERNIE CLEVELAND '42\nSEABOARD ADVERTISING CO.\nLIMITED\n301 WEST 5th AVE.\nFA. 0066\n#-_*m&-. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2- *\"-\"'\nflow jet propulsion\ncreates employment\nfor Canadians\nThe principle of the\ngas turbine has long\nbeen known but its\nmost recent application to\nthe jet engine is one of the sensational\ndevelopments of our time. One of the\nmain problems in thes \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 engines, is to get\nmetals to stand up under the intense heat\nand stresses involved.\nDevelopment work on the gas turbine\nis now world-wide. Much progress in\ndesign and development has already\nbeen carried out in Canada.\nnew engines, and placing all their\ntechnical knowledge regarding Nickel\nalloys at their disposal.\npxNietel\"a 611- page\nboot fully illuh\ntrattd, will hi sent\nfrte an rrqntst lo\nanyone interrstid.\nTNE INTERNATIONAL NICKEL COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED, 25 KING STREET WEST, TORONTO Thursday, May 13, 1948\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nPAGE 9\nThe Sun Life Of Canada\nIN BRITISH COLUMBIA\nProvincial Government Report of 1947\nof British Columbia Business\nTotal Assurance in force December 31, 1947 $114,544,077.00\nNew Business effected during 1B47:\nOrdinary 12,205,049.00\nGroup 1,776,570.01)\nTOTAL 13,981,619.00\nCash Disbursements in British Columbia during 1947\nto Policyholders and Beneficiaries 1,977,674.00\nAn average for each working day of 7,083.00\nBritish Columbia Investments\nBonda and other securities $31,193,147.00\nOn Mortgages 5,682,338.00\nTOTAL 36,875,485.00\nBRITISH COLUMBIA BRANCH OFFICE\n6th Floor, Royal Bank Building\nA. L. WRIGHT, C.L.U., Branch Manager \u00E2\u0080\u0094 PA. 5321\nCONGRATULATIONS TO THE GRADUATES\nWMHEUJ\nYOUR FASHION FLORIST\nSpecializing in\nWEDDING BOUQUETS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 CORSAGES\nPhone: BAyview 5656\n3691 West Broadway\nU(en J\l(ayktW, Secretarial\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Accounting\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Machine Training\nWESTERN\nRobson at Granville\nSCHOOL OF\nCOMMERCE\nMA. 8828\nCONGRATULATIONS\nCLASS OF '48\nr4*f\nJewellers\nAmple\nResources\nTHE\nROYAL\nTRUST\nWide\nExperience\nI COMPANY\nASSETS UNDER ADMINISTRATION\n$945,000,000.\nOur service* for the safe-custody of securities, and the management of investments, such as Bonds, Stocks and other securities,,\nMortw-\u00C2\u00AB^\u00C2\u00AB^'\u00C2\u00AB^>areefc*^Wr1W*yi\nVANCOUVER BRANCH\n626 W. Pender St. MArine 8411\nG. O. VALE, MANAGER\nits alumni.\nFIRST CHOICE ON THE\nThese are the shoes you'll see\non every campus this year.\nThey're down to earth styles\nthat will take you through\nsummer with flying colors . . .\nRED, GREEN, BELANCIAGO,\nBLACK SUEDE 10.95\nCOMPLIMENTS\nOF\nCOMMODORE CABARET\nRED GREEN, BELANCIAGO,\nGREY SUEDE 10.95\n691 CRANVILLE ST.\nOppo*lt\u00C2\u00AB The )\nCongratulations Graduates\n... we wish you every success!\nAs Contractors for the new Physics Building, we are proud of the part we have\ntaken In the University Expansion plan.\nAMR WELL COnSTRUCTIOn COIIIPfllW, LlflllTCD\nGENERAL CONTRACTORS PAGE 10\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nCOMPLETE MINING PLANTS\nInternational Tractors and Power Units\nManclia Storage Battery Locomotives\nElmco Loaders\nHolman Mining Equipment\nPetter Diesel Engines\nWheat Electric Minors Lamps\nBertram Machine Tools\nPratt and Whitney Tools\nContinental Do-All Machines\nB. C. Equipment Co. Ltd.\nHEAD OFFICE\n551 Howe Street\nVancouver, B. C.\nWAREHOUSES\n306 Industrial Street\nGranville Island\nSUCCESS TO THE CLASS OF '48\nTerminal City Iron Works\n1909 FRANKLIN ST.\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nDIETHERS\nLTD.\nSAND and GRAVEL\nTRUE MIX CONCRETE\nBUILDERS' SUPPLIES\nCOAL\nGRANVILLE ISLAND\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nMArine 6231\nCAMPBELL\n&\nGRILL\nLTD.\nRoofing and Sheet Metal\nContractors\nExtend Congratulations to the\nGraduates of 1948\n122-124 West 6th Ave.\nFAir. 2920\nValedictory\nByJOANBAYNE\nFor 1400 young men and women, May 13, 1948, will signify\nthe end of undergraduate years and the beginning of more\nearnest careers as UBC graduates and Canadian citizens. In\nspeaking for the 1400, I realize that the year of graduation is\none of the few dates we have in common; for those who registered\nin 1943 and '44 were only interested spectators of the transformation which accommodated those who registered in '45 and '46.\nBut although our interests have been greatly.varied during our\ncollege years, still we take pride as a whole in the accomplishments of UBC and of our fellow-students .\nSince it is a young university, UBC's yearly growht\nin almost every field is only natural, but the impact of the war\nand post-war era created extraordinary demands on the Point\nGrey campus as on every campus throughout the world. However, the Montreal Standard's lengthy article is evidence\nthat the remarkable and memorable achievements of President\nMacKenzie and his faculty and administration command the\nadmiration not only of the province but of the whole of Canada.\nIn 1944 the curriculum still included compulsory military\ntraining and Red Cross service; but with the influx of returning\nservice men and women, courses were accelerated, classrooms\nwere overcrowded and the now-familiar huts appeared on the\ncampus. Further consideration was given to the increased\nenrollment by continuous attempts to furnish new courses and\nnew faculties so that this year witnesses the second graduating\nclass of the Home Economics department and the first valid\ngraduating class of Dean Curtis' Law faculty.\nDespite the swollen registration causing the spotlight to\nrest on academic pursuits, UBC's traditional student endeavors\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nathletic, social, cultural and administrative \u00E2\u0080\u0094 have not been\nignored. Rather ,student activity has reached an all-time high,\nparalleling the growth of the student body and participated in\nequally as well by the veterans as by the average-aged university student.\nSports have prospered and gained in importance since\nthe war's end to the extent that the athletic directorates now\nhave exclusive control of their own finances. \"Bigger and\nbetter\" symphony and jazz concerts, guest artists' programs,\nplays, operettas, and speeches, have been the entertainment fare\nof the UBC student. The opening of the Radio Society's ultramodern studios, the establishment of the university branch of\nthe Canadian Legion, of Acadia, Fort, Wesbrook and\nLittle Mountain Camps, the launching of the War Memorial\nGymnasium Drive, and the increased leadership which UBC\nstudent government officials have given in Canadian and American college associations \u00E2\u0080\u0094 all these are factors in student extracurricular life.\n(Continued on Page 11)\nThursday, May 13,1948\nGOOD GOING!\nElectric Power & Equipment Ltd.\n1285 HOMER ST.\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nCONGRATULATIONS\nTO THE GRADUATES OF 1948\nBloedel, Stewart and Welch Ltd.\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\nBowell McDonald Motor\nCo. Ltd.\nDealers for\nCADILLAC BUICK PONTIAC\n615 Burrard St.\nVancouver, B.C.\nShow Goes On\nWavy rMop of Hair'\nWorn By Players\nGarbage collectors know their\nbusiness but UBC Players' Club\ncast of \"School for Scandal\" claim\nthey don't know real art when they\nsee it.'\nIt was all very disasterous. The\ngarbagemen made off with all the\nhuge elaborate Elizabethan wigs,\nmistaking them for waste, and\nburned them in the incinerator.\nFouy hours before the players\nwere due to board the train fcr\ntheir tour of interior B.C. the loss\nwas discovered.\nRather than have Sir Peter and\nBenjamin Backbite et al appear\nbalding on the stage, the harried\nplayers canvassed the local department stores for mops and spent\nthe first night on the train to\nVernon, their first stop, tying the\nnot so flaxen locks into wigs.\nWith a few licks of poster paint\nand some aluminum dust the\nconverted mops became convincing\ncoiffures and saw thc travelling\ntroup through their week-long\nschedule.\nOpportunity\nMADE IN B. C.\nCONGRATULATIONS TO THE 1948 GRADUATES\nn\nu\nLIMITED\nENGINEERS AND GENERAL\nCONTRACTORS\n1449 HORNBY ST.\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\nThe development of British Columbia's\nnatural resources brings industries here . . .\nwith accompanying payrolls to provide\nopportunities for our young people.\nThrough its Industrial Development Department and its advertising campaign \"Business\nis Moving to B. C.\" the B. C. Electric is\nhelping to establish industries here. Through\nprojects such as Bridge River Hydro, the\nB. C. Electric is ensuring an ample supply of\nlow-cost power . . . one good reason why\n\"Business is Moving to B. C.\" Thursday, May 13, 1948\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nPAGE 11\nCongratulations\n... to the Graduating Class\nWhether for Home or Business Office Our Stationery and Printing\nDepartments will serve you In many ways\nGEHRKE\nSTATIONERY & PRINTING CO. LTD.\n566 Seymour St.\nPA. 0171\nBEST WISHES\nTO THE CLASS OF '48\nCAVE & COMPANY\nLTD.\nASSAY, INDUSTRIAL and EDUCATIONAL\nLABORATORY SUPPLIES CHEMICALS\n567 Hornby St.\nVancouver, B. C.\nTHE\nTORONTO GENERAL TRUSTS\nCORPORATION\nEstabttAea 1882\nBritish Columbia Advisory Board\nSfKRWOOft LETT, C.B.B., \u00C2\u00BB.S.O\u00E2\u0080\u009E LL. B., Chairman\nHON. BUC W. HAMBERv, C.M.O., LL.D.\nn. n. MALKIN\nGEORGE T. CUNNINGHAM\nPRENTICE\nVancouver Office\nPENDER. AND SEYMOUR STREETS\nAssets Under Administration over $3M,IM,#M\nYOU MAY DO BETTER WITH\nKEYSTONE\nIRANI\nLOOSELEAF SHEETS\nand BINDERS\nCl\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB0se Keystone Brand for all Your Class and\nStudy work\nSMITH, DAVIDSON & WRIGHT\nLIMITED\nVancouver Victoria Edmonton\nCalgary\nValedictory\nGrads Of Today Marched With UBC\nIn Transition From War To Peace\n(Continued from Page 10)\nCuriously enough, when most of us donned the traditional\ngreen finery of First Year in 1944, President MacKenzie was\nalso entering UBC as a virtual Freshman; now as we wear our\ngraduating robes so proudly, we find that our honorary President and Vice-president are also leaving the cloistered halls of\nhigher learning for the \"Cold, hard world.\" We salute our most\ndistinguished fellow-graduates, Dean Bucanan and Dr. Sedgewick, and wish them all success and happiness.\nSince 1916, UBC has fostered every activity worthy of\nundergraduate or graduate upport. Its history is short, but it\nis such that each of us is proud today, and will in the future\ncount it an honor to hold degrees from the University of British\nColumbia. The Class of '48 has been fortunate in being a part\nof the university's transition from war to peace with its consequent rebirth of ideas and efforts. As heirs of a vigorous, |\ngrowing, human institution, we hope that we have added to that\ngrowth. And now we leave our Alma Mater, confident that her\ninfluence will never be weakened by any lack of love or loyalty\non the part of the student body, certain that she will grow with\nevery passing year, and hopeful that the contributions of the\n'48 graduates will not soon be forgotten.\nQ*uitjnp\nImported Linens\nChina Antiques\nOriental Gifts\n2932 South Granville Street BAy view 9105\nDICK BLOCKBERGER, Sports Editor\nActing Editor, LAURIE DYER\nEvery Success to the Class of '48\nFoster's Fine Furs\nDesigning\nManufacturing\nRemodelling\n82.) Howe Street\nVancouver, B. C.\nMarine fiV2(i\nDISTINCTIVE HAIRSTYLING\nTownhouse Beauty Salon\nProprietress\nEDITH M. WALL\nOPPOSITE HOTEL VANCOUVER\nCONGRATULATIONS GRADUATES\nfrom\nSorotljtj Mttttyv\nImported Sportswear and Hats\nBAvview 2908\n2572 Granville Street\nCOME IN AND SEE OUR DASHING\nFREE 'N EASY PLAYCLOTHES!\nChoose man tailored slacks or shorts to pair with a sharkskin\nblouse or halter pretty striped sweaters and smartly\ntailored blazers to wear in the evenings when it's cool.\nAll designed for maximum comfort ... at minimum prices.\nCorduroy Shorts \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Wine, red, powder blue, brown $4.95\nShort sleeve striped pullovers in variety of colour combinations $3.95\nFOR FUN IN THE SUN AND SEA\nChoose from our large selection\nof Swim Suits . . . either one\nor two piece suits styled in\npure \"Lastex\" and showing a\nrainbow of color. Sizes 32 to 38.\n$7.95 to $15.95\nVANCOUVER'S\nFASHION\nCENTRE Thursday, May 13, 1948\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\n'Big Red7 Ron Grantham\na\nosen\n'M\nan\nOf y\near\nEngineer Who Risked All To Work With Artsmen\nAdds Honored Title To Long List Of Laurels\nRED'\nGrantham,\nChoice of the Publications Board for Man of the Year 1947-48 is husky, red-headed Ron\nGrantham, president of this year's Engineer's Undergraduate Society.\nThe announcement will come as no surprise to countless students who have known the\ncarroi-topped Engineer s Presi-, likeable Grantham either personally or through his wide reputation as a sincere, hard-working\ndent, has added title of \"Man of | student, leader. Interviewed soon after he was chosen for the honor, Grantham expressed\nthe Year\" to other distinctions, typical qualms about his civil engineering course, in which he is slated to graduate this year.\nAlthough he felt \"surprised\" and \"honored\" about the Pub's\ndecision, it is hardly a new experience for the 22-year-old native\nVancouverite to be singled out for special recognition.\nHis efforts in numerous activities^\nhave been outstanding sihce his days\nBEST WISHES\nto the\nGRADUATING CLASS\nC\nrossman Machinery\nCO. LTD.\n806 BEACH AVE.\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nVssmiwlfe sefrfsh i\nWe're determined to keep both our\ncustomers and our good\nreputation. That's why we'll take\nyour old ear for resale at a fair\nprice and, in return, can usually\noffer you a choice of guaranteed\nlate models at their proper\nvaluation . . . well below new\ncar prices.\nat Kitsilano high school when he was\ntwice acclaimed the best all round\nstudent, winning the Honor Award\nas a junior high student and later\nas a senior.\nMAMOOK MEMBER\nIn 1944, although busy beginning\nhis applied science course, he managed to hold down two presidencies,\nthose of his own engineers' class and\nof the Mamooks. His classmates\nchose him as their leader the following yebr as well, a year that marked\nhis first and last venture into campus-\nwide politics.\nIn that instance he ran and was e-\nlected to the position of USC chairman. But a post-election investigation found him ineligible under the\nexisting AMS regulations, since he\nwas only in his third university year.\nTwo most notable events in Grantham's third year engineering were\nhis election to UBC's honorary fraternity, Sigma Tau Chi, and his trip\nas president-elect of the EUS to the\nToronto conference of the Engineer's\nInstitute of Canada.\nEUS PREXY\nHeading EUS this year, Grantham\nplayed no small part in student\ngovernment, upholding and defending t'he cause of the group he represented. He championed the engineers early last fall when they were\nallotted what they considered to be\nan insufficient budget.\nHis whole-hearted, let's-get-behind-\nand-push spirit is exemplified by the\nMarch of Dimes campaign he engineered this year. All told, the Crippled Children's Fund benefitted by\nmore than 600 dollars from the drive.\nPeppery Council Member\nChosen 'Co-ed of Year*\nSince Nora Clarke arrived at university, she has inevitably\nhad her finger in \"the pie\" of most campus activities.\nSensationalist of the year, she became the basis of a great\ncontroversy when she staged a walk-out at a council meeting in\ndefense of the future editor of the Daily Ubyssey, later handing\nin her resignation as president of the Women's Undergraduate\nSociety. Said Miss Clarke, \"My robes did not catch in the door,\nand I do not think it was a childish action.'\nNora's ability of leadership .goes\nDUECK CHEVROLET OLDSMOBILE LTD.\n1305 WEST BROADWAY\nB A yview 4 6 61\nG1NGE\nf\LtLj\nGoes\nWith\nEverything\nback to the good old days at \"Vic\nHigh,\" where, in her last year she\nwas elected vice-president of the\nstudent council, appointed editor of\nthe school paper, \"Camoson,\" and\nbecame one of those famed diciplin-\narians, commonly known as a perfect.\nShe not only held .these three offices,\nbut she was able to win the women's\npublic speaking pin( and the newspaper pin.\nThus arriving at the University of\nBritish Columbia this ambitious girl\nwith the ironical sense of humour\nstarted her career after being elected\npresident of first-year girls which\ngave her a seat on WUS. Later she\nwas chosen for (he first Fall Ball\nCommittee and finally ended the\nyear by having a \"sup\" in Beginner's\nSpanish.\nBy second year. Nora was president\nof Second Year Arts, was chosen\nchairman of the Sophomore Prom,\nand later the Junior-Senior Prom.\nIn the Mock Parliament session, she\nsat in for the Retrogressive Progressive Party that had the slogan, \"Look j\nback to go forward.\"\nTo Nora, third year was perhaps\nthe most exciting for her. As vice-\npresident of WUS and secretary for\nthe co-ordinator of activities, \"Buzz\"\nWalker, she became a member of the\nhonorary sorority. Delta Sigma Pi.\nOn thc committee for the Western\nCanadian Universities Beauty Contest\nshe was chosen in the final eight for\nBeauty Queen. This to Nora is extremely funnny as Buzz only put her\nname in for a \"gag.\" At the end of\nthis most successful year, with the\nhelp of Gerry MacDonald, it was\nshe that was responsible for getting a\nwell-known architect to come and\nlook over the foundation of the Brock\nbasement for the extension of the\nRadio Society. It was also she that\ninaugurated the \"Council at Home\"\nfor the Frosh Reception.\nThus passing into fourth year it\nwas only natural that Nora should\nbe elected President of WUS, and as\na member of i'he Students Council\nthis gal caused a riot when she walked out of their regular meetings concerning the .ratification of the editor\nof the Ubyssey.\nTaking a double major in English\nand History, with a minor in sociology, Nora hopes to take her Master's\nDegree at the University of Washington.\nHER CHARM mixed with firecracker personality which\nmade her storm center of UBC\ncampus politics won for Nora\nClarke title of \"Woman of the\nYear.\"\nBEST WISHES\nTO THE GRADUATING CLASS\nJOHN McKINNON\nB. C. Distributor:\nBRUNSWICK BALKE COLLENDER CO.\nof Canada Ltd.\nBilliard Tables and Bowling Alley Supplies\nT Nabob Grata Labtl and Nabob Dt Luxt art still T\nWend*.\nCongratulations\nto the\nGraduates of '48\nBlack Motors Ltd.\nMercury-Lincoln Dealers\nDistributor of Genuine Ford Parts\nGEORGIA AT RICHARDS\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nEducational Stationery\nLoose Leaf Books \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Slide Rules \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Fountain Pens\nScales \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Drawing Instruments\nCLARKE & STUART\nCO. LTD.\nSTATIONERS, PRINTERS, BOOKBINDERS\n530 Seymour St.\nVancouver, B. C.\n(Eln%a thai liatrnjittal??u ptapl* mtnt at\nItafytgujahru phtts\nHOWE AT DUNSMUIR PAGE 14\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nThursday, May 13, 1948\nPlayers Many lrackmeets On lap\nComing Up\nYear by Year\nIf past progress is anything\nto go by, the UBC grid machine\nis on its way up. According to\nthe local moguls, this season's\nAmerican football has been\nsuccessful in that the Thunderbirds managed to move away\nfrom the league cellar. After\na no-win year in their first\nseason at American grid, the\n'Birds came back to win one\nand dropped two very close\ncontests that gave the fans a\nlittle hope of things to come.\nAt lt\u00C2\u00BBe initial opening of the season last September, some 70 odd players had drawn strip. From these,\nCoach Greg Kabat was able to pick\na team with plenty of prospects. The\nlads who remained throughout the\nseason developed into strong seasoned\nfootball players and gained the experience that is so necessary to future\nsuccess.\nNEW TALENT\nThis year, when spring-training-\ntime came around, newer faces added to the team of the future. The\nolder and more seasoned players\nwere able to help the new-comers\nand taught them the \"tricks of the\ntrade.\"\nAccording to those who know coach\nKabat haa done a marvelous, job\nin teaching the rudiments of football.\nThere was so much to teach in such\na short time that he was forced to\nspecialize his players, He used one\nteam for the offensive and another\nfor defensive.\nSTARS LEAVE\nMany of those who played last year\nwill return next year, but Bill Pearson, John Gray, John Caplette, Fred\nJoplin, Harry Mark and Herb Copozzi\nwill graduate this spring.\nAs Olympic Itials Near\nThe Thunderbird Track Team, defending Conference champions, rolled to an impressive\nvictory in their first meet of the season last Saturday, May 8, at the University Oval.\nOutscoring their opposition in both the track and field events, they beat out a strong\nSeattle team composed of University of Washington thinclads, 48-38. Teams from Victoria, the\nVancouver Owls Club* and the Pacific Athletic Club finished behind Seattle in that order with\n19, 18 and 12, points respectively.\nRUNNING MATES \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Pat Minchin and Bob Piercy,\nCo-eds Enjoy Great Year\nIn All Sports Circles\nBy JACQUIE SHEARMAN\nWith the initiation of intercollegiate\nsports, the revival of the Victoria\nInvasion and greater participation in\nthe intramural programme, women's\nathletics enjoyed a successful year and\naged by Yvonne French, was considered to be one of the best the\nUniversity has produced for some\ntime. After a slow start, the UBC\nteam ended up in third place in the\nsame League.\nIn the Northwestern Universities\nended up with a fair share of silver. GraM Hockey Conference held fa\nwar*' .. , I Portland, the Varsity team proved\nThe Varsity Grass Hockey team ^^j^ ^j to ^^^ Col.\ncame very close to copping top honors legM ^ wJnnlng ^ ^\nin the Grass Hockey League, bowing ^ ^^j\nout to a strong ex-Kits aggregation!\nby a score of 4-2 in the final game\nof the year. Tht Varsity team, man-\nBLUE RIBBON LIMITED\nExtends congratulations to the\n1948 GRADUATING CLASS\nand wishes them \"every success\"\nBlue Ribbon Tea \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Coffee \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Baking Powder\nBEST WISHES TO UBC'S\n1948 GRADUATES\nFROM\nJantzen Knitting Mills\nef Canada Limited\nleth Ave. at Kingsway\nVaMouver, B. C.\nB. C. Distributors For\nDODGE \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 DStOTQ\nPassenger Cars\nDWGE\n\"Job Rated\" Trucks\nBegg Brothers\nLtd.\n1190 West Georgia\nPAcific 5181\nHOOP TEAM HOT\nHie launderette basketball team\nwas entered in the Senior B division\nof the Cagette League and brought\nhome their share of silverware by\nwinning the City and The Lower\nMainland Championships. Headed by\nhigh scorers Nora McDermott and\nMearnle Summers, the girls had little\ntrouble in downing the Tracy quintette in three straight games to win\nthe city championship and were\nequally successful in defeating a\nChilliwack team to cop the Lower\nMainland championship. In the B.C.\nfinals, the Thunderettes were finally\nstopped in Victoria by a strong Hudson's Bay quintette by a sojre ef 84-\n102 in a two-game, total point series.\nIn a baskejbal) pWgay held at\nWestern lejSUnjgoi* College, in Bel.\nllnghem, Vajraity fauna swept te\nvictory by winning all of their fejur\ngamejL against teams from Weptern\nEverett and WWtmore\nSOW LEARNING\nThe, Varsity Girls* Ski team entered\ntw*, tote\u00C2\u00A3cej|fi0\u00C2\u00ABjf. meet, this year\nat Sun. Valley, Idajie and ait Martin\nF*pj,. in. Wjufcingten. A!$W#>. they\nwere apt succeasful in placing in\neither of the. meets against stiff competition from American colleges, they\ngained valoahje experience which\nshould assist them in future tournaments.\nIMve new members were welcomed\nto the Big Block Club this year at\nthe Annual WUS-WAA Banquet. The\nnew winners were Meamle Summers\nfor basketball, and Jean Weber, Ann\nTurner, Anne Munro, Nora McDermott\nand Vilan Spicer for grass hockey.\nThere were four rewind Doreen\nCampbell and Nora McDermott for\nbasketball and Yvonne French and\nSheila Stewart for grass hockey.\nUBC DIVOTERS\nTRAVEL SOUTH\nFOR TOURNEYS\nAfter a successful opening ef their\nseason, the UBC divaters left home\nlast weekend fer distant greens. They\nwill be gone for more than a week.\nWith victories ever College \u00C2\u00A9f\nPaget Sound and Western Washington\nalready behind them, the Blue and\nGold golfers are heading for competition in Tacoma where they will\nplay a return match with the Loggers\nfnom CPS. From there, the divoters\ntravel south to Portland where they\nwill meet University of Portland.\nIhe final tourney of the tour will\nbe played in Salem( Oregon, when\nKhe 'Birdmen take part In the Pacific\nIntercollegiate Conference meet on\nthe home grounds of Willamette University.\nWith sprinter Chick Turner sidelined with a sore leg, the 'Birds\nfailed to win a single track event, but\nbuilt up an overwhelming lead in\nthe three weight events with three\nfirsts, two seconds, a third and two\nfourths.\nThis coming Saturday, the 'Birds\nhave their first dual meet since the\nWar with the University of Washington's powerful Freshman team.\nThe meet will see the return to\naction of Chick Turner and Dave\nBlair, the UBC star sprinter and\nhibh jumper respectively. Distance\nstars Pat Minchin and Bob Piercy\nwill be doubling up in the mile and\ntwo mile.\nAt the Conference Meet in Walla\nWalla on May 22, the team's chances\nof retaining the championship may\nhinge on Russ Hoy, the Intramural\nchampion, being available.\nIn lasV Saturday's meet, the half-\nmile with Al Bain and Doug Knott\nentere, was the best race of the day.\nBain took the lead at the end of the\nfirst quarter and held Jack Hutchins\nof the Owls Club off until the final\nrurn.\nEz Henniger was nosed out 'in a\ndriving finish in the 440 by Earl Robinson, University of Washington's\nstar, in 50.9\" but came back later to\nrun the anchor leg in the mile relay\nin 49.8\" for the fastest quarter of the\nday.\nEffects of the examination lay-off\nshowed up as Pat Michin followed\nHutchins around in the mile to fonlsh\n35 yards behind and Bob Piercy dropped behind Pete Salmond in the two-\nmile after four laps.\nSalmond went on to set a new\nCanadian record of 9* 41.6\" and Piercy\nfinished in 9' 55\" well below the Conference records.\nJohn Pavelich led the team with\nthirteen points. Russ Hoy, the 'mural\nchamp, also showed well, throwing\nthe Javekin further than me best\nCanadian performance of 1947.\nIn the mile relay the 'Birds came\nvery close to the flying Seattle team\nbut placed second despite the efforts\nof Henniger in the. final stretch.\nEDITORIAL\nBy DICK BLOCKBERGER\nIt seems that there are three things that should go in the editorial on.\nthe Sports Page of this year's Graduation Issue of the Daily Ubyssey.1 And\nthey're all important and sincere.\nFirstly, there should be a word of \"good luck\" to those who are graduating from dear old UBC this year. It is our sincere hope that the education\nyou have received on our campus will bring you success and good fortune.\ni\nWe also hope that you won't forget the Blue and Gold, nor the teams\nthat wear those colors out there on the field of battle. We want you to come\nback often and always to follow the 'Birds.\nSecondly, we should let you all know that we feel that we have completed\ni very successful year in the world of sport. If we had the space, we could\nsay something nice about every team on the campus. Yes, it's been a great\nyear, and we want you to know that we feel that next year is going to be\neven better.\nAnd then, my third point. Just as it has been a fine year in athletics,\nK> has it been an excellent year on the sports desk .We've had lots of grief\nand lots of fun, but somehow we always managed to hit the deadline.\nPerhaps it was because your sports editor had a great bunch of guys and\ngals around the desk. All that can be said is \u00E2\u0080\u0094 \"Thanks.\"\nHappy summer, all.\nCongratulations and Best Wishes\nTo the Graduates of 1948\nJ. C. WALBERER\nTotem Photographer\nRes. 5 West 7th Ave. FAir. 1157\nAll Totem negatives will be kept on file for any size photographs\nyou may desire tq order.\nGREETINGS\nTO THE GRADUATING CLASS\nf. DFKHEL CO. LTD.\n831 Powell St.\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\neur complete teelnep\nMEN\nHere's what you have been waiting for!\n[\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 It's New \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 It's Different\nNOTHING LIKE IT IN THE DOMINION\nAn Original Idea Specially Planned\nTo assist the veteran and these meehankaUy-\nminded who wish to make their dollars go\nfurther.\nIT'S THE \"U-RX-IT YQtHSlUr\nLocated - corner 5th Ave, & Burrard St. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 The Texaco Station\nCome in and see our set-up and the advantages there are in it for you. You not only\nsave \u00E2\u0080\u0094* but learn as well \u00E2\u0080\u0094 as we are here to assist you in any difficulties.\nAll Jobs Done Under Superb Supervision\nWe heve the feels\nYeii Finish the Jeh Thursday, May 13, 1948\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nPAGE 15\nca\nii -\nem\nBl LAURIE DYER\nTHE SHOW MUST GO ON\nI walked into Room 103, Semi-private, at the Vancouver\nGeneral the other day, to find \"Rickie\" Blockberger, our little\nold sports editor, lying flat on his back and having to admit that\nhe was not quite all there.\nActually, I wasn't too surprised because that was what I\nexpected to find. You see, a little birdie had 'phoned and told\nme that the poor lad was dying to see me. I must admit that at\nfirst I couldn't figure out why he wanted to see me instead of a\ncute little blonde friend of mine who happens to be one of the\nbetter nurses down at VGH, but my alert mind soon had the\nproblem solved.\nNot only did I know that he had lost his appendix, I also\nknew that we was going to lie there groaning and beg me to\nput out the sports sheet of the graduation issue for him. Well I\nwas right. And after all, what can a guy say in a case like that?\nThe Bird Started It All\nBut as I began to wonder what I was going to write about,\nI thought about the little bird that had got me into all his work\nby getting the right number when he phoned instead of the\nparty line. (And I'm sure that Hartt Crosby, the English rugger\nstar, would have made a very fine sports ed.) Anyhoo, the birdie\nwas Lome Glendinning. He's always good for some copy. You\nknow, that guy's started something.\nLome was the wee lad that was mainly responsible for the\naddition to the campus sports scene of the Pep Club, an up-and-\ncoming little organization if this humble scribe ever saw one.\nAnd a most necessary one too.\nOf course, Lome always has been a great one for that\nintangible stuff known to us all as \"college spirit.\" In fict, given\nthe proper conditions (preferably a small room with a locked\ndoor and the keys in Lome's pocket), he would talk Ihe hind\nleg off a freshman in his efforts to put across his ideas about this\nall-important feature of any healthy university.\nAnd He Was Just In Time\nBut the good part about the whole story is that Lorro came\nalong just when he was most needed. You see, when a College\nhas the enrollment that we have, and an athletic board that\nwants to progress along with the rest of the university, we need\nvery badly just such a pep club as Mr. Glendinning and hiscon-\nfederates are planning.\nIt fits right in with the program in which UBC is detply\nentrenched at the present moment. I mean, after all, vjhat\nkind of a football game would it be without lots of the old \"l|h-\nrah\" that should be a natural part of any college grid contest.\nWhy, the very expression \"college football\" has a certain connotation of color, bands, and screaming students, plus those lonely creatures, the drum majorettes and the rhythmic movement\nof their, ah, baton.\nAh yes, college football! What excitement! And from what\nthe grid moguls say, we're going to have a team next year. Not\nthat the lads did too badly during the past season, what with one\nwin and two very close losses on the record. But when that1\nteam starts winning, and the kids start filling the blue and gold\nstadium, the \"big brass band from Mr. Delamont\" starts breaking\ninto rousing marches, blue skies, green field, lots of blue and\ngold streaming out in the breeze ...\nThey've Got A Job To Do\nAnd behind a great deal of the rah-rah that goes on that\nday will be Lome and his Pep Club members. See those guys\nand gals out there all dressed in white? They're the cheer leaders,\nand a sincere, hard-working lot they are too. And we up heve\nin the grandstand WANT to yell . . . look at those burly characters down there over the ball for the next play!\nYes, the Pep Club has a great many jobs. It all adds up\nto a grand total of trying to put the spirit into college sport.\nAnd if you don't think there's a lot of work behind that kind\nof carrying on, you're way off the bit, brother.\n' But Lome has problems. How are you going to teach 9000\nstudents all the yells. And then how are you going to get them\nto follow cheer leaders, even if they are kind of cute! And how\nare you going to get 3000 freshmen to get behind those Varsity\nteams? How are you going to make them feel that they are\npart of UBC now, and that you want them to be proud of our\nboys and the colors they represent?\nWe're Behind You, Lome\nWell, Lome still has a couple of years to work on thoso\nproblems, but let me tell you, Lome, that the kids on this campu.s\nwho are athletically inclined are right behind you. At times I\nwish I was going to be back next year to watch your progress.\nBut don't think that I'm going to forget about the dear old\nBlue and Gold, Lome. I'll be there in my seat in the stadium\nwhen football season rolls around, and that goes for the 'Bird\ngames on the basketball maples, too. And don't think I'll forget\nabout the rugger lads who make us happy every year by bringing home all the silverware they can get their hands on.\nIn fact, 1300 other graduates like myself will be keeping\nan eye on our old alma mater. We're going to be homesick for\nquite some while. Good luck, UBC. We want to hear from you\nand your teams . . .\nBeta's Retain Cup\nIn'Mural Set-up\n| Beta Theta Pi Fraternity headed i\nlist of 38 entries to cop the Intramural\nAthletic Championship for the second\nsuccessive year. The standings announced by Ivor Wynne aijcl hi\nintramural Council show that th<\nBetas ^retained their tiv'le by edging\na gallant Phi Delt crew by a scan\n2\{> points in this year's race for thie\ntwo gallon mug, A strong Physica'\nEducation entry placed third.\nIn an interview with the Dail\\nUbyssey, Wynne revealed that the\nIntramural setup had operated on -i\nsound financial basis during thc 1947-'\n48 session, and would face the coming year with a considerable backlog\nof funds.\nThe athletic program was reduced\nsomewhat this year according to the\ndiminutive and erstwhile Cloverleaf\nbasketball \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 star. Touch football was\nslashed from the slai'e because of\ninclement weather, while the proposer!\ntennis tournament was shelved duo\nto insufficient time.\nPHYS. ED. ROMPS\nPhys Ed took the major share of\nthe individual titles, sweeping to victories in the swimming meet, the\nboxing and wrestling tournament,\nand capturing the softball championship by a wide margin. The Phi\nDelts and the Scienceman each bagged two gonfalons, the fraternity lads\nnabbing the volleyball and basketball,\nand the redshirts powering t'o wins\nin the skiing and table tennis.\nThe Legion managed to eke out a\nclose win in the cross country bracket\nat the Annual Road Race in the fall.\nThe badminton title fell to the Alpha\nDelt shuftlecockers, while Ihe Kappa\nSigs and the Betas divided the Track\ntitle between them.\nHere are the standings:\n1, Beta Theta Pi, 347%; 2. Phi Delta\nTheta, 345; Pyhs Ed, 302; 4. Kappa\nSigma, 287y2; 5. Sciencemen, 229V2;\n6. Delta Upsilon, 221; 7. Aggies, 205;\n8. Alpha Delta Phi, 201%; 9. Psi Upsilon, 200%; 10, Kats, 200; 11. Phi\nKappa Pi, 199; 12. Jokers,-198; 13. Phj\nGamma Delta, Termites (vie), 196%;\n15. Legion. 190; 16. Forestry, 158%;\n17. Jondos, 151; 18. Newman Club, 131;\n19. Beta Chi, 127; 20, Norvans, 120;\n21, Phi Kappa Sigma, 119; 22. Pre-\nMed, 110; 23. Pharmacy, 98,\nTheir Final Step-The Olympics?\nBOB HAAS\u00E2\u0080\u0094One of the co-captains\n>f this years' Thunderbird hoop quintet was Bob Haas, the lofty pivot man\nwho has dropped many a crucial\npoint for the Blue and Gold. Playing\nwith a bad ankle during a great\npart of the season, Bob has nevertheless held the 'Birds together and is\nwell known for his great sportsmanship.\nHARRY KERMODE-The other co-\ncaptain of the 'Birdmen who won the\nDominion Collegiate Championship\nin 1948 was the tall forward of the\nVarsity club, Harry Kermode. The\ncalm, hard working Kermode has\nmade a name for himself as a dependable, sharp-eyed ball player who\ncould always be counted on in the\nclinches.\nPAT McGEER\u00E2\u0080\u0094A real mainstay of\nthe 'Birds is young Pat McGeer, the\nleading scorer of the team and the\nwinner of the Bobby Gaul Trophy for\n1947-48, A crafty forward who knew\nhow to make that left flipper work to\nperfection, Pat was one of the big\nguns throughout the Conference\ngames and the Dominion finals.\nWITH THE COMPLIMENTS\nAND BEST WISHES OF\nGeorgia Pharmacy Limited\n777 WEST GEORGIA\nLeslie G, Henderson, Oc.P., 'Ofi\nGihb G. Henderson, B.A., B.A.Sc., '33\nTennisQumtet\nTouring South\nAfter three straight wins in competitions with American universities,\n%e UBC tennis team \"started out on\ntheir annual tour last Sunday., The\n% includes tournaments in three\ns^them cities.\ntast Tuesday, the tJBC team played\na return match with the College of\nPu|ft Sound in Tacoma, having de-\nj feahd the Sound team 6-1 in a\npreVfcus tournament' played on the\nUBC home grounds,\nToiky tlie Blue and Gold will meet\nPortlincl University in Portland, and\nwill travel , from there .to . Salem\nOregon, the home grounds of Willamette University.,\nCONFERENCE MEET\nSalerawUl be the site of-the annual\nPacific Northwest Inter-collegiate\nTennis tourney slated this year for\nSaturday,\" May 15.\nIn conUsts to date, the Blue and\nGold team ha.s defeated College of\nPuget Sound, and has twice defeat\"d\nWestern Washington. UBC won the\nfirst match on their home courts, 7-0,\nand then downed the Washington lads\n4-3 at Bellingham last Friday.\nLeading the UEC sextet is Art Jeffrey, a Davis Cup trialist of last year\nand the third ceded player of these\nparts.\nOther members of the team are\nReg Anderson and Bill Sparling, two\ntop juniors of their in that bracket.\nThe two other mainstays are Steve\nGreen and Lionel Jinks,\n(Tire GOSPEL - Continued)\na hunch Comparelli was carrying a\nbattery), and I'm away winging dawn\nthe homestretch. Things are looking\nup, I can see \"Happy Boy\" smiling\nto himself with one of those big,\ntoothy grins, in my rear-view mirror.\nThe UBC track.Jf're/toJBi and golf foams\nare off to a AflealthJ start with two\nbig wins eaan, and it's up to them\nto carry ma down to the wire. With\nsome help t'rom the cricketers, maybe\nwe'll make it by next September,\nand that w*uld mean a new track\nrecord, '\nWill we v'in? Will we smash the\nmark for tie 29 and one-sixteenth\nmile route? Tune in again at this\nsame time text year, folks, when\nBrousson's 31ack B'ile Beans will\nbring you thi thrilling finish!\n(Okay, Dyer Pay me now!)\nthe gospel . . .\naccording to LUKE MOYLS\nAT THE POST\nWhen they drag an old sports\ncolumnist like myself out of retirement it's like bringing a plug out of\npasture to run in the Kentucky Derby.\nBut then, I once heard of a milk-\nwagon nag who returned his supporters (even all the old biddies who\nplunge with their two-buck show\nbets) with nothing but greenbacks\nwhen he won by a whisker in the\nthird (or was it the flftf?) at Bay\nMeadows (or was it Suffolk Downs?)\nAnyway, I ain't saying you would\nbe missing a good bet if you stopped\nreading this \"form chart\" right now(\nbut when I get in with the typewriter\njockeys anything can happer, and usually does!\nLaurie \"Scoop\" Dyer is responsible\nfor the current round-up of us bunch\nof has-beens. Even \"Frankly Speaking\" Turner, a fine mudder in his\nday, is being called back into action.\nIt seems I recall the Alumni putting\nhim away to stud when I first took an\ninterest' in horse-racing.\nIndirectly, it was my interest in\nthis so-called \"sport of kings\" which\nput me through university. I used to\nbe quite an authority in those days,\nfor I followed the horses closely\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nwith a bucket and shovel.\nTHERE THEV GO\nWell, to get back to this guy Dyer,\nin collecting his stable of has-beens\nhe rates me a hot chance over the\n29-mile and one-sixteenth route. So\nI start out last September, and as I\nam pawing the turf, eager to break\nfrom Clay Puett's gate, who do I\nsee but Greg \"Hardrock\" Kabat putting his Thunderbird gridders, through\ntheir pre-season paces on the infield,\nI forget to mention that none other\nthan Dave \"Happy Boy\" Comparelli,\nMAD prexy, is my jockey, weighing\nin at 191 which is quite an impost\nfor any thoroughbred to lug 29 and\none-sixteenth miles.\nThe bell rings, the gate flies open,\nand off we go to a hot start. But it\nis not till November 1st (Homecoming,\nremember?) that we grab the lead and\nmove in on the rail as the UBC\nfootball heroes notch their first victory\nby shellacking Lewis & Clark College's Pioneers.\nAT THE TURN\nRounding the Clubhouse turn, various other glue-factory prospects are\ngiving me plenty of challenges,\nbreathing hot on my neck as the\nThunderbird basketballers swing into\naction. like Coach Bob Osborne's\nhopping hoopers, one minute I'm in\nfront, and the next minute I'm not.\nBut I catch my second wind as I\ngo racing down the backstretch. That's\nwhen the rugger stalwarts start running loose. The Varsity fifteen wins all\nthe silverware in sight and everything\nlooks rosy.\nJust when we are getting near the\nfar turn, Jupe Pluvius suddenly decides to turn on the sprinkler system\neven though nobody so much as\ntouches the fire alarm. Now I am\nno mudder, but it so happens that\nDoug Whittle's swim team comes\nalong at this time to win the Conference swim meet and help me through\nthe puddles.\nAND THE STRETCH\nWhen I am thinking of Peter Vajda's\nskiers, never doing better than placing\nsecond all year (why didn't they\nsabotage Washington?\u00E2\u0080\u0094no one would\nnotice a little glue in their wax). I\nam starting to slow down on the\nturn. iBut Frank Frederickson's Ice\nHockey sextet finishes off its season\nin a blaze of glory by beating Colorado College, the Western U.S. Inter-\nCollegiate Champs, and I'm back in\na gallop again.\nA few other startling shocks, tike\nthese, only more electrifying (I had\n(Continued at Bottom of Page)\nONW COURT- /N ANY SPORT-\nvw &\u00E2\u0082\u00AC&t 6et cd\no\nSCIENTIFIC LAST\nPermits feet to function tfs\nnature intended.\nSLANT-CUT TOPS\nStreamlined for flexibility\nand snug fit.\nCUSHION INSOLES\nAbsorb shocks, lessen foot\nfatigue.\nBREATHABLE UPPERS\nPermit air to circulate\nfreely through shoes.\nNON-CHAfING TOE\nEliminates seams that cause\nfriction and discomfort.\nrfook at the features that make Fleet Foot the\nfinest shoes you can buy for sports. Here's\nthe \"Gym\" \u00E2\u0080\u0094 scientifically designed to\nprovide maximum comfort and support,\nand to stand up under the most strenuous\nplaying conditions. High cut and oxford\nstyles in men's sizes, oxfords in women's\nsizes. Remember to ask for Fleet Foot, the\nShoe of Champions, at your shoe dealer's.\nO\na\nTESTED COMPOUNDS\nFirst in the laboratory, then\nunder actual wearing conditions.\nI\nBALANCED CONSTRUCTION\nUpper and sole are correctly\nbuilt to give \"balanced\"\nwear.\nNON-MARKING SOLES\nSpecial light coloured soles\nwon't mark polished floors.\nDOMINION RUBBER O COMPANY LIMITED\ni\ PAGE 16\nTHE DAILY UBYSSEY\nThursday, May 13, 1948\nThe\nGovernment of British Columbia\nThrough The\nDEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION\nextends cordial greetings to the sfudents of\nthe University of British Columbia\nThe People of this Province ore proud of the ccfttri-\nbvtion which the University, its Staff and its Gradiates\nare making to the welfare of the Province. Facilites for\ntraining in Law, Architecture and Pharmacy ait now\navailable and the next year will see the establishment\nof a Faculty of Medicine.\nThe requirements of the University, financial and\notherwise, have always been of major conceit to the\nGovernment. For the current year the Legislature of this\nProvince has provided one and one-quarter millions for\nthe operation of the University in addition fo special\nprovision for the capital cost of new buildings.\nBursaries and Loans are available to student* of ability\nthrough a Dominion-Provincial programme of Student\nAid.\nHON. BYRON I. JOHNSON\nPremier\nHON. WM. T. STRAITH\nMinister of Education\n\\nL^"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1948_05_13"@en . "10.14288/1.0124047"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "[place of publication unknown] : [publisher not identified]"@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from The Ubyssey: http://ubyssey.ca/"@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives"@en . "University of British Columbia"@en . "The Daily Ubyssey"@en . "Text"@en .