"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-07-24"@en . "1961-09-12"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0124887/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Test Sex\nAppeal\nTHE UBYSSEY\nVol. XLIV.\nVANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1961\nNo. 1\nWoman to be chancellor\nNew arena\nmight get\nbig grant\nThe University could receive a\nsubstantial grant from an as yet |\nunnamed source to go towards I\n^construction of the new winter\nsports arena.\n, Officials said the grant was\noffered to the university by a\nprivate donor, whose name cannot be released until the deal\nis finalized.\nIt is expected to be completed\nsometime next week.\nThe grant, if it goes through,\nwill be added to the $500,000\n*to be put up by the Alma Mater\nSociety and the university administration.\nNO COMMENT\nE. D. MacPhee, dean of administrative financial affairs,\nsaid the university administration could make no comment un-\n~\"til the deal had been completed.\nHe said it would not be completed at least until the next\nmeeting of student council, Sept.\n18.\nStudent president Alan Cornwall said the sports arent would\nhave to be divorced from the\nproposed new $800,000 student\nunion building if the grant comes\nthrough.\nHe said it was originally planned to put the union building\nand arena out together to architectural competition.\n-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0=\u00C2\u00BB He said the possibility of\nerected an integrated building\nwas being considered.\n^CORNWALL MUM\nHe would not say why the\n\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094arena had to be divorced from\nthe union building if the grant\ncame through.\nCornwall said construction of\n\"\"the union building has been\npostponed indefinitely to allow\nmore careful planning.\n.-> No definite decision has been\nmade with regards to the architectural competition, he said.\nHe said council must yet decide on the philosophy to be employed in the planning of t h e\n- building, and whether or not to\nhire a planning consultant.\n\"We are deliberately going\n,, slowly at the problem,\" he said.\n\"We have seen the problems\nother universities have encountered, and feel we must avoid\nthem.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E SUMMER TRIP\nCornwall and three other\nmembers of the student building\ncommittee toured several U.S.\n^ univerities this summer looking\nat student facilities.\nMost councils have made plans,\nthen asked for permission to\nbuild from the university, he\nsaid.\n\"We have worked in reverse\nby getting the permission first\nthen looking for a philosophy\nand a plan.\"\n^ Berkeley spent over 10 years\ncompleting their building and\nthe result is much better than\nothers that have rushed right in-\n,. to the construction, he said.\n\"We must plan now for a\ncomplete building for 20,000\n., students, and not just the first\n' stage.\"\nMrs. Ross, Mrs. Angus,\nin first election ever\nTwo women\u00E2\u0080\u0094both distinguished graduates of the University\u00E2\u0080\u0094will contest the first election for chancellor in UBC history;\nCandidates in the Nov. 28 election are Mrs. Frank M. Ross,\nwife of the former lieutenant-governor, and Mrs. Anne Angus,\nwife of Public Utilities Commission chairman Dr. Henry F.\nAngus.\nThe ballot was finalized at midnight Sunday\u00E2\u0080\u0094the deadline\nfor nominated candidates to withdraw their names.\nDr. Hugh L. Keenleyside and Dr. Leon Koerner were also\nnominated but withdrew.\nI the B.C. Power Commission and\ni.muH Jb C. Ek'ctric Co. Ltd.\nDr. A. E. (Dal) Grauer\nUniversity mourns\nchancellors death\nUniversity Chancellor Dr. A. ;\nE. Grauer died July 28 of leukemia.\nA commemoration ceremony\nwill be held in War Memorial\nGymnasium Sept. 28 at 4 p.m.\nDr. Grauer, 55, one of t h e\nprovince's most able and illustrious native sons, had been suffering from the disease since\nearly spring.\nHe gave up a brilliant career\nas a university professor and\ngovernment adviser to become\ngeneral secretary of the B.C.\nElectric in 1939. He later rose\nto chief officer and chairman of\nthe board of the parent company,\nS.C. Power Corporation.\nDr. Grauer was serving the\nsecond year of his second three-\nyear term as chancellor and\nchairman of the UBC board of\ngovernors.\nTributes were paid to Dr.\nGrauer by most Canadian leaders and 1,800 people attended\nhis funeral Aug. 1.\nDr. Grauer was a member of\nthe Zeta Psi fraternity. (A fuller\nrecord of Dr. Grauer's achievements will appear in the Sept.\n19 edition of The Ubyssey.)\nAbout 26,000 members of the\nconvocation\u00E2\u0080\u0094made up of graduates, recipients of honorary degrees and faculty members \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nwill decide which of the two\nladies is to replace the late Dr.\nA. E. Grauer as \"chairman of\nthe board\" of the University of\nB.C.\nMrs. Ross, nominated by the\n20,000-member UBC Alumni Association, graduated in honors\neconomics in 1925 and received\nher MA from Bryn Mawr in\n1927. She is a member of the\npresent board of governors.\nMrs. Angus, nominated by a\ngroup of individuals who wish\nto see an election for chancellor,\ngraduated in honors English in\n1923 and went on to become a\nchild welfare specialist.\nIn her first attempt at civic\npolitics in Dec. 1952, she topped\nthe poll for school board. She\nbecame chairman in 1956.\nMrs. Ross was vice-president\nof the Alumni Association in\n1954-55 and an administrative\nofficial in the federal govern-!\nment during World War II.\nThe chancellorship carries no\npay but demands a great deal of\ntime. University officials said\nthe job is similar to that of\nboard chairman of a large corporation.\nThe chancellor is chairman of\nthe 11-member board of governors which sets university policy\nregarding finance and property\nand must represent the university at all official functions.\nDr. Keenleyside, chairman of\nformer United Nations official\nand university lecturer, said he\nwould be too busy to accept the\njob.\n\"We are fortunate in having\ntwo most admirable candidates,\nboth distinguished graduates of\nUBC and both with outstanding\nrecords of achievement,\" Dr\nKeenleyside said. \"A third candidate is unnecessary.\"\nHe agreed with Mrs. Angus\nthat it is desirable \"to put an\nend to the undemocratic custom\nof having there appointments\narranged in advance.\"\nDr. Koerner withdrew in favor of Mrs. Ross. \"I would not\nstand against Mrs. Ross,\" he\nsaid. \"She would be the most\nwonderful chancellor we could\nget.\"\nThe winner will be UBC's first\nwoman chancellor.\nRegistration\nrush begins\nStudents began arriving at the\nBuchanan building as early as\n8 a.m. today to register for winter session courses.\nRegistrar J. E. A. Parnall said\nabout 1,000 students would complete the two-hour processing.\nAnother thousand are expected\nto go through Wednesday.\nParnall said a record enrol;\nment of 12,800 students are expected to register for the ses-\n(Confinued on page 12)\nSee REGISTRATION\nBut council wasn't told\nStudents must pay to park next year\nBy MIKE HUNTER\nStudents will soon be charged $5 and faculty members\n$10 annually to park their\ncars on campus The Ubyssey\nlearned today.\nA motion to this effect has\nalready been received by the\nBoard of Governors, E. D.\nMacPhee, Dean of administrative and financial affairs said.\nThe parking fee will be instituted for the 1962-63 fall\nsession, he said.\nHe said the fee was necessary to meet some of the expenses from the increasing\ntraffic and parking problem.\nThe move comes on the\nheels of the announcement of\nthe strictest parking regulations in University history.\nThere has never been a\ncharge for parking privileges\nin the past.\nStudent president Alan\nCornwall termed the move\n\"ridiculous.\"\nHe said he and co-ordinator\nDoug Stewart met with the\nparking committee Aug. 28,\nwhere the parking and traffic\nproposals for 1961-62 were\noutlined to them.\n\"But,\" said Cornwall, \"no\nhint was given us regarding\na parking fee either this or\nnext year.\"\n\"If this is the case, it is\nhighly unfair that such a\nmove was made without prior\nknowledge of the students and\nwithout consultation with student council,\" he said.\nCornwall said the matter\nwill definitely be discussed\nat the next council meeting.\nHe said he and council parking committee chairman Chas.\nMacLean were already irked\nby the new regulations for the\ncoming year.\nFor the first time, students\nwill have to park in student\nlots whenever they are on campus.\nAssistant superintendent of\nBuildings and Grounds Len\nBayly said \"sheer chaos\" in\nnight parking last year made\nthe new rule necessary.\"\nHe said on busy nights\npeople were parking in roadways and fire zones, causing\ntraffic and fire hazards.\n\"Now we will be impounding illegally parked cars at\nnight as well as during the\nday,\" he said.\nCornwall said this rule particularly bothered him. After\n6 p.m., all faculty and visitors\nlots will be closed to students,\nand reserved for night school\nand extension courses, he\nsaid.\nThis move will prohibit\nstudents using the library, attending night basketball games\nor working in student offices\nin the Brock from parking in\nthe faculty and staff lots at\nnight.\nIt seems to me they're creating more financial problems by\ninstituting night towing,\" said\nCornwall. \"And they're having\nto levy this new parking fee to\npay for it.\nThe regulations also require\nanyone who brings a car to campus to have a parking sticker.\nThere will be an information\nbooth in the Armoury during registration and booths in A lot\nto place stickers on car windshields.\nUndergraduates must park in\none of three lots designated in\nthe special parking brochure.\n(Continued on page 9)\nSee PARKING PROBLEMS ie 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nAuthorized as second class mail by Post Office Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS\nPublished three times weekly throughout the University year\nin Vancouver by the Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society,\n1'niversity ot B.C. IMitorial opinions expressed are those of the\nKditoiial Board of The Ubyssey and not necessarily those of the\n-Vina Mater Society of the Univfersity of B.C.\nTELEPHONES: CA 4-3242, locals 12 (news desk), 13 (critics-\nsports), 14 (Editor-in-Chief), 15, 6 business offices).\nEditor-in-Chief. Roger McAfee\nAssociate Editor . Ann Pickard\nNews Editor Fred Fletcher\nCity Editor Keith Bradbury\nCUP Editor Bob Hendrickson\nPhotography Editor George Fielder\nSenior Editor . Sharon Rodney\nSports Editor Mike Hunter\nPhotography Manager Bryon Hender\nCritics Editor David Bromige\nSTAFF THIS ISSUE:\nLayout: Maureen Covell\nNEWS: George Railton, Mike Blair, Lloyd Drake, Gail\nNeff, Chris Fahrni, Joy Holding. Betty MacKenzie, Pat\nHorrobin, Sharon MacKinnon, Fred ones.\nPHOTOGRAPHY: Don Hume.\nTHE\nPC\nIt-\nUBYSSEY\nTuesday, September 12, 194^\num UP FOR\nfiW?5TRAn\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\nHey kid!\nY;\nHey kid, get that transistor radio out of your ear and listen\na spell.\nYou won't accomplish much here with that cordless wonder, or with any other high school childness.\nYou're supposed to be an adult now.\nAct like it.\nEach year an ever-increasing mass of indistinguishable\nhumanity comes to UBC. And every year the result is the same.\nRegistration lineups are clogged, traffic is jammed because\nsome meatheaded freshman couldn't read and parked his car in\nthe wrong place. The whole registration process is gummed up\nbecause of 3,000 high school children.\nWhat are you doing here anyway? The place is crowded\nenough with people seriously trying to get something out of\nthe university. You complicate matters and bring little with you\nas compensation.\nDon't leap to the end of your chain and scream that the\nworld owes you an -education. The world owes you nothing\nmore than the-opportunity to obtain it\u00E2\u0080\u0094if that.\nMost of you will spend more time wasting time than doing\nanything else. One third of you will fail.\nWhy are you here? To play socialite? To impress your\nfriends? or just generally have one hell of a good time? If you\nare you'll soon join the one third of every freshman class who\ntried to do the same. And you'll probably end up standing in\nthe same unemployment insurance lineup.\nWhat does the term \"freshman\" mean? Professors probably\nthink of fresh, new ground in which to plant their personal beliefs and prejudices. The general public probably look on the\nupcoming class as fresh new blood, ready to \"scale the heights\"\nand all that.\nFreshmen look upon themselves as the great new force\nwhich will start the university thinking and break the present\nchains of conservatism.\nWe think the term rose to describe the children fresh out\nhigh school, in most cases fit for nothing except going to university. And in many cases ill-prepared for even that.\nTrue, a freshman could be successful out here. He could\nput aside the childishness, and silliness of high school and learn.\n. If he realizes he does not have a right to be here, but rather\nhas an opportunity to learn.\nA. freshman could become an individual instead of just another \"frosh.\" He would have to realize that almost everyone\nhere knows more than he does. He has to be willing to learn\nfrom people he may feel are his social or intellectual inferiors.\nHe has to be willing to work. And hard.\nNot only at his academic endeavours but also at any extracurricular activities in which he participates.\nThere are perhaps a few freshmen who have learned the\nrules already. We welcome you, and hope you can teach the rest\nof the first year class survival.\nMost of them need the instruction.\nI dunno, Dudley, it looks bad . . . they say they've been here since last year.\nSERENDIPITY:\nRadiation on the rocks\nBy JACK ORNSTEIN\nRead: Coalman Sense and\nNuclear Warfare. Bertrand Russell.\nHear: Tchaikovsky's 1st piano concerto.\nAt least once in your life\nyou should march in protest\nagainst something or other.\nThere's something desperate\nbut exciting about having to\nresort to walking the streets\n(albeit in a group) in order to\nattract attention to a cause you\nconsider worthy.\nWhile marching for nuclear\ndisarmament and against Russia's resumption of tests, I noticed the curious gazes of Van-\ncouverites and American tourists. I suppose the Canadians\nwere indifferent or mildly in\nsympathy with us\u00E2\u0080\u0094after all,\nwho wants the atmosphere polluted with radioactive dust (or\nwhatever)? Only God knows\nwhat the Yanks thought. Maybe they figured we were communists and what we REALLY\nwanted was to subvert the government and make a Cuba out\nof Canada. (Those seely green-\ngos!).\nYou should join the UBC\nnuclear disarmament club. Of\ncourse if you want to know exactly when and how you're\ngoing to die, don't join. You\nsee, if there's a war. we'll probably just have time to cross\nand. uncross ourselves (how\ngeometrical!) and go mad with\npanic.\nBut if you like the suspense\nof not knowing when and how\nfather death will cart you away,\nthen you'd better act fast.\nIt's a matter of psychology. If\nyou're the type who enjoys the\nsecurity of absolutes (e.g.\n\"There'll absolutely be a nuc\nlear war. There's absolutely\nnothing I can do about it\u00E2\u0080\u0094^\neven think about it\")\u00E2\u0080\u0094if you\nare the type, you'll be among\nthe gapers watching us march\nor you'll be at home watching\na T.V. commercial.\nSo I appeal to the adventurous and foolhardy among you.\nWe may be fighting a losing battle; but if we lose this one, w%\nlose it for all mankind. Isn't it\nstrange that we have to almost\nbeat people over the head in order to get them to try to save\nthemselves? (..\nBut even if we despair, even\nif we think that war is inevitable and even if we must en-\ndure indifference or hostility,\nwe ought to continue making\nthe effort. After all. if we're\ndead, who'll be left to listen to\nTchaikovsky? But then, of\ncourse, he WAS a Russian! <\"*\n-totem -\nbirdcalls\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2advance sale\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094totem\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n&\n?*\n-now $4.00-\nlater $5.00\n-birdcalls-\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094now 50c \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094later 75c\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nold at Field House, AMS office.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094Armoury\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Tuesday, September 12, 1961\nTHE\nUBYSSEY\nPage 3\nSirects Health Service\nJohnson new Med man\n\" Dr. Johnson has been named the new director of the University health service. This is the first time a specialist has been\nlead of the department.\nGraduating from the University of Western Ontario in 1940,\nDr. Johnson took post-graduate\nwo'ric at Toronto and Vancouver.\nHe received his FRLP in 1947,\nfollowing four years in the army\nmedical corps.\nWith 14 years experience in\nprivate practice as an internist,\nDr. Johnson has been associated\nwith the university as a clinical\ninstructor since the inception of\nthe medical school in 1952.\n*3 am very interested in the\nathletic program and hope to\nhave a close liaison with the\nphysical education department,\"\nDr^ Johnson said.\nA $10 medical and surgical\n;are plan for students will be\ncontinued this year, he said. We\nhoj?e every student will avail\nlimself of this opportunity and\nregister before the October 1\nleadline.\nThe plan offered by Medical\nServices Incorporated was instituted last year. It covers students for one year for surgical\nand medical care while in hospital and incidental medical expenses, such as visits to a doctor, resulting from accidents.\nThe plan provides additional\ncacg to that offered by the\nHealth Service and the Accident\nBenefit Fund.\nAppication forms are available\nin the armory.\nFrosh symposium\nisjirst ever held\nThe first Frosh Symposium\nlo be held at this university\noffers discussion, debate and\nentertainment to all frosh interested in the academic life\nof the university.\nThe event, to be held in\nBrock Hall Sept. 27, 5:30 p.m.\nId* 11 p.m., will also be attended by senior students and faculty leaching first year classes.\nApplications may be obtained from the AMS office or\nfrom The Ubyssey form on\npage 3.\nSUITS\nDRESSES ,\nSHORTY\nCOATS .\nPANTS\nSKIRTS\nSWEATERS\n5 DRESS\nSHIRTS\nwn\nDRY CLEANED\nwn\nDRY CLEANED\nwn\nClos*1 to Campus Scorers W. 10th Ave.\nTHE CLOTHES HORSE\nNew Spacious Shop\n4353 West 10th Avenue\nVancouver, B.C. CA 4-6112\nDesigners' samples for the\nentire family at wholesale or\nJess.\nFrosh to view\ncampus classic\nEach fall, a young freshman's\nfancy turns to Her Scienceman\nLover.\nAnd this year is no exception.\nFor more than a decade, th e\nplay by the greatest of campus\nwits, Eric Nicol, has been a hit\nwith students.\nPresented by the P 1 a y e r s'\nClub, it will appear at 12:30\nSept. 21, 22, and 25 in the Auditorium, complete with timely revisions of the script. Cost is 25\ncents.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094photo by Don Hume\nGRINNING SCHMOO is one of many scattered over campus\nby Frosh Orientation committee. Shmoos carry calendar of\nFrosh week events.\nRCMP warns students:\nRadar traps in operation again\nStudents who drive too fast\non the roads leading to and\nfrom the campus can be fined\nas much as $500, an RCMP\nspokesman has warned.\nAnd he promised that the\nradar traps would be in action\nagain this year.\nThe officer said the maximum fine for speeding is $500\nbut the average is $25.\nThe purpose of the radar\ntraps is to curb speeding, not\nto trap speeders, the spokesman said. Research shows that\nspeeding is the biggest single\ncause of accidents involving\nuniversity students, he said.\nStudents often warn other\ndrivers of the location of radar\ntraps by flashing their lights\nat oncoming cars. UBC Radio\nhas been known to broadcast\ntrap locations.\nThe radar set has a tolerance of two mph in favor of\nthe driver \u00E2\u0080\u0094 it reads 40 when\na car is going 42.\n' Hitchhiking in the University area is legal as long as it\nis not done on the travelled\nportion of the road. But it is\nillegal for drivers to stop on\nFROSH SYMPOSIUM APPLICATION\nNAME\nADDRESS\nPHONE NO.\nI will pursue a course of studies mainly in the\na. Liberal Arts [-]\nb. Sciences ri\nIndication of standing in high school:\nGov't exams (where applicable)\nFirst class \t\nSecond class\t\nLetter grade (A, B, etc.\t\nComplete and hand in to AMS office\nFROSH\nWELCOME TO U.B.C.\nYOUR COLLEGE SHOP will have a booth\nin the armouries during registration as well\nas being open in its location in BROCK\nEXTENSION.\nCome and see us for Faculty Pins and sweaters, UBC\nJewellery, Lighters, Crests and Mugs.\nfflhlL (JlaAAiL\nYour College Shop Manager.\nincoming routes to the campus.\n\"When traffic is heavy one\ncar may stop, the next slow\ndown, but the sleepy driver in\nthe third may cause an accident,\" police said.\nAll students with out-of-pro-\nvince licence plates and\ndrivers' licences must register\nwith the Motor Licences Office\nwithin 30 days after lectures\nstart.\nThere is no fee for this service but there is a $10 fine if\nit isn't done. The licences are\nvalid during the University\nyear when registered.\nAWS gives\nfreshettes\nbig sisters\nAssociated Women Students'\ncouncil has planned an extensive\norientation program for freshettes.\nOn the program are:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 The Big-Little Sister orientation program. Sign up for a\nsister in the AWS booth at the\nend of the registration line.\n9 The annual AWS free frosh\nfashion show, Sept. 18 in Brock\nLounge. Girls nominated for\nFrosh Queen will model.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 The Big-Little Sister banquet, at 6 p.m. Sept. 20 in the\narmoury. Cost $1.00 per student.\nLittle Sisters must dress as little\nsisters.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 A gathering in the Women's\nGym following the \"sister\" banquet, where entertainment and\nvoting for the Frosh Queen will\ntake place.\nAWS provides an information\nbooklet for freshettes entitled\n\"Clues for Co-eds.\" It is available during registration.\n(point $Mif.\n4435 W. 10th Ave. CA 8-8718\n25% Discount on all Purchases if your present your\nAMS card.\nHAH! ... Bet you thought\nyou were rid of us by last\nMay, didn't you? Guess what\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 you're not! You're stuck\nwith us for another whole\nyear, so get used to it.\nNot only are we back, but\nwe're bigger than ever too!\nYep\u00E2\u0080\u0094we're opening a poison\npalace right near campus. On\nor about October 1st you can\nget your regular dose of Pizza\nwithout having to go all the\nway downtown for it. As a\nmatter of fact, you can even\nsit down and eat it at the new\nplace as we'll have 108 seats.\nThe old place will still be\njumping too\u00E2\u0080\u0094it's not closing\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094so we'll now be a city-wide\nchain. GET THAT! \u00E2\u0080\u0094 A\nCHAIN!!! WOW???\n*JKi^4\n4409 W. 10th Avenue\nYOUR FASHION SHOP\nJust Outside The Gates!\nCAstle 4-5352\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 GOWNS\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ACCESSORIES\nSPORTSWEAR\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 LINGERIE\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 HOSIERY\nFinest Quality in Top Fashion Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, Septembe\nFahrni appointed as head:\nNew centre trains therapists\nThe Senate and Board of\nGovernors of the university\napproved the establishment of\na - school of rehabilative medicine. The school is enrolling its\nfirst class of 15 students this\nmonth.\nStudents will be admitted to\nthe school on completion of the\nfirst year of arts and science or\nits equivalent or senior matriculation.\nFor admission to the school\nstudents will be required to have\ncompleted courses in English,\nchemistry, mathematics, zoology\nor biology in the case of senior\nmatriculation, and one other\nelective.\nThe course leading to a certificate in physical medicine therapy will consist of three years\nof.study. The first two academic\nyears will be taught on the campus followed by a third rotating\nsupervised intern year.\nAfter receipt of the certificate\nand two or more years of practice, therapists in good standing\nmay return for a third academic\nyear leading to a bachelor's degree.\nDr. Brock Fahrni, who has\n(been named director of the\nDR. BROCK FAHRNI\n. . . new school\nschool, said the training of therapists was \"an urgent community health need.\" He said care\nin the field of chronic illness\nwas at a standstill in B. C. because of a lack of trained therapists.\nThe Canadian Arthritis and\nRheumatism Society, which has\nannounced a $5*000 grant, the\nPoliomyelitis and Rehabilitation\nFoundation of B. C, the G. F.\nStrong Rehabilitation Centre\nand the Vancouver Foundation\nhave signified their willingness\nto share in the cost of converting\nan existing building at UBC to\nhouse the school, Dr. Fahrni\nsaid.\nMoney for salaries and equipment, said Dr. Fahrni, would be\nmet largely through federal rehabilitation health grants.\nNINE GOOD ADDRESSES\n**%\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nWhen You Need\nOPTICAL SERVICES\nCONTACT LENSES\nZENITH HEARING Al\nGEORGE HAYES\nMen's and Boys7 Wear\nFor your college'clothes see us for a fine selection in the\nsmartest styles.\nSLAX \u00E2\u0080\u0094 SWEATERS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 SPORTSHIRTS \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSPORTSCOATS, ETC.\nfv^ADE-TO-MEASURE CLOTHES BY \"SAVILE ROW\"\nPersonalized Service\n4548 W. 10th AVENUE CASTLE 4-5844\nMafrz & Wozny\n548 Howe St. MU 3-4715\nCustom Tailored Suits\nfor Ladies and Gentlemen\nGowns and Hoods\nUniforms\nWe specialize\nin\nIvy League\nClothes\nSpecial Student Rates\ns\n693 Hornby St. (Medical Dental Building)\n1700 West Broadway\nRoom 424 (Upstairs), Vancouver Block\n2178 West Broadway\n5318 Cambie St. (Oakridge)\n788 West Broadway (Fairmont Building)\n1940 Lonsdale Ave. (North Vancouver)\n401\u00E2\u0080\u00946th St. (New Westminster)\n13656\u00E2\u0080\u0094102nd Ave. (North Surrey)\nPtesCiibtion Oftical\nWe use GENUINE CORRECTAL lenses\n\"Ask Your Doctor\"\nSpecial Discount to Undegraduates\nEstablished 1924\nMU 1-8723 *\nRE 8-2630\nMU 3-2454\nRE 1-6818 *\nFA 7-4114\nTR 2-5711\nYU 7-0455\nLA 1-7424\nWO 1-7636*\nDISPENSING,\nOPTICIANS\nWithout this label\n'*m\nYoung man who wants to make\n$10,000 a year before he's 30.\nSingle easiest way to GET THERE is put on a vest. Lawyers, bankers wear vests\n... a vest gives a young man that Rock of Gibraltar Look, sound, substantial,\nready for a raise. See there and the NEW SUCCESS suits, with shoulders that are\nyour own, the shorter coats, the slim trousers, at your favorite store . . .\nTHE LIONS DEN\n771 Granville St., Vancouver, B.C. Tuesday, September 12, 1961\nTH E\nUBYSSEY\nPage 5\nVarsity choir invites\nsingers to third season\nWOBBLE BOARD and all,\nAustralia's Rolf Harris wiH be\n-\"feature attraction at Frosh\nReception at Armory Sept. 23.\nTie me down\nHarris stars\nat big dance\nRolf Harris, wearing his big\ntjolack hat and carrying his\nwobbly board, will return to the\nuniversity as the featured entertainer at the frosh reception.\nThe Frosh Reception, to be\nheld in the Armory Saturday,\nSept. 23 at 9 p.m., is the finale\nof frosh orientation week.\nv Harris was a smash hit on\ncampus last year when he packed the auditorium.\n SEPT. 24\nJ A Z Z\nat the inquisition\nMIKE DOWNS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 trumpet\namerica's top jazz trumpet\nplayer \u00E2\u0080\u0094 currently with\nphilly joe jones in new york.\ndale hillary \u00E2\u0080\u0094 alto sax\ndon thompson \u00E2\u0080\u0094 vibes\nal neal \u00E2\u0080\u0094 piano\nbob roberts ^\u00E2\u0080\u0094 bass\ngerry fuller \u00E2\u0080\u0094 drums\nTICKETS AT\nJUST JAZZ RECORDINGS\n726 SEYMOUR\nMR. MIKE'S STEAK\nHOUSE\u00E2\u0080\u0094GRANVILLE ST.\nTHE 711 SHOP\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n783 GRANVILLE ST.\nEQQCK8IX5IOD\nCoffee fiouee\n726 Seymour St.\nOpen For Lunches\nRental Service\nTUXEDOS\nBlack Suits, Formals,\nCostumes, Make-up\nSpecial Student Rates\nNew York\nCostume Salon\n4397 W. 10th Ave. CA 4-0034\nNear UBC Gates\nr\n\u00C2\u00BB\n9\nSUPER\nKEY-\nTAB\nThe original PUNCHED and TABBED\nEXERCISE BOOKS 5 books to a\nPoly Protected Package\nUBC Coil Exercise Books\nUBC 4K Poly-W rapped Loose Leaf Fillers\nMade in the West\ndu MAURIER Page 6\nTHE\nUBYSSEY\nTuesday, September 12, 1961\nUniversity obtains\nmedical collection\nThe university has acquired an\noutstanding collection of the\nwritings of the Canadian physician Sir William Osier.\nPurchase of the collection,\nwhich is estimated to contain\nmore than 500 volumes, was\nannounced by Dr. William C.\nGibson, professor of the history\nof medicine and science.\nDr. Gibson said the collection\nwas purchased from a book\ndealer in San Francisco and\nwould be worth $15,000 or more\nif sold on the open market. He\ndid not disclose the price paid\nby the university.\nSir William was born in 1849\nand achieved fame as the first\nprofessor of medicine at Johns\nHopkins University in Baltimore. In 1905 he was named\nRegius professor of medicine at\nOxford University. He died at\nOxford in 1919.\nDr. Gibson said the collection\nis one of the most complete ever\nassembled and contains rich\nsource material for student projects on medical history and student theses concerning the life\nand works of Sir William.\nIn addition to his medical\nwritings Sir William was an avid\nclassicist and wrote extensively\nn that field. These non-medical\nliterary works will be of great i\nvalue to students in the humanities, Dr. Gibson said.\nClub head hunters\nseek out freshmen\nFreshmen will be more popular than Dale Carnegie's best\ngraduates September, when unctuous predators from campus\norganizations launch the member-bolstering twelve-hour drive\nknown euphemistically as Clubs\nDay.\nAll types of groups\u00E2\u0080\u0094political,\nreligious, service, outdoors and\naesthetic \u00E2\u0080\u0094 will have their\nsmoothest con men and toughest\norganizers out in top form.\nThe armory will be the site\nof colorful barking and booths,\ncalculated to lure the freshman\nfrom his neutral position into\nthe working ranks of the respective clubs.\nAlumni Association\ndirector appointed\nSPECIALSTUDENT RATES\nCOMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE\nGlasses Fitted\nContact Lenses\n24-Hour Service OPTICAL Repairs\nVANCOUVER BLOCK\nMU 5-0928 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 MU 3-2948\nMain Floor\n734 GRANVILLE ST.\nImmediate Appointment\nNEW WESTMINSTER - 675 COLUMBIA STREET\nLA 6-8665\nHeadquarters For Your\nScholastic Supplies\nDuffel Bags\nIdeal for carrying Gyir, Strip, handy zipper closure,\nRubberized $1.89\nClipboards\nby Hilroy, A must for college 89c\n- VARSITY OPENING SPECIAL -\nCanadian Made Retractable Ball Point\nPens, only 5c\nIRIIIDIV SERVICE\n__ DRUG STORES LTD.\n10th Ave. and Sasamat St. CA 4-1377\nStore Hours: 8:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.\n\st r n-\u00C2\u00BB ejKOft: Tor eight\nmonths is Trail student Bruno\nFreschi, 24, winner of the\n$2500 Pilkington travelling\nscholarship, one of Canada's\ntop architectural awards.\nThe appointment of Emerson\nGennis as director of the University's Alumni Association has\nbeen announced by Association\nPresident, Dr. William C. Gibson.\nGennis succeeds Arthur H. Sa-\nger, who resigned to accept a\npost as administrative officer at\nthe Regional Training Center for\nUnited Nations Fellows on campus.\nGennis took up his appointment August 1. He graduated\nfrom UBC in 1948 with the degree of bachelor of commerce.\nGennis was actively engaged\nin the UBC Development Fund\ncampaign in 1957-58 when he\nassisted Sager in organizing\nalumni committees throughout\nthe province.\nFor the past three years he\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nhas been a member of the Association's board of management\nas chairman of the branches and\ndivisions committee.\nHe organized the commerce\nalumni division and served as\npresident of the division for two-\nyears. He has also served as\nchairman of the Association's\ncontinuing education committee\nand the alumni house committee.\nCheaper Bird Calls\nStudents will be able to pur- ;\nchase Bird Calls \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the student\ntelephone directory \u00E2\u0080\u0094 at a re-1\nduced price in the advance sales.\nBird Calls may be purchased\nin the Armory and the AMS office for 50 cents now. Price after\npublication will be 75 cents.\nTotems\u00E2\u0080\u0094the year book\u00E2\u0080\u0094cost\n$4 in the advance sales in the\nArmory and Field House. Price\nlater will be $5.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n(RuAhrad: QamsJvaA <\u00C2\u00A3bd.\n4538 W. 10th Avenue CA 4-5858\nVancouver 8, B.C. CA 4-9112\n\"If it's photographic, we can serve you\"\n\Jw %/ounf Uten\nNatural-Looking Clothing,\nSportswear and Furnishings.\nHere and now clothes that speak\nyour language in a rounded selection\nDt dress, campus and casual wear for\nyoung men. The look is natural and\nthe picture is complete in our shop\nfor young men. YOU can assemble your\nentire wardrobe, assured that the look\nis correct. YOU set the trend, JACK ELSON\nfollows through.\nVested suits $69.50 to $79.50\nVests $7.95. Raincoats $19.95 to $29.50\nOur tapered dress shirts end sports shirts\n$6.00 to $7.95. Sweaters from $12.95 to\n$19.95 and our siim cords priced from\n$8.95 to $10.95.\nJack CiicH \u00C2\u00A3t4*\n545 Granville St.\nSHOP DOWNTOWN TIL\nMUtual 1-9831\nON FRIDAY Tuesday, September 12, 1961\nTHE\nUBYSSEY\nPage 7\nShrum changes hats:\neducator to executive\nOne of Canada's best known scientists, Dr. Gordon Shrum,\nbrought a distinguished 36-year faculty career to a close June 30\nwhen he resigned as Dean of Graduate Studies and head of the\ndepartment of Physics.\nSince his resignation, Dr\nShrum has accepted positions\nas president and chairman of tho\nnationalized B.C. Electric Co.\nProfessor George M. Volkoff\nsucceeded Dr. Shrum as head of\nthe Physics department. Dean\nJF. H. Soward, Associate Dean of\nGraduate Studies and head of\nthe History department, replaced\nDr. Shrum as Dean of Graduate\nStudies.\nJoining the faculty in 1925 as\nan assistant professor, Toronto-\n, educated Dr. Shrum became\nhead of the Physics Department\nin 1938 and Dean of Graduate\n. Studies in 1956.\nHe has also headed the UBC\nextension department, chaired\nthe housing and food services\ncommittees, and, from 1937 to\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E 1946, commanded the UBC contingent of the Canadian Officers\nTraining Corps.\nt A Moscow-born UBC graduate, Dr. Volkoff joined the faculty in 1940. Between 1943 and\n1946 he did research for the National Research Council and\nhelped design the nuclear reac-\n\"*' tor at Chalk River.\nEditor of the Canadian Jour-\n. nal of Physics and member of the\nRoyal Society of Canada, Dr.\nVolkoff was a member at the\nCanadian delegation to the 1958\nnuclear weapons conferences in\nGeneva./\nv-: Dean Soward, a specialist in\n'|,!*4-o-d er-n\" history,- obtained degrees from; Toronto and Oxford,\njoined the faculty in 1922 and\nbecame head of the history department in 1953.\nPast president of the Canadian\nHistorical society, and membe:>\nof the Royal Society of Canada.\nDean Soward served as special\nassistant to the Canadian undersecretary of external affair?\nfrom 1943 to 1946 and in the\nsummers of 1949, 1951, and 1952.\nWoodward Foundation\nfinances med library\nHome Sweet Home\nBrock Hall, located on the\nEast Mall, seems to the freshman at least, to be a catch-all\nfor student activities and interest.\nIt is the A.M-.S. office, t h e\nbarber shop, the publication office, the Pubsters \"cavern\" \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nand the local card room.\nTime to relax? \u00E2\u0080\u0094- Shy co-eds\nseek the Mildred Brock room;\nmost prefer the \"intregrated\"\nmain lounge or Common Room.\nAnd, oh yes, Men and Women's washrooms are \"located\nstrategically in the building\".\nDR. GORDON SHRUM\n. . . new BCE head\nBuchanan lockers\nready for Artsmen\nMore than 1,000 lockers are\navailable in the Buchanan\nbuilding, Arts president Mike\nSharzer announced.\nStudents wishing lockers\nshould register before placing\na lock on any locker, Sharzer\nsaid. Locker registration fee\nis 50 cents.\nA $250,000 bio-medical library\nwill be built in the new university hospital now being planned,\npresident Dr. Norman MacKen-\ndie has announced.\nHe said cost would be paid by\na grant from the Mr. and Mrs.\nP. A. Woodward Foundation.\n\"Mr. and M'rs. Woodward,\"\nthe president said, \"have been\ngenerous friends of the university in the past, and this latest!\ngift is further evidence of their\ninterest in the continued growth\nand development of the univer-\n!sity-\" i j.\nUBC's dean of medicine, Dr. QieS flt dty nOITie\nJohn F. McCreary, said the university hospital, to be erected\non the campus as soon as funds\nbecome available, will be a med\nical research and referral centre for the entire province.\nA bio-medical library is an essential feature of the building,\nhe added, and the gift will enable detailed planning to go forward without delay.\nThe university expects to\nmatch this gift from other university capital funds.\nDr. F. S. Nolan,\nEmeritus professor\n6 Win Awards\nFellowships, scholarships, and\nbursaries totalling more than\n$131,400 have been awarded to\nUniversity students.\nWinners are: Frederick A.\nYoung, $2,100. Clement Andre\nSalamo; George T. Atamanenko,\nRoy A. Fletcher, John L. North-\ney, and Noman Pearson. Each\nreceived $1,500.\nDr. F. S. Nowlan, who became\nProfessor Emeritus of UBC in\n1959, died at 75 at his home in.\nVancouver.\nHe taught mathematics at the\nuniversity for 19 years between\n1926 and 1945 and authored an\nanalytic geometry text which is\nin use in more than forty universities.\nWhile he was teaching here\nhe collected over $75,000 for\nstudent bursaries.\nHe attended Pictou Academy\nand the universities of Harvard,\nColumbia and Chicago.\nINCO DEVELOPS WORLD MARKETS FOR NICKEL\nTOTEM SHOES\n\"Hush Puppies\"\nfor\nMen and Women\nAthletic Footwear\n4550 West 10 th Avenue\nCAstle 4-1810\nVancouver 8, B.C.\nOpposite Safeway\n\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00A3 \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00ABKK\u00C2\u00A31S8\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB%SS\u00C2\u00AB\nie Brsi I\n., hurrans 1\n.0'*^ fall\nJCOLOR\nSCO-ORDINATES\nHighland House ate concentrating on educated\nfashions for back to college\noi senior high school Students. For example: Their\ncolor co-ordinates in beautiful skirts and sweaters\n... soft and lovely, that\ncan match exactly or blend\nbeautifully. Skirts and\nSweaters from $12.9$.\nInland\nif mis?\n733 W. GEORGIA\nand\n114 OAKRIDGE\n*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB\nlower builds world markets for nickel\nNickel and nickel alloys have properties that are essential to the production of\natomic power. Special alloys developed through Inco research are used in\nnuclear power plants to withstand extreme pressures, corrosion and intense\nheat in pipe lines, pumps, condensers, heat exchangers and fuel tanks.\nIn the search for new and better products containing nickel, Inco has always\nplayed an active role . . . developing alloys to fulfill special requirements in\nindustry and the home . . . finding new ways to use existing alloys.\nCanada is the world's largest producer of nickel. And Inco, through sales,\nresearch and market development operations, maintains a continuing program\nfor the expansion of international markets for Inco nickel.\nMore Inco nickel than ever before will be exported to Inco's expanding\nworld markets . . . helping to build trade balances . . . stimulate Canada's\nfuture economic growth and create more jobs for Canadians.\nTHE\nNUCLEAR POWER IS ON THE WAY\nCanadian scientists and engineers\nconducted long-term experiments before\nlaying plans for Canada's first atomic\npower plant at Chalk River.\nIN THE UNITED STATES\nNUCLEAR POWERED MERCHANT SHIP\nThe N. S. Savannah, world's first\nnuclear-powered merchant ship, depends\non nickel stainless steel for corrosion and\nheat resistance in its power plant.\nIN ENGLAND\nINTERNATIONAL NICKEL\nCOMPANY OF CANADA. LIMITED\n55 VONSE STREET TORONTO\nA*\nWORLD'S FIRST NUCLEAR POWER STATION\nWorld's first large-scale nuclear power\nstation went into operation at Calder\nHall, England, in 1956. Page 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, September 12, 1961\nFriesen announces\nextension changes\nA major reorganization of the university's extension department has been announced by the director, Dr. John Friesen.\nDr. Friesen said the reorganization was the result of a study\nof the administrative structure of the department and a grant of\n$150,000 from the Fund for Adult Education for expansion of the\nliberal arts program for adults. 7\nDr. Friesen said a liberal edu- courses, the non-credit evening\ncation division would be created j classes and the lectures bureau.\nand supervised by Bert Curtis,\ncurrently supervisor of short\ncourses and conferences. Mr.\nCurtis has also been named assistant director of the department.\nThe new division will include\nthe present living room learning program directed by Knute\nButtedahl and the public affairs\nprogram directed by new appointees John Grant and Richard\nPearce.\nGrant is a UBC graduate and\nformer RCAF officer. Pearce is\na graduate of Victoria College\nand UBC and a former school\nteacher.\n- A second division has been\ncreated under John Wood, formerly of Victoria College, to\nco-ordinate UBC's extramural\nand evening class programs. It\nwill include all extension credit\nUBC graduate Bernard Baiton, formerly with the corrections branch of the B.C. attorney-\ngeneral's department, succeeds\nMr. Curtis as supervisor of conferences and short courses.\nJ. Trevor Matthews, a UBC\nhonors chemistry graduate, becomes supervisor of courses for\nbusiness and industry.\nAlan Booth, a graduate of An-\ntioch College, Yellow Springs,\nOhio, and the University of California, succeeds Alan Thomas as\ndirector of the communications\ndivision.\nCLASSIFIED\nFOR SALE \u00E2\u0080\u0094 First year chemistry, physics, math, and English texts. Phone Don at TR\n4-2573.\nPART TIME PAID STAFF\n1 male, 1 female, 16 hours a week to work with Teen Co-\n-Ed program in a leisure-time group agency. Call Bea\nSanderson, AL 4-1661.\nVOLUNTEER STAFF\nMale and Female volunteers also needed for work with\nboys and girls, Committee Work, and some having special\nskills in hobbies, *i?ts and crafts, and gymnastics are required. Call Norma Paul, AL 4-1661.\n//\n\"U)sd\u00C2\u00A30jvm\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nA Sincere Welcome Home to both\nFrosh and Seniors!\nVarsity Jewellers\n4517 WEST 10th AVENUE CAstle 4-4432\nSTUDYING ENGLISH?\nThe Great Tradition In English Literature:\nFROM SHAKESPEARE TO SHAW. By Annette T.\nRubinstein, Ph.D. Cloth. 900 pp.; $8.95\nAn illuminating interpretation of the life and work of\ntwenty-two major literary figures during three hundred\nyears of English literature, revealing how they were rooted\nin the political and social movements of \"their own time.\nWith representative selections from their writings.\nLEARNING RUSSIAN?\nEnglish-Russian and Russian-English\nDictionary\nS. G. Zaimovski. 16,000 entries. 5\"x4\"; cloth; 430 pp.; 65c\nEnglish-Russian Dictionary\nC.S. Akhmanova. 20,000 entries. 7\"x5\"; cloth; 590 pp.; $1.20\nStanding, Discount Offer: 10% off on purchases by\nUBC students! (Your student's card is your qualification.\nWE ARE EXCLUSIVE DEALERS IN BOOKS, ART\nPRINTS AND PERIODICALS FROM CHINA & U.S.S.R.\nCome in and Browse at\n\"Vancouver's Most Interesting Book Shop\"\n307 W. PENDER ST. VAN., B.C.\nJUST OFF VICTORY SQUARE\nCO-OP BOOK STORE\nMUtual 5-5836\nOpponent of apartheid\nnight class lecturer\nA sociologist who authored a\nbook banned in South Africa\nbecause it exposes the fallacies\nof partheid will lecture to night\nclasses at the university this fall.\nAnthony H. Richmond, author\nof \"The Colour Problem,\" is a\nCanada Council visiting lecturer\nin the department of anthropology and sociology.\nHe is from the University of\nEdinburgh. Richmond will give\nsix lectures beginning October\n4 on apartheid, pan-African nationalism and inde p e n d e n c e,\nWest Indian negroes in Britain\nand race relations in Canada.\nProf. Richmond's course is one\nof 181 listed in the evening class\nbrochure issued by UBC's extension department.\nRESEARCH PROFESSOR in\nthe department of electrical\nengineering, Dr. George\nWalker, has been invited to\nlecture on UBC's microwave\nelectronics research at the universities of Oxford, Cambridge, London and Sheffield.\nFive summer students in\nUBC-Keio exchange plan\nA dead hit\nAn Amherst, N.Y. man, moping home from a no-strike evening of bowling, found a skunk\nin his yard. Irritably, he grabbed his bowling ball and let fly.\nResult: a clean strike and one\ndead skunk.\nFive UBC students participated in the second annual exchange of students with Keio\nUniversity in Tokyo this summer.\nLome R. Bolton, Victoria;\nElizabeth Daly, Train; Carol\nReynolds, Sqamish; Jerry Wat-\nney, Vancouver; and Kaien Shi-\nmizu, Edmonton, Alberta; all\nspent the summer studying in\nJapan.\nFive Japanese students in\ncluding Takeshi Namura, editor\nof t h e English language Keio\nUniversity paper, attended summer session at UBC.\nTuum Est\ntells all\nRead . ..\nBelieve\nTUXEDO\nRENTAL & SALES\n1,000 Men's\nFormal Wear\nGarments to\nChoose From!\nE. A. LEE Ltd.\nOne Store Only!\n623 Howe St. MU 3-2457\nUNTD Needs Recruits\nThe University Naval Training Divisions have been established to select and train university students for commissioned rank in the Royal Canadian Navy (Reserve). Any\nmale student under 25 years of age who is interested in\nbecoming a Naval Officer is invited to apply at the UNTD\nrecruiting booth which will be located in the Armouries,\n12 - 16 September, 1961.\nm^m^\u00C2\u00BBm\nIMPORTANT\nTO ALL STUDENTS\nLast year the Board of Governors and your\nStudent Council sponsored a Medical-Surgical plan through M-S-l to supplement\nthe University Health Services Plan.\nThe average claim paid by M-S-l last year was $69.02.\n(Almost seven times the annual dues)\nPlease apply when registering -\nApplications cannot be accepted\nafter September 30, 1961. 1961 Tuesday, September 12, 1961\nTHE\nUBYSSEY\nPage 9\nFrom page 1:\nParking problems\nThere are special lots for faculty\nand staff and graduate students.\nThe latter get their stickers at\nthe parking office. All stickers\nare issued from this office after\nregistration week.\nResident students, for the\nfirst time, will get stickers from\nthe same booth as all other undergrads. They must have a\nform from the housing authority\nproving they live in residence.\nStudents must bring their cars\nand Motor Vehicle Registration\nforms in order to get a sticker.\nREGISTRATION PARKING\nUnstickered cars may be parked in student lots during registration week but will be impounded after that. Lost or damaged stickers must be replaced\nimmediately.\nOther parking facts:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Illegally parked cars will\nbe impounded and released only\non payment of the fine \u00E2\u0080\u0094 $5,\n$10 and $25 for the first three\noffenses. A fourth offense means\nloss of parking privileges.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 There are about 6,500 parking spaces on campus \u00E2\u0080\u0094; 3,800\nof them for students. Officials\nexpect about 5,000 students to\nStudents to cruise\nas guests of navy\nAbout 80 UBC students are\nexpected to go on a four hour\ncruise in the Straits of Georgia\naboard the HMCS Skeena, as\nguests of the Navy, Sunday,\nSept. 17, at 1:30 p.m.\nNames of those interested in\ntaking the cruise will be taken\nduring registration in the Armory. A navy spokesman said the\ncruise is primarily for those interested in joining the University Naval Training Division or\nNavy Regular Officers Training\nPlan.\nPIPERS AND\nDRUMMERS\nWould all people interested\nin playing in the UBC Pipe\nBand come to Buchanan 225\nat 12:30 on Monday, the 18.\nThe band plays at many\nfunctions through the year\nand a good time is had by all.\nregister cars but only about\n3,600 to be on campus at any\none time.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Roughly half all cars expected on campus this year are\nalready registered and sticker-\ned, as a result of new summer\nregistration rules.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 The main malls will be\nbarricaded and traffic routed directly to parking lots, as in\n1960.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 This year, no traffic will\nbe allowed to go past Memorial\nGym on University Boulevard.\nEven professors will have to\nmake the loop around Agronomy Road. Officials said it is too\nhard to separate the faculty\nfrom the students \u00E2\u0080\u0094 who have\nto go that way into \"C\" lot.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Students can appeal parking fines by writing to the traf-i\nfie office. They must appear in\nperson before Court of Appeal,\nmade up of faculty and student\ncouncillors, which meets from\n3:30 to 5 p.m. on the last Tuesday of every month.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Cars in authorized loading\nzones must leave their headlights on to avoid being impounded.\n\u00C2\u00AB No parking is permitted on\nroadways at any time.\nLibrary Lovers Listen!\nThe College Library\u00E2\u0080\u0094opened\nlast year\u00E2\u0080\u0094has been a great help\nto Frosh fumbling their way toward a university education, library officials say.\nThe library, in the south wing\nof the main library, is for the\nspecial use of students in their\nfirst two years and is desiged to\ncater to their needs.\nThe College Library is open\nfrom 8 a.m. to 10 p.m., Monday\nto Friday, 8 to 5 Saturday's and\nSunday afternoon for zealous\ntypes.\nColourful ceremony\nto commemorate Trek\nGIRLS!\nFOR ALL YOUR\nNYLON NEEDS\nQsdstAtcL\n4475 W. 10th Avenue\nVancouver 8, B.C.\nCAstle 4-4942\nCHELA MATHESON\n. . . Frosh Queen\nFreshettes vie\nfor queen's crown\nLeg-watching will be in the\nline of duty for a group of upper-classmen during registration.\nThey'll be waiting outside the\narmory to select 30 likely-looking freshettes \"as candidates for\nthe title of Frosh Queen.\nCandidates will be on view to\nthe public at the AWS fashion\nshow and other functions during\nthe Frosh Orientation week.\n, Twenty contestants will be\neliminated before the final voting on Sept. 18 at the Big Block\nSmoker and Little Sister Banquet. Frosh only are allowed to\nvote.\nThe queen and two princesses\nwill be crowned at the Frosh\nReception Saturday, Sept. 23.\nThe Cairn Ceremony, to be\nheld at 8 p.m., Thursday, Sept.\n21, commemorates the Great\nTrek of 1922 when students\nmarched from the old UBC cam-\n' pus at Fairview out to the then\n.wilderness of Point Grey.\ni\nThe stones that the students\ncarried were piled on the Main\nMall to become the Cairn, sym-\n[ bol of the pioneering spirit of the\n1 university.\nThe colorful ceremony is to\ninclude a torchlight parade from\nthe steps of the library to the\nCairn, speeches by President\nMacKenzie and last year's Great\nTrekker, Col. Harry T. Logan,\nand music by the student band\nand choir.\nTRAINING GRANT GIVEN\nA $20,000 grant from the Association of Retarded Children\nwill be used to establish a training program for teachers of\nhandicapped children. A clinical\npsychologist will be appointed.\nThe president will hold an informal reception for the frosh in\nBrock Hall following the ceremony.\nIn case of rain, the ceremony\nwill be held in the Memorial\ngym.\nFresh frosh\nnominate now\nNominations for Frosh Council open Wednesday, Sept. 27\nand close at 3 p.m. Oct. 4. After\na week of campaigning, elections will be held Oct. 13.\nPositions on the council are:\npresident, vice-president, secretary, treasurer, executive member, and special events chairman.\nA public relations officer and\nNewsletter editor will be appointed after the elections.\nThe Council is the executive\nof the Frosh Undergraduate\nSociety, govened by an assembly of delegates from the 80-100\nEnglish 100 classes.\nPermanent, Rinse, Touch up or Tint,\nWe do it best!\nLeader Beauty Salon\n4447 W. 10th AVENUE\nCAstle 4-4744\nMale and Female Stylists\nOPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS\nThurs. Sept. 14 Til Sat. Sept. 23\nThe King of the Balladeers\nSinging\n\"EL PASO\"\n'it's Your World\"\n'Gunf ighter Ballads'\n\"White Sports Coat\"\n\"BIG IRON\"\n\"Singing the Blues\"\n\"Jimmy Martinez\"\n\"Streets of Laredo\"\nTHE\nFabulous Favorite\nIN PERSON\nMARTY ROBBINS\nShows 9:30 & 12:30\nDancing Til 2\nTheatre Restaurant\n626 HORNBY ST. MU 2-3 677\n\u00C2\u00A7uyyn<\u00C2\u00A7ciU\n\u00C2\u00A3kteA\nDear Guys 'n Gals,\nHere is a new exciting rendezvous for your Campus\nbound footwear. Look for the above sign on West Broadway near Macdonald Street, across from the bus stop,\nonly 2 miles from your university gates.\nGUYS' N GALS Shoe Store was created especially\nfor you to make the smartest and latest fashions compatible with your budget.\nPlease drop in and browse. Your suggestions will be\nwelcome.\nyojuAA. iAidy.\n(David. \u00C2\u00A3. dtyatL\nAND STAFF\n2858West Broadway at Macdonald\nREgent 3-3022\nWe are looking for a guy or gal\nwith some shoe experience for\na part time job Friday evenings\nand Saturdays. REgent 3-3022. Page 10\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, September 12, 1961\nNew Birds take on grads\nUBC meets oldsters\nin first annual game\nFootball coach Frank'Gnup launches his 1961 version of\nthe Thunderbirds Saturday when they meet a crew of alumni\nOld Boys in the first annual grad game.\nThe grads, coached by B.C.\nLions general manager Herb\nCapozzi and rugger star George\nPuil, will, lead their contingent\nof ex-Birds against this year's\nversion at 1:30 at the Stadium.\nOLAFSON OUT\nThe Birds will be missing\nspeedy halfback Jim Olafson,\nwhose heavy course of studies\nwill not allow him to play this\nyear. They're also short defensive end Greg Findlay, who is\nineligible.\nBut Gnup's dilemma is somewhat lessened by the arrival at\nUBC of a Western Junior College AU-American, Barry Cark-\nner, who quarterbacked the Trinidad (Colorado) team last season.\nReturning to the backfield\nwill be fullback Roy Bianco,\nGordy Olafson (Jim's brother),\nand a host of quarterbacks including last year's starter Stan\nKnight.\nMANY STARS\nThe Grad's lineup will include\nex-lion Doug Mitchell, MAC\nalumni rep Gerry Nestman, former MAA president Ian Stewart, Gary Bruce, Bill Hutchison,\nBill Melville, Roger Kronquist,\nBob Hindmarch, Mike Williams,\nand Capozzi.\nThe Grads will be allowed 13\nmen on the field \u00E2\u0080\u0094 an extra\nquarterback with flash cards to\nhelp the players with their\nassignments. The Grads have\nbeen working out only two\nweeks.\nGnup's Bird's, however, aren't\nespecially in shape themselves.\nWCIAU league rules prohibit\nthem from starting training be-\nfor the first of September, so\nthey've only been working out\nsince Labor Day.\nMost of the first-stringers\nip 1 a y e d for the Intermediate\nteam in Saturday's 8-7 loss to\nNew Westminster.\nBe prepared!\nDenver University football\ncoach John Roning is a man\nwho turns all stones. During a\npractice he instructed his men\nin the technique of carrying him\noff the field on their shoulders\nafter winning games.\nGals have\nbig choice\nUBC offers the largest athlet- I\nic program for women in North\nAmerica.\nMore than six hundred women i\ntake part in extramural and in-1\ntramural activities. '\nThe extramural program offers 17 different sports. UBC\nsponsors at least 25 teams in\ncity, WCIAU, and Pacific North- '\nwest competition.\nManagers, reporters, board\nchalkers, are urgently needed,,\nsays Women's Athletic Associa- j\ntion president Barb Whidden. j\nStudents can also earn P.E.'\ncredits, as well as supporting\ntheir faculties, clubs, and soro-\nrites, by playing intramurals at\nnoon hours. |\nAn indoor track meet Septem-'\nber 21 begins intramural activities.\nRegistration forms for interested athletes are available in\nthe Women's Gym, and are included in the WAA booklet.\nCompleted forms should be put\nin the WAA publicity box at the\neast entrance to the Women's\nGym.\nIn debut:\nSMOTHERED BY THREE large New Westminster Royals,\nUBC Chief halfback Dave Lee (dark helmet) is stopped for\nshort gain. Lee scored one touchdown, but Chiefs lost 8-7 to\nleague-leaders Saturday.\nChiefs lose squeaker 8-7\nUBC Chiefs, Frank Gnup's\nnew entry in the Pacific Coast\nIntermediate football league,\nalmost made a third-quarter\ntouchdown stand up Saturday\nagainst New Westminster\nRoyals.\nThe Chiefs, a motley collection of all three UBC teams,\nlost 8-7 to the Royals, who\nscored the winning touchdown with less than two minutes remaining.\nIt was the Chiefs' first game\nin the newly - revamped\nleague. Royals have played\nthree and won them all.\nChiefs, who have been working out only since Labor Day,\nheld their own against the\nleague-leading Royals for\nmost of the game.\nRoyals scored a first-quarter single, but UBC came back\nin the third quarter to score\nseven points on a touchdown\nby Dave Lee and a convert by\nDave Barker.\nThe score was set up by a\ndazzling 50-yard sideline run\nby halfback Bruce McCallum.\nThen Royals scored in the\nlast two minutes of play on\nthree long gains.\nBest for Chiefs were McCallum, Lee, Jack Schrieber,\nwho gained consistently\nagainst the big Royal line, and\nend-turned-halfback Tom Andrews, who caught five passes.\nThe freshman team, the\nBraves, headed by Grant Hooper, has won all three of its\ngames so far. Sunday, they\ncame from behind a 13-0 half-\ntime disadvantage to edge\nRichmond 14-13.\nBrave touchdowns came on\na 70-yard run by Bob Paulley\nand a 10-yard jaunt by Bob\nSweet.\nEarlier, they defeated Surrey 6-0 and Victoria 14-7.\nThey meet Victoria on the Island next Sunday, while the\nChiefs play Seattle Cavaliers\nat 2 p.m. at UBC Stadium.\n'A'Cards are your\ndate to athletics\nA-cards, the athletic pass\nthat lets its owner and his or\nher date into every sport\nevent on campus, are being\noffered again this year for $5.\nThe cards are good for all\nhome football, basketball,\nrugby, hockey, swimming,\nand gymnastic events \u00E2\u0080\u0094 plus\na few extras.\nThey're being sold at the\nend of the registration lineup\nby members of the football\nteam, and at the Memorial\nGym office, and the-AMS office.\n\"PERFECT MILDNESS\nIN YOUR PIPE\"\nDrakakt's\n... Brahadi's smoking\ntobacco is a special\n\"Cavendish\" blend of\nMild tobaccos. Comfortably satisfying... a mild\nsmoking tobacco with a\ndelightful aroma.\n53\u00C2\u00AB for 2 ounces\nSuggested price, all taxes included\nAlso available in\nvacuum packed half pound tin\nWelcome to U.B.C.\nTo All Seniors and Frosh\nBest- Wishes with your year's studies.\njan!/en\nJantzen of Canada Ltd.\nKingsway and 10th Avenue\nVancouver 10, B.C.\nWELCOME STUDENTS\nOLD AND NEW\nThis year we extend a 10% discount to all students purchasing record players, radios, tape recorders and repairs\n10% Discount mi all edlucational records (spoken, word, art, drama, ethnic\nand language.\nCOME IN AND LOOK AROUND!\nGreatest Variety in Town!\nIF WE HAVEN'T GOT IT, WE'LL GET IT FOR YOU!\nQlsxand&h & Gx&Iadh CipplicuiaiA Jjtcf.\n4508 West 10th Avenue\nVancouver 8, B.C.\nCAstle 4-6811 \u00E2\u0080\u009E Tuesday, September 12, 1961\nTHE\nUBYSSEY\nSky's limit\nfor male\n* athletes\nMen who wish to play on UBC\nteams can obtain information\nregarding intramural and extramural sports at the athletic of-\n- fices in the Memorial Gym.\nSome 50 teams in more than\n25 different sports are on the\nextramural program. There are\nan unlimited number of teams\nand some 16 sports in the intramural program.\n^ENQUIRE NOW\nStudents interested in playing\n^ on extramural teams should enquire in September at the gym,\nor contact the coach of the sport\nthey wish to play.\nNotices of organizational meet-\nt ings and practices appear on the\ngym bulletin boards and in The\nUbyssey.\n,. Information regarding intramurals is posted on the bulletin\nboards in the gym dressing room\nbut students should also watch\nThe Ubyssey and the notice\n^boards of clubs and other organizations to which they belong for\nannouncements of practices and\nmeetings.\nATHLETICS DAY\nThe second annual Athletics\nDay, to be held in the Armoury\nOct. 12 this year, will give students a chance to familiarize\n^themselves with UBC's vast athletic program.\n^ Registration forms and information regarding compulsory\nP.E. can be obtained in both the\nArmoury and in the gym during\nthe first week of registration.\nPage II\nFLEET BACKFIELDER Jim\nOlafson won't be back with\nfootball 'Birds because of extra studies.\nGrid help needed\nFootball coach Frank Gnup is\nstill looking for recruits for all\nthree UBC teams.\nGnup needs more first and\nsecond-year under 21 men for\nthe Braves, the freshman team.\nThere are still many positions\nopen to newcomers on both the\nThunderbirds and the Chiefs,\nthe new intermediate entry.\nStudents!\nFor a new dining pleasure\ntry our daily special.\nDEANS\n4544 W. 10th\nOpen 'till 11:30\n' JOHNNY THOMPSON'S\nTHUNDERBIRD SERVICEN^\nUniversity District Chevron Service Station Ov*d\n10th & Tolmie \u00E2\u0080\u0094 CA 4-5313 ^<^\nFEATURING LEADING STANDARD OIL PRODUCTS\nARTS\nQuicker, surer stops with\nKAUFMAN\nGolden Jets\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 the basketball shoes scientifically designed\nto improve your game\nWear the shoe chosen by so many well-known Canadian basketball teams . . . Golden lets. New non-marking ripple\u00C2\u00AE Soles\nlengthen the stride, propel the foot forward for fast get-aways, or\n\"dig in\" for instant, non-skid stops.\nGolden Jets let you play longer without tiring because cushion\naction of ripple\u00C2\u00AE Soles absorbs shock, reduces foot fatigue.\nYou'll want these other Golden Jet features too:\n* PROFESSIONAL LAST (narrow at heel, wide at ball of foot)\n* SHOCK-ABSORBING CUSHION ARCH PROTECTOR\n* \"BREATHABLE\" UPPERS of long-wearing heavy duck\nGolden Jets come in white\nwith golden trim. Ask for\nGulden Jets at your nearest\nsports or shoe store.\nUBC athletic schedule has\nbrand new look for 1961\nThe UBC athletic calendar\nhas a new look this year.\nA new football team, a smaller Western\" Canadian Inter-\ncollegiate league, a new\nprairie school, and earlier\nstarting times for football\ngames are among the changes.\n* * *\nFootball coach Frank Gnup\nhas formed a new team, to be\ncalled the Chiefs, which will\nplay in the Pacific Coast Conference Intermediate League\n(see page 10).\nThey'll play three home\ngames on Saturdays, with another on a Sunday. The freshman team, the Braves, plays\ntheir games on Sundays.\nThe 'Birds, who have five\nhome games this year, will\nstart playing at 1 p.m. Saturdays, instead of 2. They've also arranged one of those home\ngames for Nov. 9, a Thursday,\nat 12:45 noon.\n* * *\nThe Western Canadian In-\ncollegiate Athletic Union, the\nleague in which most UBC\nteams compete, now has only\nthree member schools. Manitoba dropped out last year.\nHowever, the University of\nAlberta's new Calgary branch\nhas entered the league on an\nexhibition basis, and the\n'Birds will play them four\ntimes in basketball.\nThe basketball Birds will also play an exhibition game\nagainst the University of Alaska at Memorial Gym Feb. 1 at\nnoon.\nAnd the zany Harlem Globetrotters are scheduled to play\nfour games at UBC this year,\ntwo in November, and two in\nJanuary or February.\nGnup has six\nhelpers now\nFrank Gnup's football faculty-\nhas been flooded with new faces\nthis fall.\nGnup, who has a new intermediate team to handle this\nyear, as well as the varsity and\nfrosh teams, has four new helpers.\nThey are: Primo Villaneuva,\nex^B.C. Lions quarterback; Joe\nYamauchi, ex-Lion and third-\nyear architecture student; Dpug\nMitchell, another ex-Lion and\nthird-year law student; and Denny Argue, a lineman with last\nyear's 'Birds.\nThey join Bob Hindmarch,\nGrant Hooper, and Gnup, who\nwere on last year's staff.\nMade by Kaufman Rubber Co., Limited, Kitchener, Ont.\nINCORPORATED 2\"!\u00C2\u00B0 MAY 1670.\nGeorgia at Granville . . . Shop daily 9-5:30. Fridays 9-9 .. . MU 1-6211\nThe Bay's CAREER AND CAMPUS SHOP\nNOW OPEN on the second floor!\nWhere young-thinking, forward-looking men can buy everything\nfrom a suit to a tie, knowing it's the right thing to do. The Career\nand Campus Shop features the latest style trend to the \"Natural\nLook.\" It's a spacious department, well-arranged for looking around;\nwith young, informed salesmen to help you choose the latest in high\nstyle men's wear and furnishings. Come on in, have a look at what's\nnew!\nThe Natural Shoulder Look in\nan wool hop-sack weave suit.\nHigh three-button jacket. Pleat-\nless slacks with tapered legs, no\ncuffs. New blue-olive tones and\nother shades. 36-44 shorts, regulars, tails. Each 69.50\nUse yonr PBA . .\n2nd Floor.\nPay Nothing Down\nNew Black, Black Blazer in traditional styling, with pearl buttons; in all wool English flannel.\n36-44 regs., tails. Each 39.50\nSlim Black-and-While Hounds-\niooih Check Pants in all wool\nworsted. 28 to 36. Pair 17.95\n, at The Bay Career and Campus Shop Page 12\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, September 12, 1961\nMatric marks make\nmoney for students\nOrientation program:\nMore first year students than\never before will be attending\nUniversity on award money won\nCont'd, from Page 1:\nRegistration rush\nsion, about 1,200 more than last\nyear.-\nThey said hazing has again\nbeen banned.\nAmong events planned for\nfrosh are:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 an address by Dean Walter\nGage, Tuesday.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 a general assembly, Thursday.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 the annual Cairn Ceremony\nand presidential address Sept 21.\nIt will be followed by a reception in Brock Hall.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 a faculty-symposium in\nBrock Hall, Sept. 27.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 and the three-day frosh retreat, beginning Sept. 29.\nA Frosh Queen will be crowned at an evening reception in\nthe Armory Sept. 23, from can-\nadidates chosen by1 upper class-\njflfien during the first days of tne\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2school year.\nFrosh Retreat\nApplications for frosb, retreat\nSept. 29-Ocl. 1 must be received\nal the AMS office by noon Sept.\n16, not by Sept. 18, as was stated\npreviously.\nThe retreat, an annual get-together of frosh, faculty, and student leaders, will be held at\nCamp Elphinstone again this\nfor high marks in junior matriculation exams.\nTop student, Robert B. Gordon, of Prince Rupert won $500\nfor five years on a Chris Spencer scholarship.\nSecond place student, Timothy\nCharles Padmore of Vancouver,\nreceives $500 a year for four\nyears from Standard Oil.\nOther award winners are:\nJohn A. Cairns, Trail, $500 a\nyear for live years, Chris Spencer; Mary A. Green, North Van\ncouver, $500 for four years.\nStandard Oil Company; Janet\nC. Haddock, Vancouver, $200\nFaculty Scholarship.\nIH helps foreign students\nSummer Record\nA record high of 6,697 students registered for credit courses. Persons taking non-credit\ncourses and delegates to conferences made up the balance.\nWhen a foreign student is\na guest at a Canadian household, does he observe his own\neating habits or his hosts?\nDoes he offer to do the dishes? Does he wear the dress\nstyle of his hosts? How does\nhe address professors?\nThese are a few of the problems that John Haar, director of International House,\nand his staff try to overcome\nwith the foreign students orientation program.\nEach year, about 200 new\noverseas, students arrive on\nthe campus, mainly from the\nU.K., U.S., West Indies, Japan, Europe, and Africa.\nForeign students, numbering 1^200, now comprise about\n10% of the student population.\nThe increase in overseas\nstudents, according to Haar, is\ndue to the increase in foreign\naid through the Colombo Plan\nand other commonwealth aid.\nLately, Africans have been arriving in large numbers.\nArangements are under\nway for Russian exchange\nstudents to come here, but so\nfar the only communist block\ncountry represented is Yugoslavia.\nAlthough many of the students missed the program\nowing to the delayed arrival\nof the P&O liners, most who\nattended thought it was\nworthwhile. T his was the\nfirst year the program; has\nbeen held; ''\nBefore lectures begini International House has a spec?\nial instruction period to teach\noverseas students about the\nhistory of UBC, student gov\nernment, fields of study, immigration department regulations and money exchange\nrates.\nFor the first time, a social\ncustoms question and answer\nperiod with Dean of Women\nHelen McRae has been set up. .\nImmigration controls limit\nstudents on visas to work in\ntheir field of study, which\neliminates many o f t h e i r\nchances to make money for\ntuition. Most are on scholar-*\nships.\nStudents join all political,\nsocial and ehurqh groups with-\n'puf iayoritisaffJ& any organi-\nzation> says HseW':\nIntematwaal ilbuse program *\nincludes social ^meetings, debates, special speakers. A barbecue and dance open the '61- *\n'62 program Sept. 16.\nCARR5\nLADIES\nWAR\n(Barbara Carr)\n4469 West 10th Avenue\nJantzen Knitwear\nSuzanne Sportswear\nMorley Sweaters\nImported from\nEngland\nCoats by Wilson, a\ncomplete size range\n'A Friendly Hello...'\nWe wish to welcome back all\nour old customers . . . and,\nof course, a special welcome\nto the new students of the\nuniversity. ..\nUPPER\nTENTH\nBARBERS\n4574 W. 10th AVE.\nOne Block Past the Gates\nFeaturing European Trained\nBarbers\nWHERE YOUNG MEN SHOP\nJjojdm\n. . SETTING THE TREND IN SUBURBAN WEAR!\nOur masculine Loden coats have a fresh, v igorous outdoor quality. The Loden material is wind resistant, shower proof and lightweight . . . originally developed in the\nBavarian Alps ...\nSee these smart Va, length coats in\nBeige . . . Brown . . . Lodengreen\nAT\nRichards & Farish Mens Wear\n802 Granville Street\n\"THE SHOP THAT IS LOADED WITH THE SLIM . . . SMOOTH . . . STYLES\"\nVancouver, B.C."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1961_09_12"@en . "10.14288/1.0124887"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C."@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 Ubyssey"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .