"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-28"@en . "1964-05-28"@en . "Misprinted volume, should be XLVI.
Graduation edition."@en . ""@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0127820/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Message to the Graduates\nof 1964\nUniversity of British Columbia\nThe Government of this Province, representing the people of British\nColumbia, is pleased to utilize this opportunity to extend ifs congratulations to the 1964 graduating class of the University of British Columbia.\nDuring the years that the members of this graduating class have\nbeen on the campus, they have observed the progress that has been\nmade in the provision of new facilities to accommodate fhe ever-\nincreasing number of students at both undergraduate and graduate\nleyels.\nIn providing increased financial support for the University of British\nColumbia it is the hope of the Government that those who have graduated from this University will be able to provide leadership in the many\ntechnological and professional fields that are developing throughout our\ngreat Province. By providing such leadership graduates will use their developed capabilities not alone to obtain individual satisfaction and to\nrealize individual ambitions but also to contribute to the gratification of\nsociety's needs and to improving opportunities for all those who live in\nBritish Columbia.\nGRADUATION EDITION THE U8 YSSEY\nVol. XLVII, No. 60\nVANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1964\n43\nCA 4-3242\nSKELETON of new classroom and office block at corner of Main Mall and University\nBoulevard puts a little flesh on its bones. The $2.9 million edifice, which will house\ncommerce and social science departments now living in drab huts, will be finished next\nsummer. Sunny weather for the last few days has speeded work on the building which\nwill eventually reach nine stories. \u00E2\u0080\u0094photo by Don Hume\nTeaches till end\nDying prof finds\npain no barrier\nLaw professor Malcolm Maclntyre promised he would\nnot let down his students, and he was true to his word.\nMaclntyre, professor of torts\nat UBC,- had known he was\ndying from cancer for several\nmonths.\nBut he refused to give up\nteaching: \"The students are depending on me,\" he said, \"I will\nnot let them down.\"\nToward the end of his life he\nfound it very difficult to carry\non, but he was never known to\ncomplain though he was often\nin great pain.\nDoctors had told him he\nshould give up his work but he\nrefused. They said if he stopped\nit would extend his life, but\nagain he refused.\nJames Maclntyre, a lecturer\nin law at UBC, said his father\nhad loved his classes too much\nto give them up.\n\"His whole life revolved\naround his work,\" Maclntyre\nsaid.\n\"He could not have given up\neven if he had wanted to. He\nknew he was going to die, and\nhe wouldn't stop teaching just\nto put it off.\"\nJames Maclntyre says he will\ncontinue in his father's footsteps.\n\"It's a good school here, and\nthere are memories,\" he said.\nHe said his father started\nteaching at UBC in 1948 and\nstayed there until he died this\nApril. He was 59.\nMembers of the law faculty\nacquainted with Maclntyre expressed unqualified admiration\nfor him.\nTypical comments were:\n\"A wonderful man, one of\nthe foremost authorities on\ntorts in the country.\"\n\"His courage was an inspiration to all he came in contact\nwith/'\nHis students said:\n\"He did it, but it was really\npathetic to see him work his\nlife away for us, but somehow\nhe managed to finish the job he\nstarted.\n\"Those of us that passed this\nyear owe a lot to Professor\nMaclntyre.\"\nBut perhaps the tribute that\nProfessor Maclntyre would\nhave appreciated most came\nfrom a fellow member of UBC's\nlaw faculty, assistant professor\nJ. C. Smith: \"He died doing\nwhat he wanted to do, but how\nhe found the strength I don't\nknow\u00E2\u0080\u0094it was the most absolute\ndevotion I think I will ever\nsee.\"\nAMS shells out\nfor rank amateur\nThe AMS has started to\nhire amateurs as well as professionals.\nBesides obtaining the services of a publications coordinator and an executive\nsecretary recently, student\ncouncil has approved retaining AMS President Roger\nMcAfee at a $400-per-month\nsalary for the summer.\n\"I think the policy of\nhiring the president to work\nduring the summer will end\nthe tradition of his having to\ntake a year off from studies\nto be able to conduct all student business properly,\" said\nMcAfee.\n\"The president can prepare his year's program during the summer and have it\nready for council at the beginning of the year.\n\"I'm spending an average\nof 12-13 hours a day on the\njob, including evening meetings and business dinners.\"\nSUB grows\nfrom gleam\nto reality\nThe student union building goes onto the drawing\nboards this month after a four year struggle during which\nthe '64 grads have watched SUB grow from a gleam in Dean\nFeltham's eye to a full-fledged and fully financed building.\nOver 90 architects should\nRed shirt\nbest way\nto get ring\narchitects should\nsubmit first stage plans by the\nJuly deadline, making this the\nlargest competition in North\nAmerica for student unions,\"\nsays planning committee head\nDean Feltham.\nThese preliminary designs\nwill be narrowed down to four,\nwith selected entrants receiving a prize of $2,500 each and\ncompeting with expanded plans\nin the final.\nAn award of $3,000 plus\ncosts is at stake.\nDeadline for entries in the\nfinal stage of the competition\nwill be sometime in October,\nwith the Board of Assessors'\ndecision expected before the\nend of that month.\nMaking up the board are W.\nW. Wurster, San Francisco:\nProfessor Henry Elder, UBC;\nGuy Desbarats, Montreal; and\nJames Murray, Toronto, with\nFeltham and Warnett Kennedy\nof Vancouver as non-voting\nadvisors.\n\"The grad class's gift of a\nfountain for the SUB has been\ntaken into consideration in the\narchitectural plans, at an expected cost of $8,000,\" said\nFeltham.\n\"Any deficiency between\nthis and the graduates' contribution will be made up by the\nAlma Mater Society.\n\"We have not received a\ncheque to date from the class,\"\nhe \u00E2\u0080\u00A2added.\nBy LORRAINE SHORE\nNow you've got the B.H.E.\nor the B. Ed. and no husband,\nhere's what you should have\ndone.\nGone into Engineering.\nOr Architecture, or Law.\nYou might never have become Mary Smith, B. A. Sc, or\nJane Jones, LL. B., but you\nsure could have become Agatha\nHinkleman, MRS.\nThe engineering faculty has\nthree girls in it, a ratio of one\nto 305.\nLaw has 29 men for every\ngirl. Agriculture has 25 to one.\nBut Forestry tops them all.\nIt hasn't got any girls in it.\nAnd you went into Home\nEconomics, didn't you, Judy?\nAfter all there is one man in\nthat faculty\u00E2\u0080\u0094and 213 women.\nOr you decided to become\nFlorence Nightingale and join\nthat maleless faculty of Nursing.\nOr go into primary Education, where there are three\ntimes as many women as men.\nTime to start all over again,\nisn't it, Susie?\nIncredible wagon retired\nShambulance ambles out in class\nBy MIKE VAUX\nUBC's venerable traffic\npatrol wagon - come - shambulance has graduated with this\nyear's convocation.\nThe wagon, a 1957 Chev\nwhich has been in a state of\nrapid deterioration for the\nlast seven years, is being\ntraded in on a new one.\nAnd, according to traffic\npatrol head Cece Paul, it is\ngood riddance.\n''We drove the old bus about\n70,000 miles over the years,\"\nhe said. \"And most of those\nmiles were in low gear at\nunder 20 miles-an-hour.\n\"It is incredible that it even\nlasted this long.\"\nPaul said the new wagon\nwould be a 1964 Chev station\nTHE SHAMBULANCE\n20 miles an hour\nwagon equipped with first aid\nequipment and a stretcher.\n\"It will be much better all\naround,\" he said. \"The old one\nwouldn't even hold a stretcher\nproperly.\n\"Our men are trained in\nfirst aid, and this new car will\nserve a vital function at\nUBC.\"\nOther traffic patrolmen\nagree with Paul.\n\"The damned thing has\nbeen around so long it has\nbecome an institution,\" said\none patrolman. \"It was the\nbutt of all kinds of student\npranks.\n\"They should put it on the\nmain mall as a decoration for\n(Continued on Page 11)\nSEE: OLD BUS THE UBYSSEY\nPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the university\nvear by the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C. Kditonal opinions\nexpressed are those of the editor and not necessarily those of the AMh\nor the University. Editorial office, CA 4-3916. Advertising office, CA\n4-3242, Loc. 26. Member Canadian University Press\nAuthorized as second-class mail by Post Office Department, Ottawa,\nand for payment of postage in cash.\nWinner 1963-64 Canadian University Press trophies for\ngeneral excellence and editorial writing.\nTHURSDAY. FRIDAY, MAY 28. 29\nIvy and UBC\nIt's a little hard to be reminiscent about UBC. We'd\nlove to spill some purple prose about the ivy-covered\nwalls, the past glories, and the days when we defeated\ntraditional Yurtsford at rounders.\nBut we don't have much ivy. What there is has been\ncarefully cultivated to hold up some of our shakier\nshacks. And we haven't been around long enough to have\nany rivals of the \"drink-up-and-remember-the-good-old-\ndays\" variety.\nSo with UBC's lack of real tradition you may be\nwondering why all the medieval ceremony, as your flat\nhat, tassel and bulky gowns combine to make graduation\nthoroughly uncomfortable. You may also be a little\nmiffed to discover your part of the ceremony takes about\nas long as it does to swat a fly. You may also be concerned that you are only one out of some 1,900 students\ngraduating this year.\nIt would seem a good time to ask yourself just what\nyou've gained. Four years have taught the majority of\ngraduates a slice of science, a pithy bit of information\nabout ancient philosophy and the full realization that life\nafter university is going to be very different. A few\nothers have been taught such highly specialized subjects\nas to have become super-departmentalized. They become\nso departmentalized as to be unable to talk to anyone but\nother super-departmentalized souls. And they probably\nwon't have to if they continue at universities for the\nrest of their lives.\nFor the majority, though, \"all the courses in\n(philosophy) (electronics) (English) will be wasted. In\nfuture years at cocktail parties they will recall the names\nof the odd author or concept, briefly pull it out, and\nthen shove it away after whoever they were talking to\nhas failed to see its significance.\nAfter university most. companies seem to think a\ngraduate needs to be retrained. He has to be. Much of\nthe material he's learned isn't much good. And as the\nbright-eyed graduate enters the accounting office for the\nfirst day they tell him to forget what he's learned and\nstart learning about double accounting and income taxation loopholes.\nAnd suddenly he realizes he isn't in university any\nmore. And a little later some department head tells him\nto do something and when he's finished there isn't a\nmark for the effort, just another job. And the student\nsuddenly realizes people are treating him as if he was\ncapable of handling the odd responsible job. He's not just\na feckless - wreckless student. He becomes a citizen \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nsomething the university hardly trains him to be.\n'Bye shambulance\nIt is with deep regret we note the graduation of the\nuniversity's famed shambulance. Like all good grads the\ncombination traffic car and ambulance has been set out\nto pasture\u00E2\u0080\u0094in the harsh surroundings of a junk yard.\nAnd this is where most students thought the\nmachine should have been in the first place when it\nappeared on the campus two years ago. Mostly it got in\nthe way, ticketing cars and generally adding confusion.\nThe ambulance function it was supposed to serve\nwas always a bit of a laugh. It had an ill-equipped first\naid box and was too short for a stretcher to fit in.\nStill it was a part of the university. It did many good\nthings. Sometimes even it helped students when they\nwere stuck in the depths of C-lot late at night and it did\nbart the odd injured student to Wesbrook hospital, even\nif he did have to stand.\nAnd without the shambulance UBC lost another\nlittle bit of its character. We hope the new one that\nreplaces it isn't too efficient and well-painted. We hope\nit doesn't look like an ambulance or a traffic patrol car\nany more than our old shambulance did.\n\"B. C.\" Gets To College!\nGet rid of dirt, grime\nand grads in a minute\nBy MIKE HUNTER, BA '63\nGroping throught the dust\nthat has accumulated on our\nnews desk since we buried the\nlast volume of Ubysseys, we\ncame upon a press handout\nmarked For Immediate Release, from, of all people,\nProctor and Gamble. It contained word that another\nUBC graduate has made his\nmark in this world, which we\nof course were very glad to\nhear.\nIt seems one Clifton W.\nHealey, B. Comm. 1960, has\nbeen promoted in P&G's advertising department\u00E2\u0080\u0094to the\ngroup responsible for consumer marketing of Mr.\nClean, the man who gets rid\nof dirt and grime and grease\nin just a minute.\nMr. Healey, we are informed, will assist in planning\nadvertising and sales promotion campaigns for the product, and in co-ordinating\nmarket research, product research, budgeting and packaging activities.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThis being graduation time,\nwhen everything is rosy and\nglowing and hallowed, it\ncame as a bit of a shock to us\nto discover what subversive\nthings UBC grads actually do\nafter they get out of here.\nWe have always been suspicious of commercemen, them\nand their thin ties and olive\ncorduroy jackets, and those\nsuper-confident little grins\nwiped all over their faces.\nWell, now we know it's all\ntrue.\nWhen commercemen graduate, they run gleefully onto\nMadison Avenue and begin\nwriting those excruciating\nsoap commercials. Terrorizing\nour youth. Driving us to tranquilizers (Benz-E-Pep, with\nZX-3), teasing our ids, playing\non our neuroticisms, exploiting our secret desires, and\ngenerally interrupting our\nPrime Time bliss.\nHealey, where's your sense\nof loyalty to Alma Mater? To\nthink we have to listen to\nsinging commercials composed, planned, co-ordinated, researched, budgeted, and packaged by a UBC grad!\nWhy didn't you want to be\na nuclear physicist, or an\nengineer, or an aggie, like\nother red-blooded students?\nBut wait a minute.\nWhat's so good about\nTHEM?\nAfter all, it's those nuclear\nphysicists who made The\nBomb, that curse which is\nnext only to singing soap commercials as a threat to our\nsearch for peace and contentment.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nIt's the aggies who put the\nweed killer in our milk and\nbutter; it's the engineers who\nbuild those eyesore apartment\nslums; the architects and\nthe planners who design the\ntraffic-jammed roads; the lawyers who snarl everything\nwith red tape.\nAll those grads of the other\nfaculties \u00E2\u0080\u0094 they're no better\nthan that thin-tied terror behind the soap bubbles.\nAnd to* think you're going\nto join them. Migawd. You're\nall out to get us.\nYou know, the more we\nthink about it, the more we\nbegin to agree with a spiteful,\nblack-haired demon we once\nworked for. What was it he\nsaid?\n\"If there's one thing this\nworld can't stand, it's a bunch\nof goddam university kids.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nWell, there you are, all unavoidably capped and gowned. Emblazoned with the stigma of knowledge.\nGo forth, and pursue your\ndespicable purpose.\nBut have mercy on the rest\nof us, eh?\nEDITOR: Mike Horsey\nManaging George Railton\nNews Tim Padmore\nCity Tom Wayman\nSenior - _ Mike Vaux\nArt Don Hume\nCUP Lorraine Shore\nSports George Reamsboltom\nAssociate Mike Hunter\nAssociate Ron Riter\nAssociate Dave Ablett\nAl Birnie, John Kelsey, Lionel Wood,\nDanny Stoffman, Carol Anne Baker,\nAl Donald, George The Grad, Dean\nFeltham, Tom Skupa, Jeanne\nHughes, Pete Shepard, Andrew\n(Late) Black, Bev Adams, Winton\nDerby, Hoger Mouse. Roger McAfee,\nRichard Simeon, Georpe (Sweat)\nftailton, Klephant Mastadon, Leo\nThe Proctor, George The Janitor,\nGarth The Gardener, Louie The\nLock, Kay The Key, Open Spaces,\nPadded Masthead.\nPoor Dick\nalmanacs\nhis last\nBy RICHARD SIMEON BA '64\nSo long, UBC, it's been\ngood to know you.\nAnd as we say goodlbye,\nwe have some parting wishes\nfor you.\nTo General Sir Ouvry Roberts, Director of Traffic: may\nthe traffic ever flow smoothly, the parking meters pay\nhandsomely, and your army\never be victorious.\nTo Miss Ruth Blair, head\nof food services: let the hamburgers ever be drier and let\nnone ever be able to say they\ngot ptomaine poisoning from\nthe food YOU cooked.\nTo AMS president Roger\nMcAfee: may you get those\nthings done which ought to be\ndone on time, and may you\nnot do those things which\nought not to be done, so help\nyou, Scott. May you continue\nto bark loudly and wave\nyour very little stick.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nTo Basil Stuart - Siubbs,\nchief librarian: may you ever\nget books, but never be booked, may you drink happily,\nbut never get bombed.\nTo Dean Feltham, chairman\nof the Student Union Building\nplanning committee: may your\ngrandchildren one day have\nthe thrill pf resting on a cot\nin the \"quiet room\" of a\nmulti-million dollar SUB.\nTo SFA president Pat Mc-\nTaggarl-Cowan and Chancellor Gordon Shrum: We wish\nyou continued good hunting\nfor bright young professors at\nUBC to staff your aerie entity\natop the mountain.\nTo soap-box orator Dietrich\nLuth: May you carry your\nbox wherever you go\u00E2\u0080\u0094it will\nmake nice firewood.\nTo AMS vice-president Jim\nWard: Please don't pull any\nmore fast ones on us; you\nmight waste away.\nTo the Board of Governors:\nMay your lips, in the interests\nof public order, ever be sealed. May you never let the students disturb your quiet rest.\nTo UBC president John B.\nMacdonald: May the Premier\nbe nice to you, the students\nbe nice to you, SFA be nice\nto you, the board of governors\nbe nice to you and the faculty\nbe nice to you. May you get\nyour graduate school, and\nmay you see the day when\nyour university really is the\nHarvard of the West Coast.\nTo the faculty: may the\nwages go up, the work load\ngo down, and may you all\npublish definitive works in\nyour own fields. May students\nnever interfere with your\nreal work.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n' And finally to the Students:\nMay you have a covered\nwalkway in from C-lot, clear\nset used to teach you sociology, an honest student government, a federal government scholarship plan, a\nunited CUS, fewer assignments and more time for creative work on your own, fees\nyou can pay out of one summer's earnings, a student union\nbuilding, a pub on campus,\nand an end to the RCMP\nR-squad. ROGER McAFEE\n. . difficult role\nMcAfee*.\nGrads will\nneed other\ncheek\nROGER McAFEE\nAMS President\nA university graduate has\na very difficult role to play at\nany time, but graduates of\nthis university will probably\nbe called upon to play an even\nmore difficult role in an even\nmore difficult period.\nThis province is currently\nundergoing an educational\nrevolution.\nTwo new institutions of\nhigher learning have recently\ncome into being. The competition for loyalties and dollars\nwill be keener than ever, and\na full-scale war among the\nthree could very easily develop.\nThe people of the province\nare being bombarded with\nfacts and figures about the\ntwo youngest institutions and\nit seems at times like UBC\nhas been completely written\noff.\nYou are going to be badgered by critics who insist UBC\nhas reached the \"stale\" stage\nand needs a little competition\nto brighten it up. You are\ngoing to be put upon by the\nignorant, demanding to know\nwhy a university as big as\nUBC should receive funds\nwhen a poor, struggling institution like Simon Fraser really needs the money to get\ngoing? Inanity will follow inanity.\nYou'll likely get pretty fed\nup. You'll likely be tempted\nto tell such types to drop off\nthe Lion's Gate Bridge. Or\nelse you'll spring to the defence of UBC, at the expense\nof the other two institutions.\nThis must not happen, because if it does, if you put\nUBC before the educational\nneeds of the province, you will\nbe doing yourself and this\nuniversity a great disservice.\nAs a university graduate,\none of your greatest responsibilities in the next few years\nshould be to convince the uninitiated of the value of higher education, regardless of\nwhether it is in Vancouver,\nBurnaby or Victoria.\nSo when you are tempted to\ndefend UBC at the expense of\nthe others, remember that one\nof the things this university\nhas tried to teach you is\ntolerance.\nMacdonald\nGraduates\nwill face\nhigh seas\nDR. JOHN MACDONALD\nUBC President\nAs the graduating class of\n1964 prepares to leave the\ncampus I want to add my\nword of congratulation to\nthose parents and close friends\nwho are elated, though not\nsurprised I am sure, at your\nsuccess.\nSome of you will be setting out on well-charted seas.\nOthers will be entering upon\nuncharted, stormy and precarious voyages in distant\nparts of the world or of the\neconomy, or beyond the frontiers of scientific knowledge.\nStill others will set sail on\nthe sea of matrimony.\nTo all of you I say good\nluck. We hope that we have\ngiven you the preparation\nwhich you need in the years\nahead.\nBut do come back occasionally to re-charge your batteries. Become active members of your alumni association, the better to build sound\ncolleges and universities wherever you go.\nThe friendships and associations of your days here will\nsustain you for the rest of\nyour lives, incredible though\nthis may seem to you now.\nUBC looks to you as a group\nto change the world for the\nbetter. I wish you health and\nstrength in your endeavours.\nHard worker\nAMS president Roger McAfee commented on his standing of 86 out of 91 passing law\nstudents: \"I did too much\nWork.\"\nDR. JOHN MACDONALD\n... do come back\nWalker moves\nDr. George Walker, research\nprofessor at UBC, has been\nnamed head of electrical engineering dept. at the University of Alberta.\nFive UBC professors\naccount for Malaysia\nFive UBC commerce professors went to Malaya last month\nin the final part of a five year\n$500,000 aid program to two\nMalaysian universities.\nLed by Prof. Leslie Wong,\ndirector of the project since it\nbegan in 1961, the team is composed of Professors Hugh Wilkinson, Arthur Beedle, Dr. Wil-\nlian Hughs and D_\ David\nQuirin. A professor from Alberta, Bryce Rollins, is accompanying them.\nThe project has established\nnine courses in accounting and\nbusiness administration at the\nUniversity of Malaya, at Kuala\nLumpur, and University of\nSingapore.\nWhen the UBC team returns\nin August, 1965, it will be replaced by nine Malaysians who\nCONGRATULATIONS\nTO THE 1964\nGRADUATING CLASS\nCOLLEGE PRINTERS LTD.\n2015 West 12th Avenue\nPrinters of 'The Ubyssey\"\nfor over 25 years\nlA/hat hath this day\ndeserv'd? what hath it\ndone that it in golden letters\nshould he set among the high\ntides in the calendar'?\"\nShakespeare\nKinB John, Act III, Scene I.\nThe BANK OF MONTREAl takes pleasure in\ncongratulating the graduates of faculties upon the\nsuccessful completion of their studies.\nwill have completed post graduate work at UBC under the\nColombo plan.\nProf. Wong said the project\nis an outcome of the government's decision after independence last year to replace\nforeign personnel with Malaysians in the civil service.\nYou'll feel like\nfor having changed to Tampax\nTampax is more than internal sanitary protection. It's a state of mind.\nIt's being sure that nothing can\nshow, no one can know.\nIt's never worrying about odor.\nIt's knowing you can be as active\nas you wish without being concerned about chafing or irritation.\nIt's exulting in the fact you've all\nbut done away with differences in\ndays of the month.\nTampax is not, we repeat not, difficult to use. The silken-smooth applicator guides insertion perfectly.\nWhat's difficult is to be without the\nadvantages of Tampax. Especially\nafter you become a user.\nChoice of 3 absorbency-sizes (Regular, Super, Junior) wherever such\nproducts are sold. Canadian\nTampax Corporation Limited.\nBarrie, Ontario.\nInvented by a doctor\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nnow used by millions ot women\nGRADUATION EDITION For art's sake\nANNE SMITH ... to retire after 44 years\nShe watched the ivy grow\nGraduates honor librarian\nat UBC before cairn built\nThe grad class honorary\nvice president has been at\nUBC as long as the cairn.\nNext year only the ivy-\ncovered cairn will remain.\nMiss Anne Smith, 65, retires\nthis year. And in recognition\nof 44 years of service the class\nof 1964 has elected her their\nhonorary vice president.\nMiss Smith, now assistant\nhead librarian, started attend\ning classes in the old Fairview\nshacks, site of the university\nbefore the Great Trek of\n1922. The cairn was built to\nmark the trek to Point Grey.\nMiss Smith went to the\nUnited States to complete her\ngraduate work but returned\nto become part of the library\nstaff in 1930.\nMiss Smith said she has\nbeen giving students lectures\nStudying minor\naccomplishment'\nTed Chamberlin can add a Rhodes Scholarship to his\nalready impressive list of accomplishments.\nChamberlin, 20, UBC's\nRhodes winner for 1964, is a\ngrad in double honors Math\nand English this year.\nBut studying is one of his\nlesser accomplishments.\nHe plays tennis, rugby, cricket, and several musical instruments.\nHe is a profesional big-game\nguide and hunter.\nHe leads canoe trips down\nsuch rivers as the Columbia\nand the Fraser.\nAnd on top of all this, he\nstill finds time to be a loyal\nfrat boy (Zeta Psi).\nA graduate of St. George's\nschool where he was head boy,\nChamberlain won the David\nSpencer scholarship awarded\nfor topping the provincial high\nschool government exams.\nSince entering university, he\nhas been awarded many additional scholarships.\nChamberlain is organist at\nthe University Anglican\nChurch during the academic\nyear, and spends his summers\nas a canoeing instrctor at the\nRocky Mountain Boys Camp.\nHe has been in residence at\nRobson House for the last\nthree years.\non the use of the library for\nas long as she can remember.\nThe Ubyssey asked Miss\nSmith what an honorary vice\npresident does.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\"Frankly, I don't know,\"\nshe said, \"and I don't think\nanyone else does. I've been\ntrying to find out.\n\"I have to make a few\nspeeches, and serve at the\ntree planting ceremony. But\nthat's about all.\n\"It's a great honor, though,\"\nshe said.\nMiss Smith is also head of\nthe library research division.\n\"I don't quite know why\nthey selected me for the position,\" Mjiss Smith said. \"I\ndon't know too many students\nof this generation.\n\"But I knew all their parents by name,\" she said.\nTop grad returns\nto beat system\nThe top science graduate at UBC believes he missed a\nlot by concentrating on his honors math and physics program,\nso he's coming back to study the arts.\n20,\nAndrew Stuart Glass\nson of North Vancouver physician Dr. Leslie Glass, 4035 St.\nAlban's, believes scientists\nshould be thoroughtly versed\nin the arts.\nSo he's coming back to take\ncourses in languages and economics \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and also math and\nphysics, \"to keep in touch\".\n\"Ideally, I would have liked\nto take a five-year program,\nthe extra time being used for\narts,\" said Andrew.\n\"But I found the only way\nI could do it was to graduate\nin science and come back.\"\nHe plans to spend only one\nyear in arts, returing to science\nfor a doctorate.\nThe head of the graduating\nclass in architecture thinks\nhe'll settle down into a job now\nthat he has a second degree.\nLawrence Redpath graduated in engineering at McGill\nfive years ago but decided architecture would be more interesting so he joined the\nschool at UBC.\nHe intends to work for a\nVancouver firm.\nThe top engineering graduate is planning three years of\nresearch before returning to\nthe RCAF.\nJames Sutherland's successes at UBC have won him a\npromotion to flying officer,\nbut he will take further studies\nin control systems before accepting his commission.\nMany of the top students\nwill be travelling afar, to take\njobs or more studies.\nHead of the forestry class,\nBart van der Kamp, will study\nin Aberdeen, Scotland, for\nthree years on a grant.\nThe leading medical grad is\noff to intern in Montreal, although he said he is not bilingual:\nDr. Malcolm Wilson wants\nto spend his interning years\nthere because he is anxious to\nsee Canada.\nElizabeth Anne Leroux, top\nhome economics student, is also going to Montreal \u00E2\u0080\u0094 to an\ninternshijp in dietetics at\nRoyal Victoria Hospital.\nShe also attributes the move\nto a desire to travel.\nOne of the few leading graduates staying in Vancouver is\nKenneth Bagshaw of the law\nschool.\nHazy days\npassed by\n'64 grads\nHey, whatever happened to\nhazing?\nThe class of 1964 is the first\nclass to graduate without having been hazed.\nThe practice of harrassing\nfrosh was stopped by the AMS\nin 1960.\nThe Ubyssey asked an old\npubster if he remembered the\ngood old days.\n\"Actually this is where the\ndunking all began,\" he croaked.\n\"Frosh used to be told they\nhad to wear a frosh beanie,\nsawed off blue jeans, a shirt\non backwards, and a sign called a frosh report card, a big\npiece of cardboard looped\naround their neck,\" the old-\ntimer recalled.\n'Any upper classman could\ncheck a frosh to make sure he\nwas wearing the correct dress.\nIf not, we'd chuck him in the\npond, or make him wash Brock\nlounge floor with a toothbrush\nThe wheezing pubster collapsed over his typewriter in\na fit of laughter.\nBooks collected\nMELBOURNE (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The\nNational Union of Australian\nUniversity Students has collected 1,000 books for students\nin Basutoland and India.\nTradition, a la $1.49 day\nShady paths - in 5 minute doses\nBy DANNY STOFFMAN\nAre you a traditional-type\nstudent?\nThe type that thinks he\nneeds four calm and thoughtful years to learn about the\nworld and about himself?\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe type that has visions\nof leisurely strolls amid tree-\nlined campus walks?\nWell, a beautifully-designed university is rising on Burnaby Mountain. But if you're\na traditional-type student, forget it.\n\"Not more than five minutes will be allowed between\nclasses,\" says SFA president\nGRADUATION EDITION\nPatrick McTaggart - Cowan.\n\"That's all that's necessary.\"\n\"Simon Fraser will be a\nyear-round operation,\" says\nchancellor Gordon Shrum.\n\"That way a student doesn't\nhave to waste time. He can\nget out of here sooner.\"\nForget about that lovely\nhilltop, traditional-type student. SFA won't be a musty\nbookstore to browse in. It'll\nbe Woodward's on $1.49 Day.\nSFA is speeding toward its\ntarget opening date of September 1965.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nArchitects completed plans\nin nine months instead of the\nexepcted 27.\nAlready $14 million worth\nof buildings are under con-\nDR. GORDON SHRUM\n... no wasted time\nstruction\u00E2\u0080\u0094an academic quadrangle, a library, a gymnasium, and a science complex.\nChancellor Shrum is proud\nof Shis ultra-modern univer-\nsity-in-a-hurry. The chancellor\nseldom discusses SFA without\ngleefully announcing:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\n\"Once a student' takes off\nhis rubbers in the morning,\nhe won't need to put them on\nagain until he leaves for\nhome at night.\"\nImagine that, traditional-\ntype student! Day after glorious day 'without rubbers.\nMaybe you'd better reconsider. No other university can\npromise both Burnaby Mountain and dry feet, too.\nNot even Oxford. r '.-WV\u00C2\u00BBfc\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00ABV-r**\nFat Scott\nleaves\nbig hole\nWith the passing of\nMalcolm Scott from the\ncampus, an era has come\nto an end at UBC.\nIn the six years he has\nbeen a man about this\ncampus, the cheery, chubby Scott has held five\nelected positions.\nHe's a member of the\nmen's honorary society\nSigma Tau Chi. He ha-\nalso received the hone\nary activity's award, the '\nAlma Mater Society's\nhighest service award.\nAnd he has received an\neven greater distinction\n\"Malcolm can truly be\ncalled a friend to everyone on campus,\" said\nDean Feltham, who ha?\nworked with Scott in the\npast two years as together they conceived, planned, and almost single-\nhandedly convinced the\nstudent body of the need\nfor a student union building.\nScott appeared on UB^\nin 1959, an emigree from\nVictoria. The same year\nhe was operations mar\nager of the film society.\nBy 1960 he was treasurer\nof that organization, his\nfirst step up the ladder to\nsuccess.\nHe never looked back.\nBy 1963, already\ntwice treasurer of the\nAMS, he reached the pinnacle of student government. He was elected\npresident of the society,\na $700,000 Organization,\nthat year.\n(Continued on Page 10)\nSee: SCOTT\nVALEDICTORY\nInto cruel world: purposefully?\nBy PETER SHEPARD\nDu-ing the years we have\n. en at UBC our lives have\nnen channelled towards this\nlay. Many have gone before\nus, working in the factory on\nthe same job and leaving with\nthe same box of tools which\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ve, ourselves, have now manufactured.\nIt is unfortunate but necessary that in today's age of\nmass education, manufacture\nof the required box of tools\nnecessitates an organization\nresembling a factory production line. It is certainly no\none's fault, particularly not\nthat of the administration or\nour professors.\nWith the number of students\nincreasing so rapidly, qualified professors and good facilities are now at a premium.\nThe result is an impersonal\neducation in which standards\nmust be met, exams passed,\nessays written and laboratories\ncompleted.\nThe tools manufactured\nThe wrong number was\nthe corrections one\nIf you're looking for SFA president Patrick McTaggart-\nCowan, try the department of corrections.\nA Ubyssey reporter dialed the wrong number when\ntrying to reach the academy Tuesday, and asked for McTaggart-Cowan.\n\"He's not here,\" said a voice, sweetly.\n\"This is the department of corrections. Should he be\nhere?\"\n\"Why don't you call back later,\" the voice cooed.\nAthletics look ahead\nBirds beam in\non the big time\nBy GEORGE REAMSBOTTOM\nUbyssey Sports Editor\nOne of the unhappier memories graduates will probably\nhave is how often UBC students were accused of apathy for\ntheir lack of support for campus athletic events.\nAttendance at varsity sports\nattractions has been consistently poor.\nBut those who have cried\nabout poor attendance spent\ntoo much time looking at\nempty seats and not enough\ntime observing the quality of\nthe attractions.\nTALENT MEDIOCRE\nThe real reason varsity sports\nhave few fans is the low calibre of the athletic talent.\nStudents will not accept a\nmediocre standard of sports\nfrom a major university. And\nuntil the quality of athletics\nparallels the size of the university, student support will not\nbe forthcoming.\nHappily, the long overdue\ntransition from a minor to major centre of college sports,\nppears to be underway at UBC.\nSeveral top-quality coaches,\nncluding Lionel Pugh, one of\nEngland's best in track and\nfield, will join UBC's department of Physical Education\nnext fall.\nCommittees are investigating ways to stretch the athletic\nbudget and provide athletic\nscholarships.\nLEAVE LEAGUE\nThunderbird teams have\nwithdrawn from the weak and\nsprawling WCIAA in favor of\na two-year schedule against\nmuch stronger American competition. Besides gaining better\ncompetition, varsity sports will\nsave greatly in travel expenses.\nIn football, hockey and\nbasketball alone the saving\nwill be $10,000.\nOther promising signs are\npossible admission of the\nThunderbird team to the Pacific Coast Soccer League, and\nprobable representation in\nthis year's Olympics by the\nUBC rowing crews and grass\nhockey team.\nTWO PROBLEMS\nHowever there are currently\ntwo major problems.\nThe building of the new Student Union Building means a\nnew sports stadium will have\nto be built and the funds for\nit raised promptly since work\non the SUB will start this\ncoming year.\nAlso Thunderbird sports\nnow have much stronger competition than in past years, and\nare desperately short of athletes because of severe restrictions on athletic scholarships.\nBut, thanks to Dr. Gordon\nShrum's |plans to offer athletic scholarships at SFA, resistance at UBC's upper levels\nmay soften.\nSTRETCH SUPLY\nMeanwhile, Thund e r b i r d\ncoaches will have to stretch a\nthin supply of talent even\nthinner to attempt to complete\nsuccessfully with the tougher\ncompetition.\nS h r u m's much - publicized\nplans to point up the need to\noverhaul UBC's athletics to\nmake SFA a major sports centre.\nUBC athletic officials are anticipating an intense rivalry\nwith the Burnaby campus and\nlook forward to a possible\nleague made up of UBC, SFA\nand Victoria College.\nNuffield award\nDr. Philip V a s s a r, of the\nfaculty of medicine, has been\nawarded a Nuffield Foundation\ngrant for cancer research al\nLondon University College,\nEngland.\nfrom such an education are\nthe ones that will enable us\nto get a job. The fact that we\nhave manufactured these tools\nto the required specifications\nis symbolized by the degrees\nwhich we will receive this\nafternoon.\nThere are, however, other\nutensils which we must have\nat our disposal. They have\nnot been manufactured on the\nproduction line 'but have been\ndeveloped during our lunch\nhours and many coffee breaks.\nBy entering into political,\nreligious, and sociological\ndiscussions, by joining clubs,\nby attending social functions\nand, in general, by participating in the kaleidoscope of\nactivities varying from athletics to academic symposia,\nwe have acquired essential\ntools wheh will enable us to\nwork with people and to help\nsolve the problems facing\nsociety today.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nWhile at university our time\nand effort have been devoted\nto obtaining these tools. Our\nlectures and laboratories took\nup most of the day and we\nstudied at night. We worked\nhard during the summer to\nfinance our education.\nOur social life and extracurricular activities have been\na necessary psychological balance. Our prime objective has\ntoo often been just a desire to\nget a degree as a key to the\n\"affluent society\".\nAt this time we realize that\nwe have only been \"standing\nlike dwarfs on the shoulders\na giant\" (Robert Burton). We\nrealize the factory has been\nsupplied by society and the\nknowledge contributed by our\nforefathers while we have\ngiven relatively nothing except when the manufacture of\nour own personal tools was at\nstake.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nNow we have the basic\nequipment. Now we must\nmake our contribution to\nsociety. Because we have a\nlarger box of tools than non-\nuniversity graduates, our contribution must be that much\ngreater.\nThe tools which we manufactured on the production\nline we shall use to earn a liv\ning. In our particular fields we\nmust apply ourselves unsparingly. We must strive for the\nbest technique, the most comprehensive theory, the best\nwork of art or the most efficient operation.\nIn order to contribute to\nsociety we must build on the\nideas and principles we have\nbeen taught. If we do not we\nare merely using the tools in\na mediocre way, resulting in\na complacent and selfish\nsociety.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nA more effective way to repay our debt is to expand and\nuse the \"coffee break and\nlunch hour\" tools which we\ndevised by entering into extracurricular activities and participating in discussion. We\nnow have more time to develop and use these special\ntools and we must take advantage of this opportunity.\nWe must turn our thoughts\nto the social problems of our\ntime. We must evaluate the\ndecisions and policies of our\ngovernments and ensure that\nthey are taking a responsible\napproach. We must help dispell\nhatred, untruths and narrow-\nmindedness.\nWe must challenge the old\ninstitutions and be cautious of\nthe new. We must take an\nactive interest in welfare\nsocieties, youth organizations,\nchurch groups and political\nclubs. It is up to us to contribute to society by coming\nforth with our ideas and participating in the issues of our\ntime.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\nA university equips us only\nwith the essential tools. We\nmust continue to develop new\ntools and to throw out those\nwhich we find corroded. If\nwe do not, our effectiveness\nin society will soon fade.\nIt is easy for me to stand\nbefore this graduating class,\nand on your behalf thank the\npeople who have made our\n.education possible: to thank\nour professors, our parents,\nthe taxpayers, and the administration. I believe, however,\nthat our true thanks and appreciation can best be shown\nby all of us in the years to\ncome, by making the world a\nbetter place in which to live.\n\u00C2\u00A3&&L Uti&hndu Jjpl J Jul\n(jraduatty OaU\ntm\n3-hom.\na _^_\u00C2\u00AB FRIE NDLT SERVICE m\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0^^ *\u00C2\u00BB CUMIIKJ1A* 1>UC STMrtS :n>.\nGRADUATION EDITION Record number of graduates\n<\nLet's start\nat the top\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nGrad class heads\nThe Governor-General's gold\nmedal for the head of the graduating class in Arts, degree of\nB.A.: Patricia Mary Ellis, Vancouver.\nThe Wilfrid Sadler gold medal for the head of the graduating class in Agriculture, degree of B.S.A.: Thomas Andrew\nBlack, Langley.\nThe Association of Professional Engineers gold medal\nfor the head of the graduating\nclass in Engineering, degree of\nB.A. Sc: James William Sutherland, Vancouver.\nThe Kiwanis Club go'd medal\nand prize, $100, for the graduating class in Commerce, degree of B. Com.: LeMoyne Marguerite Major, Dawson Creek.\nThe University medal for the\nMARIE MANDOLI\n. . . elementary head\nhead of the graduating class\nin Science, degree of B.Sc: Andrew Stuart Glass, North Vancouver.\nThe Law Society gold medal\nand prize, call and admission\nfee, for the head of the graduating class in Law, degree of\nCongratulations and Greetings\nJhsL fonnviMiuVL ShnfL\nCHINA\n4433 WEST 10TH\nGIFTS ANTIQUES\nLAMBERT POTTERY\nB.C. CRAFTS\n224-5488\nLL.B.: Kenneth Mackenzie\nBagshaw, Vancouver.\nThe Hamber gold medal and\nprize, $250, for the head of\nthe graduating class in Medicine, degree of M.D.: Malcolm\nLeonard Wilson, Vancouver.\nThe Horner gold medal for\nPharmacy, for the head of the\ngraduating class in Pharmacy,\ndegree of B.S.P.: Ona Rosalee\nWillis, West Summerland.\nThe Canadian Institute of\nForestry medal for the best all-\nround record in professional\nforestry and overall qualities,\nin all years of course: John\nKonkin, Salmo.\nThe H. R. MacMillan prize\nin Forestry, $100, for the head\nof the graduating class in Forestry, degree of B.S.F.: Bart\nJohn van der Kamp, New\nWestminster.\nThe Dr. Maxwell A. Cameron Memorial medal and prize,\n$50, for the head of the graduating class in Education, elementary teaching field, degree\nof B.Ed.: Mrs. Marie Evelyn\nMandoli, Prince George; hon-\nBEST WISHES AND THANKS\n_ FOR YOUR PATRONAGE _\nPeter Van Dyke\nCampus Barber Shop\nBrock Extension\nCONGRATULATIONS\nTo The 1964 Graduating Class\nof U.B.C.\n. . . and a warm welcome to the\nIndustrial, Commercial and Professional life of Canada's\nfastest-growing Province - BRITl'SH COLUMBIA.\nHere are opportunities for the graduating student\nto fulfill the career destiny for which University training\nhas been the preparation\nDEPARTMENT OF INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT,\nTRADE AND COMMERCE\nParliament Bldgs. - Victoria, B.C.\nHon. Ralph Loffmark, Minister\n8\nGRADUATION EDITION\nWESLEY SCHINDEL\n. . . honors chem\nourable meniton, Mrs. Sandra\nAnn Djwa. Vancouver.\nThe Dr. Maxwell A. Cameron Memorial medal and prize,\n$50, for the head of the graduating class in Education, secondary teaching field, degree\nof B. Ed.: David Ernest Mc-\nClenahan, Vancouver.\nThe Ruth Cameron medal for\nLibrarianship for the head of\nthe graduating class in Librarianship, degree of B.L.S.: Elisabeth Jupp, Vancouver.\nThe Royal Architectural Institute of Canada medal for the\noutstanding student in Architecture, degree of B. Arch.:\nLawrence Andrew Redpath,\nVancouver.\nThe Canadian Association of\nHealth, Physical Education and\nRecreation medal for the head\nof the graduating class in\nPhysical Education, degree of\nB.P.E.: Louise Margarita Parker, North Vancouver.\nSpecial University prize in\nHome Economics, $50, for the\nhead of the graduating class\nin Home Economics, degree of\nB.H.E.: Elisabeth Anne Leroux,\nVancouver.\nSpecial University prize in\nMusic, $50, for the head of the\ngraduating class in Music, degree of B. Mus.: Michael John\nCass-Beggs, Saskatchewan.\nThe Moe and Leah Chetkow\nMemorial prize, $100, for the\noutstanding student in Social\nWork, degree of M.S.W.: Allan\nE. Halladay, Saskatchewan.\nThe Laura Holland scholarship, $350, for the head of the\ngraduating class in Social Work\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094degree of B.S.W.: Susanne\nBellward, Burnaby.\nRhodes scholar\nThe Rhodes scholarship, John\nEdward Chamberlin, Victoria.\nGeneral awards\nThe Encyclopedia Britannica\nof Canada Ltd. prizes for high\noverall standing and achievement in areas of liberal education, set of \"Great Books of the\nWestern World\". In Engineering: Terence Michael Gordon,\nVancouver. In Science: Andrew Stuart Glass, North Vancouver.\nThe English Honours medal\nfor the outstanding graduate\nof the year in English honours\ncourse: Mrs. Sandra Ann Djwa,\nVancouver.\nThe Gordon M. Shrum book\nprizes, $50 each for the greatest contribution t o social,\ncultural and recreational life\nin Lower Mall residences:\nMarilyn H. White, Powell\nRiver; and David M. Young.\nChemainus.\nItalian book prizes, gift of\nthe Consul of Italy, Dr. Guido\nPagano, for proficiency in:\nItalian 100: Ge\u00C2\u00B0rge Robert Anderson, Rossland; Italian 200,\nJohn Stuart Gardner. Vancouver, and Anna Whiteley, Vancouver; Italian 305, Franco\nMartinelli, Vancouver; Italian\n310, Lucio MarampOn, Vancouver; Italian 402, V. Louise Ka-\ntainen, Ontario; Italian 500,\nRaffae-le De Luca, Vancouver.\nThe Lefevre gold medal and\nscholarship, $200, for the highest standing in honours Chemistry: Wesley Gerald Schin-\ndel, Vancouver.\nSociety of Chemical Industry merit awards, inscribed\ngold key, for highest standing\nin: Honors Chemistry, Wesley\nGerald Schindel, Vancouver;\nChemical Engineering, Gordon\nHalcro Thomson. Vancouver.\nThe University Essay prize,\n$25, for the best essay in English courses in graduating year,\nMrs. Sandra Ann Djwa, Vancouver.\nArts\nThe David Bolocan Memorial\nprize, $25, for the outstanding\nstudent in Philosophy, final\nyear, Carol Sue Killy, Prince\nGeorge.\nThe Frank de Bruyn Memorial prize, $50, for proficiency\nand promise in 17th century\nliterary studies, Mrs. Elspeth\nMacGregor Fisher. Ontario.\nFrench Government bronze\nmedal for proficiency in\nFrench, Janice Eleanor Hickman. Victoria.\nFrench Government book\nprize for proficiency in French\nAndre Louis Le Palud, Vancouver.\nBook prize of the Ambassador of Switzerland for proficiency in French language and\nliterature, Patricia Mary Ellis.\nVancouver.\nThe Slavonic Studies graduation prizes, $50 each, for the\nhighest standing in Slavonic\nStudies: Nick Galichenko,\nVancouver; and Emoke- Elizabeth Kornya, Vancouver.\nEngineering\nThe Heavy Construction Association of B.C., graduation\nprize, $50, for highest standing\nin C.E. 470, highway engineering: George Alan Clark, Vancouver.\nMachine Design Prize, $50,\nfor best design in M.E. 463:\nStanley Charles Mosse, West\nVancouver.\nTimber Preservers Limited\nprizes for best plans of a\nstructure of modern engineering timber construction requiring preservative treatments:\nFirst prize, $100: Edmund H.\nH. Pun, Hong Kong; second\nprize, $60: George Alan Clark,\nVancouver; third prize, $30:\nArne Robert Carlson, Vancouver; merit prizes, $20 each:\nJohn Herman Engweiler. Vancouver; David William Nairne,\nNorth Vancouver, and Peter\nWalter Newson, Comox.\nSpecial University prize, $50,\nfor proficiency in graduating\nclass for B.A. Sc. degree: Jonathan Ernest Slater, Sidney. ops record crop of scholarships\nHome Economics\nThe B.C.DA. scholarship in\nDietetics, $100 for^high standing, proceeding to dietetic internship in Canada: Margaret\nAnne Watson, Vancouver.\nThe Lillian Mae Wescott\nPrize, $70, for proficiency in\nareas of clothing and textiles:\nMrs. Dorothy Lenore Webber.\nVancouver.\nSinger Company of Canada\nLtd. prize, portable electric\nSinger sewing machine, for proficiency in area of clothing and\nentering field of teaching: Marjorie Sharon West, Vancouver.\nLaw\nBest Printer Co. Ltd. prize in\nLaw, $50, for highest standing\nin Wills and Trusts: Kenneth\nMackenzie Bagshaw, Vancouver.\nThe Boughton, Anderson,\nMcConnell & Dunfee prize in\nLaw, $50, for overall proficiency: William Alexander\nNeilson, West Vancouver.\nCanada Law Book Company\nprize, books to value of $50\nfor high standing: James Lewis\nBarrett. Pitt Meadows.\nCanada Permanent Trust\nCompany prize, $100, for highest standing in Trusts: Kenneth\nMackenzie Bagshaw. Vancouver.\nCanada Permanent Mortgage\nCorporation prize, $50, for the\nhighest standing in Mortgages:\nKenneth Mackenzie Bagshaw,\nVancouver.\nThe Carswell Company Limited prize, books to value of\nJAMES BARRETT\n. . . high in law\n$35, for highest standing in\nthird year: Kenneth Mackenzie\nBagshaw, Vancouver.\nThe H. Carl Goldenberg book\nprize: Robert Paul Beckmann.\nBurnaby.\nMedicine\nCiba Prize in Psychiatry,\n$100, Paul James Donald. Vancouver.\nThe C. V. Mosby Company\nbook prizes, Gerald Uirquhart\nColeman, Duncan; and Charles\nArthur Boyd, Argenta.\nThe Dean M. M. Weaver\nMedal for outstanding record\nand progress in the four-year\ncourse, Lawrence Herbert Burr\nof Vancouver.\nThe Dr. A. B. Schinbein memorial scholarship, $250, for\nhighest standing in surgery,\nMalcolm Leonard Wilson. Vancouver.\nThe Dr. A. M. Agnew memorial scholarship, $200, for proficiency in Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Alan Franklin\nHunter, North Vancouver.\nMALCOLM WILSON\n. . . top surgeon\nThe Dr. Frank Porter Patterson memorial scholarship, $150\nfor a student meritorious in\nsurgery with special interest in\northopedic surgery, proceeding\nto internship, Marilyn J\u00C2\u00ABan\nMacvey. Vancouver.\nDr. Lavell H. Leeson memorial scholarship, $100, for high\nstanding and promise, Darryl\nGlyn Morris. Cloverdale.\nThe Dr. Peter H. Spohn memorial prize, $150, for pediatrics, Anthony George Borsch-\nfleck, Vancouver.\nThe Dr. Walter Stewart\nBaird memorial prize, $50, for\nbest graduation dissertation,\nMalcolm Leonard Wilson, Vancouver.\nThe Dr. W. A. Whitelaw\nscholarship, $250, for overall\nqualifications, Lawrence Herbert Burr, Vancouver.\nThe Hamber scholarship in\nMedicine, $750, Malcolm Leonard Wilson, Vancouver.\nThe Hamish Henry Mcintosh\nmemorial prize, specially\nbound volumes of Cushing's\nLife of Sir William Osier, for\nthe student selected as best\nqualified in every respect to\npractise his profession, Paul\nJames Donald, Vancouver.\nThe Horner gold medal and\nprize, $100, for highest standing in medicine,Malcolm Leonard Wilson, Vancouver.\nThe Ingram & Bell Limited\nprize, special equipment, for\nbest overall qualifications in\nstudent affairs, personal qualities and standing, Donald\nJames Harterre, Vancouver.\nMead Johnson of Canada\nLtd. prize in pediatrics, $100,\nfor highest standing in pediatrics, Maria Ellen Stradiotii,\nVancouver.\nThe Samuel and Rebecca Nemetz memorial scholarship,\n$100, for special aptitude for\nresearch, Malcolm Leonard\nWilson, Vancouver.\nThe Signus Club of Vancouver prize, $100, for best thesis\non nervous diseases, Allan Joel\nChernov, Vancouver.\nLibrarianship\nThe Marian Harlow prize in\nLibrarianship, $25, for leadership and proficiency: Gordon\nThomas Stubbs. Vancouver.\nThe Neal Harlow book prizes\nfor overall proficiency: Mary\nEsme Leask, Cobble Hill; and\nSidney Owen Fosdick, Vancouver.\nScience\nArmstead prize in Biology\nand Botany, $100, for scholastic achievement and ability for\nresearch, Frederick Patrick\nHealey, Abbotsford.\nThe David E. Little memorial scholarship, $100, for proficiency iii Physics, proceeding\nto graduate work, Norman Ian\nRobb, Princeton.\nVancouver Natural History\nSociety prize, books to value\nof $25, for best student in\nFourth Year Botany, Frederick\nPatrick Healey, Abbotsford.\nForestry\nCanadian Forest Products\nLtd. prizes, $100 each, for gen\neral proficiency, Harvesting op\ntion, B.S.F. degree: Kenneth\nJohn Harmer, Alberni; Forest\nEngineering, B.A. Sc. degree:\nDavid Murray Lawrie, North\nVancouver.\nThe H. R. MacMillan prize,\n$100, for highest standing in\nForest Engineering, degree of\nB.A. Sc: David Murray Lawrie, North Vancouver.\nSpecial University Prize\n$100, for proficiency in degree\nof B.S.F.: Bruce Douglas Web\nber. Victoria.\nCongratulations to the\nGraduating Class of 1964\nMANY THANKS TO FACULTY AND STUDENTS\nFOR THEIR CONTINUOUS SUPPORT OF\n(Zed Cnu\nBlood (Donah Qlink.\nB.C. Division\nCanadian Red Cross Society\n1235 West Pender Street\nVancouver, B.C.\nPharmacy\nThe Bristol award, special\nbooks: Donald S. Millward,\nPenticton.\nThe Cunningham prize in\nPharmacy, $100, for most outstanding record in all years of\nthe course: Ona Rosalee Willis, West Summerland.\nThe Dean E. L. Woods memorial prize, $50, for most outstanding record in both theoretical and practical parts of pharmaceutical subjects: Robert R.\nCameron, Prince Rupert.\nThe Edith and Jacob Buck-\nshon memorial prize, $100, for\nhighest standing in laboratory\ncourse in compounding and dispensing: Linda G. Rosenfeld,\nVancouver.\nMerck Sharp and Dohme\nawards, books and $25 each,\nfor highest marks in pharmaceutical chemistry: Ona Rosalee Willis, West Summerland,\nand Linda G. Rosenfeld, Vancouver.\nPoulenc gold medal for highest standing in pharmacology\ncourses: Ona Rosalee Willis,\nWest Summerland.\nWarne r- Lambert research\nfellowship in Pharmacy, $1200,\nfor graduate study at UBC:\nDavid George Wyse. Kamloops.\nSocial work\nThe B. C. Association of Social Workers prize, $100, for\nbest all-round member of First\nYear Social Work Class, Peter\nGriffiths, Vancouver.\nGreater Vancouver Branch,\nB. C. Association of Social\nWorkers prize, $25, for all-\nround proficiency and promise\nin M.S.W. course, Micaela M.\nBrown, Quebec.\nSocial Work Prize, $25, for\nbest thesis for M.S.W. degree,\nMrs. Ethel Allardice, North\nVancouver.\nCommerce\nGraduating Class of 1958\nmemorial shields for, overall\nqualifications and standing:\nMatthew H. Henderson memorial shield, Robert Barnett\nMacKay, North Vancouver.\nDorothy Anne Dilworth memorial shield, LaMoyne Marguerite Major, Dawson Creek.\nAwards by other\ninstitutions\nAthlone fellowships in engineering, post-graduate study\nin United Kingdom with tuition, maintenance and travel,\nKenneth Freeman Dobell. Vancouver; Frank Arthur Dvorak,\nVancouver; Gordon Winston\nLorimer, Vancouver; Peter\nBlair Shepard.\nPrix Alliance Francaise de\nVancouver, $200: Patricia Mary\nEllis. Vancouver.\nDisappearing act\nLEIDEN, Netherlands (CUP)\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094The first president of the\nWest African Student Confederation, A. K. Kludze, was arrested in Ghana on Feb. 3. He\nhas not been heard from since.\nphys. ed\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E tumble\nilipflop-\n, push\nleap\npun puff\npause\nthings gO\nbetter.i\n.-.with\nLoke\nBoth Coca Cola and Coke ate registered trade marks which identity only the product ot Coca-Cola Ltd.\nGRADUATION EDITION No foul play\nChemistry head\nshot to death\nDr. Alistair Bryce, acting head Of the chemistry\ndepartment, was found shot to death on the banks of the\nFraser River early this month.\n. The 42-year-old scientist ad-\n. _ .. ministrator was to leave UBC\nCanada Council\npays off for six\nSix UBC students received\nCanada Council awards averaging $1,500 each this\nspring.\nAwards were granted to:\nMaureen Covell, Arts IV,\nformer senior editor of The\nUbyssey, for international\nstudies at UBC; Sidney Fos-\ndick, Library I, for librarian-\nship and Chinese at University of Chicago; William\nNeilsen, Law III, for economics and law at Harvard.\nMurray Fairweather, Arts\nIV, for history at University\nof Toronto; Gilbert Johnson,\nArts IV, for economics at\nUniversity of Toronto; and\nDorothy Thompson, Arts IV,\nfor European history at University of Toronto.\nSCOTT\n(Continued from Page 7)\n\"I started my presidency\nwith the Back Mac campaign\nand ended it with the SUB,\"\nScott chuckled reflectively.\n\"My greatest achievement?\n... I guess the winter sports\ncentre,\" he said. \"That was one\nof my pet projects.\"\n\"My greatest regret? . . . The\ntime my activities took away\nfrom my academic work.\"\nBut he added that the number of offices he held was the\nkey to doing a successful job\nlater.\n\"Good qualities are not\nenough,\" he said. \"It's necessary to amass a background of\ncontacts too.\"\nScott, 26, said he has no immediate plans after he makes\nup missing requirements for his\ndegree. He is currently working for a market research consultant.\nScott said he plans eventually\nto attend a graduate school,\nfinances permitting.\nHe said he only weighs 230\npounds.\nCongratulations\nto the\nGraduating\nClass\nGEHRKE\nSTATIONERY ft PRINTING\nCO. LTD.\n1035 SEYMOUR ST.\nVANCOUVER. B.C.\nin September to become dean\nof arts and science at Vic College.\nThe move would have been\nthe highlight of a lifetime of\nwork in academic institutions.\nPolice said the body was\nfound just off No. 5 Road, Richmond. A .45-calibre revolver\nwas near the body.\nPolice said there was no suggestion of foul play.\nDr. Bryce was holder of\nthree National Research Council grants, and has studied at\nCambridge on a Nuffield Foundation grant. He held PhD's\nfrom .McGill and Oxford.\nA doctor who had attended\nDr. Bryce said he worked him\nself too hard.\n\"He literally drove himself\nto death,\" the doctor said.\nDr. Bryce is survived by his\nwife and four young sons.\nBIOCHEMIST Dr. Gordon\nDixon has been awarded\ngrants totalling $72,000 for\nresearch into structure of\nproteins in human body.\nMarkle grant\ntor pediatrics\nDr. John Birkbeck, 31, instructor in the department of\npediatrics, has been named a\nL964 Markle scholar by the\nrohn and Mary Markle Founda-\nion of New York.\nThe appointment provides a\n130,000 grant paid at the rate\nif $6,000 a year to the medical\nchool where the scholar will\nteach and carry out research.\nElectrons beam on\nfuture metallurgists\nBy CAROL ANN BAKER\nThe metallurgists at UBC\nwill be seeing things more\nclearly this fall.\nThe department of metallurgy has a new electron microscope.\nThe microscope, made in\nJapan, is the Hitachi model\n11A.\nIt is worth $38,000 and financed by grants from the UBC\nBoard of Governors and the\nNational Research Council.\nThe new microscope uses\nbeams of electrons instead of\nthe beams of visible light used\nin ordinary light microscopes.\nDr. Edward Teghtsoonian, associate professor of Metallurgy,\nsaid that the wave lengths of\nthe electrons are many times\nshorter than the wave lengths\nof visible light making possible\na much higher degree of magnification.\nUBC's new microscope will\nhave a magnifying power of\n100,000 times. Ordinary light\nmicroscopes have a magnifying\npower of only 2,000 times.\nPRESCRIPTION\nEYEGLASSES\nJ-fl \u00C2\u00AB* Ifi'5\nr~^HHand Lena IU\nGRANVILLE OPTICAL\n861 Granville MU 3-8921\n- -^Money-Back Guarantee\nBEST WISHES TO THE CLASS\nOF '64\nTHOMPSON, BERWICK, PRATT\n& PARTNERS\nUNIVERSITY ARCHITECTS\nEATON'S\nSUITS\nhave a way with men who want\na neat, trim look; more comfort in\naction during a busy schedule.\nYou can put yourself in this picture\nof more wearing pleasure by\nselecting your suit from hard-\nwearing, go-everywhere fabrics\nthat stride into summer with\nwrinkle resistant scorn. See new,\neasy-on-the-eyes patterns and\ncolours for every taste. Wear a\nBirkdale, feel the top quality\ncraftsmanship as you indulge inj\nthe excellence of fit and, note\nthe price ... as welcome as a\nsummer breeze.\nSince 1869:\nGoods Satisfactory\nor Money Refunded\n10\nGRADUATION EDITION DEAN F. H. SOWARD\n. . . honorary degree\nSoward\nhas dual\nrole today\nHonorary president of the\ngrad class will receive an honorary degree at spring congregation today.\nDean F. H. Soward of graduate studies was elected honorary president of the class of\n1964 in March.\nLast month, the Board of\nGovernors announced that Soward, longest serving member\nof UBC's faculty, would be\nawarded an honorary doctorate\nof laws today.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nAn honorary doctorate of\nscience will also be given today to Dr. Arthur Kelly, general secretary of the Canadian\nMedical Association.\nFriday, honorary doctor of\nscience degrees will be conferred on Dr. Gerhard Herzberg,\ndirector of physics for the National Research council, and on\nCecil Green, founder of a large\nDallas, Texas, instrument manufacturing company.\nDean Soward joined UBC's\nfaculty in 1922 and became\nhead of the history department\nin 1953. In 1961, he succeeded\nDr. Gordon Shrum, now chancellor of the new Simon Fraser\nAcademy, as dean of graduate\nstudies.\nDean Soward will retire on\nJune 30 this year, but will continue to teach here.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nDr. Kelly has ben secretary\nof the Canadian Medical association since 1954. He also\nplans to retire later this year.\nGerman-born Dr. Herzberg\nhas been head of physics at the\nNational Research Council\nsince 1949. He has published\nseveral papers on atomic structure.\nGreen, a student at UBC for\nthree years, later graduated\nfrom Massachusetts Institute of\nTechnology in 1923. He started\na science school for boys in\nDallas, and helped create graduate study centres in Texas\nand at MIT.\n168 on Monday\nVic College give\ngrads first degree\nVictoria College's first convocation saw 168 graduates\nreceive their degrees this\nweek.\nChancellor J. B. Clerihue\npresided at the ceremony Monday, first since Victoria College attained university status\nin 1963.\nPreviously, degrees were\ngranted through UBC.\nFirst honorary degree, a doctorate of laws, was conferred\non Jeffree Cunningham, former zoology professor at the\ncollege.\nJudge Clerihue was installed\nas chancellor by Lieutenant-\nGovernor George Pearkes\nprior to the convocation cero\nmony.\n\"It is a wonderful experience\nto see coming true the dream\nof this institution becoming a\nuniversity,\" said Pearkes.\nThe chancellor told the convocation that facilities at the\nuniversity would be inadequate by September, 1965,\neven if a public fund drive for\nexpansion of the Gordon Head\ncampus reached its $5 million\nobjective.\n\"To handle the expected\n2,400 registration by 1965, two\n$1.7 million buildings, one for\narts and education, one for\nlaboratories, social sciences,\nand administration are needed,\" said Clerihue.\n\"But I doubt if we will get\nthe latter by 1966,\" he added.\nMore literature,\nmore character\nTORONTO (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Mont\nreal has more \"character\" than\nother Canadian cities, according to a McGill professor.\nDr. Brian Robinson told students this is the reason so\nmuch great literature has come\nout of Montreal.\nOLD BUS\n(Continued from Page 3)\nstudents to spit on,\" he said.\nSir Ouvry Roberts, director\nof traffic, said the new shambulance will be equipped with\na red light and siren.\n\"But we hope they don't\nhave to use them,\" he said.\n''But it is an emergency vehicle as well as a patrol car,\nand the siren is required by\nlaw.\"\nSir Ouvry said the new\nwagon probably wouldn't be.\naround as long as the last one.\nThe old wagon could be\nseen carrying its burden of\nsunny-faced patrolmen around\ncampus at almost any hour of\nthe day or night.\nIt served as the subject of\npranks, engineers' and otherwise. In its years at UBC it\nhad the air let out of its tires\ncountless times, and was even\npainted a bright red once.\nIts passing will be mourned\nby none and hailed by all.\nCompliments of\nThe Empire Life Insurance\nA men c I y\n-C\"?:ia;'icn Crmoorr.\nintere.'ed in young .ffiaoiar.s\nSpecial Student Coverage\nLeonard tt. Eerry, C.L.'J. 1270 West Georgia S/., .\nBranch Mancger. Vtr.ccuver 5, B:C.\n681-8377\nCONGRATULATIONS\nto the\n1964\nGRADUATING CLASS\nfrom the\nUNIVERSITY\nBOOKSTORE\nBooks and new prof spur\nstudy of Buddhism at UBC\nThe study of Buddhism is expanding at UBC.\nDr. Arthur E. Link, a specialist in Buddhism, has been\nappointed to the faculty in the department of religious\nstudies at UBC. He will take up his appointment July 1.\nAlso a collection of works on Buddhism is being assembled for the library using funds from the Leon and\nThea Koerner foundation.\nBEST WISHES TO THE 1964 GRADS\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 from \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nUBC Thunderbird Winter\nSports Centre\nSouth End of Wesbrook Crescent\nPhone CA 4-3205 - UBC Local 365\nSUMMER SCHEDULE\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Ice Skating and Roller Skating every\nTues., Wed., Fri., Sat. and Sunday.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Party Bookings available Mondays and\nThursdays.\nWISDOM AND VISION\nOFTEN ARE SIMILAR BLESSINGS\nGOOD VISION helps greatly\nto obtain WISDOM.\nWISDOM decrees that you\nsafeguard your VISION, by\nhaving regular eye examinations, followed by a visit to\nPrescription Optical for the\nproper glasses.\nPtesciibtioH Optical\nSince 1924\nAsk your doctor . . . Use your credit\nWHEREVER YOU GO\nWHATEVER YOU DO\nWE WISH YOU WELL\nParsons Brown\nLimited\nINSURANCE OF ALL KINDS\n535 Homer Street\nMU 4-0311\nGRADUATION EDITION\n11 PROPHECY\nBlack looks into a brighter future for grads\nBy ANDREW BLACK\nEvery year, at this time, for\nthis special occasion a graduating student is asked to take\nupon himself a task for which\nhe is ill-prepared. The prophet\nof old was keen-eyed and always on the right spot at the\nright time. He would have\nfound it much more difficult if\nwearing spectacles and attending lectures. Its like asking a\ncampus mole to predict the\nfuture. But after all, a mole\ndoes emerge occasionally and,\nno doubt, the meaning of some\nOf the big reverberations coming from above must register\nin his tiny brain.\nSo, unprepared and ill-qualified as I am, I would like to\noffer some of my mole-like\nruminations and forecasts if\nyou will give me your attention.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nLast year gave time enough\nfor students, educators and the\npublic alike to digest the MacDonald Report. It came as a\nshock to most of us \u00E2\u0080\u0094 a shake-\nup from complacency. This\nyear, as expected, has seen the\ninflux of more and more students to UBC. We can see\nthat there is a very real limit\nto the number of students this\nuniversity can educate. We are\napproaching this limit rapidly.\nBut now, the Simon Fraser\nUniversity is a very real thing\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 no longer an architect's\ndream, no longer \"Fearless\nTom's\" Herculean task to find\nit. (We now have, besides The\nUniversity of Victoria, municipal groups in the Okanagan\nand the Fraser Valley especially planning for two-year colleges that will eventually become the universities of the\nfuture.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nDebate is bound to continue\nas to whether the full year\noperation of our universities\nas against the present seven-\nmonth system is best, that is,\nbest scholastically or economically. ,\nStudents meet new teachers\nwith stimulating ideas; they\nfind themselves in a different\nenvironment, both demanding\nand rewarding. This reduces\nthe danger that the student\nmight fall into a \"rut\" and the\ndanger of \"inbreeding\", both\nundesirable tendencies, made\nmanifest when there is a lack\nof choice in universities. In\nfact, the wider the field in\nwhich we receive our education, the greater is the understanding between the people of\nthe world. And this leads me\nto my next prediction\u00E2\u0080\u0094with\nthis kind of improved communication will come the\nlikelihood of international\npeace. But it makes fresh demands on us. It is not enough\nto be able to boast that our\nphysics and chemistry departments are as well equipped as\nany in North America. For\nthose we lose to other universities, we must attract others\nand this means not only new\nbuildings and equipment, but\nfunds to provide for fellowships and assistantships for\nstudents from the U.S. and,\nindeed, from any other part\nof the world. This is an absolute necessity.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nDuring the past several\nyears that this graduating class\nhas been part of the university, there have been certain\nchanges. One that we all\nnoticed, not only the Agricultural students, (and obvious\neven to the underground mole)\nis the diminishing of the uni\nversity farm area. Although\nwe have been clearing the afforested area of our endowment land, building sites and\nparking lots have encroached\nmore rapidly on the farm acreage than anywhere olse.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nWhile dealing with small\nbut important faculties, I feel\nconfident in predicting a revolution in the attitude toward\nagriculture and agricultural\ntraining, which will also certainly apply to the school of\nHome Economics. The full\nsignificance of the world's\nhungry imbalance and the role\nof research through food production and technology has yet\nto be realised.\nMan has reached a unique\nrevolutionary stage at which\ntime he has within his grasp,\nweapons capable of destroying\nhis very breed. But I predict\nthat man will never deliberately use atomic power as an\ninstrument of war. These weapons have come from scientific\neducation. Also through education, and even more remarkably so, comes a total rejection\nof the atom bomb. From these\nWILL\nLeavings of a grad class\nBy WINTON DERBY\nWe, the graduating class of\n1964, of the University of British Columbia, being of sound\nthough somewhat confused\nMind, hereby revoke all Wills\nand Testamentary Dispositions\nof every Nature and Kind\nwhatsoever by us heretofore\nmade, repudiate all hasty promises and foolish Utterances by\nus made under the Pressure of\nExaminations, and declare this\nto be our Class Will and Testament.\nWe give, bequeath, and devise:\n1. To Jim Ward, our ubiquitous first vice-president, a\nten year supply of metreca1\nand an honorary membership in the Pilikwe School\nP.T.A.\n2. To Malcolm Scott, presi\ndent of the A.M.S., in order\nto sustain his incredible\nstamina in the bettermen'\nof the. A.M.S., a lifetime\npass to Emilio's Spaghett1\nHouse.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n3. To Dr. Gordon Shrum\nChancellor of Simon Frase\nUniversity, indefeasible\ntitle in 907 somewhat bat\ntered, stomped upon, over\nand under heated, poorl-\nventilated, inadequately\nlighted, army huts, that he\nmight establish a thrivirr\nacademic community on thf\nsummit of Burnaby Moun\ntain, in other words \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSimon Fraser Academy.\n4. To Dean Feltham, chairman of the Student Unior\nBuilding Committee, o^\nton of Elk Brand instap'\ncornerstone mix, on th'\ncondition that it only be\nused after a referendum-\nwith a built-in, automatic,\nuncontestable fee hike, and,\nto his public rel_ lions offi\ncer, one acceptable photograph of the aforemention\ned gentleman to be forwarded to the local press.\n5. To the University of British\nColumbia, to the greater\nglory of our Alma Mate-\nSociety, one fountain, fully\nequipped with casters, to\nenable willing volunteers\nto trundle it around the\ncampus to find a suitable\nsite for the S.U.B.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n6. To General Sir Ouvry Rob\nerts, Administrative Offi\ncer, a fully equipped Reviewing Stand in a Baroque\nModern style, to be constructed by Buildings and\nGrounds artisans at the cor\nner of Main Mall and University Boulevard, on thr\ncondition that the job b^\ngiven a five star priority\nrating (completion by or before 1970, barring unfore\nseen eventualities).\n7. To the University Patrol,\nfour spare tires installable\nwithin eight minutes, an . _ .\u00C2\u00ABrt\u00C2\u00ABn/-\u00C2\u00BBr>*TC r\u00C2\u00BB _>HO MAV I R7d.\nINCORPORATED 2W MAY 1670."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1964_05_28"@en . "10.14288/1.0127820"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : 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 .