Businessmen at homeand abroad who read the :... want accurate interpretations of Canada's .. economic trendsread the B of XI Business

B of M Business ..., , : .. Review...... ,.:. .:...... :.:.: ...... I Review '. I authoritativeIt'spuhlication, pro- an ..I I duced by Canada'sFirst Bank. Published I monthly,each issue containsadetailed I I survey of some aspect of the Canadian econ- I I I omy, or anover-all analysis of national I I I business trends, together with crisp reports I I I on each economic division of the country. I I I I I If you would like to read the B of hI's I I I Business Review regularly, simply fill in I I I andsend off thecoupon. No obligation. I I I Address I I I I I I "MYIO 3 MllllON BANK' CANADIANS I I I I I I I Business Development Division, I I Bunk of Montreal, I I I P.O. Box 6002, I BANKOF MONTREAL Montreul. P.Q., I I e4zuauhh 7rw ~cza4 I Canada. I I I I I CONTENTS Volume 17, No. 2- Summer, 1963 4 Ediforial -Paul S. Plan!, BA'49 Ediior 5 TheUniversity FrancesTucker, BA'50 13 CanadianUniversity Service Overseas

Business Manager 14 AlumniAssociation Annual Meeting Gordon A. Thom, BCom'56, 16 Close-upon backing Mac MBA(Mary1and) 20 SimonFraser University "By Gordon M. Shrum, Editorial Commiiiee Chancellor of SimonFraser University Cecil Hacker, BA'33, chairman 22 LatinAmerica -Seminars a! InternationalHouse Inglis(Bill) Bell, BA'51, BLS(Tor.) 25 AlumniAssociation News Mrs. T. R. Boggs, BA'29 AllanFoiheringham, BA'54 26 TheCase now rests with !he Jury "T. Hollick-Kenyon,BA'51, BSW'53 John L. Gray, BSA'39 27 KelownaConference on Higher Educafion F. P. Levirs, BA'26,MA'31 29 Alumnaeand Alumni Eric Nicol, BA'41,MA'48 42 Alumni Associa!ion

Publishedquarterly by theAlumni Associafion of the University of BritishColumbia, , Canada. Busi- ness andeditorial offices: 252 BrockHall, U.B.C., Van- couver 8, B.C. Authorizedas second class mail by !he Pos! Office Deparfment,Ottawa, and for paymenf of postagein cash. The U.B.C. AlumniChronicle is sentfree of charge to alumnidonating to theannual giving programme and U.B.C. DevelopmentFund. Nan-donors may receive the magazineby paying asubscription of $3.00 ayear.

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COVER PICTURE Reproducedon cover is road-map found in Studenf Action Committee office affer Back Mac campaign.Routes marked were followed by the 10 busses carrying 41 passengerseach, including abus leader and town leaders. "Bus No. ll", aVolkswagen bus, capacity 9, went to PowellRiver Manyleft the busses at the farthesf point, and continued by hitch-hiking. Jolyon Hallows wen! to Fort st. Jamesand Denis Stanley to Nakusp.From Vancouver Island sfudents reached Texadaand Quadra Islands. Most of themore populous areas were covered by !he busroutes wifh !he exception of the Norfh-wes! andthe Peace River country. TheInterior campaign was !he most importan!phasa of StudentAction Week.

3 Paul S. Plant

DURINGTHE PAST YEAR Frank Walden in his scholarly 0 We hope to press for continuing close contact with way used thiseditorial page to placebefore you the theadministration and Board of Governorsin their basic policy of the Board of Management of the Alumni relationshipwith the Provincial Government. Through Association. I hopeto continue this practice in order our members on Senate and through increased consulta- to draw to thc attention of the readers of this magazine tionwith the Board of Governors we aresure the some of theBoard of Management’sproblems in its AlumniAssociation can provide help when necessary relationship not only with the students and administra- and when called upon for support. We believe that by tion of the University but also withthe business com- havingthe facts the Board of Managementcan make munity and the provincial government. a positive contribution to the welfare of our University. Atthe Annual Dinner in May you elected an able 0 We intend to increase our activity and contact with Board of Management to run the affairs of this Asso- students,particularly undergraduates. We trust that ciation. I hopethat together we will beequal to the we will be asked to continue our association with them responsibilities in theyear ahead, which can bestbe on theirStudent Union Building project. An adequate described as a year of austerity. student centre is needed for our many commuting stu- Our operational grant from the Board of Governors dents. for the coming year has not been increased; it has been In view of thefact that we nowhave three new maintained at last year’s level, even though we now have Universities it will benecessary to reassess ourpro- 2,000 more graduates to serve. To meet our budget we gramme of branch work throughout the province, and arereducing our staff in thecentral ofice which will inparticular to reassess thepurposes of ourrecently forcecurtailment of some of our activitiesinstead of establishedRegional University Associations andour planned expansion. To offset the lack of staff, all mem- relationship with them. bers of the Board of Management and other interested SimonFraser University, University of Victoria, alumni volunteers will find themselves more closely in- Notre Dame University and junior colleges throughout volved in the committee work of the Association. theprovince will soon havealumni activities of their Because of this austerity we plan to discuss with the owncommanding regional loyalty. Ourfundamental University the feasibility of incorporating the functions problem this year is to realign our programme keeping of the two publications, UBC Reports and UBC Alumni in minddivided loyalties andcontinuing to concern Chronicle. It is our hope to produce andmail an Alumni ourselveswith thc basic needs of higher education in magazine to all graduatesrather than to graduates the whole province. donating to an Alumni Annual Giving fund. To do this, This University will needincreasing support from however, will requiremore money, and we hopethat its graduates if its reputation is to be maintained, and by incorporatingthe budget of UBC Reports we will most of allit will needsupport from graduates living be in a position to bring you a more thorough picture in thelower mainland. of alumni and faculty affairs. Wemust avoid fractionalized pressure on govern- We intend to take thefollowing steps in several other ment, on industry and on our own alumni for support. important areas of our work: In recent weeks spokesmen for 0 To increase contact between the University and the and University of Victoria have indicated a willingness business community, wewill call together a council of and a desire to work with us. Wehope to provide PastPresidents of thisAssociation to meetwith Dr. leadership in this area and at the same timecall upon Macdonald and possibly representatives of the Board of graduates of UBC to recognize the needs of their own Governors to discuss problems of mutual concern in the University. University community. 0 Weintend to reassess thepurposes of Alumni An- nual Giving and work towards co-ordination of all Uni- versity fund-raising activities through the Development Fund. We have been hoping for the creation of an on- goingactivc Development Council for several years. Perhaps this year we can stimulate interest in the Board of Governors to resolve the problem. 4 The University

Spring Congregation 1963

MORE THAN 1600students, the largest tin.Brian LeslieScarfe of Vancouver. anddelegate for the U.S. atthe first number inUBC’s history, graduated on thisyear’s Rhodes Scholar, took first threegeneral assemblies. He holds his thetwo days of SpringCongregation, class honoursin economics. current appointment from January 196 1. May 30 and May 31. Honorarydegrees were conferred on Dr.Leo Marion is distinguished for Dennis Charles Healey of Abbostford, Adlai E. Stevenson,United States dele- hiswork in organic chemistry, particu- in honoursphysics and mathematics, gate to theUnited Nations, Dr. Leo larlyin the field of alkaloids.He gave headed the graduating classes in the Fac- Marion,vice-president (scientific) of the thecongregation address on May 30. ulty of Arts andScience for BA end NationalResearch Council of Canada, Dr. Frye,who was thecongregation BSc degrees. TheUniversity Medal for and Dr. H.Northrop Frye, principal of speakeron May 31, is theauthor of headingthe graduating class in the Fac- VictoriaCollege atthe University of twobooks, Fearful Symmetry, a study ulty of Artsand Science, non-science Toronto. of theEnglish poet William Blake, and group, ‘was won by RichardMichael Mr.Stevenson assisted in theforma- Anatomy of Criticism, a study of the Toporoski of Vancouver in honoursLa- tion of theUN, and was senior advisor theory of modernliterary criticism. New Appointments to Faculties

SEVEN SENIOR APPOIN rMENTS to the Uni- where he received his PhD, will also join Dr.Lin is a formerpost-doctoral re- versity of British Columbia faculty have thephysics department as an assistant searchfellow at UBC and is currently beenannounced by thePresident. professor.His research is also in the doingresearch in thedepartment of Inthe department of physics Dr. R. field of low temperature physics. theoreticalchemistry at CambridgeUni- D. Russellwill rejoin the UBC faculty In the department of Romance studies, versity.His research is inthe area of following a yearat the University of Dr. Frank R. Hamlin has been appointed electron spin resonance. Toronto.Dr. Russell,who has been anassistant professor. A graduate of Ihrahim L. Poroy, a native of Turkey appointed to therank of professor, will 3irminghamand Cambridge, Dr. Ham- currentlycompleting the requirements teachin the department and carry out lin hasbeen a researchfellow at Cam- forthe degree of doctor of philosophy research in Institutethe of Earth bridgesince 1961. He specializes in the at the University of California at Berke- Sciences. teaching of medievalFrench literature. ley, has been appointed an assistant pro- In thesame department, Dr. Michael MauriceC. Carr, a graduate of Lon- fessor in thedepartment of economics J. Crooks, a graduate of UBC, where he donUniversity, will rejointhe Faculty and political science. receivedhis master of artsdegree in of Law after a year’s leave of absence to After attending the University of Istan- 1957, andYale, which awarded him the obtainhis master of lawsdegree at bul,Poroy enrolled at the University of degree of doctor of philosophy,has Harvard University. California,where he received his master beenappointed to therank of assistant In thedepartment of chemistryDr. of artsdegree. He has taught at Cali- professor.Hisresearch field is low Wei-ChengLin, a graduate of Nanking forniaand San Francisco State College. temperaturephysics. Universityand McGill. where hewas Hisresearch is in economicde- Dr. Charles F. Schwerdtfeger, a gradu- awardedhis PhD, has been appointed velopmentand comparative economic ate of Villanovaand Notre Dame, anassociate professor. systems. 5 nancial aid immediately if it is to become a first class centre for research. Elected by Convocation to Senate

SIX PERSONS wereelected forthe firsttime to the University of British ColumbiaSenate, May 22, 1963.Nine others were re-elected for three-year terms.

Elected to theirfirst three year terms as convocationmembers of the Senateare: H. L. Keenleyside, BA’20, MA’21, PhD(Clark ), LLIl’45 Vancouver Malcolm F.McGregor, BA’30,MA’31, PhD(Cincinnati) Vancouver Mrs. H. J.MacKay, BA’38. (MaryGibson) Revelstoke Hon. James Sinclair, BASc’28 North Vancouver Frank A. Turnbull, BA’23, MD(Tor.) Vancouver Harry V. Warren, BA’26, BSc’27. DPhil(0xon.) Vancouver Re-elected were: Mrs. H. F. Angus, BA’23. (Anne M.Anderson) Vancouver KennethCaple, BSA’26. MSA’27 Vancouver IanMcTaggart Cowan. BA’32, PhD(Calif.) Vancouver WillardIreland. BA’33. MA(Tor.) Victoria Dr. Roll: JosephE. A. Kania, BASc’26,MASc’28, PhD(MIT) Vancouver J. Stuart Keate. BA’35 Victoria This is the burden of the annual report Vancouver of Dr. JamesRanz. UBC’s librarian. to Eric P. Nicol, BA’41, MA’48 theUniversity Senate for theyear Hon.Mr. Justice David Verchere, BA26 Vancouver endingAugust 31. 1962. ArnoldWebster, BA’22, MA’28 Vancouver Dr. Ranzrecommends a substantial increase in funds for the purchase of new Convocation is composed of theChancellor. the Senate, all personswho booksand older materials, which he beoamemembers of the Convocation prior to thefirst day of January1919, says are badly needed if the UBC library is to provide adequate services to students allpersons holding academic appointments with the University and whose andmembers of faculty. names are added to the roll of Convocation by the Registrar of the University UBC,he says, needs todouble its upon instruction from the President, and all graduates of the University. Con- present book purchasefund of $250,000 vocation elects the Chancellor and fifteen members of Senate. just as quickly as funds become available. Headded that the Senate library committeeplans to giveserious and ex- tendedthought tothe needs of the libraryduring the next few years. Hesaid that courses dealing with “Withoutfurther study,” he adds. “it Buddhism books for Library Christianitywould comprise about half is apparentthat substantial sums both THE UNIVERSITY will expand work in the theofferings of thedepartment in its for graduateresearch and for the shor- field of religiousstudies as the result of developed state. while the balance would ingup of existingservices are needed a Senatedecision and a gift of books dealwith Buddhism, Indian religions and immediately.” worth$10,000 toincrease library re- theJewish faith. Despitethe fact that few libraries in sources. Mr.Nicholls also announced that the North America can match UBC’s growth TheUBC Senate has approved a pro- University will receiveapproximately overthe past ten years, it is doubtful posalwhich will increasethe number Sl0,OOO worth of books onBuddhism whetherthe library serves its users as of coursesin religious studies and allow fromMr. Carroll Aikins, of Naramata, well today as it didten years ago, Dr. thedepartment to offer a major in the B.C.. who is presentlypurchasing the Ranz says. subject. librarywhile on a round the world trip. Almost 4000 books ordered by faculty members in thepast year were not pur- The newmajor will beoffered in The gift of approximately2000 vol- chasedfor lack of funds,he says. For Septemberfor the 1963-64 session. The umes will meanthat UBC will havea thesame reason, subscriptions were number of coursesavailable will bein- uniquecollection, Mr. Nicholls said. It placedfor fewer than half the periodi- creased from six to nine, and the follow- will giveUBC the only substantialBud- cals ordered. ingyear a seniorscholar in the field of dhistcollection in Canadaand will The needforadditional staff and Buddhism will, it is hoped,be added to include almost every book worth reading space is equally pressing, Dr. Ranz adds. the faculty to develop this new field. onthe subject in theEnglish language. Fourthousand recently acquired books At present there are two full time and Mr.Nicholls said that Mr. Aikins had andseveral major collections await cata- twopart time instructors in the depart- also agreedtoprovide an endowment loguing,and for UBC’s 14,000 students ment. About 100 students are taking the which will allowthe University to add the library can provide only 1800 seats- sixcourses now offered by the depart- to the collection. Mr. Aikins will provide less thanone half the recommended ment. additional funds for the making of trans- number. TheReverend William Nicholls, who parencies of Buddhistart, and provision The library set new records for service joinedthe UBC faculty in 1961 to direct of a scholarshipfor the leading UBC in 1961-62,the report states, yet once work in the field of religious studies, said student in the field. again the services answered a still smaller thatwhen the present phase of develop- percentage of the need. ment is complete,between 20 and 30 Atotal of $240,930was spent on courseswould be offered, and the teach- Help!cries Librarian librarymaterials, Dr. Ranz says. but ing staff wouldincrease to approxi- THE UNIVERSITY of BritishColumbia’s only35,235 volumes were added-2321 mately eight persons. libraryneeds substantially increased fi- fewerthan in theprevious year. Factors

6 contributing to the decrease in the num- Theyare Dr. IvanAvakumovic as the expansion of academic work relating ber of volumes added are devaluation of associateprofessor and Dr. Maw Lin to esf.ate managementat the University theCanadian dollar and increases in Lee as assistantprofessor. of British Columbia. bookprices. Dr. Avakumovic,anexpert inthe Incomefrom the $100,000 trust fund Circulation of library materials reach- governmentand politics of countries of will supportscholarships, bursaries and ed a new record of almost600,000 vol- eastern Europe and Russia, will come to prizestograduate and undergraduate umes-a one-yearincrease of almost 25 UBCfrom the University of Manitoba, students in the field of estatemanage- per cent, the report states. where he has been an assistant professor ment, enable UBC to purchase additional of politicalscience and international librarymaterial, and finance research relationssince 19.58. projects in estate management. Dr. Ormsbyheads hisiory Dr.Avakumovic is graduatea of Thecapital sum willbe vested in the DEANFREDERIC H. SOWARDhas resigned CambridgeUniversity where he received VancouverFoundation and the income ashead of thedepartment of historyat thedegrees of bachelorand master of of approximately$5000 per year allo- theUniversity of BritishColumbia, arts,and Oxford University, where he cated by a grants committee made up of President John B. Macdonald announced. received his doctor of philosophy degree six members from the Institute and three ThePresident saidDean Soward in 1958. past or presentmembers of UBC’s wouldcontinue to serve as a professor Beforecoming to Canada, Dr. Ava- Faculty of Commerceand Business inthe department, director of interna- kumovicwas anassistant lecturer in Administrationappointed by President tional studies, and dean of UBC’s Faculty politics atAberdeen University in Scot- John B. Macdonald. of Graduate Studies. land. ColonelHerbert R. Fullerton, presi- ProfessorMargaret Ormsby has been Dr. Lee,who works in the field of dent of the Real Estate Institute of B.C., appointedacting head of thehistory de- economicstatistics, iscurrently at the said “Theeducation and research foun- partmentfor one year beginning July l. University of Wisconsin. dation now being established by the Real He is a graduate of theNational EstateInstitute will provide, in perpe- TaiwanUniversity in Taipei, Formosa, tuity, thenecessary scholarship funds to wherehe was awarded his bachelor of trainand educate future teachers in the arts degree, MontanaState University, field of realestate education; to develop wherehe received his master of arts newteaching materials and texts, and to degree.and the University of Wisconsin, provideopportunities advancedfor wherehe received his PhD. studyand research in realestate for A third appointment announced by the Canadiansat a CanadianUniversity.” President was that of Richard M. Bessom ProfessorPhilip White, head of the asassistant professor in the Faculty of division of estatemanagement in UBC’s Commerceand BusinessAdministration. Commerce Faculty. said the income from Mr. Bessom,who will teach in the thetrust fund would provide for further division of marketing, is a graduate of expansion of work in the field of real Cornell,where he received his bachelor estate at UBC. of artsdegree, and the Stanford Uni- He said fundsfor aid to students versitygraduate school of business, andpurchase of librarymaterials were where hereceived the master of busi- mostwelcome, but the greatest need lay nessadministration degree. in the area of research. Since1960 Mr. Bessom hasbeen a lecturer at the University of Washington “We will nowbe able,” he said, “to in Seattle. expandour programme of researchin the ar1za of Canadianmortgage policies andthe more efficientuse of mortgage EsiaieManagement research funds,and begin new work on the I‘HE REAL ESTATE INSTITUTE of British structure of real estate markets in Canada Columbiahas established $100,000a andthe function of privateownership Dr. Ormshy Educationand Research Foundation for of reail property.”

DeanSoward said his decision to resign as head of the history department waslargely the result of increasedad- ministrativeduties in fields otherthan history. Inparticular, he said,the increasing importance of graduatework at UBC hadresulted in addedacademic and administrativeresponsibilities. Dean So- wardsaid he would continue to teach courses in historyandinternational studies. DeanSoward has been a member of theUBC faculty since 1922. He is a graduate of theUniversity of Toronto andOxford and holds an honorary de- greefrom Carleton University, Ottawa. DeanSoward was named head of UBC’s historydepartment in 1953, and wasassociate dean of theFaculty of GraduateStudies until 1961, when he succeededDr. Gordon Shrumas dean. * *: * Dr.Macdonald also announcedtwo seniorappointments to the UBC faculty WilfridSndler Memorial Gold Medalpresented io Kenrwth R. Pasiro, BSA’63. this inthe department of economicsand year’s lop ngricultrrre strrdent, by W. B. Richardson, BSA’47, pastpresident of Signlo political science. TauUpsilon, honorary agriculirrral fraternity. Place M’NS GraduateCentre

7 Arts and Science Separate July 1

Deurz ChotIt Dr. OX[llitcll

Tm r 4cuLly OF ARTS AND SCIENCE at the head of the UBC department of geology. and the departments of anthropology and Univcrsity of BritishColumbia will be The UniversitySenate approved divi- sociology,classics, economics and politi- dividcd into separate faculties on July 1, sionof the Faculty of Artsand Science cal science, English, fine arts, geography, President John B. Macdonald announced. atthe earliest possible time last March. German, history, music, philosophy, psy- ThePresident also announced that Atthat time President Macdonald said chology, Romance studies, Asian studies, Dean S. N. F. Chantwould serve as the division was desirable in the interests Internationalstudies, Slavonic studies, actingdean of theFaculty of Arts,and of increasing intellectual stimulation and religiousstudies and theatre. Dr. Vladimir I. Okulitch as actingdean encouraginggrowth in blocks of related TheFaculty of Sciencewill include of the Faculty of Science for one year or studies. the departments of bacteriologyand im- untilthe appointment of new deans. Underthe division, the Faculty of munology,biology and botany, chemis- Dean Chant is the present dean of the Arts willinclude the schools of home try,geology, mathematics, physics and combinedfaculties, and Dr. Okulitch is economics. librarianship and social work, zoology. -~~____ ProfessorCharles McDowell, head of inCanada under the age of 40 working Awards for UBC’schemistry department, said that inthe fields of inorganic,physical, or two Chemisls to hisknowledge this is the firsttime analyticalchemistry. thatthe award has been made to a The recipientreceives a commemora- DR. JAMES TROTTER,an assistant profes- Britishchemist who was working in a tiveplaque and an award of $500. sor of chemistry at theUniversity of Commonwealthcountry outside Great Dr. Bartlett,31, was internationally British Columbia,has been awarded the Britain. acclaimed last year for a series of experi- Meldola Medal of the Royal Institute of There is avery keen competition for ments curried out at UBC which proved Chemistry of Great Britain. theaward, he added, which is based that the so-called “inert” gases will com- The medal, one of the top international solelyon a consideration of thecandi- binewithother elments formto awards in chemistry, is awarded annually dates’published work by a board of compounds. to a chemist under the age of 30 who has distinguishedchemists. Hiswork overthrew a long-accepted doneoriginal and distinguished research Dr. Trotter,who joined the UBC theoryand has opened up an entirely work. faculty as an assistant professor in 1960, new field of research. worksin the field of x-raycrystallog- raphy, a field of chemistryconcerned with the structure of large molecules. Dr. Trotter, 29,is a graduate of the University of Glasgow where he obtained the degree of bachelor of science in 1954 and doctor of philosophy in 1957. Prior to joiningthe UBC faculty Dr. Trotterlectured at Glasgow and carried outresearch on fellowships awarded by the Nationalthe Research Council of Canadaand Imperial Chemical Indus- tries of GreatBritain. Dr. Trotterhaspublished more than50 papers invarious journals of chemistry. Asecond member of thechemistry department, Dr. NeilBartlett has been selectedto give the inaugural Noranda lecture of theChemical institute of Canada in Torontoon June 7. Thelectureship was established this yearand is awardedannually to the individualjudged to be the most out- Dr. Jan1es Trotter standingand promising young scientist Dr. Neil Bartlett a New! New!

Our First Architect-Planner

THE APPOINTMENT of John C. H. Porter AnglinNorcross engineering prize, and as architect-planner to theUniversity of the P. J. Turnerconstruction prize. British Columbia has been announced by Followingwar service with the Cana- President John B. Macdonald. dian army, Mr. Porter joined the firm of Mr.Porter, a formermember of the Sharp,Thompson, Berwick, Pratt in UBCfaculty in theschool of architec- Vancouver. He was an assistant professor ture, will takeup his duties on June 1. in theUBC school of architecturefrom He will beresponsible for planning 1947until 1953. physical facilities on the campus and the From1953 to 1961 Mr. Porter wasin preparation of mastera plan for the private practice as a member of the firm futuredevelopment of theUniversity. of Davisonand Porter. He continued to Bornin New Brunswick, Mr. Porter actas design critic in the UBC archi- waseducated atSt. John Vocational tectureschool. Ton). Archer Schooland McGill University, where he Since1961 Mr. Porterhas been em- Jolrrl Porter receivedthedegree of bachelor of ployed as anarea architect thein architecture in1941. Vancouver officeof thefederal govern- He is a member of severalprofessional On graduation Mr. Porter received the ment’sDepartment of PublicWorks. organizations and a former vice-chairman RoyalArchitectural Institute of Canada In1952 Mr. Porter was awarded the of theB.C. chapter of theArchitectural gold medal, the medal of the lieutenant- silvermedal of theMassey Foundation Institute of B.C. and the West Vancouver governor of the Province of Quebec, the forthe best designed house in Canada. town planning commission.

UBC Governor joins Alumni Association Honorary life membership was presented to George T. Cunningham at Alumni Asso- ciation’s annualdinner meeting on May 16 by Frank E. Walden(right), retiring president of the Association. Mr. Cunningham has served on the Board of Governors for almost 28 years;he was first appointed to theBoard in 1935and has been con- sistentlyre-appointed ever since. His term of serviceon the Board has not been matchedby any other member. The newUniversities Act limits future appoint- mentsto three terms. For other pictures taken at annual meeting see pages14-15.

Class of ’39 on TV TUNE IN on CBC’s TVprogramme Ex- plorationsJuly 3and July 10. UBC‘s class of 1939 will bethe subject of two half-hourshows with the title of ‘‘Class of ’39: Encounter with a Generation.” Thisspring CBC producer George C. Robertson. BA’50, cameto the Alumni Association offices to borrow1939a Totem. “Whathappened to theclass of 1939?” he asked.“They graduated and withinafew months the whole world wasplunged into war. How were they affected?” Hestudied the Totem, foundout the women’s married names, searched in the Chrorlicle indexand looked through the classplates for addresses. By thetime hereturned the Torem to us heknew theclass of ’39 so wellhe mighthave graduatedwith them instead of 11 years later. Theresults of hisinquiries and inter- viewswill be seen onthe nation-wide TV programmeat 10.30 p.m., Wednes- dayJUIY 3 andWednesday, July 10.

9 SummerSession . . .

AN INTERNATIONAL FLAVOUR will prevail onthe UBC campus this summer when more than 6.000 students and instructors from all parts of Canada,the United States.tho British Isles and Common- wealthattend the 1963 summer session. Mr. John McCechaen, summer session director,reports that total a of 220 courses will beoffered from JUIY 2 to August16. During this six-week period 80 visiting instructors will joinwith 170 members of theUBC faculty to supervisecourses offered in thelargest summer session programme in Canada. Among the visiting instructors will be: Dr. Erwin Raisz, consulting cartographer, HarvardUniversity; Dr. A.Rose,J. seniorlecturer in geography, Australian National University, Canberra; Dr. Regi- naldDale, senior lecturer in education, UniversityCollege of Swansea,Wales; Dr. C. H. Lamoreaux, botany, University M r. DrewMr. of ExtensionDr. Welln,ood of Forestry of Hawaii;Dr. Archibald P. Thornton, internationalstudies, University of To- Gralutn Drew spent a month in Korea to conduct a survey of the needs for fisheries ronto:Dr. George R.Kernodle, depart- etilrcation for FAO. Dr. Wellwood will spendthe summer in Nigeria rrnder FA0 10 ment of theatre,University of Arkansas studylong-term ohjectives for Nigerian forestry developnlent and improvement of andDr. Curt Zemansky, professor of currentpractices. Englishand authority on the works of Chaucer, University of Iowa. trainingand experience inthe “stage wasawarded the degree of master of In addition to such new courses as the arts” of theopera singer; while the forestryby Duke University in 195 1. history of Japanand geography of the popularhigh school band and orchestra He is currently employed as a forester SovietUnion there willbe courses in workshop will bedirected by Hans-Karl withForestal Forestry and Engineering history,languages (Russian, Spanish, Piltz, UBC department of music. InternationalLimited technical aas German, Latin and French ), art, religion, Theexpanded music programme will supervisorforeston inventory and music,literature and physics. As in the include a masterclass in piano, under management projects in Canada, U.S.A., past.numerous education courses will Dr. John Crown, University of Southern Mexico and Pakistan. heoffered. Californiaand an additional workshop From1950 until 1958 Mr. Breadon inpiano and recorder for classroom was employed by the B.C. Forest Service teachers. as a party chief and assistant forester in Thesummer school of visual arts the forest surveys and inventory division. . . . and School of Arts offersclasses inintermediate and ad- Hewas incharge of appliedforest ADVANCED PRoGRAhfMEs in theatre, music vancedpainting under Boyd Allen, mensuration projects connected with pro- andthe visual arts will be featured at University of California;an advanced vincialinventory. theUniversity of BritishColumbia’s sculptureclass under Cecil Richards, Mr.Breadon is membera of the twenty-sixthsummer school of thearts University of Manitoba,and pottery for Association of B.C.Foresters and the from July 2 to August 17. beginnersunder Hilda Ross, staff cera- CanadianInstitute of Forestry. Students from all parts of Canada and micist for the UBC extension department. Asdirector of theUBC research theUnited States will have the oppor- introductionAn contemporaryto forestMr. Breadon will beresponsible tunity to participatein both credit and poetry will form the basis for a creative forthe preparation of management and noncreditcourses under nationally and writingworkshop directed byleading operational plans, direction of all logging internationallyknown instructors. NorthAmerican poets Margaret Avison, operations and contracts, initiating, plan- Specialevents will includea seminar RobertCreeley. Robert Duncan, Allen ning, and supervision of research project, onLatin America presented bythe Ginsberg,Denise Levertov and Charles andthe supervision of records,budget, SummerSchool on Public Affairs, (see Olson. andpersonnel employed at the forest. articleelsewhere in this issue), evening Participatingin the fine arts lecture Prof.Knapp, who will assist Mr. lecturesin fine arts and public affairs, serieswill be Denis Matthews, distin- Breadon in hispost as director for one exhibitions,opera scenes and majora guishedEnglish pianist; Dr. Peter Selz, year,first joined the UBCfaculty in theatre production. curator of theNew York Museum of 1922after graduation from the Univer- Guestdirector of thesummer school Modern Art and Dr. Edmund S. Carpen- sity of Washington,where he received of theatre will beJohn Brockington. ter,renowned anthropologist. thedegree of master of sciencein assistant professor of theatre at UBC and forestry, and the University of Syracuse, one of Canada’s leading young directors. ForestDirecior wherehe was awarded the degree of Thetheatre school, under the direction bachelor of sciencein forestry. of SydneyRisk. field dramasupervisor THEAPPOINTMENT Of Robert E. Breadon 1941In Prof. Knapp selected the for the UBC extension department, offers asdirector of theUniversity of British present10,000-acre forest as a research courses in acting, speech, directing, stage Columbia’s10,000 acre research forest site for UBC. He was named director of movement, stage costuming and children’s nearHaney, B.C., wasannounced by theforest in 1946, three years before it theatre.A credit course on the history President John B. Macdonald. becameUBC property under a Crown of moderntheatre will begiven by Mr. Breadonsucceeds Professor F. grant from the B.C. government. theeminent American theatre scholar, MalcolmKnapp, who retires inJune DeanThomas Wright, head of UBC’s GeorgeKernodle. afterserving as a UBC faculty member forestryfaculty, said that as resulta FrenchTickner, Opera Theatre, Uni- for 41 years. of Prof. Knapp’s leadership and guidance versity of SouthernCalifornia, will re- Mr.Breadon received the degree of theUniversity Forest today has become turnfor the second year to directthe bachelor of sciencein forestry with first oneofthe outstanding research and OperaWorkshop which will provide class honoursfrom UBC in1950. He demonstration forests in North America.

10 Facultyon Leave yearAsiain and Africa under the for Missions Overseas auspices of UNESCO. Royal CommissionDuties MANYMEMBERS of UBC’s staff have been Two members of thedepartment of away on leave to carryout missions for economicsand political science have internationalorganizations or to un- beenattached toRoyal Commissions: dertakespecial assignments arranged Dr. J. H. Young, head of the department. throughthe External Aid Office ofour will return this summer after a year and Departmentof External Affairs. Royal ahalf with the Royal Commission on Commissionshave claimed the services banking and financing. Dr. R. M. Will is of three.Listed below are members of on leavefor the next academic year facultieswho have been granted leave tocarry on investigationsfor the Royal overthe last eighteen months to carry Commission on taxation. out work supported by variousagencies, Mr.Bernard Blishen of thedepart- under the Board of Governors’ policy on ment of anthropologyand sociology re- leave of absenceto undertake paida turnsto UBC this summer after two assignment: years’leave of absence to carryon re- Commerce and Business Administration search on behalf of theRoyal Com- Through External Aid Office our com- mission on healthservices. mercefaculty was asked to adviseand help establish a commerce faculty at the Scholarshipsin Russia Universityof Malaya in Kuala Lum- pur.Professor Leslie Wong, Dr. Noel A SECOND GRADUATE STUDENT thein Hall, Mr. C. L. Mitchell and Mr. Harvey University of BritishColumbia’s geog- Babiak spent the last year there, and Mr. raphydepartment has been awarded an WilliamHughes and Mr. G. D.Quirin exchangescholarship to Russia for the left this May for a year. Mr. Babiak will coming academic year. remainuntil September 1964. This is Professor Wong’sthird tour ofduty there. ProfessorHugh Wilkinson, chairman Dr. Torr~ns of thedivision of industrialadministra- tion, is on leavefor a year to carry on managementtraining inKorea under To Senegal for Summer theauspices of the International Labour Organization. SENEGAL, the oldest French settlement in Africa,and Gambia, the oldest English Education settlement which is a tiny coastal enclave Mrs.Hilda M. MacKenzie has spent of Senegal, will beheadquarters for Dr. the past year carrying on teacher training GerardTougas this summer onthe in Malaya. steamyWest African coast. His prime Dr.Vera A. MacKay willspend the purpose is to study developing literatures comingyear in Tanganyika under the in French-speaking African countries, but auspicesof External Aid, to carryon thereare interesting comparisons for workin education. Canada inthe cultural relationships be- Agriculture tweenthe English and French-speaking Dr.Charles Rowles, chairman of the African states. department of soilscience, has been on Dr. Tougas, professor of French in the leave for this academic year to carry out department of Romancestudies, has a special mission in Venezuela for FAO. made“peripheral literatures” in French Professor T. L.Coulthard, chairman a specialty. Hehas already published a of departmentthe of agricultural Hislo.ry of French Cmodinn Liternillre mechanics, is teachingat the University and StudiesConrempornryin S,riss of Ghana. Literrrture. Thisstudy of developing MissionsAccomplished Robert North literaturesFrench-speakingin African Lastyear Miss Muriel Cunliffe of the He is RobertN. North, Vancouver, countries is supported by grantsfrom School of SocialWork spent three whohas been appointed a British Coun- CarnegieCorporation and UBC’s com- months in Uganda under the auspices of cilexchange student. He will studyat mitteeon research. He will alsobuy theUnited Nations Bureau ofSocial theUniversity of Moscowin 1963 and materials,with a fund from the Univer- Affairs. 1964. slty Library, to establish a nucleusof Dr. J. R. Adam of zoologyreturned Earlierthis spring Brenton M. Barr, French African literature at UBC. lastDecember after six months of re- BA’62, a candidate for a master’s degree, Senegalhas had intimate associations searchtheInstituteat of Medical was awarded a World University Service with the French language and culture for Researchin Kuala Lumpur. ofCanada exchange scholarship for a twocenturies. The educated Senegalese Dr. R. F. Scagel, professor of oceanog- year’sstudy in Russia. speakexcellent French and the country raphyand a member of thedepartment Mr.North. a graduate of Cambridge hasthe unusual distinction of having a of biologyandbotany, spent four University,came to UBCin 1960 on a poet,Leopold Senghor, as primeminis- months last year collecting seaweed from CanadaCouncil fellowship and is the ter. He is, moreover, one of the greatest theIndian Ocean under the auspices of first Ph.D. candidate in UBC’s geography poets in the French language today. the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute. department. BritishGambia, in places just a few He was invited to participate in the three- Hehas beenworking in the field of mileswide, comprises the two banks of yearoceanographic expedition which transportgeography of westernSiberia theGambia River. Here 300,000 Gam- is undertheoverall sponsorship of atUBC and hopes to continue work in bianslive, surrounded by 3 million UNESCO.The half-ton of seaweedshe the same field in Russia. He will return Senegalese.Cherishing their British in- collected will takehim the next three to UBC in 1964to complete his Ph.D. stitutions,the Gambians have put up years to identify and classify. Mr.North speaks fluentRussian as determinedresistance to fusionwith Dr.John K. Friesen, director of Uni- the result of having learned the language Senegal,which isthe reverse of our versity extension, spent three months last duringhis career in the British Army. Canadian experience.

11 Anafomyresearch NorthwesternUniversity, which awarded long-termeffects of abnormallyhigh his medical degree in 1937. pressurein the eye and vision. Two VISITING PROFESSORS willjoin the Dr. Belangerwas elected a fellow of staff of the department of anatomy in the Glaucoma,the commonest cause of theRoyal Society of Canada in 1958. Faculty of Medicinefor the academic blindnessin Canada, destroys the seeing Dr. Dunihue has been associated with year1963-64. parts of the eye as a result of increasing theUniversity of Vermontsince 1936. pressure within the eye. The disease can Theyare Dr. Leonard F. Belanger, He holds the degrees of bachelor of arts bechecked if it is detectedearly. head of the department of histology and fromWabash College, and master of Dr.Drance was educated at theUni- embryology in the school of medicine at scienceand doctor of philosophyde- versity of Edinburgh,where he received theUniversity of Ottawa,and Professor greesfrom New York University. his medical degree in 1948. He did post- FredW. Dunihue, of theUniversity of Dr.Dunihue was a visiting professor graduatework in ophthalmology at the VermontMedical College. ofanatomy at the University of Pitts- University of Londonand was named a Dr.Belanger will carry out teaching burghin 1959-60, and currently holds fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons andresearch at UBC inthe next aca- a research grant from the National Heart in1956. demicyear. Dr. Dunihue will cometo Institute. From 1955 to 1957 Dr. Drance was a UBC on afellowship awarded by the researchassociate in the department of UnitedStates National Institutes of ophthalmologytheUniversityat of Health lo carryout research in renal Glaucoma research Saskatchewanin 1957 as director of the physiology(kidney research). DR.STEPHEN M. DRANCE,director of glaucoma clinic. Dr. SydneyM. Friedman, head of glaucomaclinic atthe University of UBC’s anatomy department, said he was Saskatchewan,will join the faculty of Lung diseasesurvey delightedthat two outstanding teachers theUniversity of British Columbia in and researchers had agreed to visit UBC July to work in UBC’s new eye research A SEVEN-WEEK SURVEY designed to throw unitat 2550 Willow Street which was light onthe causes of chroniclung for a year. “Their activities here will be officiallyopened in May. diseasebegan in the Fraser valley com- beneficial to students and other members Dr.Drance, who has been appointed munity of Chilliwack May 15. of the faculty,” he added. an associatcprofessor in the UBC de- 600 Chilliwack adults have been asked Dr. Belangerwas organizer and first partmentsurgery,of will direct the toco-operate in thestudy to be con- professor of thedepartment which he glaucomaresearch programme inthe ductedby Dr. DonaldAnderson, assis- heads at the University of Ottawa. He is new unit. tantprofessor of medicine and preven- a graduate of the University of Montreal, He willinitiate the first statistical tive medicine at the University of British wherehe received his BA in 193 1, and pilotstudy in Canada to investigate the Columbia,and Dr. Benjamin Ferris, Jr.,

12 associateprofessor of environmental healthand safety at the Harvard Uni- versitySchool of PublicHealth. Thesurvey beingis conducted in co-operationwith the Upper Fraser ValleyHealth Unit and financed with a $9,080public health research grant awarded by the Department of National Healthand Welfare in Ottawa. Theresults of theChilliwack survey willbe comparedtoresults obtained from a similar study carried out in 1961 by Dr.Anderson and Dr. Ferris in Berlin,New Hampshire, a majorpulp andpaper producing city in the north- easternUnited States, which has con- siderableatmospheric pollution due to sulpherdioxide and other lung irritants. The researchers want to see if there is thesame amount of respiratorydisease in a clean,a in pollution-free city when differencesinsmoking habits and age are taken into account. “Weselected Chilliwack for the sur- vey,” Dr. Andersonsaid, “because it is a clean city in a rural setting without any industry that would cause serious atmos- phericpollution, and because its resi- dentshave always shown a readiness to co-operate in such studies.” Canadian University Service Overseas Another function of the survey will be todetermine the prevalence of various respiratorysymptoms such as coughing, production of mucous,coldsand “When tht. t’onvc,rstrtion with n shop- the job they do. The Canadian University andwheezing in normal, a healthy keepcjr in to1t.n flrrtls on educ(ttion, it he- Service Overseas, set up in 196 I by Can- population. co171es clrnr tlmt ptrrents’ rlrsirr to give adian universities. in response to the need A thirdaim will be to determinethe theirclliltlren tlre hcst a,,rrilrrhle edrrcn- to create something similar to thePeace prevalence of indigestionandulcer tion tctkes precedence otlc’r otlrer COII- Corps in the United States. exists for the symptomsin the survey group. sidercrtions. They eogerly osk, ‘How Ion!: twofoldpurpose of correlatingthe re- The600 Chilliwack residents were trre yotlsttrying?’. 1vith the impliccrtiorl questswith the candidates, and of rais- contactedby mail and asked to report tllrrt rhrjy hope the 1,isit ,c.ill he rt long ing.hy voluntary subscription, the funds to the Upper Frnser Valley Health Unit one. Evrn ttvo or three years sorrnds piti- to transport them there and back. where they answered a questionnaire and fully .short when cottlpared with the need, There is, of course, a need in the total tooka series of breathingtests lasting crnd hotlr they nntl YOU know it.” scherneof foreign aid for theexpensive about 15 minutes. In report frtmWalter Herring expertwho may be costing you and me Residents are asked how long they have some$10,000 a year, but there is also livedin the area, the type of workthey CANADA’S unpretentious peace corps does room for the unspectacular and inexpen- havedone, the presence or absence of notget much in the way of publicity, sive--for the graduates of this and other respiratorysymptoms and diseases, and andeven less is knownabout UBC’s universitieswho are willing to go and their smoking habits. pioneeringthat played no small part in spendtwo years overseas serving and Those raking part are also weighed and gettingthis national non-governmental learning, at no cost to the taxpayer. They asked to take a breathing test which will agencystarted. Yet the first volunteers gosingly and work with the people of measure such things as lung capacity. No from UBC are back from Ghana already. the countries that ask for them; they have x-rays or blood tests are being taken and Theyare Judy Foote and Jocelyn King no pretensions. allinformation obtained will be confi- (now Mrs. Harold Anderson), graduates Certainly,it is idealistic, but let LIS dential. inHome Economics, who spent a year not forget that as a trading nation we are Becausethe questionnaire has been and a half in the interior of the country going to needpeople who know some- coded in advancethe answers will be trainingGhanaian women, under the thingabout the people with whom we fedinto a computerobtainto fast direction of theMass Education Branch hope to trade. It costs us on the average results. of Department of Social Welfare. of $1.500 each to finance our volunteers Whilethe research team is atwork, Another “wave”went out in 1962- for two years overseas. the B.C. Research Council will be carry- three of these,Colin Johnstone, Walter There areten waiting to gothis sum- ing out an eight-monthair pollution Herringand Brian Bayly, are teaching mer--whetherthey stay here or getthe survey of the Chilliwack area to measure in Sarawak; two others, Graeme Balcom chance to go,depends on the success of dustfall, and levels of sulphurdioxide, and I orneLane are teaching in Ghana, the current fund-raising campaign. under hydrocarbons,and ozones. andanother, Chris Siggers, is also in thechairmanship of G. V. Hutchinson. “Our interestin this kind of study,’’ Ghana as anengineer. There would supervisor of theVancouver branch of Dr. Anderson said, “stems from the fact havebeen many more to carry TUUM theBank of NovaScotia. who has vol- that chest diseases such as chronic bron- ESTinto other lands, had there been unteered to co-ordinatethe fund-raising chitis,asthma and pulmonary emphy- money to send them. There is no short- activities in thecommunity on behalf of sema,a term applied to the finalstages age of volunteers,and no shortage of theSenate Committee, chaired by John of lungdisease, is thefastest growing requestsfor Canadian graduates in agri- Wood of theExtension Department. cause of death in North America.” culture,forestry, education, medicine, Members of theAlumni are urged to The rate of increase in the U.S. in the nursing,home economics or engineering contribute to thefund, and may do so pastten years has been seven times, he fromvarious countries in Africa,Asia throughAlumni Annual Giving, 252 added,while inCanada the rate in and in our ownhemisphere. BrockHall, earmarking their donations. increasehas been five timesin the same Our graduates go where we know they Contributions are, of coursetax deduct- period. areneeded and are paid local rates for ible.

13 Alumni Annual

May 16

Franklin E. Walden, retiringpresident of theAlurnni Association, reported on his year of ofice at the Annual Dinner Meeting on May 16.

He hadthis to say about higher education in the provinceand the alumnus’ role as the public voice of theUniversity:

THIS YEAR has been one of great change in the affairs of higher educationin this province.Speaking tothe Annual Meeting a year ago I suggested that the efforts of our Association should be concentrated upon assist- ance in thedevelopment of asensible plan for the future. At that time I expressedthe hope that a year hence I would be able to report that a satisfactory plan had been determined and that your Association had an active part in its determination. This I can now doand also state that it hascon- stituted the most active area of the Association’s work during the year. Immediately upon his arrival in Van- couver, Dr. Macdonald, the new President, announced his intention of proceeding with a survey for the devel- opment of a plan for higher education in the Province. You are all now familiar with the essentials of this plan,

14 Association Meeting

1963

Dr. Kelsey n’as present to receive Alumni Association’s first Award of Merit for Plrhlic Service.As Frances Oldham she arterldetl Victoritr College hefore taking a scirrrce degrec trt McGill Uni\,ersitT.

apart of which hasbeen translated into prospective past, the amount by which the grant has fallen short of accomplishmentmuch more quickly than would have thebudget has never been madepublic. This spring, seemed possible. however, the Board of Governors, in an appeal for pub- The Association continued its programme of assist- lic support,announced that the government grant fell ance to regional groups in settingup, through the short by $1,600,000 of its minimalrequirements. Branchcscommittee under David Brousson, several This is a matter of vital public concern, not only for conferences,the last of which tookplace in Trailon this year, but in the immediate future when the whole May I 1. The first of theseconferences during 1961 new higher education system stands in peril if UBC is were of a general nature to consider the need for exten- to beprevented, by lack of funds,from giving the sion of our higher education programme but, following leadership upon which the success of the whole system thepublication of Dr.Macdonald’s report, four more depends. conferences were hcld and these took the form of public While continuing to carefor undergraduate needs, forums for its study. UBC must strengthcn and expand its graduate schools The conferences have also resulted in the formation before it can hope to maintain a competitive position in of regionalorganizations of ourAssociation, so that the academiccommunity, attracting and retaining the thereare now three regional representatives on the scholars that make its useful existence possible. Board of Management,one each from Vancouver As members of the community, alumni can and must Island,Fraser Valley, andOkanagan-Mainline. It is bethe public voice of theUniversity. The Board of hopedthat at least twomore will beadded in the Governorshas thisyear given usthe facts concerning coming year. the needs of the University. Let us hope they will con- The area of most concern to alumni of the University tinue to do so and be prepared to justify them to the of B.C. must be its continuation as a University of high community. Higher education is of vital public concern rank.Yet its future as suchstands in jeopardy. As a and its purposes will not beserved by conjecture, state supported University it is dependent for the largest innuendo and perpetual hide and seek through a maze part of its revenue on the Provincial government.Tn the of contradictory statistics.

15 CLOSE-UP on backing ON THE EDGE OF A WHIRLWIND: that’s where we were in the Alumni offices during the 1963 Student Action Campaign. Two weeks in March, one for planning, one for action, were one prolonged burst of student energy that swept almost every student into meetings, parades MAC and petitioning and sent 500 of them by bus to towns throughout British Columbia. Everyone was inthe campaign. “Student Council types”, “Brock types”, Dietrich Luth the campus soap- boxer,presidents of most of thecampus clubs, even thecampus communist took part. It was the Alma Mater Society exercising its freedom to act. Here is a close-up of the campaign as we saw it in theAlumni Association, and as thestudents saw it themselves, based on the ebullient Ubyssey and on notes made by MalcolmScott, incoming president of the Students’Council and Jim Ward, incoming first vice- president. They were co-chairmen of the co-ordinating committeefor the Student Action Campaign. It could be called “How the students backed Mac by really try- ing.” Why did it start so suddenly? Rumour became a certainty-the Uhyssey found out “thatUBC had not received the full increaseasked for in the operating grant. “Premier Bennett sliced $1.6 million worth of skin from UBC’s back with his budget paring knife and campus rebels took to working over- time in dark cellars planning action week,” is thc way a Ubyssey editor put it. TheAcademic Symposium in February was the hatcheryfor some of theideas; the President’s report on HigherEducution in British Columbia and a plan for the Future, withrecommendations to createnew universities and colleges, was a major topic and every- oneagreed withhis timing-the futurehad to start Uicrrkh L Iitll ‘S today. An important part of his plan was to strengthen UBC,the only established university. Withoutthe budget asked for thiswas impossible. The news about thebudget slicetriggered the whole campaign. Tuesday March 5th-“We discussed what the gov’t On Monday evening, .March 11, a full meeting of the was doing and what the Board of Govswere doing,” Students’ Council finally adopted the plan, after “rather notes Ward, “we knew only that Mac had obtained an impassioneddebate” which includedthe many guests, increase in operatingbudget of $1 ni., $1.6 m.short one of them a representative of theVictoria students. of what he should have received. After this crucial step, “.we went to work that evening,” “In view of the inactive Board of Govs & the silent notes Jim Ward. gov’t we decided something had to be done. The first At a specialmeeting on Tuesday 350 members of thing was to setup a committee. . . . Theleaders of the Faculty Association heard Belfont, Keith Bradbury, the Committee weretemporarily to be Belfont,Brad- Scott and Doug Stewart outline their plans and ask for bury and Ward. We decided to have a meeting Friday. support. “The students were tremendous!”reported a . . . Informed Scott of what was developing.” member of thefaculty later. A resolutionwas passed “There wasoriginally noconcern over the coming calling for “whole-heartedsupport and co-operation.” year’s finances,” saysMalcolm Scott, “as no one ap- On Wednesday atnoon 1450 of the 1750 Victoria peared to thinkthat the Universitywould receivean College studentsgave an enthusiastic hearing to Mal- inadequate grant. There was a good deal of controversy colm Scott. Hereminded them that they would be on how students could help the implementation of Dr. starting their university’s history, as UBC students had, Macdonald’s report.” by taking independent action on its behalf. On Friday afternoon 6,000 students signed a petition In themeantime the scurrying figures in theBrock fora supplementary estimate for UBC. It was tele- had the downtown canvass, the Annual General Meet- graphed to the Minister during the debate on education ing, the Interior Campaign, the busses and kits for the estimates in the legislature that same afternoon. students all linedup for the next day. The students That evening Scott, Brian Marson, Bryan Belfont and going to the Interior were briefed and bus leaders and Ward left forKelowna to attend the Alumni Associ- town leaderschosen. ation’s Saturday conference on higher education. Daily bulletins and publicity informationfrom the Driving back to Vancouver on Sunday they planned Alumni office hadalerted all ourbranch contacts in actionfor the following week under these headings: theprovince. They were standing by tohelp the bus- high school committee; Victoria College co-ordination; loads of students.Last minute information wastele- labour unions; fraternities; undergrad presidents; liter- phoned by Tim Hollick-Kenyon or sent by the students’ ature,instructions, facts; print shop; transport; city short-wave radio,HamSoc. street-corner petitions; general meeting and demonstra- Thursday March 14th was action day. Six thousand tion; city residence petitions; public rclations; co-ordi- studentsat the mass meeting gave Dr.Macdonald a nator’s ofice. standingovation when he spoke to them although his The notes on the results run the gamut from “Suc- enthusiasm seemed to be in inverse proportion to theirs. cess!” to “Highlysuccessful.” Theyhad many willing “DoesMac back Mac?” headlincd the Ubyssey the helpers. nextday. Then the students going tothe Interior

17 climbed into the waiting busses with their bags and their information kits, 500 of them, and went off on the most importantpart of thecampaign, spreading the word wide into the province. Smaller groups had already left the day before by car for distant points in B.C. In downtown Vancouver, led by student pipers and drummers, 3500 marchedfour abreast to the Court Housc lawn, heard Dr. Norris of the history department addressthem, then dispersed to petition on thestreet corners and at shopping centres (leaving a crew behind to clean up the Court House lawn!) Slrrzduy night the bus-loads from the Interior returned to Brock Hall with 70,000 signatures, and found Presi- dentMacdonald waitingwith thecommittee to greet them-and meetmost of them for the first timc. The Ubyssey reported their experiences:

This Is the Way It Was in Horsefly, B.C. Fivehundred students who took the petitions to the interior overthe weekend returned to UHC Sunday with 500 different stories to tell. Our alumni branch contacts rose nobly to the occa- There was: sion, a good many of them in the middle of the night. 0 a manwho signedthe petition in hisbathtub; Dr. Henniger in Grand Forks took the bus-load, driver 0 a lot of people in theOkanagan who thought “Mac” re- ferred to a kind of apple; and all, to the community hospital, the only place they 0 A petitionerwho sat up from 1 to 4 a.m.trying to gethis could get a cup of coffee at 2 a.m. In Quesnel, the whole father to sign the petition. He finally did. alumni group was down at 3 a.m. to greet the students. 0 thosewho thought Mac is a communist,and others who In Revelstoke,Mary MacKay arrived early, as she didn’t sign because of the “atheistic professor.” thought, to meetthe bus andfound the spokesman, 0 theman who said: “All youhave at UBC are booze and sex partiesand all the girls get pregnant;” JohnAbrahamson, waiting forher. The bus had 0 the nuns at a school in Kamloops who pinned “Back Mac” arrivedat 3 a.m. They sat for an hour in her parked cards in theirhabits; car, reviewing theplans for the students,-“Am sure Radiostations all over the province devoted time to the the cruising RCMP must have wondered what Mrs. H. campaignwith interviews, spot announcements, and news stories. J. MacKay was doing parked with a strange man on a But the hardest workers were the students themselves. street corner at that hour of the morning!” The eight Threestudents took an over-night train from Kamloops to home-town students were kept busy that weekend. They McHride,where they got 600 signatures in oneday. McBride spokeat the high school,the Rotary luncheon, the has a population of 800. As they arrived back to coffee and doughnuts at UBC, their CanadianClub meeting, atan NDP rally andat an cards were changed to read “I’m back Mac.” Elks banquet.

18 1-he Rev. Newton Steucy, 01ur brunch contact in 1>rime George, signs ptrtition for Lr,Ici Denis, 2 Ed and Neil Killingbec .k, I Cornm, both of PrinceGeorge.

Cec Hacker’s house in Abbotsford was comman- deered by his daughterJoan as petitioners’ head- quarters. (In 1932, he had seized the basement of his father’s South Vancouver church for the same purpose; that wasin depressiondays when the Universitywas threatened with closure). Don Stewart of Powell River had extra petitions and letters run off and drove some of the students to Van- Thestudents are not yetsatisfied. Says Malcolm couver on Sunday. He was highly impressed by the en- Scott: “If the Board of Governors don’tget theirfull thusiastic, intelligent, mature and responsible approach grant they shouldmake public the factat once, and of the students, and their well-planned campaign. aggressively seek the funds required from government, “It was admitted that the young lady who appeared business and industry-instead of flitting on andoff before the local Rotary Club,” wrote Roy Thorstenson the campus once a month to bemoan their plight!” from Hope,“answered questions and handled the Sincc the campaign, too, a very full statement on pro- situation better than most of the Rotarians themselves vincial governmentassistance to UBC and Victoria could have done.” College has been given wide distribution by theMin- John Welton reported from Trail that the reception ister of Education. It shows most impressive increases was cool at first because of a Truil Tirnes editorial the in grantssince 1952. But in 1952the University had day before, but it warmed as the campaign progressed not yet caughtup with thecosts of the post-war stu- andbecause of thestudents’ presentation on CJAT’s dent enrolment. In 1956, all students and staff from the “OpenLine” programme (which he hadarranged). three provincial Normal Schools were transferred to the Theyalso spoke on radio.Mimi Roberts, 4 Arts,the new College of Education at UBC and Victoria College. town’s group leader, noted: “The trek to Trail was very The three Normal Schools were closed. successful and we nettedapproximately 3,700 signa- ForMalcolm Scott, thr: Minister’s statementproves tures. The trip back to Vancouver on Sunday wases- nothing.“The fact that some millions of dollarsare pecially enjoyable as Trailproduced more signatures currently beinginvested in higher education is nota than its rival city, Nelson.” relevant measure of the adequacy or inadequacy of gov- Thishas been a close-up.Now let us look atthe ernmentassistance to the universities,”he wrotere- campaign in the wider context. cently.“The real measure lies in acomparison of the The President’s report was madepublic only atthe requirements of the future with the level of excellence end of January. The government, with dazzling speed, and the scope of the present University programme. acted to create three newuniversities and new commun- “Dr. Macdonald’s report has stressed that we face a ity andjunior colleges; butthe President’sfinancial crisis in higher education. Reference to the present nig- recommendations were not included. gardly grants and a summation of the amount appro- The financial implementation of the Macdonald re- priated over the past 10 years is an exercise in futility. port is what the Alma Mater Society is asking for. More Let us not permit a fixation with statistics to blind us to money must be spent; they want it spent wisely. In the truth.” meantime they want UBC‘s budget slice restored. Whatdid the students,’ actioncampaign achieve? TheBoard of Governorshas never published the They collected over 230,000 signatures as evidence of operating budget requested nor by how much the pro- support for higher education throughout the province; vincial granthas fallen short - untilnow. Since the they have told agreat many people of the financial campaign, on April 9, theymade a full statement on plight of the University; they have drawn most unusual bothbudget and grant for 1963-64.(The full text of statementsfrom the Minister of Educationand the their statement is printed in the current issue of UBC Board of Governors. Reports). And they are not through yet.

19 smon Fraser University

by Gordon M. Shrum, Chancellor

IN HIS INTRODUCTION tothe Letters and Journuls of Simon Fraser, KayeLamb says “SimonFraser is the most neglected of themajor explorers of Canada.” This oversight should be at least partially redressed by namingone of the newuniversities afterthis rugged pioneer who made the first historicjourney down the riverwhich bears his name. Some of the senior editors of the Chronicle have sub- mitted a list of questions about Simon Fraser Univer- sity which I shall try to answer as briefly as possible. Leslie Peterson chose the name, but he seems to be too modest to admit that he also suggested it. In any case, 1 like it and cannot think of one more appropriate for a potentiallygreat university serving the valley of the Fraser and the great metropolitan area which has grown uparound the landing where Simon Fraser ended his journey. The municipalities in the Lower Fraser Valley each offered large tracts of land suitable for a university site serving twenty thousandstudents. It was extremely difficult to choose the one that would best meet both immediateand future requirements of the University. TheBurnaby Mountain site meets the functional de- mands and, in addition, rivals the Point Grey Campus of UBC in natural beauty and grandeur. This site will present a challenge toB.C. architects to create an overallbuilding plan which will match and bring to a focusthc dignity, colour,and splendour of thepano- ramiccircle of mountains,rivers, ocean inlets, rich farm lands and dynamic urban communities surround- ing the mountain. EricNicol, in one of his questions,reminds me of Leacock’s prescription for a new university which starts with a men’s commonroom, next a library, and then adds a few professors,classrooms and laboratories. Although I agree, and all these we must have. unfor-

20 Blrr/~nhyMolrrltnirr, site of B.C.’s news ~tr~ivcrsity. tunately we mustacquire them simultaneously if we Mamie Moloney has an enquiry about the continua- are to enroll students in September 1965. tion of the first and second year programs at UBC, I Some fears have been expressed about the ability of expectthat they will continue,but as UBC concen- a newuniversity, without graduate facilities, to attract ratesmore on theprofessional schools andgraduate top-gradeprofessors. Fortunately, Ph.D. training has worksome first andsecond year students will gradu- notcompletely killed thepioneering spirit and I am ally be shifted to a two year college in Vancouver City confident that the challenges presented by a completely and to SFU. By placing the emphasis on undergraduate newuniversity - not only a new campusand new programs these institutions should attract the students. buildings, but a new curriculum, newmethods of in- Theremight be a differentialin thefees. Professional struction and a favourable climate for creative teaching andgraduate work is moreexpensive and thismight - will attract outstanding scholars and teachers even be reflected in the fees of all students at UBC. in competition with the older institutions. Your Editor wishes to know why we didn’tchoose Thc library should present few problems. Books for either Oakalla or the B.C. Penitentiary site where there course work can be purchased. The research collections would be“ready made lbuildings andsome tradition atUBC will no doubtbe available to staff andstu- for college spirit.”These two sites, as well as oneat dentsat SFU. One wouldthink only of complement- Essondale, were considered.The latter, Munday Lake ing, not duplicating, these collections and making these area, was arunner-up in thcoverall sweepstakes be- available to UBC scholars. cause of the favourable site characteristics. The possi- Residences will come with time, and will provide in- bility of recruitingpart-time specialists from the insti- expensiveaccommodation, I don’tmean army huts, tution is a possible advantage that was apparently over- which studentsfrom familieswith incomes of $5,000 looked. per year or less can afford. Seventy-five percent of the Finally, I am asked-“Who is going to divvy up thc families in B.C. are inthis group and they produce at public funds?” At the present time Victoria is the main least their fair share of the top students in our schools. source of public funds. I ,am confident SFU will get its The main body of students will commute either by bus fair share. It will be the responsibility of all the univer- orpool car. Winners of thearchitectural competition sities andthose interested in higher educationto con- will be asked to include in their overall plan an inex- vincc thetaxpayers and, through them, the members pensivesolution to theparking problem. This condi- of theLegislature and the Government that the uni- tion will no doubt reduce the number of competitors. versities are meeting a vital educational need and doing Eric Nicol also enquires if there will be a place for it in the most efficient and economical manner. sports or will the“more cloistered virtues be empha- In the past there has been no local competition for sized.” The preliminaryplans call for more playing UBCbut this state of affairs will bechanged in the fields than UBC has and I hope that we can start with future with the establishment of Simon Fraser Univer- gymnasiumsfor both men and womenas well asan sity. How far in the future depends upon many factors, indoor swimming pool. I wouldlike to seephysical butwhenever it comes it will strengthenrather than education emphasized but not to the point where it is weaken UBC-an institution which commands and de- compulsory. The locker rooms will, no doubt, provide serves the loyalty of all it!; graduates as well as former facilities forindoor extra-curricular activities! staff members. 21 Studies in International Understanding

Latin

Seventh Annual

Summer School Seminar clude:His Excellency Sergio Correa da Costa, Am- bassador of Brazil; His Excellency AmCrico Cruz, Am- on Public Affairs bassador of Cuba; Dr. James F. King; and Dr. A. R. Beckwith,chairman of theDepartment of Business Administration at the University of the Pacific, Stock- ton, California. THEQUESTION OF WHETHER OR NOT Canadashould The sessions on Thursday,July 4, will deal with join the Organization of American States is once again economicproblems faced by LatinAmerica. In the coming to prominence in thepress and in political afternoon,Dr. Victor Urquidi, an economistfrom circles. Mexicowho took part in the29th Couchiching Con- An American once wrote that the greatest lack suf- ference, will outlinethe economic problems faced by fered by LatinAmerica is thelack of understanding LatinAmerica. Dr. A. R. Beckwith will commenton by North Americans. SirOliver Franks, inhis address Dr. Urquidi’s paperand there will be timefor ques- to the 196 1 graduates of UBC,stated: “The North- tions and discussion. At the evening session on Thurs- South problem is the new problem and the new prob- day a panel will examine development of the economic lemis the right relationship between theindustrial potentialities of LatinAmerica, with H. Leslie Brown countriesto the North and the developing peoples of (BA’28), assistant deputy minister of the Department the South.” of Trade and Commerce, acting as chairman. Panellists This year, the Department of University Extension’s include His Excellency the Ambassador of Brazil, His Summer School on Public Affairs will conduct a week- Excellency the Ambassador of Cuba, Dr. Urquidi, Dr. long area study of Latin America. The programme will Beckwith and Leslie Rohringer, who has spent a num- present,at the outset, three background lectures on ber of years with various oil companies in Latin Amer- the history, geography and culture of Latin America. ica and is now a member of the staff at UBC. OnTuesday, July 2 at 3:30 p.m.,Dr. James F. To conclude the seminar, on Friday, July 5 at 3: 30 King, professor of history atthe University of Cali- p.m., a panel of Canadians will discuss Canada’s rela- fornia, Berkeley, will outline the history of Latin Amer- tions with theLatin American states. Mr. A.J. Pick, ica with particularemphasis on thelast 35-40 years. head of the Latin American division of the Department Time will be allowed for questions and discussions fol- of External Affairs will be the chairman of this panel lowing his paper. On Tuesdayevening at 7:30 p.m., composed of Dean F. H. Soward, Faculty of Graduate Dr. A. C. Gerlach, currently president of the American Studies;Dean G. F. Curtis,Faculty of Law,and Dr. Association of Geographers will examinethe geo- Marcel Roussin. graphicalaspects of LatinAmerica, with emphasis on TheLatin American seminar has been designed to economic and demographic factors. interestteachers, businessmen who might becontem- On Wednesdayafternoon at 3: 30, Dr.Carlos plating markets in Latin America, as well as interested Garcia-Prada,professor emeritus at the University of alumni and members of the general public. Washington, will examinethe cultural influences in Moreover, it is hoped that the knowledge and opin- Latin America. ions of academics,members of theDiplomatic Corps On Wednesday evening, a panel of diplomaticand anddistinguished civil servants will enablethe public academic experts will examine the underlying problems to understand the problems affecting Canada’s relations of powerand revolution. The panel, chaired by Dr. with theLatin American states and to follow, with MarcelRoussin of the University of Ottawa, will in- greater understanding, events in Latin America.

22 ,."_ : ,P

t to consideration of the cultural implications of increas- ing understanding among the Americas. i The major speakers will bethe leading participants America in thePublic Affairs Seminar.Under this outstanding leadership our aim is to draw together the many disci- First International House plines andcultural backgrounds represented in our University andgreater Vancouver communities. The Summer Seminar first International Hou:je Summer Seminar promises to providea stimulating venture in internationalunder- standing. WE ARE DELIGHTED thatmany of theoutstanding speakers who will lead the Public Affairs Seminar on Alumni will note that the sessions of the Seminar on Latin America will be staying on for the week-end to Public Affairs will take place in the late afternoon and help establish a new UBC tradition: the Annual Inter- earlyevening in order to facilitatetheir attendance. national House Summer Seminar. Brochures describing the programme are available from Aforeign student in GraduateStudies sparked the theSummer School on Public Affairs, Department of idea. It was soon developed by a round-table of faculty, University Extensionor by telephoningthe director boardmembers from International House, and repre- at 224-1 1 1 1, local 7 IS. Forfurther information on sentatives of internationally-minded campus groups, in- International House Summer Seminar telephone Inter- cluding the Alumni Association. national House. It is anticipated that up to one hundred people will attend,including faculty, Canadian and foreign stu- dents from winter and summer sessions, and members of thecommunity, both alumni and friends of Inter- national House. Theidea of holdingthe scminar in a residential camp-setting wassuggested. Anopportunity for con- ferees to devote themselves tostudy and discussion, freed fromthe usual distractions and in pleasantout- door surroundings, was very appealing to the planners. For July 5-7 we find residentialcamp-sites at a premium and may therefore hold our seminar this year onour own home ground at International House. As moreand more foreign studentscome to UBC for advancedstudy we find a rich internationalresource His Excellency here on our doorstep. Anlbrico Crrlz TheInternational House Summer Seminar is a special avenue of continuingeducation capitalizing on these resourcesand providing a muchsought oppor- tunity for foreign students to shareideas with Can- adians, and particularly University alumni. The registration fee will be nominal, partly covered by a tie-in with thePublic Affairs Seminar, as two of itsevening sessions areparticularly pertinent to our programme.These are the Wednesday and Thursday eveningpanels, on powerand revolution, and on the economic potential in Latin Amcrica. The first two major sessions of the week-end seminar will deal with revolution in Latin America, historically, economicallyand politically. Followingupon general discussion, there will be a panel on the future of Latin America. The third phase of the study will be directed

23 Excerpis from Dr. Norihrop Frye’s Congregaiion address on May 31 io graduaies in ihe aris and sciences “therefore and board meetings because it’s a public isnot the pellet in the ground, but the service todo so: in short,the people oaktree it is trying to become. If you whodevote as much of theirlives as find this hard to understand, you need to choose possible to keepingup the standard of developyour imagination. preferably by cultureand civilization, both for them- readingliterature, and you can learn a selves and for theircommunities. They great deal about it from your own British wouldinclude a teacherof French 1 Columbialiterature. If you read, or re- knowin a small town in this province, read,the second story in Ethel Wilson’s life” whobought herself a couple of cats in Eyun/iorls of Lo~,r,“Lily’s Story”, you orderto have somebody to talk French will read a verysimple account of how toin this allegedly bi-lingual country. a girl puts up a gallantfight for herself Theycertainly include the members of andher child against her own back- this staff, who, like nearly everybody else ground.Its meaning is less simple:its ina Canadian university, are maintain- meaning is that a person’s real character STUDhNTS of primitivesocieties tell us ingstandards of scholarshipat a weary isrevealed, not by what he has been or how important is the rite de passage, the distancefrom thenearest research done,but by what he is trying to make socialritual marking the transition from library. of himselfat any given moment. Next, onephase of lifeto another . . . These SO far as it is a teachinginstitution, I suggestyou read Earle Birney’s radio same students tell us further that in rites theUniversity exists primarily to recruit play, Trirrl of rr Ciry. Here the annihila- of passagethere are always at leasttwo peoplefrom the bigger lower-case uni- tion of Vancouver has been decided upon elementsinvolved, one of separation versity of the world. At the same time a bysome mysterious tribunal, and every- from a past phase of life, and one of in- good many people come into the univer- one who appears to defend the city shows corporationinto a futureone. The sep- sity of theworld with very little formal that there is no reason in the world why aration part of this rite is simple enough: education,and among those who have this should not be done. Fortunately not What you’reincorporated into is less the education there is a heavy drop-out. all thereasons are in the world. The easyto see. It’s customaryto say that The reason is that when you move from point is thatman can always be con- you’regoing outinto the world, but if oneto the other, you move from one demned by his own past. What we have you’re not in theworld now you never kind of knowledgeto an entirely differ- donebecomes, forever, the property of will be.You’re bound tofeel, quite entkind. Here you’re exposed to know- theaccuser of mankind,and as longas rightly,that there is much more to this ledge abour things,which is veryeasy we assumethat the future consists only business of being graduated than merely toacquire, as is obviousfrom the num- of thelogical consequences of thepast, ceasingto be where you’ve been. . . . berof people in front of me,and very we can look forward to nothing but dis- Hereyou’ve been attached to a Uni- easyto lose. It’s what you produced on aster. versitywith a capitalU, a specificinsti- examinationslast week, and will start This brings us, of course, to the chief tutionthat gives specfic degrees. But forgettingnext week. Knowledge about preoccupation of ourtime, the apoca- peoplewho may not know you’vebeen thingsis mainly intellectual, and it de- lypticexplosion. We have certain mech- here willspeak of you as havingbeen mands a goodmemory and a sense of anisms set up that, in a few minutes, can “to university,”with smalla u. That detachment.Its great virtue is objectiv- kill half the human race and destroy the meanssomething more: it means a cer- ity,the ability to see things as theyare, value of livingfor the other half. And tain way of life that you’ve been in con- preferably on both sides. What you trans- yet, others say, if we don’t set this bomb tactwith, and would have been at any fer to the university of the world is not off, we shall have a population explosion, university. As youleave the University this, but knowledge of things. Knowledge where the world will become so crowded of British Columbia, what you are being of things is really your vision of society, thathaving a largechest expansion will invited to join is the lowercase university, and is part of whatyou are. It is en- constitutean act of aggression.Shall we theuniversity of theworld, as I should gagedand committed, not detached: it suffocatewith life or withdeath? It is call it, which represents the social values demandsmoral qualities, like courage, merelyignorant toimagine that this that this institution exists for. . . . and holding it is a constant test of char- problem is originalwith us, and the Sometime ago [I wasasked]: should acter. To join the university of the world answer to it is inthe Book of Deuter- we devote our maineducational efforts it is notenough merely to do one’s job onomy.“Behold, I haveset before you to producing a managerial or intellectual andmind one’s own business. To main- todaylife and death; therefore choose elite? Myanswer was that if societyde- tainthe standards of culture is a fight, life.” The “therefore” is inserted not be- mandsan elite of thiskind, the univer- and a fightwith enemies. It doesn’t take causeit is logical,but precisely because sities will produceit; they must produce long to discoverwho the enemies are: it is illogical,the irrational choice that what society thinks it has to have. Many theyare the people whose vision of refuses to face the consequences of one’s of ourimportant people are university society is that of a mob,who are dedi- actions. . . . graduatesand it is nodoubt legitimate catcd tohysteria, slander, persecution Ihave spoken of whatyou are about enoughfor a University to pointwith andhatred. In someplaces the enemy to be incorporated into, but this is a rite pride to theimportant people who hold has become so strong that the university of separation too. I think there is an im- itsdegree. But the real elite, the really of the world has been actually destroyed pressivesignificance in thefact that. of bestpeople, arean invisiblegroup, and ordriven underground. The institutions all institutions, the University is the only nobodyexcept God knows who they all calledUniversitics are still there: they onethat requires you to leave it . . . It are. Some of them have influential places stillteach arts and science and train for dismissesyou, because, while its reality in society, but most of them are diffused professionsand grant degrees, but their is mainly in the past, it knows that your through and dissolved in that society, like degreesare no goodany more, because reality is alwaysin the future, always thesalt to which Jesus compared his theessential social reason for producing beginningin the present moment . . . disciples.They include the quiet self- themno longer exists. . . . Like a Spartan mother, it sendsyou out effacingpeople who are busyteaching Most of us todayfeel that man’s ori- to stand or fallby the powerand skill school or fixing teeth or saving money to ginal state is not to be understood by his it has tried to give you; it is not careless sendtheir own children to university, past,but by his present and his future, aboutyour fate, merely careful of your whosit through endless dull committee just as theoriginal state of theacorn freedom.

24 Directors Diary

DEARDIARY: During the post-exam dol- worldand society generally. Any alums drumsthat have just about come to an interestcd in attending the next Academic end,and are to be abruptlyended with Symposiumshould contact the Alumni theonrush of SummerSchool students, office. SUMMERLAND-Dr. JamesMilti- we’ve hadtime to reflect on recent more, BSA’48, waselected president of alumni activities-local andworld-wide. theSummerland alumni branch ata meetingheld here on February 21st. Datelines Their new secretary-tre;lsurer, Mrs. Patri- CHICAGO--MrS. RichardH. Thompson ciaCarter, also reports that a drive for (Mary Margaret Leeson) hosted the first newmembers in thc area is currently Chicagoalumni branch meeting last beingcarried on. VICTORIA -the first April3rd. There was a goodturnout of jointmeeting of thenew Founders of alumnito hcar guest speaker, Dr. Bill Convocation of theUniversity of Vic- Gibson of UBC,and Mary reports, “1 toriaand alumni in the Victoria area couldsee the old spirit returning to our was held on the new Gordon Head cam- alumni eyesas Dr. Gibson outlined the puson May 17th. Bob Gray continues Dean MacPheehonoured futureplans forour Alma Mater.” aspresident of thebranch for another OTTAwA--Sixty UBCgrads gathered at year,backed up bya high-powered exe- COMMERCEGRADUATES gathered to pay Ottawa on April 2nd to hear Dr. George cutive.After the business meeting, Wil- respects toDean and Mrs. E. D. Mac- F. Davidson speak on the Glassco Com- lardIreland gave a moststimulating Pheefor their service to theUniversity mission Report. Dr. Davidson was intro- addressentitled “Victoria College - and in particular, the Commerce Faculty ducedby Ted Jackson, president of the Castle to Campus.” LILLooET-Harold and business community. Ottawaalumni chapter, and thanked by E. Stathers,BSP’53, has taken over as DeanMacPhee is retiringas Dean of WilsonMcDuffee, branch vice-president. branchcontact for the area, replacing Financial and Administrative Affairs this year. MANILA,PHILIPPINES - UBC Was Offi- IanCameron, who has been transferred ciallyrepresented by Joaquin 0. Sio- to Vancouver. Urwrm KINGDOM- UBC Thegathering was held in the Uni- pongco, RSCE(Madua Inst. Tech.), MASc grads in the London area may have their versiry Club on the evening of May 23rd. ’62, at the inauguration of Dr. Carlos P. firstopportunity to meet the Chancellor KenMartin, Commerce division chair- Romuloas the ninth President of the andour new President, when Dr. Ross man,presented the Dean with alarge University of thePhilippines, on April andDr. John B. Macdonald willbe in boundcollection of letters of tribute 5th,when Mr. Siopongco presented to Londontoattend the Commonwealth fromCommerce graduates theon Dr.Romulo the officialgreeting onbe- UnivcrsitiesCongress, being held from graduates’firm’s letterhead. Committeefor arrangements for the half of UBC. TOKYO- Mrs.Yuriko July15th toJUIY 19th. Dr. Norman receptionwas chaired by Roy Dixon, a Moriya, BA’36, writes us that she has re- A. M. MacKenzie,President Emeritus, centlybeen elected the first president of former student of Dean MacPhee. will alsobe there. Watch for further Dean MacPhee came to UBC in 1950 theCanadian University Club, and that details in your mail. they would appreciate hearing of any gra- asdirector of thethen School of Com- merce and honorary bursar for UBC. In duatesthat may be travelling between Jet flight thetwo countries. MADISON, WISCONSIN 1956the school was made a faculty and Plans are now well under way for the hewas appointed the first dean. After “PeterKrosby gathered the faithful first IJBC Alumni Association jet charter UBCalumni together last April 4th to retiringas dean of thefaculty in 1960, flight next winter to the Winter Olympics hebecame the first Dean of Financial hearDr. Bill Gibsonspeak on new de- inAustria. My spies tell me that the jet velopmentsat UBC in higher education and Administrative Affairs. leavesVancouver on January 24, 1964. andreports that it was a successful returnson February 15th, and will cost meeting.YELLOW POINT, VANCOUVER Memo from AAG IsLANo-alumni gatheredhere for the only$385 return. Skiers, hockey players andother travelling enthusiasts should second annual meeting of the Vancouver ONE THOUSAND GRADS havesupported IslandUniversity Association. The guest contact the Alumni office, 224-4366, Mr. AAGr 1963 by contributingover $20,000 speakerwas Dean John F. McCreary, HermanFreydenland at MU 4-2177, or to date. The average gift has been more Dean of UBC’s Faculty of Medicine, who Mr. Russell V. Stantonat 581-5288 for than$20. We have therefore 15%a spokeabout the Macdonald Report and furtherdetails. increaseinaverage gift, 300%a in- thenewly planned University Hospital. creasein the number of donorsand a Jobs, anyone? b Atthis meeting Jack Caldwell, LLB’48, 400%; increasein dollars given. This is fromCampbell River, was elected presi- UBC’sPersonnel office tell us that a mostencouraging start for this year. dent. TORONTO-graduates from all wes- theyhave over 2,000 students listed for To those 1 .OOO grads we say thank you ternCanadian universities held agala alltypes of summeremployment, and for thechallenge and support. eveningat the 28th Annual Universities that a simplecall to them will start a of WesternCanada Alumni Dance held student on his (or her) way to you, and onMarch 9th last at the Royal York helpthe students out as well. Austerity! Hotel.Toronto branch president, John Ridington,headed up the local arrnnge- Working committees ments on behalf of UBC.PARKSVILLE. Our new Alumni president, Paul Plant, VANCOUVER IsLmo-several alumni delc- hasset up newa system of u,orki/lg gates joined with students and faculty at alumnicommittees for the coming year. (This space is reserved for a report theannual week-end Academic Sympo- Thccall is now out for any volunteers. to he written by the other 23,000 siumheld February 15, 16 and 17 to If interested,please get in touch with grads of [JBC. Please help us fill discussthe problems of theuniversity the Alumni office by phone or letter. it soon.) 25 THEUBC ALUMNIASSOCIATION this year the resources of post-high school institu- completed a two-yearprogramme of tionsavailable to the people of B.C. organizingand assisting at regional con- Following a series of discussiongroups, ferences in themore thickly populated the Rev. Newton Steacy summarized the areas ofBritish Columbia. The climax Conference. camerecently when five RegionalCon- Atthe Conference banquet in the ferences on Higher Education were held evening, Dr. W. H.Johns, President of in a two-month period. theUniversity of Alberta,spoke on the Theconferences dealt with the broad topic “A National Programme for Higher aspects of highereducation thisin Education in Canada.” province,the Macdonald Report, tech- CRANBROOK nicaland vocational education, and par- The firstConference Higheron The Case ticularregional problems. Many experts Educationin the East Kootenay region gave of their time to speak at the gather- on April20th brought people together ingswhich were open to allinterested fromGolden through to Creston. This now rests members of the region and their presence Conference also coveredthe wide spec- contributedtheto success of the trum of post-highschool facilities, and conference. tormallyendorsed at its conclusion the One of thenoteworthy groups in this formation of anEast Kootenay Uni- with the respectcame to be knownas“The versityAssociation to continue to work GypsyBand”, comprised of Professor fortheestablishment of regional a G. 0. B. Davies,Professor Ronald collegein that region. Baker,Dr. John Chapman, Dr. Ronald DeanDavid M. Myers, Dean of the Jury- Jeffels,Dr. Stephen Jennings, and Dr. Faculty of AppliedScience atUBC, WalterHardwick, members of theUBC leadthe delegation from UBC. Dean facultywho had contributed to there- Goard of theVancouver School Board searchand writing of theMacdonald was also one of thefeatured speakers, the People Report.The conferences were carefully andhis exposition of thevocational plannedand organized wellin advance training programme attracted a great deal by volunteerswho were citizens of the of interestat the Conference. region. BURNABY KELOWNA TheBurnaby School Board sponsored Over500 people attended an exciting a similar type of Conference on May 4th Conferenceon March 9th, featuring the at the junior high school. new UBCPresident, Dr. John B. Mac- Theprogramme featured the new chan- donald as thekeynote speaker. Excerpts cellor of SimonFraser University, Dr. from hisspeech are printed elsewhere in Gordon Shrum, and Dr. J. B. Macdonald, thissection of the magazine. President of UBC.This was the first Themorning panel comprising the publicconference of itstype to beheld faculty members who had assisted in the thein Metropolitan Vancouver area, writing of theMacdonald Report dealt anddrew much attention, particularly insome detail with theReport and withregard to thelocation of the answeredmany questions, both after the proposedSimon Fraser University. panel,and during anopen question TRML period following lunch. During the after- Citizens of theWest Kootenay area noonan open sessionin the form of a gatheredlast May 1 lth to debateand panelentitled “Design for Action” was discusstheir problems of highereduca- held. At the conclusion of the Conference tion.The Conference theme was “The a resolutionwas passed endorsing con- MacdonaldReport and a KootenayCol- certedaction by all areasin the Oka- lege.”After a keynoteaddress by Dr. nagan-Mainlineregion in applyingfor a John B. Macdonaldentitled “The Aims regional junior college. of HigherEducation inBritish Colum- PRINCEGEORGE bia,” a morningpanel discussed “The OnMarch 23rd, Dean S. N. F. Chant Role of aJunior College.” delivered the opening address at a region- ThisConference featured Dr. Mac- al conferenceal with the theme “After donald, of UBC,andtwocollege Grade XII, What?”After a morning administrators,Dr. R. K. Berg, President panelonthe Macdonald Report, and of EverettJunior College, and Dean W. luncheon,an afternoon panel explored J. Cousins, of theLethbridge Junior College. Discussionduring the afternoon was devoted to theproblems of establishing a regionalKootenay College, and fea- tured expertturedspeakers differentfrom a academicsettings inB.C. At the conclu- sion of theConference a formal resolu- tionwaspassed urging thespeedy implementation of therecommendation fora Kootenay college under the com- bined leadership of the School Boards :n the area. WithNorthern B.C. andthe Peace Riverregion the only areas left un- covered,the case for higher education nowrests with the jury-the people of this Province, who in the end will decide exactlywhat kind of system of higher educationthey willenjoy.

26 Kelowna Conference on Higher Education

President Macdoncrld addressingConference. Below, from left, Purr1 Pltrnt, R. K. Berg. CurletonWhitehead, MncX Stevenson.

FIVE HIJNDRED Okanagan - Mainliners thatin this world of thetwentieth cen- gavethe President of theUniversity of turyhe must be so educatedand his British Columbia a standingovation mind so trainedthat he is ableto live whenhe addressed them at the second with somemeasure of mentalease and Okanagan-Mainline Regional Conference spirtualease. . . held onSaturday, March 9th, in the “Thepersons who will makethe Kelownahigh school. greatestcontribution to society will be Dr. Macdonaldsketched the broad thoseeducated tothe limits of their outlines of theneeds and problems of capacityand talents by the very best highereducation. Following are excerpts kinds of educationalinstitutions we can from his speech: financeand staff. Humanresources are “In the past we have not succeeded in our most important assets. . . “Thevery sobering facts of wherewe persuadingeither our citizens or our “In Canada more is needed by way of stand in thisworld are before LIS and governmentsthat we must support edu- educationalfacilities at the level of col- thetasks that are facing us arernonu- cationat the level which is required in lege and universities in the next seven or mental. They will not disappear by ignor- thischanging world of thetwentieth elghtyears than we have been able to ing them-they are urgent tasks. We are century.Yet education is themajor key accomplish since Confederation. . . facedwith a nationalemergency with tothe progress of mankindand to the “You havedecisions to makehere in respe’ct to education,and whether we preservationof those rights and privi- the Okanagan Valley, and they are your winor lose as anation is going to be legeswhich we believeshould be shared decisions-they arenot my decisions, determined largely by how effectively we byall men. . . theyare not the University of British face the tashs ahead of us in the field of “Thedays are rapidly disappearing Columbia’sdecisions, and they are not education. . . when the man with little formal training the Provincial Government’s decisions. . . “Can we make the decisions about the canmake an appreciable contribution It is up to you to decide what you want. support of highereducation that are to ournational strength. Muscle power It is yourresponsibility, and you must needednow for our welfare, our eco- hasbeen almost totally replaced by the chooseyour own opportunity and de- nomy,our fair participation ina world machine. But what is of more importance cidewhat kind of growthyou want in of revolution,and our survival’.’ I be- anddirect interest to theindividual is your Valley. . . lieve we can-I believe we must. . .”

27 Homecoming 1963: Chairman chosen, plans laid

MANYCLASSMATES will renew college day 20short years. Rod Lindsay has plans acquaintanceswhen they reunite at forthe class of '48, whilethe first re- Homecomingthis fall. The class of '18 union for the class of '53 will be directed is thesenior class this year. Their re- by Art Phillips. union is beingplanned by Magistrate All in all, itsounds like fun, if your I.orne Jackson. year of graduationends in -8 or -3. JoeBrown, Aubrey Roberts, and a That is,except for the class of '58. committee of classmatesare busy plan- They're too young for this type of party! ning a big day for their class of '33. Dr. Forthose not attending reunions and Dougl:~~Telford and his committee, who as a plusforthereunion classes, plannedthe class of '28 reunion five Homecomingchairman Bill Rodgers is yearsago, have agreed to do itagain. planning many innovations and surprises. HaroldMoorehead is in contactwith Di Wong. luncheon chairman, has several 1933class president, Vic Rogers, for original ideas for her barbecue luncheon. his thoughts on the class of '33 reunion. DickArchambault has big surprises in Paul Paine will plan the '38 reunion, and storefor the Alumni Ball onSaturday. Mrs. J. A. Findlay,(HonorCe Young), MargaretHayward hopes presentto hasconsented to organize for the '43 someoutstanding lectures. Plus! Plus! class,whose members have been away Plus!

All about the Chronicle

The C'llrotlicle's editorialcommittee, The Chronicle isan excellent medium under Cec Hacker, recently proposed and forreaching better-than-averagea in- hadaccepted by theAlumni Associa- comemarket-university graduates. Our tion's Board of Management, a statement readersinclude influential people in Applications are invited of policyconcerning the UBC Alrrrnni business, government, and education. We Chronicle. suggest thatyou should sellyour pro- for the position of Thisstatement listed four principal ducts,services and yourself yourto objectivesfor the Association in pub- fellow alumni. lishingthis magazine. These were: to The Editorial Committee would like to Editor maintaincontact between the Associa- thankthose people and firms who do tion,the University and the graduates; advertise in the Chronicle. Only through (full or part-time) to makethe graduate body aware of theirsupport are we able to put out a theachievements of UBCand of the magazine of whichwe can be proud. of the problems it maybe expected to face in For complete information, write to Mr. thefuture; toadequately inform gra- GordonThorn, BusinessManager, UBC duates of the gravity of the whole prob- Alumni Chronicle, 252 Brock Hall, Uni- UBC Alumni lem of thedevelopment of higheredu- versity of BritishColumbia, Vancouver cationfacilities inB.C., andto inform 8. B.C. Chronicle them of whatour Association is trying to do about such matters; and to stimu- lategraduates themselves to participate Pleasereply in writing, stating inAlumni Association activities. Reach editorial experience and background Forour magazine features, the Com- 10,000 Circulation mitteehas adopted what has become to: known as the Nicol Law, named after its o High IncomeBracket author,Eric Nicol: features must be InfluentialPeople Director, bright,interesting and may be opinion- Businessand Government ated.They must be relevant to UBC, UBC Alumni Association, Leaders feature a UBCgraduate or concern the 252 Brock Hall, UBC, subject of highereducation. Preferably, Advertise in the they should contain news that cannot be Vancouver 8. B.C. found elsewhere. CHRONICLE TheEditorial Committee suggestedin their policy statement that the Cllroniclc should go to all graduates as soon as the financialresources of theAssociation permit.Presently, the magazine's circu- lation, which exceeds the very respectable figure of 10,000 copies, is sentprimarily to donors of AlumniAnnual Giving of recentyears. Almost half of therecipi- entslive in greater Vancouver. and al- ZENITHENGRAVING COMPANY LIMITED mostthree-quarters of themlive in 898 RICHARDS STREET, VANCOUVER 2, B.C. MU 2-4521 BritishColumbia.

28 Alumnae and Alumni

Items of Alumni news are inviied in the form of pressclippings or personal leiters. These should reach fhe Ediior, UBC Alumni Chronicle, 252 Brock Hall, UBC, for !he nexi issue not later fhan August 1, 1963.

1917 Dorothy R. Geoghegan, BA, co-princi- paland one of thetwo founders of QueenMargaret's school for girls in Duncan, has retired. Since its opening in 1921, the school has grown from 10 day Howard 0. McMahon, BA'35, MA37, PhD(MIT),has been named executive vice- girlsto its present enrolment of 104 president of Arthur D. Little,Inc., well-known private research organization in boarders and 71 day girls. Miss Geoghe- Cambridge,Massachusetts. He has successively held positions of sciencedirector gan will continue to take classes in Latin. andsenior vice-president in charge of theresea.rch and development division. He joinedthe research company in 1943. Dr. McMahonco-invented the Collins-ADL 1921 HeliumCryostat, which has made possible most of theworld's low temperature Mrs. Hazel E. Hodson, nCe McConnell, research.In 1951 theFranklin Institute awarded him the Edward Longstreth medal BA,MA'23, head of thelanguage de- forhis contribution to helium liquefaction; and in 1952 the American Ceramics partment and girls' counsellor at Victoria Society gave him the Frank Forrest award for work in the field of thermal radiation high school, has won the 1963 Fergusson from heated glass. Memoria(Award, thetopteaching A native of Alberta, Dr. McMahonnow lives at 72 ShadeStreet, Lexington, honourpresented by the B.C.Teachers' Federation. Mrs. Hodson was formerly a Massachusettswith his wife and three children, Thomas, Jean and Nancy. Frenchinstructor UBCat and also ~~~ ~ "~ taught at KingGeorge highschool in mer Vice-president of thenational coun- SanFrancisco. Mr. Bishopjoined the Vancouver.She has been teaching for cil,was voted by hercolleagues a life companyin 1937 and served as sales 40years. membershipin the Association "for dis- managerand general manager of the 1923 tinguishedservices tothe performing company'sRock Island, Illinois, plant. Theodore V. Berry, BASc,has been arts." In 1!>53 hewas made general manager electedchairman of theCanadian sec- 1927 Angeles,California, Loscontainer of the tion, American Water Works Association. Charles B. Bishop, HASc, has beenplant. This is the first time the chairmanship has appointeddivision general manager of 1928 movedwest of Winnipeg.Mr. Berry has the west coast container division of Con- Albert S. Whiteley, BA.MA(Pitts- beenassociated with the Greater Van- tainerCorporation, with headquarters in burgh),who was a member of theRe- couver water district since 1926 and with thesewerage district since 1931. He has , been commissioner of both since 1952. RE 1-6424 - 731-6012 Mrs. JohnH. Creighton, nCe Sally Murphy, BA, has receiveda Canada Fast, Efficient, Courteous Service CouncilAward spendto some four ALL PHASES OF PHOTOGRAPHY months in theWest Indies broadcasting 2580 Burrard St. at 10th Ave. andspeaking on Canadian subjects and collectingmaterial for broadcasts and scripts.She and her husband, who re- tiredfrom the English department of PHOTO-OFFSET PRINTING UBCin June, will travelto Jamaica by Ii#EiZTW2YLC=A2'Kh\TS freighter in thc fall. PRICELISTS Ltd. Earlierthis year, Mrs. Creighton, a ILLUSTRATEDBULLETINS 2 formerpresident of theVancouver MACHINE ADDRESSING 9 1191 Richards Street MU 1-3448 branch of theAssociation of Canadian 5 Experience""40 Years' Televisionand Radio Artists and a for- I AND 29 strictiveTrade Practices Commission from1952 to 1962, is nowConsul Gen- eral for Canada in Seattle. 1929 William B. Patrick, BA.has been appointedvice-president of TheCalifor- niaStandard Company in Calgary. Me hasbeen with Calfornia Standard since 1935 and head of the finance department since 1957, a position he will continue tQ hold in addition to his new appointment. Art Laing, 1932 Mini.Tfcr Donald J. Morgan, BCom.has been appointed manager of Pacific Petroleums Ltd. Mr. Morgan, who has been market- Candidaiesin Federal Elecfions ing petroleumproducts here and in the U.S. for 28years, will be in charge of NAME RIDING PARTY 2111 sales activities for the company. 1936 British Columbia Cameron Gorrie, BA,secretary of Peterborough,Ontario’s YMCA since Robert Prittie, BA’47 Burnaby-Richmond New Democratic Party 1958, hasbeen appointed to thestaff of WilliamTrainor, LLB’SO thegreater Vancouver YMCA. Mr. Burnaby-Richmond Liberal Gorrie willspecialize intraining and John Davis, BASc’39, BA,BASc Coast Capilano Liberal programme development in his new posi- tion.He has been active in ‘Y’ work (Oxon.), PhD(McGil1) since1936. JohnG. Wallace, BA,has been ap- Mary F. Southin, LLB’52 Coast Capilano Progressive Conservative pointed principal of Oak Bay senior high school.Mr. Wallace started teaching Wilfred R. Jack, BA’35, MA’37 Frdser Valley Liberal there in 1927and in 1957became vice- principal. Erhart Regier, BA’50 Fraser Valley New Democratic Party 1937 Jar1 Whist, LLB’56 Kenneth A. West, BA.MA’39, PhD Kamloops Liberal (McGill), vice-president of Canadian Oil. William B. Mundy, BA(Tor.), Kootenay East New Democratic Party hasbeen appointed a vice-president of BST(Tor.), BSW’63 Shell of Canada. He joined Canadian Oil in 195 1 as chiefprocess engineer and DouglasGreer, BA’49, LLB’SO Nanaimo-Cowichan- Liberal held senior manufacturing positions until the Islands 1961, whenhe was named a vice-princi- pal. William Gilmour, BA,LLB’S2 Okanagan-Boundary Liberal Mrs. Kenneth P. Groves, nCe Maisie Clugston, BA. BASc(N), was elected prc- David V. Pugh, BCom’34 Okanagan-Boundary Progressive Conservative sident of theCouncil of DeltaGamma internationalfraternity for a two-year J. A. (John) Young, BCom’49 Okanagan-Boundary New Democratic Party termattheir fortieth convention last June.She is thefirst Canadian to serve Ronald J. Jephson, LLB’56 Skeena Progressive Conservative president of the Council. as S. Ronald Rasford, BA’SS, LLB’56 1938 Vancouver Burrard Liberal C.George Robson, BA,has been ap- Tom Berger. BA’SS, LLB’S6 Vancouver Burrard New Democratic Party pointed to theVancouver police com- mission.An order-in-council named Mr. Douglas Jung, BA’S3, LLB’S4 Vancouver Centre Progressive Conservative Robson as commissionerfor a four-year term.replacing Rrenton S. Brown, BA. Alex Sharp, BA’39 Vancouver East Liberal HASc.33. Mr.Robson was called to the H.C. bar in 1945 andstarted a private Arnold Webster, BA’22 Vancouver Kingsway New Democratic Party practice in Vancouver in1947. Cliff Greer, BA’48, BEd’57 Vancouver South New Democratic Party

Arthur Laing, BSA’2S Vancouver South Liberal

Foster Isherwood, BA’43, MA Victoria Independent Liberal Lafarue Cement (Western Reserve), LLB’S 1 Northwest Territories OF NORTH AMERICA LTD. Eugene Rheaume, BA(Sask.),Northwest Territories Progressive Conservative BSW’S6 Our ResearchLaboratories Ensure Ontario Cements of theHighest Quality G ary Chertkoff,Gary I.LB’57 HamiltonWest New Democratic Party

VANCOUVER, B.C. Quebec John Turner, BA’49, BA,BCL Montreal St. Lawrence- Liberal and MA(Oxon.) and St. George

30 JamesWighton, BASc,has been ap- pointedB.C. regional engineer for the CanadianBroadcasting Corporation. JoiningCBC in 1939, he was seconded in1942 to theNational Research Coun- cil to workon radar for the RCAF. In 1953,washeappointed supervising engineer at CBC, Montreal, and last year he was named assistant regional engineer for thePrairie region. 1940 John E. Stark, BCom, a hotel and club executivewho has always had an ambi- tion to make either glass or steel has left his position as secretary-manager of Van- couver’sTerminal City Club to become executivevice-president and managing director of A-I Steel and Iron Foundry. 1941 John D. Beaty, BASc, owner and foun- der of BeatyLaminated Limited, the only manufacturer of hardwood plywoods in WesternCanada, has sold the com- pany to Crown Zellerbach Canada Limi- ted.Mr. Beaty will continue with the organization. 1942 Harold T. Fargey, BASc,has been appointedvice-president, sales, of the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Com- pany of CanadaLimited, in Montreal.

JeanMcMullan, BSA’42, MSA’47, is awoman Aggie graduate who really farms. BOWELL MeLEAN MOTOR After a little time in the RCAF she returned to LJBC, worked her way to a master’s degree as a lab instructor and stayed on for a couple of years teaching. She now has CO. LTD. 12Y2 acres (some of which she cleared herself) and sells her vegetables in a roadside 615 BUKRARD ST.;, VANCOUVER, B.C. stall.Obviously, she says, you don’t need a master’sdegree to run amarke: garden, Pontiac but a womanfarming on herown will benefit from all theknowledge she can acquire.Miss McMullan’s inquiring mind leads her to invention, too. She found an Buick abandonedwashing machine, fitted it with brushes. and now uses it to washher Cadillac vegetablesfor market. For 43 yearsserving the people of rhe LowerMainland UNIVERSAL APPRAISAL CO. LTD. G. ROYAL SMITH INDUSTF3AL COMMERCIAL INSTITUTIONAL MEMIiER OF GM MasterSalesman’s Guild Bus. MU 2-3333 RES. CY 8-1514

A. E. Ames & Co. A. E. Ames & Co. Limited Members

Government of Canada Bonds Toronto Stock Exchange Provincial and Municipal Montreal Stock Exchange Bonds and Debentures Canadian Stock Exchange Corporation Securities Vancouver Stock Exchange

Business Established 1889

626 West Pender Street, Vancouver-Mutual 1-7521

O&es in principal Canadian Cities,New York, London and Paris

31 Current Books by UBC Graduates

Theeditor invites news of current books by UBC graduates.

1.t. Col.T. Murray Hunter, BA’35, MA seum of Canada in Ottawa. List of the Robert F. Scagel, BA’47, MA’48,Insti- (Clark), senior narrator of the Army Mrrrine Fishes of Cancrdtr. National tute of Oceanography,UBC. Marine historicalsection, Ottawa. Mrrrslrnl Museum of CanadaBulletin No. 168. Plrrnt Rcsolrrcrs of British Co/rrrnbia. Foch: A Strrcly in Lendership. An $1.25. Also, A Re~,isionof tlrc Smelt Topicsincluded are distribution and analysis of thecareer and achievc- Fmni/J, Osnlcritloe. Bulletin No. 191. ecology of marineplants; marine mentsof the Commander-in-Chief of $1.00 Queen’s Printer, Ottawa. grasses;marine algae; potential re- theAllied Armies in the First World sourcesin B.C.; uses of marinealgae War. Theauthor is nowpreparing a Bernard Ostle, BA’45, MA’46, PhD(1owa and 27 reproductions of common B.C. study of selectedNapoleonic cam- State),professor of engineeringat species.Fisheries Research Board of paigns, to be published in 1964. He is ArizonaState University and special CanadaBulletin No. 127. Queen’s theEnglish language secretary of the consultant for severalindustrial firms. Printer,Ottawa. 50c. CanadianHistorical Association. Statistics in Rcserrrch, secondedition. WalterSheppe. MA’51, Phd’58, editor. Queen’sPrinter, Ottawa. $1.50. Deals withstatistical methods that First Mnn West. Dr. Sheppehas re- haveproved useful in most fields of searchedand annotated the journal Takashi Kiuchi, BA(Keio), MA60, staff research.Iowa State University Press, of Alexander MacKenzie’s explorations Ames,Iowa. $10.50. member of MitsubishiElectric Mfg. of Canada’s Pacific coast. He has done Co., Ltd.in Japan, with six young an extremely thorough job in the pre- scholars, A Strrdy of Crrnada (“Kanada LesterRay Peterson, BA’51, BEd’53, paration of this journal and written an no Kenkyu”, in Japanese). A systema- MA’59,teacher in Gibsons. The Gib- excellentprologue and epilogue for it. ticanalysis of thestate of affairsin sons Lrrr~clin,g Story. History of the University of CaliforniaPress. $7.50. Canadawith special emphasis on the community of GibsonsLanding, with economicaspect. The first of this informationon the geology of the A. F. Szczawinski, MagPhil(Lwow), PhD kindJapan.in Institute of World regionand the native population, by ’53, curator of herbarium,Provincial Economy, Japan. 500 yen. theson of apioneer of thedistrict. Museum, Victoria. The Heather Fanzi- Excellent illustrations. Readers Club of /y of British Cdrunbin. British Colurn- Donald Evan McAllister, BA‘55, MA’57, CanadaLtd., Peter Martin Books biaProvincial Handbook No. 19. currator of fish atthe National Mu- Division,Toronto. $5.00. Queen’sPrinter, Victoria. 50c.

News Is Where You Find It, Including Right Here

AN ENGLISH writer of respectablestature recently pointed . outthat the big events of today’sworld are known almost instantlyby everyman almost everywhere, but that the news of hisown neighbors and neighborhood tends to reach him. if at all, slowlyand incompletely. Well, he has a point, but one that readers of The Sun might challenge. The Sun not only has full coverage of world happenings by globalpress services and staff correspondentsbut also awide-ranging and on-the- marknews gathering organization right in its own back yard. It’s prettyhard for anything to happenin Vancouver or BI-itish Columbiawithout the story landing in our nextedition. SEE IT INTHE@ Mr. Fargeyhas beenwith Comincofor foreignaid section of theDepartment processequipment design since gradua- over 20 yearsin various capacities in of ExternalAffairs in Ottawa. Most of tion. WesternCanada and at the head office hiswork will bewith persons from Denis C. Smith, BA,BEd’47, DEd in Montreal. foreigncountries who have come to (Calif.), has again been asked to serve as 1943 Canadaon grants. advisor to the Canadian Education Asso- Bruce E. Emerson, B.A.,LLB’49, Born in Vancouver, Mr. Christiewas ciation-KelloggNational Conference on deputycorporation counsel for thecity director of corrections in Saskatchewan problems in generalschool administra- of Vancouver,has resigned to re-entcr before he took over the post at Oakah. tion. The conference is sponsored by the private practice as a partner in the legal He is also a formeruniversity lecturer University of Alberta this year at Banff. firm of Andrews,Swinton, Smith and oncriminology. H. J. (Jack) Williamson, BCom, is head Williams. In 195 I, hehelped draw up a report of Wheels & Equipment Ltd.. a Canadian Donald B. Fields, BCom,MBA(Tor.), on jailmanagement and the following firmstaffed entirely by Canadians with FCA,sessional lecturer and partner in year was named warden to carry out the quarters in both Vancouver and Calgary. Clarkson.Gordon & Co., chartered government’sprogramme of prisonerre- 1948 accountants,has accepted a two-year habilitation. John B. Brown, BCom, assistant direc- assignmentas research supervisor with In 1959 theUnited Nations sent him tor of theVancouver General Hospital. the Royal Commissionon Taxation in toThailand for a yearas an adviser on has beenappointed assistant administra- Ottawa.Mr. Fields has been treasurer crimeprevention, probation services and tor to the Riverside Community Hospital andmember-at-large on the Board of institutions. Riverside,in California. Mr. Brown Management of theAlumni Association. James Hatter, BA,PhD(State Coll. of served with the provincial government as Harry S. Weiner, BASc, hasbeen Wash.),has been appointed director of regional representative for BCHIS and as namedmanager of operations,interna- the provincial fish and game branch. Dr. auditorwith the comptroller general’s tionaldivision of theDiamond Alkali Hatterjoined the branch in 1947as a department,After receivinq a degree in Co.with headquarters Cleveland,in studentbiologist and for a number of hospital administration at UBC, he joined Ohio. yearswas chief game biologist. He is a theVancouver General Hospital as ad- 1944 keen fisherman and hunter and an expert ministrativeresident. Ronald N. MacKay, BASc, will under- shot with both rifle and shotgun. Ralph F. B. King, BA. MA and PhD take new responsibilities as representative RodericFrame Sexsmith, BASc, has (Tor.), has resigned as head of the depart- in engineering sales for Galbraith & Sul- returned to Canada from Bahrein on the ment of English at Royal Roads Services ley inVancouver. Mr. MacKayhas had Persian Gulf after 15 years’ service there Collegein Kingston, Ontario to become wideexperience in severalengineering withStandard Oil of California.He is professor of Englishand associate dean fieldswith particular emphasis in auto- now in thepower department of Caltex of artsat Brandon University in Mani- mationin the forestry pulp and paper Oil, in Montreal. toba. Dr. Kinghas been active in the andallied industries. 1946 Victoria branch of the Humanities Asso- 1945 Julius A. LeBrun, BASc, is chief equip- ciation of Canada. He was also Canadian Hugh Christie, BA, MSW52,has re- mentengineer for Giffels & Vallet of consultant to theCrowell-Collier Pub- signed as warden of Oakalla Prison Farm Canada,Ltd. in Toronto.He has been lishingCompany assisting in theediting to takeover the training division of the withmaterials handling and industrial of their Yolrng People’s Emwlopedia. FVMPA

To the Alumni in all its BURSARIES

agriculture - a $300 entrance bursary Endeavours, is awardedannually to a promising and deserving B.C. highschool (graduateentering the Faculty of Best wishes and Success, Agricuiture.

dairy technology - a $500 bursary from a friend IS awardedannually to a third year* agriculture studentspecializing in dairytechnology, whoin-

tendsto make CI career in thedairy industry. FVMPA also offerssummer employment to the winner of thisbursary.

no thirdyear student is consideredsuitable, a fourth yearstudent may winthis bursary. Evergreen Press Limited Applicationsfor these bursaries should be made to Dean WalterGage.

FRASER VALLEY MILK PRODUCERS ASSOCIATION

33 James G.Thomson, BASc. is vehicle developmentengineer for ImperialOil. Mr.Thomson has been special projects engineerwith Imperial Oil since 1946. Amongthe projects he carried out have beenthe design and development of a series of trackedvehicles from one to 20-toncapacity for oil industrytrans- portationover muskeg, and the prepara- tion of world-wide a transportation manual. He has had international assign- ments in Colombia,South America and Libya, North Africa. From 1950 to 1956 he wasdefence scientific research officer in charge of the soil and snow mechanics andvehicle mobility research group, DefenceResearch Board, Ottawa. 1949 Terrance H. Butler, BA,MA’53. a gear specialist with the Fisheries Research Board,Biological Station, Nanaimo, has developednewa type of prawntrap, usingmetal sides and net tunnels. Cost- ing only $3 morethan the standard net- coveredtrap, it provedto be 39% more effective in a year-longseries of tests onprawn grounds off SnakeIsland and Five Finger Island near Nanaimo. Ian F. Greenwood, BSA, assistant generalmanager of Sun-RypeProducts Limited,Kelowna, has spent some three weeksin New Zealand at the request of theirapple and pear marketing board. Hewas advising on various aspects of productioncost control in theirrecently establishedprocessing plant located near Nelsonon the South Island. Mr. Green- Donald G. Ivey, BA’44,MA’46, PhD(NotreDame), is in thenews again. He has justbeen appointed principal of NewCollege in theUniversity of Toronto.He succeedsPrincipal F. E. W.Wetmore who died suddenly on January 20 during the College’sfirst year of operation. SUMMER SCHOOL OF THE ARTS Dr. Iveywas featured in lastissue’s Alumninotes for winning, with his partner ProfessorHume. the Thomas Alva Edison award for the best science education film LECTURESERIES - 1963 of 1962. (Theyhave since won a silver medal for anotherTV science film fromthe ScienceInstitute in Rome.) FINE ARTS NewCollege is the first of a newkind of residentialcollege at Toronto, open to July II, 12-Keyboard Writing: Bach to Bar- tok-DenisMatthews, English pianist men andwomen of allfaculties and schools. The four oldcolleges, University, July 17, 18, 19-Art andthe Human Environ- Victoria,Trinity and St. Michael’s, are restricted to students in theFaculty of Arts ment-Dr.Peter Sell, New York Museum of ModernArt andScience. During its first year,and in temporaryquarters, New College has a July 25-The Artistand Mass Media-Dr.Ed- mundCarpenter, anthropologist registration of257, mostly freshmen. Construction is to begin this summer on a five- UniversityAuditorium, 8 p.m. \torey permanent home, with residence facilities for 300 men and tutorial, dining and \ocialareas for 1200 students of bothsexes. PUBLICAFFAIRS July+Development of theEconomic Po- Dr. Ivey,41, was born in Clanwilliam.Manitoba, but spent most of hisyouth on tential of LatinAmerica-panel discussion thewest coast. He joined the after receiving his PhD in 1949. withleading participants of Latin Ameri- canSeminar Dr. Ivey is one of Canada’sfew physicists specializing in thestudy of polymers- Buchanan 106, 730 p.m. that is, rubberand other substances composed of long-chainmolecules. He is a THE COLUMBIA RIVER TREATY member of theNational Research Council’s associate committee on high polymer July 9-An Outline of theProblem-Dr. John research. V. Krutilla, Resources forthe Future, In- corp. Asa scientist he has some astringent observations on popular attitudes towards July 16-The FederalView of the Treaty of 1962-Mr. Davie Fulton, QC, former Minlster hisfield. “People don’t appreciate the limitations ofscience,” he saidrecently. ofPublic Works. “Onereason is that so much of whatwe see as sciencesimply is not. We arecon- July 23-The AmericanView-Mr. Ivan White, Minister,US. Embassy, Ottawa stantlyexposed to men in whitecoats doing everything-from launching a rocketto July 30-The Provincial View-The Hon. Ray praisinga commercial product. Williston,Minister of Landsand Forests, Dr. J. D.Chapman, department of geog- “I’m alsoworried that the public seems to accept one scientist’s statement on raphy.UBC, chairman non-scientificissues as representing the opinions of allscientists. Infact, wedon’t Buchanan 106, 8 p.m. alwaysagree even on scientific matters. POETRY READINGS “Scienceisn’t a mystery or magic. It is anintellectual activity carried out by man, Fridayevening poetry readings with Robert Duncan,Allen Ginsberg. Denise Levertov andnot by nature. Even the so-called laws of natureare nothing but laws about andCharles Olson willtake place at 8 p.m. in 8uchanan 106. July 26 andAugust natureconcocted by menwho knew all thetime that they were producing nothing 9,2, 3nd 16 butapproximations. “Theonly way people can learn more about science is throughexposure to it. Forinformotion and brochure contact the Deportmentof University Extension That’sone of theprincipal reasons for our televisionprogrammes-simply to let peoplehear scientists talking about science.”

34 woods visit to NewZealand follows morethan three years’ close association betweenthe British Columbia and New Zealand tree fruit industries during which timethe B.C. industryhas substantially assisted in the development of a process- ingindustry now in its second year of operation. A. David Levy, BA, free lance journa- list, TV andradio broadcaster, and specialistin Soviet economic affairs, is leading a two-weekstudy tour of the SovietUnion this summer arranged by Claire Wallace Travel Bureau in Toronto. Thetour programme was prepared for Canadianbusinessmen interested in Russia’s huge new markets for consumer goods. John F. MacBride, BA,BASc, has been transferred from Edmonton to Mon- treal,where he will becomebranch managerchargein of theMontreal office of Johnson Controls Ltd. Hugh G. MacKenzie, BASc,formerly districtsales manager, Hamilton. for Mrs. Wiggins, withMurray Wiggins sta~lding to herright, shaking ShellOil Company of Canada,has been hands ,t.itll young King Hwsein of Jordnn, ut on Army Day celrbra- appointedreseller sales manager, central tion during the Wiggins’ stay in Amman. Jordun’s prime minister ut the division. Mr. MacKenziejoined Shell as time, Majali, is standing to King’s right. Majuli is no longerprime a chemist at Shellburn Refineryin 1948. nzinistrr. This spring the King, with the hejp of his Arab Legion, foiled P. Douglas McLellan, BA,BEd’55, a plot to join the Unitc)d Arab Republic, dismissed Majali, and took who taught English and Social Studies at over the government of the countryhinlsclf. Kitsilanohigh school, is nowhead of theEnglish department Britanniaat junior-senior high school. D. Cameron McLeod, BA, MA’S 1, has Murray Wiggins, BSA’48, MS(UtahState Agric. Coll.). left in April to spendthe beenappointed to the newposition of nexttwo years in FrenchGuinea on a new irrig,ationscheme. His wifeand 5-year senior engineer-proration for the Califor- old daughter will joinhim in thefall. Mr. Wiggins is anagricultural specialistin niaStandard Company in Alberta. Mr. theagricultural development department of HarzaEngineering Company, a Chicago McLeodjoined California Standard as firm of consultingengineers for river projects. petroleum engineer in 1955. 1950 Mr. Wigginsreturned this spring from Jordan, where he has been since 1959 as Francis James Cairnie, BA, a Victoria irrigationagronomist for the same company on an irrigation project in the Jordan highschool teacher, has been elected Valley.The ultimate aim of theproject is to raisethe standard of living for the president of the B.C. Teachers’Federa- smallfarmer as well as increasethe national income of thecountry. The scheme is tion. atpresent financed jointly by theGovernment of Jordanand the United States Donald A. Chant, BA, MA’52, PhD Agencyfor International Development. (London),has been director of there- Theground elevation of thearea varies from 200 metres below sealevel in the searchlaboratory of thefederal Depart- North to 400meters below sealevel in theSouth. Stage 1 of theproject which cost mentof Agriculture in St.Catharines, nearly$12 million, will becompleted in September of thisyear, with 30,000 acres Ontario, for the past three years. He has underirrigation. As resident irrigation agronomist in Amman, Mr. Wigginsheaded workedon the biological control of the up the farmdevelopment section of theEast Ghor Canal Authority. Inthis sprucebudworm and orchard mites and capacityhe was responsible for initiating the drainage programme, for thedevelop- initiatedwork on predacious mites and ment of irrigationcriteria usedin design and laytoutof farm units,and for the soil theirimportance in biologicalcontrol of investigation in conjunctionwith salinity, land re-classification and farm development other organisms. John D. Frazee, BASc, was among 45 programmes.His section trained Jordanians in modernirrigation farming techniques and in the efficient operationand management of theproject. The land under full irrigation willbe able to grow tomatoes, eggplant, melons, cucumbers, citrus, bananas, wheat, corn and alfalfa.

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35 dentService Scholarship. After gradua- tionhe worked in a psychiatricclinic in Vancouverand then held various posi- tionswith divisions of theCanadian Mental Health Association. Norman C. Tunna, BASc, formerly assistantchief geologist with Bailey Sel- bum Oil & Gas Ltd., has opened a gen- eralgeological consulting practice in Cal- , gary, Alberta. He will formulate explora- tion plays and also work actively on well- sitesupervision, land evaluation and representingcompanies in unit meetings. Mr.Tunna recently spent some months in Australia setting up a subsidiary com- pany for BaileySelburn and negotiating for suitable land farmouts. 1952 David M. Bowden, BSA, MSA'57, PhD (Oregon).animal nutritionist at Agassiz experimentalfarm, has created a cow's stomach in a testtube to studythe di- gestibility of grassand legumes. Dr. Bowden is seeking improved feeding for- mulas by drawingbody fluids from the paunch of living cows and using them to test the digestibility of various feeds. Test tube digestion is intended only as a rapid method of selectingforages and results willhave to bechecked in live animal trials. 2' ,~ i- : ' , &&&a*! a*, ,, Capt. Edward J. Grant, BSP, helicopter flight commander withthe Army Avia- Henry Zitko, BASc'49, researchengineer at B.C. Research Council, has developed tionTactical Training School atthe atwelve-volt D.C. vacuum cleaner that willbe on themarket this summer. The CanadianJoint Air Training Centre in cleaner is designed to pluginto a standardautomobile cigarette lighter receptacle RiversCamp, Manitoba, has recently and uses about the same power as the headlights. Unlike other cleaners using battery joined the small group of Canadian Army powerthe performance of thismodel is impressive. It readilypicks up the sand and pilotswho have successfully completed pea-sizedgravel which is commonlyfound on car floorsand which is so awkward theRCAF course on multi-engine air- craft,and who have obtained an instru- toremove otherwise in thenew drop-floor cars. The hose and cord are easily mentrating at Number One Advanced detachedand stored insidethe attractive plastic case. In addition to cleaning cars, Flying School. this cleaner is expected to beused by outdoor-types for cleaning boats, tents and for Robert G. Hindmarch, BPE, assistant inflating all kinds of low-pressurepneumatic goods. professor in UBC'sschool of physical education,has been appointed general

~~ ~ ~- ~~~~~ __ -~ manager of Canada's1964 Olympic hockey team. Kenneth C. Lucas, BASc, hasbeen winners of Alfred P. Sloanfellowships JohnInglis Company, where he later appointedassistant director, Pacific area, in executivedevelopment at the Massa- becamehydraulic engineer. of theDepartment of Fisheries. Mr. chusettsInstitute of Technologyin Bos- Douglas Wm. Russell, BASc, has been Lucasjoined the Department in 1950 as appointed manager of the eastern opera- ton.These fellowships arepresented studentengineer and has recently been annually to youngbusiness executives in tions of Swan, Wooster Engineering Co. a senior engineer in charge of applied re- the United States and abroad. Mr. Frazee Ltd.,Vancouver. Mr. Russell has just search for the Pacific area. will take a one-yearcourse in manage- returnedfrom Venezuela where he was Edward G. Wiltshire, BASc, hasbeen ment. engaged in theconstruction of over- appointedassistant superintendent, sul- David B. Harper, BASc, MS and PhD waterfacilities on Lake Maracaibo. phate and storage plants, Warfield, in the (MIT), hasbeen promoted to chief of 1951 chemicalsand fertilizers division of the theengineering and laboratory depart- Robert S. Caulfield, BASc, hasbeen Consolidated Mining and Smelting Com- ment of theAluminum Company of appointed general manager of West Afri- pany of Canada Limited at Trail. Canada in Arvida,Quebec. canExplosives and Chemicals Ltd. in 1953 David L. McKay, BASc, has been * Liberia,Africa. Mr. Caulfield joined Thornton J. Donaldson, BASc, has appointed chief engineer for the Tntema- C-I-L explosivesdivision in Vancouver joinedthe Vancouver office of James tionalMinerals & ChemicalCorporation after graduation and has held a number Richardson & Sons,stockbrokers, after (Canada)Ltd. at itspotash project near of positions in salesand technical ser- extensiveexperience in mining explora- Esterhazy,Saskatchewan. He previously vice. TheAfrican company was recently tion in NewBrunswick, Quebec, On- spenteight years with Steep Rock Iron established by C-I-L and Baird Chemical tario,Manitoba, Saskatchewan, British Mines. Corporation of New York. Columbia and the Yukon. Mr. Donaldson Robert S. MacKay, BASc, hasjoined H. Tony Dare, BASc, who spent more has also engagedin consulting engineer- Overseas Developments (Canada) Ltd. as thantwo years doing engineering work ing. vice-president. Mr. MacKay will travel on a huge dam in Pakistan, is now chief John A. C. Fortescue, BA,MSc'54, extensivelyoverseas from his Toronto engineerfor Permasteel (Alberta) Ltd. PhD(Oxon.), is the first biogeochemist in office, investigatingengineering-construc- GeorgeRohn, BA, BSW'52, MSW'53, thefederal public service. He was hired tionprojects. After completing post is director of programme development of by theGeological Survey of Canadato graduatestudies, specializing in hydro- the Canadian Mental Health Association. develop the basis of a new, reliable rneth- electric power at the Imperial College in Dr. Rohn came to Canada from Czecho- od of searching for ore bodies by study- I.ondon,England, in 1953,he joined the slovakia in 1950 on an International Stu- ingthe keen appetite of plantlife for

36 minerals.Scientists hope the project will Hospital,she is workingas clinicala from 1955 to 1958 and then at the Van- lead eventually to effective application by assistant in neuroradiology at the Nation- couver Mental Health Centre until 1960. Canadian mining companies of therela- Hospitalal for Nervous Diseases in Mrs.Lipinski is now studying for her tivelynew science of biogeochemical QueenSquare. PhDatthe University of Cincinnati prospecting. 1955 whereher husband is training in psy- Theattempt to develop an effective Kurt E. Ebner, BSA,MSA’57, PhD chiatry.They plan to return to Vancou- method of biogeochemicalprospecting (Illinois), assistant professor of biochem- ver to establish a joint practice. followspioneer research by Dr.Harry istry at Oklahoma State University. is in- Stewart Paul, BA,has spent the last V. Warren, BA’26.BASc’27, professor vestigatingnew information on the role 18 monthstravelling with the Spanish of minerologyat UBC. A note about of hormonesin the enzymes that syn- dancetroup of Susanay Jose. He first himappears in thefaculty section. Dr. thesizemilk sugar. Supporting the basic met thetroupe in Dawson Creek where Warren and his co-workers demonstrated researchduring 1963 willbe a grant of he was teaching high school. He went to severalyears ago the feasibility of this $15,364 to the university by the National help with the lighting and ended up act- form of prospectingunder Canadian Institutes of Health,Washington, D.C. ingas their interpreter. A yearlater, he conditions. Dr.Ebner‘s research project. titled met 1.hem again in Englandand became Italso follows a recent visit by Dr. “Studies in HormoneAction at the En- their stage manager, travelling with them Royle,head of thegeochemistry section zymeLevel” is scheduledfor additional ever since through Switzerland, Germany, of theGeological Survey, to the Soviet NIHsupport totalling $27.500 during Holland and England. Unionwhere he inspected work at geo- 1964 and 1965. Dr. Ebner joined the OSU Peter J. Worthington, BA,BJ(Carle- chemical research centres. He found that biochemistrydepartment in 1962follow- ton),Toronto Telegram reporter. won in biogeochemistry thc Russians lead thc ing a year on the staff of the University theI962 award for featurewriting in worldin the amount of basicresearch of Minnesota.During 1960-61, he con- the14th annual national newspaper and scope of practical applications bcing ducted post-doctoral research at National awards. studied. Institutefor Dairy Research at Reading, Orest Zakreski, BA(Sask.). BSU‘, is de- Christina J. Nichol, nCe Cameron, BA, England.on a Canadian overseas post- velopment officerwith the Indian Affairs MSc’55, PhD(London), is a research asso- doctoralfellowship. branch,Department of Citizenshipand ciate in muscular dystrophy at UBC. This Mrs. Beatrice Grace Lipinski, BA Immigration,Saskatoon. Before accept- April she was awarded a $7,500 scholar- (Sask.), MA, was the only Canadian win- inghis present position, he was a school ship by theMedical Research Council ner of one of theInternational Fellow- teacherfor the Indian Affairs branch at of Canada to continue her work for three shipsfor1963-64 awarded by the Fond du Lac. moreyears. AmericanAssociation of University 1956 1954 Women. Robert J. Abercrombie, BA, has been Margaret M.Hoehn, nee Maier, BA Mrs. Lipinski’sspecial interest is care appointed manager of the Canadian Asso- (Sask), MD, is spcnding a year in Lon- of the emotionally disturbed and preven- ciation of OilwellDrilling Contractors. don.England. While her husband. Dr. tivemeasures inthe field of mental Mr..4bercrombie was formerly manager Robert J. Hoehn, is doingresearch in health.She was clinical psychologist at of theeconomics and statistics depart- tissuetransplantation at the Westminster theVancouver Child Guidance Clinic ment of Canadian Petroleum Association.

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NATIONAL LIFE

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37 Timothy P. Cameron, LLB, is the new therstudy. Another winner is Jack T. secretary-manager of theFishing Vessel Rush, BA’40,MA’46, who wasawarded Marriages Owners’Association. Mr. Cameron is a $500. ARDIES-BERNARD. Thomas Grant Ardies to Denise A. S. Yates, BA, has joined the specialist in marine law with the firm of SharonAnne Bernard, BA’60, in McMaster,Parkes, Bray and Cameron. staff of theVictoria YWCA as a pro- Vancouver. He has spent 18 years at sea and worked gramme director for women. She has re- BOHNE-FISHER. HenryRichard Bohne, hisway through UBC on halibutlong- centlybeen employed as a social worker BASc’55, to Cynthia Carole Fisher, in linersand salmon seiners. with the provincial Welfare Department. Cornwall, Ontario. 1958 T.Roland Fredriksen, BASc, ispur- BROWN-MCLEAN. MichaelJack Brown, suing post graduate work at Purdue Uni- Gary E. Corbett, BCom,formerly BA’60, MA(Oxon.), to ValerieAnne versityin automatic control and expects assistantactuary for Manufacturers Life McLean, BHE60, in Vancouver. to receive his MS degree in electrical en- InsuranceCompany, Toronto, has been CHONG-CON.Henry K. H.Chong, MD gineeringthis June. He was awarded a appointedactuary for theLifeco Insur- ’56, to Christina S. F. Con, BSP’60, in scholarship for this purpose by IBM Cor- anceCompany of Americain Seattle. Vancouver. poration,where he has been employed Lastyear, Mr. Corbett qualified as Fel- DAY-HUNGERFORD.George Sutherland since 1959. low of the Society of Actuaries. Day, BASc’59, MBA(WesternOnt.), Michael R. Kitson, BASc, is withthe Bohuslav H. Kymlicka, BA,MA(Col- Marilynto Beryl Hungerford, in engineeringdepartment of theHowe umbia), has been appointed a lecturer in Montreal,Quebec. Soundpulp division of CanadianForest politicalscience atMiddlesex College, FAIRBAIRN-DRYSDALE. RobertHenderson Products Limited. Before joining CFP he London,Ontario. He is currently a Fairbairn,MD’59, to AnneDrysdale, spentfour years with Rayonier Canada teacher on the staff of United College in in Vancouver. Limited at Port Alice. Winnipeg. FORWARD-HUMBLE.Gordon Edward For- John F. Ridington, BCom,has joined ColinHenderson Smith, BA(Dal- ward, BASc’60,MASc’62, to Heather Trader$Finance Corporation Limited at housie),BEd, MA’60, is teachingwith Anne Humble, BA’62, in Paris, France. theirhead office in Torontoas property hiswife, the former GloriaBessie Bur- FOTHERINGHAh.1-DELBRIDGE. Murray Allan andtraffic supervisor. His job includes roughs, BA‘49,B’Ed‘58, inBau, Sara- Fotheringham, BA‘54, to SallyeBer- design, lay-out, control and co-ordination wak. 70 milesfrom the Indonesian bor- niceDelbridge, BA’58,in Vancouver. of theoffices of Tradersas well as res- der.There they are supervising building GREENWOOD-ROSS.Frederick Harold ponsibilityfor the company’s fleet of andoperation of secondarya school Greenwood, BASc’62, to Jo-Anne cars.Mr. Ridington was formerly with whichwill have 130 studentswhen it is Ross,in Vancouver. Ford Motor Company. complete.Mr. and Mrs. Smith have LAUNDY-WHITTEMORE.Patrick W. Laun- 1957 taughttogether in Kamloops,Grand dy, BA’49, MB,ChB(Sheffield1, to IanW. French, BSP. hasjust com- Forks,Dawson Creek, and later in Lon- SheilaAnne Whittemore, BA’51, in pletedhis PhD in biochemistryat the don,England, before going to Sarawak Victoria. University of Toronto.He has received asColombo Plan teachers in 1960. MCKECHNIE-LEDUC. RobertEdward Mc- a post-doctoralfellowship from the 1959 Kechnie,BASc’62, toLouise Marie NationalResearch Council to study bac- Douglas E. Coulter, BASc, hasbeen Leduc, in Vancouver. terialmetabolism with Dr. HansKorn- appointed general manager of the Drake MCKITRICK-BARTON. RobertMurray Mc- bergat the University of Leicester in ConstructionCompany Ltd., Winnipeg, England. Manitoba.For the past three years, Mr. The Rev.Walter F. McLean, BA. BD Coulterserved as the company’s chief (Knox). has been appointed by the Over- engineer in Winnipeg. seasMissions Board of thePresbyterian Jack B.Greenwood, BCom, is comp- Church in Canada to dospecial work troller of hisfather’s company, Nelson withstudents in Nigeria for an initial Machinery Co. Ltd.The company was period of twoyears. He is alsoassistant formedin Nelson, B.C.in 1938 andis Minister of the newly formed Presbyter- nowoperating on an international scale iancongregation there. His wife, the withcustomers as far afield as British former Barbara Scott, BEd’60,is teach- Guianaand Uganda. ing in a governmentgirls’ secondary 1961 COMPLETE FILM PROCESSING school in Enugu. Jack Y. F. Lee, BSc, is a bacteriologist COMPLETE PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES John K. Maynard, BCom, is the newly on the staff of the Kirkland District Hos- JOE QUAN,B.Com., Mgr. appointedhospital administrator for the pitallaboratory in KirklandLake. VernonJubilee Hospital. For thepast Ontario. I Mutual 1-4164 1 four years, Mr. Maynard has been assist- 1962 819 Thurlow, at Robson antadministrator at the Royal Inland PeterWilliam Brown, BCom,LLB’63, Mail Address, P.O. Box 2180 Hospitalin Kamloops and had consider- has beenawarded a $2,000 Carswell- Vancouver 3, B.C. ableresponsibility for the development Sweet andMaxwell scholarship for post of major expansion plans there. graduate work in international law at St. Arno L. Ulmer, BA, has been given an John’sCollege, Cambridge University, honorarium of $50 by theRichmond England. municipalcouncil for research done for JohnC. Holt, BSdManchester),MA, REGENCY hisgraduating essay. Mr. Ulmer carried principal of Lucerne secondary school in out an extensive field survey and analysis New Denver and a teacher of chemistry, CATERERS of Richmond’sagricultural industry biology and senior mathematics, has been under the auspices of the federal govern- awardedShella Merit Fellowship to CompleteCatering Services ment.His findings and work notes were attend Stanford University this summer. voluntarilymade available to the plan- William A. Low, BSc, has been award- Personalized HomeCarering ning department of the municipality and ed a$2,400 National Research Council RegencyCandlelight Room have been of great value in the prepara- studentship. Mr. Low is now working for tion of theLand Use Plan regarding his MSc at UBC, specializing in zoology. RegencyImperial Room agriculture. Atpresent he is makinga study of the Gerald Walsh, BEd, MEd’62, is winner VancouverIsland elk. of a $1,500 B.C.government scholar- MichaelStephen Mepham, BSc, has 974 West Broadway - Vmcouver. B.C. ship.These annual scholarships totalling been awarded a Woodrow Wilson Fellow- $5,000 are intended to provide outstand- shipfor graduate study in the academic RE 1-8141 ingteachers with opportunities for fur- year 1963-64.

38 Kitrick,BCom'59, to Lynda Frances '55, l.LB'56, a daughter,Jacqueline, Jane,February 13, 1963. 'in Vancou- Barton, in Vancouver. March 9, 1963, in Vancouver. ver. hlAYHEw-s1 ~VENSON. Barry Wayne May- h1R. and MRS.L. GERALD BELL, BASc'54, MR.and MRS. MICHAEL D. LESIK. BA'S6, hew,BA'60, to Pamela BelleSteven- MASc'S5, a son, MichaelThomas, (nee MARGARET ANN YOIJNG,8-4-59), son. in West Vancouver, December 7. Toronto,1962, in a daughter,Karin Ann Heather. Feb- h'lITCHELL-SEXTON. Ian DavidMitchell, Ontario. ruary I I, 1963, in Vancouver. BASc'59, to Ann-IdaSexton, in DR. andMRS. THEODORE E. CADELL. BA DR. and MRS. ROBIN G. MCCREERY. BA'SO, Montreal. Quebec. 'S7. MSc(Mass.),PhD(Wisc.), (nee a daughter,March 8, 1963,in Van- OFFENBERGER-PATI ERSON. Allan Anthony LOIS CARLEY,BA'S7), a daughter. Su- couver. Offenberger. BASc'62. Margaretto sanAnne. January 16, 1963, in De- MR. and hlRS. 10BY hlALKIN, BCom'56, Elizabeth Patterson, in Vancouver. troit,Michigan, U.S.A. (nee MARY FRANCES CIIOWN, B,4'5X), PEARCE-THAIN.George Ernest Pearce. hlR. and MRS. GORDON A. ELLIOTT, BCom a daughter.Sarah Mary. June 30, BEd'hI, to ChristineElena Thain, in '55, (nee PATRICIA CLAIRE MCCONVILLE. 1962. in Vancouver. Vancouver. BA'55). a son, BruceGordon, April MR. and MRS. JAMES F. MATl-SON, BSC RUTTLF-OGELSBY. JamesWilliam Ruttle 27; 1963. in Vancouver. '62. (nee JOYCE hl. WHITEHEAD. BA to IsabelWarwick Ogelsby, BPE'61, 1x1. and MRS.EDWARD W. FUN(;. BA'49, '61 ). a daughter, Alexandra Joan, Oc- inWindsor, Ontario. MD'S7, a daughter,Donna Lori. Feb- tober30, 1962. in Vancouver. ThSCHUK-E4CER. Steven Taschuh to Diana ruary 21,1963, in Vancouver. IX. and MRS. .JACK D. NEWBY, BA'49. ReddickEager. BLS'62, in Edmonton, DR. and MRS. PETER R. GRANTHAM, BA'54, [ID!$( McCill). a son. TimothyDean. Alberta. MD'58, (nkc MARY SCIIAFFER. BA'S7 ). December 24. 1962. in PrinceGeorge. WALLACE-ST.ZRK. CLIpt. WilliamClarke a son, RobertJames, April 28, 1963, MR.and MRS. MATTHEW OBERHOFER, HA Wallace. BA'56. to Frances Ann Starh. in Vancouver. '56,BEd(Altu.), (nee FLORENCE TUFF. in Port Credit, Ontario. hlR. and MRS. EDMUND Whl. HOWARD. RHt'53), a daughter.Elizabeth Ann. BSF'58, (nee PHYLLIS R. TIIOMPSON. January I. 1963. in Calgary.Alberta. BA.58). a son, ArthurDavid, March DR. and hlRS. ANDREW RADVANYI, B.4 and Births 24,1963, in St. John's, Newfoundland. MSc( McMaster).PhD'59, a daugh- IIH. and MRS. KENNETH G. ATKINSON, BA NR. and MRS.WILLIAhl F. IDSARDI,BA'48. ter.Ilona Louise. July 20. 1962. in '51, MD'SS. (nee LORA CELIA STOWELL, (nee DOROTHY MARION BELL, BA'49).a Edmonton,Alberta. BHE'S2),daughter.a Janet Louise, son. William James, February 8. 1963, REV.and MRS. EWING RAE, BSA'S4, (nee April 30. 1963,in Vancouver. in Cleveland. Ohio, U.S.A. LORNA SEED. BSN'60). a daughter, MR. and hlRS. GEORGE W. BALDWIN. BA MR. and MRS. MARVINLEROY .IUDD,BA' KathleenElizabeth, February 6. 1963. '50,LLH'51, (nee DAPHNE SYSON, BA 59. a son, Paul Andrew.February 28, in Nahusp. '50). a daughter, Elizabeth Marian Sy- 1963, inVancouver. DR.and MRS. ARCHIHALD I). YOUNG. HA son. February 21, 1963, in Prince m.and MRS. ALBERI M. KNUDSEN. BA'SO. '47. MD,CM(McGill). 21 son. Koss George. MD'S4, (nee PA-IRICIAKATHLEEN FUR- Cameron.February 9. 1963, in MR. and h1RS. .JACQUES R. BARBEAU. BA NISS, BA'S3 ), a daughter,Patricia Chilliwach. ______-_- n ."

A worthy membeYJoY yay team.

a a. the Sun Life representative

Yes, as an expert to help plan your estate, theSun Life representative can work closely with your lawyer, accountant and trust officer in providing you with the best possible advice. To preserve your assets, your estate will need dollars immediatelyavailable to meetdeath taxesand last illnessexpenses. Sun Life can provide such dollars. g For more than ninety years, Sun Life of Canada's representatives have provided security to untold numbers of men, women and children in time of need. With$10 billion of life insurance inforce representing three million individual policiesand group certificates, and with 140 branch offices in North America, Sun Life offers policy contracts thatare modern and up-to-date inkeeping with the changing times in which we live.

SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA

A MUTUALCOMPANY

39 Deaths 1916 by a fallingtree in MarinCounty. while had slammed into the side of a mountain lhomas J. Robertson, BA.died April clearingland for asummer home. He 125miles north of BurnsLake. They I. 1963. in Ladner,ten days after his was 55. He is survived by his wife, a son. were on acaribou and moose counting retirementfrom the board of dircctors Peter,and two grandsons. all in Cali- trip for the Game Department. Mr. Hart- of theFraser Valley Milk Producers’ fornia.and a sister, Mrs. D. C. Coates. manleaves awife and one child. He Association. He was70. Born andedu- in B.C. was 3 1. cated in EastDelta. he was Deltaa Mr.Donley joined Standard Oil of 1962 municipal councillor for eight years. sec- California in 1943 afterworking for 10 Helena Marian Lethbridge, BEd.who retary of theFVMPA East Delta Local yearsfor the Federal Reserve Bank in had been teaching in Prince George, died foreight years and chairman of the SanFrancisco. In 1952. while on loan in hersleep March 30, 1963.She at- DeltaAdvisory Planning Commission at fromStandard. he served as director of tendedschools in North Battleford, Sas- the time of his death. From 1944 to 1955 the programme division of the Petroleum hatchewan.At UBC she won the first he waspresident of the Mutual Fire In- Administration for Defense in Washing- award of theHon. W. C. Woodward suranceCompany of B.C. ton. D.C. He was manager of Standard’s memorial scholarship and successive B.C. Mr.Robertson leaves his wife and economicdivision atthe time of his government scholarships. graduating with son Thomas in Ladner, and another son. death. honours last May. J. KeithRobertson. BSF’58, in Nakusp. 193 I 1918 RobertVictor Masterson, BA, former r Are You WellFed? Well Clothed? Mrs. R. B. Spears, BA, nte Dorothea Cowichanhigh school teacher. where he Well Housed? Rolton, diedsuddenly October 4. 1962. taught for 12 years.died January 21. Will you help us to help those who in Vancouver.Born in 1897Portat 1963, in NorthSurrey. At the time of are not? Simpsonwhere her fatherwas medical hisdeath he was clerk of sessionand For ot,cr 50 Yeors Central missionaryto the Indians. Mrs. Spears superintendent of theSunday school in City Mission has served had a lifelonginterest in missionary NorthSurrey United Church. Born in Vancorwrr’s Skid Row. worh.She was secretary of B.C. Confer- Ireland 58 yearsage. he came to New Pleaseconsider the Mission when ence(United Church) committee on In- Westminster at the age of 12. He is sur- advising on bequests,making char- dianwork. and was specially concerned vived by hiswife, two sons. andthree itabledonations, discarding asuit aboutmembers of theMusqueam rc- daughters,all residing in NorthSurrey. or a pair of shoes. herve. 1933 CENTRAL CITY MISSION She is survived by herhusband: a Wilbert BrockhouseSmith, BASc. 233 Abbott St. MU 1-4439 stepdaughter.Hazel. Mrs. R. F. Mor- MASc’34. died in Ottawa on December rison, BA‘43. of Rossland; and her daugh- 27, 1962,after a lengthyillness. He terHeather. now Mrs. Leonard Golden- leaves a wife,two sons anda daughter, berg. BA’56. in Denmark. all ofOttawa. USED BOOKS 1927 Mr. Smith, who was superintendent of Mrs. Ralph M. Brown, BA. nie Madge radio regulations engineering for the De- BOUGHT Rankin, diedsuddenly athome on May partment of Transport. was horn in Leth- *** 6. 1963.She came to Vancouver as a bridge,and before going to Ottawa in Collections childfrom England and was educated at 1939 waschief engineer with radio sta- CroftonHouse school. She was a leader tion CJOR inVancouver. He is credited Appraised in many civicand community projects withdoing much to encourage improve- *** and one-time president of the Vancouver ments in the technical side of broadcast- TEXT BOOKS JuniorLeague. ingand was active in negotiations of At the 1927 class reunion last Novem- various international radio and TV agree- ber.Madge Brown wrote the script and ments.He was 52. with JackShakespeare staged a skit on 1953 BUSY “B” BOOK the “Roaring 20’s”. ManlyMorton Cohen, BCom,was Herhusband. Ralph. BA’3 1. survives killedMontrealina car accident in with four sons, RalphR. Brown. BCom STORE March.Mr. Cohen, who was golda 517 W. Pender 681-4931 ’59,Alan C.MacK. Brown. BASc’59. medalist in accountancy in 1958, moved L now atOxford. Peter M. Brown, in his to Montreal two years ago and had been thirdyear of artsat UBC. and Bobbie. with a firm of charteredaccountants athome. there. PITMANBUSINESS 1928 1956 WilfredGeorge Donley, BA. PhD Fay Herbert Hartman, BSF, was found COLLEGE (Calif.), of PaloAlto. California, was deadwith his pilot in thewreckage of “Vancouver’sLeading killedinstantly this spring when struck theirlight plane in February.The plane I BusinessCollege” Secretarial Training, Write or Phone Text Stenography, THE UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE Accounting, Dictaphone Vancouver 8, B.C. CA stle 4-1 111 Trade Typewriting, Comptometer whenever you need Medical Individual Instruction 1 ENROL AT ANY TIME TechnicaI Broadway and Granville VANCOUVER 9, B.C. Hard Back ‘1 Telephone: RE gent 8-7848 Paper 1 MRS. A. S. KANCS,P.C.T., G.C.T. BOOKS Back PRINCIPAL 40 MONTREAL TRUST COMPANY

“A Company that Cares for your Aflairs”

SERVICES TO INDIVIDUALS AND CORPORATIONS

Executors 8 Trustees

Employee Pension Funds

Endowment Funds

Savings Accounts

466 Howe Street MU 5-6311 Vancouver 1, B.C. OakridgeShopping Centre AM 1-6374

J. N. Bell-Asst. Gen. Manager G. A. Brebner-Manager

ATROPOS

41 U.B.C. Alumni Association Directory

HONORARY PRtblDEN I John H. Mncdonald. I>DS(Tor.).Mi(lllinois), PhD(Columhia), AM(Harvartl1 President 01 thc Unlvcrsiiy of Britlsh C‘ol~~mh~a Board of Management

11e.yrec RcpreJelr/ocl~,c.\’A(;BICUI I URE-Dr. Kich- h1,clfIil’e ~~Olll~lli/l~~~.I’RESIDEN I- Pall1 s. Plant, SENATE REPRESENTATIVES-Nathan T. Nemetz. ard Stace-Smith, HSA’50: APPLIED SCIENCE-Ter- HA’4Y. PSI PREslDENl-Franklin E. Walden. Q.C., BA’34; Mark Collins, BA,BCom’34; Dono- I3C‘om’iX. C‘A; FIRSI VI(.E-PRE\IDENI-D.M. rencc G. Lynch, BASc’SI; AR(.HlTEClURE-ROn- van F. Miller, BCom’47. ;dd S. L. I3rous\on. BASc’4Y: SECOND VICE-PIIESIDENI- Nairne, BA’47, BArch’51: ARTS-Mrs. Douglas Hayward. RA’41, MA(Wea1.Reserve): Mrs. Llavid C. Ellis, BA’36; IHIRD VICE-I’RESIDEN1 RegionalRepresentaliyes: OKANAGAN MAINLINE ~~lhlhlrRr~--KenncthMartin, BCom‘46; EDUCA- FRASER VALLEY-”1% ~ Kodcrlck W. Mecdonald, LLB’50; I~E~SURER- -Dr. E. M. Stevenson: H Frederick MEMBERS-AT- I ~n~--StanlevEvans. BA’41. BEd’44: FORESTRY G. E. W.Clarke, BA’22; VANCOUVER ISLAN+ Field, BA,BCom’40: -.Wlllihm -Sharpr, BA’51. BSF’52; HOME I \ubt (Terms rxplrc lY64)”Mrs. Kcnneth M. c. John K. C‘aldwell. BA‘48.LLB’4Y. Walley. BA’46; Grant K. Doneyanl. BSA‘41; Art t“I. PORTLAND. OREGON-Dr. David B. Charlton, BA- NAKusP-Donald Waterfield. MEDICINE HAT-Harry H. YUill, BCom’59, 473 ’25, 2340 JeffersonStreet, P.O. Box 1048. NELSON-Leo S. Gansner. BA,BCom’35, C/O FirstStreet, S.E. SEATTLE, WAsHINcloN-Daniel M.Young, BA Garland. Gansner & Arlidge, Box 490. MONTREAL,P.Q.-Lloyd Hobden, BA‘31, MA- ’52, 5143 N.E. 54th Street,Seattle 5. RIONDEL-Herman Nielsen, BOX 75. ‘40,28 ArlingtonAvenue, Westmount, Mon- SPOKANE, WASHINOTON-Don w. Hammersley, ROSSLAND-A. F. Brooks, BOX 351. treal 6. BCom’46. 212 Symmons Building. SALM-Dr. R. S. Smith. UNITED NATIONS-Arthur H. Sager, BA’38, cio OTTAWA, 0NTARIo”ThOmaS E. Jackson, BA’37, UnitedNations. P.O. Box 20. GrandCentral 516 GoldenAvenue, Highland Park Drive, P.O., New York 17, New York. Other B.C. Contacts Ottawa 3. ASHCROFT-Gordon H. S. Parke, BSA’52, Bona- PETERBOROUGH,ONTARIO-R. A. Hamilton, BA- Other Coun[ries parteRanch. Cache Creek. Sc’36, 640 WalkerfieldAvenue. BeLLACOOLA-Milton C.Sheppard, BA’53, BEd- ISRAEL-Arthur H.Goldberg, BA’48, P.O. BOX ’54 Rnr 1 SASKATOON,SASKATCHEWAN-Dr. J.Pepper, BA- 1713, Haifa. BRA&iildharlesM. Campbell, BA,BASc’38, 39, MA’41, Dept. of Chemistry,University JAPAN-Takashi Kiuchi, MA’60. 13.6-Chome, Manager.Bralorne Mines. of Saskatchewan. Tipura-machi. Azabu. Mlnat-Ku. Tokvo. I)&\\SON (.REEK-Mr. Roger F. Fox. BA’51.9312 - WBLLAND,0NTARIo“CharkS Connaghan, BA’59. SUDAN-Allan C. Brooks, BA’48, C/O UNTAB. Xth Street MA’60, Box 238, Fonthill. P.O. Box913, Khartoum.Sudan.

42 Bank of Commerce announces a special long-term EDUCATION LOAN The reason so many people are denied higher edu- through a flexible system of low monthly instalments cation is quite often a financial one. We at the Bank over a period up to eight years. of Commerce realize that thecost of attending Uni- This Education Loan Planis a tangible expression versity has increased sharply over the pastfew years.. . of an earnest desire to help your child’s future-made WE ARE To THE lNCEPTloNOF THE possibleby theBankof Commerce, the bankthat builds. BANK OF COMMERCE EDUCATION LOAN. This new plan al- lows you to borrow up to 80% of the cost of your FREE BOOKLET: For complete information, call in at child’s higher education-including tuition, books, your nearest Commerce branch for the booklet “Edu- living and travel expenses to a maximum of $8,000. cation Loan Plan”-or write Uept. U7, 640 W. It is not an ordinary loan. Repayments are arranged Hastings St., Vancouver 2, B.C. CANADIAN IMPERIAL nmmm BANK OF COMMERCE m- ., Over 1260 branches to serve you Return PostageGuaranteed

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