overview cont.
SS ee eee

Heights United Chureh and of course
evening academic classes have been
offered at Squamish since September
1969.

From 1968 onwards the college was
looking for a permanent campus.
Finally, in late 1972, after months and
months of meetings, discussions,
editorials and even cartoons the ground
was broken for the Lynnmour Campus
and in September 1973 registration was
held and classes began at Lynnmour.
Gradually the portables were moved
from West Vancouver and the present
South Campus began to take shape. In
1975 the North Campus complex was
constructed and today, ten years after,
Capilano College is a physical entity ina
setting of beauty with trees and
undergrowth near to the classrooms.

I would like to close this overview of the
past ten years at Capilano College by
naming some of the people who
pioneered the growth of the college,
either by their expertise, their hard work
or their continuing enthusiasm: I mix
faculty, administrators, staff in one big
mix:

Shiela Stewart (the very first secretary)
Bill Schermbrucker, Les Brookes, Isabel
Steward, Rosemary Murchisan, Jan Bain,
Ian Buck, Sheila Fletcher, Pat Gallaher,
Del Affleck, Alex Douglas-Burns,
Conchita Furstenwald, Hilary Clark, Joy
Smith, Bill Zienty, Harold Kirchner, Jim
MeDonald, Sue Carter, Lil McDonell,
Barbara Hankin, Terry Donovan, Sue
Hatelt, and then some of the students
who became staff and faculty members:

Ted Clarke, Melody Hucal, Fred Hoeflok,
Sheila Perret, Kerry Holloway, Muriel
Booth, Peter Kellington, Karen Waugh
and Elliot Yehia.

Ten years can be a long time, but it can
also be a short and happy time if the
result is something to be proud of - the
time has been short and we are proud. $$

22

Coffeebreak for some Library staffers in
August 1967, just before Lynmmour opened.

te *

Looking east through present Library area
in early 1973 at first Lynnmour building.

Not a swimming pool, but the pit of the
Cafetheatre under very wet construction.