Farewell Message from University Librarian Dr. Susan E. Parker

A headshot photo of a woman with short blond hair wearing a pink shirt and navy blazer, against a greenery background, with text reading "Message from the University Librarian Dr. Susan E. Parker"

On June 24, 2026, UBC Library came together to celebrate Dr. Susan E. Parker’s retirement and honour her nine years of leadership as the University Librarian.

At a reception held at Cecil Green Park House, Susan spent time with colleagues and friends, reflecting on the many milestones from her long career in academia and sharing memories of her time at UBC Library. Excerpts from her address at that event are included below, along with her fond farewell to the UBC community.

 


 

I started my career 46 years ago, in 1980, when I graduated library school. As a librarian, I have had the privilege to stand at the forefront of our changing information landscape for almost 50 years.

I was trained on card catalogues, print indexes, and searches coded on punch cards. It was a world where your computer was hardwired to a central database; reference requests required courier deliveries between libraries; and sometimes you simply needed to know who to call at which institution for a specific knowledgebase.

But libraries have always been among the first organizations to adopt new technology.

I saw the shift from print indexes to the relatively futuristic use of DOS, WordPerfect and DIALOG. At the time, academic search methods were highly specialized, often expensive, and centered librarian expertise.

“As a librarian, I have had the privilege to stand at the forefront of our changing information landscape for almost 50 years.”

Then the widespread use of the internet pushed us forward again. The ability to search became more democratic, and many people believed Google would be the end of librarians as intermediaries altogether.

Photos from various UBC Library events over the years.

But those of us in this profession know that librarians are still intermediaries. In fact, the need for information literacy makes our work more important than ever.

With the dawn of AI, we are at a turning point again; another moment of evolution. Librarians are well positioned to provide the guidance needed for this moment. Our licensing and copyright expertise is more critical than ever for untangling ownership, as is our ability to determine provenance, and archive materials in the face of digital precarity.

Photos from the UBC Undergraduate Prize in Library Research reception ceremonies.

Having seen librarianship through the past 50 years, my vision for our future is the same as what it was in our past: we must be a source of truth; determine what is true and reputable; preserve what exists for the future; and help others find, interpret and use information and technology.

Amid all this change, my years at UBC were a deeply rewarding way to cap off a long career. From developing UBC Library’s Strategic Framework to opening new spaces like the Chung | Lind Gallery and even spearheading an undergraduate research prize, my time at UBC was varied and exciting.

From top left, clockwise: UBC Library employees engaged in group discussion; Dr. Parker in her office; viewing the Shakespeare First Folio as it arrives at UBC; Dr. Parker reading a letter from a UBC alum who returned a book after 64 years.

This work is only made possible through the incredible partnership of hundreds of people working across UBC Library. I also could not have done it without the support of UBC leadership and a strong collective of peers at research libraries across Canada. Thank you for all of your remarkable collaboration over the last nine years.

“UBC Library will continue to evolve, but it’s the same work it has always been; it’s really just the tools that change.”

I am optimistic about the future of UBC Library, and I wish all of the best to both University Librarian pro tem Julie Mitchell and incoming University Librarian Dr. Dale Askey in their continued leadership of the library’s next chapter.

UBC Library will continue to evolve, but it’s the same work it has always been; it’s really just the tools that change.

Sincerely,
Susan E. Parker

Rice: Far more than a simple grain – New display at the Asian Library

How often do you eat rice in your meals? If you asked people from Asian cultures this question, many would likely say, “Countless times!” In East Asian and South Asian cultures, rice represents far more than a simple grain, deeply influencing people’s lives and traditions both in the past and today. This display features books […]

Crane Library Part 2: Accessibility, Technology, and Innovation

This week we are building on our previous post about the Crane Library, UBC’s special library for the blind, and jumping back into Open Collections to highlight various fascinating technologies blind and deafblind students used in the library before modern digital tools.

Content Warning: This blog post features items that may contain outdated, ableist, and derogatory language about blind, deaf and disabled people.

This post is part of a short blog series inspired by National AccessAbility Week 2026, which seeks to raise awareness around the importance of accessibility in Canada, and National Deafblind Awareness month which seeks to draw attention to deafblindness this June.

Read our first post on the Crane Library here!

New Technologies for the Blind in the Crane Library

At its peak service levels in the 1970s and 1980s, the Crane Library saw the introduction of many creative new technologies for the blind, some of which were developed by UBC students, professors, or alumni.

The “Talking” Typewriter

One of the earliest UBC inventions that found its way to the Crane Library was a “talking typewriter” developed by UBC Professor of Engineering, Michael Beddoes, and his team in 1973.

Michael Beddoes with Judith Thiele and “talking” typewriter
for the blind, 1973, UBC Archives Photograph Collection

The functionality of the typewriter is described this way in the March 15, 1973 issue of UBC Reports.

(Click to Zoom) UBC Reports, March 15, 1973

The OPTACON

In 1975, the Crane Library was donated funds to obtain a groundbreaking new tool for the blind called the OPTACON, which allowed users to translate scanned text into tactile sensations.

(Click to Zoom) “Optacon provides tactile eye,” Aldergrove Star, February 11, 1976, p.18.

The OPTACON was groundbreaking for the time, but required significant time and training to use.

CCTV Enhancement Screens

The Crane Library’s dedicated reading room had special cameras and closed-circuit TV screens that allowed students to “zoom” in on small text.

Student using CCTV screen and a camera to read a
document, 1982, UBC Archives Photo Collection

Van Schyndel Voice Indexer

In the 1980s, the Crane Library also started exploring innovative solutions for audio recordings. As discussed in our previous post, the library created  “talking books” for blind students, but it was hard for listeners to find specific sections or page numbers in a recording.

Paul Thiele, Crane librarian listening to a recorded
tape, 1976, UBC Archives Photograph Collection

In 1982, a UBC PhD physics student named Andre Van Schyndel came up with an innovative solution called the “Van Schyndel Voice Indexer”. The indexer worked by encoding additional audio on the tape that was only audible when the tape was fast-forwarded or rewound. The following news article explains how it worked:

Kurzweil Reading Machine

In 1982, the Crane Library was gifted a KRM III Kurzweil Reading Machine, a cutting-edge piece of technology that employed the first use of commercial text-to-speech technology for the blind.

The Kurzweil machine was outfitted with a flatbed scanner that would capture the image, OCR the text, and then read the resulting words out loud in a mechanical voice.

DAISY (Digital Accessible Information System)

Finally, in 1997, the Crane Library received the trial version of the cutting-edge DAISY/Plextalk book indexing system which was meant to fulfil a similar function to the Van Schyndel Voice Indexer. This was a sign of the oncoming shift to digital audio formats for the blind and an improved version of the DAISY system is still used in libraries to this day.

Hiroshi Kawamura from the University of Tokyo installing the
DAISY talking book indexing system in the Crane Library,
1997, UBC Archives Photograph Collection.

We hope you enjoyed our trip through some of the fascinating technology behind the Crane Library!

Related Blog Posts

Recommended Reading

Explore cIRcle: Undergraduate Research Projects in Environmental Science

Photo of inside Pacific Spirit Park, looking up into the trees

UBC Pacific Spirit Park © Philip Jeffrey CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

ENVR 400 Community Project in Environmental Science is a project-based course in UBC’s Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric sciences. This course gives students the opportunity to work hands-on with community organizations on an environmental science project, gaining collaborative field experience and producing valuable research reports.

Since 2010, cIRcle has been receiving student projects from this course with topics that range across BC! The first deposited project was Waste Solutions for Metro Vancouver and it explored possible new waste management systems and how to improve the existing systems, all while making sure to maintain good human health in Vancouver.

Explore ENVR 400 student projects

More recent student projects have focused on different parts of Vancouver. Over by Stanley Park, the Water Quality Analysis of Lost Lagoon and Associated Biofiltration Ponds at Stanley Park took a look at the water quality and efficiency of biofiltration ponds in this area. Discussion focused on the various factors that negatively affect these ponds, and the report’s findings help contribute towards possible solutions for conserving and sustaining Stanley Park’s environment.

Vancouver’s diverse bat population has been facing habitat issues, and the project Vancouver’s Batscape : Enhancing Urban Habitats for Our Winged Neighbours helped the City of Vancouver identify ways to optimally coexist with Vancouver bat species and support bat biodiversity. Observations identified various Vancouver parks that had appropriate plant species to be a suitable habitat.

Although we’re moving into sunnier and warmer months, if you prefer rainy Vancouver, then give Rain Down the Drain : UBC Vancouver Green Rainwater Infrastructure Performance Monitoring and Future Weather Event Modelling a read. This report offers recommendations for Vancouver to better manage stormwater from an evaluation of green rainwater infrastructure on UBC’s Point Grey Campus, such as the Campus Energy Centre rain gardens.

Looking beyond urban Vancouver, the report Seeking shellfish harvesting safety, security, and sovereignty : Trends in Environmental variables, biotoxins, and shellfish harvesting closure instigations in coastal First Nations Territories in British Columbia examines relationships between the closures of climatic shellfish harvesting areas in four BC First Nations Territories, Canadian government organizations, and environmental factors like marine biotoxins to identify trends. This report is a part of the We All Take Care of the Harvest (WATCH) Project by the First Nations Health Authority.

Faculty champions for cIRcle

Undergraduate deposits to cIRcle require the support and approval of a UBC faculty member. Dr. Tara Ivanochko, along with Dr. Sara Harris, are longstanding instructors of ENVR 400, with both having subject interests in climate and environmental science, as well as geoscience education. Both have strongly championed cIRcle by encouraging more than a decade’s worth of ENVR 400 students to deposit their projects. This successful collaboration has seen nearly 120 projects added to cIRcle from ENVR 400 students.

Dr. Ivanochko has been involved in various UBC initiatives such as sustainability strategic planning and curriculum improvement for the Environmental Science program, and was recently appointed to a new role, Associate Vice-Provost, Teaching and Learning. Her new role will continue to demonstrate her passion and support for environmental science education. Congratulations, Dr. Ivanochko!

Deposit your work in cIRcle

You don’t have to be an ENVR 400 student to deposit your work in cIRcle! If you’re a UBC faculty, researcher, staff member, graduate or undergraduate student with an interest in submitting your work, check out the kinds of content accepted in cIRcle on our submissions page. Alternatively, if you have questions or would like more information, please go to our contact us page.

Further reading

Environmental Sciences. UBC Academic Calendar. Accessed June 4th, 2026.

Undergraduate Projects. Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences. Accessed June 4th, 2026.

Podcast: F is for Faculty – Dr. Tara Ivanochko. UBC Sustainability. Accessed June 4th, 2026.

On the Origin of Scientists: Dr. Sara Harris teaches climate change differently. The Ubyssey. Accessed June 4th, 2026.

 

 

 

 

 

 

New Books at the Law Library – 26/06/23

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KE3109 .D66 2024
D.J. Doorey, The Law of Work, 3rd ed (Emond Montgomery Publications Limited, 2024).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KF250 .S537 2024
A.M. Sinsheimer et al, Legal Writing, a Contemporary Approach, 3rd ed (West Academic, 2024).

2026 UBC Library Recognition Award and Professional Development Award recipients announced

Six proud Library employees show off their awards from the 2026 Library Recognition Awards, as well as the Professional Development Awards and Innovation Grants.

Elena Pederson, Angappa Reddy and Kyra Wheatley are the 2026 recipients of UBC Library Recognition Awards. Each year, the Library Recognition Awards celebrate faculty and staff who demonstrate exceptional creativity, innovation, leadership, excellence and a dedication to customer service through their work.

Allan Cho, Edlyn Lim, Nataliya Radke, Jeff Stonehouse and Isabel Zhang also received 2026 Professional Development Awards in the names of Diana Lukin Johnston (Cho and Radke) and Suzanne Dodson (Lim, Stonehouse, Zhang).

Projects led by Sarbjit Randhawa and Jing Liu were also announced as the winners of the 2026 UBC Library Innovation Grants, as determined by a vote of UBC Library employees.

University Librarian Susan Parker presented the awards during the 2026 UBC Library Summer Recognition Awards Luncheon, held on June 17.

Congratulations to this year’s recipients, and thank you to those who nominated their peers for the awards.

Leadership from Within: Kyra Wheatley

Kyra Wheatley is a recipient of the 2026 Leadership from Within Award, which recognizes library employees who demonstrate leadership through their ability to inspire engagement in others, and who go above and beyond for the betterment of their workplace.

Kyra was recognized as the “proactive heart” of the David Lam Library at the Sauder School of Business, often demonstrating leadership regardless of job title. Kyra bridges operational duties with library and community team building, leading sustainability and health initiatives as well as inclusivity programming, and mentoring student employees on projects that grow the students’ confidence and capabilities in library operations. Furthermore, all of this is done while Kyra is pursuing full-time MLIS studies in addition to her role at the library.

Unsung Hero: Elena Pederson, Angappa Reddy

Elena Pederson and Angappy Reddy both received a 2026 Unsung Hero Award, which honours colleagues who keep UBC Library’s programs, services, and infrastructure running. When they do their jobs well, their work is seamless and often goes unnoticed.

For more than 25 years, Elena Pederson (Publications and Web Services Assistant, Education, Walter C. Koerner Library) has been a dedicated, collaborative, and creative member of UBC Library and has been serving the Education community with proficiency and a steadfast commitment to strong public service. In receiving this award, Elena was recognized for her vital role in ensuring that the Education collections and services remain strong, adaptable, and accessible to users amid the collection’s ongoing relocation to Koerner Library.

In receiving this award, Angappa Reddy (ASRS/PARC Assistant, Collection Services) was recognized for quiet excellence, reliability and commitment throughout his 21 years of service with UBC Library—often behind the scenes at the Automated Storage and Retrieval Service (ASRS) and PARC, the preservation and archives building. Angappa is known not only for his technical skill and strong work ethic, but also the care he brings to the workplace community.

Diana Lukin Johnston Professional Development Award: Allan Cho, Nataliya Radke

The Diana Lukin Johnston Award supports professional development opportunities for librarians, which furthers their internal capacity to grow, explore and flourish.

Allan Cho (Community Engagement Librarian, Irving K. Barber Learning Centre) will complete Trauma-Informed and Relational Care for Libraries, a course that addresses the growing need within the profession to integrate trauma-informed approaches into everyday library practice in ways that are sustainable and grounded in the realities of library work.

Nataliya Radke (Processing Archivist, Rare Books and Special Collections) will complete a course on Canadian copyright law to complement her work with the university archives, and plans to later complete a certificate on the subject.

Suzanne Dodson Professional Development Award: Edlyn Lim, Jeff Stonehouse, Isabel Zhang

The Suzanne Dodson Award encourages Library Assistants to be at the top of their game and provides professional development funds to support those who demonstrate a commitment to their profession.

Edlyn Lim (Serials and eResource Assistant, Collections Services, Woodward Library) was able to attend the Canadian Health Libraries Association Conference where she co-presented about her ongoing study, Impact of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia Library Closure: A Qualitative Study.

Jeff Stonehouse (Library Services Assistant, UBC Okanagan Library) plans to attend the International Federation of Library Associations (IFLA) 2026 World Library and Information Congress in Busan, Republic of Korea, this August. While there, he hopes to learn more about artificial intelligence, coping with change, and emerging technologies in academic libraries.

This award will also support Isabel Zhang (Cataloguing and Metadata Assistant; Technology, Discovery and User Experience Team; Asian Library) to participate in an in-person intensive workshop this summer, at the Richard C. Rudolph East Asian Library at the University of California–Los Angeles (UCLA), where Isabel will enhance her learning in advanced descriptive metadata and knowledge sharing of Chinese rare materials.

Innovation Grants

Administered by the Exceptional Workplace Team and with winners determined by a library-wide vote, the UBC Library Innovation Grants support the exploration of new initiatives and encourage new ideas.

Runner-up: Calligraphy Workshops, led by Sarbjit Randhawa, South Asian and Himalayan Studies Librarian, Asian Library

The calligraphy workshop series will present the opportunity for participants to learn about the history and practice of calligraphy in diverse cultural contexts, including South Asian style, while offering the opportunity to observe and learn from an expert. The project expands beyond Islamic scripts to analyze the distinct calligraphic traditions of Punjabi and Hindi languages.

Winner: Hakka Living Library, led by Jing Liu, Chinese Language Librarian, Asian Library

The Hakka Living Library will be a community-engaged event that explores the diasporic cultures of Hakka (a Chinese ethnic and language group) through performance, conversation and collective storytelling. Participants will engage with a live kirin dance, panel discussion and interactive stations designed to gather memories, materials and perspectives from diverse audiences.

Meet Avni Kant, recipient of the UBC Undergraduate Prize in Library Research

About the prize

The UBC Undergraduate Prize in Library Research is a way to showcase students’ effective and innovative use of library services, information experts and resources provided by the UBC Library. Applications for these prizes also provide students with an opportunity to reflect on their information-seeking experience, showcase their research beyond the classroom, and promote scholarship excellence at the undergraduate level at the University of British Columbia.

The Prize was established by UBC Library to encourage more and deeper use of its resources and collections, to advance information literacy at UBC, and to promote academic excellence at UBC.


Project title: Accessing Empire: Puck Magazine and the Making of a ‘Benevolent’ Conquest of the Philippines

Q: Could you tell us a little bit about your project?

Originally submitted for a history majors seminar on histories of the U.S. Empire, my project examines the contributions of Puck (1876-1918), an American satirical magazine, in normalizing U.S. empire during the Philippine-American War (1898-1902). This seminar delved deep into “informal empire,” and I specifically wanted to explore and argue how the process of embedding imperial ideology into popular visual culture paved way for normalization. For me to convey how Puck was able to translate imperial thinking into a familiar, digestible, and culturally acceptable phenomenon, my research required heavy engagement with visual archives, interdisciplinary scholarship, and selective methodology. The UBC Library’s research guides, databases, and digital archival access were central for both, the content of my paper and the way I conceptualized the historical evidence.

Q: What does winning this prize mean to you?

I am incredibly grateful! I would love to thank Dr. Roosa and his classes that I have taken. With his guidance, I have been able to continue examining and analyzing “informal” modes of knowledge and systemic power structures, especially through images and materiality (my favourites!). As a someone who aims to prioritize “non-traditional” methods of record keeping and learning, winning this prize is incredibly validating to the ways that I – and many others – have been brought up and keep culture, histories, and day-to-day education alive.

I would also like to thank UBC Library for offering me this prize – knowing my research process, I spend a lot more time going through books, films, magazines and clicking through tabs to understand archival content than I do writing. Amidst all excitement from the digitized material and downloaded PDFs, I was also writing this project while traveling for my honours thesis research with a heavy schedule, so having access to the many resources (especially those of the Library of Congress) via the library had been crucial for its completion.

Q: What are your plans for the future?

For the immediate future, I am gearing up to begin writing my honours thesis in the fall once I complete my final co-op term in August. Although my thesis strays from the temporal and geographic scope of this project, it follows in its footsteps as I similarly look to understand and then reframe colonial representations of courtly women in early modern South Asia. Doing this project was a great way for me to remain connected to the nuances and layers within colonial publications and the roles their language, visual imagery, and dissemination played in exerting power.

Aside from that, I am also applying to graduate programs in the winter. Since my time here at UBC, I have been on research trips, volunteered at local archives, and now, through winning this prize, I have been able to locate a vocation toward archival institutions and libraries systems that I would like to pursue.

Q: Do you have a favourite research spot at UBC Library?

I’ve always had two that I particularly loved – the Education Library, and the Asian Library. I have spent a lot of early mornings at both throughout my undergraduate degree. You’re almost always able to get a spot! Seating aside though, I thoroughly enjoyed being at those two libraries since they had such a beautiful combination of nature and media that I could access not only to inspire my studies, but also to take a breather, relax, and reconnect with learning through a lens of enjoyment.


Xwi7xwa Archives joins UBC’s archival research database

A closeup photo of a hand flipping through a photo album of black and white archival photos.

Xwi7x̱wa Archives has joined Explore Archives at UBC, an online archival database created by UBC Library and UBC Okanagan (UBCO) Library to help researchers search through the university’s complete archival holdings. Explore Archives includes detailed records of the collections housed at the library’s archival repositories, including UBC Archives, Rare Books and Special Collections, UBC Okanagan Special Collections and Archives, and X̱wi7x̱wa Archives.

As the newest member of the online archival network, Xwi7x̱wa Archives added its first two collections to Explore Archives in March. The first collection, the Verna J. Kirkness Fonds, chronicles the career of Dr. Verna J. Kirkness, associate professor emeritus at UBC and a renowned educator and Indigenous education advocate. The Original People’s Library Association Fonds was added soon after and consists of textual records, photographs and audio cassettes that document the founding and operation of the Original People’s Library Association during the 1970s to 1980s.

Xwi7xwa Library has housed extensive collections of archival materials for many years, which chronicle the history of the branch, the First Nations House of Learning and numerous Indigenous programs, communities, organizations and individuals, both at UBC and beyond. But until this year, Xwi7xwa Archives’ collections had not been included in Explore Archives as the extensive work needed to process the materials for inclusion required a dedicated archivist.

“The Verna J. Kirkness Fonds is the first archive that we’ve put up on UBC’s Explore Archives database,” says Jesse Carson, Xwi7xwa Archivist, who started his work on the fonds in 2025, soon after joining Xwi7xwa Library as its first full-time archivist, for a three-year term.

“Verna’s materials were the first ones that I reprocessed and created a new finding aid,” says Carson. “Now these materials will show up as part of [UBC’s archival] research ecosystem, making them more accessible.”

An archival finding aid describes the history of a collection and how its materials have been physically arranged within the archive, which can help future researchers navigate the collection’s lengthy inventory list.

“I am so proud of the work Jesse has been doing to make our archives accessible,” says Kayla Lar-Son, Head of X̱wi7x̱wa Library and Interim Assistant Director, Community Engagement, Irving K. Barber Learning Center. “Having both the Verna J. Kirkness Fonds and The Original People’s Library Association Fonds as the first collections added to the online database highlights important people like Verna and Xwi7xwa founding librarian Gene Joseph, and organizations that have uplifted Xwi7xwa library since our beginning.”

View Explore Archives at UBC

Celebrating 100 Years of UBC at Point Grey exhibition extended until December 2026

Glass display case with archival documents, a metal jug, and an baseball hat.

Celebrating 100 Years of UBC at Point Grey, the exhibition that showcases artifacts from every decade of UBC’s 100 years at Point Grey, has been extended once again. View it until December 31, 2026, at the Robert H. Lee Alumni Centre.

The exhibition first launched on September 8, 2025, to recognize UBC’s move to its permanent campus location at Point Grey in 1925. UBC Library hosted a commemorative opening event later that week, which drew faculty, students, alumni and many other distinguished guests.

Presented by UBC Library in collaboration with the UBC Alma Mater Societythe Office of the Provostthe Museum of Anthropology, and the Robert H. Lee Alumni Centre, the exhibition showcases artifacts from every decade of UBC’s 100 years at the Point Grey campus.

Celebrating 100 Years of UBC at Point Grey aims to explore the UBC student experience at Point Grey. This immersive visual exhibit combines artifacts, photography and video interviews with alumni to show how student life and the University has changed, developed and diversified through the decades.

Learn more about this exhibition.

«Emigrante» Italian Migrant Stories: Memories and Secrets around the Table  

We are excited to announce that the UBC Digitization Centre has digitized the Italian-language book «Emigrante» which is now available in UBC Open Collections.

This pocket-sized book, written in Italian and Italian dialects, had a print run of just 300 copies in 1985. Today, only a few known copies remain, including those held by The Italian Cultural Centre Library and the Vancouver Public Library. Some copies may also exist in private homes, kept by the families of those who shared their stories. Most of the original books were destroyed during a basement flood in the late 1980s, making the surviving copies all the more valuable. The Digitization Centre has made this book available as an important educational resource for historical research, giving voice to a past generation of Italian immigrants in Canada.

«Emigrante» is a collection of oral histories and traditional recipes from the home written by Italian immigrants in Vancouver and across British Columbia. It captures the challenges faced by early immigrants in pre-multicultural Canada, while also highlighting their resilience, determination and hope. These firsthand narratives, spanning from the late 1940s to the early 1980s, provide unique insights into working conditions, social interactions and family relationships within Vancouver’s Italian community. They also offer a snapshot of pioneer life in the interior of BC and touch on significant historical events, such as the displacement of Cominco smelter workers and the Renata inhabitants in the Kootenays.

See below for a selection of photos from the book.

June 1985 : a large group of members of the “Senior Citizens Association – Club Over 50” on a social outing to Peach Arch Park, White Rock, B.C.
Top photo: Gabriele Iacobucci, his wife Rosina, and their son Danny (1931).
Bottom photo: Gabriele and Rosina Iacobucci with their children Danny and Tricia (1934).
Top photo: Leonardo and Angela Maria Bellusci on the terrace of their home.
Bottom photo: Squamish, 1954. Linda De Paoli D’Odorico and her friend Rita Bortolossi.

Read the full book through UBC’s Open Collections!