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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"FileFormat","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"FullText","value":" The University of British Columbia\nGRADUATE\nCHRONICLE\nDirector of Alumni Publications:\nISOBEL HARVEY\nEditor of The Chronicle\nSADIE BOYLES\nAssistant Editors\nANNIE ANGUS\nKATHLEEN LAWRENCE To the Student Council Campaign of 1922\nand 1932, this second number of\nThe Chronicle is inscribed. Edito\nrials\nWhether or not the first issue of The Graduate Chronicle was a success\nis hardly for the Editorial Board to say, but with all due modesty we\nshould like to make reference to a very tangible proof of its favorable\nreception. Never before has the Treasurer received so many lucrative letters and\nnever in history has anyone felt sufficiently opulent to become a life member. The\nChronicle was paid for in a very short time and the Alumni executive rejoiced in\nsolvency and basked in the approval of many.\nIn addition to the expressions of appreciation, many letters were received containing information about the neglected and incorrectly designated, and the\nEditorial Board wishes to thank all members who were sufficiently interested to\nsend in their expressions of opinion and their corrections of the inaccuracies they\nnoted. Another opportunity will be given this year of rendering us a similar\nservice, and it is our sincere hope that all Alumni will avail themselves of it. The\nEditor can always be reached through the Registrar's Office of the University.\nA terrible tragedy occurred in the distribution of last year's Chronicle. We\ndon't know how it happened. There is a graduate of '17 living in a far country and\nshe has consistently and persistently clamored for some sort of publication which\nwould be of interest to those in foreign lands. In fact, in the summer of '30 her\nclamor became so objectionable that a few members of the Executive thought up\nThe Chronicle in order to at least turn her complaints in a different direction. We\nhave wondered, at intervals, why we have not heard what was wrong with The\nChronicle. We knew that its imperfections were quite obvious and our friend has\na ready tongue. In March, we heard that she hadn't received one. No one knows\nhow badly we feel, just as if we had wasted a whole year's efforts.\nA very pathetic story has reached the Editorial Board. It appears that a graduate who shall be nameless (he lives in Montreal) has been wailing over the overwhelming brilliance of all those members of the Alumni who are written up in\nThe Chronicle. He himself belongs to the common folk and he would like to hear\nabout some of his own kind. May we refer him to pages thirty-five and thirty-six?\nWe also would like to suggest that letters from \"ordinary people\" (the phrase is his\nown) are always most welcome and he might set the rest of his kind a good example.\nAgain this year we thank Mr. Matthews and his staff for their constant co-operation and valuable assistance. We also take pleasure in acknowledging the different\narticles which were sent to us, and in expressing our gratitude for the interest that\nhas been shown in The Chronicle. THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932^\n-dm \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 -\"P\"\nAppreciations\nWith the passing of Mademoiselle Foucart the University lost one of its most\ndevoted friends. Ever since her arrival in Vancouver in 1916 Mademoiselle interested herself in the problems of the students of French, and did all in her\npower to encourage them in their work and to find scholarships that would permit them to\nstudy abroad. Many of the graduates will call to mind her Friday afternoon teas, when\nMademoiselle personally conducted conversation groups and did much to inspire the students with a love of the French language and an appreciation for French culture. Scholarship winners will remember countless favors. They will recall the letters of introduction\nthat were provided, and the trouble that was taken to render their stay in Paris as beneficial\nand as interesting as possible. It was Mademoiselle's desire that they should become ac-\nqauinted not only with France, but with the most charming of French people.\nThe value of Mademoiselle Foucart's services was appreciated not only in Vancouver,\nbut also in France, where a group of influential men suggested proposing her name for the\nLegion d' Honneur. Mademoiselle, however, refused such recognition, preferring to accept\nno credit for the work she had done. She found her reward in the gratitude of those she\nhelped, and in their understanding of France, its people and its civilization.\nAll who came in contact with Mademoiselle sincerely regret the passing of a friend who\nendeared herself to them by reason of her great unselfishness and devotion.\nWith the retirement this spring of Mr. George E. Robinson, U.B.C. is losing from\nactive service in her ranks one who has made a most distinguished contribution to\nher organization and to the growth of her traditions, as well as to her cultural life.\nMr. Robinson's academic career has been a worthy as well as a lengthy one since he graduated from Dalhousie in '8 5. Following graduation he was for several years in Charlotte-\ntown at the Prince of Wales College. During this time he was also the brighest feature of\nthe great historic \"Abegweit\" star football team on which he played a most perfect game\nas fullback.\nIn '93 Mr. Robinson came to Vancouver, where he taught, first in Vancouver High\nSchool, then in Vancouver College. During the years of McGill, B. C, Mr. Robinson was\nhead of the college\u2014this in addition to his position in the Department of Mathematics.\nWhen U.B.C. opened Mr. Robinson was Registrar, then he became Dean and so continued during the war time years. Shortly after Dr. Wesbrook's death, however, he retired\nfrom this position.\nIn addition to being a mathematician Mr. Robinson has always been known as a very\nfine scholar with a deep and thorough knowledge of classical and of English literature\u2014a\nknowledge that adds considerable of charm to personal association with him. But it must\nhave been mathematical ability that stood him in stead when, in pre-contract days, he\nplayed \"a wicked, yes, a wicked game of whist.\"\nIn the matter of recreation Mr. Robineon has always been a great outdoor man. In the\nearlier days he knew every trail round about Vancouver. He has always been a skilful hand\nwith a boat, whether as oarsman or sailor, and he now plays a game of golf that many of\nhis former students regard with envy.\nWhen Mr. Robinson signified his intention of terminating his long and splendid years\nof service to education, the Senate of U.B.C, wishing to make some gesture of recognition,\nvoted to confer on him an honorary degree. This degree Mr. Robinson, with his customary\nmodesty, refused. But he cannot refuse the respect, the esteem, the admiration and the\ngood wishes of colleagues and students who have come in contact with \"Geordie\" Robinson\nduring practically forty years of academic life in Vancouver. JTHE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932\nEvents Leading Up to the University Investigation\nBy Sherwood Lett, B.A.\nO\"\ni n December 22nd, 1931, the Hon. the\nMinister of Education wrote President\nKlinck advising him that the grant\nfrom the Government to the University\nwould be cut to $250,000.00. This represents\na reduction of approximately 57% in two\nyears.\nThe Board of Governors after considering\nthe situation sent a delegation to interview\nthe Hon. the Minister of Education on January 27th, 1932. The delegation was informed\nthat the Government could not give more\nthan $250,000.00 to the University for the\nfiscal year 1932-33. The Minister stated that\nin his opinion those departments which contributed most to the development of the natural resources of the Province should be the\nlast to be affected adversely as the result of the\ndecrease in the appropriation.\nIt became apparent that if the cut were distributed between the three different Faculties\nin proportion to their expenditure inl931-32,\nthe standard of the degrees offered by the University would most assuredly suffer. Many\norganizations and associations in and around\nVancouver made representations to the Board\nof Governors and requested that everything\npossible should be done to maintain the standard of the University's degrees in Arts and\nScience.\nOn February 17th, the Board of Governors\nsubmitted to Senate its opinion as follows:\n\"That in the opinion of the Board\nfunds be allocated the Faculties of Agriculture, Arts and Science and Applied\nScience, as follows:\n\"1st: That student fees be credited to\nthe respective Faculties in which they\nregister.\n\"2nd: That after deducting cost of\nadministration, the balance of the Government grant be divided equally between the respective Faculties.\"\nHaving been informed by the President that\nhe was not in accord with the Board's opinion,\nthe Senate appointed a committee to consider\nthe Board's communication and bring in recommendations in respect to it. The committee consisted of Dr. W. B. Burnett, Chairman,\nPresident Klinck, Principal W. H. Vance, J.\nN. Harvey, Sherwood Lett, Miss A. B. Jamie-\nson, Prof. H. F. Angus (Arts rep.), Dr. G. G.\nMoe (Agric. rep.), and Dr. H. Vickers (App.\nSc. rep.). After numerous meetings and an exhaustive search and enquiry into the possibilities of the situation the Committee made recommendations to Senate which were adopted\nby Senate on February 24th and forwarded to\nthe Board of Governors.\nThe chief recommendations of Senate were:\n(1) Approval of the Board's opinion on the\nproper distribution of fees and Government grant to the Faculties.\n( 2 ) That the work of the Faculty of Agriculture be reorganized as the Department of Faculty of Applied Science.\n( 3) That the University Farm be leased.\n(4) That administration costs of the University be reduced to a sum not exceeding $160,000.00, leaving $90,000.00\n(of the government appropriation)\navailable for the work of teaching.\n( 5 ) That the Government be asked for an\nadditional appropriation of $40,000.00\nto provide for salary commitments and\naccrued liabilities.\nThe Governors referred Senate's recommendations to the President on February 29th,and\non March 12th passed a resolution to the effect\nthat in its opinion the University should be\ncarried on for the fiscal year 1932-33 on the\nbasis of the President's summation as submitted. This summation proposed reductions in\nFaculty grants as follows:\nArts and Science.\u2014$92,834.00 reduction\nApplied Science 8,840.00\nAgriculture 64,701.33\nOn March 16th a resolution of want of confidence in the President was introduced in Senate and after some discussion was tabled.\nPAGE FIVE **-}\u25a0'\nTHE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932\nOn March 18th at the President's request\nthe Faculty members of the Senate (the three\nDeans and Messrs. Angus, Logan, Sedgewick,\nHutchison, Vickers, Turnbull, Moe and\nLloyd) were asked by the President to meet\nhim and express their individual views on the\nwant of confidence motion. This they did on\nMarch 21st and the representatives of Arts\nand Applied Science intimated in unmistakable terms that they had lost confidence and\ngave their reasons.\nOn March 15 th the Heads of Departments\nin Arts, being Dr. Hutchison, Dr. Hill, Dr.\nClark, Prof. Lemuel Robertson, Prof. Angus,\nDr. Sedgewick, Dean Buchanan, Dr. Coleman,\nDr. McLean Fraser, Dr. Weir and Dr. Sage\n(Dr. Ashton was absent on leave) passed the\nfollowing resolution:\n\"The Heads of Departments in Arts\nand Science express confidence in the Faculty Members of Senate with the understanding that if circumstances warrant\nthis involves supporting a vote of non-\nconfidence in the President in the Senate.\"\nThe President was advised of this resolution. Similar resolutions were subsequently\npassed by the Faculties of Arts and Science,\nand Applied Science.\nA joint meeting of the Board of Governors\nand Senate was held on March 29th to consider the situation but no conclusions were\nreached. On March 24th the Alma Mater Society consisting of the students now at the\nUniversity passed a vote of censure upon this\nyear's policy of President Klinck. The President appeared at the Students' meeting but\ndeclined to defend himself or his actions.\nOn March 30th the Alumni Association\nmet and at the largest meeting in its history\nheard particulars of the reasons for the students' vote of censure and the introduction in\nSenate of the non-confidence resolution. President Klinck attended the meeting and addressed it but stated he would not attempt to\ndefend himself.\nOn March 31st the Board of Governors met\nand adopted the budget submitted by President Klinck which calls for reductions in the\nFaculties as follows:\nArts and Science $77,549.00\nApplied Science 12,700.00\nAgriculture 64,701.00\nThe Board decided to retain the Faculty of\nAgriculture as a separate Faculty contrary to\nSenate's recommendation and abandoned its\nown previous plan of dividing the Government grant equally among the three Faculties\nafter deduction of administration costs. The\nbudget adopted also contains items of expenditure for \"Administration and Miscellaneous\" of $190,000.00.\nOn April 5 th the Senate met. A resolution\nassuring the Board of Senate's willingness to\nco-operate loyally in working the budget\nadopted by the Board was passed unanimously.\nAnd after considerable discussion the Senate\npassed by a majority of 18 to 7 a resolution of\nwant of confidence, in the following terms:\n\"That Senate regrets that it has lost\nconfidence in the President of the University and feels that the best interests of\nthe University cannot be served under\nhis leadership, and that a copy of this\nresolution be communicated to the Board\nof Governors.\"\nOn the following night, April 6th, the\nAlumni Association at a largely attended\nmeeting passed the following resolution:\n\"Resolved that the Alumni Association deplores the state of utter disturbance which exists at present in the University and respectfully urges the Board\nof Governors to investigate and review\nall matters and circumstances connected\ntherewith, being strongly moved to do so\nby the expressions of disapproval passed\nby the student body, by the vote of non-\nconfidence in the President passed by the\nSenate, and by the implied support of this\nmotion given by a practically unanimous\nvote of two major Faculties of the University.\"\nAt a special meeting held on April 9th the\nBoard of Governors reaffirmed its confidence\nin the administration of President Klinck and\npassed a resolution requesting two members of\nthe Judiciary of British Columbia to make an\ninvestigation into the present troubles of the\nUniversity and to report thereon to the Board.\nEditor's Note\u2014A recent press announcement states\nthat at a special meeting of the Board of Governors His\nHonor Judge Lampman was appointed to conduct the\nenquiry, and requested to begin as soon as possible. _THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932_\nA Plea for An Arts Course\nWhen war broke out in Europe in\n1914 every nation engaged in it announced to the world at large its\nright to survive. Each based its claims not\nupon the strength of its arms, not upon its\nriches, not upon its contribution to material\nprogress but upon its part in the advancement\nof civilization. Its claims were based then\nupon poets and prose-writers, theologians and\nphilosophers, musicians, painters and sculptors, architects, explorers, scientists\u2014all, in\nshort, who had made real their dreams, all who\nhad worked without hope of reward other\nthan the discovery of truth or the creation of\nbeauty.\nIn this parade appeared men whose names\nwere known even to the students in American\ncolleges, yet who had been so little appreciated\nin their own day that they had suffered want\nand died of starvation. Peace and prosperity\nhad made it possible for all these countries to\nlive a lie and to pretend that civilization was\na matter of material comfort and wellbeing,\nof busy marts and great military power, of\nprostituted art and applied science. The shock\nof war laid bare the truth, and claims for\nrecognition were based on the real contribution to world progress. It would soon be\nproved whether science could assure the survival of these nations; the right to survive\ndepended solely upon Arts.\nWe have short memories. The non-war\nstate had not yet deserved the name of peace\nwhen the world was again listening to the\napostles of pink bathtubs, silent cisterns, vacuum cleaners, electric washing machines and\nstraight eights as the be-all and end-all of\ncivilization. People were again to be educated\nin thirty-two lessons by mail. Domestic\nscience consisted not in the knowledge of\nhumanity that alone could make domestic\nlife tolerable, not in the broad culture that\nwould make it varied and interesting but in\na smattering of knowledge applied to domestic pursuits. Grandmother knew that a certain\noffensive smell indicated a bad egg. Granddaughter knew (or once knew) the chemical\nformula for the smell. We have progressed.\nWe have progressed to the end of a blind\nalley. Pseudo-science and even many loose\nthreads of real science lie waiting for comprehensive minds to dismiss the former and to\nweave the latter into a web that will have\nsome meaning and some use in the upward\nprogress of mankind. In Europe this work is\ngoing on, quietly, patiently, in Arts faculties\nand in the study rooms of Arts graduates.\nScience was paramount during the period of\ntaming nature and ministering to our comfort, but the individual scientists are now like\nscattered sheep. We have discovered once\nagain that human beings inhabit the earth and\nthat they must be the basis of all education.\nWe understand again the meaning of the Hu-\nmanites.\nThe great plea for Arts is as smiple as that.\nLiterature, whether our own or that of other\nraces, living or dead, History, Music, Art,\nPure Science (if taught by a scientist and not\nby an instrument manipulator) all these require a knowledge of human beings, not\nmerely of their constitution and thought processes but of their mystery and their part in\nthe infinite. Applied Science can contribute\nto this study only in proportion to the Arts\ntraining of its teachers. Those who are without it can but turn out skilled artisans. Any\nteaching that aims solely, or principally, at\nincreased production, that deals with and\nboasts of dollars earned and dollars saved,\nshould be relegated to Business and Technical\nSchools. It has no place in a University because it has none in Education.\nIt is true that science gives thought-training but such as can lead only to reproduction\nand application. It can rarely, if ever, break\nnew ground, discover new fundamental\ntruths and extend considerably man's knowledge of life. Imagination is necessary for this\nand it is best fostered by the Arts. \"What is\nnow known was once only imagined,\" wrote\nBlake, a hundred years ago. Science, Applied\nScience particularly in too narrow a field,\nstifles imagining and this fact leads to the\nconclusion that an Arts training is necessary\nto produce really great scientists. The great\nscientist is closely akin to the poet.\nFor a long period the Arts progressed slowly\nPAGE SEVEN THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932\n-*\u25a0 \u25a0\nand Science scarcely existed. Then Science\noutstripped the Arts, outstripped human\nthought in the majority of men and brought\nan unbalance that made the world unwell.\nToday the balance must be restored if we are\nto regain our health. It must be restored because the world is rushing forward at an ever-\nincreasing speed. The actual pace of change\nhas increased enormously during the last century and a half. Humanity can adapt itself\nto this change, but only under the guidance of\ngenius. Groups of men with good brains will\nbe useful but the world needs for its salvation\na spiritual, passional and intellectual revivification which can come only from individual\ngenius. Such men find their medium of expression in the Arts. It was not mere stage-\nplay that induced the British Broadcasting\nCorporation to take the whole of its New\nYear's Day programme for 1932 from the\nworks of Milton and to introduce it with the\nlines:\nMilton thou shouldst be living at this\nhour\nEngland hath need of thee.\nAnd let it not be said that there is no Milton\nat this hour. The Arts training is not, as so\nmany suppose, an eternal chewing of the cud\nof past greatness. It points to, and prepares\nfor, the future. Thomas Wolfe, Richardson,\nJoyce, Lawrence, Mann, Undset, Martin du\nGard are wrestling, or have but recently\nceased to wrestle, with the epic of life. Women are bringing a notably feminine contribution to Letters, to Art and to Music and we\nmay hope that in the two latter fields their\nshare will rapidly increase. Out of this striving will emerge great figures whom we cannot\nat present clearly see.\nWe do not need brazen-voiced and leather-\nlunged leaders with a slogan. Most of these\nmen are unconsciously suffering from mental\npsittacosis and we are beyond help from parrots. We need individuals who can think as\nindividuals, not as part of a herd, and who\nhave the courage to think out things to their\nultimate conclusions. They will not be found\namong men who have applied every scrap of\nknowledge, as soon as acquired, to a practical\npurpose and to immediate gain. The leaders\n\"who will beat the new paths in modern\nthought will probably be unaware of their\nleadership, little known in the market place\nand almost certainly not rewarded with this\nworld's goods.\nThe stability and balance of England,\nwhich in a moment of crisis so surprised the\nworld, was due to the fact that education as\na thought-training process is there still the\nprivilege, in varying degrees, of all classes. If\nwe are looking forward to stability, to a people\nnot inclined to panic, able to examine coolly a\nseemingly new situation, able to think out its\nimplications and to plan a course of action,\nthen must we insist upon Arts courses in our\nUniversities. They furnish the mind with\nanalagous cases in the past, with the panaceas\napplied and the reasons for their failure, with\nthe final successful solution which in modified\nform may perhaps again be of value or with\nthe conviction that an entirely new course\nmust be steered and with the confidence and\ncourage necessary to swing over the wheel.\nThe modern constructive plan can be made\nonly by men with wide knowledge and the\n\"study\" is no longer a place smaller than, and\napart from, the world. It is not the bookish\nman, nowadays, who is cut off from humanity\nand therefore unable to contribute to its progress. The modern monk is the narrow scientist, or pseudo-scientist, the data-collector,\nthe small phenomenon observer, the practical\ndabbler in one little corner of knowledge. The\nworld needs these journeymen but it needs still\nmore the trained thinker ranging over a much\nwider field.\nAnd trained thinkers must have to do with\nhuman beings\u2014their past, their present, and\ntheir future. They must come to grips with\nthe best of human minds. However great may\nbe the cash value of a study of diarrhoea in\nfowls it cannot be compared as a means of\neducation with the study of a Greek Tragedy,\nof Shakespeare peering into the depths of Life's\nmystery, or of Pascal wrestling with the unknown.\nWhen that process we call an Arts course\nhas been applied, the individual is free to go\nonwards in the realm of thought or to apply\nhis brain to the material comfort of his fellow-men, and, incidentally, of himself. But\nthat any civilized community should hold out\nthe latter process as equivalent to the former\nis inadmissable. For any institution to cheat\nPAGE EIGHT THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932\nstudents out of an education by offering an\ninferior substitute should be regarded as immoral.\nThe basis of education has not changed because humanity has not changed. Human\nbeings live more and more in contact with\neach other. Life is more and more complicated. Thought, clear, rapid and fearless is\nincreasingly necessary and the more it is based\non humanity and the less on cash and comfort\nthe greater is our hope of lasting peace, of real\nhappiness and of ultimate improvement.\nH. Ashton.\nC.P.R. train crossing the Prairies,\nMarch 10, 1932.\nCrosby Hall from Within\nI often wonder why I live at Crosby\nHall. Every morning, as executing a\nstrategic flanking movement I charge\nthrough the crowd in the general direction\nof a \"19\" bus, I resolve firmly to move to\nBloomsbury; and I go on resolving it all\nthrough the interminable ride to the British\nMuseum, in a vehicle that heaves and plunges\nlike a roller-coaster with foursquare wheels.\nBut I never do move, for apart from struggles\nwith transportation I am reasonably happy\nhere.\nFor one thing, I like the address. Crosby\nHall, Cheyne Walk, Chelsea; it rolls trippingly off the tongue, for being old and English \"Cheyne Walk\" is not pronounced as\nspelt\u2014though I once heard a bus conductor\nbark it out in two harsh syllables. But he was\na Philistine; the best people, including policemen to whom the innocent newcomer applies\nfor direction, call it \"Chainie Walk,\" and\ncertainly they have euphony on their side.\nThose who named many of the Chelsea streets\nseem to have had an ear: King's Road, Paradise\nRow, Ranelagh Gardens, for instance; and\nmost delightful of all, World's End, \"the way\nbetween the Pales\" which in the eighteenth\ncentury led across the fiields to Kensington.\nI always wondered where Morris found his\nlovely title, \"The Well at the World's End.\"\nIn the way of celebrities, too, Chelsea can\nhold its own. Did not Rossetti live a long\nstone's throw from us in Cheyne Walk; Oscar\nWilde and Whistler in Tite Street; and even\nHenry the Eighth, occasionally, at the hunting lodge which still exists in Glebe Place?\nAnd as for Carlyle, memories of him lie thick\nhere: his house in Great Cheyne Row, where\nyou may have a cup of tea in the kitchen\nwhere he and Tennyson spent their convivial\nevenings in smoky silence; his statue in dressing gown and slippers in Embankment Gardens; and\u2014but this is not in any guide-book\n\u2014the lineal descendant of the rooster which\nwoke him with such commendable regularity\nin the early dawn. I forget whether he ordered Jane to have it despatched, or built a\nsound-proof room, or merely \"changed\nhouse.\" We, unfortunately, have no recourse.\nThe oldest inhabitants, I believe, rather resent the intrusion of Crosby Hall into the\nancient atmosphere of Chelsea, with which it\nhas only the remotest connection. But the\nHall brings with it a fascinating history of\nits own. It is the last fragment of the noble\nmansion built in Bishopsgate c. 1466 by Sir\nJohn Crosby, a London citizen of remarkable\ncredit and renown\u2014Warden of the Grocers'\nCompany, member of Parliament, Sheriff of\nLondon, and valiant warrior in the Yorkist\ncause. After his death in 1475, Richard\nCrookback \"logid himselfe in Crosbye's Place\nBysshoppisgate Strete,\" and it is mentioned\nas his residence in Richard HI. In 1523 Sir\nThomas Moore bought the lease, though it is\nconsidered unlikely that he ever lived in the\nHall, since at the time he was already building\nBeaufort House in Chelsea. From 1609 to\n1615 the Countess of Pembroke, Sir Philip\nSidney's sister, was the tenant of Crosby Place,\nand for the twenty-five years following that,\nthe East India Company made it their headquarters. The Hall has also been in its time a\nPresbyterian meeting-house, a semi-prison for\n\"Royalist malignants\", a grocer's warehouse,\na wine merchant's store, a Literary and Scientific Institute, and a restaurant. Part of the\nmansion was destroyed by fire in the late\nPAGE NINE THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932_\nseventeenth century, and in 1907 it appeared\nlikely that the remainder would be completely\ndestroyed, for the freehold was sold to a Bank,\nwhich proposed to erect new premises. The\nUniversity and City Association of London\nmade prodigious efforts to raise the purchase\nsum required by the Bank to preserve this\n\"magnificent specimen of Gothic domestic\narchitecture\", but the task proved impossible;\nand thus in a few days a priceless memorial of\npast ages was obliterated. The Association,\nhowever, managed to rescue the fabric of the\nBanqueting Hall, the parts of which were\ntaken down stone by stone, numbered, and\nstored until such time as a scheme for their\nre-erection could be completed. Finally, after\nmuch controversy, a site was chosen in what\nwas formerly part of Sir Thomas Moore's\ngarden in Chelsea, and there the Hall was rebuilt in 1909. After the war it was purchased\nby the British Federation of University Women, and to it was added the residential wing,\nwhich was opened by the Queen in 1927 as\n\"an International Hall of Residence of University Women.\"\nThe tourist who visits Crosby Hall will not,\nI think, be particularly impressed by his first\nsight of it from Cheyne Walk\u2014unless by the\ngreen lawn in front, which even in February\nlooks as brilliantly unreal as a stage setting.\nThe Great Hall lies at right angles to the main\nwing, and presents to the observer only the\nunfinished end, to which there is to be some\nsort of addition when funds permit. Its architectural beauty is not apparent until one\ncomes into the garden, and faces the long\nfacade with its pointed windows, and the terrace whose steps lead down to the broad flagged path. With such a neighbour the residential wing is properly unobstrusive in style;\nthe main entrance, however, is rather fine: a\nheavy iron-hinged door, with the initials J. C.\n1466 and T. M. 1523 at the corners of the\nstone frame above.\nOn the ground floor, besides the offices of\nthe British and the International Federation\nof University Women, are the common rooms\nfor residents. Of these the \"Panelled Room\"\nis the pleasantest. It has grey-green walls hung\nwith bright flower studies; a finely-moulded\nceiling; high casement windows; and a most\nefficient fireplace, round which we gather\nafter dinner to sip English coffee, which is as\ngood as its reputation, and to listen to English\nwireless, which affords a welcome respite from\nAmos and Andy and the famous Longines\nObservatory watch. Opening from this room\nis the tiny library, where one may wrestle with\nGothic to the tune of a gas fire, alternately\nstimulated by the orange covers of couch and\nchairs and soothed by the subdued roar of\ntraffic on the Embankment. The books here\nmay be borrowed on the supposition that they\nwill be returned in a fortnight; but, of course,\none always forgets the date, and duly receives\na pained and lengthy notice from the Honorary Secretary, regretting to inform one, etc.,\netc. If one prefers not to risk the twopence\nfine, one may borrow unrestricted the Wallaces and Walpoles in the \"Danvers Room\",\non the other side of the building. To me this\nroom is rather a depressing place; perhaps because it has a gas fire instead of an open grate,\nperhaps because one of its two windows looks\nout on a minute and gloomy court and the\nother on Danvers Street, which consists, at\nleast the portion visible from the window, of\na garage, dingy looking houses, and street-\nsweepers in their black Anzac hats\u2014varied\nby an occasional gentleman intoning \"Co-o-\no-o-al\" from the top of a pile of incredibly\ngrimy sacks, or by a fishmonger's barrow, all\nbloody slices and scales. In the Danvers Room\none reads newspapers, notices to aliens, and\nthe railway guide. There is also an enormous\nglobe to play with, but I have never seen any\nresident thus amused.\nOur dining-room is the great hall itself,\nwhich is quite a show place for visitors, and\nan excellent conversational ice-breaker for the\ndinner guest, met for perhaps the second time,\nwho is a relative of a relative of a friend of\nyours at home. For those interested in dimensions, the Hall is seventy feet long, twenty-\nseven feet broad, and forty feet high. The\nbest time to see it is perhaps the evening, when\nthe shaded lights soften the bareness of the\nlofty walls and gleam on the polished refectory tables; and the best coign of vantage the\nreconstruction of the old musicians' gallery.\nFrom this gallery one has a closer view of the\nmagnificent oak roof, whose carving is thrown\ninto relief by special lights so placed as to illuminate its intricate detail. I suppose we see\nPAGE ten THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932\n~\u00abS\u00ab \"fr\nit more clearly today than ever the early\ndwellers did either by daylight or the uncertain glimmer of torches and candles. In the\ndaytime, the most beautiful thing in the Hall\nis the oriel window overlooking the quadrangle. The original vaulting and the stonework of the three tiers of lights are still intact;\nand coats of arms make bright rainbows on\nthe opposite wall whenever the sun is propitious. Just now that does not often happen,\nand the focus of the room is the huge fireplace\nwhich faces the oriel. Its stone framework\nwas part of the original fabric; but the heavy\niron back behind the massive hooded basket,\nwhere in winter the fire never goes out, (praise\nbe\u2014for a few radiators make but little impression on the vast chilliness), dates only\nfrom the seventeenth century. Patterned on\nthis back is the crest of Sir John Crosby, which\nlooks like a very meek ram with its forefoot\nraised in the manner of the well-trained dog\non the command \"Shake hands.\" Heraldically\nspeaking, of course, it may be almost any-\ning: lamb limpant, perhaps? At any rate, we\ngrow familiar with this emblem, for quartered\non a shield he appears on the china, and\u2014a\ncharming touch this\u2014on our cakes of soap.\nIn summer the fireplace has lost its attraction,\nand we turn away to the heavy door under\nthe gallery, which is kept open on fine days so\nthat one may look at the trees on the Embankment or watch the boats sliding past below like a painted panorama on a stage.\nThe first floor and upwards (numbering\nEnglish fashion) is occupied by some forty-\nfive bed-sitting-rooms, as I believe they are\nofficially called. Here there is none of the\nstereotyped effect of some college residences,\nfor each room is furnished by a different indi-\ndual or society, so that you may find yourself\nliving in \"Remembrance. Founded by Sir Otto\nBeit and furnished by H. M. the Queen of\nNorway.\" or \"Marion Withiel, B.A., Lond.,\n1880; one of the first four women to be\ngiven a degree. Founder Mary M. Adamson.\nFurnished by the Bath Association.\" Each\nroom has hot and cold water and a gas fire\u2014\nthe latter a concession to the foreigner, I suspect, for these sturdy English consider heat\nin bedrooms unhealthy. (Even in the common\nrooms one may guess the nationality by noting whether the window is surreptitiously\nclosed or flung wider open with an air of\nvirtuous superiority. Personally, I see no virtue in congealing for the sake of a little more\nfog to breathe; and if it were not that we\nhave central heating in the corridors and common rooms, I should promptly die.)\nFrom the rooms at the front of the house\nthere is a pleasant view of the stream of traffic on the Embankment and of the river beyond, which also runs swiftly here, and carries\na multitude of vessels. Most of them have to\nlower their smoke-stacks as they pass under\nBattersea Bridge,\u2014which seems quite wrong\nsomehow: a ship ought not to shut up like a\njack-knife. Sometimes the tugs whistle that\nhoarse note that takes one back on the instant\nto Prospect Point. But it is at night that the\nriver is most beautiful, for then the buildings\non the far shore lose their detail and give wings\nto the imagination; the water slides in gleaming ripples under the dark arches of the bridge;\nand right across the river lies a shining crimson pathway. Unfortunately, the Neon sign\nwhich produces this reads very clearly, \"Ho-\nvis,\" and in the daytime it still shines from\nthe topmost tower of a pseudo-Gothic factory. (It is said that a tourist was once overheard pointing out this structure\u2014in the days\nbefore the sign, we hope\u2014as Windsor Castle.)\nAt the back of the house, on the lower\nfloors at least, the outlook is less inviting; but\nthe dormer window of my little room on the\nfifth storey is high above the chimney pots of\nDanvers Street, and I look over them to a\nslender church spire in the hazy distance, or\ndown at the gardens whose defects are\nsomewhat softened by the height. (Speaking\nof the fifth floor, we have an automatic lift,\nbut it is not supposed to be used after ten\no'clock, lest some virtuous person should wish\nto sleep. In my life it seems always five minutes past ten.) Outside my window is a tiny\nbalcony with a fifteen-inch brick parapet;\nand I have been told that the previous inhabitant provided herself with a stool by means\nof which she strode over a chest of drawers\nand a three-foot sill to disport herself thereon.\nThe stool is still here as evidence of the achiev-\nment, but I am waiting for spring to inspire\nme to emulate it.\nBut I fear I forget the dignity of the correct guide-book manner. To resume it: since\nPAGE ELEVEN THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932\n<*-\nCrosby Hall is international, one meets here a\ngood many interesting people (or should I\nsay makes worth-while contacts?) but because of the constantly-changing population\nit is difficult to establish more than casual acquaintance with many of them. This year's\nnucleus is mostly American or Canadian.\n(There is, of course, no difference to the foreign eye.) Of the half-dozen Canadians no\none but myself is from B. C; indeed, I think\nthat every one comes from a different province. There are several Indian women, whose\nconstantly-changing saris are a delight\nto the eye; a sprinkling of French, English,\nYugo-Slavian, and Swedish; and one charming Finnish girl whose name, in her own\ntongue, means \"little pine tree\", and who\nsometimes sings for us solemn Finnish melodies in a gorgeous contralto that fills the great\nhall.\nBefore Christmas we had a newspaper celebrity amongst us: Miss May Oung, the one\nwoman delegate to the Burmese Conference.\nThrough her we were invited to meet the\nother delegates and their friends, who all came\nto the party in full native costume. The feminine dress is very attractive; the masculine\nless so to a western eye, probably because of\nthe sort of bustle effect in front. The Burmese reception was the biggest affair at the\nHall this winter\u2014except, of course, the annual sale in aid of the Crosby Hall Fund,\nwhere, in the usual fashion of bazaars, the\nmembers of the committee had stalls at which\nthey sold to themselves and their friends articles which they and their friends had donated. All the residents ran around assisting;\nand I, knowing practically nothing of this\ninfernal English coinage, was set to sell tea\ntickets at ls.6d. or 9d. each. You know the\nsort of thing: if three teas at one-and-six and\ntwo at ninepence cost seven-and-fourpence-\nhalfpenny, what's the change from ten shillings? And when I protested, the Warden\nmost immorally told me to be sure, if I must\nmake mistakes, that they were on the right\nside.\nI had better conclude with the most superior personage in Crosby Hall\u2014a very black\ncat with an immense plume of a tail. He is\nwell named Rajah, for only infrequently does\nhe condescend towards us. It is true that for\nmonths some of our American friends addressed him in all good faith as Roger, but\nnot even this insult could account for the\nwhole of his disdain. However, this is but a\nslight flaw in the pleasant atmosphere of\nCrosby Hall. The mixture of communal and\nsolitary life suits my temperament, and I enjoy too the combination of London's central\nroar with the peaceful charm of Chelsea. In\nshort for the present at any rate, j'y suis, j'y\nreste.\nDorothy Blakey, Arts '21.\nFrank Fairchild Wesbrook\n\"The dream that fires man's heart to make,\nTo build, to Jo \"\nEach year when the graduating class of\nthe University, on the 19th of October, lays a wreath on Dr. Wesbrook's\ngrave they pay grateful tribute to the memory\nof one who, in the brief years of his administration, laid the foundation for all that is\nworthy in the University today. Ten generations of students have graduated who did not\nknow him, who unknowingly have enjoyed\nthe fruits of his work. Today, when progress\nhas apparently ceased, when dissension and\nstrife reign in place of fellowship, we look\nback in an endeavor to visualize once again his\nplan, the beginnings of which he wrought\nwith so much care.\nAt the time when the University came into\nbeing, world affairs were in a more uncertain\nstate than they are today. The first three years\nof its existence were the last three years of\nwar. It was surely an unfortunate time to try\nto lay the foundations of a University, yet Dr.\nWesbrook did this with no uncertain hand.\nHe never believed that a University was dependent on buildings and endowments\nalthough he would gladly have welcomed\nthem. He did believe that as fine a University\ncould be born and could grow in the Fairview\nshacks as in all the pomp and dignity of the\nPAGE TWEIVE ~<*\nTHE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932\n*\u00bb\u00ab\npromised buildings at Point Grey. He looked\nforward to the time when these latter would\nhouse his dream of a University but the years\nin Fairview were to make the dream come true.\nThe site at Point Grey was to him the loveliest\nin the world and the University which was to\nmove and grow there must be worthy of it.\nIn his mind there were three essentials for\nthe growth of a University and these he felt\nhe had provided, in spite of the other lacks\nwhich were visible on every hand. The most\nimportant was a first-class faculty; the second, an adequate library; the third, student\nself-government.\nIf the students of today feel that self-government is worth while, they have Dr. Wesbrook to thank for its establishment. He felt\nthat undergraduate days were training days,\nand that, although it would be simpler to run\naffairs on a different basis, the student from a\nself-governing college went out more fitted\nfor citizenship than he whose thinking was\ndone for him by faculty members. He never\nclosed his eyes to the difficulties and the dangers of the system, but he had a profound faith\nin his students and believed that all the disadvantages did not weigh for a moment against\nthe real value from an educational point of\nview. Self-government was his gift to the student body.\nIt is not necessary to dwell upon his second\nessential, the Library. The war made it impossible for the students of those years to reap the\nbenefit of the Library that was being purchased. But those who have worked in other\nUniversity libraries where funds were more\nelastic come back with a sense of gratitude to\nour own where much less money has been\nspent but where gaps in essentials are much\nless evident. This is due, to a great extent, to\nthe way in which the library is built up on\nrecommendation of department heads, so that\nbehind each course there are the necessary\nsources for student research.\nDr. Wesbrook put the Faculty first. This\nwas the corner-stone upon which he would\nbuild. Amazement has often been expressed\nin academic circles over the personal magnetism which induced so many scholars to come\nfrom assured and well-paid positions to assume\nothers at a University which, in reality,\nscarcely existed. Their first glimpse of the\nFairview shacks must have filled them with\ndismay but they were good pioneers and they\nthrew in their lots with other pioneers from\nMcGill College who had already been blazing\nan academic trail through the wilderness. Dr.\nWesbrook was able to kindle in all of them\nthe same enthusiasm that filled him and they\nthrew themselves into the task of building up\ntheir own particular part with loyalty and\ndevotion. It is not always understood that the\nefficiency of a department not only as to methods but also as to personelle rests almost entirely with the heads of departments. Appointments to the faculty are made in almost\nevery case on recommendation of the heads of\nthe departments. Dr. Wesbrook's high standard, we feel, has been maintained.\nThat these men who form the faculty of\nthe University are outstanding is evidenced by\nthree facts: First, the endeavor of other Universities to remove them from us; second, the\nachievement of a small group of Alumni\u2014the\nChronicle of last year bears eloquent testimony to this in its scholarship records; third,\nthat their loyalty to the University has drawn\nthem this year into a hard way, into the wilderness of strife and uncertainty\u2014when comfort and security lay in the other direction.\nThe work which Dr. Wesbrook did was not\nspectacular and is apt to be forgotten. Those\nwho knew him and worked with him will not\nforget. In spite of all that is against it, the\nUniversity that he planned will go on.\nIsobel Harvey.\nProposed '26 Reunion\nThe Class of 1926 will hold a reunion in\nthe fall, the details of which will be announced later in notices to the graduates. The out-\nof-town members of the class, who cannot\nattend, are asked to send letters to Secretary\nMrs. Bert Wales (nee Doris McKay), 3825\nWest 26th Avenue, Vancouver.\nTen Royal Society Fellowships of\n$1,500 each have been endowed by the\nCarnegie Corporation of New York due to\nnegotiations carried on by Dr. F. S. Nowlan\nof the mathematics department.\nPAGE THIRTEEN THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932\n~\"\nmost beautifully elaborate pastel costumes.\nTheir finale, an ensemble of about 90, was one\nof the finest and most attractive I've ever seen.\nTheir speaking voices are abominable\u2014very\nhigh and nasal, but their singing voices are\nbeautiful.\n\"For another 5 0 sen, you can go to the other\ntheatre and be entertained from 5 p.m. to 11\np.m. with a skit, a dance play, 'Madame Butterfly'; Cavelliera Rusticana' and a musical\nrevue presenting the night life of a dozen different countries\u2014Chicago being honored by a\nfull scene of its own. We stayed only to see\n'Madame Butterfly,' which proved to be the\nJapanese version of the play\u2014rather changed,\nbut true in essentials. Most interesting!\n\"The stage by the way is extremely large\nand revolves. While a scene is going on in the\nsection presented to the audience, the scenery\nis being shifted in the next section. The lights\ngo out for a minute, and there you are! The\nstage is all set for the next act.\n\"I went up to Yokohama and Tokyo for\nNew Year's and down to Kamakura while\nthere to see the enormous 'Diabutsu.' It stands\nin the open, by the sea, where it has been\nplacidly looking down on generatins for the\npast 700 years. It is a marvellous piece of\nwork, with stone steps inside it which you\ncan climb and thus get up into its head.\"\n* * *\nThe following news comes from Dorothy\nBrown, Arts '27, who was responsible for the\nreunion banquet of British Columbia graduates in San Francisco at Homecoming last\nyear:\n\"At the banquet last fall, we didn't exactly\nform an Association, but the dear things decided that it would be lovely to have a banquet\nonce a year, if someone else did the work. I\nwas one of the goats along with Gordon\nPatton '27. I tried to wiggle out of it at the\ntime but without success.\n\"My knowledge of the grads is very old and\nvery indefinite. Hank Gartshore is a successful biscuit salesman; Laura Pim is the\nwife of a Baptist minister somewhere; Al\nBuchanan is lecturing in Economics at U..\nC; Lou Hunter is with some navigation\ncompany; Joe Denham, a real old-timer, is\nmanager of an old people's home; Dr. Mc-\nKechnie's son, Eberts, is a minister in the\ncity, connected in some way with the Grace\nCathedral; John Williams got his Ph.D. at\nCal. last year and is now lecturing in Chicago;\nHarry Warren has made a success of things\nat the California Institute of Technology at\nPasadena. Harry has had a great time selling\nthe Americans about the country on the merits\nof badminton and soccer.\"\nIsabel Kuhn (formerly Isabel Millar) of\nArts '22, writes from China Inland Mission,\nTali, Yunnan, China:\n\"Tali is a very beautiful place; up behind\nour compound towers the 'heavenly azure\nmountain'which is 14,000 feet above sea level,\nand its foothills slope away to lovely Lake of\nthe Ear, so named because of its shape. Although magnificent in scenery, these inland\ndistricts are far from being up-to-date. We\nsee more bound feet among the women than\nnatural ones, and I have even seen one or two\nqueues among the old men. Compared with\nthe rest of China we are reckoned as living in\npeace and quiet: even though one cannot go\ntwenty or thirty miles out of the city without\na military escort, the brigands are so plentiful.\" * * *\nAlan Hunter, Arts '23, writes from Tyler, Texas, where he has been for the last four\nyears doing title work and leasing for Humble\nOil and Refining Co. Alan has a wife and two\nchildren, a boy and a girl.\n* * *\nJames H. Dauphinee, Arts '22, tells us:\n\"The Ellen Mickle Fellowship reported in the\nChronicle to be held by me, is in Medicine\nand not in Zoology. With its help my wife\n(Miss Doris Manning of Toronto) and I have\nspent the last year in London where I have\nbeen working at St. Bartholomew's Hospital.\"\n* * *\nBill Argue writes from the University of\nNew Brunswick, where he is professor of\nBiology, and mentions that he is the only living representative of U. B. C. in the entire\nMaritimes. * * *\nLeslie Brown, Arts '28, Assistant Canadian Government Trade Commissioner in\nMexico, writes:\nPAGE TWENTY-THREE THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932\n~4\" *\u2022\u2022\n\"My hobby in Mexico is to visit all the\nancient and colonial temples and ruins that I\npossibly can. While far from being an arch-\neologist I have found that these are of tremendous interest and that they provide an additional stimulus to read books on the subject.\nI like to visit a place and then to return home\nto agree or disagree with a man who has made\na study of it.\n\"Mr. Chase, in his recent book, 'Mexico,'\ntakes Tepoztlan as the typical Mexican village\ncomparatively unspoiled during Spanish colonial days, and, generally speaking, still living\nthe life of a millennium ago. I have been to\nTepoztlan, and it is difficult to find a more\nfascinating scene. And yet, when comparing\nit to our own British Columbia, allowance\nmust, of course, be made for the romance and\nglamour of a foreign people, of a different and\nolder history. The tremendous jagged mass-\niveness of the Canadian Rockies is not found\nin Mexico, for here the peaks rise in comparative solitude; Popocateptl, the Mountain Who\nSmokes, and his wife, Ixtaccihuatl, the Sleeping Woman, stand far above the surrounding\nhills to the east of Mexico City. Small wonder\nthe Mexicans, past and present, have deified\nthese two. Two hundred kilometres farther\nto the east is the peak of Orizaba, which, with\nits 18,000 odd feet above the sea, is the Queen\nof the Mexican Sierras. These three peaks can\nbe seen from much of central Mexico, they\nhave had a considerable influence on the life\nof central Mexico, and central Mexico is and\nhas been the most important and most\npopulated section of the country. . . .\n\"The finest way to enter Tepoztlan is from\nabove\u2014yes, literally from above. Take the\ntrain from Mexico City to El Parque\u2014a few\nhours\u2014and you are in the middle of a vast\nchaos of volcanic debris. An hour's walk,\nsteadily down and down, over bits of old\ncobbled road and by narrow trails, brings one\nto the pyramid of Tepoztecatl\u2014a square mass\nof rock assembled on one of the many cliffs\nand small peaks. Access to it is only by a steep\npath up a narrow defile and includes the ascent\nof an iron ladder. Hundreds of feet below lies\nthe village of Tepoztlan. In every direction\nare jagged rocks, precipitous cliffs and inaccessible fastnesses. How true it is that Mexico\nis built on the vertical plane! ....\n\"So much for the living Mexico, of the dead\nthere is Xochicalco\u2014three large hills simply\ncovered with dozens of pyramids of unmor-\ntared stone but containing one ancient temple\non which are some fine reliefs, including most\nprominently, of course, the plumed serpent.\nThere are the ruins of Calixtlahuaca, two\nhours' drive, where sixty-two archeological\nsites have been marked out in one small district; five having been excavated at the\npresent time.\n\"Calixtlahuaca provides a story of interest\nto the superstitious. One pyramid is dedicated\nto Tlaloc, the Aztec, god of rain. My visit was\npaid in the dry season, which means dry season.\nAs we examined the nearer pyramids we became aware of a rainstorm in the distance,\nanother, and another\u2014in all, five rainstorms\nin five different directions. We climbed the\n600-foot hill on the crown on which is a large\npyramid. Hardly had we set foot on it than\nthe storm broke on us. Such a terrific downpour of rain, such large and hard hailstones,\nsuch flashes of lightning and such bursts of\nthunder so close, I had never experienced.\nWhile running vainly for shelter I wondered\nwhy our homage to Alaloc had not been acceptable.\n\"An hour's drive from Mexico City are the\npyramids of San Juan Teotihuacan. The\nPyramid of the Sun is over 200 feet in height,\nand the base of each side something over 700\nfeet in length. There, too, is the temple of\nQuetzacoatl with again the plumed serpent as\nthe motif of all the decorations. Nearby have\nbeen excavated the ruins of some great man's\nhome in which are found in a good state of\npreservation his private chapel, his theatre, the\nkitchen well and even a primitive form of\nshower bath! And the plaster is so smooth\nand hard as to be the envy of us moderns who\nknow so much.\n\"Hundreds of years ago Ajusco poured forth\na tremendous flow of lava. Near the farthest\npoint and where it is only about twenty feet\nthick some curious person tunnelled under it.\nAnd there to this day may be seen in their\noriginal tombs under the lava the skeletons of\nthree or four women who were buried before\nthe eruption of Ajusco! And only a few\nminutes farther, at Tlalpam, is a 'round\nPAGE TWENTY-POUR THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932\n\u25a0\u2022\u00ab)\u25a0 <*\u2022\npyramid' which was half buried by the same\nlava flow.\n\"You appreciate my enthusiasm? Or would\nyou prefer to be told of modern Mexico? It,\ntoo, has a tremendous interest but of it I must\nwrite at another time. In any event you may\nnow have an inkling of what there is to\ninterest one in Mexico.\"\nHaven't you enjoyed these letters? Then\nwhy not write one yourself, now, to your\nfellow graduates. Tell them where you are,\nwhat you are doing, and what you hope to do.\nSend it to the Editorial Board, care of the\nRegistrar's Office of the University, and we\nshall be happy to print it in our next\nChronicle. K. M L.\nGeneral Information\nDr. Harry V. Warren, Arts '25, Sc. '26,\nis regarded as one of the most prominent\ngraduates of the University. He was awarded\nthe Rhodes Scholarship in 1926 and spent\nthree years at Queen's College, Oxford, where\nhe obtained his Ph.D. in geology. His thesis\nwas entitled \"A Comparative Study of Some\nof the Lead and Zinc Deposits of South Western\nEurope.\" This involved work in the Pyrenees\nand in the central plateau of France and the\ncentral plateau of Spain.\nDuring his stay in England Dr. Warren\nfound time to compete in numerous sprinting\nevents. He equalled the Olympic record unofficially and won the 100 metres in the Irish\nchampionships in 1928. In 1929 he obtained\nhis full blue for Oxford by winning the\nOxford University 100 yards in the annual\nsports.\nDr. Warren also gave talks on Canada for\nthe Y.M.C.A. Red Triangle Association and\nfor the Overseas League, and talks on the\nLeague of Nations for the League of Nations\nUnion. These lectures took place in all parts\nof England, the most important being held in\nLondon and Liverpool.\nIn 1929 he received a three-year Commonwealth Fund Scholarship with avalue of $3000\na year. There are only two Canadians holding\na Fellowship of this sort at present. These\nfellowships are open each year to about thirty\nBritish students who have shown that they\nwill profit by their experiences in the United\nStates and who have later taken degrees or\notherwise shown their ability in England, in a\nDominion and England, or in the Civil Service\nof some Dominion. No definite work is demanded of the students but the interchange\nis expected to help eventually in promoting\ngood international relationships, and all Fellows must return to the Empire at the close\nof their three years in the United States. Dr.\nWarren has spent the greater part of his time\nin Pasadena at the California Institute of\nTechnology working under Dr. Ransome on\n\"The Relationship between Precious and Base\nMetals in the Fissure Veins of the Western\nUnited States.\" He has already written three\npapers which will be published this year.\nIn addition he has travelled about 50,000\nmiles by car, 10,000 miles by rail and 10,000\nmiles by boat since he left London to take up\nhis Fellowship. Nor has he neglected to participate in activities which will better acquaint\nhim with the American people. He has taken\npart in productions at the Pasadena Little\nTheatre on several occasions, and is President\nof both the Wanderers Hockey Club and the\nWanderers Rugby Football Club of Southern\nCalifornia. * * \u00bb\nWilliam G. Sutcliffe, Arts '19, has made\ngreat progress since graduation, in his chosen\nsubject, economics. After leaving the University of British Columbia he took a post-graduate course at Harvard leading to an M.A.\ndegree, and later taught in Simmons College,\nBoston. He was then given the Chair of\nEconomics in the College of Business Administration of Boston University. In 1930 Mr.\nSutcliffe was exchange professor of Economics\nat Hamline University, St. Paul, Minnesota.\nProfessor Sutcliffe is also a member of the\ngeneral committee of the Anglo-American\nFellowship. The general committee of this\nsociety is composed of men from the United\nStates and from Great Britain, and under their\ndirection investigations on economic subjects\nPAGE TWENTY-FIVE THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932\nof vital importance to Anglo-American relations are carried on by students of both nations. The object is to promote greater cooperation and better economic understanding\nbetween the two countries. Professor Sutcliffe\nwas resident adviser for the first year of the\nFellowship for students coming from Great\nBritain.\nIn conclusion, some mention must be made\nof Professor Sutcliffe's books, the first of\nwhich was written in collaboration with a\nbank treasurer and dealt with \"Savings.Banks,\"\nwhile his most recent publication, issued last\nyear, was entitled \"Statistics for the Business\nMan.\" * * *\nKalvero Oberg, Arts '28, who graduated\nfrom the University of British Columbia with\na B.A degree in Economics, has had a most\ninteresting career. His secondary education\nwas obtained chiefly by correspondence, and\nhis holidays for many years were spent in the\nsalmon fisheries near his home at Tofino, Vancouver Island. In 1929 Mr. Oberg was signally\nhonored by the University of British Columbia\nin being recommended for appointment as a\ngraduate assistant in the department of economics at the University of Pittsburgh. He\ntaught there for a year and received his\nMaster's degree.\nMr. Oberg's chief interest has always been\nin the study of Indians. Ever since he was a\nyoung boy on the West Coast, and more\nparticularly since the time he was engaged in\nfishing with the Indians, he has always taken\na keen interest in them. When only seventeen\nhe had mastered their language thoroughly. It\nwas therefore not surprising that, after only\none year at the University of Pittsburgh, he\nreceived an offer as an assistant in the department of anthropology at the Chicago University, specializing in the study of Indians of\nthe northwest coast of America.\nMr. Oberg has now been commissioned by\nthe University of Chicago to undertake an\nethnographical field research covering the\neconomic institutions of the Tlingit ( Alaskan)\nIndians of the Alaskan Peninsula. This work\nwill take him about a year, when he will return to Chicago to assume his regular duties\non the faculty of the university there.\nWhile in Alaska Mr. Oberg has been com\nmissioned by the United States Government\nto organize an exhibit of the Northwest Coast\nIndians for the World's Fair to be held in\nChicago in 1933, and it is probable that he\nwill arrange for a visit of fifty of these Indians\nto Chicago. * * *\nOne of the University of British Columbia's most distinguished Alumni is Lionel\nStevenson, Arts, '22. After graduation he\nwent to Toronto where he received his M.A.\ndegree, and later proceeded to Berkeley where\nhe was awarded his Ph.D. and where he taught\nfor several years. He is now professor of\nEnglish and head of the department in the\nArizona State Teachers' College. He is also\nsecretary-treasurer of the Philological Association of the Pacific Coast, and for two years\nbefore going to Arizona he was president of\nthe California Writers Club, a state-wide\norganization.\nProfessor Stevenson has written several\nbooks, the first of which was entitled \"An\nAppraisal of Canadian Literature.\" \"The Rose\nof the Sea\" is just out as his second offering in\nthe series of the Ryerson Poetry Chap-Books,\nfollowing his first Chap-Book, \"A Pool of\nStars.\" * * \u00bb\nH. R. Lyle Streight, who received his\nB.A. in 1927 and his M.A. in 1929 with first-\nclass honors in chemistry, has already a remarkable list of successes to his credit.\nThe most recent was the award of his Doctorate degree at the University of Birmingham,\nEngland, in December, 1931.\nDr. Streight was the recipient in 1929 of\nthe Royal Commission Scholarship of 1851,\nthe highest individual scientific award open\nto any student in any University in the British\nEmpire. It has been awarded annually since\n1851 by the Royal Commission of Great Britain for the student in any of the overseas\nuniversities who shows exceptional ability in\nscientific research work. It is granted only to\nstudents who have completed their regular\ncourse in university work and have given\nevidence of particular ability in scientific investigation in order to enable them for the\nnext two years to do research work under\nconditions most likely to equip them for practical service in the scientific life of the Empire.\nHe was also awarded graduate work and a\nPAGE TWENTY-SIX THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932__\nUniversity Fellowship by Stanford University\nfor 1929.\nIn 1929 Dr. Streight took up his research\nwork in carbohydrate chemistry at the University of Birmingham, under Professor W.\nN. Haworth, D.Sc, F.R.S., world authority\nin the chemistry of sugar. Results have from\ntime to time been published in the Journal of\nthe Chemistry Society, London. The Royal\nCommission renewed the scholarship in 1930,\nwhich is done only under exceptional circumstances. Dr. Streight thus received his Ph.D.\nlast year, and had the distinction to be the\nfirst Canadian to receive it from that university. He has accepted a renewal of his scholarship to do further research work for 1932,\nunder Professor R. Robinson, D.Sc, L.L.D.,\nF.R.C.S., in the Dyson Perrin Chemical\nLaboratory at the University of Oxford.\nBessie Hurst, Arts '28, has a scholarship\nat Bryn Mawr where she is working for her\ndoctor's degree in social research in Economics.\nAlso at Bryn Mawr on a scholarship is\nMargaret Ormsby, who received her B.A. in\n1929 and her M.A. in 1931 from the University of British Columbia with honors in history. She is working towards her Ph.D in\nhistory. * * \u2666\nRev. J. W. Duncan, B.A., B. Th., is assistant pastor of the Dublin Street Baptist Church\nin Edinburgh, Scotland. Mr. Duncan graduated from the University of Columbia in\n1927, and took his theology degree in 1930\nfrom McMaster University. He is now studying for his Ph.D. at Edinburgh University.\nHugh L. A. Tarr, who received his B.S.A.\nand M.S.A. from U. B. C. and who won a\ngovernment scholarship in 1930, was awarded\nlast year a Ph.D. degree in bacteriology at\nMcGill University. He was also successful in\nobtaining the 1851 Exhibition Overseas\nTravelling Bursary, and the Resident Studentship at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, England. He will do his research work in the\nbiochemistry laboratory at Cambridge University.\nEleanor Riggs graduated from the University of British Columbia in 1928 with\nhonors in biology and bacteriology. She spent\nthe next two years doing post-graduate work\nat the University of Toronto where each year\nshe was awarded a $500 open scholarship. In\nJune, 1931, she took her M.A. degree in\nphysiology and is at present in Toronto on a\nteaching fellowship offered by the department\nof physiology. * s. *\nHugh M. Morrison, Arts, '30, who has\nbeen attending Clark University, Worcester,\nMass., on an American Antiquarian Society\nFellowship, has been awarded a fellowship and\nappointed assistant in the history department\nat Clark. \u201e, ... ^\nBetty McKenzie, Arts '30, gained three\nprizes last year at McGill University. Miss\nMcKenzie, who was the youngest member of\nher class, won the degree of Bachelor of\nLiterary Science by her proficiency.\n* * *\nLes. Mallory, Ag. '27, who received his\nB.S.A. and M.S.A. degrees from U. B. C, and\nwho was subsequently connected with the\nactivities of fruit organizations in the province, is at present reporting on agricultural\nconditions in the Mediterranean Basin for the\nUnited States department of agriculture. He\nwas married quite recently at Marseilles to\nMay Smith, a former student of the University\nof California. \u00ab.\u00ab.-.\nCecil Lamb, Ag. '26, is now wheat breeder\nat the Wooster Station, Ohio. On graduating\nfrom U. B. C. he was awarded the W. C.\nMacdonald scholarship which took him to\nMacdonald College, Quebec, where he specialized in agronomy and obtained his master's\ndegree. Following this he returned to U. B. C,\nwhere he was assistant in the agronomy department for two years. He then attended\nCornell University and studied for the degree\nof Doctor of Philosophy. In 1931 he was\nawarded the Goldwin Smith Fellowship in\nbotany from Cornell.\n* * \u00bb\nEugene CASSiDY,Arts '30,who was awarded the H. R. MacMillan Scholarship two years\nago, is continuing his studies in Japanese trade\nPAGE TWENTY-SEVEN THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932\n\u25a0c>~\nrelations, and has been appointed as teacher in\none of the native schools in Yamagata.\n* * *\nRussell Munn, Arts '30, who was attached to the Fraser Valley Library experiment\nafter graduation, is now in New York where\nhe is continuing his studies at Columbia under\na Carnegie Institute scholarship.\nLionel Laing, M.A., who graduated from\nU. B. C. in Arts '29, was last year appointed\na fellow in the department of political science\nat Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.,\nwhere he had been taking a post graduate\ncourse in international law. Unfortunately\nillness prevented him from continuing his\nstudies, and he is at present convalescing in\nVictoria.\nIn the April issue, 1931, of the Washington\nHistorical Quarterly appears a twelve-page\narticle by him entitled \"The Family-Company-Contact,\" a review of events connected\nwith the establishment of responsible government on Vancouver Island.\nThe varied activities of some of the graduates in Agriculture are well set forth in the\nfollowing list compiled by Dean Clement:\nJ. C. Berry is a member of the firm of John\nW. Berry & Sons, Langley Prairie. The company is interested in purebred Holstein cattle,\nin an export business and, in addition, produces\npreferred raw milk bottled at the farm.\nFergus Mutrie of Vernon is a producer\nand shipper of vegetables and vegetable seeds.\nThis farm produced the first elite stock seed\nin onions in Canada.\nJohnny Pye of Lulu Island is developing\na herd of purebred Ayrshires. His stock is\nspreading throughout the community where\nhe farms.\nArt Aylard is just beginning to develop a\npurebred Jersey herd near Victoria.\nL. A. Murphy began with Canadian Industries Limited a little more than three years\nago. Today he is district manager of the\nfertilizer section, New Westminster.\nArt Laing is with the Vancouver Milling\nand Grain Company, Vancouver, in charge of\nthe fertilizer division.\nErnie Peden is a son of William Peden of\nthe firm of Scott & Peden, Victoria. He is a\nspecialist in soils and seeds.\nBill Roach is a field agent with Canadian\nHatcheries Limited, Royal Oak. He is a specialist in soils and seeds.\nJ. D. Middlemass is with the Trail Smelter\nand has a keen interest in the experimental\nand productive aspects of treble phosphate.\nKeith Thorneloe of Vancouver is assistant professor of dairying at Manitoba Agricultural College.\nE. C. Hope is assistant professor of agricultural economics at the University of\nSaskatchewan.\nMiss Helen Milne is in charge of the\npoultry department, University of Alberta.\nR. C. Palmer is assistant superintendent\nof the Summerland Experimental Farm. He\nis leaving at once for England as exchange\ninvestigator. He will work at the East Mailing\nStation. * * *\nPhyllis Freeman, who graduated in Arts\n'29 with first class honors in history, has been\nwinning scholarships consistently for the past\nfew years. In 1930 she went to Smith College\non a fellowship and took her M.A. in history.\nLast spring she won a fellowship of $1,000\nfor independent research at Washington, D.C.\nShe took as her subject the connection between\nAmerican and Canadian Trade Unions, and\nis working under the chief of the Manuscript\ndivision in the Library of Congress. Next year\nshe will go to England on an I.O.D.E. Travelling Scholarship and will study at the London\nSchool of Economics.\n* * *\nMarjorie Leeming, Arts '26, added to her\nlist of tennis triumphs last summer when she\nreached the finals of the Canadian championships. In doing so she defeated Olive Wade,\nthe titleholder of the previous year, but failed\nto win out against Edith Cross. Marj. was\ntennis champion of Canada in 1925-26 in all\nthree events. * * *\nHonor Kidd, Arts '26, spent last winter in\nOttawa with her brother, Desmond Kidd,\nSc. '2 5, who is engaged in geological work for\nthe Government. Desmond went out again\nto Bear Lake this spring. He is in charge of\nPAGE TWENTY-EIGHT THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932\nthe Geological Survey for the Arctic. Honor\nhas just sailed for Europe where she will spend\nsix months. She will be joined in the summer\nby Dorothy Peck, Arts '24, and they intend\nto motor in England and France.\n* * *\nLucy Ross, Arts '28; Dorothy Patterson, Arts '29, and Jean McRae, Arts '26,\nspent some time holidaying in Honolulu this\nwinter. Later Lucy went to California and\nMexico and via the Panama Canal to Bermuda.\nSince graduation Lucy's chief interest has been\nin Social service. She took a two-year course\nin this work in Toronto and during 1930-31\nshe held a position with the Children's Aid\nSociety here. * * *\nTeddy Guernsey, Sc. '23, who has been in\nAfrica for the past three years, was home on\nfurlough this winter for seven weeks. He left\nin February to resume his work in geological\nexploration with a party under Dr. Bancroft,\nformer head of the Geology Department at\nMcGill. They are endeavoring to locate ore\nbodies in Northern Nigeria.\n* * *\nThe first U. B. C. graduate to engage in\ngeological exploration in Africa was Gerald\nJackson, Sc. '24. He worked for three years\nwith the Roan Antelope Company, and then\nwent to England to study at the Imperial\nCollege of Science at the London University.\nHe obtained his doctor's degree in Science in\nthe unusually short space of two years. This\nwas made possible because he was given a year's\ncredit for his work at U. B. C. He is now\nengaged in geological work in India.\n* * *\nArthur Beattie, Arts '28, spent 1928-29\nin Paris on a French Government Scholarship\nand was awarded his M.A. at the University\nof British Columbia last year. He is at present\ninstructing in French at the University of\nIdaho, Moscow, Idaho.\n\u00ab\u2022 \u00ab\u2022 \u00bb\nHarry Hickman, Arts '30, who won the\ngold medal and a French Government scholarship when he graduated, returned from Paris\nlast summer and has been at the University of\nBritish Columbia for the past year, instructing\nin French and working towards his M.A.\ndegree.\nEleanor Dyer, Arts'29, has this year been\nacting as assistant in the German department\nat U. B. C. She spent the winter of 1929-30\nin Toronto on a fellowship and obtained her\nM.A. degree. The following year she studied\nat the University of Munich, and travelled a\ngreat deal in Germany and on the continent.\nEleanor has been offered three scholarships\nfor next year, one at Wisconsin, another at\nRadcliffe, and a third at Columbia.\n* * *\nMargaret Grant, Arts'29, who spent two\nwinters on a fellowship at the University of\nToronto working towards a Ph.D. in English,\nhas for the past year been an Assistant in the\nEnglish department at U. B. C.\n* & *\nDon Grant, B. Com., who graduated in\n1931 and won the H. R. MacMillan Scholarship, went to Shanghai last June. He spent\nseven months in China doing research work in\nindustrial conditions for a thesis entitled\n\"Growth of Manufacturing in China As It\nAffects Foreign Trade.\"\n* * *\nNan Hadgkiss, Arts '29, who spent two\nyears studying social science at the University\nof Toronto, has now a position with the\nChildren's Aid Society in Vancouver.\n* * *\nGrace Hope, Arts '27, is with the Family\nWelfare Bureau, Montreal.\nX- * *\nBert Jagger, Sc. '29, is with the General\nElectric Company in Peterborough, Ont.\nA. Earle Birney, Arts '26, and Edward\nChapman, Arts '25, are instructing in English at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City.\n\u00bb \u00ab\u2022 *\nCarmen Sing, Arts '25, has a business\nposition with Macy's, New York. Walter\nLanning, Arts '25, went east last summer to\nvisit him. * * *\nB. W. Crickmay, who graduated from the\nUniversity of British Columbia in 1927, and\nwho later received the degree of Doctor of\nPhilosophy from Yale University, is at present\nassistant pathologist of Georgia.\n>:- \u00ab\u2022 *\nSylvia Thrupp, Arts '25, who received her\nPAGE TWENTY-NINE THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932\nB.A. and M.A. degrees from the University\nof British Columbia, with honors in history,\nis at present continuing her work at the Institute of Historical Research connected with\nUniversity College, London. In the fall of\n1929 she went to England on an I.O.D.E.\nTravelling Scholarship, and was awarded her\nPh.D. from the University of London at the\nend of two years. Her thesis dealt with the\neconomic history of mediaeval London, and\na certain portion of it is being prepared for\npublication. Miss Thrupp was last year granted a half share in the Metcalf Scholarship, and\nis still pursuing her historical research. During\nthe winter she did some work on mediaeval\nLatin for an American dictionary.\n* * *\nThe Parisian colony of U. B. C. graduates\nis growing steadily larger. This year Mrs. H.\nHemming (formerly Alice Weaver) , Arts\n'28; Jean Woodrow, Arts '26; Margaret\nLarge, Arts '31; Helen Matheson, Arts\n'28; Sallie Carter, Arts '31, and Vera Tipping, Arts '31, have been added to the list.\n* * *\nThe work of W. A. Bickell, Sc. '22, was\nfeatured in the Sunday Province some time\nago. Mr. Bickell has been in charge of operations on the jetty at the mouth of the Fraser\nRiver, and the consequent improvement in\nshipping has occasioned much comment. Mr.\nBickell went to Japan this spring with the\nCanadian rugby team.\n* * \u00bb\nDorothy Gill, Arts '22, is at McGill University working for a master's degree.\n* * *\nJames Duffy, Arts '22, is Assistant Professor of Classics at Washington University,\nSt. Louis, Mo. -\nDouglas Telford, Arts '28, has been\nstudying medicine for the past four years at\nthe University of Toronto. During his first\nyear there he was given a fellowship in biochemistry, and last year he was awarded the\nCanadian General Hospital Scholarship of\n$125 for general proficiency in his examina-\ntions- * * \u00bb\nPeter Demidoff, Sc. '2 5, who was report\ned drowned several years ago, turned up a few\nmonths after the story of his death had been\ncirculated. The full details of his disappearance are unknown, but he is said to have left\nhis companions and gone up to his mining\nclaim in the north.\nRobert H.Wright, Arts'2 8, who received\nhis Ph.D. from McGill University last spring,\nis now teaching chemistry at the University\nof New Brunswick.\nRalph Ball, Arts '26, who won his doctor's degree in 1931 from McGill University,\nis research chemist for the American Celluloid\nCompany. * * *\nArthur Gallaugher, Arts '26, who took\nhis Ph.D. in chemistry from McGill last fall,\nis research chemist for the Interlake Tissue\nPaper Company.\n* * *\nAmong University graduates in and around\nNew York are Mary Watts, Arts '29, who is\ntaking a library course at Columbia University; Betty Groves, Arts '28, who is in the\nBrooklyn Public Library; and Hugh Wood-\nworth, Arts '29, who is with the Bureau of\nAdvertising. * * *\nClifford D. Kelly, Ag. '22, was recently\ngranted the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in\nBacteriology from Cornell University. Dr.\nKelly graduated from U. B. C, where he received his master's degree in 1923. Since\nleaving Vancouver he has carried on his studies\nat Reading University, England, at the N. Y.\nState Agricultural Experimental Station at\nGeneva, N. Y., and at Cornell University,\nIthaca. * * *\nAlbert R. Poole graduated with honors\nin mathematics from the University of British\nColumbia in 1929 and won his master's degree\nin 19 31. He has recently been awarded a $7 5 0\nfellowship in mathematics at the California\nInstitute of Technology in Pasadena. The winning of the fellowship is significant because\nof the fact that only three fellowships were\navailable this year at the Institute.\nPAGE THIRTY THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932\nGeorge Davidson, Arts '28, is preparing\nfor his final Ph.D. examinations at Harvard.\nHis thesis is to deal with motivation in classical drama. Recently he won the finest scholarship yet awarded to a Harvard Classics\nstudent. * * *\nDorothy Blakey, Arts '21, who last year\nwon the Federation of University Women's\nScholarship, is now studying for the degree of\nDoctor of Philosophy at King's College, University of London. Her thesis will be a study\nof the Minerva Press.\nMargaret Ross, who received her B.A.\ndegree in 1930 and her M.A. in 1931, has been\nan assistant in the history department at the\nUniversity of British Columbia for the past\nyear. Next fall she will do research in history\nat Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, where she has been awarded a fellowship.\n*>(\u25a0\u00ab\u2022\nLloyd Bolton, Arts '22, is at Cornell University working towards a Ph.D. in biology.\n* * *\nFrank Morley, Arts '30, is completing\nhis second year in Edinburgh under a renewal\nof the I.O.D.E. Scholarship. He is working\ntowards a doctor's degree in constitutional\nhistory. * * *\nFabian Underhill, Arts '30, has held a\nteaching fellowship at Berkeley for the past\ntwo years. He is working towards a Ph.D. in\nEconomics. * * *\nAndrew McKellar, Arts'30, has recently\nbeen awarded the Whiting Fellowship in\nphysics by the University of California at\nBerkeley. Under the terms of the fellowship\nhe will proceed to the degree of Ph.D. and will\ndevote his entire time to study and research.\nMcKellar was graduated with honors in physics from the University of Columbia in 1930\nand later he won a teaching fellowship at\nBerkeley. He will receive his M.A. there this\nspring. * * *\nJohn D. Duncan, B. Sc. '28, is Sales Engineer of the Motor Section of the Canadian\nGeneral Electric Company, Toronto.\nStuart S. Holland, Sc. '30, has been\nawarded a fellowship in geology at Princeton\nUniversity. For the past two years he has\nbeen at Princeton where he will enter his final\nyear this autumn for a Ph.D. degree.\n* * *\nD. F. Stedman, Allan Gill and W. E.\nGraham are in the chemistry division of the\nResearch Council in Ottawa. Les Howlett\nis in the physics division.\n* * *\nIn the Ottawa Department of External\nAffairs are Hugh Keenleyside, Alfred Rive\nand Norman Robertson.\n* * *\nBert Imlah has been assistant professor\nfor the past four years or more in the department of history, Tufts College, Mass.\n* * *\nRoy Graham, Sc. '30, is an assistant in the\ndepartment of geology at the University of\nBritish Columbia. He is working towards his\nMaster of Applied Science degree.\n* * *\nMax Cameron, Arts '27, is the principal\nof the Powell River High School.\n* * *\nEric W. Jackson, Arts '24, who spent several years in India after graduation, took his\nL. Th. from the Anglican Theological College\nlast spring, leading his class. He is now a\ncurateat Christ Church Cathedral, Vancouver.\n* * *\nNorman McLellan, B.A., Sc. '22, graduated in medicine from McGill University,\nand is now on the staff of the Shriners' Crippled Children's Hospital, Montreal.\n* * *\nE. G. Hallonquist, Arts '28, and H. Borden Marshall, Arts '29, have just been\nawarded fellowships of $1,000 to be held in\nthe Department of Cellulose Chemistry, McGill University. y. * *\nStuart Itter, Arts '30, has been awarded\na $900 research scholarship in biochemistry\nat Johns Hopkins Universtiy. Mr. Itter received his B.A. degree at the University here\nin 1930 and has been working under Dr. E.\nPAGE THIRTY-ONE -\u00ab*\nTHE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932\nV. McCollum, noted nutrition authority, at\nthe University of Washington, where he will\nshortly receive his M.A. degree. He will continue studies for a Ph.D. degree at Johns\nHopkins in Baltimore, Md.\n* * *\nAllan C. Young, who graduated with\nfirst-class honors in physics and mathematics\nin 1930, has been given a National Research\nCouncil bursary in physics at the University\nof Toronto. Mr. Young expects to receive his\nM.A. degree shortly from the University of\nBritish Columbia, and next year he will pursue\nhis studies for a Ph.D. degree at Toronto.\nresearch fellowship in physics, received his\nM.S. last June. He was awarded an assistant-\nship of $1,000 for the year 1931-32 and has\nbeen doing valuable research in physics. His\nmain work is connected with a special type of\ncondenser microphone. He has published two\npapers, \"Mounting of Thin Metallic Membranes Under Tension\" in the Review of\nScientific Instruments, and \"Thermionic Frequency Doubler\" in Physics.\nK. R. More, Arts '29, and O. E. Anderson, Arts '29, have fellowships at Berkeley\nfor 1931-32 and for 1932-33.\nDr. Hugh M. Fletcher, Arts '19, is an\nassistant professor of economics at the University of Pittsburgh. He received his B.A.\ndegree from British Columbia in 1919, his\nA.M. from Stanford in 1920 and his Ph.D.\nfrom Illinois in 1926. His field of specialization is economic theory and the history of\neconomic thought.\n* * *\nG. Cuthbert Webber, who graduated\nwith first-class honors in mathematics in\n1930, has been awarded a fellowship at the\nUniversity of Chicago, where he will work\ntowards a Ph.D. degree. He has been an assistant in the department of mathematics at\nthe University of British Columbia for the\npast year and expects to receive his M.A.\ndegree this spring.\n\u00bb * *\nDoris Baynes, Arts '26, will return shortly from Toronto, where she has been taking\na social service course for the past two years,\nto start her work with the Children's Aid\nSociety. * * *\nMargaret Higginbotham, Arts '23, was\nawarded recently a graduate scholarship in\nphysio-chemistry at the University of Chicago, where she will proceed towards her Ph.D.\ndegree. For the past two years she has been\nwith the Minnesota Board of Health Laboratories, Minneapolis, as bacteriologist.\n* * *\nCecil Stedman, Arts' 30, who went to\nPurdue University, Lafayette, Indiana, on a\nSteven E. Madigan, Arts '30, has a fellowship at Purdue University.\n* * *\nIan McTaggart Cowan, Arts '32, has\nbeen awarded a fellowship at the University\nof California, where he will undertake postgraduate work next year.\n* * *\nMalcolm F. McGregor, Arts '30, has just\nbeen granted an extension of a fellowship\nwhich was awarded to him last year by the\nUniversity of Michigan. He received his M.A.\nin 1931 and is at present working for a Ph.D.\ndegree. * * \u00bb\nWilson Coates, Arts '30, of Rochester,\nMass., has but recently returned from Russia,\nwhere he was studying conditions.\nReunion of the Class of 22\nThe Class of 1922 celebrated the tenth\nanniversary of graduation by a reunion luncheon held on February 13,1932. Those present\nwere Dr. G. G. Sedgwick, Honorary President\nof Arts '22; Mrs. Sedgwick, Mr. P. A. Boving,\nHonorary President of Agriculture '22; Eve-\nlyne Monkman, Edna Ballard, Mary Munro,\nDoris Dowling, Marjorie Agnew, Mrs. J. P.\nG. MacLeod (nee Martha McKechnie), Mrs.\nE. Clarke (nee Louise Campbell), Mrs. Bud-\nden (nee Jocelyn Frith), J. P. G. MacLeod,\nR. Argue, Dr. W. Black, Dr. A. Harris, L.\nPAGE THIRTY-TWO \u2022\u2022\u00ab*\nTHE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932_\nHeaslip, Dr. H. Harris, Ernest Clarke and J.\nWatson.\nAnother dinner is being planned for October, and Marjorie Agnew, 3672 West 15 th\nAvenue, Vancouver, asks that all out-of-town\nmembers of the Class of '22 send letters to\nher before that date.\nU. B. C. Grads. Elisible for Study\nFormal notification has been received\nfrom the Council of Legal Education in England that the University of British Columbia\nhas been approved and that its degree examinations will qualify students for admission to\nany of the four Inns of Court.\nThis recognition is a great advantage to\ngraduates of the University who wish to read\nlaw and obtain calls to the bar of England.\nIt will be particularly useful to Rhodes\nscholars who hope to study at the Inns of\nCourt concurrently with their work at Oxford in the Final Honors School of Jurisprudence in preparation for the degree of D.C.L.\nAs late as November the only two Canadian universities recognized by the council\nwere McGill and Toronto. Graduates of other\nCanadian universities were admitted in special\ncases, but only after making separate applications, which often involved delay.\nU. B. C. Nurses Stand Highest\nin Intelligence Tests\nIn the intelligence tests given by Dr.\nWeir in 1930 in connection with his Nursing\nSurvey, the median I. Q. of the 28 student\nnurses enrolled in the special nursing courses\nat the University of British Columbia was\n115, the highest in Canada. The majority of\nthese nurses were taking the degree course.\nThe median I. Q. for the 2280 student nurses\nin Canada was 98.3.\nMr. Stephen Haweis Presents\nPictures to U. B. C.\nA very interesting gift of pictures was\nrecently presented to the University by Mr.\nStephen Haweis, brother of Mr. Lionel Haweis\nof the Library Staff. They were intended as an\naddition to the Burnett Collection but now\nhang temporarily in the West Wing of the\nReading Room, as there is no space available\nin the present Museum.\nLast year, when Mr. Lionel Haweis was in\nDominica, British West Indies, he obtained\nthese pictures from this brother. They consist\nof Fijian studies, twelve of which are large\nheads of natives. The other six represent various phases and scenes of Fijian life. They were\ndone by Mr. Stephen Haweis about 1912 when\nhe was in Fiji. Many of the drawings are in\npencil, two are in water colours and others are\ntouched with colour or india ink. The work is\noriginal and occasionally quite eccentric, as\nthe artist has adopted conventions designed to\nemphasize movement, especially in the one depicting the dance. Otherwise the drawings\nshow good straightforward draftsmanship\nwith a strong decorative tendency.\nThe pictures have been exhibited frequently\nin the United States, and they are the remains\nof a much more extensive collection.\nMr. Stephen Haweis is at present in Dominica where he has an orange plantation. For\nsome years he has done no painting but he has\nrecently had a studio built and is resuming his\nwork. It is very improbable, however, that he\nwill do any more Fijian subjects.\n\"Freddy\" Wood Honored\nPast and present members of the Players' Club gathered recently at the home of the\nretiring president, Miss Alice Morrow, in\nhonor of Mr. F. G. C. Wood, who has severed\nhis active connection with the club.\nIn the course of the afternoon Miss Morrow\npresented to Mr. Wood a very lovely silver\ntray, suitably inscribed, and given by graduate\nand undergraduate members who wished to\noffer some tangible expression of their appreciation of Mr. Wood's untiring efforts and\nsplendid guidance over a period of some sixteen years.\nIn thanking the donors \"Freddy\" traced\nthe history of the club from its inception,\nspoke of its hopes, its ambitions and its successes. He referred to pleasant associations\nand to happy friendships and regretted that it\nwas no longer possible for him to continue as\nHonorary President and Director.\nPAGE THIRTY-THREE -4*\nTHE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932\n*>-\nReport of the Toronto Branch\nof the University of British Columbia Alumni Association\nThe Toronto branch of the University of British Columbia Alumni Association still continues to be very active.\nThe executive for the season 1931-32 is as follows: Honorary President, Dr. Dal Grauer;\nPresident,Roscoe Garner; Secretary-treasurer,\nDoris Baynes; Social Committee: Margaret\nReggs, Kenneth Groves and Douglas Telford.\nThe following is a list of University of\nBritish Columbia Graduates in Toronto,\n1931-32:\nBaird, Kathleen, Arts '28\u2014Ontario College of Education.\nBarton, Mary, Arts '29\u2014Librarian Course.\nBaynes, Doris, Arts '26\u2014Social Science.\nBrock, David, Arts '30\u2014Law at Osgoode Hall.\nBishop, J. W., Sc. '29\u2014Working with the General Electric.\nCampbell, Mildred, Arts '26\u2014Ph.D. work in Biology.\nCassidy, Dr. Harry M., Arts '23\u2014On the Economics\nand Social Science Staff, U. of Toronto.\nCassidy, Mrs. H. M. (Bea Pearce), Nursing '24.\nColeman, John, Arts '30\u2014Medicine.\nCraig, Ruth\u2014Teaching at Branksome Hall.\nCull, Dr. J. S., Arts '26\u2014Grace Hospital.\nDaniells, Roy, Arts '30\u2014Ph.D. work in English.\nDauphinee, Dr. James\u2014Interning at the Toronto General Hospital.\nFisher, Jean, Arts '29\u2014Ph.D. work in Mathematics.\nGarner, Roscoe, Arts '29\u2014Medicine.\nGarratt, Jean, Arts '31\u2014Librarian Course.\nGilbert, Ernest, Arts '31\u2014Graduate Work in Psychology.\nGraham, Jean, Arts '26\u2014Social Science.\nGrauer, Dr. Dal, Arts '26\u2014On the Economics Staff, U.\nof Toronto.\nGroves, Kenneth, Arts '27\u2014Medicine.\nHall, Wilfred, Arts '29\u2014Working with a Chemical\nCompany.\nHart, Babs, Arts '29\u2014Ph.D. work in Biology.\nHelliwell, Hillary, Arts '30\u2014Library Work.\nKajiyama, Toshio, Arts '29\u2014Medicine.\nKeenan, T. J., Arts '25\u2014Teaching.\nLewis, Dr. Gordon, Arts '24\u2014Western Hospital.\nLucas, Verna, Arts '28\u2014Ph.D. work in Biology.\nMaltby, Mrs. C. (Dr. Lila Coates), Arts '21\u2014School\nfor Child Study.\nMichener, Mrs. R. (Norah Willis), '22.\nMorgan, Dr. Lome, Arts '24\u2014Dept. of Economics, U.\nof Toronto.\nMorgan, Mrs. Lome (Lucy Ingram), Arts '24.\nMurray, Vernon, Arts '29\u2014Medicine.\nMcCharles, Donalda, Arts '31\u2014Librarian Course.\nMcLean, John, Arts '24\u2014Western Hospital.\nNash, Jack, Arts '27\u2014Medicine.\nNeedier, Mrs. Alfred (Alfreda Berkeley), Arts '26.\nPhillips, Ernest, Sc. '31\u2014Construction Work.\nPiters, Jack, Arts '26\u2014Medicine.\nPound, Dorothy, Arts '30\u2014Library Work.\nRiggs, Eleanor, Arts '29\u2014Medicine.\nRiggs, Margaret, Arts '3 0\u2014Graduate Work in Biochemistry.\nSalmond, Mrs. Kenneth (Hope Leeming), Arts '30.\nSimpson, Dr. W. W., Arts '24\u2014Interning at the Psychiatric Hospital.\nSmith, Harold, Arts '27\u2014Ph.D. work in Physics.\nSteele, David, Arts '29\u2014Medicine.\nSturdy, Edith, Arts '31\u2014Librarian Course.\nTaylor, Dr. Tommy, Arts '26\u2014Botany Staff, University of Toronto.\nTelford, Douglas, Arts '28\u2014Medicine.\nTudhope, Mrs. James (Eloise Angell), Arts '25.\nTurnbull, Dr. Frank, Arts '24\u2014Toronto General Hospital.\nTurnbull, Mrs. Frank (Jean Thomson), Arts '26.\nWeld, Dr. Beecher, Arts '22\u2014Dept. of Physiology, U.\nof Toronto.\nWhiteside, Betty, Arts '29\u2014Household Science.\nWoolliams, Ewart, Arts '25\u2014Ph.D. work in Botany.\nU. B. C. Graduates in Montreal\nThere is no definite Alumni organization in Montreal but each year some\nform of reunion is held. For the information about University of British Columbia\ngraduates in Montreal we are indebted to Fer-\ndie Munro, Arts '29.\nJ. Stanley Allen, Arts '27; Francis\nFowler, Arts '29; H. Borden Marshall,\nArts '29; Kenneth Gray, Arts '29; E. G.\nHallonquist, Arts '29; and F. L. Munro,\nArts '29, are in the Graduate School in Chemistry at McGill University, doing work leading to a Ph.D. degree. The last four are holders\nof National Research Council scholarships.\nMurchie McPhail, Arts '29 and Peter\nBlack, Arts '30, are in the Graduate School\nin Biochemistry working towards a Doctor's\ndegree. Murchie McPhail is also a holder of a\nPAGE THIRTY-POUR THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932^\n..#, _\u2014. \u25a0{\u00bb\u2022\u2022\nNational Research Council Scholarship.\nFrank Buckland is taking an M.A. in\nGeology.\nIn Medicine there are many graduates of\nthe University of British Columbia, among\nwhom are the following: Reg. Wilson, Gordon Baker, Digby Leigh, Norman Dick,\nRod Foote, Jack McMillan and Fred\nGrauer.\nRussell Palmer, Arts '26, and Ian\nBalmer, Arts '26, are now M.D.'s and are\ninterning in the Montreal General Hospital.\nThe following graduates are resident in\nMontreal: Grace Freeborn, Doug. Tutill,\nFrank Barnsley, Gerry Newmarch, Mr.\nand Mrs. Terry North, Mr. and Mrs. A.\nP. Mooyboer (Elaine Griffiths), Betty McKenzie, Mrs. Leigh Hunt (Jean Faulkner),\nC. J. Timlick, R. McKinnon and Otto\nGill.\nBirths, Marriases and Deaths\nBirths\nTo Major and Mrs. H. H. Hemming\n(Alice Weaver), a daughter.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. J. Oliver (Mary\nRobertson), a son.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. H. Furniss (Helen\nPeck), a daughter.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. B. Tudhope (Eloise\nAngell), a daughter.\nTo Dr. and Mrs. P. W. Gates (Lillian\nF. Cowdell), a son.\nTo the late Dermot Davies and to Mrs.\nDavies (Elsie Rilance), a daughter..\nTo Mr. and Mrs. James Herd (Gertrude Dowsley), a son.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. Eric Moberg (Molly\nWilcox), a son.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. George S. Clarke, a son.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. Edward Chamberlain,\na daughter.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Caple (Bice\nClegg), a daughter.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. Bentley Edwards, a\ndaughter.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. Albert Black (Katie\nUsher), a daughter.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. Cairns Gauthier, a son.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. K. McAllister (Clare\nMcQuarrie), a son.\nTo Dr. and Mrs. Charles B. Crittenden\n(Lucy Edwards), a daughter.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. E. L. McLeod (Flora\nMcKechnie), a son.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. Bill Phillips, a son.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. James R. Hodgson, a\ndaughter.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Bennett (Evelyn\nCrich), a son.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. C. Stewart (Freda Wilson), a son.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. J. Kuhn (Isobel Miller),\na daughter.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. W. Swanzey Peck, a\ndaughter.\nTo Mr. and Mrs. William Murphy (Esther\nKing), a daughter.\nMarriages\nLester De Witt Mallory, Agriculture '27,\nto Miss May Smith.\nG. L. Fraser, Arts '17, to Yvonne Drefus.\nDr. Donald McKay Morrison to Miss Irene\nYork of Arkansas City, Kansas.\nRussell Munn, Arts '30, to Mrs. Helen\nCoote of Chilliwack.\nBlanche Almond, Arts '27, to Hector\nMunro, Arts '27.\nDr. Robert William Ball to Helen Beatrice\nSlepicka of Oak Park, Illinois.\nShannon Mounce to Helen May Chambers\nof Winnipeg.\nJohn Plommer, Arts '29, to Lyla Stewart.\nMarion Orlo Roberts to Robert Lawrence\nMorrison.\nJean Faulkner, Arts '26, to Dr. Leigh\nHunt.\nEsther King, Arts '26, to Billy Murphy,\nArts '26.\nDoris McKay, Arts '26, to Bert Wales,\nArts '26.\nLenora Irwin, Arts '26, to Ian Douglas.\nWilliam Maxwell, Arts '16, to Leila Lewis.\nMargaret Kerr, Arts '23, to Duncan Fraser,\nSc. '23.\nPAGE THIRTY-FIVE _THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA GRADUATE CHRONICLE\u2014MAY, 1932\n~ Westinghouse, Hamilton, Ont.\nBarnes, Vera, Upper Sackville, New Brunswick.\nBaynes, Doris, 49 St. George St., Toronto (5).\nBrock, Britton, Queens' University, Kingston.\nBruce, Mrs. Charles L., lit Victoria Rd., Halifax.\nBuchanan, Thomas G., 187 Sanford Ave. N., Hamilton.\nCairnes, Clive Elmore, Geological Survey, Ottawa.\nCalvert, Donald E., Ontario Agricultural College, Guelph.\nCassidy, Harry M., Department of Social Science, University of Toronto,\nToronto.\nCassidy, Mrs. H. M. (nee Bea Pearce), Department of Social Science, University of Toronto, Toronto.\nClement, Bruce Dennis, 178 Sanford Ave. N., Hamilton, Ont.\nColes, Eric, Suite 404, Mountain View Apartments, Hamilton, Ont.\nCoward, George Stanley, 143 Pine St., Kingston.\nCraig, Ruth D., Branksome Hall, Elm Ave., Toronto.\nCraster, James Edmund, 570 Bolivar St., Petcrboro, Ont.\nCreighton, Mrs. J. H. (nee Sallee Murphy), 176 Madison Ave., Toronto (5).\nCrozier, Robert, University of Toronto, Toronto.\nDauphinee, James A., 214 Inglewood Drive, Toronto.\nDavidson, John Ross, 320 Prince Arthur St. W., Montreal.\nDes Brisay, Merril, 25 Elgin Ave., Toronto.\nEmery, Donald J., c\/o Canadian General Electric, Peterborough.\nEvans, Charles S., Geological Survey, Ottawa.\nFowler, Francis Louise, 3466 University Street, Montreal.\nGill, Alan F., 198 Somerset St., Ottawa.\nGill, Madge, 198 Somerset St., Ottawa.\nGill, Otto, 4870 Cote des Neiges Rd., Montreal.\nGraham, Jean, 25 5 Walley St., Montreal.\nGraham, William, National Research Council of Canada, Ottawa.\nGunning, Henry C, Geological Survey, Ottawa.\nHall, Wilfred N., Canadian Industries Ltd., Montreal.\nHay, Kenneth A., Lachute, Quebec.\nHeaslip, Wilbur J., 179 Sanford Ave. N., Hamilton, Ont.\nHome, Maurice, Department of Physics, McGill University, Montreal.\nHorwood, Hereward C, 92 Bagot St., Kingston, Ont.\nHuggett, Jack, Imperial Oil Co., Sarnia, Ont.\nHurst, McLeod Ewart, Department of Mines, Office of Provincial Geologist,\nToronto, Ont.\nJagger, Albert Edward, 376 Stewart St., Peterborough.\nJagger, Mrs. A. E., 376 Stewart St., Peterborough.\nJane, Robert Stephen, Shawnigan Falls, Quebec.\nJohnson, Mrs. Lloyd, Windsor Mills, P. Q.\nKajiyama, Toshio, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto.\nLidgey, Ralph C. G., 127 Sanford Ave. N., Hamilton, Ont.\nMaltby, Mrs. C. (nee Coates), 113 Kenson Apartments, 51 Groivenor St.,\nToronto.\nMennie, John H., Chemical Research, McGill University, Montreal.\nMitchener, Mrs. R., (nee Willis), 439 Sherbourne St., Toronto, Ont.\nMooyboer, Abram P., 1696 Queen Mary Rd., Apartment 13, Montreal.\nMooyboer, Mrs. A. (nee Griffiths), 1696 Queen Mary Rd., Apartment 13,\nMontreal.\nMorgan, Lome T., Department of Social Science, University of Toronto,\nToronto.\nMorgan, Mrs. L. T. (nee Ingram), Department of Social Science, University of Toronto, Toronto.\nMorrison, Robert L., c\/o Canadian General Electric, Peterboro, Ont.\nMorton, Ralph, c\/o Canadian General Electric, Peterboro, Ont.\nMounce, Irene, Division of Botany, Central Experimental Farm, Ottawa.\nMcAfee, W. R., Georgetown Mills, Georgetown, Ont.\nMcAfee, Mrs. W. R. (nee Munn), Georgetown Mills, Georgetown, Ont.\nMcAllister, Mrs. K. (nee McQuarrie), 22 Queen St., Sydney, N. S.\nMcDougall, Stewart R., 638 Old Orchard Ave., Montreal.\nMcLellan, Norman W., Shriners' Hospital for Crippled Children, Montreal.\nMcKay, Katherine, Cornwall, Ont.\nMcKeever, James Lawrence, c\/o Canadian General Electric, Peterboro, Ont.\nC\/5\nI*\ns\nn\n\u00a3\nI\nt ALUMNI DIRECTORY\u2014(Continued)\nMacKinnon, Ronald L., c\/o Sun Life Association Co., Investment Dept.,\nMontreal.\nMcLachlan, Charles G., c\/o Home Copper Corporation, Noranda, Quebec.\nMcPhail, Murchie K., 363 5 Lome Crescent, Montreal.\nNeedier, Mrs. W. H., Ellerslie, P. E. I.\nNelson, Clarence, 657 Lansdowne Ave., Westmount, Que.\nNorth, John Terry, 35 Trenholme Park Apartments, 6874 Sherbrooke St.,\nMontreal.\nOsborne, Dwight Hellis, 80 Sun Life Bldg., Toronto.\nRichards, Albert E., Economist, Agricultural Economics Branch, Ottawa.\nRiggs, Eleanor, c\/o University of Toronto.\nRiggs, Margaret, c\/o University of Toronto.\nRive, Alfred, 3rd Secretary, Department of External Affairs, Ottawa.\nRoberts, James Chester, 121 Emerald St., Hamilton.\nRobertson, Francis McG., Canadian Industries Ltd., Hamilton, Ont.\nRobertson, Norman A., Department of External Affairs, Ottawa.\nSchell, Joseph McClure, c\/o 470 Argyle Ave., Westmount, Quebec.\nSivertz, Christian, University of Western Ontario, London, Ont.\nSoutham, Harold Davey, 208 Pearson Ave., Toronto.\nStedman, Donald F., National Research Laboratories, Ottawa.\nSuttie, Ethel G., 59 Dupont St., Toronto (5).\nTaylor, Thomas M. C, c\/o Department of Botany, University of Toronto.\nThomas, Isabel, c\/o Suite 3, Athalmo Apartments, Grosvenor St., Toronto,\nOnt.\nThompson, Gertrude Hester, 6 Oakland Ave., Toronto.\nTudhope, Mrs. J. B. (nee Angell), 14 Kilbarry Rd., Toronto.\nWaddington, George Wilfred, Creighton, Ontario.\nWalker, John F., Victoria Museum, Ottawa.\nWeld, Charles B., 48 Hillsdale Ave. W., Toronto.\nWilby, George Van, 300 Huron St., Toronto, Ont.\nWoodland, Harold Elton, 489 King St., Peterboro.\nPRAIRIE PROVINCES\nAnnable, George, Outlook, Sask.\nBalmer, Ian, Tuxford, Sask.\nBaxter, Mrs. Catherine F. Weir, Lougheed, Alta.\nBaxendale, Robert D., Holland Creameries, Box 885, Winnipeg.\nBoomer, Edward H., Department of Chemistry, University of Alberta,\nEdmonton, Alta.\nBrain, Kathleen, 1209\u201416th W., Calgary, Alta.\nBridge, John W., Faculty of Medicine, Univ. of Alberta.\nBrown, Mrs. Harold, Keheler, Sask.\nCameron, William C, 612 Southam Bldg., Calgary.\nCotterell, Mrs. R. P. (nee Eugenie Fournier), Box 1965, Calgary, Alta.\nDalrymple, Thomas, Box 50, University of Alberta.\nElson, Mrs. Robert T., c\/o \"Winnipeg Tribune\", Winnipeg.\nFalconer, Joseph G., c\/o Forest Service of Canada, Customs Bldg., Winnipeg,\nManitoba.\nFisher, Raymond A., Dept. of Soils, University of Sask., Saskatoon.\nGreggor, C F., 2143 Osier St., Regina, Sask.\nKidd, Mrs. George (nee Stewart), Nordegg, Alta.\nKirby, J. O. C, Rocky Mountain House, Alta.\nKirby, W. J. C, Rocky Mountain House, Alta.\nLucas, Colin C, Brandon College, Brandon.\nMarsh, D'Arcy, \"The Albertan,\" Calgary, Alta.\nMartin, Elmer W., Manitoba Beach, Watrous, Sask.\nMillar, Mrs. T. G., (nee Abernethy), 413\u201413th St. N. W., Calgary.\nMilligan, Frances M., Fishing Lake, Sask.\nOsterhout, Victor H., Mannville, Alberta.\nPreston, Shirley Guy, College of Agriculture, Unviersity of Alberta.\nMacKinnon, Flora G., 3 Sandringham Apartments, 914\u201415th Ave. W.,\nCalgary.\nRobertson, Muriel Amelia, Strathclair, Manitoba.\nSinclair, Mrs. A. R. (nee McArthur), Rocky Mountain House, Alta.\nStone, Harriett, Dawson, Y. T.\nThornloe, Keith C, Man. Agricultural College, Winnipeg.\nTolmie, K. Jean, Wayne, Alberta.\nTraves, Charles W., Calgary, Alberta.\nWaters, Mrs. P. E. (nee Bulmer), Namaka, Alta.\nYoung, Robert Bruce, Compeer, Alta.\nBRITISH ISLES\nAdams, Mrs. James (nee Parker), 78 Parkway Close, Welwyn, Garden\nCity, England.\nBlakey, Dorothy, Crosby Hall, London.\nCampion, Mrs. H. Red vers (nee Griffiths), 75 Winmill Hill, Enfield,\nMiddlesex, England.\nChristison, Mary H., Stageholt, Stow, Midlothian, Scotland.\nCoates, Wells, Welwyn Theatre Bldg., Parkway, Welwyn Garden City,\nHerts, England.\nGrace, John, Gonvillc & Caius College, Cambridge, England.\nJackson, O. A. E., c\/o Dr. R. W. P. Jackson, 97 Clifton Ave., W. Hartlepool, England.\nJackson, G. C. A., c\/o Dr. R. W. P. Jackson, 97 Clifton Ave., W. Hartlepool, England.\nfa\ns\nn\na\nn\nX\n\u00a7\nz\nO\nr\nr\nK> ALUMNI DIRECTORY\u2014(Continued)\nJones, Margaret, 31 Onslow Road, Richmond, Surrey, England.\nMangat Nahur Singh, 79 Sinclair Rd., London W. 11, England.\nMurison, Mrs. C. A. P. (nee Clement), 106 Gordon Road, Camberly,\nSurrey, England.\nNelson, John C, 60 Oakwood Road, Golders Green, London N. W. 11,\nEngland.\nRobertson, Mrs. G. C. (nee Wesbrook), 48 Sun Ray Ave., London 24,\nEngland.\nStedman, Ralph Elliott, Swanston Cottages, Lothianburn, Midlothian, Scotland.\nStedman, Mrs. R. E. (nee Underhill), Swanston Cottages, Lothianburn,\nMidlothian, Scotland.\nTolmie, John Ross, Brasenose College, Oxford, England.\nTurner, Mrs. L. H. (nee Phyllis Gregory), 34 Onslow Rd., Richmond,\nSurrey, England.\nVollum, Roy Lars, Lincoln College, Oxford, England.\nVollum, Mrs. R. L. (nee Ella Crozier), Lincoln College, Oxford, England.\nWoods, Mrs. A. R. (nee Walsh), 30 Linden Rd., Bristol, England.\nZoond, Alexander, 88 Constantine Rd., Hampstead, London, England.\nTHE ORIENT\u2014THE FAR EAST\nBaker, Lorimer, 228-b, Kuling, Kuikiangsi Province, China.\nBarnwell, George Francis, Nederlandsche Koloniale Petroleum Maatschappy\nBatavia, Java, D. E. I.\nFaris, Mrs. D. K. (nee Fisher), 55 Racecourse Rd., Tientsin, China.\nCassidy, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene, 23 Kamitomizaka, Koishkawa, Tokyo.\nKeenleyside, Hugh, Canadian Legation, Tokyo, Japan.\nKeenleyside, Mrs. H. L. (nee Pillsbury), c\/o Canadian Legation, Tokyo,\nJapan.\nKuhn, Mrs. J. (nee Isobel Miller), China Island Mission, Tali, Yunnan,\nChina.\nMacArthur, Donald M., 2189 Kalia Rd., Honolulu, T. H.\nMcDonald, A. Bruce, c\/o Canadian Trade Commissioner, Shanghai.\nMcLane, Paul V., c\/o Canadian Trade Commissioner, P. O. Box 230, Kobe,\nNakano, Noboru Abe, \"The Japan Times\", Tokyo, Japan.\nPratt, Bernard Dodge, Hawaiian Canneries Co., Kanai, Hawaii.\nSeddon, Mrs. Arthur (nee Leveson), 23 Peking Rd., Shanghai, China.\nSmith, Grace, c\/o Cameron Importing & Exporting Co., Kobe, Japan.\nSuttie, Ethel Gwen, Eiwa Jo Gakko, Kofir, Yamanashi, Japan.\nTamenaga, Seiji, 15 Shimo-nibancho, Koji-machi, Tokyo, Japan.\nThorman, Mrs. C. (nee White), 1 Clive St., Calcutta, India.\nTaylor, William, Honolulu, T. H.\nEUROPE\nDallas, Dorothy, c\/o Bank of Montreal, Place Vendome, Paris, France.\nHarris, Mrs. E. L., (nee Battle), c\/o American Consulate General, Vienna,\nAustria.\nHallamore, Joyce, Elisabethstr., 15, Munich, Germany.\nHemming, Mrs. H. H., 57 Ave. de Segur, Paris, France.\nKeyserlingk, R. W., Alt-Moabit 85, Berlin.\nLamb, Kaye, chez Mme. Cattet, 18 rue Monsieur le Prince, Paris (6), France.\nRiddehough, Geoffrey B., Hotel Minerve, 13 rue des Ecoles, Paris (5),\nFrance.\nThompson, Homer A., American School of Classical Studies, Athens, Greece.\nTipping, Wessie, c\/o Madame Guemy, 19 Rue Monge, Paris (5), France.\nMallory, Lester, Asst. Agric. Commissioner, American Consulate, Marseilles,\nFrance.\nAFRICA\nFarrington, John L., c\/o Anglo-American Corporation, Broken Hill, Northern Rhodesia, South Africa.\nGillanders, Earle, Loangwa Concession, Broken Hill, Northern Rhodesia,\nSouth Africa.\nLord, Cliff, Loangwa Concession, Broken Hill, Northern Rhodesia. South\nAfrica.\nMcKeown, Merle, c\/o Loangwa Concession, Northern Rhodesia, South\nAfrica.\nSOUTH AMERICA \u2014 MEXICO\nBrown, Leslie, Trade Commissioner's Office, Edificio Banco de Londres y\nMexico, Officiana 30, Calle de Bolivar 32, Mexico City.\nCooper, Mrs. R. F. V. (nee Coates), Leccion Fomenta Rural F. C. S., Plaza\nConstitucion, Buenos Aires, Argentina.\nPlummer, Arthur H., Hacienda Guatajata, Huaruna Via La Paz, Bolivia,\nSouth America.\nAUSTRALIA\nSmith, Mrs. A. C. (nee Mutrie), Tumut, N. S. W., Australia.\nUNITED STATES\nAdams, Mrs. Cecil, E. 37th and Broadway, Portland, Oregon.\nAnderson, Allan Jardine, P. O. Box 221, Trona, California.\nArkley, Stanley, c\/o Sun Life Assurance Co., 315 Montgomery St., San\nFrancisco.\n7*\n3\na\n3\no.\no\nas\ne ALUMNI DIRECTORY\u2014(Continued)\nArkley, Mrs. C. (nee Celia Williamson), 315 Montgomery St., San Francisco.\nAshwell, Iris, Ames College, Iowa.\nAspinall, Thos. E., Department of Animal Husbandry, University of Illinois,\nUrbana.\nBall, Robert William, Dupont Experimental Station, Wilmington, Delaware.\nBarton, Charles M., 541 Hamilton St., Morristown, Penn.\nBayley, Milton D., 7114 S. Lowe Ave., Chicago.\nBeattie, Arthur H., Dept. of Modern Languages, University of Idaho.\nBell, F. H., International Fisheries Commission, Seattle, Wash.\nBell, John Gordon, 3 58 Merchant St., Armbridge, Pa.\nBishop, Charles, c\/o Dysart & Kuh, Board of Trade Bldg., Chicago.\nBlack, Lindsay M., c\/o Dept. of Plant Pathology, Cornell University,\nBlack, Mrs. B., (nee Lyness), Box 134, Ephrata, Wash.\nBlack, Bishop, Box 134, Ephrata, Wash.\nBolton, Lloyd, Department of Zoology, University of Washington, Seattle.\nBolton, Mrs. L. (nee Pittendrigh), Department of Zoology, University of\nWashington, Seattle.\nBolton, Lorraine, 1840 Largin St., San Francisco, California.\nBirney, Earle, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah.\nBramston-Cook, Supt. Union il Co., Oleum, Cal.\nBrown, Dorothy, c\/o California Packing Corporation, 190 California St.,\nSan Francisco, California.\nBruun, Geoffrey, Washington Square College, New York University, New\nYork City.\nBuchanan, Allen, Department of Economics, University of California, Berkley, Cal.\nCant, Hector, c\/o Y. M. C. A., Tacoma, Wash.\nCarpenter, Gilbert, Dupont Experimental Station, Wilmington, Delaware.\nCarter, Mary Juliet, 482 East 49th St., North Portland, Ore.\nCavers, Raymond Vere, West 11th St., Upland, California.\nChapman, Eddie, 1029\u20141st Ave., Salt Lake City, Utah.\nCharlton, David Berry, Dept. of Bacteriology, University of Nebraska,\nLincoln, Nebraska.\nCoates, Wilson, 212 University St., Rochester, N. Y.\nCook, Mrs. A. J. (nee Maizie Suggitt), 7724\u201414th Ave. N.E., Seattle.\nCoope, Geoffrey, University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho. z\nCoope, Madge, 2220 Bancroft Way, Berkeley, California.\nCorfield, Guy, Pacific Gas and Electric Co., Los Angeles, California.\nCouper, Walter J., Department of Economics, Yale University, New Haven,\nConn.\nCowdell, Mrs. S. F. (nee Pedlow), Apartment 104, 304 Belmont Ave. N.,\nSeattle, Wash.\nCrann, Mrs. Bennie, c\/o Wynn tC Russell, 1014\u20144th Ave. S., Seattle, Wash.\nCrickmay, Colin H., Department of Geology, University of California, Los\nAngeles, California.\nCrittenden, Mrs. Charles B. (nee Lucy Edwards), 60 N. Franklin St.,\nWilkes-Barre, Chatanooga, Tenn.\nCurtis, P. S., Jr., 30 Evans Way, Boston, Mass.\nDavidson, John Randolph, 3318, H Street, Sacramento.\nDean, Curtis M., 109 McKinnon St., Martinez, California.\nDean, Mrs. C. M. (nee Hazel Wilband), 109 McKinnon St., Martinez, Cal.\nDhami, Bhaghat Singh, International House, Berkeley.\nDonley, Wilfred, Dept. of Economics, University of California, Berkeley.\nDodds, Kathleen, Berkeley.\nDunlop, Harry, International Fisheries Commission, University of Washington, Seattle.\nDunton, Marjorie, P.O. Box 764, Tracy, California.\nEmmons, Frank, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.\nEmmons, Richard C, Science Hall, University of Wisconsin, Madison,\nWisconsin.\nFournier, Leslie, 53 Park Place, Princeton, N. J.\nFournier, Mrs. Leslie, 2 5 Park Place, Princeton, N. J.\nFletcher, Hugh M., Dept. of Economics, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh.\nFraser, J. G., 317 Northwestern Bank Bldg., Portland, Ore.\nFulger, Mrs. Byron (nee Adams), 1090 Franklin Ave., Williamette Heights,\nPortland, Oregon.\nFulton, Doris, 100 Falleson Drive, Rochester, N. Y.\nGale,WilliamA.,Box 84, Trona, California.\nGartshore, Hendrie, 10 Napier Alley, Telegraph Hill, San Francisco.\nGates, Mrs. Paul W., 124 St. George St., Lewisburgh, Pa.\nGibson, Ernest, 422 West 23rd St., New York City.\nGillespie, Gordon D., University of Southern California, Los Angeles.\nGlasgow, Mary Helen, Bakersfield, Cal.\nGill, Bonnie, 210 East 64th St., New York City.\nGoranson, Roy W., 27 Conant Hall, Cambridge (38), Mass.\nGold, Norman, Department of Economics, University of California.\nGreenwood, Mrs. E. (nee Irvine), 2 5 36\u20142nd Ave. W., Seattle.\nHadwin, Thos. Fred, c\/o Westinghouse Electric, Sharer, Pa.\nHallett, Lawrence, University of Oregon, Eugene.\nHastings, Mrs. C. (nee Agnes Morrison), Central Y. M. C. A., Albany,\nNew York.\nHay, Edward Campbell, 730 Hill Ave., Wilkinsburg, Pa.\nHemingway, Allan, 52 5 East River Road, Minneapolis, Minn. ALUMNI DIRECTORY\u2014(Continued)\n4\nHidy, Mrs. Ralph W. (nee Muriel Wagenhauser), Box 201, Northfield,\nVermont.\nHodson, Mrs. C. Padgett (nee Hazel McConnell), Suite 201, 2085 Sacramento St., San Francisco, California.\nHoneyman, P. D. I., Inspiration Smelter, Miami, Arizona.\nHooper, CJeeve Woodward, Union Oil Co., San Francisco.\nHoy, Mrs. E. C. (nee Day), Newark, N. J.\nHunter, Allan D., Box 302, Tyler, Texas.\nHurst, Bessie, Radner Hall, Bryn Mawr, Pa.\nImlah, J. A. H., Dept. of History, Tufts College, Mass.\nIngram, Sidney, 315 Packard St., Ann Arbor, Mich.\nJames, Ralph Duncan, 12 Blake Hall, University of Chicago.\nKnapton, Ernest John, 5204\u201418th Ave. N. W., Seattle.\nKobe, Susumu, 923\u201429th Ave. S., Seattle, Wash.\nKask, John L., International Fisheries Commission, Seattle.\nKeith, Mrs. Leslie, S. Harvard Boulevard, Los Angeles.\nLaird, Frederick William, St. Louis University, St. Louis, Mo.\nLe Messurier, Ernest, 25 West J 1st St., New York City.\nLewis, Mr. and Mrs. E. Dewart, c\/o Marin Junior College, Kentfield, Cal.\nLevick, Mrs. J. E. (nee Weinberg), Box 289, Carter, Oklahoma.\nLintleman, Mrs. Leslie, New York City.\nLivingston, Mrs. R. S. (nee Urquhart), 234 North River Boulevard, St.\nPaul, Minn.\nLocklin, Lillian R., 5125 Oakland Ave., Sierra Park, Los Angeles.\nLoveridge, Gilbert T., Rocky Hill, Conn.\nLunn, Edward Otty, 501 Pen wood ve., Wilkinsburg, Pa.\nMaikawa, Fred, University of Washington, Seattle.\nMadigan, Stephen E. J., Dept. of Physics, Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind.\nMarshall, Abraham Lincoln, Department of Chemistry, Princeton University, N. J.\nMather, Greta Ellen, Metropolitan Building Corporation, Seattle.\nMather, Vera Gertrude, John Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md.\nMathers, Cliffe, Atlas Imperial Diesel Engine Co., Oakland, California.\nMathewes, John T., 420 Rebecca Ave., Wilkinsburg, Pa.\nMiller, Roland McL., University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon.\nMitchell, Marion, Dept. of History, Lindenwood College, St. Charles, Mo.\nMoberg, Mrs. E. G. (nee Wilcox), c\/o Scripps Institution, La Jolla, Cal.\nMoore, Hilton. 120 Wall St.. New York City.\nMorgan, Frederick Stewart, 9101\u201437th Ave., Jackson Heights, Long\nIsland, N. Y.\nMorrison, Donald, c\/o Shell Petroleum Corporation, Arkansas City, Kansas.\nMorrison, Lyle Alexander, 16 Park Place, Princeton, N. J.\nMorrison, Margaret R., City Health Department, Chattanooga, Tenn.\nMorrison, Ted, Department of English, University of California, Berkeley.\nMunn, R. Russell, 509\u2014122nd St., New York City.\nMunro, Mr. and Mrs. R. J., 734 Noyes St., Evanston, 111.\nMcCulloch, Walter F., 1122 Clinton St., Hoboken, N. Y.\nMcDonald, Marguerite, Ballard Branch Library, Seattle.\nMcKay, Evelyn C, c\/o American Foundation for the Blind, Inc., 12 5 East\n46th St., New York City.\nMcKay, John, 4002 Brooklyn Ave., Seattle, Wash.\nMcKellar, Andrew, 2417 Durant Ave., Berkeley, California.\nMcKenzie, Frederick F., Department of Animal Husbandry, University\nof Missouri, Columbia.\nMcLennan, Lester, 531\u201410th St., Richmond, California.\nMcLennan, Mrs. L. W. (nee Cora Metz), 531\u201410th St., Richmond, Cal.\nMacLeod, Robert L., 504 East 19th St., Spokane, Wash.\nMacLeod, Mrs. R. L. (nee Welch), 504 East 19th St., Spokane, Wash.\nMcVittie, Charles A., 230 Park Ave., New York City.\nNunn, Edward H., Crown Willamette Ca, Camas, Wash.\nNicholson, Howard G., Gallatin Hall, Soldiers' Field, Boston, Mass.\nOfford, Harold R., 618 Realty Bldg., Spokane, Wash.\nOgawa, Thomas T., c\/o Mitsubishi Co. Ltd., 1274\u201484 Dexter-Horton\nBldg., Seattle, Wash.\nOldfin, Mrs. E. C (nee Alexander), c\/o Mrs. E. A. Greenwood, 2536\u20142nd\nAve. W., Seattle, Wash.\nOram, Mrs. C T. (nee Damer), 228 University Dr., Minto Park.\nOsborne, Freleigh F., Department of Geology, State University, Iowa City.\nOsborne, Mrs. F. F. (nee Jardine), Department of Geology, State University, Iowa City.\nPatten, Gordon, 2419 Channing Way, Berkeley, California.\nPeardon, T.P., Barnard College, Columbia University, New York City.\nPeck, Wallace Swanzey, 102 Media Parkway, Chester, Pa.\nPeebles, Allen, 910\u201417th St. N. W., Washington, D. C.\nPollock, Thressa Aleeta, Carnegie Library, Boise, Idaho.\nPurdy, Harry Leslie, Department of Economics, University of Chicago.\nRebbeck, James W., Dow Chemical Co., Detroit, Mich.\nRhodes, Andsley Vernon, Y. M. C. A., Elizabeth, N. J.\nRichmond, William O., 321 Franklin Ave., Wilkinsburg, Pa.\nRiddell, William H., 1116 Bluemont St., Manhattan, Kansas.\nRussell, Mrs. John (nee Fulton), 100 Falleson Dr., Rochester, N. Y.\nSanders, Fred, 2417 Durant Ave., Berkeley, California.\nSchcll, Kenneth, Hoquiam, Wash.\nSchwesinger, Gladys C. J., 420 West l\u00bbth St., New York City.\nW\nI*\na\n8\no\na\n\u00a3\nO\nz\nO\n5 ALUMNI DIRECTORY\u2014(Continued)\na\nw\nC\nz\nC\/3\no\nw\nn\no\nr1\n52\nO\nScott, Seaman Morley, History Department, University of Michigan, Ann\nArbor, Michigan.\nSelwood, Pierce W., 3 57 Chemistry Dept., University of Princeton, New\nJersey.\nShore, Maurice, 15 54 Minford Place, Bronx, N. Y.\nSouthon, Henry S. A., Hill Military Academy, Portland, Oregon.\nStaub, Mrs. R. R. (nee Rosebrugh), 1015 East Davis St., Portland.\nStuder, Frank John, Sterling Hall, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin.\nSutcliffe, William George, Department of Economics, Simmons College,\nBoston, Mass.\nSwadell, Mrs. Eric (nee Pim), Box 789, Fort Bragg, Cal.\nSwanson, Clarence Otto, Department of Geology, University of Wisconsin,\nMadison, Wisconsin.\nSweeting, Bertram S., Meadowsweet Dairies, Inc., Tacoma, Wash.\nTelford, Gordon D., 344 Harvard St., Cambridge, Mass.\nTelford, Mrs. G. (nee Mary Esler), 344 Harvard St., Cambridge.\nThompson, Willard Allen, 346 Broadway, New York City.\nTimleck, Curtis J., 310 Waverley Ave., Syracuse, N. Y.\nTolman, Carl, Department of Geology, Washington University, St. Louis,\nMo.\nUnderhill, Fabian, Department of Economics, University of California.\nUpshall, Cecil, State Normal School, Bellingham, Wash.\nUsher, Alexander Murray, Hamot Hospital, Erie, Pa.\nVan Wickle, Mrs. (nee Clarke), 330 Elk St., Bellingham, Wash.\nWalsh, Clara Maude, 1019 Terry Ave., Seattle, Wash.\nWalsh, Dorothy H., Bryn Mawr, Pa.\nWarren, Harry, Athenaeum, 5 51 South Hill Ave., Pasadena, California.\nWheeler, A. L., Department of English, University of Wisconsin, Madison,\nWis.\nWheeler, Mrs. A. L. (nee Bennett), Department of English, University of\nWisconsin, Madison, Wis.\nWilliams, John H., 2129 Haste St., Berkeley, California.\nWilson, Mrs. Ray (nee Chapin), 3772 Ibis St., San Diego, California.\nWilson, Mrs. Yorke (nee Dorothy Rogers), Whitehorse, Alaska.\nWilson, Idele Louise, Clark University, Worcester, Mass.\nWorkman, William Ross, 671\u201471st Ave., West Allis, Wis.\nYarwood, Cecil Edmund, Agricultural Experimental Station, Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind.\ns\no\nX\n1\nPRINTED BY WRIGLEY DIRECTORIES LTD.\nVANCOUVER, CANADA. '\n\\0\nt","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. 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