"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1209674"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-07-15"@en . "[1929?]"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/ubcyearb/items/1.0119009/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " X\n^'i>7\n\u00C2\u00B0^\nA^\n-*- V^^<\u00C2\u00AB^^^rfJww\u00C2\u00AB^i*>*>*/s+i**+>+**+i***s**+i^^**\nJ fTHE UNIVER^TVrzfzSo^-j^Bftm/H COLUMBIA 7)]\nJEAN HALL ADAM\nCorning to U.B.C. from Nanaimo, Jean has\nwon a great many friends. During her three\nyears with '29 she has become a popular member of the mathematical circle, being secretary\nof the club this year. Jean, being one of our\nclever minority, has honoured in Mathematics,\ntaking Physics on the side-. Next year we may\nsee her here again enrolled under the Education\nstandard.\nOSCAR ELMER ANDERSON\nElmer is an honour student in Physics and is\nin his lab. most of the time. Besides his Physics\ncourses he has taken several courses in Mathematics. He is vice-president of the Mathematics Club and a member of the Physics Club.\nHe played goal on the First Soccer team for two\nyears and this year he played Grass Hockey.\nIn spite of this he makes first-class marks. He\nwill be back next year to continue his studies.\nJEAN ELLIOT ANDREW\nIn spite of the fact that she is one of the\ncourageous few who undertake English honours,\nJean does not find it necessary to have her\nbooks for constant companions. Marjorie and\nshe are inseparable in their leisure hours. In\naddition to English honours, Jean is a member\nof the Letters Club, and her appreciation of\nEnglish courses will probably bring her back\nto U. B. C. next year for Education. Phi\nOmega sorority.\nROBERT NORTHEY ANDERSON\nBob is a living advertisement for the wonderful climate of the sunny Okanagan, and\nmore particularly for the district round Trail.\nHe has spent only two years with his classmates of '29 but has become fairly infamous\nwithin that time. In spite of his extreme youth\nand his kinky hair he managed to hold down\na place on the Intermediate Basketball squad\nin his Third year. He occupies himself with\nslicing up frogs and punching holes in test\ntubes: calls it a Pre-med course. Women? No.\nEVA VIOLA ARBUTHNOT\nEva is one of the youngest members of\nArts '29 and, when she chatters gaily at a\nVarsity dance, one would hardly guess that\nshe is a senior. However, she has delved into\nthe mysteries of Latin, French and German\nduring the past four years and intends to\nteach B. C. youth to speak \"in many tongues.\"\nEva can drive any Ford, and gives many a\nwelcome lift to Varsity students. We are\nwondering where she spends her free afternoons.\nPage Nineteen SHIELA MARION ARMSTRONG\nSigma Beta Pi sorority. If you want to\nfind Shiela, find Lillian. Shiela is a small excitable person with wind-blown hair. Her\nfavourite remark is, \"Tell me, too!\" To look\nat her you would never know that she makes\nfirst-classes in Economics. Shiela tried Victoria College for a year but then returned to\nVarsity and has since remained true to her\nAlma Mater. Shiela plays badminton, and\nhow?\nERNEST AYTON\nErnest is a Victoria bird of migratory\nhabits. He began his academic career with\nthe Victoria College class of '26 which, after\ntwo years, he deserted. He then studied pedagogy at Victoria Normal. After practising\nthis for a year he made his appearance in\nVarsity circles with the class of '28. Although\nsuccessful, he decided to spend another year\nteaching while waiting for '29. He is of a\nstudious turn of mind and has proved himself\nan expert on the dance floor and the tennis\ncourt.\nJEAN GRACE KATHLEEN BAILEY\nBeing convinced that Varsity must not be\ntaken seriously, Jean has discarded all afternoon\nlectures and also \"the other three units.\" She\nhas tried everything including Mathematics,\nPhilosophy, class parties (any year), and Biology I. You can find her at any time, in any\nlecture, reading English 13 novels. Next Fall\nshe is going to California and we have a suspicion that she is looking for an interesting and\nunusual course to take in place of education.\nHERBERT GORDON BAKER\nGordon's philosophy of life has enabled him\nto enjoy his college career to the utmost,\nfor it is his belief that one gets most by giving most. He has taken part in almost every\nextra-curricular activity and has throughout\nmaintained a passing interest in the academic\nside. Gordon's divers interests are exemplified\nby the following list: Diving Champion, president Swimming Club, finalist University\nGolf Championship, Miller Cup rugby in his\nFreshman year, class treasurer as a sophomore, Inter-class and University Debates.\nJEAN RENEE BALLARD\nIn its final year Arts '29 received a delightful acquisition from Edmonton in the person of\nthis flashy little skater and keen student. Jean\nquickly made friends on the campus, but to\nintroduce herself to the University at large she\nclinched the position of her class as first in the\nwomen's relay event at the Ice Carnival. Schol-\nastically speaking, Jean is interested in French,\nHistory, and the English drama. Vocationally\nspeaking, her interest is torn between physical\nculture instruction and a librarian's course.\nDelta Gamma.\nPage Twenty \u00E2\u0096\u00A0fii<^Vii'^' a\nD I THE UNIVER/TTY\ny\u00C2\u00BB<^W^*^iw\u00C2\u00BBCfc h 4 feC-^^C^^C <>4>VWi>V4>4^4U>G\n^CBBITI/H COLUMBIAN)\nMARY KATHLEEN BARTON\nShe is particularly fond of indulging in\nmany of the hardest courses at Varsity, especially Mathematics. Her philosophical turn of\nmind has resulted in her being \"the privileged\none\" of the Philosophy 6 group of seven. Being\nan ardent member of the Musical Society, Mary\ncan be seen and heard in all its activities. Pet\nrecreation: Badminton. Favourite expression:\nI must practice.\njohn macdonald billings\nThrough four years John has tasted and\nenjoyed everything from studies to athletics.\nIn his first two years he played rugby, as all\nfreshmen should, and rowed for the Senior\nIV. As a junior he became a member of the\nPlayers' Club and took a leading part in the\nSpring play. This year he was business manager for the club. Another interest of his is\nthe annual crop of freshettes. Although continually worrying about exams., he scrapes\nthrough with high seconds.\nFRANCES BELL\nNo, not Frances\u00E2\u0080\u0094but Frankie. That is more\nsuited to the young lady with the mischievous\nbrown eyes. Just get her in one of her witty\nmoods\u00E2\u0080\u0094you acquire a permanent smilg. She is\nanother of these people who say, \"I don't know\nanything and I'm going to fail!\" The results\ncame out, and her name appears among the\nfirsts! The bets she loses ! But no sympathy\ncan she get from us. Member of Kappa Kappa\nGamma.\nROBERT CAMPBELL BROWN\nCongenial, yet unobtrusive, \"Bert\" is an\nArtsman but an Agriculturist at heart, and has\nwon his way into that sanctum sanctorum, \"The\nAggie Common Room.\" He majors in Bacteriology and minors in Botany, where he has\nfound much favour with the Nursing faculty\nby his ready wit and gentle charm. He sports\nat badminton and succeeded in annexing the\nmixed U.B.C. 1927 handicap finals. Has ambitions as a \"Medico\" and, by the versatility\nof his career at U.B.C, we know he will succeed.\nMURIEL MAUDE BOWES\nThe word \" earnest\" describes Muriel. With\nher sympathetic and unselfish nature she should\nsucceed in anything calling for self-sacrifice and\ndevotion. Yet with all her earnestness, she\npossesses a vein of nonsense. She is fond of\noutdoors and is very resourceful. Muriel started with Arts '26 at Victoria College, but\ntravelled and taught before coming to Varsity\nto finish her course. She is a member of La\nCanadienne, the Classics Club, and the V.C.U.\nPage Twenty-one ( THE TOTEM:\nkm.n-cj*fa^n >fc< ttfctt'\nTK^V^>in,ii r .[\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ir-irr-nrf-,fr-irr\u00C2\u00BB-Nf-^t-'l1-'ftl^) I the university:\n_J6F\u00E2\u0080\u0094-gCBRITI/H COLUMBIA^)\nDOROTHY JEANNE CARLAW\nEver since Jeanne came to Varsity, she has\nbeen connected with sport. In her first two\nyears she played forward on the Senior \"A\"\nBasketball team. For two years she held the\nVarsity Mixed Doubles Tennis Championship\nand was secretary of the Tennis Club. Jeanne\nrepresented her Alma Mater at the Intercollegiate Tennis Meet at Edmonton in her\nSophomore year, and last year she was vice-\npresident of Women's Athletics. Jeanne is\nquiet, but thoughtful, and misses nothing.\nNORMAN CLARK\nEmpirical Formula: As above.\nStructural Formula: See accompanying diagram.\nOccurrences: Cassidy, V.I., and U.B.C.\nsince Sophomore year.\nProperties: Combines with Players' Club,\nforming \"The Usual Thing\" and \"The Romantic Young Lady.\" Found in many Chemistry\nclasses, active in Biochemistry. Present in\nChemistry Society meetings. Unites with Education next year, but perhaps somewhere, sometime, Biochemistry will receive his further\nattention. We hope so!\nMARY JULIET CARTER\nHere's to Mary: the stately and fair.\nDuring her University career Mary has\ncombined scholastic standing, executive ability, and athletic achievements. Although she\nhas delved in Economics and Philosophy she\nhas served her Alma Mater as secretary of\nthe Literary and Scientific Department, secretary of the Alma Mater Society and president of Women's Athletics. In the Track\nand Swimming Clubs, she holds the records\nfor the high jump and backstroke. Her amiable personality has won her many true friends.\nJAMES DILLON CURTIS\nJimmie is Heinz' 58th variety \u00E2\u0080\u0094 a double-\ncourse man. At heart, he is a woman-hater,\nbut takes infinite pains to conceal the fact\nfrom his fellow-sufferers. During exams, he\nmay be seen with a corrugated dome of thought,\nmumbling the words: \"Make it pay, fellers.\"\nHis sense of humour and intriguing personality are great assets; he should go far in his\nchosen profession\u00E2\u0080\u0094Forestry.\nROSE FOWLER CAUFIELD\nSeveral years of convent life have left an\nimpression on the aims and ideals of Rose. She\ndoes not talk much about herself, which only\nlends to her charm. She is sincere, helpful,\npatient and persevering in her studies; one who\nbelieves in doing her own thinking. She snow-\nshoes and skates quite creditably. Although\nRose has a natural bent for classical dancing,\nshe may adopt the more prosaic existence of\na high school teacher.\nPaqe Twenty-three I THE TOTEM\nDAISY CHRISTIE\nSingle honours would not satisfy this ambitious young student, so she has courageously\ncombined Latin and French. Throughout her\ncollege career she has always passed with first-\nclass honours and deserves great credit for her\nhard work. For the last two years she has\nbeen an interested member of the Classics Club.\nAlthough naturally modest and retiring she is\na delightful companion, and reveals her pleasing personality to her own circle of intimate\nfriends.\nMAURICE PERCY DESBRISAY\nA speculative philosopher, he devotes much\nof his editorial energy to making the University\nsafe for democracy; and seated in his arm\nchair he cogitates upon the \"menace of fraternities,\" the inanity of examinations, and the\nvagaries of society. Occasionally he interrupts his musings to rid the \"Pub\" of the dilettanti and 'I won't works' who gather there.\nIn his idle moments, when not playing on the\nMen's Grass Hockey team, or practising for\nthe Arts '20 Relay, the genial Editor-in-Chief\nmakes rhymes for the Letters Club to which\nhe belongs. He intends to become a gentleman of the Fourth Estate.\nMAY HAMILTON CHRISTISON\nMay has the distinction of taking a course\nin Arts, Nursing, Journalism and Palmistry.\nThis year a mixture of labs., noon lectures and\nGerman reading courses has compelled her to\nresign from the Players' Club, Der Deutsche\nVerein, and La Canadienne. However, she still\nfunctions on the \"Ubyssey\" as Senior Editor\nwhere a wee touch o' the brogue makes her\namazing command of Teutonic explosives highly effective. A Scotch conscience, plus an\nabundance of brains, regularly results in a high\nsecond-class average.\nGEORGE BLAIR DICKSON\nBlair is an athlete of note, since he played\nfor several seasons for the Victoria McKechnie Cup team, and was a star on the Varsity\n\"Big Four\" team this year and the \"Big Three\"\nteam of two years ago. However, his fame\nas an athlete has not travelled faster than the\nnews of his high-powered personality and his\nsophistication, both doubtless acquired during\nthe several years which he has spent teaching.\nMARY CLARK\nA great lover of all outdoor sports, an\nenergetic badminton player and an enthusiastic little dancer is Nellie. She is a good\nstudent, with a great share of common sense\njust tinctured with a reasonable amount of\nfun and wit. Nellie's main interests lie in\nL'Alouette, the Philosophy Club and the\nClassics Club. Teaching is Nellie's aim and for\nthe future we wish her much success and fame.\nPage Twenty-four -\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n5^C=Z= =^)'[THE UNIVERyiTYmDo^-^\nBRITI/H COLUMBIA^)\nEVELYN ELIZABETH CLIFF\nEvelyn used to write poetry: now she\nsketches. The formation of the Philosophy\nDiscussion Club, of which Evelyn is now secretary-treasurer was in great part due to her\ninitiative and determination; she is also active\nin S. C. M. and gymnasium work. Her sympathetic spirit and gay smile make her a welcome addition to everything in which she takes\npart.\nSTANLEY DUFFELL\nSince his entrance to University, Stan, has\nmade many friends in both athletic and social\ncircles. He is a familiar figure at University\nfunctions. In athletics Stan's main interest is\nsoccer. He has made a team every year until forced to withdraw because of injuries.\nThis did not prevent him, however, from being an efficient manager of this year's team.\nIn academic work Stan, leans toward Chemistry and Mathematics.\nIRENE RHODES COLE\n\"I adore boys, they amuse me!\"\nIrene is one of those rare individuals who\nhave courage enough to be perfectly natural.\nAdd to this a keen sense of humour and a\nlarge fund of sympathy, and you can easily\nsee why her career at Varsity has been a\npeaceful succession of laughter, dances, and\ngenuine friendships. It is rather difficult for\nthe rest of us to understand just when she\naccomplishes all those History essays. A member of Phi Omega.\nARTHUR ENGLAND\nA cheery fellow is Art., possessing a winning\nsmile and a pleasant word for one and all of his\nnumerous friends. Having taken his Senior\nMatriculation at Nelson he joined us in our\nSecond year. First-class honours in Mathematics, a member of the Mathematics Club and a\nconsistent player on the Junior Soccer team are\namong some of Art's activities. An ardent\nworker, a good pal, a sincere friend, is Art,\nand may good luck attend him in his chosen\ncareer.\nMARION THELMA COLLEDGE\nTheme Song: \"We Love the College Girls.\"\nThelma always has meetings at noon and the\nrest of the day she spends in labs. Her\nlatest achievement is cheese-making and we begrudge the Aggies every minute she spends\nwith them. They soon will sing \"I Miss My\nSwiss.\" Another hobby is Geology. She is\nversatile in Agriculture, Science and Arts. But\nthat is not all. She has been secretary and\nvice-president of Arts '29 and now secretary-\ntreasurer of the W.U.S. Hence her great\ninterest in minutes and \"bills.\"\nPage Twenty-five DORIS ISABEL CROMPTON\nDoris Isabel Crompton, otherwise Bunny.\nQuiet, but who sends her hot-house flowers\nregularly? Bunny is culminating a brilliant\nUniversity career by relaxation. She joined\neverything she could think of in her first two\nyears and then wrote a paper for the Letters\nClub. As a freshie she reported on the\n\"Ubyssey,\" working up to be assistant editor;\nshe also played in \"Pygmalion.\" In her Junior\nyear she was on the executive of the Players'\nClub and the International Club. Kappa Kappa\nGamma.\nRALPH KEIRSTEAD FARRIS\nDuring his four years at college Ralph has\nbeen an outstanding member of Arts '29. In\nhis First year he was a member of the First\nFreshman Rugby team of 1925-26. From this\nbeginning he has become one of the snappiest\nforwards on the McKechnie Cup team. When\nhe is not playing rugby he is actively engaged\nas business manager of the English Rugby\nClub. Next year he plans to join his \"big\nbrother\" at Harvard.\nDOROTHY MELISSA CRUICKSHANK\nDorothy came to Varsity last year from\nVictoria where she spent the first two years\nof her academic life. Since coming to Varsity,\nDorothy's interests have been varied and include active participation in the orchestra, vice-\npresidency of the Classics Club, and membership in La Canadienne. Tall and slender, with\ndark wavy hair, she possesses qualities which\nhave endeared her to many people. After a\nyear in Education, Dorothy hopes to teach.\nBonne chance, Mile.\nRICHARD HOWELL FLEMING\nEmpirical Formula: As above.\nStructural Formula: See accompanying diagram.\nOccurrence: Victoria, B. C. and U. B. C.\nsince Sophomore year.\nProperties: An honour student in Chemistry\nand president of the Chemistry Society. When\nnot in his laboratory may be found on the\ntrack keeping in trim for the Arts '20 Relay.\nWith the sound of the 12 o'clock bell, can\nusually be found migrating towards the Applied Science building. Intends to continue his\nstudies in Chemistry after graduation.\nMARGARET EVELYN GREY CRUISE\nShe boasts the academic air\nThat speaks a college education,\nAnd on the hockey field she finds\nExtraordinary elation.\nBut she is dark, and she is wise,\nOf fascinating disposition;\nShe has, withal, the sunniest eyes\nAnd modesty in addition.\nPage Twenty-six .t^-\u00C2\u00ABy !?>,,\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ,-i-t>,wis1yj\nO.fTHT\nUNIVERSITY ZTZZDoi\n.CBRITI/H COtUMBIA~3\nHARRIET MURIEL EMBLING DANIELS\nIn the field of scholarship, Muriel has an\nenviable record. Since she matriculated with\na medal and scholarship in 1925, she has been\nsuccessful in gaining a bursary each year in\nVarsity. During the last two years she has\ndevoted herself to an honour course in History,\nand is a member of the Historical Society.\nThough to many she may appear reserved, yet\nto her intimate friends she is a source of constant entertainment. Her motto: \"Give every\nman thy ear, but few thy voice.\"\nWILLIAM RODGERS FOOTE\nRod joined us in our Sophomore year. As\npresident of the class in its Junior year he\nproved an excellent diplomat as well as a conscientious and hard-working executive. He\nplans taking medical work at McGill, and to\nthat end he dissects frogs and breaks test\ntubes. He attends social affairs\u00E2\u0080\u0094indeed Rod\nis quite fond of the giddy whirl. Of course,\nas he would put it, \"It's all for the sake of\nscience.\"\nANNA IOLA DAVIS\nIn the course of its young but eventful life\nthe University has been indebted to King Edward High School for many of its cleverest\nscholars and most charming personalities. Iola\nis no exception, and what she can do with a\n' History essay is a source of envy to her many\nfriends. We sometimes wonder if scholastics\nclaim as much of her attention as she would\nhave us believe, but her earnest attitude is\nevidenced by the fact that she intends to venture into the complicated mazes of the business\nworld.\nJAMES ANGUS FRASER\nJim is a lover of the great outdoors. He is\na pleasing combination of the old and the\nnew, retaining the sturdy ideals of a pioneer\nScotch ancestry and displaying all the vivacity\nand likeableness of the modern youth. Although\nhe persistently delves into the inner mysteries\nof Physics and Mathematics, planning on\nrevealing these obscurities to the growing\nmind, he firmly believes that \"a little nonsense\nnow and then is relished by the wisest men.\"\nETHELWYN MARY DEE\nDiversion: English and Philosophy. Pastime:\nPlayers' Club. \"Ethel Windy\" made her name\nin \"Dear Brutus\" while at Victoria College.\nDuring her first term at Varsity she acted in\n\"A Romance of the Willow Pattern.\" This\nyear she was secretary of the Club until she\nresigned on account of her health. Whatever\nEthelwyn may take up in the future, we feel\nsure that, with a will and a way, she will make\na success of it.\nPage Twenty seven THE TOTEM\na a a * < * * t * * . i t e * j * *I7* ^*- i.r...... ...... -.. -. ^ f^^i lilrfct tUCtt fcU>fcCi^U^i^44UCC\n\u00C2\u00A3 BBITI/H COH)MBIA~p)\nJEAN MARGARET DOWLER\nThere is a young lady named Jean,\nWho, for a career, is quite keen;\nBut when she drags W\t\nUp to the altar\n'Twill knock her career on the bean.\nJean has tried English, History and the\nLetters Club with great success; and is, we\nlearn, to attempt cooking next. She has a\nquiet dignity for the right occasion, but is\n\"pep\" itself on a party. Her curly head and\nattractive personality have won her a host of\nadmirers during her college years.\nF. O. ROSWELL GARNER\nKnown far and wide as Roscoe, but we're\nall for \"F.O.R.\" He arrived from Duncan,\nand as a frosh achieved renown because of\nhis red tie, red socks and red handkerchief.\nRoscoe rowed for Varsity and displayed\nprowess on the rugby field to earn the enviable title of \"Touch-down.\" Since he has spent\nconsiderable time in the navy and in Zoo. Labs.\nWe should like to record some of his expressions, but must desist. Roscoe intends to\nstudy medicine next year at Toronto.\nDOROTHY HELEN DOWNES\n\"But known from campus to the town -i-\nNevitably as just Downie!\"\nVictoria claims her for its own but does\nnot, unfortunately, divulge her past. She\nseems to be studying French and English but\nis contemplating a career darkly connected\nwith stripes. No, nothing concerned with the\ncountry to the south of us, merely a short\nterm in prison for a minor offence. Evidently someone has digested \"Kushy Kareers Kail\nKake-eaters\" to advantage.\nJOSEPH GENSER\nJoseph is one of those rare students that\nsucceed in surviving an honour course in\nEconomics. To the practical affairs of life\nJoseph is now going to apply the principles\ngained from this particular study, as well as\nthose gleaned from other branches and activities of University life, for Joseph believes he\nwill become an advocate of the law. If in\nthis pursuit his diligence equals that displayed\nin his work during his University career, his\nsuccess should be assured.\nELEANOR GERTRUDE DYER\nEleanor conceals, under an unruffled exterior, a tenacious capacity for work and a\ndauntless courage in attacking her combined\nhonour course in German and French. Her\nscholastic achievements were deservedly rewarded in her Second year, and her linguistic\nability has been displayed more than once in\nDer Deutsche Verein and in her triumphant\nappearance as heroine of a German play. As\nsecretary and president of Gamma Phi Beta,\nEleanor has revealed a distinct talent for executive administration.\nPage Twenty-nine the totem:\n^JSk\n** < 444444 t/n* *V\u00C2\u00BB*. t .|F . \u00E2\u0080\u009E ,,i . \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ** \u00E2\u0080\u009E,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0v.-,-r..^l^-^ 4 ^t\rit UttH 4 dj^4t(^ irt1_A\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nESTHER EDDY\nEsther and the inevitable bear-skin\u00E2\u0080\u0094Whoopee! no worries\u00E2\u0080\u0094infectious giggle (heard on\nthe campus, at meetings especially)\u00E2\u0080\u0094good\nhead. Athletic accomplishments: Three years\non the First Badminton team, finalist in\nLadies' Doubles Tennis, seeker of the elusive\ngolf ball. Executive positions: Vice-President\nof the Badminton Club, sub-treasurer of Arts\n'29. Intellectual interests: English, Economics,\nSub-Normal Psychology (especially the study\nof morons). Esther is a member of Delta\nGamma.\nHENRY CECIL GILLILAND\nBefore coming to Varsity, Harry occupied\nthe position of vice-principal of Sir James\nDouglas school at Victoria. Arts '29 welcomed him in his Senior year. Despite his\nlate arrival on the campus, Harry soon made\nhimself known to us by his faculty for combining a general interest in sporting and social\nevents with the highest qualities of studentship. His specializing in History and Economics and his marks are the envy of us all.\nMARJORIE LILLIAN EDWARDS\nMarj. is one of those people who cannot be\npersuaded to shine in public, which makes it\nnice for those who are fortunate enough to\nknow her privately. Being blessed with a sly\nsense of humour she may often be seen chuckling over some incongruity. You would never\nsuspect when you look at her that she majors\nin Latin and minors in Philosophy, not to\nmention a few German courses to brighten\nthings up. Phi Omega.\nNORMAN LEON GOLD\nAnother budding lawyer, and so, doomed.\nHis pastime, bull sessions, preferably about\nblondes. Present occupation, unofficial Economics Professor to the dumb ones. Achievements\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094read, and pity: Debating, president of Social\nScience Club, Historical Society, Economics\nhonours, badminton, futile rugby, and playing\nthe stocks. Nor,mie's little heart failed him,\nwhen \"snowflakes\" came tumbling down.\nMARY JEAN FISHER\nAfter two years with Arts '28 she spent a\nyear studying for her degree in music. On\nreturning to Varsity her interests attracted her\nto the Studio Club, also the Musical Society,\nto which, as violinist and pianist, she has\ndevoted a great deal of time. An unbroken\nrecord of first-classes in Mathematics and\nattendance at the Mathematics and Classics ,\nClubs indicate her scholastic tendencies. This\nyear much of Jean's time has been taken in\ntrying to avoid History 9 classes.\nPage Thirty FRANCES LOUISE FOWLER\n\"Rodent\" and \"Moron\" are Sance's favourite\nterms of affection, and her pet diversion is\ngetting up in time to catch the \"hearse\" for\nnon-existent nine o'clocks. She lingers late\nin the mysterious recesses of the Science building finding out all sorts of strange things\nabout cows' blood. She is at home to her\nfriends almost any afternoon from three to\nsix in her lab. In her higher moments she\nacts for the Players' Club and has even been\nknown to tour the province with a certain\nSpring play of blessed memory.\nGEORGE H. E. GREEN\nGeorge had three years war service. On his\nreturn, he taught school in Victoria for five\nyears. For four years he attended Summer\nSchool and completed three years work joining\nthe class of '29 this year. George is a trumpeter of wide experience; although he owns the\ntrumpet, it isn't his own trumpet he blows.\nHe seeks diversion in the Musical Society and\nthe Studio Club. He is planning to continue\nin the teaching profession.\nPHYLLIS MAUD FREEMAN\nPhyllis is a pastoral character ejected from a\nranch in the Okanagan. She is a member of\nthe Historical Society and the Social Science\nClub, and is vice-president of both. She spends\none day a week as Associate Editor of the\n\"Ubyssey,\" and takes History honours. Waxing fluent on Spengler's philosophy and on Carr-\nSaunders, she stuns both students and professors with her argumentative brain. If not\nattending I.W.W. meetings, Phyllis is in the\n\"gods\" humming a weird ecstatic accompaniment to the orches^tu\nROBERT SILAS GRIFFIS\nBob is another student who makes good\ngrades with very little effort. He gets a\ngreat deal of enjoyment out of his University\ncourse and is always on the go. He played a\ngood game of Canadian Rugby two years ago,\nbut figures that the early morning is made\nfor sleep and not for charging around a football field. Bob plans to take Business Administration next year and become a tired business man in the advertising field.\nEVELYN LOUISE FULLER\nInnumerable Economics courses based on a\nyear at Business College provide an outlet for\nEvelyn's gifts of logical thinking and neat\nmanner of expressing sound ideas in the minimum of words. As a freshette in '28, Ev.\nwielded a wicked hockey stick, while since then\nthe International Club, reporting, taking part\nin the famous Thoth Ballet, and meditating on\nthe merits of the friendly subtilis in the Bac.\nLab. have monopolized her time.\nPage Thirty-one CECILIA G ARES CHE\n\"No, I can't possibly have another ice-cream\ncone, because there's a Players' Club meeting\nat twelve that I simply must go to\u00E2\u0080\u0094I can't\nmiss it, because I have to manage the props,\nfor the Spring play. That means missing my\nafternoon lectures\u00E2\u0080\u0094oh, well! I'll get the notes\nfrom somebody. Aren't I the most unfortunate person ? Well, I don't care! Let's give a\ntea\u00E2\u0080\u0094go home and tidy up the flat. It's too\nfar to walk. Quick! Run! There's the bus!\"\nMember of Kappa Kappa Gamma.\nMILTON MADISON HARRELL\nFamous for his droll sayings and his rapid-\nfire speech when excited, Milt, began Varsity\nas a studious freshman who made high marks;\nsince then he has been demonstrating the\nhitherto undiscovered fact that a really clever\nfellow can pass without studying or going to\nlectures. The biggest disappointment of his\nlife came the morning he went to English 9\nand found that it wasn't a \"funny day.\" One\nof these days he is going to astound the world\nas a brilliant divorce lawyer.\nFLORENCE MARGARET GILLESPIE\nMargaret decided to take a combined course\nin Arts and Nursing. Experience shows that\nshe has chosen her vocation wisely, for she\nexcels as a nurse. As an Arts student she\nis famous as an Economist, a Chemist and a\nBacteriologist. Her interest this year is in the\nAggie and Dairying courses because of her\nunlimited tasting capacity. Margaret runs on\nthe class Relay team; she is an excellent\nswimmer and an ardent supporter of rugby\nteams.\nDUNMAIL HORATIO HARTNESS\nDunmail is one of the quiet unobtrusive men\nof Arts '29, but is exceedingly active when\naway from the atmosphere of lectures. On the\nbadminton court he is commonly known as a\n\"slicker,\" and being keenly interested in aviation, knows just about all there is to know\nabout planes. In the realm of \"U\" work he\nspecializes in Chemistry, in which subject he\nhas a habit of picking up \"firsts,\" no matter\nhow difficult the exams, may be.\nMARY HELEN GLASGOW\nMary Helen is that pert little senior with\nthe curly brown hair and mischievous eyes.\nShe is always rushing somewhere, seldom the\nlibrary. She makes marvellous marks in English, excels in essay writing, and has the honour\nto be one of our youngest graduates. Mary\nHelen comes from Salmon Arm, joining Arts\n'29 as a sophomore. Next year will not see\nher on the campus. Rumour has it she may\nstray as far as New York.\nPage Thirty-two \"\u00C2\u00BB/'*' i\"S.~Y>WV.\n>).l THE UNIVERSITY ZTZDoF\nBRITISH COLUMBIAN\nMARGARET THERESA GOURLAY\nYou'd never know that Peggy comes from\nVictoria. Over there she won several scholarships, played the leading part in two of the\ncollege plays, and was secretary-treasurer of\nthe Victoria College Council. She is full of\nideas and always expresses them\u00E2\u0080\u0094even Science\nmen have found her no mean opponent in a\nbattle of brains. When not amusing us with\ndescriptions of her many boarding-houses, she\nis tackling short stories and French plays.\nMember of Delta Gamma.\nCLEON DOUGLAS HONEYFORD\nSome years ago Vancouver Tech. bestowed\nupon us a freshman that wasn't \u00E2\u0080\u0094. Cleon has\nalways given us the benefit of a quiet geniality and high sincerity. As president of the\nVarsity Christian Union in his Senior year\nhe has enlisted the interest of many students\ninto Christian fellowship. Reports declare\nthat in the fields of English and History this\nmodest fellow has harvested a high average\nfrom year to year. We wish him well in the\nfield of the ministry.\nMARGARET ISOBEL GRANT\nIn spite of the intricacies of English honours Margaret has found time for many other\nactivities. As a Sophomore she was Associate\nEditor of the \"Ubyssey\" and worked on the\n\"Totem,\" advancing in '28 to Editor of the\n\"Totem\" and finally to Senior Editor of the\n\"Ubyssey,\" in '29. Margaret was secretary\nfor '29 in her Junior year, and her literary\nachievements include a Letters Club prize and\nthe contribution of papers to both the Historical Society and the Letters Club. Gamma\nPhi Beta.\nJAMES WILSON HORNE\nAfter matriculating at the tender age of\nfourteen, Jimmie elected to stay out a year\nbefore embarking on the rolling ship of college\nlife. Having completed his first two years at\nVictoria College he registered in Arts '29, in\nwhich class he has since remained, a notable\naddition, and one of our youngest members.\nAfter completing his combined honour course\nin Mathematics and Economics, he has decided\nto go to Harvard, make his fortune, and settle\ndown.\nKATHLEEN BLACKWOOD GREEN\nKasye Green\u00E2\u0080\u0094you know Kasye Red-head?\nWhy, of course. Who doesn't? Gay and witty, bubbling over with odd sayings and admir\nable intentions is Kasye. She reserves the odd\nsayings for the entertainment of her friends,\nand the admirable intentions for Philosophy\nand English, but the latter very often turns\ninto a most entrancing game of munching\nbrownies and composing epitaphs. A damsel\nof moods.\nPage Thirty-three [THE TOTEM \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n*^ii i-irf Ohjj f i J r n* -rur \u00E2\u0096\u00A0*tt\-tft-*tm-i-'-'\*-\*\'\'\J'*t',l'*il'ttii*i /^L'\nELIZABETH ALICE GROVES\nBetty is petite and good\u00E2\u0080\u0094but that twinkle in\nher eye belies her demure appearance. Betty\ncame in with Arts '28, but she went to Europe\njoining Arts '29 in her Junior year. She has\nsince indulged in a course, dabbling in English, Philosophy, French, and German. Besides\nbeing a member of Der Deutsche Verein, Betty\nis one of the intellegentzia, and as such, is on\nthe executive of the International Club, while\non Wednesday afternoons she acts as an efficient assistant at the library loan desk. Member\nof Sigma Beta Pi.\nEDWARD WILLIAM HORTON\nEd. is one of the faithful for he has been\nwith '29 since he came from North Vancouver\nHigh School. Academically his chief interests are History and Economics. Among sports\nhe plays Rugby and runs in the Arts '20 Relay.\nHe is also an active member of the Musical\nSociety. Next year we believe he is to become a Theolog.\nNAN HADGKISS\nShowing a nice discrimination, Nan dropped\nfrom Arts '27 in her Third year and, deserting\nVarsity for two years, chose '29 for her graduating year. A young lady of unusual dignity\nand reserve, Nan possesses a latent electricity\nwhich reveals itself in precipitant descent of\nstairs or flaring up at Canadian Rugby games.\nWe wonder if two years as \"Nanette\" gave\nNan her French distinction in dress. Outside\nof Varsity circles Nan is pianist in the Hadg-\nkiss-Rigby trio. After graduation Nan intends\nto continue her studies in Social Service in the\nUnited States.\nRALPH HULL\nFrom South Van. High to U. B. C.\nA freshman came with '23,\nBy scholarship to Varsity brought.\nHe stayed two years; then, having taught,\nTo enter '29 decides.\nWhere o'er the Math. Club he presides.\nAnother scholarship he won.\n(Math, honours are to him just fun.)\nHe hopes some day a prof, to be,\nWe hope that much success he'll see.\nWINIFRED HILDA HALL\n\"I could praise her if I would.\"\nFor four years Winnie has been an enthusiastic member of the Musical Society. In her\nthird year she was costumes convener and\nserved on the Music Committee. Now she is\na leading member. She has a charming soprano\nvoice and is intensely devoted to vocal music.\nSpecializes in French and English and intends\nto take up primary teaching. Always interesting in her varied moods and ever sympathetic,\nshe has made many friends.\nPage Thirty-four y '\u00C2\u00AB.\n25\n^11 THE UNIVERSITY\n^^>wM^^.'\u00C2\u00BBJ>A\u00C2\u00BBC<, fc fa fa<^4^><^^i^C-^i>4>C-4>fc4^*-<>oC\nJ^S\nBRITISH COLUMBIAN)\nJOSEPHINE F. L. HART\nThree little (!) maids from Arts are we,\nThough we aren't Arts except in Degree\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSo we don't give a hoot for that faculty,\nFor we're pure Science now.\nBabs, or Jo, is the only woman in '29 taking\nhonours in Zoology, which she dilutes with\nBotany and Chemistry. Such is her enthusiasm that she may be seen any morning counting the toe-joints of a pickled shrimp. Babs\nspends her spare time trying to run the rest\nof the executive of the Biological Discussion\nClub.\nHAROLD PERCIVAL JOHNS\nA Victoria College product, and proud of it!\nAfter an excellent record there, Harold came\nto U. B. C. to continue his good work by taking\nhonours in History. His chief diversions are\nthe Historical Society and Ice Hockey. Of a\nnaturally lively disposition, he nevertheless is\nable to subdue his spirits long enough to get in\na good many hours of study and, like all true\nworkmen, he sings at his work.\nDOROTHY EVELYN HELMER\nDolly has many attractions and a cheerful\ndisposition, an agreeable nature and an ambition to accomplish big things. Her method of\ncarrying out the latter is by taking a double\ncourse in Arts and Nursing, which keeps her\nbusy in numerous labs, killing guinea pigs and\ntasting cheese. Dolly is very interested in\nRugby games and teams, and is one of the\nmain supports of our Relay team each year.\nThe hospital gains when we lose.\nTOSHIO KAJIYAMA\n\"Kaji\" as he is usually called, comes from\nCumberland and is a Pre-med. A crack athlete\nin his high school days. Since coming here,\nToshio has settled down to serious study and\nas a reward is always high in his averages.\nHe spends his time either in anatomizing frogs\nand rabbits in the Zoology lab., or in attending\nthe \"talkies\" downtown. His jovial nature\nand keen sense of humour have won for him\nmany friends who wish him every success in\nthe field of medical science.\nVIRGINIA CAROLINE HOLLAND\n\"Ginger's\" serious side is shown by the\namount of time she spends in the stacks, her\nwork in the library, her devotion to Summer\nSchool, and the quantity of Aggie Ec, which is\nenclosed in her auburn head. She is keenly\ninterested in German, English and French\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nand in hunting ducks! Her variety of interests\ninclude the International Club, La Canadienne\nand the Skating Club. Her ability to tease cannot be beaten and many a victim has she\ncaught.\nPage Thirty-five NORA MARGARET HOLROYD\nWith a charm of her own, \"Our Nora\" has\na sympathetic nature combined with an attractive wistfulness and a streak of pure mischief.\nThough a student of the culinary art, she has\nchosen French honours for her particular field.\nJudging from her past record\u00E2\u0080\u0094scholarships in\n'27 and '28, and a brilliant career all through\nVarsity\u00E2\u0080\u0094we feel sure success awaits her. As\npresident, she has capably piloted the Classics\nClub this year besides being an interested member of La Canadienne.\nWILLIAM KAY\nBill is a good-natured fellow and a willing\nworker. He belongs to the mathematical intelligentzia as he is an honour student and a\nmember of the Mathematics Club. His great\nambition is to make it from Collingwood to\nVarsity in twenty flat. He has pedagogical\naspirations, so rumour has it, and we shall probably see his genial countenance beautifying the\nupper common room again next year. He plays\nbadminton at times and is a member of the\nVarsity Club.\nLYLIAN GERTRUDE JACKSON\nLylian descended from the Upper Country\nthree years ago, but she still thinks the lower\ntowns cannot compare with Cranbrook. She\nspecializes in English and History, but also\nfinds time for Philosophy and Skating Clubs.\nHer optimism, generosity and enthusiasm\nhave won for her many friends. Though\nLylian prefers spinsterhood and pedagogy, yet\nwe predict a different future for her.\nROBERT W. KEYSERLING\nBob was born in Russia and came to us in\n'27, after living nine years in the Orient,\nwhere he attended school and afterwards\nwent into business. As well as being a member of the Social Science Club, the Letters\nClub and the Historical Society, and holding\npositions in the German Club, the Debating\nUnion and the International Club, he also fences, and is one of our keenest debaters. In\naddition, an honour course in Economics and\nan assistantship in the German department make\nBob one of the busiest men on our campus.\nSUZANNE CLARE JACKSON\nIt is the way of the world that those who\ndo most for the University gain most in return. This is especially true of Suzanne.\nMembership during the past three years in the\nPlayers' Club and Historical Society are an\nactive expression of her love of drama and\nhistory. S.C.M., however, claims most of her\ntime and thought, giving her most pleasure; if\nyou judge by her joyous spirits and energy at\ncamp.\nPage Thirty-six ~KC BRITISH COLUMBIAN\nU\nNORA JOYCE JENKINS\n\"I looked beyond the world for truth and\nbeauty,\nSought, found, and did my duty.\"\nShe comes from Wales. At Burnaby High\nSchool she established for herself a praiseworthy scholastic record, which she has continued at Varsity by a succession of first-\nclasses. She is often seen on the street car\ntranslating the letters of Seneca or Vergil's\npoems. An active member of L'Alouette and\nthe Classics Club, Joyce has shown originality\nin several well-prepared papers.\nTHOMAS DOWNIE KIRK\nThis eighteen year old youngster joined us\nin our Sophomore year, since then has been\ntaking honours in French, and is now the president of La Canadienne. He also carries extra\nunits in German and is a member of Der\nDeutsche Verein. As a respite from searching in the stacks for material on the French\nRomantic Drama, Downie visits the swimming\npool.\nMARGARET CLARA JOHNSON\nMargaret's hobbies are teaching kindergarten\nand taking honours in Mathematics. Her biggest\nWorry is trying to be at two or three places\nat once, and still do the third and fourth necessary things. She is always present at the\nPhilosophy and Mathematics Clubs meetings,\nand seldom misses an S. C. M. retreat. Margaret is not sure what she intends to do next\nyear but we are expecting unusual results\nfrom the influence of Philosophy 2 and \"Freddy's opinions.\"\nGEORGE JUTARO KORENAGA\nGeorge, a native son of Vancouver, specializes in Economics and History, and has the\nhabit of obtaining high averages in exams.\nAlthough a diligent and conscientious worker,\nhe is no book-worm by any means, and the\nway he handles a basketball or a baseball is\nenough to convince anybody that he is an\nathlete of no mean ability. His many friends\nknow and admire him as a man of reliable\nand friendly nature whose only weakness is,\nperhaps, that he goes to the shows during\nexams.\nELIZABETH KILLAM\n\"Nineteen: of years a pleasant number.\"\nBetty by name and bouncing by nature\u00E2\u0080\u0094she is\nthe happiest girl in the college, and even the\nproblem of being a senior has not depressed her\nbright smile and boundless pep. In preparation\nfor either travel or a career she has favoured\nEconomics, English and Ethics. In her First\nyear she formed the pattern for secretary of\nArts '29 and started a stage career in \"Ukulele\nLady.\"\nFavourite expression: \"Oh, my sainted aunt.\"\nKappa Kappa Gamma.\nPage Thirty-seven NORMA L. KING\nNorma has decided opinions and facility\nfor their expression. Also her peculiar intellectual interests range from courses in Civil Engineering to Dramatic Art. The former finds\nexpression in summer surveying and \"plus\nfours,\" the latter led to the Players' Club prize\nfor \"Cootie Consequences.\" Extra-mural work\nhas led Norma into finding expression in the\ndance, instances of her art being \"Chauve-\nSouris,\" Russian girl at Home-Coming and a\nfair co-ed at the Invasion pep meeting.\nLIONEL H. LAING\nAnother desirable immigrant from Victoria!\nThe man who walked off with the Native\nSons' Scholarship in our Sophomore year and\nwho has been a prominent History honour\nstudent, but whose interests are not limited.\nSuch offices as the president of the Philosophy\nClub, vice-president of the Musical Society,\nsecretary of the Historical Society, the fact\nthat he has been a hard working member of\nthe class executive, and above all the host of\nfriends that he has formed should testify to\nthis.\nBARBARA LANG\nBarbara is the product of sterling Scotch\nancestors. Her outstanding qualities are sincerity and steadfastness. At the Trail High\nSchool she left a brilliant record which she\nhas continued to uphold at Varsity securing a\nscholarship in her Third year. Her main inT\nterest is in French, and she is a member of\nLa Canadienne. To her professors she is\nknown as the late Miss Lang but she is never\nlate with a helping hand.\nROBERT STEWART LAMB\nStew, is one of those quiet unobtrusive\nchaps who spend much of the time poking their\nnoses into test-tubes in Chemistry umpteen lab.\nBesides taking Chemistry and Mathematics as\nhis major subjects he takes a few extra courses\nin Philosophy and History. For amusement\nhe attends the meetings of the Chemistry Society, and spends his noon hours hiking along\nMarine Drive. In spring he and his cheerful\nsmile go North.\nMARJORIE LANNING\nMarj. has only three weaknesses: The Cres-\nton High School staff, afternoon tea, and\nCanadian rugby. After hearing her \"rooting\"\nat the Alberta game, we feel that she should\nabandon the teaching profession for the operatic stage. Marj. keeps her sylph-like form by\nscintillating with dashing abandon on the\nbasketball floor, where she wears a darn-that-\nbasket expression. In the intervals between her\nmany diversions, she is a serious student, and\nexpects to create quite a stir when she publishes her thesis on \"The University Student\nand the Rush Seat Problem.\"\nPage Thirty-eight D [the university:\n^^3f\ngC BRITISH COLUMBIA?)\nELEANOR FRANCES MADELEY\nA rare specimen, originating in Japan, but\nnow found only in B. C. Habitat: Varies\nbetween the stacks, the Green Room, and the\n\"Hearse.\" Diet: Chiefly English courses, with\na small proportion of German, taken in preparation for a meteoric career as a librarian.\nHabits: Concerned with the Players' Club.\nShe took a prominent part in the Spring play\nlast year, and this year was a member of the\nexecutive. She plans another tour with the\nSpring play caste.\nDAVID ALAN LLOYD-JONES\n\"Orpheus with his lute made trees . . . .\"\nand in fact \"Lute\" arrived at Varsity from\nKelowna, the land of apple trees and snow.\nFor two years, he was as reserved and retiring as those words suggest. But in his Third\nyear he filled the position of circulation manager of the \"Ubyssey\" in a most efficient manner. In his private life he is known as an\nexcellent musician, and blossoms forth when\noccasion permits. He majors in English and\nFrench, but his real passion is Biology.\nHILDA ADELAIDE JANE MARSHALL\nA certain majestic absent-mindedness distinguishes Hilda, who is engrossed in Seneca,\nChaucer, or the inescapable thesis, for she is\nhonouring in Latin and English. Her academic career has also been graced by several\n\" scholarships, at Victoria College as well as at\nVarsity. Hilda intends to enter the Education\nclass next year, but apparently does not expect\nto stand the strain of a teacher's life as she\nhas designs on the Civil Service. Outside of\nthe library, Hilda disports herself in debating,\nthe S.C.M., the Classics and International\nClubs.\nJOHN CLAIRE LOOMER\nAlways thoughtful of others, ever ready to\nlend a helping hand, Claire is one of the best\nknown members of '29. He gave up a teaching profession for a university career. Although\nClaire is an ardent student of History he has\nchosen Physics and Chemistry as his special\nsubjects. He has a great partiality for dancing and may be seen at many of the major\nfunctions and practically all the class parties.\nHis home is in Hedley and in the summer\nmonths he spends his time as a hard rock miner.\nKATHLEEN MATHERS\nKay is like her handwriting\u00E2\u0080\u0094neat and petite.\nThough she struggles through four-hour labs.,\nand abstruse Zoology texts, she still finds time\nto gobble up modern drama and attend all\nFreddie's lectures. For the first three years\nher goal was an M. D., but now she has\nabandoned her medical ambitions in favour of\njournalism. She is an enthusiastic member of\nthe Letters Club. Kappa Kappa Gamma.\nPage Thirty-nine THE TOTEM\ns&psse\n+^**+^*+J^*+****+*+*******+j***++ \u00E2\u0096\u00A0J^J^Cfcfc^C\u00C2\u00BB*C^iifcfct.fc*'*Ci'CC^<.i4\nLILLIAN MATHERS\nNeither too quiet nor too studious, Lillian\nis a valued member of our crowd. If you\nwant to be remembered stand on your head\nwhen being introduced to Lillian, for she holds\nthe college record for forgetting whom she's\nmet. Although she took up badminton in her\nold age her enthusiasm for the game is refreshingly infantile. Sigma Beta Pi.\nRONALD ADLAI LYONS\nRon. was born in Winnipeg, \"followed the\nbirds to Victoria,\" and later migrated to Pen-\nticton. He came to us in his Senior year after\ncompleting his Second year with Arts '28, and\nhis Third year by Summer Sessions. He made\nan enviable teaching record at Penticton and as\nvice-principal at Ocean Falls. An enthusiastic\ndevotee of such sports as basketball, tennis, and\ngolf, he nevertheless specializes in History and\nEnglish.\nELLEN FORTES CUE MELLISH\nA good friend who lives at peace with all\nher neighbours. An ardent member of S. C. M.\nNellie intends to train as an athletic instructor, so she has played full-back in Grass\nHockey, belonged to the Outdoors Club, and in\nher last year has been a gym. enthusiast. Her\ninterest in swimming made her vice-president\nof the Swimming Club in her Junior year and\na member of the Banff team that brought home\nthe cup.\nHAROLD STRATTON MAHON\nIn his first two years at Varsity he was a\npillar of strength to the McKechnie Cup rugby\nteam, but an unfortunate accident forced him\nto retire from sport in his last two years. An\nexecutive position in his Second year matured\ninto the position of senior class treasurer, a\nvery responsible position. We can suggest no\nhigher praise than that Harold can number his\nfriends in scores.\nJESSIE ROSA MENNIE\nJessie is usually seen in a long black gown\nhaunting the stacks, with her thesis cards in a\ncigar box, which denizens of the library recognize to be as much a part of Jessie as her\nspectacles. She is taking an honour course in\nFrench, and is a member of L'Alliance Franchise, vice-president of L'Alouette, and a\nscholarship winner. Jessie's purpose is to\nteach, but her ambition is to travel where she\ncan talk French all day.\nPage Forty ^C BRITISH COLUMBIA\"^)\nCLARA MARGARET MERCER\nClara has taken her courses in instalments.\n' After making her debut with the class of '23\nshe took her Second year with Arts '27, her\nThird year in Summer School and this year has\njoined us. With no delay Clara entered into\nthe spirit of the University by joining the Musical Society and playing basketball for the\nSenior \"B\" team. Nevertheless she takes a\ngreat interest in Latin, Philosophy, and weekend trips to her home in New Westminster.\nFRED H. MAIKAWA\nFred Maikawa is a native son of British\nColumbia. He joined Arts '29 in its Third\nyear after leaving Arts '28 to travel in Japan.\nFred is an active member of the Historical\nSociety, the Social Science Club, and treasurer\nof the International Club. A persuasive tongue\nand an inclination to study Economics led him\nto join the Debates Union. Among his acquaintances Fred can number the Prince of\nWales, Premier Baldwin and Ramsay MacDonald, perhaps because he is one of the best-\ndressed men at Varsity.\nHELEN HENDERSON MILLAR\nFrom Trail to U. B. C. comes smiling Helen\nwith a Math, text, a French play, a Latin book,\nher basketball togs, tennis racquet, golf clubs\nand hiking boots, her skates and her skiis.\nPrimarily Helen is a sport and a jolly companion. She's a student too; an ardent member of the Social Science Club, Classics Club\nand La Causerie. We all hope to see Helen\nwith the Education class next fall.\nHARRY BORDEN MARSHALL\nDuring four years Borden has shown himself to be a systematic and conscientious\nworker. He is the enigma of the Chemistry\nclass; a mathematical mind, taking honours in\nChemistry and also vice-president of the Chemistry Society. His favourite haunt is his\nlab. and there he delights himself in glass\nblowing and trying to obtain SnC.P. We\nhave wondered how H. B. can so often indulge in a nap during lectures and yet always\npull down first-class standing. Diversions:\ntennis, motor cars and swimming.\nMARY PATRICIA MOLONEY\nMamie is a prominent Varsity swimmer, one\nof those to make the Banff trip this term. She\nhas been P. I. P. A. editor of the \"Ubyssey,\"\nand a staff member of long standing, also vice-\npresident of Arts '29 during the past year.\nBut these seem less important, thinking of\nMamie, than other things. She has danced and\nbeen gay for us at Homecomings and pep meetings ; she has said the kind thing oftener than\nit has been necessary, when it counted more\nthan she realized.\nPage Forty-one ^ *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB.,. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i. I.*lf..... ^./-^ 4 *,!, ^,^ f | 17tHE UNIVERSITY ZZZ-poF^^fc BRITISH COLUMBIA^)\nMARY RICKETrS\nMolly came to us in her Second year from\nthe University of Manitoba. She has been a\nprominent member of the S.C.M. and in her\nFourth year was its very efficient secretary.\nShe is also a member of the Musical Society\nand Gymnasium club. But perhaps the most\ninteresting thing about her is that she is the\nonly woman \"theolog.\" on the campus, and\nhopes to go into New Canadian Work.\nNATHAN NEWALL\nNat. began his quest for knowledge with\nArts '28, but after a holiday is graduating\nwith '29. Has served three years on the Soccer team, splashing valiantly on many a muddy field. He is also a tennis enthusiast. A\nmajor in English and Economics, with spasmodic Latin, keeps him occupied, but he still\nindulges in the pleasure of the upper common\nroom. Characterized by a quiet nature; many\nclass parties; good humour; and a host of\nfriends.\nA. ELEANOR CAROLINE RIGGS\nTo be one-half of the honour class in Bacteriology is a distinction in itself, but, not content, \"Riggs\" is taking combined honours in\nBacteriology and Zoology. She sails serenely\nthrough this appalling combination, always\nobtaining her honours. How she finds time for\nthe Players' Club, the Biological Discussion\nClub, and Swimming, remains a mystery; but\nshe also manages to be ready for any amusement that presents itself. Next year, \"Riggs\"\nplans post-graduate work in the East, after\nwhich she will continue to pursue the elusive\nbacterium.\nHOWARD NICHOLSON\nDuring his four years at Varsity, Howard\nhas been one of the most prominent members\nof Arts '29. An earnest student, his brains\nand application won him the Royal Institute\nscholarship as a freshman, and high first-\nclasses during the succeeding years. He has\nplayed on the Second Basketball team, filled\nthe position of president of that club, and has\nbeen Treasurer of the Men's Athletic Executive.\nHe plans to study business administration at\nHarvard after graduation.\nGRACE AGNES RYALL\nGrace casually arrived at Varsity in our\nSecond year. Since then she has spent her time\nin talking, a little study the night before, and\nan occasional lecture. By accident she applied\nto the Musical Society this year, and discovered\nshe has an alto voice. She also plays badminton, speaks a foreign language at La Canadienne, and is vice-president of the Women's\nLiterary Society. She occasionally lives down\nher family's reputation on the tennis court,\nthough she may yet surprise them.\nPage Forty-seven II THE TOTEM\n^SgC\nCfc^<^C^4fcfafc<.fc< * fa I ttfcjtt&.\n\u00C2\u00BBM\u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0096\u00A0jj^Ji*Wtfi^j^Mwsww^\u00C2\u00BByuKii^hfa*c