"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1209674"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-07-15"@en . "[1931?]"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/ubcyearb/items/1.0119016/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n*ft\n- rattu, nf Srtttalj (Enlnmbta Befticatton\n6fothe\nClass af '31 CONTE NTS\nA Word to the Graduating\nClass\nt==l\nClass Records\nStudent Government\n1=5=1\nPublications\n===\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nClubs and Societies\nk==<\nAthletics\nE==l\nLiterary Supplement FOREWORD\nHPHE Editors wish to thank those\nwhose co-operation has aided in the\npublication of this issue of the \"Totem\".\nIt is to be hoped that this rather inadequate attempt to record some of\nthe more important phases of student\nactivity may prove of service both as\na reminder to our Graduating Classes\nand as a guide to those returning next\nsession.\nEditor\nDORIS J. BARTON\nBusiness Manager\nJOHN W. FOX A Word to the Graduating Class\nTN the month of May we shall witness the ceremony for the conferring\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 of degrees upon the Class of 1931. This formal acknowledgment by\nthe University authorities that the prescribed course of studies has been\nDR. L. S. KLINCK\ncompleted, does not imply the severance of relations between the members of this Class and their Alma Mater; rather does it signify that those\nupon whom the degrees have been conferred have been admitted into a\nfraternity which embraces in its membership all University men and\nwomen everywhere.\nFortunately, this larger fellowship need not result in a loss of interest\nin the University of British Columbia. I therefore express the hope that\nyou will continue to hold in affectionate regard the associations of your\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\n[ 11 1 A Word to the Graduating Class\n(Continued from Page Eleven)\nundergraduate days, and that whenever occasion offers you will give\neffective expression to this sentiment by taking an active interest in the\nUniversity and in its work.\nIdeally, there is no essential difference between an undergraduate\nand a graduate, at least so far as the attitude towards learning is concerned. The one receives training under a measure of direction; the\nother is still, let us hope, a student who continues to develop independently. The conferring of the degree merely marks a milestone along\nthe way.\nThe mental discipline and the mental enlargement which you have\ngained during your undergraduate years will be of great assistance to\nyou in your business, professional or public life. I congratulate you on\nthe opportunities which are yours, and in expressing the hope that you\nwill direct your knowledge and ability to their highest purpose, that of\nhuman welfare, I feel that I am expressing the sentiments which will be\nyours when Chancellor R. E. McKechnie admits you into the world-wide\nfellowship of University graduates.\n/C@*\nPresident\nI \"1 CLASS RECORDS THE FACVLTY OF\nrlS^SCIENCE\n is\nDEAN D. BUCHANAN\nDr. Buchanan was appointed Professor and Head of the Department of Mathematics in\nthe University of British Columbia in September, 1920, and became Dean of the Faculty\nof Arts and Science in September, 1928. For nine years before his appointment to the\nUniversity of British Columbia, Dr. Buchanan was Professor of Mathematics at Queen's\nUniversity, Ontario. The Class History of Arts '31\nS\u00C2\u00A3i\\n1 153*\nTSfrS t\njjJsasW i.\"\nMARGARET McMILLAN ALLAN\nMargaret came here after a brilliant canter\nthrough South Vancouver High, and she has maintained the same high standard throughout University. She is a Math. Honour student and for two\nyears has been the secretary of the Mathematics\nClub. Margaret's studies by no means absorb all\nher time, for she is able to take an active interest\nin tennis and swimming, and is also a proficient\npianist. Favourite saying: \"Have you seen Joan?\"\nNELSON ALLEN\nNels hails from Victoria where he established an\nenviable record as a student. While in that seat of\nlearning, he won the David Spencer Mathematics\nprize, and among other things played the lead in\n\"Green Stockings\" and was president of the L.S.E.\nAt Varsity he is known for his proclivities as a\npunster and his cachinnations which probably incited\nMax Beerbohm to his essay on \"Laughter.\" A Mathematics Honour student, he is president of the Mathematics Club and the Musical Society. Next year\nalong with his Master's work he will square the\ncircle, duplicate the cube, and trisect the angle.\nALICE TEAGUE BAILEY\nDuring her college career, Philosophy and Economics have claimed a large portion of her attention.\nDespite these weighty matters, Alice has found time\nto make herself indispensible to her many friends,\nand to take part in various activities such as the Badminton Club, Philosophy Discussion Club, and the\nGolf Club. Vice-president of the latter, she has\nserved on the Women's Athletic Executive in her\nfourth year. Although somewhat undecided as to\nher future, Alice holds architectural aspirations.\nEDWARD CHUTARO BANNO\nEd is a man of Utopian ideals despite his unaccountable attachment to chick embryos and T.B.\ngerms, Although majoring in Zoology and Bacteriology, in which he holds his own with annoying ease,\nthe chief object of his sojourn at Varsity has been to\nattain a liberal education. This accounts for his\nliberal outlook and attendance, even somewhat sporadic, at the Art Club and the International Relations\nClub meetings. After graduation, Ed contemplates\nan intensive study of medical science elsewhere.\nMARY ELIZABETH BALL\nBetty, as she is known by her friends, comes to\nU.B.C. each year from Courtenay. English and\nPhilosophy interest her chiefly, although she indulges\nin History just to show that life is quite serious.\nBetty wastes precious moments attempting to avoid\ntea in the caf., but apart from this, she is quite\nhuman. Next year Betty plans to return for Education.\nf 17 1 MARY OTTIELIE BLANCHE BALL\nMary by name and merry by nature. Famed for\nher curly hair, jolly laugh and pep at parties. Besides French, her weaknesses are English and basketball games. She enjoys a good time and may always\nbe found wherever fun is. But in spite of this,\nMary always makes good grades. Her jolly nature\nis sure to carry her far on the road to success in\nher chosen profession of teaching. Best of luck,\nMary.\nWILLIAM RANDOLPH BEAMISH\nAlthough \"Ran\" was born in Ontario, he received all of his education in this province. Coming\nfrom South Burnaby High, where he won the Governor General's medal in 1926, he completed his\nFreshman year at this University. After a year's\nabsence he returned for his second and subsequent\nyears. In his Sophomore year he took part in the\nactivities of the Rowing Club, and during the following year held the office of president of the Radio\nClub, at the same time honouring in Maths.\nHELEN IRENE BARR\n\"How goes it?\" and an ever-cheerful smile adequately describes Helen. Her sincere geniality and\nnever-lacking interest in everything pertaining to\nVarsity have won her many friends. Of numerous\nclubs she is a real member, an ardent supporter of\nall debates and a great enthusiast of tennis. Not\nonly in those of her class but in all the functions of\nVarsity life she takes a well-balanced interest, giving\nthe best she has and gaining the best they offer.\nEDWARD DA VIES\nEd., formerly a member of Arts '26, left that\nillustrious body at the end of his Sophomore year in\norder to guide benighted youngsters up the golden\nstairs of knowledge. He joined the ranks of '31\nlast year but has not been very definitely heard from\nyet. He is an enigma, a member of Math, and\nPhysics classes, with a penchant for peculiar mixtures\nlike classical literature, photography and fishing.\nALICE MIRIAM CECILIA BELL\nMcGill will be lucky next year in the acquisition\nof one of the nicest girls in our Senior class. Alice\nwas a popular student in Victoria College and now\nat U.B.C. continues to win the good wishes of her\nmany friends. At present she is making a special\nstudy of English, Latin, and Philosophy, with a view\nto taking up Library work. During the afternoons\nand evenings she is to be seen guarding the reserved\nbooks in the Library.\nI 1\u00C2\u00AB 1 i\nTv^ ,u^-u\nISABELLA BEVERIDGE\nAfter spending her first two years at Victoria\nCollege where she won a scholarship in French\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nL'Alliance Francaise \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Ella come to Vancouver in\nsearch of higher learning, which she found by taking\nan Honours Course in Latin. Consequently, she is\nan enthusiastic member of the Classics Club and has\ngiven several interesting papers at its meetings. Ella\nintends to return to Varsity next year for Education.\nHERMAN DERICK BISCHOFF\nHerman came to B.C. in 1927 with McGill\nmatriculation. In his Freshman year, he was manager of the Junior Soccer team; in his second, he was\ntreasurer of La Canadienne; in his third, its president,\nin his fourth, vice-president of the German Club.\nIn his spare time he plays chess, and is also an ardent\nGrass Hockey player. In his Varsity career he\nspecializes in modern languages.\nEDITH PHYLLIS BICKFORD\nEdith's versatility is shown by her many and\nvaried courses. Second year found her in the Botany\nlab., while in third year her favourite subject was\nFrench. However, German, English and Philosophy,\nhave claimed her attention as a senior. Even this\nheavy course weighs lightly on her shoulders, for\nEdith spends the odd hour at afternoon teas and\nbridges. Next year Normal will be graced by the\npresence of this budding teacher.\nPETER THOMAS BLACK\nA young man of many and varied abilities is\nour Peter, for, this Chemistry Honour Student and\nbudding bacteriologist speaks German with remarkable fluency and has been heard to hold forth in\nFrench. Of course, he is a member of L'Alliance\nFrancaise and of the Chemistry Society (where he\ndisplays a Borgia-like enthusiasm for poisons.) He\nhopes to do post-grad work at an eastern University,\nand we are sure that this peppy youth who reduces\nhis friends to a state of eulogizing him in verse, will\ncontinue to be both popular and successful.\nVERNA MARGUERITE BOLTON\nSo much of Verna's time is occupied in writing\nHistory essays, that it might be concluded it is her\nfavourite form of punishment. In her last year she\nserved on the class executive, and, as a member of\nthe Valedictory Committee, contributed much time\nand effort to the undertaking, positively gloating over\nthe collection. Verna's position behind the loan desk\nleads us to believe she will be taking a Library course,\nif she can overcome the temptation to return for\nEducation.\n[l> 1 THE TOTEfrfa;\nCLARA EVELYN JOHNSON\nAnd this, boys and girls, is our Clare,\nA maiden with blue eyes and very fair.\nTook work at Queen's then arrived to us;\nAnd was very welcome to '31 class.\nShe's fond of Philosophy and not in vain:\nHas taught school already, will teach again.\nSkating, she claims, is her favourite sport.\nSo there\u00E2\u0080\u0094don't you think Clare's a good sort?\nPEARLEY RANSDELL BRISSENDEN\nA native of Flora, Illinois, where he obtained his\nearly education, Bris, for a time, lived in Los Angeles.\nCalifornia provided him with a most delightful wife,\nand after remaining out of school for several years\nhe came to us in '27. The purpose of his university\ncareer has been to prepare himself for the study of\nLaw; consequently he confines most of his attention\nto Economics, with English as his hobby. Bris will\nbe remembered for his soundness of judgment and\nhis great sincerity of purpose.\nHELEN REBECCA BOUTILIER\nA capable vice-president of the Historical Society, past president of the International Relations\nClub, and a member of the Musical Society, Helen\nhas taken an active interest in student affairs. She\nis usually found in the stacks working with dusty\nhistory books, for her chief interest is her History\nHonour course. Judging from her brilliant work in\nthis line, we predict that some day other students\nwill be using her texts as works of reference.\nRALPH McLACHLAN BROWN\n\"All-round\" is the only phrase properly to describe Ralph's college career. As a freshman he played\non the first Canadian and Freshman Rugby teams.\nIn his Sophomore year, Ralph continued to play English rugby, and was Advertising Manager of the\n\"Ubyssey.\" As a junior, he was president of the\nEnglish Rugby Club and Business Manager of the\n\"Ubyssey.\" This year he is a member of the super-\nVarsity Rugby team, and has undertaken the management of the downtown Stadium Campaign. Good\nseconds in Ec. and varied social activities complete\nthe circle.\nNORMA MADELINE BRENT\nNorma, alias \"Happy,\" majors in Musical and\nminors in English (to the extent of four courses!).\nShe spends her surplus time chasing down her loaned\nnotes, preparing banquet speeches, writing the odd\nessay and looking for Maysie. As a member of the\nUpper Common Room Discussion Club, \"Happy\"\nmingles with \"Intelligentsia\" and gets away with it.\nHer friends will tell of a generosity and interest as\nboundless as her capacity for long walks.\nI 20 J s\u00C2\u00BBm< Am\nDOROTHY MARY BRUCE\nDorothy's interests have been very varied. For\nthe last three years she has been a member of the\nArt Club. In second year she also belonged to the\nMusical Society and Outdoors Club. Then last year\nshe joined the Biological Discussion Club and Chemistry Society. She is now secretary-treasurer of the\nformer Club and vice-president of the latter. Dorothys' specialties are Chemistry and Biology, and she\nintends to take Education next year.\nEDGAR NEWTON BROWN\n\"My chief ambition is to write \"the Great American Novel'\u00E2\u0080\u0094but don't put that in the 'Totem.' \"\nEdgar, Lord of the social whirl, has shown literary\ntalent, but as he is an ambitious student in Commerce, one may expect him to become either a Trade\nCommissioner, or a man of letters\u00E2\u0080\u0094or both. As a\nsophomore, he was a \"Ubyssey\" reporter, and became\nassistant, associate, and finally a Senior Editor. In\naddition, he was treasurer of the Arts '31 Valedictory\nCommittee and a member of the Social Science Club\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094but all this signifies nothing until it is added that\nhe proved loyal in his friendships and true to his\nideals.\nDOROTHY ELINORE WYLIE\nDot is one of the privileged few\u00E2\u0080\u0094a Chemistry\nHonour student, and an enthusiastic member of the\n.Chemistry Society. Just what does she find so\ninteresting in Chemistry lectures? Besides Chemistry\nshe takes an odd Math, course and intends to take\nher M.A. next year. Dot plays on the Grass\nHockey team and was a member of the former select\nStudio Club. Her chief relaxation is entertaining\nat tea every afternoon in her lab.\nFRANK LANG BURNHAM\nFrank is a true Vancouver product and hails\nfrom Grandview, where, as a scholar and \"bantam\"\nrugby player, he showed the boys at Britannia High\njust how he could \"do his stuff.\" After two uneventful years on this campus \"Frankie\" stepped out\nas an important member of the L'Alouette and the\nClassics Club, and a regular on the champion '31\nInter-class. He is now striving for Latin Honours,\nand expects to be teaching youngsters in a couple of\nyears. Prefers blondes.\nELIZABETH CHANNING BUCKLAND\nFreshette\u00E2\u0080\u0094member of Players' Club; part in\nChristmas play; swimming. Sophomore\u00E2\u0080\u0094secretary of\nPlayers' Club; vice-president of Swimming Club;\nmember of swimming team. Junior\u00E2\u0080\u0094president of\nPlayers' Club; part in Spring play; vice-president of\nL.S.E.; Senior\u00E2\u0080\u0094member of Big Block Club; Players'\nClub; president of Women's Athletics; Council member. Despite her very active participation in campus\nactivities, Betty has not shirked her academic responsibilities, for she is ta be a chemist and bacteriologist and those science courses mean work.\nI 21 J KATHLEEN AUBIN BURRIDGE\nAubin came to us from Victoria College two\nyears ago. Since she has been here, she has entered\nwith much pep and enthusiasm into all phases of\nuniversity life. Aubin, majoring in Botany and\nFrench, manages to carry off \"firsts\" with great ease.\nIn athletics she takes an active part, being vice-president of the Outdoors Club, as well as an enthusiastic\nworker for the Hockey Club. She frequently hides\nherself in one of her many labs. Not satisfied with\na B.A. at eighteen, Aubin plans to return next year\nto take her M.A. in Taconomy.\nALAN THOMAS CAMPBELL\nFor two years Alan, more commonly known as\nTommy, came to Varsity without letting many of\nus know about it. His third year was spent ft\nMcGill as exchange scholar and this year everyone\nknows him as president of the Men's Undergrad.\nAs councillor, he is respected for his legal mind; as\nchairman of the Discipline Committee for his stern\ndemeanor; as member of the Stadium Committee for\nhis enthusiasm, and in social circles for his diplomacy\nand dancing.\nJEANNE BERNADINE BUTORAC\nJeanne has made her last year at U.B.C. an\nactive one. In the Fall she joined the \"Ubyssey\"\nreportorial staff. This year she has shown enthusiasm for basketball and skating, while in previous\nyears she was known to gym fans. Jeanne is one of\nthe few walking enthusiasts at U.B.C. Languages\nare her specialty and La Causerie her chosen club.\nTrail, Education and Essays are her favourite topics\nof conversation. All who know Jeanne appreciate\nher resourcefulness and capacity for friendship.\nROBERT JENNINGS CHAPMAN\nRobbie's \"Hiss\" on the basketball floor has won\nfor him a place in the \"Hall of Fame.\" In spite of\nfirst-class marks, commercial art, being a Life Saver\nat Jasper, the fun he gets out of dances and the\nhundred and one other things he does\u00E2\u0080\u0094his idea of\nenjoyment is a Canadian Championship in basketball.\nWithout a doubt the future holds quite a lot for\nRobbie.\nPHYLLIS MARGUERITE CAMPBELL\nMontreal, 1935.\nDear Marion:\nDo you remember Phyllis Campbell of our year?\nShe came from New Denver but lived in Vancouver\nduring the winter. She was a member of La Canadienne. I remember the hours she used to spend in\nthe Library worrying over Economics and Phil, essays.\nI often think of our 2 o'clock cups of coffee in the\ncaf. followed by a dash to the Library to get places.\nI read of her quite recently in connection with\nSocial Service work in Vancouver.\nMABEL.\nf 22 J ffcr\n-**\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n33*\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\nDNlVtRStTY-DRITlSII COLUMBIA-\nVELMA STEWART CARNWATH\nDespite the prospects of Normal next year and\na major in Philosophy, Velma has managed to preserve her unique sense of humour and characteristic\nwit. In her four years of Varsity she could always\nbe depended on to provide pep and laughter to any\ngroup that she might join, and though she lends\nher presence to Faculty balls and basketball dances\nwith noticeable regularity, Velma pulls good grades\nwith surprising ease. Favourite subject\u00E2\u0080\u0094Biology.\nDONALD FRASER HUTCHISON\nDon is Edinburgh born and bred, but U.B.C.\ntried and proved. Since coming to Varsity in the\nfall of '27, he has played soccer, been an active\nmember of the Musical Society and for two years'\nsat on Students' Council. First as treasurer, and\nthis year as president of the Alma Mater Society,\nhe has dealt with lofty Governors, rebellious councillors and irate students, without fear or favour.\nAt all times he has discharged his duties conscientiously and well. He is a bit of an idealist, is Don,\nthough Scotsmanlike, he hates to admit it. It is\nrumoured that Don plans to return to the old\ncountry.\nSALLIE BUELL CARTER\nOne of two generally seen tearing frantically\nfrom one end of the parking space to the other exclaiming to the world at large\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Know anyone that\nknows anyone that's going in at three?\" Among\nnumerous other activities Sallie somehow managed to\nfind time last year to write a play, \"The Trees,\" and\ntook the leading part when it was produced at\nChristmas. In her Sophomore year she broke the\nbroad jump record. It is still a deep, dark mystery\nhow she acquires high seconds and firsts in English\nand Philosophy.\nRICHARD McNAUGHTON LENDRUM\n\"Now listen!\"\n\"Dick\" joined us in our third year, coming\nfrom Victoria College where he was president of\nthe A.M.S. A prominent member of the Players'\nClub, he starred in \"The Veil Lifts\" as the Naval\nOfficer, and in \"Friend Hannah\" as the Duke of\nYork. Dick is this year president of the Letters\nClub. He is majoring in English and intends to\nreturn for Education. With his sterling character\nand jovial disposition we predict every success for\nhis future.\nBEATRICE MARGUERITE CHISHOLM\nBee, president of Women's Undergrad. at Union\nCollege, where she obtained a scholarship in Church\nHistory last year, is a member of the Literary Forum.\nIn spite of every Thursday afternoon with Gym (or\nis it Jim?), she makes first class marks\u00E2\u0080\u0094mostly in\nHistory. Formerly a member of Arts '27, she helped\nto erect the present U.B.C. buildings by manicuring\nred-headed Freshies at Thirty-five cents a victim.\nShe aspires to Girls' Work, but\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"you never can tell\nwith Bees!\"\nl\u00C2\u00BBl IE TOTjjMijg--;\n-ta-\n. iMs&^tA i.\nlg\nNORMA ROSE CLARKE\n\"Dolly\" is one of the more ambitious members\nof the Class of '31. Although majoring in History\nand English, along with many others, she is showing\nher individuality by refusing to take the Teacher's\nTraining Course. After graduating, Dolly intends\nto return to California where she will enter the field\nof Journalism. We sincerely hope that she will have\nall the success possible in this venture.\nIAN FERGUSON DOUGLAS\nIan started out with the Class of '26, but was\nbeguiled into pedagogy. He survived, however, and\nreturned for this last year. The \"Pirates of Penzance\" was his major sport in which he took the\nrole of the \"Pirate King.\"\nNORLEEN CRAFTER\nDuring Norleen's school life, England, St. Michael's School at Vernon, and Victoria College, have\nfigured in her education. After such a varied and\nwandering career, she has remained at Varsity long\nenough to complete her final two years. Judging by\nNorleen's high scholastic standing we are sure she\nwill be very successful in her chosen work. Although\nher outward reserve makes it difficult for us to\nknow what she is really like, all her friends agree\nthat she is well worth knowing.\nALFRED ABRAM EVANS\n\"He plays the thing.\"\nDrama and Literature have taken the leading\nroles in Alf's university career. He has sixty-five\npublic performances to his credit, and has also been\nvery active in Little Theatre circles. He was advertising manager of the Players' Club in third year and\nwas appointed assistant director of the Christmas\nPlay this year. Elected to Letters Club in Sophomore\nyear. Member of Rowing and Fencing Clubs. As\nactor, playwright and director, Alf has a brilliant\nfuture in the theatre.\nMARGARET WINTON CREELMAN\nWere you looking for Margaret? She's likely in\nthe common room, looking vaguely around for inspiration for a short story\u00E2\u0080\u0094Not there? Well, perhaps she's in the Pub. office\u00E2\u0080\u0094she's Associate Editor\nof the \"Ubyssey,\" you know. She's president of\nL'Alouette too, and a member of Der Deutsche\nVerein and the Gym Club\u00E2\u0080\u0094Well, I guess she must\nbe at a lecture\u00E2\u0080\u0094She's planning to be a librarian,\nyou know, so she takes a little bit of everything\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nGerman, History, Sociology, English\u00E2\u0080\u0094Oh, here comes\nMarion, she'll know where Margaret is!\n24 2*&t\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Hi\nbNtVERStTY^BRITiSiTCtfLtJWBIA^I\nMARION LORAINE CROWE\nLoraine's hobbies are History and back-scratchers. She is noted on the campus for her brilliant\nlipstick and for the hours she spends in the caf.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\njust another of these students who make good grades\nwith very little effort. She started Varsity with\nArts '30 but later joined '31. As to her future\ncareer\u00E2\u0080\u0094we know very little about it, even she is a\nbit vague. Perhaps we shall see her in Education,\nperhaps in Toronto.\nJOHN LAUCHLAN FARRIS\nTo this date we have never seen a frown on the\nbrow of this blase Senior. Four years of lackadaisical\nexistence see him graduating with a consistent record\nof good marks. Constant loyalty to the English\nRugby Club, combined with his good nature, have\ngained him a host of friends, but this last term the\ncollege girls seem to take more and more of his\ninterest. Next year John will go to Harvard, to\nprepare to be one of Vancouver's promising young\nlawyers.\nMURIEL ANNE CUNLIFFE\nMuriel's college days began in the \"shacks\" at\nFairview. After \"school-marming\" for a few years\nshe returned to her Alma Mater in her Junior Year.\nBeing interested in things scientific she spends most\nof her time in labs, peering through microscopes,\nand is a member of the Biological Discussion Club.\nBut Science is not Muriel's only interest. Her ambition is to win a sweepstake and, on the proceeds,\nsatisfy the cravings of a globe-trotter.\nJOHN BICHAN FOUBISTER\nAfter enduring his Freshman and Sophomore\ndays at Victoria College, Johnny discontinued his\nscholastic career for three years. The Victoria life,\nhowever, failed to handicap him, for he resumed his\nstudies at U.B.C. with a bang. Prominent in his\nJunior year in basketball and swimming, John became president of the Swimming Club this year.\nHis first two years at Victoria and his last two at\nU.B.C. have undoubtedly shown his ability as an\norganizer and participant.\nKATHLEEN MARGARET CUMMING\nKathleen came to us as a junior from Victoria\nCollege where she efficiently filled the position of\nsecretary of the Students' Council. Since taking up\nLatin and Mathematics as her major subjects she may\nbe found in an odd corner five minutes before the\nlecture translating the twenty lines of \"Virgil\" she\nexpects to be asked. She is a prominent member\nof the Classics Club and in her Senior year was\nelected vice-president of it. Her favourite expression is, \"Let's have tea.\"\nI 25 1 BARBARA LILLIAN DAWSON\nBarbara seems inclined to take a serious view of\nlife. We wonder if this is the only explanation of\nher tendency to make first classes. After attending\nhigh school for two years in Saskatchewan, she\nmatriculated in Vancouver in 1927, winning a\nscholarship. She has been occupied lately with English, trench and German courses, and is a member\nof La Causerie and the Deutsche Verein. She hopes\nnext year to take a course in Library science.\nJOHN WALDEN FOX\nJohn, of the friendly smile and the businesslike air, is one of our most popular students. During his first two years at Varsity he played Canadian\nrugby, winning his small block. In third year he\nmade his debut into the business world as Advertising Manager for the \"Ubyssey,\" and in his last\nadvanced to the Business Managership, holding that\noffice with great success. John is an ardent follower\nof G. K. Chesterton, believing that \"Woman's place\nis in the home.\"\nVIOLA VICTORIA DAVIS\nViola is another brilliant student from Victoria.\nSince coming to Varsity in the third year she has\nestablished an enviable record in History honours.\n\"Ve-Ve\" is a popular member of the select social\ncircle which congregates about the history stacks.\nThe Historical Society and International Relations\nClub have claimed her knowledge of current affairs,\nwhile the S.C.M. carries her in lighter moments to\nCopper Cove Camp. Viola plans to migrate again\nfrom the City of Birds for Education '32.\nJOHN WINDSOR FROST\nJack's career at Varsity has been divided equally\nbetween scholastic, athletic and social interests. In\nhis Freshman year he held a position on the Frosh\nEnglish Rugby team. From that time on he has\nappeared spasmodically on the field, a broken leg in\nhis Sophomore year somewhat cooling his ardour.\nAfter a not-too-rapid beginning J. W. has managed\nto obtain rather decent marks and should have no\ntrouble in graduating well. Next year we may see\nhim back as a Pre-Med.\nMARGARET BEATON DICK\nMargaret embarked upon her combined Arts\nand Social Service course with the class of '29.\nNone of us need to be told that her chief interests\nare deserted wives and youthful delinquents. Besides her extensive fieldwork she has found time to\nattend handicraft classes and to captain a Point Grey\nGuide company. All who know her conscientious\nnature and her unruffled efficiency are confident that\nshe will be successful in her chosen field of family\nwelfare work.\n[\" ! *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0**\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 '\"\ntJNlVt1WITY^^RITiSirtOLi)MBIA^|\nSHEILA MARTIN DOHERTY\nWe were joined in our third year by this trim\nlittle miss from New Westminster. She quickly\nshowed herself to be a brilliant student whom English Honours was, proud to claim. Ability to make\nmarvellous marks in the most abstruse subjects would\nbe sufficient reason for anyone to be just a wee bit\nconceited\u00E2\u0080\u0094but not Sheila. Clearness in thinking,\nsteadiness in acting and a saving sense of humour\nplace her far on the path towards success.\nJAMES ALEXANDER GIBSON\nJames Gibson has held offices in the Players'\nClub, the Historical Society, the International Relations Club and the Men's Gymnasium Club. Last\nyear he was a member of the \"Friend Hannah\" cast\nand this year he took part in a debate with a team\nrepresenting the National Federations of Students in\nEngland and Scotland. He has also contributed much\nto the success of the Valedictory Gift Committee of\nArts '31 in its work on the B. C. Historical Collection. He goes to join our Rhodes men, Ross Tolmie\nand James Sinclair, at Oxford, with the sincere good\nwishes of his classmates.\nJOAN ELIZABETH EDWARDS\nIn the first two years Joan showed that she was\nproficient in all subjects, but finally became a Maths.\nHonour student and has since been an interested\nmember of the Mathematics Club. During her third\nyear at Varsity, Joan played guard on the Senior\n\"B\" Basketball team but, owing to lack of time, was\nforced to drop the game this year. Unless she\nchanges her plans, she will be back for Education\nnext year.\nERNEST WILLISTON SHERATON GILBERT\n\"Well boys, what's the score . . . ?\"\nErnie completed his first two years in Arts '30\nand, after a year spent in mining gold at Premier,\nreturned to the Class of '31. Forsaking boxing and\nrowing, Ernie joined the Players' Club, playing successfully in \"The World Beyond\" and \"Fog.\" He\nalso maintained his musical reputation, gained by\nsummer work on the C.N. boats, by his appearances\nwith the British Columbians and the Musical Society.\nLast year Ernie majored in Philosophy, and this year\nis continuing with a Pre-Medical course.\nFLORENCE RUTH ELLISON\nFlorence had better luck than most in being\nable to spend some months in England during her\nhigh school training, which she received in Trail.\nShe left that city in 1927 for Vancouver, to begin\nher Varsity career. She has successfully carried an\neighteen-unit course in two different years, and is\nparticularly interested in History and English, even\nthose awesome courses listed under English, Division\nIII. She is undecided what she will choose next year:\nEducation, or Library Science.\nI 27 J ELEANOR ELIZABETH EVERALL\nEleanor arrived at U. B. C. in her third year\nfrom Victoria College. She took up badminton and\nthis year has been a very necessary member of the\nsecond team. Eleanor delved in the realms of Philosophy and decided to major in this abstruse subject.\nThe vocational problems of other people are likely to\nbe her future worry. Eleanor has as her goal, during\nthe next few years, an M.A. at Toronto and even\nfurther education at Cambridge.\nEDWARD GLEAVE\nTed, as he is known to his classmates, took\nSenior Matric at Kamloops before joining the ranks\nof Arts '31. Specializing in Chemistry and Maths.,\nhe is an active member of the Chemistry Society and\nis well acquainted with matters mathematical, equations so simple and also quadratical. Ted is keenly\ninterested in winter sports such as skiing and skating, and is a soccer fan as well as being a tennis\nplayer of some note.\nANN BLANCHE SCOTT FERGUSON\nThroughout her varied university career, Ann\nhas been one of the most prominent and valued\nmembers of the Players' Club. Combining a genuine dramatic sensibility with rare humour, she has\never delighted her audiences. Ann's versatility enables her to carry success into her studies, and we\nsee her name on the scholarship list where she won\na Khaki Scholarship in her Junior year. Ann is a\ngreat favourite and we hope she will \"carry on\"\nafter Varsity days as cheerily as she has done in the\nlast four years.\nHERBERT GUY GLOVER\nHerbert is an entomologist and has an habitually bright outlook on life. He shares his comprehensive understanding of zoological problems with\neveryone he meets and so has proved himself of invaluable assistance to all his classmates. During his\nfirst two years at University he was intimately associated with the Musical Society. Although he is\nnow carrying the burden of a Zoology Honour\ncourse, he still finds time to assist the Biological\nDiscussion Club in the capacity of curator.\nNANCY FERGUSON\n\"Ask why God made the gem so small?\nAnd why so huge the granite?\nBecause God meant -mankind should set\nThat higher value on it.\"\nNancy distinguished herself at Victoria College\nby high marks and the championship of the Pacific\nCoast for Professional Highland Dancing. At Varsity she has divided her time between English and\nFrench, Gym. Club, hockey and track. After\nEducation, instead of teaching B. C. mountaineers\ntap dancing, rumour says she will be displaying her\ntalents in London.\n28 } m\ni*4Mi\nA-\nLNlVtRStTY-BRmSH COLlJMBIA-i\nRUTH EMILY FIELDS\nRuth\u00E2\u0080\u0094known to her friends as \"Rufus\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094came\nto Varsity two years ago from Victoria College. She\ndistinguished herself as a basket-ball player there,\nwas a profficient scholar and, as Bi. Lab. assistant,\nshowed a marked liking for things scientific. Here\nat U.B.C. she is doing excellent work in Botany\nHonours, and is vice-president of the Biological Discussion Club. Her lighter moments are spent with\nthe Outdoors Club. Possibly Rufus will be with\nVarsity again in Education '32. We hope so.\nROTH GARTHLEY GORDON\nBegan with Arts '29, but accepted a principal-\nship at the Tsolum Consolidated Superior School.\nReturned with '3 1 to continue his weakness for English and Latin. Roth plays a \"mean sax\" and is a\nmember of the Musical Society. He belongs to the\nClassics Club and was a dancing girl in the Thoth\nballet. To most of us he is better known for his\npoetical effusions on the Muck Page. Roth has lots\nof talent and ambition.\nMARGARET GERTRUDE FINLAY\nOne of the important reasons why young men\ncome West to college. Looks as though being a\ncharming mannequin in the University fashion parade was her heaviest duty\u00E2\u0080\u0094you'd never guess that\nshe is amazingly competent in the Chem. lab., and\ngets \"firsts\" in such bewildering subjects as Agronomy 20. Was Literary Representative for Arts '31\nin her Freshman year, belongs to the Skating Club,\nand goes round in approximately \"par\" with the\nUniversity Golf Club.\nGEORGE GRANT\nGeorge joined the Class of '31 in 1927, coming\nfrom Burnaby South High School. He has distinguished himself as a sprinter and broad jumper\nin connection with the Track Club. As a soccer\nplayer George has also shown his worth; he plays\nfull-back on the Junior team and is skipper of the\nchampion Arts '3 1 Soccer team. George has centered\nhis studies in French and English, which he intends\nto teach the rising generation.\nAGNES JEAN FORSYTH\nIn the first year Nan distinguished herself at\nbadminton while representing the University at the\nVictoria Invasion. During the succeeding years she\nturned her attention toward academic pursuits where\nshe is known to her friends as the \"budding economist.\" But she has been relieved from these financial\nworries by the odd English and Pholosophy courses.\nYet she continually reverts to type by plaguing all\nwith the expression, \"I must do those 'aggie ec'\nquestions. She intends to enter the business world\nafter graduation.\n29 1 THE TOfEftfci\nu^-- *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nBEATRICE JOAN FOSTER\nJoan came to U.B.C. in her Sophomore year\nafter taking Senior Matric. in Kelowna. Her course\nis Math. Honours and she shows her interest in that\nsubject by never missing a Mathematics Club meeting. Joan spends some of her spare time playing\nbadminton and tennis and is an enthusiastic member\nof the Swimming Club. Although she is returning\nnext year for Education, her ambition is to take up\npost-graduate work in Physical Culture. Favourite\nsaying\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Have you seen Margaret?\"\nRONALD GRANTHAM\nRonald, who came to U.B.C. in his Sophomore\nyear from Ridley College and Welland High School,\nOntario, has led a Dr. Jeckyl and Mr. Hyde existence during his university career. On one side he\ninvokes the Muse of poetry and has done some notable\nwork, especially in winning the Letters Club award\nfor an original contribution. On the other hand,\nas Editor-in-Chief of the Publications Board, he has\nsteered a tortuous course between the difficulties\noffered by a recalcitrant Students' Council, a sometimes fractious staff and an exacting student body.\nRonald intends to enter the teaching profession.\nJEAN ROBERTA FOWLER\nWhat a versatile young lady she is. She revels\nin English and even holds forth in German. Her\ntrue passion is History and her essays, which reveal\nJean's charming whimsicality and sparkling sarcasm,\nare the envy of every student. With her sense of\nhumour and ready interest she combines the qualities\nof a brilliant conversationalist and a sympathetic\nlistener. Friendship with Jean is a stimulating thing\nfor she is far more temperamental than a black-\nhaired, blue-eyed person has any right to be.\nJOHN LAWRENCE GREIG\nSpent his Freshman year at the \"U\" of Saskatchewan, but attracted by the \"scenic\" wonders of\nU.B.C, decided to complete his course here. He\nhas dipped into swimming activities and nosed\naround boxing circles\u00E2\u0080\u0094not to mention milder athletics with the Letters Club. Laury has the happy\nfaculty of accomplishing a lot with little apparent\neffort. Comic novels and supposed misogynistic\ntendencies constitute his chief weaknesses. Lawrence\nvisions a course in medicine after a few years of\nteaching.\nFRANCES LYLA FRASER\nFrances, during her career at Varsity, has succeeded in making that unusual combination\u00E2\u0080\u0094successful participation in the three important phases of\nUniversity life: sport, social activities, and studies.\nFrances can wield a tennis racket with the best; she\nis invariably among \"those present;\" and on top of\nthis she manages to obtain high marks. She is\nmajoring in History and English. Frances is going\ninto business after graduation, and we feel that her\npersonality and capability for hard work will carry\nher to success.\nf 30 I m ffr\n^^^^^^^^^^^B^\nVERNA ELIZABETH GALLOWAY\nVerna hails from Nanaimo and that town may\nwell be proud of her record both in scholarship and\nathletics. She is majoring in Mathematics and\nPhysics, and is a member of the Philosophy Club,\nthe Golf Club, where it is rumoured she plays\nbefore breakfast, and the Outdoors Club, in which\nshe is an ambitious hiker. Verna intends to take\neducation and if brains and unbounded energy mean\nanything, she should be a great success.\nHERBERT HENRY GRIFFIN\nBert is this year capping his Varsity career by\ngraduating as president of the combined Senior\nclasses. Through his four years he has been closely\nallied with English rugby, this year making the McKechnie Cup team. In second year Bert collected\nclass fees as treasurer of '31, and in third year,\ntickets as a bus-driver. His chief bid to fame is\nhaving had a record number of jobs. Seen at most\nsocial functions, and obtains very decent marks with\na very indecent amount of work.\nKATHERINE LAURA CLAYTON GAUL\nKatherine, known as Katie to her class-mates, U\none of the quieter members of Arts '31. Devoting\na great deal of her time to English and History,\nshe can often be found in the library reading for\nher numerous essays. We have heard it hinted that\nKatie intends to take a post-graduate course in\nLibrary work next year. We all wish her every\nsuccess in her chosen profession.\nFRANCIS CONSTANT HALL\nAfter spending two years at Victoria College,\nFrank ventured forth to Varsity, where he soon took\nan active part in campus affairs, as is shown by his\npresidency of the Law Club and his boxing attainments. We are confident that his ability to concentrate on one thing at a time will stand him in\ngood stead for his future profession of law. Frank,\ncharacteristically garbed in sturdy tweeds, consuming innumerable cigarettes, and looking decidedly\nstern, is familiar to everyone.\nMARY HAMILTON STRONG GRAHAM\nA hard worker, and an ardent student, Maysie\nstill finds time to be secretary of the Musical Society and to rehearse three nights a week for the\nspring production. She even consents occasionally\nto a cup o' tea of an afternoon, or a walk to the\ngates of an evening. These activities, however, do\nnot debar her from knowing everything (judging\nby the extent of her class-notes) about Maths.,\nPhysics and English 13, which leads us to the firm\nbelief that she will prove a remarkably able teacher.\nf 31 ] AA\nALICE GERTRUDE GRAY\nHonours in French and membership in La\nCauserie and L'Alliance Francaise occupy most of\nAlice's time; nevertheless she is interested in History\nand English. She does not, however devote all her\ntime to studies; she is always ready for any amusement and supports all student activities. Though\na conscientious worker, Alice is never too busy to\nhelp others. Next year she intends to take Education.\nREGINALD PERCY ELLERY HAMMOND\nBehold Reg! For two years Reg stealthily\nmanouvred in and out among us, fearing lest we find\nhim out. \"Let it not be known,\" says he, \"that I\nwas ever the treasurer of Victoria College Council.\"\nAnd when the Class of *31 becomes a memory this\nwhisper may be heard in strange academic halls,\n\"Let it not be known that I was ever chairman of\nUnion College House Committee.\" Reg has left us\nan enviable record as an Honour student in plant\npathology. By a process of quiet persistency he intends to become a prof.\nANNIE TOOP GREEN\nAnnie began her Varsity life at Fairview. After\ntwo years there, she taught school for a time, and\nthen returned to U.B.C, joining Arts '31 in her\nJunior year. In spite of this break in her studies\nshe is courageously tackling an Honour course in\nFrench with a little Latin as a side-line. She intends to teach again after graduation. Here's wishing her the best of luck.\nFRANCIS CHESTER HARDWICK\nFrank took his first year with Arts '26 and has\nsince then been teaching, gaining his last three years\nat Summer Session. History and Philosophy claim\nfirst place in his academic interests, while he has devoted sufficient time to basketball and tennis to\ngather a few trophies. He also finds time to devote\nto vocal work, having been a member of the Welsh\nand Chown United choirs. As treasurer of the Summer Session Students Association he keeps a fatherly\neye on the finances of that organization.\nEDITH JOSEPHINE GREEN\nAfter a splendid record at Victoria College,\nEdith joined us for her last two years. She is a\nvery deceiving person; let us whisper it softly\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nshe is not really the decorous young lady she seems.\nBut we won't reveal any more of her lurid past.\nFnough, that she looks very solemn when seen typing\ndiligently behind the Library desk. Next year Edith\nintends to take a Library course at the University\nof Washington. We wish her the best of luck.\nI 32 ] K\n1HK.\n^\u00E2\u0096\u00A04^44rir\"\n-jfcctft\nFRANCES MARJORIE GREENWOOD\nMarjorie entered the University after matriculating from the Prince of Wales High School.\n\"Midgie,\" as she is better known, finds time to be\npresent at all the social functions despite the fact\nthat she is always very busy with studies and library\nwork, and is interested in sports. \"Midgie\" won her\nBig Block for swimming, in her first year. She is\nmajoring in English and History and intends to continue along this line next year at Washington.\nBARRIE HERBERT HARFORD\nBorn in Vancouver, Barrie successfully worked\nhis way through Burnaby South High School, whence\nhe graduated to the U.B.C. in 1927 to join the ranks\nof '31. From that time on Barrie has shown remarkable ability in French and Latin as well as in several\nphases of sport, of which skating and badminton\nhead the list. After graduation, Barrie intends to\ntake Education with the object in view of training\nthe rising generation in his own favourite studies.\nEILEEN BUTLER GRIFFIN\nDuring Eileen's four years at University she has\nbeen a very active member of the Players' Club. In\nher first year she appeared in the Christmas Plays\nand again in the Spring Play, \"Polly with a Past.\"\nIn her third year she was secretary and in her fourth\nyear vice-president of the Club. When Eileen is not\ndashing from one antique shop to another, looking\nfor \"props\" for the Spring Play, she finds time to\nattend an occasional lecture.\nGEORGE LLOYD HARVEY\nLloyd evidently believes that variety is the\nessence of a good education. After his Freshman\nyear he joined the pre-medical students. Leaving\nthem, he took a business course in the city. Then\nhe entered Science for an Electrical Engineering\ncourse. One year with the \"Red-Shirts,\" however,\ncured him and he returned to Arts to graduate in\nEconomics and Philosophy. Next year he hopes to\ntake his M.A., and then a course in Theology. \"Take\nit easy, Lloyd, take it easy.\"\nMARGARET MENZIES HARRIS\nMargaret took her first two years at Victoria\nCollege, and came to us as a Junior. After braving\nthe elements every morning in \"the Chariot\" (which,\nby the way, has an unlimited capacity), she hides\nherself in the mysteries of the Bacteriology labs.\nMargaret is a Grass Hockey enthusiast, and in her\nSenior year was elected president of the Club. She\nexpects to continue in the field of Bacteriology.\nI 33 J Jl_^ut^tL l^aJH\nAGNES MAUDE HEALEY\nAgnes ordinarily seems to be a quiet and conscientious worker, but on the tennis field the full\nforce of her personality is revealed. She played\nGrass Hockey during her four years and is very\nfond of her summer swims. She has delved into a\ngood many courses, running all the way from English, Philosophy and History to Geology, but English now claims most of her time. Her friends find\nher kind and unassuming and full of humour. Her\nambition for the future is an Art course.\nMALCOLM HEBB\nMalcolm is one of the most brilliant lights of\nthe graduating class. A Physics Honour student, he\nis president of the Physics Club, and an abiding disciple of Einstein, Maxwell, and Weierstrauss. His\nnursery literature most surely included a treatise on\nRelativity and his toys probably consisted of galvanometers and wattmeters. His pet hobby is exposing projected theories re things physical, and withal\nhis genial personality has made him a host of friends\nat the University. Malcolm is a credit to the Institution.\nMARY HERBISON\nComing to Varsity a scholarship-winner, Mary\nhas maintained her brilliant record throughout. She\nwon a second scholarship and always gains first class\naverages. As president of La Canadienne, she has\nput her French honours to excellent practice. In\naddition she is a member of the International Relations Club and an active member of the S.C.M.\nU.B.C. will not lose Mary this spring, for she plans\nto return in the fall to study Education.\nGIBB GILMOUR HENDERSON\nGibb is a double-course man, having taken his\nsecond year Arts at Summer School. Next year he\ngraduates in Electrical Engineering and the East will\nprobably claim him for a while at least. Of unfailing good nature, he has won many friends at\nU.B.C, and we all feel that, as an engineer, his\nsuccess is assured. As a diversion from the more\nserious business of studying, Gibb plays badminton,\nand in the summer tramps the wilds with the\nGeological Survey.\nMABEL ELIZABETH FRAILEY HILL\nFrailey comes to us from North Vancouver.\nShe entered Varsity in the second year and since\nthen her chief occupation has been in winning\nFrench Honours. An active member of \"La Canadienne,\" Frailey was the heroine in the play produced by that Club. Furthermore, she has been\nworking on the Valedictory Gift Committee for Arts\n'31 and has given the group much assistance. Frailey\nintends to teach, so we hope to see her back at\nEducation in the fall.\nI 34 1 \u00C2\u00A3\u00C2\u00A3\nl^^^^gyfiSS^\n^Nrtta,\nUNlVt1t\u00C2\u00BBjTy^f\u00C2\u00BBpSHll^\nMAVIS MAUD EVELYN HOLLOWAY\nPopular and peppy\u00E2\u0080\u0094that's Mavis. Entering the\nUniversity as a Governor General's medallist, Mavis\nhas now acquired three major scholarships and is a\nbrilliant student in English Honours. Connected\nlast year with the executive of Arts '31, she became secretary of the Senior Executive Committes\nthis year. She is also an efficient secretary of the\nLetters Club\u00E2\u0080\u0094but Mavis is not one-sided; she has\nmany interests, among them, tennis. A well-rounded\nlife, a vivid personality and a keen mind make her\nfuture success assured.\nALEXANDER HENDRY\nAlex spends his winters absorbing Economics\nand his summers recuperating his vocabulary on an\nice-truck. He may most frequently be found juggling figures in the Stat. lab. or commenting upon\nthe pretty green signs in the Library. He is a\ncooperative worker of the highest order. Despite\nthese grinding occupations, Alex is an ardent and successful student in his chosen field. He is undecided\nwhether to return for a B. Com. or to plunge directly into business.\nKATHARINE BOEHNER HOCKIN\nBorn in China, Katharine came to Vancouver\nby way of Europe in 192 5. Her chief interest at\nVarsity besides History and English is the Student\nChristian Movement, of which she is president. She\nbelongs to the Literary Forum, and is an active member of the International Relations Club, where she\nis an authority on China. This year Katharine was\na delegate to Reed College and to the S. C. M. Conference at Jasper. She intends to take Education.\nEVERETT FRANKLIN HURT\nEv. brought something of the swing of the\nrugged western plainsman with him when, after three\nyears of teaching in Alberta, he came to Victoria\nCollege as a sophomore. At U. B. C. he became a\nstaunch supporter of the Law Club\u00E2\u0080\u0094once he graced\nthe Judge's Bench\u00E2\u0080\u0094the Men's Gym Club and the\nMusical Society. His handiwork was revealed to advantage in many of the decorative innovations of the\nSenior Barn Dance. Solid determination, backed by\nbecoming modesty, augur well for his success.\nJEAN ARCHIBALD HOOD\nJean is one of the few people who seem to go\nthrough Varsity with little work or worry. Her\ninterests range from History, English and Latin to\nBiology. At certain times of the year she can be\nfound in the Library hunting books for her numerous essays. During the third and fourth years Jean\nhas been an enthusiastic supporter of the Arts '31\nValedictory Gift project, and she acts as the secretary of the Committee. Next year she intends to\nreturn for Education.\nI 35 1 CICELY ROSAMOND HUNT\nNeither too quiet nor too studious, Cicely is a\nvalued member of our class. She has that endearing quality of being willing to do anything in the\nworld for you, whether you want a play criticized,\nan essay written, or an original excuse for doing\nneither. Cicely is majoring in English and Philosophy\nin hopes that she will some day realize her ambition\nof taking a Library course at McGill. She is an\nenthusiastic member of the Philosophy Club, and\nattends an occasional meeting of Der Deutsche Verein.\nJOHN GEORGE MORGAN\nThis, ladies and gentlemen, is U.B.C.'s other\nprize Scotchman\u00E2\u0080\u0094yes! we have two in the Auditorium. The wee fellow is kept above and Geordie\nbecause of his radicalism and other native qualifications, spends his time below. Besides good books he\nkeeps good smokes. Like the rest of the Morgans,\nhe is famous. As an economist of the first rank, an\nexponent of the views of Marx and Hegel, he bears\nan enviable reputation as a defender of his beliefs.\nHe has seen many classes come and go, and we are\nhonoured to have him graduate with us.\nAGNES MAUD HUTSON\nMaud will graduate not only with her B. A.\ndegree and Honours in Economics, but also with her\nSocial Service Diploma\u00E2\u0080\u0094evidence of her keen ambition, her true scholastic spirit, and, above all, her\nability to apply her knowledge in a practical manner.\nBesides gaining a P.E.O. scholarship, Maud has been\na member of the I.R.C. and Social Science Club, the\nMusical Society, and the S.C.M. executive. By her\nready sympathy and cheery friendliness she has won\nmany loyal and true friends. Her \"Lott\" is sure\nto be a happy one!\nCLARKE VAN SICE MORRISON\nVan, as he is known to all, is an ardent student\nin Physics and Maths. However, he excels in Canadian rugby, where for three years he has been packing the pigskin in the Intermediate Canadian Rugby\nLeague. He supplements his dinner hours by playing in the inter-class basketball and soccer games.\nVan will take Education next year, if only to show\nhis famous pipe to High School students.\nBESSIE KENNEDY\nDuring her university life Bessie has endeared\nherself to us all by her genial sympathetic nature,\nher love of fun and her keen sense of humour. Judging from her indulgence in Economic essays we are\nled to believe that she will enter the- business world\nafter graduation if she can overcome the temptation\nfor Social Service.\nI 36 [Jim jkfSt-\nUNtVERSiTY^BRlTJSirtgLlJMBIA\nHARRIET ELIZABETH JOHNSON\nTo all and sundry, Betty. Throughout her\nuniversity career Betty has chased those subjects\nnecessary for Home Economics. She revels in\nBacteriology and Zoology and one may find her at\nany hour of the day in the \"lab,\" inoculating\nbunnies and butchering cats. After graduation,\nBetty plans to complete her Home Economics course\nat the University of Washington.\nROBERT ERIC GLYN LANGTON\nEric, better known to his friends as \"Tony,\"\nentered Arts '31 as a sophomore, having taken his\nSenior Matriculation at Port Haney. He belongs to\nthe Mathematics Club, and in the second and third\nyears was a member of the Badminton Club, which\nhe deserted this year in order to devote his time\nmore exclusively to obtaining Honours in his chosen\nsubject, Physics. Next year we shall welcome Tony\nback as an Education student.\nVIOLA MARGARET JOHNSTON\nViola is one of those steady and industrious students, but this in no way detracts from her interest in\nthe lighter things of life. At some future date she\nintends to take a post-graduate course in Library\nwork and, with this end in view, she spends Thursday\nafternoons behind the loan desk. Viola is always a\nloyal and cheerful friend and we are sure that, if she\ncontinues in her present ambitions, she will be assured\nof future success.\nLAWRENCE ALLAN LANG\n\"Larry\" is the customary and more accredited\ntermination. His perpetually happy disposition arises\nfrom a faculty of obtaining real and intense enjoyment from little things, while at the same time not\nallowing trifling annoyances to destroy his equanimity. Larry is to be found in the Caf. any afternoon\nimbibing tea, discussing philosophy in the dialectical\nmanner, and smoking the inevitable pipe. His ability\nto work hard when he wants to, will carry him to\nsuccess in his chosen profession, education.\nELIZABETH JONES\nAfter two years at Victoria College, Betty went\nto Normal, and the following year joined the Class\nof '31 at U.B.C. A member of the Musical Society\nlast year, she is also connected with the S. C. M.\nand the Gym Club. Her chief courses are in English, French and History. Betty's name is usually\ncoupled with that of her so-called \"sin-twister.\"\nHer witty remarks have made her a general favourite, and will help her along the road of teaching\nf 37 1 ALICE MARGARET KNOTT\nMargaret is another student whose high standing is helping to maintain the reputation of Victoria\nCollege. She is known as the other half of the\n\"sin-twistership.\" During her two years in Vancouver, Margaret's work has centred around English,\nHistory and Philosophy, while her extra-curricular\nactivities have included the Musical Society and\nS.C.M. It is by her sunny disposition and friendly\nmanner that Margaret will best be remembered by\nher many friends, who wish her much success as\na teacher.\nFABIAN ERNEST CLAUDE ROBERTS\nErnie dropped into Varsity three years ago after\nteaching in the North. Besides being the energetic\npresident of the Soccer Club for two years, he has\nbeen one of the outstanding players on the Senior\nteam. Last year he brought about the presentation\nof the \"Soccer Cup\" for inter-class competition. He\nis a member of the C.O.T.C. and a leading shot on\nthe rifle team. Spends his summers in the mines or\non surveys. Will probably follow teaching.\nMARIAN ISABEL KUMMER\nMarian came from Cranbrook in her Sophomore year to join the Class of *31. Throughout her\ncollege career, her cheery personality has won for\nher a host of friends and she believes \"that a friend\nin need is a friend indeed.\" Last year she joined\nthe Gym Club to keep herself fit to wrestle with\nher two bugbears, Latin and English, which she intends to teach in the near future.\nJOHN MURDOCK RUTHERFORD\nMurdie, after matriculating at Revelstoke, attended Normal School at Victoria before he came to\nVarsity. During his four years with '31 he has been\nchiefly interested in Philosophy, although he has also\nspecialized in Mathematics and English. He plays\ninter-class basketball, skiis a little, and is very fond\nof hiking. He has also a weakness for dancing and\nbridge, and in the summer vacations enjoys the wide-\nopen spaces of interior construction camps and surveys.\nMARGARET OLIVE MUIRHEAD\nMargaret's versatility and sincerity have distinguished her college career. Her scholastic standing has\nbeen consistently high, notwithstanding her wide\nrange of outside activities, which include International and Class Debating, winning of the Women's\nOratorical contest, acting as secretary and vice-\npresident of Arts '31, and finally as secretary of the\nAlma Mater Society. Margaret has been a member\nof La Canadienne, I.R.C., and the Letters Club.\nInterested throughout in the S.C.M., she has been its\npublicity convener and vice-president and went as a\ndelegate to the 1929 Jasper Conference. A good\nstudent and leader; a splendid co-worker and friend.\nI 38 1 A-\nFRANCES MARGARET LARGE\nMargaret is one of those brilliant people for\nwhom first classes are a matter of course. She\nmatriculated from Lord Byng High School with a\nscholarship and carried off another in her second\nyear at Varsity. Her main interests are French\u00E2\u0080\u0094in\nwhich she is honouring\u00E2\u0080\u0094and German. But academic\nwork is only part of Margaret's career. She is vice-\npresident of La Canadienne, a member of the German\nClub and plays a violin in the Musical Society.\nDAVID HAROLD LePAGE\nDave is one of the double-course men. His\nhome being in Victoria, he took two years at Victoria College, and at the end of his first year there\nwas awarded the Rotary Scholarship. Continuing\nwith Science '31, he was among the favoured ones\nthat finished the first two years; but, like many\nothers of the class, took a year off to \"recuperate.\"\nHe is now found with the Chemical Engineers of\nScience '32, \"sweet songsters of the Chem. 5 lab.\"\nFREDA LASSER\nFreda first came to Varsity with Arts '27. After\nattending for two years she left, joining Arts '31\nlast year. While taking a course of combined\nHonours in German and History, Freda still finds\ntime to be secretary of the German Club and an\nactive member of the I.R.C. and the Historical\nSociety. During the two years she was absent from\nVarsity, Freda attended Normal and later taught\nschool. We expect that she will continue in that\nprofession.\nRONALD SHIRLEY LOWE\nRonald comes from the city of sunshine and\nflowers. He brought some of the sun in his genial\npersonality, which has won for him the presidency\nof the Classics Club. Many a friendless Freshman,\nlost in the dark library, has blessed the supreme\nBeing who made Ronald chief librarian on Saturday\nafternoon. Few know how he finds time for Honours in Latin, but he does; and next year he intends\nto return to take Education.\nMARGARET LEA\nAnd this, nobody but Margaret Lea,\nAs charming and clever as a co-ed can be;\nLit'rary Forum and English\u00E2\u0080\u0094her pets,\nDances or parties? Answer is, \"Let's!\"\nAt badminton, tennis she is a shark!\nAnd in her exams she gets a high mark.\nShe is always and everywhere witty and bright,\nWe know it and say it\u00E2\u0080\u0094she is all-right.\n{ 39 } MARGARET WHITE LIGHTBODY\nAfter two years at Victoria College, Peggy decided last year to grace Varsity with her presence.\nSince her arrival she has been heard frequently\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nespecially in the \"PR\" stacks or at occasional meetings of the Classics Club. Still undecided as to her\nfuture, she employs the present in exercising a keen\nsense of humour and an infectious laugh, and in\ngaining affection and admiration as one of the most\ncheerful and persevering members of the Class.\nCHRISTY MADSEN\nEntering U.B.C. with Arts '28, Chris aspires to\na double degree in Chemical Engineering. Three\nyears with the Rowing Club have proved his worth\nas stroke for the first eight. In the past, the Musical\nSociety and the Studio Club also claimed his interests.\nConfidence in his executive ability is reflected this\nyear in his appointment to treasurer of the Science\nUndergrad. Chris, will be with us again in '31-'32.\nMYRA RALSTON LOCKHART\nAfter a year at Normal, Molly joined Arts '31\nand has since then directed her attention towards\nPhilosophy and English with the end in view of\nteaching in high school. She has already taught in\nAlberta during the summer. Molly has shown her\nexecutive ability as vice-president of the Outdoors\nClub in her Junior year and as president of the\nPhilosophy Discussion Club in her Senior year. Her\nfavourite pastimes are: hiking, skiing, losing her\ngloves and leaving her beret in Ethics.\nCARL ALGOT MALM\nCarl comes from Britannia Beach. He is an\nexcellent tennis player, a good diver and has devoted\nsome time to gymnastics. He came to the University\nintending to become a chemical engineer, but decided\nthat the Physics Honour course looked harder. He\nhas good ability in Physics and Chemistry and intends to follow up his courses with research work\nafter graduation.\nCLARIBEL LUGSDIN\nClarie, otherwise known as Bluebell, has the\nreputation of being studious and quiet. To those\nwho know her, she may be studious, but quiet?\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nno, never. Besides a full Honour course in French,\nClarie has taken several courses in Latin. First\nclasses and a scholarship sum up her scholastic\ncareer, while swimming and eating form her chief\npastime. Her favourite expressions are unique and\nClaribel's own. For four years she has been living\nin hopes of taking Education.\nI 40 J j\u00C2\u00A3^\nIJNlVtR^TY^OniTlSirtgLtMPIA^i\nHELEN KATHLEEN MAGUIRE\nHelen, one of our most popular members, is the\ngirl immortalized in that popular song \"Betty Co-ed.\"\nShe played Grass Hockey in her Freshman year,\nSenior \"B\" Basketball for three years and has held\nexecutive positions as Track representative last year,\nand Athletic representative this year. She is our\n\"Campus Advisor\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094knows everything about everything. She hasn't been able to control her flair for\nhigh finance and Economics, which leads to her great\nambition\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"to be the lady-manager of the Vancouver\nHotel.\"\nRONALD ALLEN MAKEPEACE\nRonald came to the University without much\nidea of the course he was going to take. He had a\nleaning towards Engineering, but saw the error of\nhis ways in time, and instead, took an Honour\nCourse in Physics. His standing in class has always\nbeen good because he is a conscientious worker. He\nis going on to research work in Physics, so let's join\nin wishing him good luck.\nBERNA AGNES MARTIN\nBerna came to the University from the interior\nand throughout her four years here she has smiled\nand laughed her way into many hearts. She is one\nof our graduates who hopes to return next year to\nstudy methods and means of imparting education to\npublic and high school pupils. As an associate member of Thoth, she religiously paints armour at Homecoming. She has three weaknesses\u00E2\u0080\u0094chocolate cake,\nice cream and Canadian rugby. Major, English;\ninterest, Economics.\nSUSUMU MATSUZAKI\nOne of the most brilliant of the Japanese students studying in the University. After graduating\nfrom the Richmond High School, he entered the\nU.B.C. in 1927 with the Class of Arts '31. Taking\nhonours in languages, with major in French and\nminor in German, he has made consistently high\nacademic standings throughout the four years. Susie\nis loved by all his friends for his frankness in conversation and his seriousness in study.\nJEAN EUGENIA MARGOLIS\nJean joined the Class of '31 in the Senior year,\ncoming to us from Manitoba. Although she left\nRussia only three years ago, she managed to graduate\nat nineteen. Besides being a brilliant student, she\nwas very active in the Historical Society and La\nCauserie, found the Gym to satisfy her athletic\nstrivings, and the \"Ubyssey\" her literary ambition.\nGay, witty, and a good friend, Jean has made everybody love her. Daughter of a doctor\u00E2\u0080\u0094does this\naccount for her schoolgirl complexion?\nI 41 1 Aui\nVERA BEATRICE MAWBY\nIn spite of the fact that after every exam, she\nwrites. Vera is always certain that she made a terrible\nmark, she seldom fails to make a good first-class.\nThough a decided \"modern\" Vera has spent much\nof her time deciphering the works of classical authors\nsuch as Vergil and Cicero and has even studied\nGreek. In her frivolous moments (not infrequent)\nVera plays bridge and usually remembers herself\nsufficiently not to ask what is \"trump.\" Education\nseems to have her picked out as a recruit for next\nyear in spite of many attempts on her part to evade\nROBERT VICTOR MASTERSON\nA prize is offered to anyone who can make\nlonger strides than Bob when catching a bus or\nstreet car. Daily trips from the outposts of Burnaby\nhave made this the forte of our blossoming pedagogue. A former Normal student and teacher, Bob\nnow devotes his spare minutes to avoiding co-eds\nand attending Education lectures. His fearless participation in class discussions on training the young\nand on sex differences will go down in the annals\nfor ever.\nSHIRLEY ISABELLE MAYSE\nShirley's record of scholastic achievement is an\nenviable one. As well as obtaining first-class marks\nin a combined Honour course in Latin and English,\nand winning a Khaki Scholarship in 1930, Shirley\nhas found time to be a very interested member of\nthe Classics Club. Next year shee will join the Class\nof Education '32 and her friends wish her every\nsuccess in the profession for which she is so well\nqualified.\nHUMPHREY WALTER MELLISH\nSince a time to which the memory of man\nrunneth not back there has been a Mellish at the\nU.B.C. Specializing in Economics and Commerce,\nHumphrey is an industrious and painstaking student\nwho, although modest and retiring, has decided\nopinions of his own, which he is not at all backward at expressing on occasion. He is of the Anglican persuasion and studies the art of war in the\nC.O.T.C. Humphrey has spent some time in travel,\nhaving visited South Africa, Australia and the Pacific\nIslands.\nMARIAN ELIZABETH MEILICKE\nBringing action and vitality to everything she\ndoes, Marian's college years have been marked by\nthat elusive combination, good marks and good times.\nIn the hidden corners of her nature, she shields a\nnumber of surprising qualities. She is a violinist;\nshe has a keen business sense, which will stand her\nin good stead in connection with the post-grad, work\nshe intends to take up in an Eastern university; and\nshe has the quality of surprising originality.\nC 42 1 m\n^ *\"\nun tvtatWTVrWO^^\nFRANCES MARY MILLIGAN\n\"Fran\" comes from Saskatchewan and joined\nour ranks in the Junior year, after spending two\nyears at Regina College. She is interested in English\nand History and is an ardent supporter of clubs,\nbeing a member of the Literary Forum, International\nRelations, Philosophy Discussion, Gym Club and\nS.C.M. She has a keen sense of humour, and her\nready smile and sympathetic personality have won\nher many friends.\nGEORGE MITCHELL MEREDITH\nGeorge never settled down to anything in particular\u00E2\u0080\u0094scholastically he tried a bit of everything\nmaking very high marks, and athletically sampled a\nlittle tennis and was \"cox\" for the Varsity crew for\nthree years, incidently winning his Small Block. For\nquiet in lectures he has no regard but many are\nindebted to him for his witty remarks which helped\nto while away the time in dull periods.\nMARJORIE ELIZABETH MOFFAT\nMarjorie entered U.B.C. in her Junior year,\ntaking two years at Victoria College where she distinguished herself as a splendid, all-round scholar.\nShe has ably upheld that reputation at Varsity in her\nchosen line of work\u00E2\u0080\u0094Latin, English and Psychology.\nMarjie's activities are not limited to the scholastic\nalone, as she is a proficient and enthusiastic member\nof the Skating Club, belongs to Literary Forum and\nClassics Club. She expects to return for Education\nand we wish her every success in her teaching career.\nROBERT DONALD MILLAR\nComing from a family of medicos, Don has felt\nhimself called to follow the family profession, and\nso has become a \"Pre-Med.\" Thus he has spent most\nof his Varsity career quietly, but by no means\nsleepily, polishing off numerous Zoology courses, with\na few Chemistries thrown in to make things lively.\nDon, although undoubedly saturnine, has a quiet\ncharm that interests people in him. His friends\nknow the value of his honesty and respect his\nindividuality.\nELIZABETH EILEEN MOORE\nBetty has been one of the strongest members of\nthe Debaters' Club, an international debater in the\nfirst two years, vice-president of the Debaters' Union\nin her Sophomore year, and president of this organization in the first half of the third year. Besides\nbeing an Honour student in English as a junior,\nBetty had the honour of being student producer of\nthe Musical Society in its Spring performance, as\nwell as being vice-president of the Society. In her\nSenior year Betty was vice-president of the graduating class and a member of the Letters Club.\nI 43 1 IH TuTEIVt^j.^ ^ -~\u00C2\u00B1\nMARGARET ANNE MOSCROP\nDuring her four years at Varsity, Margaret has\nbeen active in several fields of college life. She was\na Musical Society member for the first two years,\ncaptain of the Hockey team in second year, and captain and vice-president in the third. In her Junior\nand Senior years, she has been a regular member of\nLa Canadienne, and an enthusiast of the Badminton\nClub, of which she is secretary this year. None of\nthese positions ever worries her, however, or prevents\nher from attaining honours.\nMARGARET SEBINA PHILPOTT\nOur first impression of Margaret is that she is\nreserved, but those of us who know her best find\nher most entertaining. She is a brilliant and steady\nstudent, and faithful attendant at lectures. In her\nfavourite subject, French, she makes the high marks\nworthy of her consistent work, and she is also an\nactive member of La Canadienne. Next year Marg.\nplans to come back for Education, and we feel she\nwill be successful in this field.\nWILLIAM JAMES SELDER\nOur \"Versatile Bill\" hailed from Port Arthur\nin 1927. After indulging in four years of college\nactivities he does not lack one atom of his contagious\nenthusiasm. To Bill falls the honour of managing\ntwo successful presidential campaigns of Alma Mater.\nHe has held executive positions in musical, hockey\nand athletic departments, and the treasurership of\nArts '31 with conspicuous ability. He is also prominent as a runner, chess player, warbler, puck-chaser,\nand philosopher. We wish Bill every success in his\npost-graduate work in Theology.\nELFRIDA MARIE PIGOU\nFrench, English and German are the least of\nElfrida's worries; first classes are simply a matter of\ncourse. We wonder how she manages to draw\nsuch life-like portraits during lectures, and still retain the ability of knowing every question asked.\nShe has many outside interests; attends La Causerie,\nexcels in originality at Der Deutsche Verein, plays\nbadminton and is a member of L'Alliance Francaise.\nAs for next year, she hasn't yet made up her mind\nabout that.\nDOROTHY LOUISE PLATT\nIn spite of Dorothy's apparent indifference towards lectures, she has always managed to achieve\nhonours in her major subjects,\u00E2\u0080\u0094English, Latin, and\nFrench. Her ability to read between the lines and\nto form her own opinions has been the cause of her\nhigh standards in English. If any information is\nrequired about the latest shows, ask Dorothy! Although she has often threatened to leave us, we\nsincerely hope she will be with us again next year.\n[44 J A.-*Nrttj(nJ\nLNlVtRStTYrBRITiSirtgHJMBiA\nGEORGINA REID MULHOLLAND\n\"Much may be made of a Scotchman if he be\ncaught young\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094proof, Jean. Jean was born in the\nLand of the Heather, but came to Canada when she\nwas very young. We haven't yet got over the shock\nwe received when she told us she was going to be a\n\"sawbones.\" Jean spent last year at the University\nof Alberta where she completed her second year\nmed. and helped to put the University on the map.\nAfter getting her B.A., Jean intends to go east to\nfinish her medical course.\nJAMES WILLIAM MORROW\n\"Jimmie\" contracted a fatal longing for Mathematics while attending the Duke of Connaught High\nSchool, New Westminster. Since coming to Varsity,\nhe has successfully tackled numerous Mathematics\nand Physics courses. He is honouring in Mathematics, and is an \"old-reliable\" of the Mathematics\nClub. Besides being a brilliant student, Jimmie is\npopular with all who know him. Next year will\nsee him learning the art of imparting knowledge to\nthe adolescent mind.\nGRACE WALLACE MURRAY\n\"Looks sanctimonious but acts like an imp.\"\nGrace is an enthusiastic member of the Musical\nSociety and was seen in this year's production. She\nmanages to maintain good marks without much\nwork. Because of her unlimited capacity for tasting\nmost of her time is spent in the Aggie building.\nHowever, a few hours a week she can be seen studiously dissecting cats, chickens, etc., in the Zoology\nlab. It is rumoured that her future will be divided\nbetween dairying and Arthurism.\nJOHN ALEXANDER MUNDIE\nJohnny emigrated from Britannia High four\nyears ago and came to Varsity to join the Class of\n'31. After being exposed to the various courses of\nfirst and second years, he chose Physics and Maths,\nin which to exert his abilities and make his mark.\nJohnny is also known as a soccer player, and was\na member of the Junior team, playing inside right.\nNext year, weather permitting, Johnny hopes to take\na course called Education. Another good man gone\nwrong.\nMARY KATHLEEN MURRAY\nFor the last three years the \"Ubyssey\" staff has\nclaimed Kay as one of its personnel. On the \"Pub\"\nshe has served in the position of \"Totem\" and\nHandbook assistant, Exchange and Associate Editor,\nand still retained her sense of humour. Besides wading through countless Exchange papers, and writing\n\"heads\" for the Tuesday \"Ubyssey,\" Kay acts as\nsecretary-treasurer of the Women's Gym Club, vice-\npresident of the Literary Forum, and is a member of\nLa Causerie. She maintains high averages in all her\ncourses, which include English and History.\nI 45 1 JESSIE ALEXANDER McAFEE\nJessie comes each year from Prince Rupert to\nattend U.B.C. Interested in English and Philosophy,\nshe indulges in German and History by way of\ndiversion. However, even when struggling through\nEnglish 19 reference books or writing history essays,\nJessie can always find time for afternoon tea with\none of her friends. Next year will find her at McGill delving into the mysteries of a librarian course.\nDAVID CARRUTHERS MURDOCH\nAfter a successful Senior Matric. course at Kel-\nowna, where he won the scholarship, Dave came to\nus in his Sophomore year. Now he is a Maths.\nHonour student and a prominent member of the\nMathematics Club. Frequently, when the week's\nwork is done, Dave may be seen playing hide-and-\nseek with a golf ball on the University course. Next\nyear Dave will come back for his M.A. degree.\nDONALDA MAE McCHARLES\nSince attending University Don has thoroughly\nconvinced us that lectures must not be taken too\nseriously. Scholastically speaking, Don is interested\nin English, Philosophy and Latin. On rare occasions\nshe may be found in the Library writing one of her\ninnumerable essays, or near examination time reading Philosophy reference books. Don has not decided\nwhat her career is to be, but is thinking seriously of\ncontinuing her studies in post-graduate work.\nNICHOLAS MUSSALLEM\nNick entered the precincts of our University in\nhis Sophomore year, coming from Maple Ridge. His\nchief interest has been in Economics, and his activities\nin this direction include the presidency of the Social\nScience Club and vice-presidency of the Law Club.\nJournalism has also had its interests for Nick, who\nhas been associated with the \"Ubyssey\" for the past\nthree years. His histrionic ability manifested itself\nin the Thoth Club performances. After leaving the\nUniversity, Nick intends to court the muse of Law.\nADA RUTH McDONALD\nIn spite of her demure and leisurely manner,\nRufus is a very capable little person, with very decided opinions of her own. This quiet capability is\nmanifested in the Musical Society of which she has\nbeen a valuable member of the soprano section for\nthree years. In addition, her services are much\nappreciated on the executive as costumes convener\nfor \"The Pirates of Penzance.\" In her more serious\nmoments she worries over History and English essays\nas befits an aspiring pedagogue.\nf 46 J .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0mm* A^-^-A\nUNIVERSITY-DRITJSHCOLlJriBjAT-i\nMABEL LILLIAN McDONALD\nDuring her four years at University, Mabel has\nshown herself to be a genial, happy-go-lucky student.\nMaths. Honours do not seem to bother her, as she\nis also taking two extra courses in English. But\nMabel finds grass hockey more interesting even than\nMaths. This year she is secretary of the Grass\nHockey Club. Mabel also belongs to the Mathematics\nClub and, with her activities outside Varsity, finds it\nalmost impossible to \"squeeze in\" her studying.\nFRANCIS JAMES McKENZIE\nFrank's whole-hearted participation in student\nactivities has won him genuine admiration from a\nwide circle of friends. As president of the Student\nChristian Movement last year, he did much to enrich its established reputation. The presidency of\nthe Literary and Scientific Executive he has likewise filled with befitting dignity and discerning\nability. His contributions to the Letters Club, the\nMusical Society, and Debating Union have been of\nsubstantial character. We wish him every success.\nMARIAN ETHEL STERLING MACDONALD\n\"Don't let a little thing worry you,\" murmurs\nMarian, or \"Mac\", as she is called more frequently,\nwhile she samples your lunch or ice-cream cone.\nEven such little things as studies don't seem to bother\nher, for she assimilates enough knowledge during her\nwanderings through the Library to make good grades\nin such trials as Economics and Maths. Her car\n\"Ben-Hur\" is a campus favourite, both as a conveyance and as a rendezvous for over-worked students.\nJOHN FRANKLIN McLEAN\nAlthough he played English rugby in his Sophomore year, John is now a Canadian rugby addict.\nLast year he was one of the backfield of the Junior\nteam. In his Senior year he has displayed his bent\nfor executive work, being vice-president of the Club,\nand one of those in charge of the training camp and\nthe Hamilton Tigers Series. Majoring in Economics\nand English, John intends to teach for a year or two,\nafter which he will study law.\nETHEL FRANCES MACDOWELL\nEthel has always been a live and valuable participant in many student activities. First and third\nyear debating furnished a useful background for her\nlater position as secretary of the Philosophy Club.\nRecently she was in Portland as delegate of the International Relations Club. We heard she liked Portland. What's the reason, Ethel? Her major study\nis Economics\u00E2\u0080\u0094her ambition to become a European\nbuyer. Ethel's ready smile and cheery friendliness\nwill be missed in the corridors.\nI 47 J fcTTIE TOTEM\nV^L.\n-U*\u00C2\u00BB\nEDITH JEAN McINTOSH\nEdith, with her unruffled and debonair manner,\nis a loyal and true friend when one knows her. She\nhas ambitions in the field of journalism, and to gain\nexperience in this line is a member of the \"Ubyssey\"\nstaff. Her favourite haunt is the \"Pub\" office where\nshe checks copy and rewrites reports quite cheerfully.\nShe has a positive genius for picking courses with\nthe largest possible number of free afternoons and\nessays.\nTHOMAS TSUTOMU NAKANO\nOriginally with Arts '29, Tom postponed his\nquest for knowledge for two years because of illness,\nand wisely chose to \"get there\" on good ship '31,\nmajoring in Zoology and Bacteriology. He is remembered as the one who twirled the ball from the\nmound for *29 against Science, although he never\ntells us the results. During his spare time, he wages\ndictatorial power in guiding the destinies of the Vancouver Japanese Student Association. After graduation Tom intends to continue his studies in the field\nof medical science.\nGLADYS KATHLEEN McINTOSH\nGladys is from Victoria\u00E2\u0080\u0094perhaps that is the\nreason she is so attractive. After two years at Victoria College she came to Varsity, carrying on the\ngood work in Latin buried in the gloomy stacks.\nNext year will see Gladys here again for Education\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094and our jealous nature makes us hope that no one\nelse will have our chance of finding what a perfect\nroom-mate she is! Although teaching is ostensibly\nthe end Gladys has in view, we feel sure it is merely\na stepping-stone to an artistic career.\nWALTER ERIC NORTH\nEntering whole-heartedly into all that University life had to offer, Eric's first conquest was in\ndramatics, where he captured prominent roles in two\nSpring productions. In athletics, Eric captained the\nFreshman Soccer team; in second year played Canadian Rugby, and when, forced out of the strenuous\nsports through injuries, joined the Swimming Club.\nTor his reputation as an administrator, Eric has been\npresident of his class, Junior Member of Council, the\npower behind the Arts '31 Valedictory project and\nthe chairman of that energetic committee that tried\nvaliantly to wring shekels out of rural British Columbians in the great Stadium Campaign.\nHELEN JESSIE MacKENZIE\nHelen, popularly known as \"Teddy,\" is renowned for getting her engagements mixed, for being\nexceptionally adept in repartee, and as a keen rugby\nenthusiast. During her college career, Teddy has\ntaken part in skating, swimming, tennis and golf.\nShe is a member of the Classics Club, as well as\nthe late member of French class. Teddy's secret\nambition is to be an actress, but she feels that fate\nwill intervene in the form of a pedagogical career.\nI 48 } ^H, <*\ntN^lHtMTY^RITASII CgLiJMBIA^I\nMARION COLVILLE McLELLAN\nConnoisseur of ideas\u00E2\u0080\u0094studies life's funny side\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nin the cafeteria\u00E2\u0080\u0094when in the library\u00E2\u0080\u0094chiefly occupied\u00E2\u0080\u0094with call-slips and conversation\u00E2\u0080\u0094found sometimes on Marine Drive\u00E2\u0080\u0094commenting caustically\u00E2\u0080\u0094on\nthe vagaries of architecture\u00E2\u0080\u0094consistently interested\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nin everything imaginable\u00E2\u0080\u0094music and pep-meetings\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nEnglish literature and badminton \u00E2\u0080\u0094 distinguishing\ncharacteristic\u00E2\u0080\u0094the way she drives a large green\nHup\u00E2\u0080\u0094taker of minutes\u00E2\u0080\u0094which she reads at L'Alouette\u00E2\u0080\u0094sampler of courses\u00E2\u0080\u0094Latin, Maths, and Chemistry\u00E2\u0080\u0094French, English and Philosophy\u00E2\u0080\u0094with peda-\ngogial intentions\u00E2\u0080\u0094lucky future generation!\nCRESWELL JOHN OATES\nCres matriculated from Britannia High away\nback in 1927. Joining the class of '31 he proceeded\nwith the usual preliminaries of the lower years, and\nthen decided to acquire a cultural background, pursuing the study of English and Latin. Creswell\npossesses a genial personality and is sure to be a success in whatever pursuit he follows. Rumour has it\nthat he will be back for Education next year.\nZORA McNAB\nZora's home is in Waldo, B. C, but she came to\nVarsity from St. Margaret's School, Victoria. She is\none of U.B.C.'s most loyal supporters, never missing\na meeting, a game, or a dance. Her weakness is\nZoology labs., and her ambition to get a B.Sc. degree.\nShe is always ready to skate or ride, and even to hike\nif it is only to the gates. Zora surely seems to enjoy\nlife and has made a host of friends at Varsity.\nHUGH PARKER\nAfter two years' experience as freshman and\nsophomore, which should have taught him better,\nHugh became an Honour Physics student, retiring\nto a course in Education as a senior. He is expected\nto become a teacher. Besides having a good scholastic standing, Hugh partakes of his full share of\nextra-curricular interests. He played soccer for '31\nand in his last year was vice-president of the\nPhysics Club. Hugh's character is best revealed in\nhis above likeness.\nPATRICIA NEWLANDS\nNeat, trim, sparkling, that's Pat! Oregon lost\nher to U.B.C. where she became one of the most\npopular members of our class. She is taking an\nEnglish Honour course and is an enthusiastic member of the Letters Club. Her favourite sport is\ntennis, and she wields a nasty racquet, but she is\nalso interested in skating and golf. With her charming personality she will go far. She intends to take\nup library work; we wonder for how long??? Pet\naversion: call her \"Patsy.\"\nI 49 ] St\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094 it;\t\nKATHERINE EILEEN O'HAGAN\nE -ileen O'Hagan is her name,\nI\u00E2\u0080\u0094rish is her favourite nation,\nL\u00E2\u0080\u0094atin is her road to fame,\nE\u00E2\u0080\u0094nglish, her other occupation.\nE\u00E2\u0080\u0094yes, bright and of a hazel hue,\nN\u00E2\u0080\u0094ature, sunny through it all.\nO\u00E2\u0080\u0094ptimism shining through.\nH\u00E2\u0080\u0094eight, just over five feet tall.\nA\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ithough in size she's very wee,\nG\u00E2\u0080\u0094reat are the things she'll surely do.\nA\u00E2\u0080\u0094nd once she decides what these will be,\nN\u00E2\u0080\u0094othing her \"Irish\" will subdue.\nSIDNEY THOMAS PARKER\n\"Tommy\" is a popular young Math's Honour\nstudent from Victoria. During his two years here,\nhe has taken eight Mathematics and a number of\nPhysics courses, and has come through them all with\ngreat credit to himself. He has also been an active\nmember of the Mathematics Club for two years.\nNext year he plans to take his M.A. course.\nJANET BEATRICE WHITAKER OWEN\nVictoria College proudly claims to be her native\nplace;\nYou could have guessed it just to look at Janet's\nsunny face.\nFrom there she came to U.B.C; the end is better\nstill\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nShe'll take her Library work course in glorious\nMcGill.\nIt's up to her to live and learn; to know what she\nlikes best.\nWe hope she never will forget our motto: \"Tuum\nest.\"\nFRED THOMAS PROCTOR\nAlthough Fred is majoring in Ph:losophy and\nEconomics, he is not as serious as this picture would\nindicate\u00E2\u0080\u0094that would be impossible. During his stay\nat U.B.C, Fred has taken a keen interest in the\nactivities of the Golf Club, being secretary-treasurer\nin his Junior year. He has not yet recovered from\nthe effort of a hole-in-one, made early this fall.\nFred has made a host of friends and they all feel\nconfident that he will have a very successful business\ncareer.\nFRANCES MARGARET MARY OWENS\nThough her picture looks like the inspiration\nfor Wordsworth's \"Ode to Duty,\" Frances is really\na much less serious person. She is absolutely irrepressible, even in lectures. Her main interests are\nFrench, in which she is honouring, and English. She\nis an interested member of La Causerie and L'Alliance\nFrancaise. Between lectures she is usually to be\nfound on the tennis courts or holding forth in the\nUpper Common Room. Her weakness\u00E2\u0080\u0094Science men!\n1501 ***\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 **\nLNL^T^SITY^BRITiSirttfLIJMBIA^I\nDOROTHY EMMA PATMORE\n\"Hello! Yes, this is Dot speaking. O, I'd love\nsome bridge to-night but I've promised to play badminton. Not tomorrow night either. It's La\nCauserie meeting. I've got to go seeing as I'm\npresident. Yes, occasionally I attend L'Alliance\nFrancaise but Good Lands! I don't get much time.\nAs a matter of fact we used to do that in Senior\nMatric. in Prince Rupert. I got another \"lift\" out\nthis morning. No, I only walk home. Goodbye,\nsee you in Education.\"\nRALPH EMERSON READ\nA sophomore, yes, but a freshman, never, for\nRalph joined '31 in its second year, coming from\nSenior Matriculation in Kaslo. He is by no means\nlimited in his activities, as he is a member of the\nLaw Club and the Social Science Club, and is interested in skating. His more serious moments are\noccupied with his specialty, Economics, which he\nhopes to continue next year while working for his\nB. Comm. degree.\nMARGARET ELIZABETH PARTRIDGE\nMarg. makes known her presence by a gay\nlaugh that is characteristic of her cheerful, happy-\ngo-lucky disposition. She is not one who has books\nfor her constant companions, but with periods of\nconcentrated study, when the occasion demands, she\nhas managed to keep up a very creditable scholastic\nrecord. She is an enthusiastic member of the Outdoors Club. Marg. intends to return to Varsity next\nyear, when she will learn to expound the mysteries\nof French and Latin to the rising generation.\nREX RETALLACK\nAfter matriculating from Britannia High, Rex\ncame to Varsity with the Class of '31. Since then\nhe has been at work striving to satisfy his innate\ndesire for Physics and Maths. Rex has been a member of the Physics Club since it was organized and\nduring the past year held the office of secretary\nin the Radio Club. Next year, Rex is coming back\nto receive training in Education so that he may pass\non his scientific knowledge to the next generation.\nMARJORIE FLORENCE PEEL\nWe know a lot about Marj. since she arrived\nat U.B.C. from Magee\u00E2\u0080\u0094so much that her past history doesn't count. She is vice-president of the\nSwimming Club and spends her mornings splashing\naround at 8 a.m. Besides winning her Big Block\naward and playing badminton, she occasionally appears in the Zoo. and Botany labs, long enough to\nturn everything upside down. She is noted for losing\nshoes which are usually found hanging to chandeliers.\nf \u00C2\u00BB 1 LOUISE ELEANOR POOLE\nIn spite of French Honours and English first\nclasses, Lou never looks half as serious as would be\nexpected. She can usually be found in the stacks,\nthough not always working; is secretary of La\nCauserie, and a member of L'Alliance Francaise.\nOther diversions: tennis, tea, and sometimes badminton; collecting Class Party tickets (not as curiosities),\nand illustrating Cyrano. Pet phrase (used before\nlectures): \"Oh, I do hope he's not coming today!\"\nShe will probably take Education next year.\nMARJORIE REYNOLDS POUND\n\"Oh, I've lost my . . . .!\"\nKnown on the campus as Bunny. Coming from\nthe Convent into the third year, Bunny has made\nan important place for herself despite the short time\nshe has been here. In her Junior year, she played for\nVarsity on the second Badminton team, joined the\n\"Ubyssey\" staff as a reporter and extended her activities to the Classics and International Relations Clubs\nand '31 Valedictory Executive. This year she made\nthe first Badminton team and has done good work as\nFeature Editor of the \"Ubyssey.\"\nVICTOR SOUTHEY\nVic hails from Manitoba, where he took his first\ntwo years in Engineering. He entered U.B.C. last\nyear and took one year in Arts to complete his\nDouble-Course credits. He has since become a prominent member of the C.O.T.C. of which he is\nAdjutant. Vic is also a reporter on the \"Ubyssey\"\nstaff as well as player-manager for the Junior Soccer\nteam.\nFRANCES IRENE SCHROEDER\nA quiet, self-effacing manner has prevented\nFrances from making many new friends, but those\nwho were with her at Victoria College realize that\nshe is well worth knowing. She is very studious,\nbut has found time to take an interest in the Gym.\nClub and the S.C.M. Her major courses are History\nand English, and she intends to teach these subjects\nafter taking Education next year.\nOLIVE FLORENCE SELFE\nOlive's sojourn in Anyox may account for her\nlove of mountain climbing, which evidences itself in\nher Sunday morning hikes with the Outdoors Club\nup Grouse Mountain. During the week Olive comprises part of the editorial staff of the \"Ubyssey\" in\nthe capacity of Associate Sport Editor. Olive spends\nmuch of her life in the Library, yet still is able to\nattend meetings of the Literary Forum, Philosophy\nand Women's Gym Clubs. Her varied scholastic\ninterests, in which she maintains high averages, centre\nin History and English.\nf 52f COLUMBIA\n'^\u00E2\u0080\u00A24\u00C2\u00BB\n^^^\u00E2\u0096\u00A0eWj[\"\nLNlVttWiTY^BRITIStrt^LllriBIA^j\nSTIRLING CROLL AITKEN\nStirling, a native son of Vancouver, came to\nVarsity from King George High with the earnest\nintention of entering Science. By a laudable change\nof mind, however, he remained in Arts. In summer\nthe \"Bulldog Fleet\" claims his attention; in winter,\nwell, we would say a course carrying eighteen units\nin fourth year is sufficient to keep anyone out of\nmischief. We prophesy titanic upheavals in the\nworld of trade and commerce shortly, for that is\nStirling's chosen field of endeavour.\nRUSSELL KEMP BAKER\nHaving obtained his B.A. degree with the Class\nof 1930, Russ. came back to his old haunts to take\nhis B. Comm. While at University Russ. has managed to find time to swim and to serve on the Club\nexecutive. Rugby has also claimed his attention,\nand he was captain of the Second Intermediate team\nin his Sophomore year. Aside from his excellent\nmarks, Russ. has the additional honour of being the\nsole charter member of the Society of Bunt in Commerce.\nGEORGE VAN NOSTIAND BALLENTINE\nOtherwise Gerry, has led an intensely varied\ncareer throughout his four years at University. He\nplayed rugby in his first year but due to an illness,\nhe has had to confine himself to the executive positions of secretary, vice-president and president of the\nRugby Club. Besides these he has been a member of\nthe Men's Athletic Executive and a tactful president\nof the Inter-Fraternity Council. As a Bachelor of\nCommerce, he intends to forsake his survey and cannery interests for more lucrative business pursuits.\nTHOMAS EDWIN BURGESS\nTo possess an amiable disposition and a likeable\npersonality is a rare virtue. Tommy combines both\nelements in fine proportion. His activities in track\nand Canadian football stamp him as an athlete who\nhas acquired a most deserved reputation for excellent\nperformance. An Arts and Commerce degree are his\nscholastic objectives, which should ensure ultimate\nsuccess in some phase of business activity.\nRONALD MAVIUS BURNS\nRon's major activities in the last five years have\nbeen furthering the cause of the English Rugby\nClub both as a player and as an executive. He has\nheld successively the offices of secretary-treasurer of\nthe English Rugby Club and of the Men's Athletic\nAssociation for two years. This year he captains the\ncrack Super-Varsity team, and when called upon,\nplays a useful game for the Seniors. Although he\nstarted slowly Ron. is now knocking down high\nsecond class averages with little apparent effort.\n{67} IpfflE^\n-u\u00C2\u00BB\nMAURICE GORDON CLEMENT\nBesides being fair and the chief reason why so\nmany Freshettes try for the Players' Club, Maurice\nhas taken an active interest in swimming and rowing\ncircles, as well as distinguishing himself in the forensic field. In his spare moments he may be found\ncompiling long columns of statistics for the Education department. Maurice is one of the bright lights\nof the Commerce class, and intends one day to see\nif Ec. 4 really does help one to amass a fortune.\nPet aversion\u00E2\u0080\u0094rehearsing with a sandwich.\nJOHN FREDERICK FISHER\nFred has now been haunting Sasamat and points\nwest for five years, having had \"admitto te\" said over\nhim when Arts *30 made its exit, and having returned\nthis year for his B. Comm. During the past year\nhis word has been law in the Society of Thoth,\nwhere he is hailed as Grand Scribe. In athletics he\nlabours daily to restore shape to a recalcitrant Ford\ntire. Outside of this, he spends his spare time in\nworking out Stat, problems and airing his opinions\nthereon.\nDONALD BATHGATE GRANT\nDon is well-known in every circle of University\nlife. He has played ice-hockey, is prominent in social\nactivities and is one of the outstanding men in the\nCommerce Faculty, having won the Scholarship for\nGeneral Proficiency in his Junior year. Don has\nmade the unusually successful combination of a\nminimum number- of outside activities with a maximum amount of marks. \"Vox populi, vox Dei\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nDon will make a million some day, (whisper) despite his weakness for Freshettes!\nFRANK WEBSTER HALLONQUIST\nFrank is another student for whom the University need offer no apology. The yearly publishing\nof examination results consistently reveals his name\namong the first half-dozen. A graduate in Arts of\nlast year, winning the Harbour Board Scholarship,\nFrank is this year taking his B. Comm., and at the\nsame time assists the erring ones in Statistics I. Besides his scholastic work, Frank is interested in golf.\nARNOLD HENDERSON\nA man of many parts is Arnold: Senior \"A\"\nbasketball player extraordinary, Business Manager for\ntwo years and a social light of no mean brilliance.\nAlong scholastic lines his courses have encompassed\nwork in Arts, Science and Commerce. Summers have\nseen him in canneries and logging camps, and an\n-occasional Forestry Survey has been graced by his\nlengthy presence. Since Fairview days Arnold has\nbeen one of Varsity's best known men, and our\ncampus will seem a strangely empty place without\nhim.\n{\u00C2\u00AB 1 Ej|jiiSZ \"\nLNlVCR^tTY \"'WfflSIf COLUMBIAdl\nHILLIARD LYLE JESTLEY\nHails from the Kootenay of which he is inordinately proud. During his trip to the Prairie\nas outside wing of the Big Four Canadian Rugby\nteam, Lyle acquired a title, \"Triple Threat,\" which,\nby the way, admirably suits his aggressive fresh\ntemperament. The Commerce class claims him as\none of its outstanding members. He does good work\nas secretary of the Canadian Rugby Club and as\ntreasurer of the '31 Valedictory committee. Chief\nweaknesses, a tendency for sarcasm and for raising\nhis left eye-brow.\nEDWIN BERNARD JOHNSON\nBorn in Ottumawa, Iowa, Ed. came to U.B.C.\nfrom Vancouver College and Prince of Wales High\nSchool. As a member of the Department of Commerce he spends most of the day in \"our own little\nroom\" in the Aggie building. Ed. has always been\nathletically inclined, his interests lying in Canadian\nfootball, track and tennis. Versatile, possessed of a\npungent sense of humour and equipped with a habit\nof doing things well, Ed. will enter the world of\ncommerce as a statistician.\nWALLACE KIMBALL NICHOLS\nKim is one of those people who obtained a real\neducation at Varsity. He has mixed Canadian rugby\nand rowing with an appreciable amount of social\nactivity and scholastic effort. The result has been\na reputation as one of the hardest and most effective\nworkers on the campus. Kim took his B.A. in 1930\nwith customary high marks, but he has ambitions\nto make a million and to rehabilitate the shipping\nbusiness, so he returned for a degree in Commerce.\nPAUL BEDINGFIELD WOLFE\nBedingfield came to Varsity from Brentwood\nCollege. He started playing Miller Cup rugby, but,\ndue to injuries, was forced to turn to more congenial\npursuits. The image of sanctorial perfection, Bed-\ningfield has been prominent in the more select social\nlife of the University. He delights in drawing down\nsecond-classes in pipe courses like English 9. When\nBedingfield enters his chosen field of commerce, we\nare sure he will have no difficulty in finding success.\nBASIL OWEN WRIGHT\nBorn in London, and with characteristic eagerness to improve himself, he migrated at the age of\none year to the sunny Okanagan. Basil entered college with the Class of '30, and majoring in Economics, received his B.A. last Spring. Anxious to pre*\npare himself for a business career, he entered the\nCommerce department this year. Served on his class\nexecutive for three years; played soccer for four\nyears. A rapid, thorough worker, endowed with\nsound judgment, Basil is sure to succeed.\nI\u00C2\u00BB } Education 31\nIT may be an undue strain upon both the dignity and the ingenuity of\nsophisticated graduates to become once more as little children, but\nhappily the transition, as it affected this Class, presented no insurmountable barriers. The patronizing and pitying smiles of teachers; the\ndiabolic machinations of pupils; the tears and triumphs among ourselves\nhave done their deflating work, but these things have also served to\nestablish a unity of spirit which distinguishes Education '31.\nThe activities of the Class were by no means limited to the evolution\nof pedagogical proficiency. A theatre party early in the term to see\n\"Old English;\" a Home-Coming skit; a bridge party after mid-term\nexams at the home of Kathleen Reid; and a dance at Killarney Hall in\nJanuary, were the outstanding social events. In athletics, the Soccer\nteam hovered around the top of the league all year, and the Basketball\nteam made up in enthusiasm for what it lacked in finish.\nThe fortunes of the Class were efficiently guided by the following\nexecutive: Honorary President, Dr. Weir; Honorary Vice-President,\nMr. Black; President, Maurice DesBrisay; Vice-President, Thelma\nMahon; Secretary-Treasurer, Claire Menten; Women's Athletic Representative, Marjorie McKay; Men's Athletic Representative, Campbell\nDuncan.\niN^p^i\nI 70 J DEAN R. W. BROCK\nDr. Brock was appointed Dean of the School of Applied Science and Professor of Geology\nin the University of British Columbia in August, 1914. He served overseas from\nOctober, 1914, until September, 1919, and was formerly Director of the Geological\nSurvey of Canada and Deputy Minister of Mines. The Class History of Science 31\nA DARK night and a full moon, a can opener, and a bottle of \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"Hell,\" said Mickey, as he staggered out of Schultz's saloon, \"I\ngotta get to that hop at Martin's Hall.\" Whereupon he increased his\nvelocity according to the law F=MA, and reached the joint 3.88884\nminutes before the end of the dance (work done R(T\u00E2\u0080\u0094T.) \"Hey,\nDobson, show Scott the way home,\" yelled Cornwall as he gave Green\nthe bounce. Then the rest of the gang of Sc. '31, who, because of the\nbusiness depression could only get jobs as Civils, tumbled out. \"C'mon\nhome, gang,\" says Irv Smith, \"we gotta get to the bunkhouse before\nmorning.\"\nSilence. The same full moon looked down upon a now peaceful\nscene\u00E2\u0080\u0094the same can opener and bottle of \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nThe smouldering sun rose above the western planes, to gaze only\nupon a row of tents and empty bottles. Crash! Bang! The silence was\nbroken by a synchronous snore from Crawford and Anderson, aided by\nBarratt's alarm clock, and the bunch rolled out to stretch the endless\nchain of steel yet another mile across the unbroken desert. \"Here's your\nmush, gang,\" called Buckland. Then Stew Terhune strolled up.\n\"What's doing to-day, boss?\" asked Hill. \"Hey, Nesbitt, take those\ntwo bums, Esterbrook and Plant, and complete the survey to Bellingham,\nand you, Mathews, sling the gang in the mulligan car and take 'em to\nthe rail head.\"\nHalf way there Nelems woke up and for some reason or other asked\nMurray for the next dance.\nOn reaching the scene of the daily grind, Sandy Smith yelled \"S\u00E2\u0080\u0094C\n31, 31, 31\u00E2\u0080\u0094hike.\" Alpen made a fake pass with a rail to Munn, who\nwent down with a tie around his neck. Cruise converted. Then Wright,\nthe grade boss, yelled from the caboose, \"The next curve will be\nr=a(8+e Cos B) +C, and don't put the ties too close together; they cost\nmoney.\"\nThen Terhune, the boss, rode up on his bicycle, yelled to Rumsey\nto put that Yo-Yo in his pocket or he'd go to bed without supper\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nthen, \"What the' \u00E2\u0080\u0094 ,\" says he, \"the track's upside down, flop the\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 thing over. But Munroe comes back with, \"Your azimuth's out of\nphase, boss, the track's O.K., but you've had one quart too much.\nOn the horizon a rising cloud of dust grew larger, and Evans burst\nfrom it. Hardly had he come within sight when he yelled, \"Get on your\nstrips, fellahs, and make a dash for Bellingham. The survey gang have\ntied in so tight that they can't drag themselves away and we'll have to\nhelp them.\nI 72 } m\nm*^\n|s4^\nIJNlVrJlSfTYrBRITiSITti)LlJWBIA^|\nrfrt rt,(n it,^-'\"^7 V ^tt''*M\nROBERT RICHARD ALPEN\n\"Bob\" graduates this year with a standing which\nwill be hard to beat. He tied for the track championship in 1927 and won it in 1930. Playing McKechnie Cup rugby and basketball for three years,\nwinning the pole vault at the W.C.I.A.U. Meet at\nEdmonton in 193 0, and holding the Javelin record,\nand the Track Cup did not affect his scholastic\nrecord. He is a double course man and was awarded\nthe Professional Engineers' Book Prize for his 1929\nsummer essay. Class athletic representative for three\nyears, and treasurer of the Big Block Club.\nRODERICK VICTOR ANDERSON\nAfter preliminary education in Calgary, Rod\nentered U.B.C. in 2nd year Applied Science. He has\nrounded out his course by combining very high\nscholastic standing with executive and athletic activities. Rod is the perfect secretary, having held\ndown positions on class executives on more than\none occasion, including that of secretary of the\nE.I.C. this year. Being conscientious and energetic,\nRod will be a credit to his chosen profession, Civil\nEngineering.\nHERBERT JOHN BARRATT\nBert plays rugby. Five Big Blocks in a row\nand captain of the McKechnie Cup team would\nindicate this. The Science Undergrad. just couldn't\nresist making him Athletic Rep. for one year. President of the Big Block Club came as another attainment. Bert has qualities and a voice that allow him\nto preside as chairman over the Civils. Bert's resourcefulness and cheery disposition will be a great\nasset in smoothing the way for the future.\nKENNETH FRASER BEWS\nThe youthful flame of the mechanical engineers\nof Science '31; Ken always has a cheerful smile for\nhis classmates and for the young ladies. He started\nhis Varsity life with Arts '27, and then entered\nScience. He is graduating this spring and has hopes\nof obtaining a good position. For the rest of his\nlife, then, his financial troubles are over. Ken is a\ngood student, having made high averages throughout\nhis Varsity career, and we hope he will carry on his\ngood work.\nFRANCIS CHANNING BUCKLAND\nSince Frank entered Varsity as a freshman with\nArts '29 we have known him, not only as a most\ncapable student, but as one who has always taken a\nkeen interest in all branches of student activities.\nBesides having held the offices of secretary and\ntreasurer of the Science Men's Undergrad., president\nof the Boat Club, and numerous other minor offices,\nhe has been actively interested in badminton, rugby,\nand rowing. Next year will find him carrying on\nfor a Ph. D. in Geology.\nf 73 J GEORGE LEEK CORNWALL\nA double course man and a Chemical Engineer,\nGeorge entered University with the Class of '28.\nHe spends his summers employed in the service of\nthe Forestry Survey Department. During his stay\nat U.B.C, George has manifested a keen interest in\nall forms of athletics and other student activities.\nOn graduation he expects to continue in the industrial world of his profession.\nELMER JAMES CRAWFORD\nElmer has been with '31 since entering Applied\nScience. For the past four years he has been a member of the Outdoors Club, and is fond of all kinds\nof sport. Played Intermediate Canadian rugby for\ntwo years and is also interested in skiing, baseball\nand tennis. Always quite popular with the girls,\nElmer has found time, in addition to his other activities, to handle numerous dates and still maintain\na high standing in his studies. His chosen profession is Electrical Engineering.\nKENNETH ALBERT CRUISE\nKen forms half of the Metallurgy class. For\ntwo years he worked on the class executive as Literary representative. A member of the Track Club,\nhe was, in his second year, a sprinter at Seattle Track\nMeet for the Club. Although he persistently claims\nthat he does not study, his high marks show proof\nthat he must do some work at odd intervals.\nWILLIAM KENNETH DOBSON\nAlthough he won the Dunsmuir Scholarship t\nlast year, Ken does not seem satisfied with his choice\nof a profession and intends returning to take his\nM.A. in Geology. He was president of the Outdoors\nClub last year. Ken. is a good man to have along\non a trip in spite of the fact that he has a nasty\nhabit of getting up and awakening everybody at\n6 a.m. His favourite indoor sport is yo-yoing.\nCHARLES BURTON DUNHAM\nCharlie pulls up the average scholastic attainment of the Forest Engineering quintette by making\nhigh marks himself, and taking time off to explain\nthe fine points to the rest of us. Unassuming, witty,\nand smoothly efficient in all he does. Has an astonishingly wide practical experience from summer jobs.\nVarsity interests\u00E2\u0080\u0094E. I. C. and Forest Club. If con-\ncientiousness, common sense, and capacity for making friends are an indication of future success,\nCharles needn't worry much.\n{74] 20>\n35\n^a.\nUNlVERStTY^-BRITiSITt^LDMBIA^I\nALAN DOUGLAS ESTABROOK\n\"Esty\" and English rugby go hand in hand. The\nshort half of the Murray-Estabrook Corporation has\nplayed on the McKechnie Cup team for five years.\nMatriculating from Kitsilano High School, \"Esty\"\nrealized that he was cut out for hard work and so\ntook Mechanical. So far he has not completely\nruined the Electrical lab. but you know what a\nsticker he is. He possesses a jovial countenance and\na fine personality but his writing is terrible. In his\nMechanical career we wish him every success.\nGEORGE EGERTON EVANS\nGeorge came from Vancouver Island in 1926\nand spent one year as a sophomore in the Faculty\nof Arts and Science, thus becoming a double course\nstudent. In 1927 he became a member of the Faculty\nof Applied Science and commenced his studies as a\nChemical Engineer. George has been very diversified in his interests on the campus and is an active\nmember in the Outdoors Club, Chemistry Society\nand Professional Engineers. He played soccer in\n1927-28.\nJAMES LLOYD GREEN\nComing to Varsity from St. Andrew's College,\nToronto, Lloyd joined us in his Sophomore year.\nHis desire was to become a Civil Engineer, and he\nnow constitutes twenty per cent, of the Civil *31\nclass. He has found time to play Canadian rugby\nand attend a goodly share of the social functions.\nLloyd is an expert with the steel handbook, generally\nunderbidding! the rest of the class with the lightest\nsections. We predict for him a brilliant career.\nTOM DOUGLAS GROVES\nTom is one of the Forestry quintette. His\nactivities range from those of sergeant and marksman in the C.O.T.C. to those of upholder of the\nlaw in the Players' Club\u00E2\u0080\u0094from those of president\nof the Forest Club to those of president of the\nHockey Club. He also has annexed a B.A. but seems\nto prefer to hide his shame. In the summers he is\na hard-boiled logger.\nROBERT ALFRED HALLET\nBob is another of the originals of Science '31.\nHe hails from Victoria, spends his summers with the\nGeological Survey, and usually manages to make\ngood marks. In his third year, he showed what\nhe could do if he really wanted to, and collected a\nscholarship as top man of his year. At present he\nis devoting his time to Geology, and next year intends to take Post-Graduate work in the east.\nf 75 J fclWE ISTiM^r-\nROGNVALD THORE HAMILTON\nRon is the unofficial entertainer of the Mechanical Class of '31, and is very often found holding\nthe class spellbound with heart-rending melodies\nfrom his accordian. When a boss is wanted in a\nlab., \"he's the boss.\" His advice to the world is,\n\"Dinna pick up any wooden farthings or ye'll get\na muckle clout i the lug.\" He won't condescend\nto lunch in the caf where Freshmen are present, so\nhe may be found any noon-hour having tea in the\nMechanical lab.\nMALCOLM ALBERT ARTHUR HARRIS\nIn second and third years Mac fought Arts\nmen with gusto. In fourth year he didn't fight so\ncften nor so hard. In fifth year he is quite subdued\n(by exams) and studious. He is the youngest man\nin the class and sophisticatedly says, \"I've learned\na lot since. I came to this place.\" Being a neat\nprinter, Mac is always given the job of \"entering\ndata\" in the lab. At noon hours Mac likes to have\nsomething to drink with his lunch\u00E2\u0080\u0094so he makes and\ndrinks tea in the lab. with three other men.\nHENRY LOXLEY HILL\n\"Hen\" hails from the banks of the Fraser. He\nentered Science with the Class of '30, serving on\nthe executive as vice-president. Spent last winter\nwatching the northern lights from around the Portland Canal district, and returned this year to join\nthe mining moguls. Hen has always managed to\ncombine a keen interest in campus activities with a\nScience course, and to make the grade with a clean\nsheet.\nernest Mcdonald kershaw\nErnie is one of the originals of Science '31, and\nhas held his own with the best of them, even though\nhe picked the hardest course of the lot\u00E2\u0080\u0094Electrical\nEngineering. Besides his studies, he has found time\nto take his place in interclass sport, being one of\nthe big defence men on our soccer team, and the\nmain half of our battery in baseball. This year a\nstudent branch of the A.I.E.E. was formed and he\nis on the executive as secretary-treasurer.\nWILLIAM SARE BULKLEY LATTA\nWhen Victoria sent us Bill, they gave us a man\nwho has combined athletic executive and social activities with a course in Forestry, and made a brilliant\nsuccess of them all. Among his activities are: two\nyears Big Four Canadian rugby, two years Senior\nsoccer, secretary of the Forest Club, secretary Men's\nAthletic Association. Bill does not say much, but\nthinks hard between puffs of his reliable pipe.\nI 76 1 \"I^ji^' i\nIJNIVCR^T^ ^DRfflMf CgLllMBjA^j\nEDWARD HILL LOVITT\nEd. entered Varsity with Arts '29, but after two\nyears in Arts entered Applied Science with '31. He\nis a double-course man in Geology and usually manages to pull down good marks. Much of his extra\ntime at Varsity is occupied with his duties as president of the G. M. Dawson Geological Discussion\nClub and his summers are spent with the Geolog'cal\nSurvey. Next year he intends to journey east to\nstudy for his Ph.D.\nJOHN ERNEST MACDONALD\nJohn started with Science '29. After three years\nhe left for Conowingo, Maryland, where he built a\n$50,000,000 hydro plant. He then returned to\nU.B.C. to graduate in Mechanical Engineering with\nScience '31. Jack is one of the good reasons women\nprefer Sciencemen. He might well be called the\n\"Spirit of Science\" for he has always been a leader\nin every phase of activity in the Science Men's Undergraduate Society. A few of his positions will indicate his interest\u00E2\u0080\u0094president and vice-president, Science\nM. U. S.; vice-president, Science '29; Science Song\nLeader.\nELMER WILSON MARTIN\nAnother one of the Mechanicals who is trying\nto plug his way to freedom. Elmer having spent\nfour years at the University of Saskatchewan, came\nto the U.B.C. to wind up his college career. He is\nan air-minded student and has already obtained his\n\"wings\" in the R.C.A.F. and intends to install a co-\nmotional motor in his first plane. His ambition is\nto get out of an inverted spin and still have his nose\nabove ground. His favourite indoor sport is writing\nup Electricity labs. He can be found any time after\n9:30 in the dug-out playing \"Once in a lifetime\" or\nlooking for a third harmonic.\nKENNETH WAYNE MARTIN\nKen is a real Scienceman. Entering Varsity\nwith Arts '30, his activities in athletics and student\ngovernment have been widespread. In h!s Sophomore year he was a prominent member of the Boat\nClub and twice has won his big letter as a member\nof the McKechnie Cup team for 1930 and '31. He\nwas president of Science '31 for 1929-30, and president of the Science Men's Undergraduate Society in\nhis Senior year. Ken hopes to continue his studies\nwith a view to obtaining his Ph.D. in Chemical\nEngineering.\nDONALD NOBLE MATHESON\nDon came down from Prince Rupert to join\nVarsity as a freshman with Arts '29, and then\nchanged over to Science and spent the next three\nyears with Science '30. Along with five other miners\nDon spent last winter gathering gold and is graduating this year with Science '31. Playing ice-hockey\nand skating on the winning relay team for two years\nat the Rotary Ice Carnival signify his prowess on the\nice. Don also excels at basketball and soccer, but\nhis studies have prevented him from participating for\nVarsity.\nf 77 J felMETOfEMfe^\nLAWRENCE GERARD MATHEWS\nMetallurgist, Insulting Physicist, Consulting\nFuse-blower to C.P.R. hotels. Manathews has played\nCanadian rugby, hockey and hookey, but in spite of\nthe last, usually manages to win out in that annual\nStudent-Faculty game of April Fool. Gerry will be\nremembered as possessor of the sense of humour responsible for many quaint little sayings that have\nhelped to brighten the lives of his class, both in and\nout of lectures; also as co-discoverer of the formula:\nAlpha squared =Alf alf a.\nJOHN LEWIS MONROE\nLouie is the little ray of sunshine of the Mechanical class. No matter how much we may dislike\na course, he has a word of praise for it, saying that\neventually we will find it of some use. To his\nability \"to stick with it\" he owes his consistently\nhigh standing in exams. Upon graduation Louie is\ngoing with Allis Chalmers in Wisconsin and will\nshow what B. C. graduates can do. In his chosen\nprofession we wish him every success.\nTHOMAS HANNA MUNN\nTommy is well known to all of us for his quiet\nand unassuming manner. As the Class treasurer, he\nhas shown the remarkable ability of collecting fees\nwithout creating a name for himself as a public\nnuisance. During his Sophomore and Junior years,\nTommy was an essential part of the English Rugby\nsquad, playing half-back for the second team. Being\na potential Civil Engineer, he has already made an\nattempt to solve the Second Narrows problem.\nWALTER ALLAN MURRAY\n\"Bud\" (he has other names but they are never\nused) is the dark handsome man of the rugby team.\nHe is probably the most consistently good player on\nthe team, having played practically every important\ngame for the past five seasons, being vice-captain for\nthe last two years. Outside of study, rugby is\nBud's big interest, yet at many a social function he\nshakes a mean hoof. Scholastically, in spite of the\ntime given to campus activities, Bud maintains a\nhigh average without too much trouble. Undoubtedly he will go far in his chosen profession of Mechanical Engineering.\nHARRY EDWIN NELEMS\nH. E. started with Arts '29 but spent a year in\nthe north between his third and fourth years of\nScience. Although Chilliwack is his home-town, the\n\"grip of the north\" has become so strong that he is\nbetter known as a citizen of Premier. After graduation he intends to travel; New Guinea, Rhodesia,\nanywhere a job offers far from the call of his friends\non Saturday night. A student of Geology but a\nmining engineer of the future.\nI 78 1 m i*f\n]S*ki*\ntNtVlHl^TYrBRITiSirCOLIJMBIAdl\nMICHAEL CULLUM NESBITT\nNezzy is probably best known this year on two\ncounts\u00E2\u0080\u0094as president of the Student Section, E.I.C.\nand as the attainer of the only first-class in Science\n'31 during the debacle at Christmas, 1930. In his\nfourth year he was secretary of the Class, and for\nthe last two years has played Senior \"B\" English\nRugby. During the summer of 1929 and 1930, he\nattended the flying course at Camp Borden and gets\nhis \"wings\" next year.\nVLADIMIR J. OKULITCH\nVlad was born in St. Petersburg, Russia, and\nbelongs to Russian nobility. He is interested in\nGeology and in the fourth year was high man of\nthe Geological Engineers. He is also on the executive\nof the G. M. Dawson Geological Club. During the\nsummers Vlad or \"Oki\", as he is also known, has\nworked as draughtsman and assayer for various mines\nin the province. His chief interests at present are\nthe Pleistocene Ice Age and causes of glaciation. He\nexpects to return next year to do post-graduate\nwork in Geology.\nWATTAN SINGH PANESAR\nWattan belongs to the well-known fighting race\nof Sikhs, but is himself rather peaceful and believes\nin the non-violent, non-resistant policy of Gandhi.\nHe obtained his early education in India and East\nAfrica and joined us two years ago from the University of California. He is interested in everything mechanical from chronometers to the government of India. He spends all his spare time in the\nservice of his community in Vancouver and intends\nto return to India to make use of his training as a\nMechanical Engineer.\nJOHN LAWRENCE PLANT\nJohn L. is a military man\u00E2\u0080\u0094anyone could tell\nthat from the way he walks. He holds a commission in the C.O.T.C, of which he is an original\nmember; and enjoys life in the summer as an officer\nin the Royal Canadian Air Force. This service will\nprobably benefit from John's talents after he graduates. Competition is the spice of his life; he likes\nboxing, chess and any kind of argument. Altogether,\nhe is a successful student and a good chap.\nHOWARD ROBSON WRIGHT\nThe Radio expert of the electrical class and one\nof the chief organizers of the Radio Club. His\nnocturnal habits have always been an unsolved mystery to his fellow students. He is one of the veterans of the Varsity Senior Soccer Club, and one of its\nbest supporters. Earned the unqualified admiration\nof the other electricals by developing the art of\nsleeping throughout lectures and producing complete\nnotes at the end of the hour. One of the chief\ngloom banishers of the \"Light Brigade.\"\nI 79] ' ; ;M5::\nAJAIB SINGH SANGHA\nHails from the \"Land of the Five Rivers,\" where\nhe matriculated. Was originally a member of Sc. *28,\nbut got left on the way, while busy making both\nends meet. Is a product of the meeting of East and\nWest, and has respect for both. Greatest weakness\nis being sociable with everybody. Is a great grass-\nhockey enthusiast and has had many a shock trying\nto be a good tumbler and diver. His foremost ambition is to go back and dam the Brahmaputra.\nMILTON EVERETT SAUNDERS\nAn original member of Science '31, Milt came\nto us from Vancouver Tech. He is one of the radio\nenthusiasts of the Electrical class and bids fair to\nbecome a prominent radio engineer, as he appears to\nhave one of the best radio sets in Vancouver. He\nshows a keen interest in all University activities and\nhis sense of humour makes him popular with his\nclassmates. His favourite expression is, \"Come on\nfellows\u00E2\u0080\u0094let's go home,\"\nCHARLES DAVIES SCHULTZ\nBack in Fairview days, before injuring his leg,\nCharlie played ball with the best of them in first\nstring basketball, English and Canadian rugby. Then,\nafter a three-year rest he came back with Forestry\n'31 and in the Spring of 1930 became president of\nMen's Athletics, showing exceptional energy and\nability in this office. We often wonder where the\nfire is when Charlie blows by or misses three lectures\nin a row, but results are always forthcoming. Pep\nand the brains to guide it are a hard combination to\nbeat.\nNORMAN VALMOND SCOTT\nHe is one of the Miners, and has gathered his\nknowledge of mining from such mines as Premier\nand Britannia; that is, in addition to what he has\ncollected at this University. Norm is known to\nmany by his practical jokes\u00E2\u0080\u0094sneezing powder and\nrubber chocolates being included in his bag of tricks.\nHe has never been seen to work. The nearest he\ncame to it was when he joined the Outdoors Club\nin his final year, but he has always managed to put\nthe load on someone else's shoulders.\nIRVING CAMERON SMITH\nIrving entered the University with Arts '30, and\nbeing an engineer at heart transferred his allegiance\nto Science '31. In second year he was class treasurer\nand next year took an active interest in the Ice\nHockey Club. In his fifth year he was president\nof the Ice Hockey Club and made the Senior Canadian Rugby squad. Irving joined the Chemical\nTriangle in his fourth year, and has carried on his\nwork with the intention of entering the industrial\nworld.\nI \" 1 m\n*\u00C2\u00BBvk Aid!\nbNlVERStTY^OTITiSirCgLtJMBIA\nJAMES WALTER SMITH\nJim, a native of New Denver, B. C, started his\nVarsity career with Science '30, but after a year\ndecided to take time out. He joined us four years\nago and has been an active member of our class ever\nsince, taking a lively interest in interclass soccer and\nbasketball, and making firsts in his chosen field of\nElectrical Engineering. He is a great radio hound\nand is said to study a lot better with earphones on.\nHe will start his career with the C.G.E. next sum-\nROBERT HAMILTON SMITH\nA hero, known to everybody on the campus as\n\"Sandy,\" hails from Victoria as a graduate of Victoria College. Since coming to Varsity Sandy has\ntaken a very active part in athletics. Big-Four\nCanadian Rugby for four years (captain last year),\nice hockey two years, vice-president Big Block Club,\nAwards Committee and class executives have not\nprevented him from accomplishing a double course.\nSandy is graduating in Mining this year.\nLORNE FOSTER SWANNELL\nAfter two years at Victoria College, Lome took\nup the battle with the Engineers of '31, choosing\nForestry in his final years. He will graduate with a\ndouble degree, having paused to collect a B.A. in\n1930. During his first year, he played Canadian\nrugby. Since then he has been a member of the\nScience '31 relay team and of the Musical Society.\nHe is an active member of the Forest Club and vice-\npresident of the E.I.C. student section.\nSTUART JOHN TERHUNE\nStew comes from Rossland, B.C., and is naturally interested in mining. He started with Science\n'28 and was president of his class in his second year.\nStew started in Civil Engineering but then decided\nhe liked Mining better and changed his course. He\nwas president of the Science Men's Undergraduate\nSociety in 1928; on the Science '28 Relay team, and\nis now vice-president of Science '31. For about\neight summers Stew worked for the Consolidated\nMining Company, doing exploration work for the\nlast two summers.\nMELVIN ARTHUR THOMAS\n\"Micky\" is a rare chap, who consistently makes\nfirst-class honours and at the same time manages to\nkeep a normal size of hat band. For the past four\nyears he has been an outstanding figure in the organization of the various official Science functions, and\nalso of those little parties which, though unofficial,\nare none the less pleasant. At the present time he\nis the popular president of Science '31 and chairman\nof the Student Branch of the A.I.E.E.\nS\n[81 J kTFETOTEIfa;\nWILLIAM THORNBER\nOne of the hated militarists! Bill started the\nfracas in 1927 which culminated with the re-establishment of the C.O.T.C. To atone for this crime,\nhe has been spending his summers travelling to\nCamp Borden to bring back all major athletic\ntrophies. When not otherwise occupied, Bill spends\nhis time collecting stories for all occasions. These,\ncoupled with his persuasive ability, will no doubt\nenable him to attain his future ambitions.\nDALTON WATSON\nA double course man in Mechanical Engineering.\nAlthough he has paused among the more classical\nstudies, he still thinks the steam boiler is the foundation of civilization. Dalt has been three years\nsecretary-treasurer of the Outdoors Club and is very\nmuch interested in hiking and skiing. He spends his\nweek-ends running up and down Grouse Mountain\nas evidence of his enthusiasm. One of the Mechanical Department blueprint artists\u00E2\u0080\u0094believes in quantity production.\nCHARLES WONG\nEasy-going and friendly. Lets nothing worry\nhim\u00E2\u0080\u0094not even Electrical supps. Charley is in the\nmechanical line. If it works\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Well, that's fine,\"\notherwise\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"That's too bad, wonder what's the matter.\" He has taken quite an active part outside of\nclasses, playing first string soccer for three years\nwith a little tennis on the side.\nI\" } t!J\u00C2\u00ABJk!l.\n'J^L.\nUNlVCRStTY-BRITiSffCtfLUMBIA^\nCIVILS\nMETALLURGY\nCHEMICALS\nSCIENCE 3/\nC/./JSS\n-EXECUTIVE -\nHon. Pres.-col. wilkin.\nPres. - m.a.thomas.\nv/ce pres.-s.j. terhune.\nsec. - r.vandersqn.\ntreas. - t. munn ,\nLit Rep -ka cruise\nAthRer-r. alpen\nFORESTERS\nMECHANICALS\nI \" J ^TcJHk.K.1.^' ^\nI...\u00E2\u0080\u0094 WSt-..-<.\nI \u00C2\u00AB4] &< l^^g^^J^\nUNiVClTSfTY -BRITISH COLIJMBIA^\nScience 33\nSCIENCE '33 is still the same well-organized and united Class that it\nwas last year. As examples of this we have lost only one Interclass\nSoccer game, have won most of our Interclass Basketball games, have\nraised seventy-eight per cent, of our Stadium fund quota and came\nfourth in the Arts '20 Relay Race.\nAmongst us there are several prominent athletes: Dick Moore, who\nhas just completed his second season of \"Big Four\" Rugby; Laurie Nicholson, forward on the Senior \"A\" Basketball team; Teddy Barbour, an\noutstanding player on the Senior \"B\" team; Henry Richmond, captain of\none of the Men's Grass Hockey teams and Vic Rogers who has been\nplaying MacKechnie Cup Rugby for his second year.\nMuch enthusiasm is shown by the Class towards athletics and every\nFriday morning between ten and eleven o'clock, thirty per cent, of\nthe fellows may be found in the gymnasium. It is this same keenness for\nsport which caused the unbelievable number of thirteen men to turn\nout for a place on the Arts '20 Relay.\nThe Class executive from left to right is: Vice-President, Alf Buck-\nland; Literary Representative, Norman McConnell; President, Art\nSaunders; Honorary President, G. S. Smith; Treasurer, Vic Rogers;\nand Secretary, Ray McConnachie.\nip^5jg^\u00C2\u00BBi\ni 85 ] EljWR lllfOfow\nScience 34\nITH the commencement of the second term the Class of Science\n'34 found itself relatively intact as compared to former years, only\nnineteen having got their baccalaureate at Christmas.\nThe Class easily upheld the reputation of all second year Science\nclasses, working hard on the stadium campaign, being sponsors of one\nof the best dances the University ever held, and staging a highly successful Class Party.\nIn athletics the Class had Gaul and Ledingham on the McKechnie\nCup team, and Hall, Tyerman, Bolton and McGuire on the Canadian\nBig Four team. To date the Soccer team has won three out of their four\ngames and the Basketball team two out of their four games and are still\nin the running for both cups.\nIn conformity with the usual practice of Science classes, red sweaters,\nas emblematic of the engineering profession, were adopted.\nThe executive includes: Honorary President, Mr. H. G. Smith;\nPresident, Alec McGuire; Secretary, Claire Donaldson; Treasurer, Tod\nHarris; Literary Rep., John Sumner; Athletic Rep., Glen Ledingham.\n911 Hi\niN^jg^i\nf 86 J m>z\n&\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0|JNlVEl\u00C2\u00BBtTyrBRlTiSH'tffLtlMB^\nMARION TORRENCE CARDWELL\n\"Twinkling eyes, fairish hair,\nA winning smile, a roguish air\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nVivacious, gay, and petite;\nCapable lass;\nPopular lass;\nA mannequin pretty and neat!\"\nMarion is one of our most energetic workers\nand can always be depended upon for original ideas\nfor class parties. As class representative she was a\nvery active member of the Hospital Students' Council.\nHEDWIG HILLAS\n\"The Law of Kindness is upon her tongue.\"\nBetter known as Heggie, or H. H.\u00E2\u0080\u0094most conveniently initialed\u00E2\u0080\u0094is a most delightful person, ever\nbubbling with good spirits. Vivacious in personality,\nshe possesses a keen sense of humour and reaps joy\nwhere sorrow was intended. An enthusiastic skater,\nespecially on thin ice, but just watch her come up\nstarry eyed and exuberant. An authority on what\none would do with an umbrella on the golf course;\nnot to speak of her executive ability.\nGERALDINE EDITH HOMFRAY\nGerry came to us from Kamloops adding to our\nclass the charm of her personality\u00E2\u0080\u0094intangible, vivacious, but yet reserved. With her demure, sweet\nexpression, Gerry is always doing the unexpected, a\nconstant source of pleasure and surprise. Beneath\nher outward calm Gerry conceals a strong, true\ncharacter which she showed as our energetic hospital\nrep. Spends spare time on the badminton court,\nlinks and walking with \"Foggie.\" Daily expression\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"I wonder if there will be five more letters today.\"\nHEATHER KILPATRICK\n\"Yon chatter, chatter as yon go,\nBoth at your work and after;\nYour bubbling spirits will o'erflow,\nWith gay and merry laughter.\"\nHeather received her B.A. in 1928. Unfailing\ngood nature has made her a popular member of Nursing. She refuses to let such little things as examinations worry her and has made a splendid average all\nthrough college. Our go-getter was secretary of the\nclass and later president of the Students' Council of\nthe Vancouver General Hospital.\nDOROTHY EVELYN MacKENZIE\n\"E'en though vanquished she could argue still.\"\nDorothy is one of the most popular students of\nany year since Nursing was started at U.B.C. Even\nthe professors have to return her genial smile and\nask her to \"come earlier.\" There has never been a\nmore capable president of the Nurses' Undergraduate\nSociety or of her class. Also she was the efficient\nsecretary of the Students' Council at V. G. H.\nDorothy is a good sport at all times. She radiates\npep, and her smile and wonderful dispostion pave\nthe way to every heart.\n[ 87 J MARGARET FITZPATRICK SUTHERLAND\nIt is so hard to put into words those qualities\nthat endear Margie to us. Her essential sweetness\nhas made her our standby time and again. Her\ninterest in athletics placed her on the Nursing Executive in her second year with us, and since then she has\nmaintained that interest in badminton, tennis, and\nriding, to the enjoyment of all who play with her.\nIn her fourth year she was an energetic vice-president\nof the Nursing Undergraduate Society.\nMARGARET FYVIE HELEN YOUNG\n\"Much wisdom goes with fewest words.\"\nFyvie is from Victoria, but why worry about\nthat? She has long since outgrown it, and is well\non her way to Columbia University for the finishing\ntouches. In the last five years, Fyvie has demonstrated many attributes which have proved her to be\nthe most outstanding member of our class. Besides\nbeing an excellent nurse, she has collected an enviable\nscholastic reputation, winning the University Scholarship for General Proficiency, and the Vancouver\nWomen's Canadian Club Scholarship.\nI\" 1 f\r\r\t\s\t\t viyr^^^/\/\^/\/\<^/v/\/^/s/s/>^^/\/%/v^^<^f^rvA/VSA^^->^^^-^^-^^'^-1^'-1^\nf^w^v^AA ^./>v^\./v^>.^v^^, >^ jvj^ji^ *.r**%.*^r\nTHE Indians had medicine-men to cure their ills and charm\ntheir devils away when the need arose. A developing civilization has made changes in the original fakir\u00E2\u0080\u0094to produce\neventually the modern doctor and nurse. They are the fount\nof wisdom that has taken the place of the near-god to whom\nwailing papooses were taken, to whom striplings, hurt in sport\nand warriors, wounded in war, turned.\nThere are more people in America today than there ever\nwere Indians, and there is a greater need for nurses. As that\ndemand has increased, so the Nursing course at U.B.C. has\ngrown to attain a record enrolment this year.\nAll years from first to fifth have co-operated splendidly\nduring this 1930-31 session, and we have all formed some lasting\nfriendships. High Jinks and Home-Coming proved that Nursing could make itself known; and we have been proud of our\nrepresentation in the Musical Society, and of our Relay team in\nthe Track Meet\u00E2\u0080\u0094it was there even if it did come last!\nThe fifth year group have seen much of Vancouver during\ntheir perambulations and are able to discuss at length many\ngovernmental institutions besides the one they are attending.\nThere have been the usual class functions, the most outstanding being the Fall Tea, held at Alison Reid's, and the\nDance in February, generously given by Mrs. R. W. Brock.\nThe Senior class was augmented this year by eleven postgraduate students, with whom relationships have been interesting and most enjoyable.\nMiss Hillas\u00E2\u0080\u0094Are primary rocks stratified?\nDr. Peacock\u00E2\u0080\u0094What a blow! I always thought Nurses\nwere a moderately intelligent group.\niNJ$LHi\nDr. Topping\u00E2\u0080\u0094Were you absent yesterday, Miss MacKenzie, or only late?\n{ 89 | THE FACULTY OF\n0RICULTUBE\nDEAN F. M. CLEMENT\nDr. Clement was appointed Professor of Horticulture in the University of British\nColumbia in September, 1916, and became Dean of the Faculty of Agriculture in\nAugust, 1919. For a number of years before his appointment to the University of\nBritish Columbia he was Director of the Horticultural Experiment Station at Vineland,\nOntario, in the Niagara Peninsula. T1IE TOTEIVfc;^^f\nJ^f\ni, iidr*iTti,\nHERBERT WARNER ELLIS\nBert signed up with the Aggie Freshmen in\n1927, and after a year's probation decided that he\nhad the makings of a first-class poultry expert. He\nwas a member of the Badminton Club, and for the\nlast year has been vice-president of Aggie '31. We\ncan always count on Bert as an enthusiastic supporter of social functions.\nROLPHE MAURICE FORSYTH\nRolphe came to Agriculture from Columbian\nCollege. His aim in life is to own a championship\nherd of Jersey cattle. He is no mean judge of cows,\nas he was on the team that represented the U.B.C.\nat Portland last term. However cow-judging has not\ntaken up all his energy. Rolfe has found time to\nplay on the Intermediate English Rugby team and\nwas a member of the Aggie Relay team last year.\nHe is also a member of the Players' Club.\nNORMAN HARRY INGLEDEW\nNorm, one of the most quiet and reserved boys\non the campus, is really an Aggie. He played English rugby in the first and second years, but since\nthan has been too occupied with various experiments\nin the manufacture of butter and cheese to give\nmuch thought to athletics. In his last year he was\na member of the Dairy Products team at the Pacific\nInternational, and was also the president of the Class\nof Agriculture '31.\nTHOMAS ALBERT LEACH\nTommy has been one of the most active members of the Class of '31. President of Aggie '31 for\nfirst three years, vice-president of the Agricultural\nUndergrad., president of the Agricultural Discussion\nClub in his fourth year, and member of the Dairy\nProducts team at the Pacific International Exhibition.\nHis chief interest lies in watching calves succumb\nto the effects of pilchard oil.\nMICHAEL ISADORE LERNER\nMike was born in China and came to B.C. in\n1927. In his Freshman year he won the David Thorn\nScholarship for Proficiency. Poultry, genetics and\nbiometry have claimed his special attention, both in\ncourse work and in research for the Poultry Department. He served as treasurer of the Agriculture\nUndergraduate Society and was twice on the winning\nteam in Agriculture Inter-class Debates. Next year,\nwe hope to have him back again taking further research work.\n[ 92 J 2^\niJiX\nIJNtVDlStTY^^RITlSirtdLUMBIA^\nTHOMAS BELSHAM LOTT\nTom was born in England, where he stayed long\nenough to see military service, so that now he is\none of the few returned men at Varsity. He started\nwith the Class of '29, but stayed out to join the\nAggies of 1931. Besides his academic work, in\nwhich he can boast of three scholarships, he finds\ntime for membership in the Musical Society, Der\nDeutsche Verein, Outdoors Club, Biological Discussion Club, S.C.M. and Aggie Discussion Club. Tom\nspecializes in Plant breeding and Pathology. After\ngraduation he will take up Research work.\nCHARLES CAMPBELL STRACHAN\nCharlie came to Varsity from Kamloops to join\nus in our second year. Spending many hours in\nlectures and laboratories, he has taken his major\nwork in scientific Horticulture. He has been very\nactive in the Badminton Club, handling the finances\nfor the last two years. Serving also on the Agriculture Undergraduate Executive, he has guided us\nthrough a most successful year in his office of\ntreasurer. Charlie distinguished himself by winning\nthe cup for sheep at the Agassiz Judging Competition\nin 1929.\nRUTH ANN KILBEE STUART\nRuth received her high school training in Kel-\nowna, where she acquired many illusions about\nagriculture. After joining the Aggies, however, she\nwas attracted by Bacteriology, and is writing her\nthesis on that subject. She has been associated with\nboth class and undergraduate executive work each\nyear. She is a member of the Biological Discussion\nClub, and has contributed anonymously to the\n\"Ubyssey\" from time to time. She hopes to continue her studies in Bacteriology after graduation.\nWILFRED TAIT\n\"A student by day\nA mystery by night.\"\nWilf came to college in 1927 and since that time\nhas taken an active part in college life. He was\nsecretary of his class for two years, gave his best\nfor the Relay team in '28 - '29, and a member of the\nDairy Judging team at Portland in '30. Wilf is\nspending his spare time now with his \"bugs\" in the\nlab.\nJAMES MILLS WINRAM\nAfter working for three years in the automobile\nbusiness, Mills decided to come to Varsity and\nspecialize in Agricultural Economics. On the campus\nhis organizing abilities have been shown in numerous\nactivities, including participation in the affairs of the\nOutdoors Club, the Aggie Club and in inter-class\nDebating. After leaving the University, Mills intends to put his knowledge of economics to practical\nuse in the financial world.\nf 93 J jU.\ntv;- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\":.*. .\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0fr\u00C2\u00BB&\nANATOLE ZAITZEFF\n\"Toly\" came to Canada in 1926 with the ostensible objects of improving his English and studying Canadian methods in Agriculture. After looking\nover all the courses in the Calendar he finally decided\nto major in Agricultural Economics. His cheerful\nmanner and his enthusiasm for campus affairs have\nmade him many friends in University circles, and\nhis cheery, \"Hello fellows,\" is a well-known greeting. His adventurous nature and perseverance will\nundoubtedly lead him to success in the future.\nIN^jg^M\nThe Class History of Agriculture 31\nTHE Class of Agriculture '31 entered University with very promising\nprospects for four successful years. We had the good fortune to be\nin our first year one of the largest classes ever entered in this faculty and\n\"got off to a good start\" by finishing up the first year of our existence\nwith the highest marks ever obtained by any Freshman Agriculture class.\nIn the following three years we more or less maintained the high\nstandard set in our first year, in spite of additional units, more difficult\ncourses and other added attractions.\nThe Class as a whole has always taken an active part in campus\nactivities and has been represented throughout in various prominent\npositions on the Agriculture Undergraduate Society. Mills Winram\nhas been well-known in debating circles; Anatole Zaitzeff has been a\npopular member of the Players' Club; and Tom Leach, besides poisoning\ncalves with synthetic milk, has been a leading figure in the Aggie Discussion Club and on the Agriculture Undergraduate Executive. Last,\nbut not least, the Class claims the distinction of having as one of its\nmembers, Ruth Stuart, the only co-ed in the faculty.\nDirecting the destinies of the Class for this year were: Honorary\nPresident, Professor Wilfred Sadler; President, Norman Ingledew; Vice-\nPresident, Bert Ellis; Secretary, Wilf Tait.\nI 94 J -^m/f:RSffY BRITISH COLUMBIA^\na.\nAgriculture 32\nENTIRELY fooling the originators of Christmas examinations, Aggie\n'32 is off to a good start and pulling steadily at the traces. Several\nnew men have realized the potentialities of the Class, and have joined us;\none of these men was previously in Arts, but he appreciated the added,\nvalue of an Agricultural degree, and switched over.\nWe can show a wide range of interests, having men majoring in\nAgronomy, Animal Husbandry, Poultry, Agricultural Economics and\nZoology, and we have representatives in the Outdoors Club, Biological\nDiscussion Club, Forest Club, and of course we are all in the Aggie Club.\nThis year's class executive consists of: Honorary President, Professor\nH. M. King; President, Henry A. Shaw; Secretary-Treasurer, Hugh B.\nLeech.\nif^5j(y>i\nAgriculture 33\nA GGIE '33 has just completed its second year with an enrolment of\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\"-*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 thirteen members. The Class supplied two of the men, Dick and\nLee, who gave the Frosh a scare in the Arts '20 Relay, and did its part\ntoward the success of the Aggie Ball.\nOsborne and Whimster carry the honours of Aggie '33 up Grouse\nMountain with the Outdoors Club, to dash that honour into the snow at\nunexpected moments while negotiating on skiis. Tedenoff has made\nAgriculture famous by his signs and posters, which, without doubt, are\nworks of art, and outshine any similar work done on the campus for some\ntime. Whimster has blossomed forth as an orator and represented Varsity in the Intercollegiate Debate this year. He also keeps the Players'\nClub moving smoothly by playing the part of chief scene shifter and\nstage manager.\nThe Aggie Basketball and Football teams have all been graced by\nrepresentatives of Aggie '33, Dave Ferguson taking a leading part. Judging from past records, the Class is going to produce some versatile farmers.\nAggie '33 can also boast control of Canadian Football for 1931-32,\nHarold Cliff having been elected captain of the team.\nThis year's Executive is: President, William Whimster; Vice-President, Harold Phillips; Secretary-Treasurer, James O'Neil.\nI\" 1 Agriculture 34\nHE of Aggie '34 have a very brilliant outlook before us. The initiation started the year off with a hair-cut for us. Then the mid-terms\nsatisfied their sanguinary aspirations by first bowling us over and then\nby further pushing us in the face through the medium of the various\nprofessors' physiognomies\u00E2\u0080\u0094more specifically the ventral portion of that\nmammal's face.\nNevertheless, at Christmas we all passed safely through; one of the\nmore brilliant of us, Fred Salisbury by name, receiving a bursary for his\ngood work. Another outstanding member of our Class is Harry Adison\nwho made the Swimming team of the University, showing up the lower\nmainland swimmers. Our worthy president is also an outstanding player\non the Senior \"B\" Basketball team. We did our bit in supplying a\nSoccer team for the Inter-class Soccer competition, having three or four\nmembers of our Class battling for good old Aggie. In the Arts '20\nRelay two of the team were full-fledged '34-ites and another two were\nOccupationals who make up a part of our Class. Jack Dicks, an\nOccupational, distinguished himself both in the Relay and also in the\nCross-Country.\nThe officers of our Class are: Honorary President, Professor Davis;\nPresident, Jim O'Neil; Vice-President, D. H. Ferguson; Secretary-\nTreasurer, Bill Vrooman; Athletic Representative, Rod Dumvill.\n{ 96 1 ^\u00C2\u00A3^^4^\nbNlVER^TY^BRiTlSfTttfLllriBIA\n\\nTOc /JnGUC/M Jt[QL06KffL CoLLCOE mo ,n emuom\n/Cecum Kopx\nCh/i/vccuog\nBouLcvrmo.\n_ H.T TO IClftf .\nThe Anglican Theological College\n^STISITORS approach our College by Chancellor Boulevard. Others\n* strike off across the river behind the Gymnasium, slip down Sovereign\nSlide to Keeling Korner, and then, by Via Vance, reach the back door.\nThe desert in which the College stands, having been reclaimed from a\nwoody wilderness, is already beginning to blossom like the rose. Trees,\nshrubs and hedges increase in number from year to year. Some day we\nhope to appear fully clothed and not quite so stark and bare as at present.\nThe College opened the year well with a Tea to the Anglicans of the\nFaculty and of the First and Second Years. This was the beginning of\nmany and varied activities, for we have taken part in soccer, track,\ngrass-hockey, Gym Club and the Musical Society. At the annual Field\nDay, R. C. W. Ward won the Athletic Championship. This was perhaps due to his light-footed practices up and down Trumpour Trottoir\nin the small hours. And as a Finale to the social events of the year we\nhad an \"At Home\" in February, attended by about one hundred guests.\nG. H. Cockburn, M. C. Humphrey and D. B. Houghton held a little\nJamboree of their own at the top of the First Year English in the University. Even Freddy smiled upon the Theologues!\nAmong the many and varied gifts to the College during the year was\n(Continued on Page One Hundred and Seventeen)\nI \u00C2\u00BB} \u00E2\u0080\u009E \"* ^''^LVL^^JL.\njti&d\nOWEN WILLIAM ROSSE HUGHES\nOwen was born in Kelowna and has lived in\nvarious parts of Western Canada from Kenora to\nPrince Rupert. In 1929 he was captain of the\nU.B.C. Grass Hockey team and in 1930 a member\nof the Varsity team. He plays 'back' in college football, is a member of the Track team and an all\nround sport. He has served as a Lay Reader in the\nYukon, is a motor expert and a builder, has lots of\npep, and holds definite opinions.\nERIC WHITCLIFFE JACKSON, B.A.\nEric Jackson was born in Cheshire, England,\nbut came to Canada when quite young. He graduated in Arts at U.B.C. in 1924 and went to India,\nserving four years as a teacher in Agra and one as\nPrincipal of Jay Narayan's High School, in Benares.\nIn 1930 he was winner of the Oratorical Contest\nand during the summer served as a Lay Reader in\nthe Yukon. President of the Literary and Athletic\nAssociation, 1930-31, a valuable member of the\nVarsity Grass Hockey and College Football teams,\nand walks to keep in trim. Recognized as head of\nthe student body in name and fact.\nREV. JOHN NOBUKAZU KIMURA, B.A., B.D.\nKimura is a graduate of St. Paul's University,\nTokio, and already has two books to his credit. He\ncame to us two years ago (it seems only two weeks)\nand now walks off with a Licentiate of Theology,\na mere step to a D.D. for this true student. This\nbrother from across the Pacific in his quiet way\nhas added much to our life, being always present at\nany activity from a social function to the wildest\nrag: and now wc lose him\u00E2\u0080\u0094but Japan gains.\nSAMUEL KINLEY\nKinley was born in County Down, Ireland, and\nis proud of it. He came to Canada in 1912, enlisted\nfor the Great War and returned in 1919 with a\nMilitary Medal, having served in France and Salonica.\nKinley taught for six years in the Indian School at\nKitwanga. He is a member of the College Track\nteam and Football Club and is respected by the\nfaculty and fellow-students for his sterling qualities.\nKinley intends to return to the Diocese of Caledonia.\nCLARENCE LEE\nLee, alias Lee Lin-Tchung, is a native of Canton\nwho paid the Student Head Tax and wonders why.\nHe has been mechanic, caterer, mirchant, Con-\nfucianist and is now a Christian. Lee is a member\nof the staff of the Anglican Chinese Missions both\nin Victoria and in Vancouver. He is assistant Sacristan in the College where he has won the respect of\nthe Anglo-Saxons while retaining that of the Chinese. He leaves us to join the permanent staff of the\nAnglican Mission to Chinese.\n{'8 1 frVH,\n-LNlVniStTY^BfllTiSirt^UMBiA\neOs^\nARTHUR RICHARD PARSONS\nParsons, a son of Lincolnshire, served in ths\nLondon Rifle Brigade from 1915 till the Armistice\nand was awarded the Military Medal. He served in\nthe Church Army on Motor Van Mission work for\nfive years and for two years was a Lay worker in the\nDiocese of Caledonia. He is a member of the College Football team and is an invaluable 'outside right.'\nBut Parsons does not advertise ... To know him is\nto respect him.\nTHOMAS BREWSTER PURVES\nPurves came from Cleadon South Shields. He\nwas educated at Westoe and Durham and taught\npublic school for two years in England before coming to Canada three years ago. He holds positions\nin the College as vice-president of the Literary Athletic Association, president of the Chess Club, and\na member of the Soccer team. His love of an argument and his appreciation of a good rag have made\nhim many friends.\nTHOMAS SCOTT\nScott hails from Newcastle-on-Tyne, and cam';\nto Canada three years ago. He had intended to\nenter the legal profession but, realizing his mistake,\nhe decided on the ministry. Captain of the A.T.C.\nSoccer team, and tennis champion, as well as being\nan adept at badminton, Scott shows himself pro*\nficient in athletics. He has left his mark upon the\nCollege by his decided views and it is with regret\nthat we see him go.\nCHRISTOPHER STOREY\nStorey is a native of Aberdeen but soon moved\nto England. He went overseas in 1914 and came\nout to Canada after the war. He was appointed\nlicensed Lay Reader in Alberta, in 1927. On coming\nto the College he was made player-coach to the\nSoccer team, which position he now holds as well as\nvice-president of Literary and Athletic Association\nand First Aid Officer. Storey was a pugilist in his\nyounger days but, nevertheless, he is slow to anger\nand will win respect wherever he goes.\nFRANCIS EDMUND CYRIL VENABLES\nVenablcs was born in Enderby, B.C., and is of\na long line of Clerical stock. Venables ranched for\nsome years in the State of Washington. He has\nserved as Sacristan in the College for four years and\nwas successively secretary, vice-president and a member of the executive of the Literary and Athletic\nAssociation. He plays for the U.B.C. Grass Hockey\nteam and the College Soccer teams. Venables has\nserved acceptably as a licensed Lay Reader in both\nSurrey Centre and in the Yukon, and is well esteemed\nby his fellow students.\nI 99 1 fcLtHE TBHTE-fe^r\nThe Union Theological College\nUNION COLLEGE EXECUTIVE\nStanding: L. King, E. Horton, W. Wovey, G. Boothroyd.\nSitting: J. Warr (President), A. Crisp, Dr. Scott (Honorary President).\nAbsent: M. Cameron.\nSINCE the College first opened its doors in September, 1927, Principal\nBrown and the College faculty have striven to create and maintain\nthe atmosphere and environment of \"an ideal home for university men.\"\nTradition is being made.\nThis year about forty \"up and coming\" men drawn from all faculties have found comfort in the downy cots and lucrative study in the\ncomfortable rooms. When chosen as Rhodes Scholar for 1931, James A.\nGibson injected a highly commendable element into the College tradition. Gradually the College is being possessed by a high standard of\nscholarship.\nYet withal, interest in things musical, dramatic, forensic and athletic\ncontinues apace. Every phase of University life is indulged in and\nappreciated by the residents. Among the most enjoyable events are the\ninter-dormitory entertainments sponsored in turn by the Anglican and\nthe Union College residents. Entertainment musical, dramatical, and\nwhat have you, is provided solely by respective inmates and reveal un-\n(Continued on Page One Hundred and One)\nf iool &VK\nLNlVCRSITY-BRITiSHCOLUMBrA^\nWILLIAM MURRAY CAMERON, B.A.\n\"Outbound your barque awaits yon.\"\nMurray came to us from friendly Saskatchewan\ntaking his B.A. here in 1927. In theology he was a\nconsistent prize-winner in Old Testament and Hebrew. The mantle of Lotze falls gently upon his\nshoulders. Noted for a stately sedateness and a quiet\nphilosophic humour, he filled the vice-presidency of\nthe Theological Society with great acceptance. Being\na zealous missionary, he hopes to serve in foreign\nfields. We expect great things of Murray.\nADAM CRISP\nScotland's borders first his home\nFar and wide he since doth roam.\nSince here at College his home hath been,\nIn the Glee Club he's been heard and seen.\nA missionary here he came\nWild natives to convert and tame;\nFull many a field he's served since then,\nAnd won regard from many men.\nJAMES HARWOOD ALFRED WARR\nPresenting B.C.'s foremost boy's worker. Boys\nhave always claimed his thought and devotion. Academic life has a great appeal for James, yet no more\nthan that of the active ministry to which he looks\nforward with great joy. However, we expect him\nto take post-grad, work at a later date. As president\nof. the Students' Theological Society, baritone singer\nand polished orator, he will leave a gap in the ranks\nthat will be hard to fill.\nirvesj&ni\nThe Union Theological College\n(Continued from Page One Hundred)\ncommon qualities in these men. In fact we cannot understand, with\nsuch talent unused, just why our University Musical and Dramatic Clubs\nflourish.\nThe committee in charge this year is as follows: Dean, Dr. A. M.\nSanford; Chairman, Reg. Hammond; Secretary, James Gibson; Treasurer, C. J. Armstrong; James Warr and Peter Simonds.\nf 1011 *c> mimfljivi\u00C2\u00AB^__ ^\nROSALIND YOUNG tr.~~ i/vx. ARTHUR PLOWS\nSECRETARY |VJ SlJ'\" I VJ J I TREASURER.\nVICTORIA\nCOLLEGE\nPAUL SPRINKLING\nMEMS ATHLETICS\nI 10* 1 WL ,u w/^-^\nVictoria College\nTN keeping with past successes and increasing registration, the Victoria\n-\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 College organizations have had a very active year.\nThe Literary and Scientific Department has offered the students\nopportunities to display their talent. Inspired by the success of its production last year the Players' Club will present the comedy, \"Yellow\nSands,\" by Adelaide and Eden Philpott. The Literary Society has sponsored lectures, debates and musicales. The Science Club has introduced\nspeakers on scientific subjects. A Men's Discussion Club has weekly\nmeetings.\nWork on the College Annual is already well under way, and the\nBoard has introduced many innovations and a distinctive publication is\npromised.\nThe Victoria College branch of the Student Christian Movement\nhas held weekly meetings. It is affiliated with the U.B.C. branch of the\nS.C.M.\nAlthough the mother University decided not to promote a Victoria\nInvasion this year, Victoria College will continue the custom of invading\nVancouver yearly. We believe this event of value in establishing close\nrelations between Varsity and College.\nA full programme of social functions has kept the committee of the\nStudents' Council busy. Following the Initiation Week there was the\nFrosh Reception and Dance. Other events equally enjoyable and well\nattended were the Hallowe'en Masquerade, the Parents' Reception and\nthe Closing Dance. The College Ball was held on January 3, and five\nhundred guests were present. The proceeds helped to swell the Vancouver Invasion Fund.\nSeveral new sports have been instituted. The Badminton Club has\na large membership and has played several matches with the Normal\nSchool. The Club, with the newly organized Swimming Club, will\nprobably find places on the Invasion Programme next year. The Women's Grass Hockey team is an enthusiastic group and hopes to make\na good showing against Varsity. The Women's Basketball team has not\nentered a league but has played many games with outside clubs. The\nmajor sports have a large following. The Rugby team, Provincial and\nCity Intermediate Champions, has met with its usual success in the\nCity League and hopes to retain both the Province and the Heyland\nCups this year. The Men's Basketball team, although not in a league,\nhas made a good showing in the many fixtures they have played.\nThe Men's Golf team succeeded in drawing with the U.B.C. team\nin a New Year's match. Other matches have been held with various\nclubs in the city.\nI 103 1 STUDENT\nGOVERNMENT {io\u00C2\u00ABl I^SM-l.\nj**. ^~^^i/NimwtryrPttfg^\nThe Students' Council\nA T about 5:45 on a Wednesday afternoon, nine black-gowned Council\n-^\"-\u00E2\u0084\u00A2- Members might be seen strolling languidly up the staircase which\nleads from the Cafeteria to the Council Chambers. The impressiveness\nof the spectacle, however, is somewhat marred by the sight of dishes of\nolives, and plates heaped high with assorted cakes which are carried with\nsolicitous care. For appetites are renewed as the meeting progresses and\nthe light refreshments invariably mysteriously disappear. Then for five\nor six hours, if not longer, we are beseiged by minutes, reports, bills, and\nbudgets without end.\nWe would all be inclined to grudge the time spent in dull routine\nbusiness were it not for the occasions when we accomplish something\nwhich we, in our innocence, consider really worth while. Already this\nyear the questions of the A.M.S. Constitution, fraternities, finance, social\nfunctions, and the Victoria Invasion have been revived and vigorously\nre-discussed\u00E2\u0080\u0094efforts which on numerous occasions have been the butt of\nheartrending (??) RAP'S on the part of certain sections of the student\nbody.\nBut the summit of our achievement this year promises to be the\nStadium project. Stimulated in the first place by our President of Men's\nAthletics, the plan, in spite of many obstacles and discouraging occurrences, has gradually materialized, and is at present in full swing. Everything augurs success for our $20,000.00 campaign\u00E2\u0080\u0094providing the students themselves do their bit.\nBut enough for \"business\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094it may all be found in the minutes\nwhich, as someone recently remarked, are exceedingly incomplete accounts of what actually goes on within the Council walls on Wednesday\nevenings. No mention of the brighter side of the meetings finds its way\nthere, or of the wide diversity of opinions which not infrequently led to\nopen \"warfare.\" No hints as to the surprising behaviour of certain\nmembers; no allusion to the uproar when Schultz had to stand on the\ntable to obtain a hearing, when Jean's purse was opened, or when Campbell woke up and asked\u00E2\u0080\u0094a la student body\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"what am I voting for?\"\nNor is there any written account of the night when, much to the girls'\namazement and according to the boys' preconceived plot, the meeting\nadjourned at 7:45 p.m. and was resumed half an hour later at the Empress\nTheatre, and finally concluding at Purdy's.\nIn spite of certain criticism, long tiresome meetings, and 9 o'clock\nThursday lectures, we all find, as the year comes to a close, that our confidence in and affection for our University has increased tenfold, as has\nalso our desire to fight for its advancement. We will remember our\nmeetings not less vividly, however, for the extreme hilarity stimulated\nby the good-natured teasing of certain members, and for those congenial\n(Continued on Page One Hundred and Fifteen)\n{107} fcraETOTEM^\n' \"*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nJEAN CAMBRON\nDEAN ML. BOLLERT\nHONORARV PRESIDENT\nDOROTHY MYERS BETTY MOORE\nSECRETARY-TREASURER UNIVERSITY OP VKE-PRCSIOSMT ARTS51\n^. BRITISH COLUMBIA\nWOMEN'S\nUNDERGRADWE\nSOCIETY\nlO^I MARYMATHtSON\nI T/vJ \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 VICE PptSIDENT *BTS'jP3\nNANCE CARTER\nVICf PRESIDENT ARTS 34\nDOROTHY MACKENZIE THELMA MAHON\nPRESIDENT NURSINC VICE-PRESIDENT WWATiON\nf >\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB] UNiVtttStTY^RITlMttffUJMB\nt. L j. .j^-\nARTS PROFESSOR LOGAN\n* \"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ^\" ^\"^ HONORARY PRESIDENT\nMEN'S\nUNDERGRADUATE\nSOCIETY\nUN/w\nU/v,B'A\nHERBERT GRIFFIN\nPRESIpENT ARTS'31\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ..J\nDOUGLAS BROWN\npresident; Airrm\nKENNETH BECKETT\nPRESIDENT ARTS'52\nRONALD HOWARD\nPRESIDENT ARTS'33\nI 109] fc TH\u00C2\u00A3 TOTC\u00C2\u00BBfa^\nmit ^i-\nA I, .fiH..\u00E2\u0080\u0094fi\n~ \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nV\nMacKENZlE\n'RESIDENT\nMISS M. E. GRAY\nHONORARY PRESIDENT\nLi\nIVY DA2ELL\nVICE-PRESIDENT\nill\nI\n.DOROTHY BLACK\nSECRETARY\nEFFIE McGOUGAN\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 TREASURER.\n. ;1\nNURSING\nUNDERGRADUATE\n^ SOCIETY\n. ^^^W 1930 -1931\nMAR6ARETJENKINS0N\nI ATHLETIC REPRESENTATIVE\nUNIVERSITY OF\nDOROTHY TAITl\nHOSPITAL REPRESEif\nBRJTISH COLUMBIA\nI H2] m\n>*> a-\nUNtvtnsi\n*-*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *--^-\ntfUMBIA\nI930\nS,TVOF BIUT^\nMENS UNDERGMDUAJF\nA'LAN CAMPBELL PVP^I ITI\/F- WILLIAM SCHULtI\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 PRESIDENT La/XLa^SV./ I I V I\u00E2\u0080\u0094 SECRETARY-TREASUKtlV\nI\nKENNETH MARTIN\nPRESIDENT Sc.M.U.S.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ROBERT McLARTY\nPRESIDENT ARTSM.U.S\nLANGFORDi\nPRESIDENT A^.M,U.^.\nHPHE Men's Undergraduate Executive for 1930-31 brings to a close\n-\u00E2\u0084\u00A2- another successful year in carrying out its duties of controlling all\nclass and faculty social activities, with the exception of those held by\nthe Senior Classes.\nThe most important of the year's social functions were the three\nfaculty balls, all of which were held in the Ballroom of the Hotel Vancouver and all of which were successful in every way. The Arts was held\nin the Fall term and had the distinction of being \"the Ball\" of that\nseason. The Aggies again proved their worth by the quality of their\nchicken sandwiches. The Sciencemen in particular outdid themselves in\ntheir efforts this year, and are to be commended on a number of their\ncurious innovations.\nEach of the various classes held one party each; the classes of Science\n'31, '32 and '33, and the classes of Agriculture giving combined parties.\nThese were as is customary marked by an interesting variety of dress and\nentertainment. In particular was the basket social held by Arts '32 an\ninteresting novelty.\nThe classes of Arts '32, '33 and '34, each entertained at a tea dance,\nthese functions taking place on Saturday afternoon following important\ngames.\n{113 J MANAGERSYSTEM\n1930\n1931\n[HENDERSON , \^/ \u00E2\u0080\u009E,. ROBERT OS\nimanacer UNIVERSITY OFBRITISH COLUMBIA man^at*\nJL> CLIFFE\nCER. NON-ATHLETICS\n-WILLIAM SCHULTZ\nMANAGER NON-ATHIETICS\nLORNE FAUDNI\nASST MANAGER. KrHLBTICS I\nTHE Managerial system has been greatly expanded this year and\nspecialization carried out. The Manager of Non-Athletics, William\nA. Schultz, has also held the position of Treasurer of the Men's Undergraduate Society, while Robert Osborne, the Manager of Athletics, has\nheld a similar office on the Men's Athletic Executive. This co-operation\nhas been to the mutual benefit of the organization concerned and the\nBusiness Office. Arnold Cliff has served as an Assistant to the Manager\nof Non-Athletics and Lome Falconer is an Assistant to the Manager of\nAthletics.\nThe Business Manager of Publications and his assistants have moved\ninto the office which has been a marked improvement.\nThe nature of the work of the office has remained very much the\nsame as last year, with a gradual expansion in all lines: Sales handling of\nequipment, securing of quotations, and the hundred and one other little\nthings.\nThe typewriting, telephone calls and much of the routine work of\nthe office has been greatly relieved by the hiring of a stenographer, Mrs.\nMartin.\nIn all, the system is gradually growing and changing to meet the\nneeds of the students, and although far from being perfect, it is the best\npossible solution, at present, to the problem which faces us.\nI 114 J The Students' Council\n(Continued from Page One Hundred and Seven)\nfriendly people whom we have come to know and appreciate as friends\nand fellow-councillors. Here we are\u00E2\u0080\u0094in case you don't know us all.\nWe have been unable to determine whether the fair sex of this\ninstitution are especially equipped with discretion in the selection of\ntheir President, or whether Lady Fortune has been especially kind to\nthem\u00E2\u0080\u0094 and us. Certain it is that this year's President has lived up to\nthe exceptionally high standard which this position always reflects. Professors tell us not to look for many outstanding qualities in one person,\nbut in Jean we have found tact, charm, a keen appreciation of humour,\nand above all, a loyalty which transcends the activities of the Women's\nUndergraduate Society. In her free minutes, during Council meetings,\nwe are sorry to say, she is kept busy placating and keeping in order the\nPresidents of the Men's Undergrad. on her right and of Men's Athletics\non her left.\nBetty came to us from the \"Chair\" of the Players' Club and there\nwere a few of us who thought that she would have acquired a little of\nthe aloofness of that august body. But, in her own quiet (?) way, our\nPresident of Women's Athletics soon exploded such mistaken ideas. She\nhas proved herself to be exceedingly fair in her judgments and though\nnaturally \"strong\" for athletics, she has shown an interest in other\nactivities which should put many of us to shame. Players' Club or no\nPlayers' Club, the Musical Society could not have a better friend. But\nit is Betty's laugh\u00E2\u0080\u0094the most infectious one on Council\u00E2\u0080\u0094that has so\noften caused the meeting to dissolve itself, so to speak, in uncontrollable\nmirth.\nWe are tempted to write \"efficient\" whenever we think of Margaret,\nbut when we look at the word we realize that it conveys in a very poor\nway indeed all that Margaret has been on the Council. The word has also\na flavour of coldness about it which in no way reflects the graciousness\nand good cheer that are always in evidence around the minute book.\nMany times, when stumped for the wording of a difficult phrase, we'd\nhear the Junior Member exclaim, \"Oh, why waste time! Give it to\nMargaret!\" Not once has she been unwilling to respond to any s.o.s.\ncall, or failed to carry out the least important detail assigned to her. But\nmost important of all we have in the Secretary one who can handle\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nwhen all others fail\u00E2\u0080\u0094our untamed \"spirit\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094McSchultz.\nBut it is our President who has set an example which not one of us\ncan boast of equalling. The manner in which he has sacrificed everything in order that he might put all his energy into Council work is\nknown only to a few. Broadminded, conscientious, and thoughtful,\nDon furthers with energy and determination any move which is definitely\nfor the good of the University and, at the same time, is firm in his\n(Continued on Page One Hundred and Sixteen)\nfll'l ibipgl\u00C2\u00ABmfe\nThe Students' Council\n(Continued from Page One Hundred and Fifteen)\nrefusal to countenance any careless proposal or irregular procedure. His\nkeen insight and ability to grasp the essential facts of a matter, his\nenthusiasm for the way \"they do it in Edinburgh,\" his sense of humour\nand cheerful smile are always in evidence. We speak for the whole\nUniversity when we say how much we appreciate all that Don has done\nfor the U.B.C. and heartily wish him an abundance of good fortune when\nhe returns to the \"Old Country\" next year.\nCharlie is the \"Hotspur\" of Council. Enthusiastic loyalty to athletics, limitless energy and optimism\u00E2\u0080\u0094these are his outstanding traits.\nDifficulties in anything seem merely to inspire him to overcome them\nand apparently unsurpassable obstacles are reduced to \"nothings\" when\nhis roaring voice challenges the world to \"come on, and knock that chip\noff my shoulder.\" He's a great boy is Charlie, and we need him on\nCouncil.\nWhat with the Discipline and numerous other committees on which\nthe President of Men's Undergrad. has had to work recently, Alan has\nhad his full share of Council responsibility since he was elected last\nOctober on the resignation of Doug. Pollock. His faculty for clear\nthinking, his ability to co-operate, and above all, his fair, unprejudiced\nattitude, have gained the respect of those with whom he has worked.\nAlan's experience at McGill last year has often been a source of interesting comparison and contrast of methods and conditions here and in the\nEast. True, he has occasionally been a trifle absent-minded of late, but\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nwell, spring is in the air already . . .\nThe President of the L.S.E. seems to get all the knotty little matters\nto attend to. His duties are perhaps the most varied of any other Councillor. But the statement that he \"has good ideas\" contains more truth\nthan fiction, and he is quite able to cope tactfully and diplomatically\nwith any \"ticklish\" situation which might arise. He may always be\ndepended on to express a sound judgment on any problem. Outwardly\nquiet, unassuming and composed, even Frank was once upset to such an\nextent that he threatened to eject the President of the Men's Undergrad.\nfrom the meeting by way of the window!\nWe were all sorry to lose our Treasurer last term, when he was\nforced to resign because of ill-health. Bob's refusal to take things too\nseriously was often a helpful element in Council. A bright remark or\nwitticism from the Treasurer cleared a tense atmosphere on more than\none occasion, and made us all feel much better.\nJack Thompson has been recently elected to fill the office of Treasurer for the remainder of the session. We don't know much about him\nbut from many good reports are sure he will overcome the difficulties\nwhich inevitably belong to this position. Good luck to you, Jack.\n(Continued on Page One Hundred and Seventeen)\nI IK 1 The Students' Council\n(Continued from Page One Hundred and Sixteen)\nThe Junior Member is contemptuous of the menial tasks which\ntradition proclaims to be his. The Secretary, however, helps to keep\nhim out of mischief by sending him on various errands and does her\nbest to keep him awake when he becomes drowsy. \"Dutch\" is the proud\n\"possessor\" of a whole class and, according to him, Arts '34 is the absolute\nparagon of classes. He's O.K. though, and is to be congratulated on his\nable and efficient handling of Home-Coming Theatre Night. Whether\nintentional or no, a spontaneous witticism from this Junior Member has\nexploded many a tense moment.\nThe Anglican Theological College\n(Continued from Page Ninety-seven)\na piano for the Common Room. This was the foundation of the success\nof the Bathroom Sextette at the Homecoming.\nThe Graduating Class of 1931 will be the largest in the history of\nthe College. Others may occupy their rooms in College, but who, oh\nwho, could ever take their place?\nWe accepted our quota of the Stadium Fund and completed it.\nAnd that's saying a whole lot! And we staged the first event on the\nStadium. \"100 to 1 both ways!\" But why do some horses prefer cinder\ntracks?\n[ 117} PUBLICATIONS E71 *Vjl. \n_THE TPTEftj^ ;;\n^\n1 120 J The Publications Board\nBy R. A. P.\n[ERELY the task of preparing a bi-weekly newspaper, an annual\nand a handbook is all that occupies the time and talent of the\n\"Pub.\" Over forty students devote their energy to this rather thankless occupation and find that both studies and pleasures have to be\nsacrificed on the altar of journalism. For recompense, there is the satisfaction of a job well done and the camaraderie of the fourth estate.\nHigh spots in the \"Pub's\" past year are many. The \"Ubyssey\" has\nentered upon a new stage in its career, having been expanded to six\ncolumns per page instead of its former five, with a column length of\neighteen inches. A special sport page made its appearance in the second\nterm. A wholesale emigration of the staff to the \"Sun\" office for one\nday resulted in an edition of that worthy daily which will be long\nremembered by local journalists. The installation of a counter in the\n\"Pub\" added a business-like appearance to the sanctum of the scribes.\nEditorial policy was consistent and direct. The C.O.T.C. and the\nexistence of military training in universities were denounced in several\neditorials. Fraternities were dealt with critically. The stadium project was heartily supported through all its vicissitudes. A plea for\ngreater consideration in the matter of term essays brought a sympathetic\nresponse from some professors. Timely comment was made on current\ncampus affairs.\nThe editor-in-chief, Ronald Grantham, pensive patriarch of the\n\"Pub,\" was appointed to that position after rising from reporter to the\nrank of associate and literary editor. His spare time, if an editor can\nbe said to have such a thing, is spent either in the chief's chair, brooding\nover editorials, or in efforts to improve the deportment of his unruly\nstaff. Easy-going in minor matters, his word is law where high policy\nis concerned. He will be known to posterity as the first editor to believe\nin being kind to Council.\nBessie Robertson and Edgar Brown, as senior editors, each has charge\nof an edition of the paper. Bessie Robertson adopts humanitarian tactics\nfor the preparation of the Tuesday issue. \"Co-operation with conversation\" is the motto of this section of the staff, and the result is exactly the\nsame as that of the other edition which prides itself on business-like\nefficiency. A simple request on her part usually gets more results than\nthunders from mere male editors.\nEdgar Brown, the chief's right-hand man, has a penchant for radical\nchanges in the \"Pub's\" policy and organization. He and the editor are\noften seen together hatching plots and perhaps editorials, or bating the\nsports editor. While superintending the \"make-up\" of the Friday issue,\n(Continued on Page One Hundred and Twenty-four)\nff 121 1 1930\nm \'0\nM DORIS BARTON\n~ EDITOR,\nTOTEM\nSTAFF\nMARION SANGSTE\nji ASSISTANT EDITOR. I\nf _\nMARION HAMILTON />'OJrRDlt\^\ntASSISTANT EDITOR. Pl\"\nBy E. N. B.\nTHE \"Totem\" staff, secreted in its basement retreat, \"far from the\nmadding crowd,\" has remained in the ambush of anonymity except\nfor occasional desperate forays in quest of late write-ups and photos.\nDoris Barton, editor, has preserved a cheerful equanimity and a\nwillingness to conquer further editorial fields in spite of dealings with\na Students' Council afflicted with \"financial stringency,\" and with an\napparently vapid and hopelessly sentimental senior class.\nUpon Rosemary Winslow, efficient and hard working, fell the brunt\nof correcting enigmatic and futile write-ups and assisting the Editor at\nall times. Much of the credit for the finished product is due to her.\nIsabel Bescoby, despite harassing duties and distractions maintained\nan outward calm during crises and was a tower of strength throughout.\nThe sport department has been in charge of Marion Sangster whose\nbreezy humour and aggressive tactics have smoothed out many difficulties between rival athletic clubs warring for \"space.\"\nMarion Hamilton valiantly tried to live down a reputation for\nshyness but finally accepted defeat when she failed to muster courage to\napproach the Editor-in-Chief for his late write-up.\nf 122} ,-*y ;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ' \"\nPUBLICATIONS\nMANAGEMENT\n1930\nUNIVERSITY OF\nD PRICE\nNMANAOER.\n1931\nJACK TURVEY\nADVERTISINO 4MWER I\nBRITISH COLUMBIA - J 1\nALBERT LAKE*\nADVERTISING ASSISTANT\nA.KENNEDY\nADVERTISING AMP6T/VIT\n1II \HE business depression has not hindered another successful year for\n-\"- the business management of the Publications Board. In fact everything shows symptoms of an extremely good year\u00E2\u0080\u0094even the budget.\nJohn Fox, the efficient Business Manager, has never been known to\nlose his poise even when harrassed on one side by strong-minded editors,\nand threatened on the other side by thrifty councillors. At all times he\nhas carried on his work serenely oblivious of minor disturbances, maintaining a cheerful calm above all journalistic storms.\nJack Turvey, Advertising Manager, has been invaluable in \"scaring\nup\" timid advertisers. His big worry, however, has been the inevitable\ndummy. Ably assisting Jack, and showing much promise of future\nsuccess, are Alexander Kennedy and Albert Lake.\nReginald Price, aided by Albert Lake, has been an efficient Circulation Manager. They have kept the paper moving and appeased annoyed\nsubscribers most successfully.\nColin Cole and Millard Alexander have carried on ably the apparently insignificant but highly important job of \"copy chasing.\"\niN3jg>ii\n[123] THE TOTEM^r^\nThe Publications Board\n(Continued from Page One Hundred and Twenty-one)\nEdgar assumes a manner of brutal frankness that makes his assistants\nrealize that college journalism is no joke.\nHimie Koshevoy, the insouciant and dapper news manager, shepherds a large flock of respectful reporters. He has his finger on the pulse\nof university life and never misses a heart-throb. Instruction of cub\nreporters forms a second part of his job. How many future eminent\njournalists have received their training from Himie will never be known.\nThe sports editor, Malcolm McGregor, is rumoured to be a soccer\nfan. A man of many talents, he fills his writings with vocabulary of\njournalism that pains the editor-in-chief, writes theses during \"Pub\"\nmeetings, eats his lunch at 10 a.m. or earlier, loudly defends the rights of\nthe sport page or the Soccer Club and assumes statuesque contortions\nmeant to symbolize adoration when speaking to lady editors.\nFrances Lucas, with M. Freeman as assistant, is in charge of literary\nsupplements and other outbreaks of the muse. Her relaxation from\nserious duty takes the form of writing a chamelionic column known as\n\"Fun and Fundamentals.\" In conjunction with the Letters Club, the\nliterary staff published a chapbook of student verse, the first to appear\nsince 1922.\nBunny Pound, feature editor, has the difficult task of examining\nefforts of campus humourists. Under her supervision Muck-a-muck\nstill continues to be the most popular part of the paper.\nAssociate editors are four in number. Nick Mussallem reformed\nand resigned from the \"Pub\" after Christmas, though still haunting the\noffice between lectures. An adept writer of incisive head-lines, he is\nnever content until he finds the precise word needed. Kay Murray is a\nquiet and efficient worker, forming a contrast to other argumentative\nmembers. Afflicted with the additional duties of exchange editor, she\nkeeps the students in touch with universities throughout the continent.\nMargaret Creelman is another hard worker on the Tuesday edition,\nwith head writing and proof-reading as her chief bane. Mairi Dingwall\nis second in command for the Friday issue, and has stepped into big-time\nstuff with the special Arts '32 Stadium Supplement.\nFive assistant editors, Mollie Jordan, R. Harcourt, Art McKenzie,\nCecilia Long and Cecil Brennan, have worked hard at the print-shop\ngaining experience for higher positions next year. Cecilia Long relieved\nthe exchange editor in the second term.\nThe sport department, that gang of radicals who fight obstreperously for independence, includes J. W. Lee, Guthrie Hamlin and Olive\n(Continued on Page One Hundred and Forty-one)\nI 124] CLUBS AND\nSOCIETIES {'\"1 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0IMM|JII.IH| | ll.li.. i i M .un \"^^^ \" \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ' ^J* \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0' ' tU\nThe Literary and Scientific Executive\nTHE Literary and Scientific Executive, whose function it is to act\nas intermediary between the Students' Council and the various clubs\non the campus, has devoted most of its time this year to furthering the\ninterests of the Musical Society, the Players' Club and the Debating\nUnion, the three major organizations, represented by their presidents,\non this Executive.\nThe Executive presented to the student body a series of noon-hour\nlectures, featuring visitors and others of note in the City, including\nProfessor Micklem, who gave an address and acted as critic at a debate\nsponsored by the Debating Union; Miss Hemminway-Jones, who gave\nus an insight into student life in Latin-America; Professor H. F. Angus,\nwho spoke on the Pan-Pacific Conference and its problems, and Mr.\nRoafe.\nUnder the auspices of this Executive, Kenneth Ross, assisted by\nMiss Marion Capp, contralto, and several of his pupils, presented a\nrecital, the proceeds of which went to the Stadium Fund.\n*4Sj$ya\nThe Mathematics Club\nTHE University Session, 1930-31, witnessed the re-organization of the\nMathematics Club from an open to a closed society limited to twenty-\nfive members. This move has proved highly beneficial judging by the\nincreased interest shown by all concerned. The prime motive of the\nClub is to widen the knowledge of the subject to the student by the\npresentation and discussion of papers on extra-curricular topics.\nIn spite of Mr. Bertrand Russell's assertion that in Mathematics we\nnever know what we are talking about, the speakers this year have\npresented their papers in a capable and highly interesting manner. The\nfollowing are included: Dr. F. S. Nowlan, \"The Meaning of Mathematics;\" Mr. F. Brand, \"The Development of Rigour in Analysis;\" Mr.\nCuthbert Webber, \"Squaring the Circle;\" Miss Jean Fisher, \"Through\nAlgebraic Number Fields;\" Mr. D. Murdoch, \"History of Japanese\nMathematics;\" Mr. B. Poole, \"Primitive Idempotent Elements of a Total\nMatrix.\"\nThe executive for the year consisted of: Honorary President, Dr.\nBuchanan; Honorary Vice-Presidents, Dr. Nowlan, Mr. Richardson, Mr.\nF. Brand; President, Nelson Allen; Vice-President, Frank Waites; Secretary, Margaret Allan.\nI 127] Chemistry Society\nHPHE Chemistry Society is one of the oldest student organizations on\n-*- the campus, dating back to 1916. Originally formed for the purpose of arousing interest in topics of a general scientific nature, it has,\nsince the advent of clubs in other sciences, devoted its attention exclusively to chemistry.\nContinuing the tradition of the past, \"closed\" and \"open\" meetings\nwere held alternately every two weeks, the former being restricted to\nthose taking higher chemistry courses, while anyone interested was\nwelcomed at the latter.\nThe first open meeting took the form of a historical competition\non the naming of famous chemists, under the direction of Dr. R. H.\nClark. Other meetings were addressed by Mr. Rees on \"Gasoline\u00E2\u0080\u0094Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow;\" Dr. Ure on \"The Chemistry of Photography;\" and Dr. Archibald on \"Vanadium.\" At the closed meetings,\npapers were read by the members on widely different phases of chemistry,\nrefreshments were served and the evenings concluded with music.\nThe Society was unfortunate in losing its president, Mr. Desmond\nBeall, through illness early in the session. The executive for the remainder\nof the year consisted of: Honorary President, Dr. Archibald; President,\nJack Young; Vice-President, Dorothy Bruce; Secretary, Lyle Swain;\nTreasurer, Don MacLaurin.\nThe Chess Club\nTHE Chess Club, although lacking some of its best players, has nevertheless had a busy and successful year. New equipment, including\nsets, magazines, a chest and tables, has been secured and the club-room in\nthe Gym is now completely furnished.\nGreat enthusiasm has been shown in tournaments. A lightning\ntournament was won jointly by McCulloch and Olund. The handicap,\nmain event of the first term, was won by Olund who defeated Fordyce\nin the finals. The \"Miniature\" Chess tournament was also won by Olund,\nwith Bischoff a close second. These are being followed by the Spring\nChampionship which is divided into major and minor sections. Likely\naspirants for the crown are Pilkington, champion of former years;\nHenniger, Bischoff and Olund. Also, matches in Fairy, Give-away and\nother unorthodox forms of chess are being played.\nThe officers of the Club are: President, W. Henniger; Vice-President and Match Captain, E. Olund; Secretary-Treasurer, Art McCulloch;\nBoards Committee, P. Parker and G. Palmer.\nI 128] IK. '^Jjiui'^^^\nThe Literary Forum\nHP HE Literary Forum is a club which now takes the place of the\n-\"- former Women's Literary Society. It was formed in the spring of\n1930 and has a membership of thirty. It is the only club of its kind on\nthe campus which is open to women of all years. At the meetings which\nare held once every two weeks, with one or two social meetings a year,\ncriticisms of plays, books, or authors of contemporary interest, speeches\nand debates are presented.\nThus far the first year of the Literary Forum has been an energetic\none. In accordance with its aims literary topics have been discussed and\na talk was given on correct parliamentary procedure. The last meeting\nof the fall term was held in the evening at which a play of George\nBernard Shaw's was read.\nAt Hi-Jinks the members of the Forum sang their own song and\npresented a skit. A strenuous programme for the spring term\u00E2\u0080\u0094the story\nof an opera\u00E2\u0080\u0094is now being arranged.\nHere's wishing the Literary Forum all success, as it establishes itself\non the campus!\niN^Vii\nThe Social Science Club\n[\"EMBERS of the Social Science Club continued to explore the\nramifications of economic theory throughout the session. A series\nof successful meetings brought before the Club speakers from outside\nthe University who dealt with subjects ranging from labour problems to\ngovernmental policy.\nThe practice of devoting a number of the meetings to student\npapers was reintroduced this year. The benefit from the student point\nof view was the discussions which were productive of unstinted criticism\nand repartee. Informal discussion groups of the members, usually held\ndown town, were continued and proved very popular.\nDue to the fact that a larger proportion than usual of this year's\nmembership were M.A. students, an unusually large number of new\nmembers were voted in at the end of the year to fill the gaps left by this\nyear's graduates.\nThe executive for the current year included: Honorary President,\nProfessor J. Friend Day; President, N. Mussallem; Vice-President, R.\nShaneman; Secretary-Treasurer, Miss I. Wilson.\nI 129] La Causerie\nTHE session 1930-31 has been a most interesting and profitable one for\nthe members of La Causierie. Soirees were held fortnightly at the\nhomes of the students. The aim of this Club is the improvement of\nFrench pronunciation, greater fluency in conversation, and a stimulation\nof interest in French usage and society.\nProgrammes consisted mainly of readings, conversational games,\ngroup singing and charades. Instructive talks were kindly given by\nvarious members of the faculty, who enlightened the Club on such subjects as, \"Student Life in the Sorbonne,\" \"French Femininism,\" and\n\"Travels Through the South of France.\" This year's programme also\nincludes an \"original contributions night,\" in which all members will\ntake part. During that evening solos and musical numbers will be\nrehearsed.\nThe Club owes much of its success to the enthusiasm of former\nmembers who are welcomed at all meetings.\nOfficers for the year were: Honorary President, Mme. Darlington;\nPresident, Dorothy Patmore; Secretary, Louise Poole; Treasurer, Betty\nAllen.\niN^gyn\nThe Classics Club\nTHE Classics Club is an organization formed some years ago to provide a medium for students in classics to discuss their opinions and\ngive their views on subjects of interest concerning the ancient world,\nGreek and Roman.\nThe Club has met regularly this year at the homes of members and\nvery often professors, and a series of papers was prepared by the personnel\nof the society. The subjects boasted a wide range, including \"Romaniza-\ntion of Britain,\" \"Roman Remains in Britain,\" \"Caelius Rufus and\nCicero,\" \"Roman Baths,\" \"Roman Sports,\" \"Greek Lyric Poetry,\" \"Greek\nIdyllic Poetry,\" \"Cicero and Tiro,\" \"Books and Writing,\" \"Classical\nManuscripts,\" \"Roman Women,\" and \"Virgil Through the Ages,\" the\nlatter by Professor Robertson in honour of Virgil's 2,000th anniversary.\nThe Executive included Professor Robertson, Ronald Lowe, Kathleen\nCummings, Robert Yerburgh, Malcolm McGregor and Carol Sellars.\nf 130} H5 1 ig| ^^\u00E2\u0080\u0094 lJN>VtnSITY\"BfilTlSH COLUMBIA^\nThe Biological Discussion Club\nHPHE Biological Discussion Club has had a singularly successful and\n-\"- interesting year. A number of papers have been read, dealing with\nsummer research of faculty and undergraduate members.\nProfessor G. J. Spencer addressed the opening meeting, speaking on\n\"Grasshopper Control Investigators in the Chilcotin.\" The second meeting coincided with a lecture on \"Sterilization of the Criminal and Feeble\nMinded,\" given at the Vancouver Institute. The regular meeting of the\nClub was postponed and members attended the Institute meeting. Ian\nMcTaggart-Cowan gave the next paper, entitled \"A Naturalist in the\nCanadian Rockies,\" and exhibited specimens of animals collected during\nthe summer. Professor J. Davidson addressed an interested audience on\n\"The Species Concept, Echoes of the Botanical and Horticultural Congress,\" showing slides of beauty spots visited on a trip to the \"Old\nCountry.\"\nThe following papers have been arranged for the Spring Term: Mr.\nHugh Leech, \"Some Summer Experiments;\" Ian McTaggart-Cowan,\n\"Lantern Slides of Jasper and Banff National Parks;\" Herbert Glover,\n\"The Satin Moth in British Columbia;\" Miss Mollie Holliday, \"Some\nStructures of Plants in Relation to Their Environment;\" Alfred Elliot,\n\"Aenemia.\"\nThe Executive is as follows: Honorary President, Dr. C. McLean\nFraser; President, Ian McTaggart-Cowan; Vice-President, Miss Ruth\nFields; Secretary-Treasurer, Miss Dorothy Bruce; Curator, Herbert\nGlover.\nif^Sp^i\nThe G. M. Dawson Discussion Club\n^HE Geological Discussion Club continued this session with its programme of meetings featuring outside as well as student speakers.\nThe tendency this year is to have speakers on widely varying subjects, to make the meetings different from class-room lectures.\nThe honorary members have, as in the past, offered their homes\nfor the club meetings.\nThe executive for the 1930-31 session was: Honorary President,\nDr. T. C. Phemister; President, Ed. Loritt; Secretary-Treasurer, Vladimir\nOkulitch.\n{nil International Relations Club\nWITH the object of promoting interest in and the study of International Relations, this Club was founded in January, 1930, under\nthe auspices of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Since\nthat time, with steadily increasing membership, the Club has carried out\na programme of exceptional interest.\nThe first term was devoted to a study of the problems of Naval\nDisarmament. Miss Mary Craif McGeachy, of Geneva, was one of the\nprincipal speakers.\nThe autumn term was featured by reviews of books in the club\nlibrary, and addresses by Rev. G. O. Fallis and Miss Amy Hemminway\nJones, National Executive Secretary. A delegate attended the All Day\nConference on Peace in November, and three members of the Club\ntravelled to Reed College, Portland, as part of the U.B.C. delegation to\nthe Northwest Student International Conference.\nRecently the Club became a member of the newly-inaugurated\nCanadian Universities League of Nations Society. As a means of promoting closer connection between U.B.C. and other Canadian Universities, the Club regards this as a valuable link.\nThe executive for 1931 includes John Sumner, Bill Roper, Margaret\nBlack, Frances Milligan, and Herbert Gallagher. Tom Barnett, Helen\nBoutilier, Leonard A. Wrinch, Freda Lasser and James Gibson presided\nover the Club's activities during 1930.\nir^g^jl\nThe Menorah Society\nTHE Menorah Society had a very successful year, during which the\nintellectual activities of the organization were stressed. The year\nopened with a social evening at the home of Miss B. Sugarman. At the\nfollowing meetings papers were read by Michael Turner on \"Eugenics of\nthe Jew;\" Paul Pinsky on \"The Economic and Political Conditions of\nWorld Jewry;\" David Rome on \"A. D. Gordon, Vladimir Jakontinsky,\nand Joseph Trumpeldon;\" David A. Freeman on \"Effects of the Arab\nRiots in Palestine;\" Dr. Jacob Brety on \"Chicken Paralysis;\" and George\nTurner on \"The Gentile and Zionism.\" A debate is being arranged at the\ntime of writing with the British Trumpeldon. The executive for the\nyear consisted of: President, H. Koshevoy; Vice-President, Miss Vera\nPeters; Secretary, David A. Freeman; Treasurer, Paul Pinsky; Reporter,\nDavid Rome.\nI \u00C2\u00BB2l iimffJ^!mi..i..miJiiiJi-Mi.i.^^^^ ii . \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ^Uf-'-\"- rT\u00E2\u0084\u00A2?^\nThe Law Club\n'TPHE Law Club entered upon its career as a recognized University\n-\"- organization in the Spring Term of '30. Its objects included the\npromotion of the study of jurisprudence in the University, and the\ndetermination to work for the attainment of a Law Faculty here.\nProfessor Angus accepted the office of Honorary President, and\ncontributed a great deal by his advice and suggestions in the establishment\nof the Club.\nThe officers of the Club for the year were: President, Frank C. Hall;\nVice-President, Nicholas Mussalem; Secretary-Treasurer, Robert L.\nPurves.\nThe only change in the next year's executive was the election of\nMr. Tupper as honorary president.\nMock-trials, as part of the regular proceedings, have this year proved\nan attraction at the meetings.\nMr. R. M. Macdonald, the Dean of the Law School in Vancouver,\nand Judge Fisher have given very interesting addresses to the Club, while\nseveral other prominent legal men in the City are scheduled to give\naddresses before the Term closes.\nGraduation will find several members entering the legal world, so\nthe Club looks forward to having the benefit of alumni interest and\nadvice.\nIN5$3*I\nThe Physics Club\nHPHE Physics Club was organized two years ago for the purpose of\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*- interesting students in current developments in Physical Science.\nTo this end open meetings are held every second Wednesday, when students hear short expositions on the results of some recent research. Each\npaper is usually followed by a general discussion in which the speaker\nanswers questions asked by the audience. Most of the programmes are\nprovided by students who are allowed to demonstrate apparatus of their\nown construction. A student who thus takes an active part in the proceedings of the Club obviously benefits from this experience in public\nspeaking, while his audience learns something of interest and value.\nThe executive for the session consisted of: Honorary President,\nDr. Hebb; Honorary Vice-President, Dr. Shrum; President, M. H.\nHebb; Vice-President, H. Parker; Secretary-Treasurer, S. Lipson.\nfl33] The Student Christian Movement\nHPHE Student Christian Movement aims to create a fellowship of those\n-\"- students of varying opinions who are searching for a comprehensive\nview of life and of those willing to test the conviction that in Jesus Christ\nis found the means to the full realization of life.\nThrough the National Movement it is linked with the World\nStudent Christian Federation with its affiliations in thirty countries.\nThis year, local activities have included five study groups, two\nseries of noon lectures, several week-end retreats at Copper Cove, with\na special three-day conference at Thanksgiving; an active discussion of\nthe \"Aim and Basis;\" and numerous special meetings.\nSummer groups proved a successful innovation, while representatives attended six conferences, national and international.\nMiss Gertrude Rutherford, Associate National Secretary; Dr. Glover\nand Mr. C. F. Angus from England; Mr. Micklem of Queen's; Mr.\nCumming of the S.V.M. and Dr. Kotchnig of the I.S.S. have been\nwelcome visitors.\nInterested students are now looking forward to the Spring Camp\nand the projected Pacific Area Conference for Students to be held in\nVancouver in June with the Canadian National Movement as host.\nThe executive, since the retirement of Tom Barnett, has been:\nPresident, Katherine Hockin; Vice-President, Eric Kelly; Secretary, Mary\nSadler; Treasurer, Fred Jakeway; Publicity, Idele Wilson; Camp, Patrick\nMcTaggart-Cowan.\nThe Household Science Club\nA DEPARTMENT of Household Science is urgently needed at the University of British Columbia. To this end the Household Science\nClub was organized in 1929, by a group of girls who, finding that the\nfirst two years of the course were being given, have registered as Household Science students, and are earnestly hoping that they will be able to\ncomplete this course in their own University. At the present time, the\nClub has a membership of thirty.\nThe executive consists of Honorary President, Dean Bollert; President, Margaret I. Putnam; Vice-President, Mary Darnborough; Secretary-Treasurer, Helen Lowe.\nLast fall the Club members took advantage of Home-Coming week\nto present an appeal for an interest in the establishment of this course\u00E2\u0080\u0094a\nrather unusual number on the programme.\nff 134]| fc*H.\" jgfeiAll\nMat i^iilk t^J\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u0094^j^SM\nThe Varsity Christian Union\nHPHE V.C.U. reviews with gratitude the progress made during the past\n-\"- year. The purpose of the Union has been fulfilled, a keen activity\non the part of every member has been shown, and the membership has\ngreatly increased.\nThe V. C. U. is a member of the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship\nof Canada, a chapter of the League of Evangelical Students of America,\nand is affiiliated with the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship of the\nBritish Isles, and with the Fellowship in Australia and New Zealand.\nDuring the session, pins, a notice-board, and a library were secured.\nA conference was held with the University of Washington; Noel F.\nPalmer, General Secretary for Canada, and Dr. H. Guiness, of Cambridge,\nwere present for a series of week-end meetings; several church services\nwere conducted, and a graduate group was formed. Also, several dinners\nand socials were held.\nThe executive consisted of: President, Paul Campbell; Vice-President, Catherine Clibborn; Secretary, James Wilson; Librarian, Kathleen\nWard; Advertising Secretary, David Rice.\nThe Philosophy Discussion Club\nHPHE Philosophy Discussion Club has had a very encouraging year\n-*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 with exceptional enthusiasm over the writing of papers. Inaugurated\nlast year, the policy of devoting the evenings to student papers has been\nsuccessfully considered. Under the able guidance of Professor Henderson\na beginning has been made in student criticism and formal discussion.\nArrangements have also been made to have the papers of the Club catalogued in the University Library.\nMeetings have been held at the homes of professors and students\nwith the exception of one gathering, which was a most enjoyable banquet,\nheld at Union College.\nThe papers covered a wide range of subjects. They were read by\nthe following members: Alice Bailey, Verna Galloway, Frances Milligan,\nRobert Brookes, Cicely Hunt, Marjorie Dimmock and Jack Anderson.\nThese papers were critized by Olive Selfe, Art Woolner, Evelyn Haines,\nPeggy Cornish, Catherine Fish, Althea Banfield and Ethel McDowell.\nExecutive: Honorary President, Dr. H. T. J. Coleman; President,\nMyra Lockhart; Vice-President, Bill Selder; Secretary-Treasurer, Ethel\nMcDowell.\nI I\" J The Agricultural Club\nHPHE Agricultural Club has completed another active year. It has\n-\"- succeeded in arousing a keen enthusiasm among the students in the\ndiscussion of current agricultural problems. This has been possible\nthrough the evening meetings at which the students have obtained a\ncloser association with the professors of all departments of the faculty.\nThe noon-hour meetings fostered by the Club were particularly\nsuccessful this year. At these meetings outside speakers spoke on such\npresent-day problems as \"The Wheat Situation of Canada\" and \"The\nEpidemology of Tuberculosis.\" The oratorical contest was a feature of\nthe Spring term.\nThe annual trip to Agassiz was held early in March, and the enthusiasm displayed showed that it is still one of the most popular attractions\nof the year. The programme for the day consisted of a livestock judging competition and an inspection of the farm. The year's activities\nwere closed by the annual Livestock Banquet where the winners of the\noratorical contest and the judging competition received their rewards.\nThe executive for the year 1930-31 consisted of: Honorary President, Prof. H. R. Hare; President, Tom Leach; Secretary-Treasurer,\nWilson Henderson; Manager of Evening Meetings, Bill Osborne;\nManager of Outside Speakers, Bill Vrooman; Manager of Debates, Bill\nWhimster.\nL'Alouette\nL'ALOUETTE has had for its aim this year, the promotion of interest\nin the life and literature of France, as well as the encouragement of\ngreater fluency in the French tongue. The fortnightly meetings were held\nat the homes of various members and the programmes have consisted of\nconversation, games, folk-songs, scenes from Moliere's comedies and\nsketches of twentieth century French writers. Two very interesting\nevenings were the \"La Fontaine Soiree\" at the home of Madame Guiness,\nand the informal tea at Le Restaurant Francais.\nThe members of the Club wish to express their gratitude to Miss\nGrieg for her untiring efforts in the interests of the Club, to the hostesses\nwhose hospitality has added so much to the success of the meetings, and\nto Miss Norah Haddock, Mr. Arthur Beattie, and Mr. Abner Poole,\nformer officers, for their assistance.\nThe executive for\nthe\nyear included:\nHonorary\nPresident,\nMiss\nTanet T. Grieg;\nPresident\n;, Miss Margaret Creelman; Vice-President,\nMiss\nMargaret Rath\nie; Secretary,\nMiss Marion\nMcLellan;\nTreasurer,\nMiss\nVera Tipping.\n[\u00C2\u00AB3\u00C2\u00AB1 KMfct,\n|\u00C2\u00BB^r%\u00C2\u00BB4< i\nIJNlVCRSlTY^PRITlSfrCOLllMBiA^\nThe Forest Club\nTHE Forest Club has for its purpose the encouragement of interest in\nForestry within the University, and the strengthening of all outside\nconnection with Forestry and the Lumber Industry.\nThe executive for 1930-31 was: Honorary President, Prof. F. M.\nKnapps; President, T. D. Groves; Vice-President, G. R. W. Nixon; Secretary-Treasurer, W. Hall; Alumni Representative, J. H. Jenkins.\nThe Club was indeed fortunate this year in having the opportunity\nto hear addresses by the following speakers: J. G. C. Morgan, B. C.\nManager Clyde Iron Works; F. McVickar, the Capilano Timber Co.;\nR. V. Stuart, Secretary-Manager, B.C. Loggers Association; J. H. McDonald, Manager B. C. Manufacturing Co.; R. C. St. Clair, Chief\nForester, Vancouver District; T. Wilkinson, Secretary-Manager, B. C.\nLumber and Shingle Manufacturers' Association; J. H. Jenkins, the\nDominion Forest Products Laboratory; Dr. P. M. Barr, Head of the\nResearch Department, B. C. Forest Branch; W. Johnson, Assistant Manager Barnet Lumber Co.\nThe field trip, to visit logging operations, is planned for Campbell\nRiver this year.\nThe Forest Club's Annual will be published again in March.\nThe Historical Society\nTHIS year the Historical Society has heard papers on \"Imperialism,\"\nchiefly in relation to the British Empire. A general introduction to\nthe subject was given by Leonard Wrinch in his paper on \"The History of\nImperialism.\" Imperialism in Egypt and in the Irish Free State were\nthen discussed by Idele Wilson and Freda Lasser.\nDuring the second term of the session two papers were read dealing\nwith the effect of British Imperialism in the different parts of the\nEmpire. In the first, Talosa Timmins discussed the \"Social, Political\nand Economic Aspects of the Race Problem in South Africa,\" and in\nthe second, Jean Fowler dealt with \"Ghandi,\" the leader of the Nationalist\nmovement in India. The trend of imperialism in the British Empire at\nthe present time was then considered by Leo Gansner in a paper on the\nImperial Conference of 1930. In the concluding paper of the year, Jean\nMargolis outlined the rise and fall of imperialism in Russia.\nThe executive for the year was: Honorary President, Professor\nA. C. Cooke; President, Leonard Wrinch; Vice-President, Helen Bou-\ntilier; Secretary-Treasurer, Talosa Timmins.\n1137 I The Letters Club\nHPHE Letters Club, which is formed for the purpose of encouraging\n-\"- \"the study of English as a joy,\" has completed a very successful year.\nNine papers were read. The first was by Jean Telford, who gave a\ncharming sketch of the Italian Picendello. The work of the Indian philosopher, Rabindrinath Tagore, was treated by Frank McKenzie in a\nmanner that showed both comprehension and appreciation. Betty Moore\nread an interesting and humorous paper on the detective novels of\nS. S. Van Dine, in which she revealed herself as a sleuth of no mean\nability. A most sympathetic study of Mary Webb by Patricia Newlands\nwas much appreciated. Then came Original Contributions evening;\nthe efforts, though occasioning much laughter, were often very admirable\nand the critic pronounced the meeting one of the most successful he had\nattended.\nThe first paper of the second term went back to the Victorian Age\nwhen Mavis Holloway told us something of the work of Algernon Charles\nSwinburne. Dick Lendrum's paper on W. H. Davies was most enjoyable.\nIdele Wilson, in a very cleverly written paper, gave a clear sketch of\nClarence Mangan. Ronald Grantham, in his sketch of Bliss Carman,\nwent beyond even the high standard we set for the editor of the\n\"Ubyssey.\" A delightful year was brought to a fitting close with Don\nMcDiarmid's paper on Max Beerbohm.\nOfficers of the Club were: Honorary President, Mr. Larsen; Critic,\nDr. Walker; Archivist, Mr. Haweis; President, Dick Lendrum, Secretary-Treasurer, Mavis Halloway.\nIN^P^I\nThe Radio Club\nTHE Radio Club has as its objects to promote an interest in radio communication and experimental work and to extend the knowledge of\nthe principles of radio by individual and collective research.\nThe Club commenced work this year where it concluded last Spring,\nthe meetings taking the form of papers and discussions. A trip to one\nof the city stations was organized in the Spring term, the members and\ntheir friends learning much about a modern radio station.\nThe executive for the past year was as follows: Honorary President,\nDr. H. Vickers; President, T. Mouat; Vice-President, W. McRae; Secretary, R. Retallack; Treasurer, Douglas James.\n138 | <\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"'\"--)\ntJN iVtRSITY ^BRITISH tOLIJMBIA^^\nDer Deutsche Verein\nTHE German Club has had a highly successful year. The members\nhave shown a keen interest, and the programmes have been consistently of the highest quality. Talks of great interest and usefulness\nhave been given by members of the Modern Language Department and\nothers, chief among the subjects of which may be mentioned: the Ober-\nammergan Passion Play, Albrecht Durer, Germany's great artist of the\nRenaissance, the unusual but fascinating subject of Iceland and Holland.\nTrips have been made, through the medium of the slide-lantern to many\ncountries in Europe, and particularly through beautiful Germany. Last\nbut not least must be mentioned the splendid musical programmes, featuring the works of the great masters of Germany. Probably few organizations on the campus combine entertainment of the highest order and\nreal instruction to such an extent as does Der Deutsche Verein.\nThe credit for the Club's success must go entirely to the Honorary\nExecutive: Dr. I. Maclnnis, Mrs. R. I. Roys, and Miss J. Hallamore.\nThanks must be rendered to those who have so kindly placed their homes\nat the disposal of the Club or who have otherwise helped in a concrete\nway.\nThe Executive for the year was as follows: President, W. T. E.\nKennett; Vice-President, Hermann Bischoff; Secretary-Treasurer, Miss\nFreda Lasser.\nThe Art Club\nTHE programme of the Art Club for this year, the third of its existence, has been marked by a study of the arts of various countries\nrather than by any actual work. The Club was almost inactive during\nthe first term, but commenced a series of fortnightly evening studies,\nsoon after the New Year. These meetings, held at various homes, were\nopen to any students or members of the faculty who were interested.\nMr. Ridington gave a very interesting paper on \"Canadian Art and\nArtists\" at his home late in January. He traced the development of\nCanadian Art up to the present day, illustrating his paper with about\nsixty lantern slides of paintings, by Canadian artists, now hanging in\neastern art galleries. Other subjects treated by the Club this term included Dutch Painting and Early American Indian Art.\nThe executive of the Club this year includes: Honorary President,\nJ. Ridington; President, Ronald Russell; Vice-President, Grace Adams;\nSecretary-Treasurer, Stanley McLean.\nif 139 1 ;J1I1'ENlvk^w \"a\nThe Society of Thoth\nTHE Society of Thoth again emerged into the limelight this year with\nits annual Homecoming Ballet. This session's offering of the Royal\nEgyptian Ballet was a new rendition of the classical legend, \"The Burning of Troy.\" Nineteen scribes performed in a terpischorean interpretation of the drama, a chorus of Greeks, Trojans and hand-maidens\nassisting the Homeric figures of the ancient myth. An innovation was\nan orchestra of scribes.\nInitiations in the Spring term provided amusement and exercise for\nthe old-timers and a fund of reminiscences for the neophytes.\nThe Stadium Fund Campaign inspired grandiose ambitions of downtown performances, but procrastination and disapproval on the part of\nthe Students' Council put an end to the plans.\nCampus history was made when four hardy swimmers plumbed the\ndepths of the Lily Pond for the aid of the Stadium Fund, to the amusement of the multitude and the horror of the Alma Mater officials for the\nseason.\nThe executive included: Grand Scribe, J. F. Fisher; Second Scribe,\nW. G. Smith; Keeper of the Baksheesh, N. Mussallem; Scribe of the\nPapyrus, A. G. McCulloch.\nLa Canadienne\nDURING the 1930-31 session, twenty interested and ambitious students of French have been improving their conversation at the\nregular fortnightly meetings of La Canadienne.\nThe \"raison d'etre\" of this active organization is the desire of its\nmembers to attain facility in the use of conversational French, and to get\nan insight into the customs, ideas, songs, etc., of the French people.\nIn the furtherance of these aims meetings have been held every two\nweeks throughout the session, and varied and interesting programmes\nhave been presented. Songs, games, a music night, dramatics night,\npoetry night and addresses by Faculty members, have been enjoyed by all.\nThe members wish to extend their thanks to those who have so\nkindly lent their homes, or in any other way contributed to the success\nof the Society during the year.\nThe Executive for 1930-31 was: Honorary President, Prof. E. E.\nDelavault; President, Mary Herbison; Vice-President, Margaret Large;\nSecretary, Reginald C. Price; Treasurer, Marion Hamilton.\n{140] IJNlVtRSITYrBR\u00C2\u00BBTlMrCtfti)MBli|^l\nThe Engineering Institute of Canada\nHPHE objects of the Student Section at U.B.C. are the advancement\n-\"- of practical engineering knowledge among its members, the development of a professional interest on the part of those who are going to\nbecome engineers, and to impress upon the students the advantages\nderived to themselves and to the profession by being members of an\norganized society.\nTo this end the executive arranges weekly noon-hour talks, where\nqualified speakers are heard representing all branches of engineering.\nThe meetings are open to all, and are frequently illustrated with slides\nor films.\nIn addition the Section holds a Student Night, where papers are\ndelivered by members on engineering subjects. The papers delivered at\nthis meeting may be entered in competition for the prizes offered to\nstudents or juniors by the Headquarters of the Engineering Institute.\nAn annual dinner also is held to promote closer relationship between\nstudents and practising engineers.\nTo give an insight into the actual practice in engineering, field trips\nare taken to places of interest in or around Vancouver. These included\nthe Vulcan Engineering Works, the Ruskin Power Development, the\nengine room of the Empress of Japan, and the Vancouver Creosoting Co.\nThe Publications Board\n(Continued from Page One Hundred and Twenty-four)\nSelfe. Their common characteristic is a weird sports vocabulary that\npasses all comprehension.\nPictorial comment is in the hands of W. Tavender, official cartoonist,\nwhose pointed drawings add pungency to the \"Ubyssey's\" editorial\npolicy.\nAs for reporters, their name is legion. Outstanding writers have\nbeen Norman Hacking, J. I. McDougall, Kay Greenwood, E. Costain,\nJohn Dauphinee and E. N. Akerley. Others doing good work are Don\nDavidson, R. L. Malkin, Day Washington, B. Jackson, Jeanne Butorac,\nJ. Millar, St. John Madeley, Edith Mcintosh, Jean McDiarmid, Eleanor\nKillam, Jean Jamieson, Berna Martin, Dorothy Thompson, Anne Fulton,\nSidney Aqua, Kay Crosby, Tom How, Laurel Rowntree, N. Nemetz,\nE. H. King.\n[hi] 142] m-iM|\"iii 11.1.1- ..ii . ii.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 mi. i^^__^^ ^jj . ' ' M\nThe Musical Society\n\"The man who hath no music in himself\nIs fit for treason, strategems and spoils.\"\nrE have no hesitation in saying that 1931 has ended the most brilliant\nand triumphal year that the Musical Society has ever experienced.\nNot only has it once more supplied the musical wants of students, but\nventured into the field of Gilbert and Sullivan, and so successfully that\nthe ensuing years should see a different musical comedy every spring.\nThe Society was fortunate this year in possessing an abundance of\ntalent, and had it not been for this fortuitous state of affairs, productions\nof \"Pirates of Penzance\" would never have been possible. As it was, the\nopera was an overwhelming success, both financially and musically, and\nis a credit to C. Hadyn Williams, the conductor, and his organization.\nPrincipals of the cast were: Kay Reid as \"Mabel;\" McKay Ester as\n\"Frederic;\" Ian Douglas as the \"Pirate King;\" Robert Brooks as \"Major\nGeneral;\" Frank Snowsell as \"Sam,\" the Pirate Lieutenant; Betty Smith\nas \"Edith;\" Cathie Bridgman as \"Isabel;\" Alice Rowe as \"Kate;\" Gordon\nWilson as \"Sergeant of Police.\"\nDuring the fall term all effort was put forth into learning the\nchoruses and no attempt was made at casting. At Christmas the try-\nouts were held and at the opening of the spring term work went ahead\nwith production, with Edgar C. Smith, of the North Shore Operative\nSociety, as dramatic director. A great deal of credit is due Mr. Smith\nfor his untiring patience with the chorus and principals, and his ready wit\nsaved many a rehearsal from failure. When rehearsals are such that\nmembers are loathe to cease, you have an ideal organization, and such\nwas the case.\nDuring the year the activities of the Society were many and varied.\nNew members were welcomed at a reception in Killarney early in the\nfall term. At Homecoming, the Musical Society responded with a\ncollegiate version of the \"Pie-Eyed Piper\" which all averred was one of\nthe outstanding hits of the evening. The noon-hour recitals, which have\nalways been the bright spots in the school year, were the best that have\never been presented. Probably the two most entertaining were on\noccasions when the Home Gas Symphony Orchestra, under the direction\nof Calvin Winter, with Frank C. Anders, announcer, presented a programme of popular and semi-classical airs, and when the C.N.R.V. Salon\nOrchestra gave a magnificent recital of classical music, conducted by\nC. Haydn Williams, late in the spring term. Artists who appeared at\ndifferent times included Marjorie Cornell, pianiste; C. J. Cornfield,\nCharles Shaw, Ira Swartz, Mrs. F. Hodgson, Louise Stirk, Gladys Letroy,\nElfie Jussa and Muriel Farrel-Donnellan. Members of the Society who\nassisted on different occasions were: Harry Katznelson, promising violin -\n(Continucd on Page One Hundred and Forty-six)\nI 143] fcTOE^ftllEEfer\nid lj-\nf 144] fgL ^W1, ^-\u00E2\u0080\u0094 UNlVCRSITY-PniTiStrtOLUMBjA-^\nThe Players' Club\nTHIS year has been an outstanding one in Players' Club annals. At\nthe Christmas production not one but four plays written by students\nwere presented with the highest degree of success. The Spring play,\nwhich was pronounced brilliant by all who saw it, was a triumph for\nactors and director alike.\nThe Advisory Board which rendered its usual invaluable aid was\ncomposed of Professor F. C. Walker, Professor F. A. Lloyd, Mrs. James\nLawrence, and Professor F. G. C. Wood. The first two members directed\ntwo of the Christmas plays, Mr. Wood taking charge of the production\nof the Spring play. Much to the regret of the Club, Mrs. Lawrence was\nunable to take as active a part as usual this year, but we were fortunate in\nsecuring the services of Mrs. MacDougall, who directed another of the\nChristmas plays, Mrs. F. G. C. Wood producing the fourth.\nThe piece de resistance of the Christmas production was Sidney\nRisk's \"Fog.\" This gripping tragedy won the Players' Club prize for\nthe best undergraduate work submitted. The two characters making up\nthe cast were splendidly portrayed by Ernest Gilbert, Arts '31, and\nDrusilla Davis, Arts '34, and the play was notably directed by Mrs. Wood.\nSallie Carter, Arts '31, won honourable mention for \"Trees,\" the\ndrama with which the evening opened. She also took the leading part,\nthat of a farm girl whose love of beauty was starved and thwarted by\nher environment. Mary Darnbrough, Arts '33, did a nice piece of work\nas the old mother, while John Emerson, Arts '34, took the part of the\nfather. The play was directed by Professor E. A. Lloyd, ably assisted\nby Alfred Evans.\n\"Finesse,\" a comedy by Byron Edwards, Arts '30, also received\nhonourable mention. The cast was composed of Eleanor Turnbull,\nArts '34; Maudeen Farquar, Arts '34; Maurice Clements, Arts '31; R. I.\nKnight, Arts '33; Jack Ruttan, Arts '33; Tom Groves, Science '31.\nProfessor Walker directed the play.\n\"The Florist Shop,\" the fourth play of the evening, was directed\nby Mrs. Jack McDougall, Arts '24, who took the leading role the first\ntime the play was produced by the Players' Club. Marjorie Ellis, Arts\n'34, took the same part this Christmas. Others in the cast were Margaret\nSheppard, Arts '33; C. I. Taylor, Arts '32; F. P. Miller, Arts '34; and\nW. H. Cameron, Arts '33. Sydney Risk was the assistant producer.\nThe Spring play this year bore a marked contrast to \"Friend\nHannah,\" last season's production. \"The Young Idea,\" by Noel Coward,\nis one of the most brilliant comedies of this sophisticated modern dramatist. A feature of the production was the fact that the three leading\nwomen's roles were taken by first-year girls\u00E2\u0080\u0094the parts of Gerda, Jennifer\nand Cicely being played by Marjorie Ellis, Dorothy McKelvie, and Nancy\n(Continued on Page One Hundred and Forty-six)\nI 145] The Players' Club\n(Continued from Page One Hundred and Forty-five)\nSymes. The leading man's part was taken by W. H. Cameron. Other\nmembers making up a thoroughly satisfactory cast were Alfred Evans,\nAnn Ferguson, Chris Taylor, Betty Buckland, Ruth Bostock, and R. I.\nKnight. At the time of going to press, two of the major parts and\nseveral of the minor ones have not yet been assigned. St. John Madeley\nand H. Tull are still competing for Claud, while Archie Dick and Jack\nRuttan try for Hiram Walker. The places of a butler and a maid have\nnot yet been filled.\nThe Executive in charge during the year was made up of President,\nWinston A. Shilvock; Vice-President, Eileen Griffin; Secretary, Alice\nMorrow; Treasurer, James A. Gibson; Committee, St. John Madeley,\nDorothy Barrow, Archie Dick.\nThe Musical Society\n(Continued from Page One Hundred and Forty-three)\nist; Ian Douglas, baritone; Jean Black, pianiste; George Holland, accordionist; and Kay Reid, soprano.\nThe Music Committee, composed of Dr. McDonald, Mr. Williams,\nNelson Allen and Jean Fisher, were responsible for the choice of the\nopera and the arrangements of recitals.\nWe cannot conclude this write-up without the tribute to Mr.\nWilliams, conductor, and the moving force behind the Society. It is\ndifficult to convey with so mundane a vehicle as language the appreciation we hold for him and the place he occupies in the hearts of everyone\nof its members. Suffice it to say that were it not for his genius as a\nconductor and his effervescent personality the \"Pirates of Penzance\"\nwould have been a sorry performance. We sincerely hope that when\nnext spring comes around the baton of C. Hadyn Williams will be waving\nto the accompaniment of \"We Sail the Ocean Blue,\" or \"We Are Gentlemen of Japan\" or some other of the stirring choruses from the immortal\nGilbert and Sullivan operas.\nMembers of the Executive are as follows: Honorary President, Dr.\nMcDonald; President, Nelson Allen; Vice-President, Betty Smith; Secretaries, Dora Bush and Maysie Graham; Treasurer, Bob Brooks; Men's\nRepresentative, Bert Poole; Women's Representative, Tsyko Legero.\nMembers of the Opera Committee are as follows: Dramatic Department, Robert Brooks and Victoria Rendell; House Management, Bert\nWebber; Advertising, Jack Pearson and Ron Russell; Costuming, Ruth\nMcDonald; Property, Ev. Hurt; Stage, St. John Madeley.\nI 146] ^^_^_\nThe Debating Union\nHPHE Debating Union has successfully carried out during the past\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 year a series of open meetings at which various topics were discussed\nunder the leadership of two of the members chosen for each meeting.\nThis has materially aided in the carrying out of the aims of the Union\nin that it has permitted a good deal of general discussion by all those\ninterested in debating.\nThe executive for the year was: President, Jack Sargent; Vice-\nPresident, Milton Owen; Secretary, William Whimster; Debates Manager, Frank Christian.\nINTERCLASS DEBATES\nAt the time of writing the interclass debates are in progress. Thus\nfar it appears that they will meet with the great success which attended\nthose of last year.\nINTERCOLLEGIATE DEBATES\nSaskatchewan Debate\nW. Whimster E. Vance\nAlberta Debate\nJ. Sargent J. Guy\nW. U. D. L.: According to the schedule of the Western Universities\nDebating League, U.B.C. this year sent one team to Edmonton to meet\nthe University of Alberta, and engaged in debate with the University\nof Saskatchewan here at Vancouver. The resolution throughout the\nLeague was: \"That dominion status should be immediately granted to\nIndia.\"\nThe debate at home was successfully carried out before a large\naudience. Messrs. Earl Vance and William Whimster pitted their forensic skill against that of the team from Saskatchewan and only just\nmissed convincing the judges that B. C. should have won.\nMessrs. Jack Sargent and Jordan Guy travelled to the University of\n(Continued on Page One Hundred and Forty-eight)\nI 147] jLl.\n-kit.\n_\u00E2\u0080\u0094..... .: : ^\nThe Debating Union\nAlberta at Edmonton, and there engaged in a very close contest with\nthe home team. The decision went to the Alberta team by the odd vote\nin three.\nAt the time of writing, the Union is\nmaking preparations for a debate with\na touring team from University of Porto\nRico. The team chosen to contest this\nvery interesting team from the south is\nFrank Hall and E. King.\nBritish Debate: In the fall term we\nwere privileged in having a visit from\nthe touring British Debating Team, Mr.\nH. Trevor Lloyd and John Mitchell.\nOur team to oppose them was James\nGibson and Richard Yarborough, who,\nin spite of their strong arguments went\ndown to defeat before the witty sallies\nof the two very clever speakers from the\nold land. This contest was very well attended.\nPorto Rico Debate\nF. Hall E. King\nI 148] ATH LETICS SIDNEY SEMPLE WINIFRED MCKNIGHT TERENCE HOLMES\nCRASS HOCttfcV GOLF BADMINTON\nSa-JL h-\n[150] m\n6\u00C2\u00BBM< .toife^ \\nIJNlVERS1TY\"tWITlS\u00C2\u00ABC0Li)MBI^\nf\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB) I4|' \" ' \" \" :,m^^_\t\n^\nThe Stadium Campaign\nBack Row: F. Buckland, C. Schultz, C. Williams.\nFront Row: A. Campbell, E. Vance, B. Buckland, S. Terhune.\nInset: E. Worth, R7 Brown, F. McKenzie.\nIN the spring of 1930 some prominent business men of Vancouver\ndecided that it was necessary for the city to have a stadium. Immediately, several U.B.C. men, seeing the advantages of a stadium on the\ncampus, commenced to promote this project. All spring and summer\nthey investigated and talked, and when fall came, were ready to present\ntheir ideas to the student body, and, in an enthusiastic Alma Mater\nmeeting, were given the power to go ahead and start the campaign. A\ntrip to Victoria was made by the President of the Alma Mater Society\nand the President of Men's Athletics. The government promised to give\ndollar for dollar for what the students raised themselves. Something,\nmeanwhile, seemed to affect the sentiment of the student body, because\nfor a while after this, the whole scheme appeared to be abandoned. But,\nafter Christmas, with renewed spirits Council revived the scheme, and\nsupported by the vote of the students of the University, launched a\nmonster campaign, with $20,000 the objective set, all to be raised by\nstudent effort either by personal contribution or by soliciting. Com-\n(Continued)\nI 152] IS\nE8\u00C2\u00A3 ^ r~~\u00E2\u0080\u0094 UNIVPWITTrBMtlWII\u00C2\u00BBWII|^\nThe Stadium Campaign\n(Continued)\nmittees were formed speedily, and the whole drive organized efficiently\nowing to the previous work and thought of the leaders.\nThe campaign on the campus itself lasted for two weeks, ending\nFebruary 6. The most outstanding group was the Anglican Theological\nCollege and the most outstanding faculty, Science. Classes vied with each\nother in collecting the largest amounts. To Science '33, under the leadership of Vic Rogers and Harold Morehead, goes the credit for being most\noutstanding in pep and in contributions. The methods devised for\nbringing in the money were varied and many; there were noon-hour\ndances and a yo-yo contest in the gym; raffles and sales of novelties, including hot-dogs, on the quadrangle; picture shows and pep meetings\nin the Auditorium; a Thoth swimming meet in the lily pond; fortune-\ntelling by Madame X; a theatre party at the Empress, sponsored by the\nAggies; a horse-race under the supervision of the \"Theologs,\" the first\nsport event to take place on the site of the stadium; classes forewent\nrefreshments at their parties, and the Senior classes donated the money\nintended for the annual boat-trip; Arts '31 and Education '31 sponsored\na public dance in the Auditorium; and to crown this, all caution money\nwas voted to the fund, and many students pledged themselves to give five\ndollars besides.\nOn the conclusion of the campaign on the campus, the down-town\ndrive started, and lasted until February 21. Growth of the fund was\nrecorded on a huge thermometer, built by Jack Macdonald and hung\nup on the quadrangle.\nIt is just a year since the plan for a stadium was born. It has grown\nslowly since that time, but surely, and once more the University of\nBritish Columbia has succeeded in a campaign, having now the assurance of at least a permanent track and playing field. Principal in this\nachievement have been: Charles Schultz, Chairman of the Committee;\nBetty Buckland, Alan Campbell, Frank MacKenzie, Stewart Terhune,\nRalph Brown, Earl Vance, Eric North, Frank Buckland, and C. L.\nWilliams.\niNiPjtl^l\n{i\u00C2\u00BBl kTHETOTEM^\n-'-.v...\nCD\nH\n^>\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0i-\u00C2\u00BB\n PC\na\nat.\n154] yfcr ^^ r^^\nThe Men's Basketball Club\nTHIS year the Men's Basketball Club enjoyed one of the best seasons\nin its history. Much of the success was undoubtedly due to having\na sufficient number of members to handle the executive end of the Club.\nFour teams were entered in the Vancouver and District League,\nbut unfortunately the Intermediate \"A\" team was unable to complete its\nschedule and consequently lost its franchise. The Senior \"A\" turned\nout its wonder team which finished the season well at the head of the\nleague at the expense of the other teams. During the Christmas holidays\nthe team took a short trip to Nanaimo to keep in shape. Needless to say\nthe boys displayed some of their sterling basketball as well as enjoying\nthemselves in a very thorough manner. The team has certainly put their\nheart into it this year and deserve every bit of success in the play-offs\nand any efforts towards further laurels. Until the last moment the\nprospects of the Senior \"B\" team were very bright, but their inability to\novercome the Pals, cost them a place in the finals. At the time of writing\nthe Intermediate \"B\" team after a very successful season had won the first\ngame of the playoffs and looked like the winning team.\nThe executive of the Club was made up of the following men:\nPresident, Harry Thorne; Vice-President, Laurie Nicholson; Secretary-\nTreasurer, Jack Streight; Business Manager, Arnold Cliff; Team Manager,\nLome Falconer.\nSenior \"A\" Basketball\nThorne\u00E2\u0080\u0094President. Harry has been the man behind the scenes for the\nBasketball Club this year.\nDr. Montgomery\u00E2\u0080\u0094Coach. His second year with the squad, and his\nuntiring efforts have put the team on top.\nDr. Thorpe\u00E2\u0080\u0094Physician. The superior condition of the team has pulled\nthem through more than one game. The credit for this is due to\nDoc. Thorpe.\nFalconer\u00E2\u0080\u0094Manager. Lome's help in filling out the tenth man in early\nmorning practices has made him one of the gang.\nCliff\u00E2\u0080\u0094Business Manager. Arnie has looked after the home games for\nthe team, also he was a big help in Nanaimo.\nHenderson\u00E2\u0080\u0094Captain. A forty minute man with lots of experience\nto back his game. He jumped centre and dropped back to defensive\nguard.\nChapman\u00E2\u0080\u0094Robbie and his \"hiss' have created a sensation in more than\none game; his blocking and passing have made him a valuable team\nman.\n(Continued on Page One Hundred and Sixty-nine)\nI '\"J fclWETOTEN^\nSenior \"B\" Basketball\nLeft to Right: R. Temple, T. Barbour, B. Lucas, J. O'Neil, W. White (captain), A. Macleod, C. Ritchie.\nT the time of writing the Senior \"B\" team is experiencing a very successful season. We hope for the Provincial title.\nThe fine condition of the players, due to pre-season practices, is a\nbig factor in the team's success. Great interest was taken because of the\nchance to \"make\" Varsity's Senior \"A\" team. It was only with great\ndifficulty that the latter was selected.\nDrawn in Section I. of the league, the team had to play Mountain\nView Pals, Meraloma \"A\", and Young Conservatives. To date, we have\nlost two games to the \"Pals\" but have won the remaining seven games.\nThe \"Blue and Gold\" boys are second only to the \"Pals\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094one game\nbehind.\nThe team is managed by \"Ceci\" Ritchie to whom we owe a great\npart of our success. The line-up is as follows: Bill White, captain and\nguard; Ted Barbour, forward; Bill Lucas, centre and guard; \"Biff\"\nMacleod, forward; Jim O'Neil, forward; Lloyd Williams, forward; Bob\nSimpson, guard; Roy Temple, guard; Gordie Root, forward.\n!N5jg3^i\n156] m\niH*^ ^^a;Av t\nLNlVtRSiTY-DRITASH COLDMBjA^j\nIntermediate \"B\" Basketball\nift^ l^ffW 'f^^rt^t ^^1 \ * m\nH l^kiL B| H^ft* ,vi j\ OH l^t |\nissB^ A ^IsssH tssssssF^^T\"3^**\" ^K \u00E2\u0084\u00A2\" >^^\u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 & 1^|\ntlssssssssssssssssssssUUvtl Jza^afl HMsssssssssL ^Issssssss^^^^^^^^^S SP^-i\nBacjfc Row: A. Harper, J. Prior, B. Chater, H. McArthur\nFront Row: J. Bardsley, C. Phillips, W. Auld, S. Teal.\nTHE Varsity Intermediate \"B\" Basketball team has established a very\nsatisfactory record. They held first place in the first half of the\nseries and have won the right to enter the final play-offs in the second\nhalf. Like the Senior team, these players have mastered a zone defense\nthat seems to be impregnable, while they have a fast aerial attack. Most\nof the players are fresh from high school teams and will provide good\nmaterial for the Senior \"A\" Division in a few years.\ni^jcy^i\n157 J) THE TOTEM\n*vL^- \u00C2\u00B1 > .*t.\n\" : . : . i\nta\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ? gi\ness *\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nJS \u00C2\u00BB s\nV w P Ca **\ni u a . j\n(A \u00C2\u00AB ^.\n- ^ *\n5 \" S \"\nill 3\nT-S s s\n* ft S\n3~\"5 !\n>-, g -^ \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n- * \"35T \u00C2\u00AB\n\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 - .5 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0* ,\ni i I.\n5 .! \"u 1\nu >. o i\n= w 8 s .!\n\"^ \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u0094 . JO I\n. 3 O 2 '\n* ? . sJ\n~ \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \"\"\"2\n3 -_-\nte C\" \"p u\n2 a J\"\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0o.S\nSS\n~ \"\" \u00C2\u00AB'\"- \u00C2\u00B0i\nja \u00E2\u0080\u00A2? S\"3 a\n_ J5 as s\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A03 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"i-5\nw 3 = - \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nJS o S. \u00C2\u00AB B<\no JB \u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00C2\u00BB\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Us.-\n1. . ** \" -fl\n2 \"< \" 0\nS .. *\n< \"s t* fr\n\"3 J*! *\ne s\n\u00E2\u0096\u00BA. 8 g\nJo:\nS S*\nd A\nff 158]} SHMH.\nLNIVtRSITY - IWIT1SH COLUMBIA^\nThe Canadian Rugby Club\nTHE season 1930-31, in Canadian Rugby history, has been the most\nsuccessful yet. In many ways it has been epoch-making: Varsity held\nthe first real training-camp in Western Canada, played the first game of\nnight rugby in Canada under floodlights, and was the first coast team to\nplay on the Prairies.\nIncreasing interest in the Canadian code is apparent on all sides in\nthe larger and more enthusiastic support and in the larger early-morning turnouts. All in all\u00E2\u0080\u0094stripped of silver and championships (Varsity lost the Hardy and failed to recapture the Lipton Cup), the past\nseason is at least a criterion of the much improved game played in the\nWest, and in keeping pace Varsity can look forward with confidence to\nthe future.\nOne of the great features of this season was the training-camp.\nWhen first mooted, doubt was expressed as to the feasability of the\nscheme. The town executive, however, under Dr. Burke and Scotty\nMclnnes worked indefatigably on the plan and \"zero\" hour, September\n1st, found forty men on the way to Bowen Island, and all doubts of\nsuccess dispelled. The camp was an unqualified success. Ten days of\nrugby and nothing else, fine playing fields, excellent accommodations\nand strict training rules combined to produce results. Clipping, tackling,\nrunning, bucking, double-teaming, kicking, signal practices and chalk-\ntalks at night, not to mention \"time\" served on the \"dummy\" soon put\nthe boys in shape to enjoy those Mt. Strahan Lodge meals, the swimming,\nbridge, tennis and fishing that formed the other side of the picture.\nWhen the team returned to Varsity it had glorious memories of days\nspent there and nicknames acquired (some printable, others not, but\nall suitable, doubtless). It is hoped this camp will become a tradition\nfor future \"Blue and Gold\" gladiators and for those who were at Bowen\nthis year, the next camp will mean that \"Happy Days Are Here Again!\"\nThe season opened with an exhibition between Varsity and Hamilton\nTigers in Canada's first game of night rugby. U.B.C. played its first\ngame of the season, with a half-green team against the most experienced\nchampions of Canada in midseason form and, as was inevitable, lost.\nThe Big Four League opened and Varsity upset the \"dope\" by\ndefeating the highly-praised Vancouver team and losing to the Meralomas. Given a bye in the League, Varsity travelled to defend the Hardy\nCup on the Prairies. The \"Blue and Gold\" won easily at the University\nof Alberta but lost the Hardy Cup and the Western Intercollegiate Championship to a much improved University of Saskatchewan team at Saskatoon. The team returned to the coast and fought its way to the finals\nwhere, in the most keenly contested game seen in Vancouver, the Meralomas just nosed out Varsity and its hopes for the Lipton Cup.\nThe success of the past season, and it was a great success in spite of\n(Continued on Page One Hundred and Sixty-nine) THE IwEM,^,:.;\nSenior City Canadian Rugby Team\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0c\nBack Row: M. Collins, T. Brown, E. Daloise, V. Morrison, W. Mclnnis, W. Morrow, D. Gordon, D. Cameron.\nJ. McLean (manager).\nFront Row: D. King. A. Code, G. Hamlin, S. Haggerty, C. Donaldson, W. Johnson, W. McKnight, M. Mason.\nCity and Junior Canadian Rugby\nTHE bulk of the Canadian Rugby Club is made up of these two teams.\nThis year has been very successful. One team only played in the fall\nterm, but there were two groups in the spring. One of these teams,\nhowever, did not get into definite league action because of the lack of\nopposition. In the fall, the team, although losing the Labrie trophy to\nVancouver College after a series of games, redeemed itself by going\nthrough the league play-off to gain the Sun trophy, emblematic of the\nLower Mainland Junior championship. Owing to lack of financial support the play-offs were not held with Nelson and Trail during the Christmas holidays as planned. The Provincial championship thus came to\nVarsity by default.\nIn the spring term the \"City\" team made an excellent showing and\ngave promise of a wealth of material for the gaps in next year's \"Big\nFour\" line-up. It would be unfair to give precedence to any section of\nthe team in playing ability. The backfield is heavier than other years\nbut does not lack speed. The line, composed to a considerable extent of\n(Continued )\nf ISO] A\u00C2\u00B1\n \u00E2\u0080\u0094 -\u00E2\u0080\u0094pp^ _,\nUN lVtffStTY^BRlTlStrCgLt)MBIAr|\nJunior Canadian Rugby Team\nr\nBack Row: Laird, L. Robinson, T. Verner, D. Cameron, E. Daloise, A. Manscn,, J. Thompson (manager).\nFront Row: R. Dorrell, W. Mclnnis, H. Knight, S. Haggerty, W. Johnson, M. Mason.\nCity and Junior Canadian Rugby\n(Continued)\nseasoned players, has all season been a veritable stone wall to opposing\nteams. A large number of the men have turned out for practice consistently every morning at 7:30 in both the fall and spring. Under the\ntutelage of Dr. Burke and his assistants, they have increased their football knowledge to such an extent that \"Big Four\" men will undoubtedly\nhave to watch their step if they are to hold their positions next year.\nThe long continued and earnest training of the members of the team\nbore fruit in the good showing they made in the latter part of their\nschedule. After losing several games at the beginning of the term, they\ncame back to defeat each of their opponents successively and win a place\nin the playoffs. In the final game of the year the team was to face the\nMeralomas who have long been the chief stumbling block of Varsity in\nregard to Canadian rugby. Emulating the actions of the Big Four team\nbefore Christmas, they lost the game by one point as the result of a series\nof bad breaks. This wound up an eventful season.\n(ml Ijipir^irote^^\n\u00C2\u00A3\nH\nbo\nU\na\nS\nf\u00E2\u0080\u0094i\n\u00C2\u00BB IIP\n'\n/\nP\n<*^ V^- *^\n\u00C2\u00A3\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n0\nj^.'J9^V-f^-- *\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ~C ^nfLnBlsssfe 1\n**\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n*\natsW^Lsssa&ads^ljsaw 1*,V\n** i'\nPS \u00E2\u0096\u00A0<\na .2\npg C-\nB\nec\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0a \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n. . o\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2S \"S \u00E2\u0080\u00A2:\nsi i\nS \"2 -\nS \u00C2\u00A7 3\nZ 1 3\n. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nQua\nSo s\ns \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nS 3\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 O\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A03 \u00C2\u00BB!\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00C2\u00BB\no\nX\ni\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB! fW-s t*J*~^\nIJ NI VElTSffY ^ORiTlSH COLlJMBjA^i\nThe English Rugby Club\nTHE English Rugby Club became organized at a very early date this\nfall due to the necessity of preparing for the game with Imperial\nJapanese. Daily practices were held from the first of September and,\nalthough the game itself was a disappointment in that Varsity lost, the\npossibility of a strong team was assured. The Miller Cup League started\nand for the first time in years the team got away to a good start. Winning\nthe first five games, the capture of the cup seemed certain until Estabrook and Rogers went off with bad ankles. The weakened team dropped\nthe next three games, thus forfeiting their chances of winning.\nIn the midst of the Miller Cup series the first of the McKechnie\nCup fixtures was played against the champion Vancouver Reps. Playing on a sodden field, Varsity's fighting forwards were in their element.\nAlthough the Varsity squad pressed from start to finish, bad breaks left\nthem at the short end of a 13-8 score. The second game in this all-\nimportant series was played in Victoria on the fifth of January. This\ngame, being a yearly feature, was looked forward to and worked for\nwith keen anticipation by the members of the team. Stiff workouts were\nheld for a week before the game. The game itself, on a dry fast field was\none of the two of three best ever played in B.C. Both sides played\ninspired rugby. It was well on in the second half before either side\nscored when Forbes of Victoria went over between the posts. Later\nTurgras of the same team scored. The game ended with Victoria 8,\nVarsity 0. Although Varsity has lost twice, they have a fighting chance\nof winning the famous trophy. Right now the team is training hard in\npreparation for the game with Vancouver on January 31.\nThe business of the Club was efficiently handled by Gerry Ballentine,\nPresident; John Farris, Vice-President, and the executive consisting of\nDerry Tye, Douglas Gordon and Colin McQuarrie. At present the\nrehearsals for second presentation of the revue \"Bally-Who\", are being\nheld under the able direction of Ted Clarke. The proceeds will go toward the Stadium fund. A tea dance with profits going to the same\ncause is arranged for after the McKechnie Cup game on the 31st. The\nClub is indebted to Rod Pilkington who handled the write-ups and Harry\nFord, the head coach, who also deserves much credit.\nThe team:\nCaptain Bert Barratt\u00E2\u0080\u0094Playing his fifth year in senior company, is\nthe best field general in B. C. His graduation will be a big loss to\nthe team. Good luck, Bert.\nPhillip Barratt\u00E2\u0080\u0094Wing three-quarter, is also a five-year man. He is\nan old player, full of the tricks of the game.\nHoward Cleveland\u00E2\u0080\u0094Playing his second year as senior full-back; is\nprobably the best man in this position in the city; has a good kick,\na deadly tackle and a sure pair of hands.\n(Continued on Page One Hundred and Seventy-six)\n1163] Senior \"B\" English Rugby Team\n-\nH i 1*1 t %\n3 >A a\nStanding: K. Patrick, B. Griffin, R. Brown. R. Hanbury, R. Stobie, W. Guire, E. Senkler, D.\nSitting:W. Hall, B. Mackedie, R. Grant, G. Mcllmoyl (manager), R. Burns (captain).\nD. Nesbit, J. Ruttan, G. Henderson\nK. Mercer.\nTye.\nUNDER the guiding hand of Gil Mcllmoyl, the Varsity Second team\nhas managed to go through its league schedule to date without a\ndefeat. At time of writing the team heads the league with seven wins, no\nlosses and one draw, a total of fifteen points out of a possible sixteen. The\none blot on the record was a 3-3 tie with Meralomas early in the season.\nThe Victoria College game was not so successful, however, and Varsity II. went down to defeat, 8-0. Victoria played a superb game and a\nweakened Varsity team could not quite hold them in the first half when\nall the scoring was done. Much better results are hoped for in the return\ngame here.\nThis year the team has worked harder and better than in any past\nyear and much of this enthusiasm must be placed to the credit of our\ncoach, Gil Mcllmoye, who has turned out morning and afteroon, rain or\nshine. It is the team's ambition to bring back the Bell-Irving Cup, which\nhas not been won by Varsity since 1925.\niN\u00C2\u00BB5jg3^i\nI 164] Ag*\nIntermediate \"B\" English Rugby Team\n*9 w\ni i\n?\n^\n*\n^\n| 1\nH**V sssstafl\n?\n\u00C2\u00ABtf\n\u00C2\u00A3\nBA\n\u00E2\u0096\u00BC\ntr *\n< #\n> i i/M 3\nJS4\n\u00C2\u00A5 ^ %\n3fV\n'1\nf\n| \u00E2\u0096\u00A0!>\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\n&\u00C2\u00BB\nIT\n< f.\n^IssCafl\nF\n1\n1'\n1\n\\n3 .*%*\n\t\n4-,,,\nBari Kotv: F. Hemsworth, D. Ncwson, G. Weld, G. Shaw, W. Hedley, G. Brand, R. Forsythe.\nFront Row: M. Young, J. Grubbe, M. Pollard, C. Dalton (captain), J. Lindsay, C. Draney, J. Carruthers.\nCOMPOSED mainly of men new to English rugby and with no coaching, this team met with remarkable success in the first half of their\nschedule. With only one defeat and five wins we are at the top of the\nthird division. This term with the help of a coach and some new men we\nhope to continue the good work. We were badly beaten by the Normal\nteam at the beginning of the season but after this, being better organized,\nwe romped through games with the Rowing Club, the Frosh, Ex-Byng,\nEx-Tech and Ex-Britannia with great success.\nirvypj^i\nf 165] Freshman English Rugby Team\nBack Row: M. Holmes, E. Kennedy, A. Shatford, B. MacKedie, A. Allen, S. Swift, J. Worthington.\nFront Row: J. Kelly, J. Bourne, B. Moffatt, H. Pearson (captain), M. Owen, G. Allen.\n\"^XT'ARSITY'S Freshman class showed its usual enthusiasm at rugby\n\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 during the early weeks of the fall term, but the lack of adequate\ncoaching and organization was evident in the loss of their first three\ngames. They followed this by a clean record, defeating the unbeaten\nEx-Normals and following this by trouncing Ex-Magee. The Ex-Byng\nsquad and the North Shore fifteen were the next to fall before the Freshman onslaught. Although this completes the schedule to date, the success of the Frosh squad is assured. With Harry Pearson at the helm and\nBert Barratt as coach a highly trained and organized team has been\ndeveloped. A great deal of credit is due the above-mentioned men.\nThe team: Holmes, Kennedy, Worthington, G. Allen, Pearson,\nOsborne, Stafford, Moffat, A. Allan, Hall, Kelley, Owen, Bourne, Swift,\nSteele, Reid.\n\"H5P*i\n{i\"l ^l^^^m_A^\niisi\f\^mxrP^U^^^^^i^\nThe Track Club\nBack Row: W. Morrow, G. Ledingham, R. Thomas, P. Campbell, G. Dirom, W. Thornbur, R. Osborne, G. Allan.\nSecond Row: A. Allen, A. Shatford.\nTbird Row: R. Ward, J. Curie, L. Clarke, L. Gansner, D. Nicol, R. Alpen, D. MacTavish.\nFront Row: \u00C2\u00A3. Costain, R. Gaul.\nHPHE Varsity Track Club began the year by sending \"six men to the\n-1L W. C. I. A. W. meet at Edmonton. While the team was not as successful as expected, the journey stimulated subsequent competition on the\ncampus. The Arts '30 Road Race was won by Alf. Allen after a brilliant\nsprint. The Frosh-Varsity meet which followed was won by the Freshman, records being set by Ralph Thomas and Bob Alpen. A meet with\nthe Y.M.C.A. concluded the fall term; competition was excellent and the\n\"Gold and Blue\" triumphed with a hard won lead of eight points. This\nwas largely due to the sensational performance of Ralph Thomas. During the Invasion a relay of four sprinters defeated the Victoria \"Y.\"\nThe Spring programme was opened by the Cross Country Race.\nAn unprecedented entry of thirty-two runners was ample evidence of\nthe increased interest displayed in track this year. Leo Gansner won the\nevent for the second time, setting a new record. The historic Arts '20\nRelay was also closely contested this year with Arts '34, the Aggies and\nArts '32 in the lead. In this contest, as in the cross-country, a number of\nthe best performances were turned in by new members of the Club.\nClub officials feel that the choice of Vancouver for the Canadian\n(Continued on Page One Hundred and Seventy-nine)\nI 1\u00C2\u00AB7] Arts '20 Relay Team\nIllSlUfllllllJI ill III I 1\nBack Row: D. Todd, R. Fordyce, J. Spragge, S. Swift, R. Hodges.\nFront Row: A. Allen, D. MacLaren, A. Skat ford.\nThe Golf Club\nDURING the past year the Golf Club has made great progress. The\nopening of the University Golf Course has added the needed facilities close at hand. The women of the University are now affiliated with\nthe Club and take part in its activities. Tournaments for the year included the Student-Faculty match, Handicap Championship, Open\nChampionship, Victoria College match and home and away matches with\nWashington. One of the achievements of the Club has been the gaining\nof reduced rates on the University Course for all members of the student\nbody. Much interest has been aroused and more progress is expected in\nthe coming year.\nOfficers for the year include: President, Wilfred McKnight; Vice-\nPresident, Alice Bailey; Secretary-Treasurer, Arnold Powell; Business\nManager, Alfred Evans.\n[ 168J UNiVBwffyrPIU3\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00ABwaiti)MBiisi\nThe Canadian Rugby Club\n(Continued from Page One Hundred and Fifty-nine)\nreverses, is due in a large part to Dr. Burke, Sandy Smith and the executive.\n\"Doc,\" at great personal sacrifice and for love of the game, gave unstint-\ningly of his time and experience in coaching. One wonders what U.B.C.\nwould be like, or what we should do without \"Doc.\" Captain Sandy\nSmith, with four years Senior experience, was invaluable as an aid to Dr.\nBurke and to his team-mates on the field. A tremendous contribution,\nunseen by the cheering fans, was made by a hard-working executive composed of Dr. Davis and Earl Vance, president and manager of Senior\nteam; Johnny McLean, Roy McDonald, Audrey Cruise, Jack Sargent\nand Lyle Jestley. Team work, here just as much as on the field, has\nplayed a great part in Varsity's success. If in the past we have had\noccasion to be proud of our team, we should be no less proud of the executive behind it and any future executive will have to work hard to equal\nthis year's record.\nThe team of next year will contain many new faces. The Club\nsuffers the loss through graduation of Sandy Smith, Cam Duncan, Bill\nLatta and Lyle Jestley (the twins) and Irv. Smith. The Intermediate\nteam will doubtless help to fill the breach as it has in the past. The\nstandard has so risen that it has become increasingly hard to pick the first\nstring\u00E2\u0080\u0094and then there is \"Doc\" Burke, always a factor to reckon with\nwhen it comes to making teams.\nSenior \"A\" Basketball\n(Continued from Page One Hundred and Fifty-five)\nOsborne\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tony, the youngster of the squad, has shown more improvement than any other player; his size and speed make him a difficult\nman to beat.\nArmstrong\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ed joined the team late in the season but gives a big\npromise for next year.\nLee\u00E2\u0080\u0094Cy is a hard worker and a consistent point getter and a wonderful\nteam man.\nTervo\u00E2\u0080\u0094Randy with his long shots from out beyond the foul line have\nworried more than one guard.\nCampbell\u00E2\u0080\u0094Pi's work on offensive rebounds has been the sensation of\nthe league. He is the high scorer of the team.\nAlpen\u00E2\u0080\u0094Frank is the man who \"missed the boat,\" but for all that, he\nhas turned in some nice games and this year's experience will make\nhim a very valuable man next year.\nNicholson\u00E2\u0080\u0094Laurie is a good team man; he covers centre floor on the\nzone defence, and snares his share of the points.\n{169} H\nu\nO\nGO\n5-1\nO\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A21-4\na\nCO\nst\nH\n^ \u00E2\u0096\u00A0-.\nu\nO J\nU M\n[170} IJNlVtRSiTY - PRfflSH COLUMBjA^\nThe Soccer Club\nTHE Soccer Club has had a very successful year, with each team\nmaking a credible showing.\nThe Senior soccer squad started this season back in the second\ndivision of the V. & D. League and celebrated by chalking up two\nstraight wins. For a while things did not go very well, injuries and bad\nbreaks contributing to several defeats.\nThis term saw a fighting aggregation playing for its place in higher\ncompany, and first the leaders and then other strong opposition were\novercome. Thus the Club retained its position and will next year be\nagain among the leading lights of the second division. Varsity always rose\nto the occasion and inflicted upon the B. C. Telephone squad the first\ndefeat the latter had suffered in twelve months. The executive of the\nClub is as follows: President, Ernest C. Roberts; Vice-President, E. H.\nKing; Secretary-Treasurer, Malcolm McGregor; Manager, Thomas\nSanderson.\nMcGregor\u00E2\u0080\u0094Goal. Malcolm has saved the team on numerous occasions\nby his spectacular saves, between the posts.\nRoberts\u00E2\u0080\u0094Back. The most vigorous tackier on the squad, and the man\nwith the most powerful kick.\nChalmers\u00E2\u0080\u0094Back. Captain Tommy is always reliable and finished in\nhis play. Rated as the best left back in the league.\nWright\u00E2\u0080\u0094Half. A determined tackier with a valuable burst of speed.\nKozoolin\u00E2\u0080\u0094Half. The finished product. Paul is a freshman and the\nbest acquisition the Club has secured in years.\nWaugh\u00E2\u0080\u0094Half. A well-built player from Nanaimo, a newcomer to\nthe team. Has a good kick and uses his build to advantage.\nCox\u00E2\u0080\u0094Half. A junior recruit promoted at Christmas, and molded from\na clever forward into a badly needed half. Jimmy shows great\npromise.\nBuckley\u00E2\u0080\u0094Half. A dour plodder who always turns in a steady game.\nWright\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bunny has speed to burn and this year developed a stinging\ndrive which finally netted him his annual goal.\nTodd\u00E2\u0080\u0094Another freshman find. Dave is from a football family and\ncarries on the traditions. Has the hardest drive on the team.\nCooke\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Club lost tricky Bud when he had the misfortune to break\nhis leg in a game in the first term. Hope to see him back next year.\nCostain\u00E2\u0080\u0094Centre forward. The inimitable cherub. Donned a Varsity\nsweater for the first time this year, and on this year's form will keep\nit for life.\n(Continued on Page One Hundred and Seventy-two)\nI 171] The Men's Gymnasium Club\nTHIS year has been very successful for the Men's Gymnasium Club.\nThe session 1930-31 was the first complete one that the Club has had,\nas it was not organized until December, 1929. The membership has increased over that of last year, new men joining continually. The remarkably large number of members that came regularly to the class in the\nUniversity Gymnasium bears ample witness to the fact that the Club is\ncarrying out the intentions of its organizers very well.\nMost of the credit goes to Mr. T. F. Whiffin, the very able and\nefficient instructor, who has been with the organization since its inception. The Swedish system of gymnastics includes both floor and apparatus work. The work-outs were greatly aided by the practical completion of equipment, which factor contributed considerably to the success\nof the Club during the past seven months.\nIt is hoped and expected that next year will be an even greater one\nfor the young organization when its opportunities shall become better\nknown to the students.\nGordon W. Stead, President; Arthur Dobson, Secretary; and Leo. S.\nGansner, Treasurer, formed the executive for the season.\nIrv^jg^ll\nThe Soccer Club\n(Continued from Page One Hundred and Seventy-one)\nTodd\u00E2\u0080\u0094Inside left. The team's schemer. Hit his stride this term and\nhas excelled ever since. There's only one Alan.\nLatta\u00E2\u0080\u0094Outside left. Came to the Club from Canadian rugby, and\nbrought with him a terrific drive in both feet. His shot is a match\nwinner.\nSanderson\u00E2\u0080\u0094Manager. Tommy is guiding the destinies of the Club for\nthe second year and has seen the Club rise to its present position from\nJunior football.\nDr. Todd\u00E2\u0080\u0094The team's best supporter. Never misses a game and is of\ngreat value to the Club as a judge of football and in an advisory\ncapacity.\nEd. King\u00E2\u0080\u0094Staunch worker for the Club and a keen judge of football.\nI 172 J K\n** A****** >\nUNlVEllStTY^BfH^\nThe Second Soccer Team\nBack Row: Dr. Todd, W. Roper, B. Goumeniouk, E. Broadhurst, R. Fletcher (manager).\nFront Row: G. Grant, A. White, H. Smith, E. Dickson (captain), L. Todd, G. Goumeniouk, L. Cunningham.\nAbsent: J. Smith. P. Frattinger, M. Legg, A. Macdougal.\nFTER an enthusiastic turnout at the beginning of the season, the\nteam has earned a place in the upper half of the league standing.\nTwo or three players were promoted to the Seniors and consequently, the\nJuniors were not expected to accomplish much.\nThe timely advice of Dr. Todd has been of much assistance to\nManagers Ritchie and Fletcher.\nAlthough eliminated from the Con Jones Shield competition the\nteam has a good chance of going a long way towards the Junior Provincial Championship.\nThe defence of P. Frattenger in goal and Grant and Roper at back\noffers quite a problem for any opposing forward line to solve. The half\nline is also strong with Dickson, the captain, at left, Arnold White at\ncentre, and either Goumeniouk or Fletcher on the right in place of the\ninjured Max. The forward line has scored over forty and of these\nBroadhurst, at centre, has obtained over half. On the inside he is ably\nsupported by Hughie Smith and Jimmie Smith. Laurie Todd on the\nextreme left has the reputation of being one of the best wings in the\nleague. Cunningham is shaping out well on the right wing. Boris\nGoumeniouk is the substitute goalie.\nfl73j ^.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"I^llf^u^^ lt_l\nVarsity Grass Hockey Team\nBack Row: I. Knight, R. Ward, A. Sangha, W. Lee, P. Merrett, M. DesBrisay, \u00C2\u00A3. Jackson.\nFront Row: F. Jakeway, O. Hughes, J. Dicks, S. Semple, J. Stevenson.\nThe Men's Grass Hockey Club\nHPHE Club started the season auspiciously when it held a banquet at\n-*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Union College at which the Honorary President and Coach made\nspeeches expressing their belief in the future of grass hockey at the University. General policy and plans for the year were formulated on this\noccasion.\nThe enthusiasm evinced by members at the beginning of the fall\nterm has hardly maintained the original high standard throughout the\nyear; nevertheless the Club may be said to have enjoyed a satisfactory\nseason. The evidence of this lies more in the increased membership and\ngreater recognition of the game throughout the University than in any\nstartling results achieved on the playing field. At the time of writing,\nthe Varsity team is holding middle place in the league, though the U.B.C.\nteam retains its position at the bottom. With regard to the latter eleven\nit may be said that the enthusiasm which has served to bring out a full\nteam to face constant defeat at the hands of more experienced opponents,\nis very gratifying to those who have the interests of the Club at heart.\n(Continued)\nCl74j IF-T\nAm\nU. B. C. Grass Hockey Team\nBack Row: A. Barr, E. Stenner, W. Lee, H. Richmond (captain), H. Johnson, W. Delap.\nFront Row: D. Baker, C. Venables, H. Bischoff, S. Semple (president), S. Lang ton.\nThe Men's Grass Hockey Club\n(Continued)\nThere is little doubt that many of the players who started the game with\nU. B. C. this year will be worthy of a permanent place on the Varsity\nsquad next season.\nA notable feature among the activities of the Club was the two-day\ntrip to Duncan, made during the Christmas holidays. Residents of the\nIsland city were the hosts and arranged a very pleasant week-end for the\ninvaders from U. B. C, the programme including two men's games, one\nmixed game and a dance.\nThe gratitude of the Club is once again due to Mr. Bushell who has\ngiven freely of his time in coaching both teams and providing chalk talks\nduring noon hours.\nThe business of the Club throughout the year has been efficiently\nexecuted by the following officers: Honorary President, Lt.-Col. H.\nLogan; President, Sidney Semple; Vice-President, M. DesBrisay; Secretary, F. Jakeway.\nI 175 J The English Rugby Club\n(Continued front Page One Hundred and Sixty-three)\nDave Ellis\u00E2\u0080\u0094Coming from Victoria College, Dave immediately found\na place in the three-quarter line where he has since stayed. A tricky\nswerve is his forte.\nAlan Estabrook\u00E2\u0080\u0094The iron man of the back division graduates this\nyear. His position at five-eighths will be hard to fill.\nArt Mercer\u00E2\u0080\u0094Is playing great rugby this year. In every department\nimprovement is marked and he could hold his own on any team.\nArt Murdoch\u00E2\u0080\u0094Played Canadian rugby during the fall term but later\nmade this squad as inside three-quarter. He is very fast with a thorough knowledge of the game.\nBob Gaul\u00E2\u0080\u0094The fastest man on the team; holds down the wing position\nwith ease. His amazing change of pace is a constant threat.\nCourtney Cleveland and George Henderson\u00E2\u0080\u0094Each played two\ngames this year. With a little more experience they will make\nexcellent McKechnie Cup material.\nRalph Mason\u00E2\u0080\u0094The steadiest player on the team and is a first-class\nhook. This is another place that will be hit by graduation.\nBud Murray\u00E2\u0080\u0094The best forward in the province and is a star in every\nphase of the game.\nJim Mitchell\u00E2\u0080\u0094Coming from King George, filled up the front rank\nof the scrum. His weight and his experience make him an asset on\nany team.\nFred Foerster\u00E2\u0080\u0094Has been playing Senior Rugby since Fairview days and\nis an aggressive and tricky forward.\nDick Nixon and Ken Martin are the breakaways \"de luxe\" of Senior\nrugby. Every half-back in the province has learned to fear this\ncombination.\nGlen Ledingham\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Tiny,\" for short, possesses the rare combination\nof weight and speed and is an extremely dangerous man.\nVic Rogers\u00E2\u0080\u0094Although injuries kept Vic out of the game during the\nfall, he is back again going stronger than ever. In the loose there are\nfew to equal him.\nRoy McConnachie\u00E2\u0080\u0094A hard-working, rear rank man who has been\nkept out of the game with a bad foot injury. However, he will\nbe out again next fall.\nBert Griffin\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sprang into prominence on Christmas day against Meralomas. Since then he has held down a rear rank position with ease.\nffl76j jTfcn. A-\ntJNlVERSITY'BWITiSW COLUMBIA\nIce Hockey\nLeft to Right: L. Falconer, R. Hagar, K. Dorrell, K. MacGregor, R. Darrah, J. Kelly, J. Cameron, K. Laird,\nM. Huston, G. Whightman, C. Ramsden.\nTHE Varsity Ice Hockey team for this year has done very well in spite\nof the low age limit set by the league for all players. Most of the\ngames lost have resulted from hard luck in the last minutes of the game\nafter having obtained, in some cases, a rather substantial advantage.\nProspects look very promising for the next season as all the men will be\nreturning to the University next year.\nThe line-ups were arranged as follows: Goal, K. McGregor; Defense,\nL. Falconer, R. Hager, A. Kerby; Forwards, R. Darrah (captain),\nRamsden, J. Kelly, G. Wightman, H. Horseman, A. Dorrell, Cameron,\nLaird, Fisher.\nir^3jg3*i\n{'77} EfcTHE TOTEIM^\u00E2\u0080\u0094-^\njLl.\n^\n^^3&\ns\n2 \u00C2\u00AB\n\u00C2\u00A3 o\nu\nV\na\nsi\no\n\u00C2\u00AB <\n. o\na s\n0 x\n3 3\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2S o\nI 17\u00C2\u00AB1 fiL .a*^ ~\"^-\u00E2\u0080\u0094 UNivmtTrrUBBWf&\u00E2\u0082\u00ACvmm^\nThe Men's Big Block Club\nTHE Big Block Club is in its second year at the University. The\npresence of the Club is being felt more and more, and it will soon be\nrecognized as perhaps the leading club on the campus. The eligibility\nrules recommended by the Club have come into effect and the new Big\nBlock Sweater can be seen on prominent athletes on the campus.\nThis year the first annual Big Block Day was observed by a dance in\nhonour of new award winners.\nThe Big Block Club hopes this year to promote a high school basketball tournament, and to make contact with Alumni Big Block men. By\ndoing so the Club will take another step towards closer relationship\nbetween past, present and future athletes of the University.\nThe executive is as follows: Honorary President, Heiley Arkeley;\nPresident, Bert Barratt; Vice-President, Ken Martin; Secretary, Alan\nEstabrook; Treasurer, Bob Alpen.\nThe Track Club\n(Continued from Page One Hundred and Sixty-seven)\nOlympic tryouts in 1932 should be an added stimulus to our competitors;\nthey feel that Varsity can contribute a large share of the local talent. At\nthe time of writing, interclass and interfaculty contests are in the offing\nas well as a clash with the V.A.C. Arrangements are also being made\nwith an American college for a meet, which will complete activities for\nthe season.\nThe executive this year is: Honorary President, Dr. J. G. Davidson;\nPresident, L. Gansner; Vice-President, R. Gaul; Secretary-Treasurer,\nJ. Curie; Captain, R. Alpen.\nf 179 J The Swimming Club\ni V\nItarA Kow: H. Andison, R. Wilson, J. Foubister, \u00C2\u00A3. Peden, N. Gustafson, B. Moffatt, L. Greig, L. Herchmer,\nD. Tyerman (coach).\nFront Row: J. McDiarmid, M. Sangster, M. Peel, P. Boe, M. McLean.\nT time of writing there are still two galas to be run off in the Lower\nMainland Swimming League and the Club is tied for second place\nwith Crescent, V.A.S.C. aggregation being in the lead.\nMorning practices have been held for the team since beginning of\nChristmas holidays, non-team members going to Chalmer's tank Tuesday and Thursday nights.\nOf the old team Mary McLean, our best bet in sprints, Joe McDiarmid, Margaret Ross and Marjorie Peel were back in good form.\nPhyllis Boe, a new discovery and a strong member of the team, Audrey\nRolston and Dorothy Rennie all joined the team for the first time.\nMarion Sangster dived for us again after a two year's absence.\nOf the men, Bill Moffat was perhaps the most versatile and hardworking. Harry Andison and Ron Wilson could both be relied upon\nto take first places against the hardest competition in Vancouver. Ernie\nPeden made good in the diving while Norm. Gustafson helped the team\nout in free style.\nDon Tyerman, in spite of a Science course and Canadian Rugby\npractices turned out to coach the squad and the team owe a great deal to\nhis \"untyering\" efforts.\n(Continued on Page One Hundred and Eighty-eight)\nI 180 J \u00C2\u00A71111111\nThe Badminton Club\nBack Row: I. Campbell, N. Solly, I. Ramage, K. Atkinson.\nFront Row: P. Van Dusen, T. Holmes,\" B. Pound, E. Gleed.\n\"JEpNTHUSIASM among the members of the Badminton Club has been\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0080\u0094J so keen this year that several new steps have been made possible.\nChallenge matches for non-team players have been arranged with outside clubs; arrangements for a tour of the Okanagan by a team of four\nare at present being completed; and the annual Chilliwack trip will be\nmade by the second team. The team visiting Victoria in the Christmas\nholidays lost two games to Victoria teams.\n\"B\" and \"C\" teams were again entered in the Vancouver and District League. The second team, which is at present tied for third place,\nconsists of Margaret Palmer, Margaret Moscrop, Eleanor Everall, Frances-\nReynolds, G. Wild, C. Strachan, and since Christmas, R. Moore and P.\nMcTaggart-Cowan have taken the place of D. Nichol and T. Shiels.\nThe \"B\" team, which shows promise of topping its league, consists of:\nEllen Gleed combines cross-net shots and tricky serves to make\na dependable game.\nBunny Pound is developing a tricky serve and is noted for her\nenergetic play.\nIrene Ramage possesses a powerful smash and a strong back shot.\n(Continued on Page One Hundred and Eighty-three)\n{'ml ^THE TOTEM^t\nVxrsity\nOutdoors\n>\nMacbetK?\nEXECUTIVE\nHon. President - Prof. H. Christie\nHon. Vice-President - Mrs. Christie\nPresident ----- Jeckell Fairley\nVice-President - - Aubin Burridge\nSec.-Treas. Dalt Watson\nMarshall Mills\nArchivist ------- Ken Dobson\n** TV A\nV*e\nW\nI 182 1 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0BL ,^ ~- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 tNivnti8iTTT*BBiwtgai>mj*a\nThe Outdoors Club\nHPHE session of 1930-31 has proved to be the best that this Club has\n-\"- ever had. The enrolment of active members is over fifty, making it\none of the largest clubs on the campus. During the fall term the Club\nmade all the regular annual hikes up Seymour, Crown, and other North\nShore mountains. In addition to these, the \"Camel\" on Crown Mountain\nwas conquered twice, both times with women in the party, a thing which\nhas never been attempted before by the Club. Another new feature on\nthis year's programme was the ascent of Mount Baker by fifteen members\nof the Club. The peak was not reached due to adverse weather conditions; the party ran into a blizzard at an elevation of nine thousand feet\nand had to turn back.\nThe skit put on by members of the Club for Theatre night, although\na first attempt, was quite a success. A swimming party was held during\nthe fall term as a get-together for the old and new members. On New\nYear's Eve the Club held its second annual turkey dinner in the Club\ncabins on Grouse Mountain.\nDuring the spring term the Club activities are confined almost\nentirely to skiing, and trips have been planned to several of the North\nShore peaks. The annual men's downhill race from the top of Dam\nMountain to the Club cabin; the women's race; and a new feature this\nyear, a cross-country race, are all parts of the Club's programme. This\nlast race starts from the Club cabin and proceeds out to the end of\nThunderbird Ridge and back again to the cabin. It is about five miles\nin length and will test the skill and endurance of the best skiers.\nThe Badminton Club\n(Continued from Page One Hundred and Eighty-one)\nPhab van Dusen. This freshette plays a brilliant game and uses\nthe back line to perfection.\nNic Solly, whose experience and smash are the mainstay of the\nteam.\nTerence Holmes\u00E2\u0080\u0094our most dependable player; plays a good net\ngame and uses his head.\nIan Campbell plays an aggressive game and has great ability in\ncovering the court.\nKen Atkinson\u00E2\u0080\u0094an all-round player with tricky net work.\nThe executive consists of the following: Honorary President, Mr.\nJ. Allardyce; Honorary Vice-President, Mr. H. R. Partington; President, Terence Holmes; Vice-President, Irene Ramage; Secretary, Margaret Moscrop; Treasurer, Charlie Strachan; Tournament Advisor, Nic\nSolly.\n183} TOE TOTEMS\njLl.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nu\nu\nO\ns\nbe\nPQ\na\no\ns\n3 H\no\nf 134 J ffc jigs .^^\u00E2\u0080\u0094 iJNimtstTYrBRjTJsiri^\nThe Women's Big Block Club\nTHIS year a Women's Big Block Club was organized on the Campus,\nconsisting of all holders of Women's Big Block athletic awards. These\nawards are given to members of Senior \"A\" Basketball team playing at\nleast two or three league games; four girls ranking highest on the Swimming team: persons winning their small block awards four years or in\nthree upper years; and the Badminton singles champion. All awards\nare made by the Big Block Club and their selection is then submitted to\nCouncil for final approval. Any letter award may be given on the special\nrecommendation of the Women's Athletic Executive.\nThe object of the Club is to promote good clean sport in the University, to maintain a high standard of awards and to act as an advisory\nboard to incoming women students.\nWith Mary Campbell as president, Marion Shelly as vice-president\nand Mary MacLean as secretary the Club made its debut into campus\nactivities by holding a bridge at the home of Mrs. W. C. Shelly, proceeds\nto be given over to the Stadium Fund.\nIr^jll^l\nThe Women's Gymnasium Club\nI\" N order to enable more of the women students to take part in at least\n-\"- one athletic activity, the executive of the Women's Gymnasium\nClub decided at the opening of the 1930-31 session to hold two classes\neach week instead of the customary one. These classes were held in the\nVarsity gymnasium on Tuesdays from 3 to 4 o'clock, and on Thursdays\nfrom 4 to 5. Due to insufficient support from the women students the\nTuesday class was dropped after Christmas.\nAt the beginning of the fall term an informal tea was held at the\nhome of the president, Kathleen Crosby, to which all women students\ninterested in gymnasium work were invited. The purpose of the tea was\nto arouse interest in the Club among the women of the University, and\nto provide an opportunity for the members to make the acquaintance\nof the new instructress, Miss L. Rutherford of the Y.W.C.A.\nUnder the competent instruction of Miss Rutherford, a class of\nabout fifty carried out an extensive programme of floor work, rythmics,\ngames and apparatus work.\nThe executive for the year consisted of: President, Kathleen Crosby;\nVice-President, Bessie Robertson; Secretary-Treasurer, Kathleen Murray.\nI 185 1 I^THE TOTflliHh^Kr\n\u00C2\u00A3\na\nH\n-t->\nCO\nPQ\no\n'1-1\na\n00\n2 \u00C2\u00A3\nm\na\n\u00C2\u00AB^ a\n. a\nS *\no \u00C2\u00AB\nit\ns I\nC 18^1 ML' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0s^rrrr^~- mvmimx^mjm^mm^\nSenior \"A\" Basketball\nTHE Women's Senior \"A\" Basketball team is this year unholding the\nsplendid record set by former Varsity teams in the Vancouver and\nDistrict Basketball League. Up to date of writing, the girls have succeeded in vindicating the trust of college fans in refusing to drop but a\nsingle game. Interest in Senior basketball was more evident this year\nwhen the number of opposing teams increased to four.\nThe loss of Rene Harris, Rettie Tingley, and Flo Carlisle of last\nyear's line-up is keenly felt by the team. However, worthy recruits have\nbeen found in Berna Dellert and Gladys Munton, who, under the careful coaching of Jack Barberie have earned places on the team. Captain\nClaire Menten and former captain Thelma Mahon are real veterans\nhaving served for five and four years respectively. Another who will\nbe missed next year is Mary Campbell who has been a member for the\npast three years. Of the others, Jean Whyte and Lois Tourtellotte\ngraduate this year, while Marian Shelly has left the team owing to\nscholastic duties.\nWorld Champions\nLAST year's Senior \"A\" team brought honour and glory to their Alma\nMater last summer, when they travelled over to Prague, Czecho-\nSlavakia, to represent Canada in the Women's International Games and\ndefeated France in the finals to win the world's title.\nAfter the splendid opposition which they showed against the Edmonton Grads, acknowledged leaders in the basketball world, in the Dominion\nfinals, the University team was selected by Dominion officials to uphold\nthe honour of Canada in these games. This demanded strenuous weeks\nof campaigning directed by the University enthusiasts, Vernard (Pinky)\nStewart, Bill Thompson and Frayne Gordon, and Mr. John Russell,\nbusiness manager of the \"Vancouver Daily Province,\" and concentrated\ntraining during the summer months under the very able direction of\ncoach, Jack Barberie.\nThe personnel of the group comprised the following: Mrs. John\nWhyte, chaperon; Claire Menten, captain; Thelma Mahon; Mary\nCampbell; Jean Whyte; Rettie Tingley; Rene Harris; Marian Shelly;\nFlo Carlisle; Lois Tourtellotte; and Mr. Jack Barberie, coach and\nmanager.\nThe game, played under international rules, on the stadium cinder\ncourt, proved vastly different from the type of basketball played on this\ncontinent; nevertheless the girls returned victorious.\nffl\u00C2\u00AB7l Senior \"B\" Basketball Team\nBack Row: C. Lee (coach), D. Black. B. Hicks, M. McLean.\nFront Row: V. Mellish, A. Harper, M. Clarke, N. Jones, W. Watson.'\nALTHOUGH the Women's Senior \"B\" Basketball team has not been\nable to distinguish itself in the first half of the league, the improvement shown in recent games promises better scoring in the second half\nof the season.\nThe team was very fortunate in securing the untiring services of\nCy Lee as its coach. From the day of the first game, Cy has devoted a\ngreat deal of time to training the girls, whose play is now showing the\nresults of his efforts.\nThe team includes: Muriel Clarke (captain), Marian McLean,\nNorma Jones, Andree Harper (forwards), Betty Hicks, Helen Maguire\n(centres), Wilma Watson, Violet Mellish, Dorothy Black (guards).\nThe Swimming Club\n(Continued from Page One Hundred and Eighty)\nThe executive was made up as follows: Honorary President, Mr.\nMcDonald; President, John Foubister; Vice-President, Marjorie Peel;\nSecretary, Mary McLean; Treasurers, Joe McDiarmid and Bill Moffatt.\nf 188j ^___^^_\nUNtVERSm^l^^\nU. B. C. Grass Hockey Team\nm\\\\\ \\\\my- a\W\n\W\i m\W m\" fl\nLiiW^ * ' ~^Hfl\n> A i Wfi^ \"*\u00C2\u00A5\nLiK^f i^H HT\" ^H\ni JpU\nIrwLi\nW* ft M \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00C2\u00A5*~ T^P^Ml\n^T7'' K \u00C2\u00ABHif9B * 1\nWp/JBb'M\nW$ HiL Ww^\n|ftr j Kl^H\n\ ^im\nLiV sHaHSviu\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2SsJ\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0HsW ^ Pa\nJ[ /\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nt WaBw\nIkV \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ^ A .\u00C2\u00ABsH\nllll X\nnmmmWL \W\nffiflB^a\nBack Row: E. Leigh, B. Sutton, C. Scllars, Mr. Black (coach), L. Rowntree, L. Youds, R. Mowat.\nFro\u00C2\u00ABf Row: V. Mellish, M. McKay (captain), A. Burridge, M. Harris (president), N. Carter, M. McDonald, E. Tcppo.\nThe Women's Grass Hockey Club\nHPHIS year has proved the most successful the Women's Grass Hockey\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Club has ever known, chiefly because of the enthusiasm and energy\ndisplayed by the girls. Although, through lack of a Varsity playing\nfield, they have had to go all the way to Connaught Park for practices,\nover thirty girls have turned out faithfully. The Women's Lower Mainland League, an experiment last year, is now definitely established, and\nseven teams are competing for the cup. Marjorie McKay, Education '31,\nis the president, and deserves a hearty vote of thanks for her unceasing\nefforts on behalf of the League and the Varsity teams.\nWe were very pleased to welcome many new players this year,\namong them several Education students. It was hoped that a beginner's\nteam would be formed, but unfortunately it was too late in the year to\narrange games. Perhaps this will be accomplished next year.\nThe most enjoyable event of the season was a trip to Duncan, which\nit is hoped will be an annual feature. A Women's and Men's team went\n(Continued on Page One Hundred and Ninety)\nf 189j Varsity Grass Hockey Team\n*\nJf< y*K *f % % *1\ni\np\nA 1 * I\nw ? ^*\nJ1 A. *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n1\nV\nJot\n1 r* / ~\\n/\n,-J\n1\n'ii. V.\n1\n1\nBacA. Row: M. Stobie, M. Harwood, D. Johnston, Mr. Black (coach), M, Finch, A. Healey, M. Moffat.\nFront Row: K. Soames, I. McArthur, D. Wylic, B. Pollock (captain), G. Humphreys, M. McDonald, D. Harris.\nThe Women's Grass Hockey Club\n(Continued from Page One Hundred and Eighty-nine)\nover and played five games in two days. The team met with real opposition there, but played their best game. Return games have been arranged,\nand also a match with Victoria. A Rep team from the league is to be\nchosen to play the High School Rep, and it is confidently expected that\nU.B.C. will provide many players.\nU.B.C. team is now third in the league, with a chance for the cup\nif they play their best. Graduations will not affect the teams quite as\nmuch as usual, as first and second year players predominate. The Club\nowes the deepest gratitude to the coach, Mr. W. Black, for his support\nand co-operation.\nThe officers are as follows: Honorary President, Mrs. Boving; President, Margaret Harris; Vice-President, Elmi Tippo; Secretary-Treasurer,\nMable McDonald; Curator, Marjorie Finch; U. B. C. captain, Marj.\nMcKay; Varsity captain, Beth Pollock.\nHl90] LITERARY\nSUPPLEMENT Igiw-iiiw IPULiw\nORION\n^UR earth is full of crouching things, and men with shadowed eyes,\nWho love their fears and fear their loves, and smother light with lies.\nThey miss all valiant loveliness with hate of pain and scars\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLook up, ye sorry earth-born, to the message of the stars!\nCoronis sings of glory, and deep Sirius of faith,\nThe Pleiades are glamoury, Virgo's a silver wraith.\nFrom his far height Polaris sends a grave and glorious call\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBut the Southern knight Orion is the greatest of them all!\nOrion, great Orion, with his lordly lifted hand;\nHe calls across the shimmering blue to those who understand.\nHis messages are chivalry, and gallantry, and fire,\nHe is the starry soldier, and the lover of the lyre.\n\"Oh, little comrade, courage now, and leave your darkling fear;\nYour tiny world is rolling still, and you and I are here;\nYea, we will still be laughing when your tiny world is gone,\nFor you and I are stuff that's made of white fire and gold dawn.\"\nOur earth is woeful full of things that should not dare to be,\nAnd yet there is an open way to beauty high and free;\nOh, seek for valiant loveliness, nor shrink at gallant scars\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLook up, ye blind and fearful, to the glory of the stars!\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094F.M.L.\niN3$y>'\nETERNITY\nTHERE will be a time when you will climb\nThe stairs no more;\nThere will be a day, when you will say,\nI cannot rise.\nThat time must come, whate'er is done,\nThe body is laid down\nWe close the eyes and hear good-byes,\nThe world is gone.\nBeyond that veil, past all travail,\nWe cannot see.\nAnd so through strife, which is our life,\nWe come to Thee.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094E.N.B.\n{192} NEUSCHWANSTEIN\nTCj^ AIRY turrets, light and gleaming,\n-\"- On a castle, fairylike;\nMy quick soul wanders there, teeming\nWith wonder and delight.\nHigh above the green and lowly vales\nWhere peasant toilers strive,\nFacing blue heaven and snowy gales\nThe mad king built thee to survive;\nFairy, airy, peaked and gay\nBravely dancing, boldly glancing\nIn the solar heat and ray,\nWith thy many myriad steeples tow'ring\nIn eternal worship to the fiery deity;\nMen bereft of all a human's lot of gaiety,\nBroke the rocks and sullen gave their all,\nRuined, unhappy, soulless men,\nPraying, as they cursed, that thou mightst fall;\nBut thou perchest, now as then\nWith the mighty tree-tops as thy floor,\nWhile they lie 'neath the soil,\nTheir names, unknown to fame, for evermore,\nWho made thee with their toil;\nLudwig, mad lover of all that was strange,\nGreat composers, fairy castles,\nWas not content with thee, longing for change,\nSo new turrets rise on new summits,\nAnd new hands bleed and new eyes swim\nFor very hopelessness;\nTears and blood all for a mad man's whim\nWho listens with eagerness.\nWhile the storms and furies roar\nUnder a master's hand;\nHe must have loved thee before\nHe made his next demand,\nFor thou wert the pearl of all his love,\nThou and mighty Wagner,\nThou with spires, like the other's thunder, standing above\nLesser, more human things,\nSymbol of Germany's romantic past,\nPlaced, as if some hands divine\nAided those plebian ones who set thee firm and fast\nOn thy rocky base, Neuschwanstein.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094J.L.S.\nI 193 1 TWO EPITAPHS\nI want no blame or sympathy\nOr honest tears or maudlin prayers.\nWithdraw and stare not, passerby:\nLet me conduct my own affairs.\nI will not have my name emblazoned here\nFor fools to stare at, or foes left behind me\nTo mock. Why should I advertise my tomb?\nGod and my friends and the worms know where to find me.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094D.H.B.\nCAPRICE VIENNOIS\nTHE stage is draped with velvet, dark as sleep,\nAnd silence soft as velvet hangs like mist,\nWhen suddenly from far deep backgrounds creep\nSlim figures, coming as to keep strange tryst\nWith fairies, on some far, elf-haunted strand;\nA throng of colors\u00E2\u0080\u0094silver and gold-red\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nIt flows apart. The leader of each band\nComes forward.\nFirst, bending stately head,\nA golden girl in robes of gypsy shades,\nHer wide skirts sweeping round her, pirouettes,\nBends low, her colors billowing, and glissades.\nThen comes a girl, her dress like some Pierrette's,\nOf silver, with a silver wig and shoes,\nWho laughs, and, standing poised, waves twinkling hands;\nTo look at her, all silver, is to muse\nOn bubbles, rainbows, sunlight on strange sands,\nSea-gulls . . . Then she steps back and smiles,\nAnd with her company fades all away,\nAnd back again, with magic swiftness, files\nThe golden group, bright as the dawning day.\nNow comes a dance of Spanish grace and pride,\nA minuet of sweeping golden-reds;\nThe dancers stately turn and bow and glide,\nAnd bend dark, graceful, gypsy-kerchiefed heads.\nThe band first forms a sparkling double line,\nAnd two by two the dancers pace it down,\nWreathing it goldly like some magic vine,\nAnd at the end, a bow with billowing gown.\nThey weave it like a living golden rope,\nAnd twist and inter-twist it, turn, and sweep,\nBend low once more, and let its shining scope\nStretch wider as they separate, yet keep\n|im! rw&u*.>--^--WT\n^y^^Y^^s^gLUMmA^\nThe pattern clearly. Then they swiftly turn,\nAnd, always dancing, fade into the black;\nTheir figures in the dark like candles burn,\nLike golden candles then are all blown back\nTo nothingness. And there, alone at last,\nIs the slim leader, who now twirls once more,\nAnd stands as though she were a statue, cast\nIn deep rich gold, then, fading as before,\nSlips out, and all that brilliant band has passed.\nBut now again the stage is swiftly filled\nWith dancing figures, all in silver clad.\nIt is like frieze-work by some artist skilled\nIn works exquisite, fairy-like, and glad.\nAnd now the silver girl who leads them whirls\nFrom out among them, pirouettes again;\nAnd, following her, the band, all shimmering, swirls\nInto a dance that shines like summer rain.\nTwo lines they form, as did the golden group,\nAnd twinkle down the lines on silver toes,\nAnd in and out between them swiftly loop,\nWhile those within the lines, all gleaming, pose,\nUntil they look like frozen water-sprites,\nStilled in their loveliness until the Spring\nReturns, releases, and once more delights\nTheir opened eyes with sight of her again.\nSo does the leader, as she skims the line,\nSet free the dancers, and their silver chain\nDissolves itself, not now a glistening vine,\nBut silver ripples, as they whirl in glee,\nAre formed\u00E2\u0080\u0094and then, just as the joyous dance\nIs loveliest, they vanish magically\nInto the darkness, with a backward glance\nOf wistful gaiety, all silvery-sad.\nThe leader poises, and white fingers flirts,\nThen fades, her final mood a gesture glad,\nA ruffled whirl of shining silver skirts.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094F.L.\nRETROSPECT\n^W\" OU vague impressions of my spirit's course,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 I blush to tread your tortured paths again;\nOld rhymes of mine, O you that once gave pain\nTo ease a greater anguish, my remorse\nBurns not for what I felt, but what you are:\nSo foul a picture of brave things now far.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094D.H.B.\nI 195 1 fcTHE TOllsM^u^,\nSHADOW NIGHT\nDARK shapes and shadows vague;\nGray coasts that loom up in the night.\nThe strange gleam of beachfire light,\nOn faces weird about the flame.\nVoices near, and sounds afar\nThat echo through the night.\nThe little stretch of road ahead\nAnd beyond that the dark,\nThe all-enfolding night.\n-r.b.\nINJ^\u00C2\u00BBI\nRESURRECTION\nYOU stood upon the height with folded arms,\nA figure posed in graceful dignity,\nAnd broodingly your eyes surveyed the scene\nOf sombre beauty deepening all around;\nThe dusky scarlet of the western sky\nBurning above rough purple mountain peaks\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nA few dark clouds\u00E2\u0080\u0094the steely vault above,\nFar-flecked with silver stars\u00E2\u0080\u0094and spread below\nIn twilight calm, the shadowed countryside\nFrom which the stored-up sunset slowly seeped.\nYou stood upon the height, thus nobly set,\nA perfect part of all the beauty there,\nOf all the beauty in the universe . . .\nAnd as the last light faded from the hills\nIt seemed that you must softly vanish too,\nDissolving with the swiftly melting day.\nGrief-stricken, then, I flung my body down\nUpon the cooling earth, and could not move\nOr think, and only felt a hopeless ache\nAnd awesome marvelling . . . until your touch\nRoused me to stir and view with joy divine\nYour moon-blessed resurrection come to pass.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094R.G.\n?{!&\nTHE NEW\nSpalding\nCatalogue\n/Contains a most complete list and description\nof the utmost in athletic merchandise for the summer season.\nYou Should Get a Copy\nA. G. SPALDING & BROS\n424 HASTINGS ST. W.\nSey. 5476 Sey. 6404\nK<2pt-\n-\u00C2\u00ABa>:\nWATCHES\nfor LADIES\nand MEN\nAt\nBirks you\nare offered a\nchoice\u00E2\u0080\u0094and \u00E2\u0080\u0094the\nbest possible value\nin each price field\ni I\nDIAMOND MERCHANTS\nVANCOUVER - B. C.\n-*ar--\nf\nK\n200 J t\n<&>*\nt<5**-\nThere are no finer\nfurs obtainable\nanywhere than\nyou will find\nhere!\nThere are at least a dozen\nglobe-trotters, international\ncelebrities, who buy something here wvery time they\nl>ass through Vancouver.\ni\nNew York Fur\nCompany Limited\n583 Granville St.\n721\u00E2\u0080\u0094West Georgia\u00E2\u0080\u0094721\n-*\u00C2\u00ABa>a\nG/OllTH the most modern\nequipment for talking\nand\nmusic in pictures.\nSTRAND\nTHEATRE\nstands high in the opinion of\ndiscriminating theatre-goers.\nSome of the largest and finest\nproductions to be made during\nthe coming year will be seen on\nthe Strand screen.\nW3\u00C2\u00BB>~-\n..-\u00C2\u00BBr\u00C2\u00ABss>:\nI \\nSi>a-\n-\u00C2\u00BBr\u00C2\u00ABs2>3>\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ft ||n *\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u0094*>*^\u00E2\u0080\u0094*\u00C2\u00BB.\nUNIVERSITY GOLF\nCOURSE\n10th and blanca\nStarting times may be booked by\nphone. Times for Saturday and\nSunday booked from Tuesday\nmorning\nH. WINDER Phone\nProfessional POINT GREY 144\nSWAN BROS. LTD.\nCleaners and Dyers\nA smart appearance will help you win.\nHave your clothes refreshed often by\nSwan Bros., the cost is so small.\n12th AVENUE and KINGSWAY\nFair. 6200 (7 Trunk Lines at Your Service)\nt\n:%\nSTRUCTURAL STEEL\nDESIGNERS - FABRICATORS - ERECTORS\nBRIDGES BUILDINGS\nDOMINION BRIDGE CO., LIMITED\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\n6\u00C2\u00A3(2\u00C2\u00BB>5i-\n-r&li\n[201 J KG**-\nDUFFUS\nSCHOOL OF BUSINESS LTD.\nThe Only School in Vancouver with\nACTUAL BUSINESS OFFICES IN OPERATION\nfor student training\n1\nWHOLESALE\nRETAIL\nFREIGHT\nCUSTOMS\nBANK\nAUDITING\nTRAIN IN A PRACTICAL WAY. IT COSTS NO MORE.\nComplete Office Machine Equipment. Day and Night School.\nSeymour and Pender Sts. Seymour 5771\nThe School That Gels Results\niepn-\ni\nHf^SSi\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094*\nPHONE SEYMOUR 2090\nService and Quality Guaranteed\nHAZELWOOD CREAMERY\nLimited\nManufacturers of\nHIGH-CLASS ICE CREAM\nSHERBETS and SPECIALTIES\n3 51-335 Keefer Street\nVancouver, B.C.\nQPORT SHOp\nNEW ADDRESS\n585 Georgia Sey. 3775\nOpposite Publicity Bureau\n\"Everything For Every Sport\"\nSpecial Prices to the U.B.C.\n* \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n THE\t\nCanadian Bank of Commerce\nTenth and Sasamat (Vancouver) Branch\nThis branch is located conveniently near to the\nUniversity and we welcome the accounts of the\nFaculty and Students.\nSAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT: Interest allowed\nat 3% per annum, computed half-yearly.\nMoney Orders Sold Mail Transfers\nSafety Deposit Boxes Travellers' Cheques\nC. R. Myers, Manager\nPIONEER LAUNDRY and\nDRY CLEANERS\nLIMITED\nESTABLISHED 1890\nWe operate the largest and best equipped dry\ncleaning plant in Western Canada\nPhone Sey. 5864-5865 Cor. Richards and Smythe\n[202 J The Bridge of The Gods\n(Continued from Page One Hundred and Ninety-nine)\n\"You can see they've failed to do the job, and more than once, at\nthat,\" Rudde continued, pointing to the deserted remains. \"Certainly\nis a nasty place, this. But they're swinging it this time. We can get\nacross most anything now, with the right stuff behind us.\"\nThe stranger was looking at some grotesque, broken rocks which\nlay as if they had been strewn across the rapids; enormous, jagged things.\n(At this point in the tale I almost remembered something. Rudde went\non, however).\n\"Yes,\" said the stranger slowly, \"There have been many failures\nat this task.\" Then, as if in a burst of confidence, \"We tried to do it\nourselves. Surely we might have done it, if anyone could. But\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \" he\nstopped, and looked again at the great bridge, and back at the rock-\nstrewn rapids.\n\"They've used the new iron truss there, I see,\" Rudde was intent\nupon the bridge. \"I'm telling you, modern engineering is making this\na great day for us builders.\" He smiled at the stranger, hardly knowing\nwhy.\nThe stranger said, \"Yes, \u00E2\u0080\u0094 new things are very wonderful.\" They\nboth stared up, while the world dipped into shadow, for the sun had set.\nWhen Rudde looked around again his companion had gone.\n* * *\n\"Seems to me\u00E2\u0080\u0094 where did you say it was?\" I puzzled when Rudde\ntold me this. \"I've seen something about it in a magazine article somewhere; it's been considered quite a stunt, I believe.\"\n\"Very ticklish place,\" Rudde confirmed.\n\"I remember now. There was a picture of the rapids. Wait a\nshake\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \" I stopped and gasped. \"Why, it was called 'The Bridge of\nthe Gods.' There was a legend about it. The western Gods who came\nbefore the Indians were supposed to have tried to build a bridge there\nonce, and\u00E2\u0080\u0094 failed.\"\nThough Rudde, as I said before, is of a prosaic turn of mind, there\nwas an odd look in his eyes as he thought about the thing.\nBut of course, it may be all imagination; and to this day we have\nnever been quite sure about that Stranger.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094F.M.L.\niN^jg^i\n[203} ?\nBorland's . . .\nICE\nCREAM\nPure rich cream\u00E2\u0080\u0094at least\n6% better than government requirements \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and\nreally fresh fruits. Use\nplenty as a food \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and\nyou'll get the pleasure of\na luxury as well!\nThere's a BORLAND STORE\nnear you\nS\nFor Printing\n-**&*\n%\nK<2p\u00C2\u00BB-\n& \u00C2\u00A9,\nJ. W. Boyd Limited\nCOMMERCIAL\nPRINTERS and PUBLISHERS\nalso\nManufacturers of\nFOLDING PAPER BOXES\nA 'phone call will bring a representative to consult\nyou about your requirements.\nPhones: Seymour 1273 - 1274\n112 Hastings Street West\nVancouver, B. C.\nr*\u00C2\u00BBS>3S K<2j>?-\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u0094._\n-koS>1\nDiscriminate as carefully in your choice of a \"Dry\nCleaner\" as you do in your fine clothing.\nTelephone: FAIRMONT 1291\nEMPIRE CLEANERS LTD.\nCorner Fourth Avenue and Ontario Street\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\nWe call for and deliver promptly.\nThe Home of Odorless Dry Cleaning\ni\nOur Mezzanine Floor offers j\nyou vividly lovely shoes j@?3\nof dashing originality j\u00C2\u00A3\u00C2\u00A7Z?S\nat the low price jdg, j\u00C2\u00A3\nof J^0%7\n$7.50 ^ 7\nf\ni\nI\n1\nRAE-SON\nLimited\n644 GRANVILLE STREET\n[<\u00C2\u00A7**\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n-**&&\nJJNION STEAMSHIPS LTD.\nWISH GOOD LUCK TO THE STADIUM CAMPAIGN\nff^Off^Off^O\nWhen planning your summer vacation and picnics obtain all information\nregarding sailings at\nCity Office, 793 Granville; Phone Sey. 93} 1: Head Office, Union Pier; Phone Trin. 1321\nfSr*.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094B^S)Stf\n[204 J K<3W \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ' **3&\nCompliments of\nKelly Douglas & Co.\nLIMITED\nd> &\nK<2z*a_~_\u00E2\u0080\u009E_\u00C2\u00BB--\u00C2\u00AB---~-. riSXtil\ngSW **dl\n\u00C2\u00A3>nptt Jffmialj (Harm\nTHIS YEAR\n-by-\nThe BROWN BROTHERS ua\nToronto, Canada\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00C2\u00AB>\u00C2\u00BB*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nWholesale\nSTATIONERS, BOOKBINDERS\nPAPER DEALERS\ni\nOp^ .. . . \u00E2\u0080\u009E fgnSiSj\n|205] t\n-**d\nThe Alma Academy\nAssemblies\nWEDNESDAY\nand SATURDAY\nBROADWAY AND ALMA\nTHREE HOURS OF SNAPPY MUSIC AND FUN\nin a\n= Modern Ballroom s\n&**-\n-K*sS5a\n1 C. Walter Murray Ernie T. Murray\nPHONE: DOUGLAS 412\nMURRAY BROS. LTD.\nPLUMBING AND HEATING\nI\nI\nCONTRACTORS\nDistributors for\nELECTRO-KOLD REFRIGERATION\nSPHINX OIL BURNERS\n716 Richards St.\nVancouver, B. C.\n-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB{\u00C2\u00BB I I:\n\"HIGHEST QUALITY OBTAINABLE\"\nSOCKEYE SALMON\nSOVEREIGN\nBRAND\nPacked by\nAnglo-B.C. Packing Company, Ltd.\nH. Bell-Irving & Co. Ltd.\nAgents\nt\n-**&>A\nColumbia Life Assurance\nCOMPANY\nHead Office - - Randall Bldg.\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\nLIFE'S SUCCESS\nSuccess in life consists of ability and depends\nupon the courage to withstand and overcome\ndisappointments.\nGirls and Boys of the U.B.C, put in your\nsummer vacations where you will receive\npleasant and profitable experience.\nJoin with the COLUMBIA LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY,\nthe youngest life company in Canada.\nOne Hundred Percent British Columbia\nHelp Build Up British Columbia\nTalk Your Home Company. Buy Your Insurance From\nYour Home Company. Sell For Your Home Company.\nWrite Direct for Particulars\nF. W. B. LAW, Managing-Director\ni\n-**m\nEfflYl\\nSOLID AS THE ROCKIES\n\nQUALITY\nPRODUCTS\nYou Can Buy\nNo Better\nChecked and analized throughout\nthe refining process by a graduate\nchemist of the University of B. C.\nMade in B. C. up to a standard by\na 100% Western Canadian Company.\naepTi-\n-rs9;\n'iS\n[ 206 J The College\nBy G. H. C.\nI PROPOSE to give an impression of a phase of University life which\nmay be unfamiliar to many readers, namely the college. In these days\nit is necessary to observe that the words \"college\" and \"university\" are\nnot synonymous; a college is to a university what an individual family\nis to a nation, a united part of a great group. The college, as an idea,\nis younger than the university; it arose from the need of fellowship and\ndiscipline. The founders of the Oxford colleges aimed to make possible\na disciplined form of student life, to provide an opportunity for the\nbest work, to make intellectual comradeship possible under the best conditions for body, soul and mind. The beauty of the Oxford fabrics is a\ntestimony to their appreciation of aesthetic value in education. Little\ngroups of men have lived there, passed into the world to be succeeded by\nother groups\u00E2\u0080\u0094seven hundred years have elapsed since England tried the\ncollege experiment\u00E2\u0080\u0094it has not failed. In the United States, by a strange\ninversion of European experience, the elder universities have arisen\nthrough college foundations.\nThere is a college on our campus, a representative of a line of\nAnglican colleges which extends from Oxford to distant Madras, a scion\nof the old family which began in the 12th century with University\nCollege, Oxford.\nIt does not advertise; the only announcement heard by the busy\nworld is the tiny note of the bell, ringing to Matins or Evensong. Perhaps the world heeds the bell no more than it does the woodpecker in the\nneighbouring clump of firs. The bell rings to its own world, and its\nworld, hearing, troops down to Chapel; thirty black-gowned figures\nkneel in the little room. The reader reads the words of a Hebrew to men\nfrom the distant lands of China, New Zealand, Japan, Wales\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"I will\nlift up mine eyes unto the hills.\"\nThree thousand years ago that Hebrew had written of his hills in\nJudea, but the hills which these men see are the dear hills of home, proud\nFujiyama or Blytch-y-Groes, mountains of Killarney or foothills of the\nCheviots. And, somehow, they have come to a smiling part of great\nCanada, all assembled with a common purpose, feeling fellowship as the\nreader's voice rises and falls, as the organ's notes invite the blending\nvoices, while the sunlight reddens the walls.\nSuch is one expression of college life, perhaps the greatest, certainly\none of the most unifying. The meals in Hall are another. The great\nroom looks out over the tall Douglas firs, over the blue Gulf to the hills.\nThe men, under the presidency of the Warden, sit at four long oak\ntables. No boarding house could hope to reproduce the atmosphere, the\ndignity of the setting, the lively conversation.\n(Continued on Page Two Hundred and Eleven)\nff 207 J Northern Construction Co.\nLIMITED\n. . and . .\nJ. W. Stewart\nENGINEERS\n. . and . .\nCONTRACTORS\nVancouver, B.C. Montreal, Que.\nI &\niifSn, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094 _.._.. \u00C2\u00BB-r\u00C2\u00ABS>3s\nI 208] THE SAFEST PLACE TO BUY DEPENDABLE USED CARS\nEZ\n1031 W GEORGIA\nHudson-Essex\nDistributors for b.c,\ntwo STORES\nsi\n877 HOMER ST.\nG. S. ELDRIDGE & CO.\nINDUSTRIAL CHEMISTS\nand\nCONSULTING ENGINEERS\n567 Hornby St.\nVancouver, B. C.\nBroadway Lumber Co., Ltd.\nLUMBER, SHINGLES, LATH, SASH,\nDOORS and BUILDERS' SUPPLIES\nCorner Broadway and Blenheim\nBay view 1900 Vancouver, B.C.\nAs a\nCompliment\nto Co-eds\nThe Georgia\nBeauty Salon\nwill give a 25% reduction on all\nbeauty work.\nI\t\nI =\u00E2\u0080\u0094^\u00E2\u0080\u0094==\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCompliments of\nI B. C. PULP & PAPER CO.\nI\nI\nI\nLTD.\n602 W. Hastings St.\nSeymour 9090\nCANADIAN BAG CO., LTD.\nJUTE COTTON\nBURLAPS\n900 Parker Street Vancouver, B.C.\nHigh. 5800\nSURGICAL SUPPLIES\nTRUSSES - CRUTCHES\nPerfumes\u00E2\u0080\u0094Powders\u00E2\u0080\u0094Prescriptions Filled\nKNOWLTON'S LTD.\n15 Hastings E. Always open Sey. 656\nE. J. RYAN CONTRACTING\nCO., LIMITED\nCONTRACTING WORK OF\nALL KINDS\nEstimates Furnished\n445 Granville Street SEY. 8585\nSWITZER BROS. LTD.\nMUSIC\n310 W. Hastings St.\n'&>**\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nSeymour 1160\nC 209 J KSW \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nTHAT GRADUATION\nPHOTOGRAPH\nA number of lady students have expressed a\ndesire to have a new photo made, with diploma\nand flowers immediately after convocation.\nWe shall be glad to accommodate you at any\nhour while flowers are fresh.\nPHONE SEY. 1002\nGEO. T. WADDS\n1318 Granville Street\nSTUDIO\nVancouver, B. C.\nTo The Men Graduates! We would remind you that we can make larger and\nmore attractive photos from the negatives we have of you, or will be glad to make a new\nsitting with diploma and mortar board.\ni\nSPECIAL STUDENT PRICES TO ALL\n<&&**-\n-r\u00C2\u00ABs9\n:-\n~*^Sf.\n\u00C2\u00A3\nFROCKS, COATS\nand SUITS for the\nJUNIOR MISS and\nSMALL WOMAN.\nGirls, you will find here the\nsmart, different styles and the\nprices in our upstair's store are\nmost reasonable.\nWe also carry a splendid dark\nnavy Blazer at $5.95. Our sizes\nare 14 to 18 and 11 to 17.\nCome in!\nWe will be glad to help you.\nRoom 1, Fairfield Bldg. 445 Granville St.\nSEY. 8 548\nt\n-\u00C2\u00AB^sg\nWHETHER for HOME or\nBUSINESS OFFICE\nOUR STATIONERY AND PRINTING DEPARTMENTS WILL SERVE YOU IN MANY WAYS\nHome\nWriting Paper\n(monogramed or\nplain)\nVisiting Cards\nReception Cards\nWedding Invitations\nand Announcements\nBirthday Cards\nBridge Favors\nand Tallies\nFountain Pens\nOffice\nLoose Leaf\nBooks\nOffice Supplies\nLetterheads\nEnvelopes\nArt Metal\nSteel Furniture\nand Files\nGeneral Printing\nand Embossing\n:<2pti-\n-r\u00C2\u00ABsS):\nKGpti-\nLIMITED\n566 Seymour Street\nTrinity 1311\n$\n{\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00B0I '*ffc. A^ ^^^^tNiviiwm^^\nThe College\n(Continued from Page Two Hundred and Seven)\nThe College is fortunate in having an excellent Common Room, with\nthe right type of armchairs, and plenty of magazines. A log-fire blazes\non the open hearth, a cheery group of men make merry around the\npiano while others lounge or smoke. It is difficult to convey a correct\nimpression to the men of the University, whose Common Rooms are\ndecidedly \"common:\" perhaps the ladies will understand, for our Common Room is like theirs, plus a piano and several pipes (we understand\nthere are no pipes in the Ladies' Common Rooms!)\nMany University students have admired our studies. The neat little\nrooms, with their oaken furniture, have a distinct appeal; the individual\ncan shut the world out and work, whenever he feels inclined. He has a\nbook-case, wardrobe, chest of drawers, rug, and bed; he may add what he\npleases to these fundamentals. His study ends by becoming a permanent\nreproduction of his personality, artistic, athletic or otherwise.\nWhether he works or not depends upon himself; he has the opportunity. Besides a well stocked College library (which is available to\nUniversity students) he is within five minutes walk of the University\nlibrary. He has the advantage of daily contact with senior students and\nthat under conditions in which they are likely to help him with his\ndifficulties. He may call on his next door neighbour and get his maths,\nstraightened out, or his Latin corrected, providing his neighbour is in a\ngood humour.\nOne should mention the interminable evening discussions on any\nand every subject. Four or more men gather in a study; they sit on the\ntable or the bed, pipes are lit and from ten to two a.m. the world is\nroamed in heated debate. If nothing else results, one's thinking ability\nis improved and pet fallacies ruthlessly exposed. This is one of the sides\nof community life which medieval founders did not anticipate. Untold\ngenerations of students have evolved its possibilities and privileges; perhaps it began when that \"sovereign herb,\" tobacco, was introduced, and\nsomehow escaped the clauses of Laudian Statutes and University Reform\nActs! In reading the biographies of so many Oxford men, one is often\ntold of the discussions in their rooms\u00E2\u0080\u0094the plans they made, the joy of\nthe battle of wits. The less fortunate student who lives in a boarding\nhouse has no such opportunity, for landladies believe in the dictum of\n\"sleep, eat or work\" and are usually unsympathetic toward midnight\ndebates.\nThe features which I have described are those which differentiate\nlife in college from that of the student who lives outside. The Chapel,\nthe meals in Hall, the cosy Common Room\u00E2\u0080\u0094all these make for real\nfellowship. The unique advantages of an individual study and proximity\n(Continued on Page Two Hundred and Fifteen)\nI 211 J THE SAFEST PLACE TO BUY DEPENDABLE USED CARS\n1031 W GEORGIA\nHudson-Essex\nDistributors for b.c,\ntwo STORES\n877 HOMER ST.\nAYLMER BRAND CANNED\nFRUITS\nBetter Because of Their Finer\nCanadian Flavor\nPacked in B.C. by\nThe Dominion Canners (B.C.)\nLimited\nWith the Compliments of\nDIETHER'S LTD.\nDEALERS IN\nHIGH GRADE COAL\n*\n1\nSeymour 6761\nGranville Island\nAdele Beauty Parlors\n2650 Granville St. Bayview 3653\nPERMANENT WAVING SPECIALISTS\nFinger Waving Marcelling\nHair Tinting\nScalp Treatments\nTHE MIRACLE IS\nIN THE CAN\nDries in Pour Hours\nFOR ALL INTERIOR\nDECORATION\nExclusive Distributors .\nMARSHALL-WELLS B.C. Ltd.\n573 Carrall St. Vancouver, B. C.\nK\nBEGG MOTOR COMPANY\n(1930) LIMITED\nVANCOUVER, B.C. and VICTORIA, B.C.\nHead Office\n1062 to 1082 Georgia Street West\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\nWith the Compliments of\nPEMBERTON & SON\nVancouver Limited\nInvestment Bankers\n410 Howe Street Vancouver, B. C.\nWhen meeting friends,\nwhy not say, \"I'll see\nyou at . . .\nTHE GEORGIA HOTEL\nHowe and Georgia\nSeymour 5742\nTHIRSTY?\nDRINK\nWHISTLE!\nCROSS & COMPANY\nManufacturers\nPhone Fair. 1173\n ruSfti\nIf 212 J f\n;saj, ic^g.\nThe University of British Columbia\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\nPresident: LEONARD S. KLINCK, B.S.A. (Toronto), M.S.A.,\nD.Sc. (Iowa State College), Officier de instruction Publique, LL.D. (Western Ontario).\nFACULTY OF ARTS AND SCIENCE\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nDean: Daniel Buchanan, M.A. (McMaster), Ph.D. (Chicago), LL.D. (McMaster),\nF.R.S.C.\nThe courses in Arts and Science leading to the degrees of B.A. and M.A. embrace\nEnglish Literature, Classical Literature, Modern Languages, History, Philosophy,\nthe Principles of Economics and Government, Education, Chemistry, Mathematics,\nPhysics, Biology, Bacteriology and allied subjects. The courses leading to the\ndegree of B. Com. include such subjects as Accounting, Statistics and Commercial\nLaw in addition to basic courses in Economics and in other departments. A\ndiploma of Social Service may be obtained after a course of two years. At the\nrequest of the Provincial Department of Education, courses in Education leading\nto the Academic Certificate are given in the Faculty of Arts and Science. These\ncourses in Education are open to University Graduates only.\nFACULTY OF APPLIED SCIENCE\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nDean: Reginald W. Brock, M.A., LL.D. (Queen's), F.R.S., F.R.S.C.\nCourses leading to the degrees of B.A.Sc. and M.A.Sc. are offered in Chemical\nEngineering, Chemistry, Civil Engineering, Forest Engineering, Geological Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Metallurgical Engineering, Mining Engineering,\nNursing and Public Health.\nFACULTY OF AGRICULTURE\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nDean: F. M. Clement, B.S.A. (Toronto), M.A. (Wisconsin).\nThe courses in Agriculture leading to the degrees of B.S.A. and M.S.A. include the\ndepartments of Agronomy, Animal Husbandry, Horticulture, Dairying, Poultry\nHusbandry, and subjects connected therewith. An Occupational Course of one\nfull session is given and Short Courses are offered in a number of departments.\nSUMMER SESSION\u00E2\u0080\u0094A seven-week's course is offered for teachers and others. Courses\nare given in the Faculty of Arts and Science leading to the B.A. degree. During\nthe winter preparatory work is given for students who wish to obtain the maximum\ncredit in the Summer Session. All enquiries should be addressed to the Director\nof the Summer Session.\nEXTENSION LECTURES on various subjects are given in different parts of the\nProvince on request. A list of subjects may be obtained on application to the\nSecretary of the Extension Committee.\nFor first year students in the Faculties of Arts and Science, and\nAgriculture, and for other students coming to the University for\nthe first time, the last day for registration for the session 1931-32\nis Wednesday, September 16th, and for all other undergraduate\nstudents, Friday, September 18 th, 1931.\nFor Calendar and other information, apply to the Registrar.\n\u00C2\u00A3<2pti-..\u00E2\u0080\u0094._._._._._.._ ._._._._\u00E2\u0080\u009E_._ ._._._._._ \u00E2\u0080\u009E_ ._\u00E2\u0080\u009E_ ._.._ ,M.-\u00E2\u0084\u00A2_^1MMHr(\u00C2\u00A3|'\n2.3] THE SAFEST PLACE TO BUY DEPENDABLE USED CARS\n<:A\\n1031 W.GEORGIA\nHudson-Essex\nDistributors for b.c,\nsi\n877 HOMER ST.\nTWO STORES\nCONTINENTAL MARBLE\nCo., Limited\nImporters and Finishers\nof\nMARBLE FOR BUILDING INTERIORS\n207 W. Hastings\nSeymour 6148\nBanfield, Black and Banfield\nLIMITED\nInsurance, Real Estate and Loans\nEstablished 1891\n55 5 Howe Street\nTrinity 6151\nbowell Mcdonald\nmotor co. ltd.\nOAKLAND AND PONTIAC\nMOTOR CARS\n1130 W. Georgia St.\nDoug. 2772\nPACIFIC (COYLE)\nNAVIGATION CO. LTD.\nTOWING AND LIGHTERING\nFoot of Jervis St., Coal Harbour Trin. 1361\nI\nFASHION LUNCHES\nextends to Varsity students his compliments, so, why\ndon't you, the next time you're down town shopping,\ndrop into a\nFASHION LUNCH\nfor a tasty AFTERNOON TEA\nThere are five Fashion Lunches, with radios too.\nRIDDELL, STEAD\nHODGES & WINTER\nCHARTERED\nACCOUNTANTS\nBank of Nova Scotia Bldg.\nVancouver, B. C.\nFRIGIDAIRE\nA Product of General Motors\nAUTOMATIC\nREFRIGERATION\nfor the\nHOME\nJOHN REDDEN CO., LTD.\nCanadian Industries Limited\nEXPLOSIVES DIVISION\n916 Birks Building Vancouver, B.C.\nPhone Trinity 1231\n&>*-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0r\u00C2\u00ABs2>J!\nf 214 ] The College\n(Continued from Page Two Hundred and Eleven)\nto the libraries of college and university render efficient study possible.\nWith such advantages, there should be a great future for the college.\nAs yet we have been slow in realising our opportunities, but that slowness\nwas due to a variety of causes. For example, we have diffused our energies, being content to give our best men to Alma Mater, rather than\nrestrict their activities by insisting on building our own house first. This\nis no place for statistics; you will find their names in the handbook, on\nclass executives, in track and field athletics, in the musical society, and\nin the several clubs of U.B.C.\nThe future appears bright. We have already completed our Stadium\nfund quota, in which achievement Science is our only rival. We are\nproud to be taking an active part in University life, and hope to do so\nmore and more. In the year 1931-'32 we shall compete in interclass\nevents on a really strong basis, if all reports are true concerning our new\narrivals.\nIn closing, we express the hope that the time will come when we\nwill be one of a group of colleges on the campus. How the other colleges\nwill be founded, one can hardly foretell. The inimitable Leacock gives\na hint when he says:\n\"The Carnegies and Rockefellers and William\nMcDonalds are the Cardinal Wolseys of today.\nMcGill University rests largely on a basis of\ntobacco.\"\nPerhaps U.B.C.'s colleges will rest on a basis of salmon tins or pulp-\nwood. First catch your millionaire, and then quote Leacock to him\n\"Students must live together and eat together,\ntalk and smoke together.\"\niN5jy*i\nI215J MS\"***'\n?\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2y.\nI\n\u00C2\u00AB:\ni\n'IS***-\n-**3,\nCompliments of\nONEIDA COMMUNITY\nLIMITED\nMakcrs of\nCOMMUNITY PLATE\nand\nTUDOR PLATE\nNiagara Falls, Canada\n***c)3 fJS^ -\ns\n-r\u00C2\u00ABsS)33\nRED ARROW\nBISCUITS\nUsed around the world.\nCalled for by the\nMost Exclusive\nCaterers everywhere\nand\nBaked in Vancouver.\nNational Biscuit and Confection\nCo., Ltd.\nVANCOUVER CANADA\nI\n-koS>:\n{217} {218} faja A-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A05j\n33\"\nUN>VtRSITY\u00C2\u00B0 BRITISH COLDMBjA\nM\u00C2\u00A5T*\nFRESHIES 6ET OBSTREPEROUS\nFESTIVAL OF THE UUY POND\n{219 1 K<5*Ji-\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\t\nf % f\nBritish Columbia Cement\nCompany, Limited\nBELMONT .HOUSE - VICTORIA, B. C.\nManufacturers of\nPORTLAND\nCEMENT\nPlants at\nTOD INLET AND BAMBERTON\nBritish Columbia\nCapacity: 1,500,000 Bbls. Yearly\nWhich is three times greater\nthan the present consumption\nin British Columbia\nSupport Home Industries. Our cement is wholly\nmanufactured in British Columbia. Concrete Roads\nsurpass all others. They save public time and public\nmoney. They are always safe to drive on, and are\npermanent investments. It pays to have the Best.\n 1<52>:\nt\nLEAD PIPE :: :: SHEET LEAD\nBABBITT METALS\nSOLDERS\nALL WHITE METAL ALLOYS\nMADE IN VANCOUVER\nThe\nCanada Metal Company\nLimited\n1428 Granville St.\nSey. 1920-22\nI\n(2PTI-...\nj\nt\n(P>*~ \u00C2\u00BB-\nThe . . .\nUniversity Book Store\nJ\nHE BOOK STORE which occupies a room in the Auditorium\nBuilding, was established for the convenience of the student,\nand has effected a considerable saving to the students in time\nand money. It is prepared to supply all the text books required\nfor the various courses offered in the University, also such\narticles as note books, loose-leaf sheets, fountain pens, drawing\npaper and instruments.\ni\n:<2p>*-\ni\n-r\u00C2\u00ABS>3S\nI 220 J KG**3\"\"\nharradine\ncommercial\nCollege\nCor. Granville and Dunsmuir\nSey. 8735\nSUMMER COURSE\nfor\nUNIVERSITY GIRLS\nI.\ni\nKSW\t\nOur Congratulations to the\nGraduates of Class '31\nWe have pleasurable anticipations of meeting\nmany of you in the business world.\nThe production of this book was accomplished\nthrough our complete publishing service which\nwill always be at your command.\nThis service includes the designing and preparation of Handbooks, Annuals, Magazines, and all\nforms of Printing.\nG. A. Roedde, Ltd.\nVancouver, B. C.\nK<2\u00C2\u00BBti-\n-r\u00C2\u00ABsS>:\nff 22. J TUTislfjL.u^ _' ^\nOM -OH\nwho's THE blonde\nI 222} Safc^i\n^V-* ^*t-Xj^ ^\nUNtVtffSITY \"-BniTiSII tOLUMBIAdi\nf 223 J ?\n***S>23 KG**\nLoose Leaf Books and Refills\nDrawing Instruments\nFountain Pens\nSocial Stationery\nPrinted or Engraved\nfi*3C*if*S\nThe\nClarke & Stuart\nCo., Limited\n5 50 SEYMOUR STREET\nPHONE TRINITY 1341\n-**&\nOur Compliments to U. B. C.\nFOUREX\n- D A1RX -\nBREAD\nA Richer, 100% Milk Loaf\nSr\u00C2\u00BB-\n-r\u00C2\u00ABj9Si\n\ CANADIAN BAKERIES LIMITED A\n6Cti\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 r*S)li\nWhat are your\nGreatest Assets?\nA University Education\nand a\nCrown Life Policy\nCrown Life Insurance Co.\nBRtNTON S. BROWN\n820-6 Rogers Bldg. Douglas 5101\nf >\nI\nI\nBATTERIES\nSold and recommended by\nlive dealers, everywhere in\nBritish Columbia\nI !\n! I\ni I\nWhen you want the\nFinest of Laundry Service\nCall the\nPEERLESS\nFor complete satisfaction and absolute relief from\nall washday troubles you should\nTRY THE\nPeerless Laundry Co. Ltd.\nLAUNDERERS and DRY CLEANERS\nCorner Third and Pine Phone Bay 841-842\n_.._.\u00E2\u0084\u00A2m\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E.\u00E2\u0080\u009E.._.._\u00E2\u0080\u009E.\u00E2\u0080\u009E.>_,\u00C2\u00AB._\u00E2\u0080\u009E_._^1\n\"The Club That Serves\" 1\n! !\ni I\nj 207 Hastings St. W. Vancouver, B. C.\nSeymour 3750- 3751\n\u00C2\u00AB{, #,,\u00E2\u0080\u0094..\u00E2\u0080\u0094..\u00E2\u0080\u0094..\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u009E_\n[224] 1ZL\n1031 W.GEORGIA\nHudson-Essex\nDistributors for b.c,\ntwo STORES\nSI\n877 HOMER ST.\nMcKEEN & WILSON LTD.\nSCOWS AND WHARFAGE\n! Ft. Hcatley Ave. High. 47\nI\nI\nCompliments of\nRALPH C. ROGERS\nBUSINESS EFFICIENCY SERVICE\n-\u00C2\u00BB*ii\nForeword 7\nA Word to the Graduating Class II\nThe Faculty of Arts and Science\nArts '31 - _ \t\nArts '33 \t\nArts '34 __\nCommerce '31\nEducation '31 .\nThe Faculty of Applied Science ...\nScience '31 .\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0._ ......\u00E2\u0080\u0094.......\nScience '32 \u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E\t\nScience '33 - -\nScience '34 _ . \u00E2\u0080\u009E\t\n14\n15\n62\n63\n64\n66\n70\n.._ 71\n.._ 72\n.... 84\n.... 8 5\n.\u00E2\u0080\u009E 86\nNursing _ 87\nThe Faculty of Agriculture __..\u00E2\u0080\u009E._. 91\nAgriculture '31 . . 92\nAgriculture '32 _. .\u00E2\u0080\u009E 95\nAgriculture '33 _ 95\nAgriculture '34 96\nAnglican Theological College 97\nUnion Theological College 100\nVictoria College\nStudent Governmfnt\nStudents' Council . .\nWomen's Undergraduate Society\t\nArts Men's Undergraduate Society\t\nScience Men's Undergraduate Society\nAgriculture Undergraduate Society\nNursing Undergraduate Society \t\nMen's Undergraduate Executive \t\nManager System _ \t\nPublications __\t\nPublications Board \t\n\"Totem\" Staff \t\nPublications Management\n102\n...105\n... 106\n...108\n_..109\n... 110\n111\n...112\n_113\n...114\n.119\n120\n...122\n_.I23\nClubs and Societies _ _ 125\nLiterary and Scientific Executive 126\nMathematics Club 127\nChemistry Society \u00E2\u0080\u0094 _ \u00E2\u0080\u0094~\u00E2\u0080\u0094..128\nChess Club _ ~ 128\nLiterary Forum 129\nSocial Science Club \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u0094, \u00E2\u0084\u00A2129\nLa Causerie 130\nClassics Club _..\u00E2\u0080\u009E _ \u00E2\u0080\u0094... 130\nBiological Discussion Club \u00E2\u0080\u0094.- 131\nG. M. Dawson Discussion Club 131\nInternational Relations Club _ 132\nMenorah Society \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u0094.\u00E2\u0080\u0094132\nLaw Club \u00E2\u0080\u009E_ - 133\nPhysics Club \t\nStudent Christian Movement\nHousehold Science Club\nVarsity Christian Union\nPhilosophy Discussion Club _\nAgricultural Club ....\t\nL'Alouette .\t\nForest Club _ \t\nHistorical Society \t\nLetters Club _\nRadio Club \t\nDer Deutsche Verein\nArt Club \t\nSociety of Thoth\t\nLa Canadienne \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nEngineering Institute\nMusical Society . \t\nPlayers' Club \t\nDebating Union\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 133\n___134\n 134\n 135\n 135\n 136\n 136\n 137\n 137\n 138\n 138\n 139\n 139\n 140\n 140\n 141\n 142\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E..__. 144\n 147\nAthletics 149\nMen's Athletic Executive 150\nWomen's Athletic Executive _.- 151\nThe Stadium Campaign \u00E2\u0080\u0094152\nMen's Basketball Club 155\nSenior \"A\" Basketball . _. 155\nSenior \"B\" Basketball _ 156\nIntermediate \"B\" Basketball 157\n\"Big Four\" Canadian Rugby Team 158\nCanadian Rugby Club \u00E2\u0080\u009E 159\nCity and Junior Canadian Rugby .160\nMcKechnie Cup Team 162\nEnglish Rugby Club , 163\nSenior \"B\" English Rugby \u00E2\u0080\u0094. 164\nIntermediate \"B\" English Rugby 165\nFreshman English Rugby 166\nTrack Club _167\nArts '20 Relay Team\nGolf Club ......\t\nSenior Soccer Team\t\nSoccer Club .. ..\t\nMen's Gymnasium Club \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSecond Soccer Team \t\nMen's Grass Hockey Club ....\nVarsity Grass Hockey Team\nU. B. C. Grass Hockey Team\nIce Hockey Team \t\nMen's Big Block Club\t\nSwimming Club \t\nBadminton Club \t\n.168\n.168\n.170\n171\n.172\n.173\n.174\n.174\n.175\n177\n.178\n180\n.181\n182\nVarsity Outdoors Club \u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E \t\nWomen's Big Block Club ....184\nWomen's Gymnasium Club .... .\u00E2\u0080\u0094... ... 185\nSenior \"A\" Basketball , 186\nSenior \"B\" Basketball \u00E2\u0080\u009E 188\nWomen's Grass Hockey Club 189\nU.B.C. Grass Hockey Team. 189\nVarsity Grass Hockey Team 190\nLiterary Supplement 191\nCampus Snapshots\n.218, 219, 222, 223\n227] Wfgfff^l\nG. A. ROEDDE, LTD.\nPrinters, Bookbinders, Stationers,\n616 Homer Street,\nVANCOUVER, B. C\nIrV^&HI"@en . "Titled The McGill Annual from 1911-1915; The Annual from 1916-1925; The Totem from 1926-1942 and 1945-1966; The Ubyssey Graduation Issue in 1943; and Totie in 1944."@en . "Periodicals"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LE3.B85 T6"@en . "LE3_B85_T6_1931"@en . "10.14288/1.0119016"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "[Vancouver : University of British Columbia]"@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Unviersity of British Columbia."@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives."@en . "University of British Columbia"@en . "The Totem 1931"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .