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Page 27 text:
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vox 25 Our Senior Stick-Elect When the student body of Unit¬ ed Colleges elected Mark A. Tal- nicoff as their Senior Stick for 1920-30, they added another laurel to a splendid collection which Mark carries so unassumingly. MARK A. TALNICOFF Mark is a late Victorian, and first became vocal in the great wheat belt, not of Canada, but of Russia. When still a wee toddler this young hopeful emigrated with his parents to the U.S., where they helped to swell the sociologists’ figures of the foreign-born population in Phila¬ delphia. Happily, however, they found their way to Winnipeg in 1913. Mark seems to have retained a wan¬ derlust, and in 1917 went over to England with the Cameron High¬ landers, no doubt as Private Mac- talnicoff! He returned to Winni¬ peg, worked in an office, and in 1924 went to Brandon College, where he matriculated, with a Gov¬ ernor-General ' s award. There he was active in debating and Boy Scout work, and indeed continues these interests. As is well known, Mark is President of Debating in United this year, and has recently taken charge of a Boy Scout patrol of one. Mark has shown himself worthy of our trust by his efficient work in debating, Vox, and as Secretary of the Student Council. We look for¬ ward confidently to a year in which his energy, idealism and quiet com¬ petence will distinguish his leader¬ ship and make its influence f.elt in all student activities. Grace Gordon Grace Gordon, Lady Stick-Elect, was born at Souris, Manitoba, sometime in the year 1909. When asked why she chose Souris as a birth-place, she replied that it was because she wanted to be near her mother. She is the daughter of Principal and Mrs. J. W. Gordon of the Manitou Normal School. As for her early training, we learn by devious methods that she matricu¬ lated with high honors from Mani¬ tou High School, and in grade XII won a scholarship for general pro¬ ficiency. Grace entered Wesley as a “knowing Sophomore” to join the ’30’s. Her class soon recog¬ nized her excellent executive abil¬ ity, for she was elected vice-presi¬ dent in her third year. She was also a member of the Dramatic Executive, vice-president of S.C.M. and vice-president of Co-eds. With
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Page 26 text:
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24 VOX probably echoed in many a heart on the Western plains: Oh, tuho am I to dream of swing¬ ing ships, Of hrown-sailed fishers beating in with dawn? But I have tasted spray upon my lips, Have loved rough weather, I am island-born. Ah, that grim headland and that gracious bay Are half a world and half a life away. She describes how her allegiance is torn between her adopted and and her native land in ‘‘Hearth Fires”: The river gods of all the world nod wise wet heads and say — Who drinketh of my waters I will call him back some day —- And that perhaps is how indeed the happy strife began, The Thames beneath the Cliveden Woods—the great Saskatche¬ wan. And who has not seen a Canadian summer like this?: Slow lazy days of breathless heat, Piled thunder-heads and slanting rain, Cloud-shadows sailing o’er the wheat, Suns that but set to rise again, The sudden fire-fly’s fairy light, Shrill castanets of of frogs at night, Oh, life, ’ Tis summer in Saskatchewan! The men of Hudson’s Bay Com¬ pany provide the theme for a stir¬ ring song, which sounds out the sturdy tread of a pioneer band: We took the man from London T own, We lured the lad from Liver¬ pool, From distant Isle and heather brown The Celt came West, and made our rule. We never knew the townsmen’s fears, Ho, Ho, we were the pioneers! We went by rivers, wild, un¬ known, We made the trails for men to tread, By lakes seen by the loon alone We built our fire and made our bed. There, where the Dancing Light appears, Ho, Ho, we were the pioneers! In printing a number of Mrs. Willey’s poems in the Annual Poetry Number of December, the Canadian Bookman announced that her collected poems will be published in book form, which will make them available to all. Are the problems of peace too great for us? Where are we to find the spiritual elan and vitality so that by a concerted effort some means can be taken to solve our pressing political and economic problems. Will the church give us a lead? It may head a subscription list, and urge personal giving, but how about the finding and curing of the sources of social evil? The energy, devotedness and economic sacrifice involved in one battle of the Great War would go far to make over the world. ‘‘Peace hath her victories No less renowned than war:” but, we suspect, they are a great deal more difficult of achievement!
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Page 28 text:
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26 VOX MISS GRACE GORDON this store of experience, her gracious manners and her interest in all col¬ lege activities we feel sure that next year will be a bright one for the Wesley Co-eds under the guidance of Grace. New Book by Manitoba Professor Professor Chester Martin’s new book, “Empire and Common¬ wealth: Studies in Governance and Self-Government i n Canada,” which was recently published by the Clarendon Press, will prove of great interest to all students of Ca¬ nadian history and Imperial rela¬ tions. It should at once take its place with the best and most au¬ thoritative books on the subject, being a thorough and scholarly piece of work embodying the re¬ sults of Professor Martin’s re¬ searches for many years past. The more extended notice which it warrants will be forthcoming in a future number of Vox. Man may now see himself as others seem him, and hear himself as others hear him. But he is still spared the pain of thinking of him¬ self as others think of him. Desolation Standing on the headlong edge of Life, My soul swathed round in Stygian cloak, I call in frenzy down the corridors of Earth For any trace of Beauty, Love or Light. I strive to glimpse a single saving ray And vainly clutch a hulkless mass of lifeless chaff. Inwardly the mocking echoes ring. No answer whispers from the barren world; And all around a charnel solitude Matches a dread abyss within, While the blind planet hurtles onward in the gloom. ■ —B.T.R.
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