The Spike: or, Victoria University College Review, June 1916
University Examination Results
University Examination Results.
Honours in Arts
James R. Cuddie | 2nd Class | Mental Science |
Lemoine J. Pilkington | 2nd Class | English and German |
Williamina M. Gill | 3rd Class | Latin and English |
Masters of Arts.
- James R. Cuddie
- Williamine M. Gill
- Doris M. H. Gavin
- Alice L. W. Gruar
- Lemoine J. Pilkington
- John E. Thwaites
Honours in Science.
Mary C. Terry | 1st Class | Botany |
James G. Anderson | 2nd Class | Electricity |
Master of Science.
Mary C. Terry
Honours in Law.
John A. Scott | 2nd Class | Contracts and Torts, International Law and the Conflict of Law and Company Law. |
Master of law.
John A. Scott
Bachelors of Arts.
- Ethel M. Adkin
- Catherine C. Braddock
- William B. Brown
- Norman A. Foden
- William H. Gould
- Janet C. Hare
- George M. Henderson
- Olive R. Sutherland
- Henry H. Ward
- Albert J. G. Heron
- Frank Joplin
- Norman F. Little
- Selina R. Oliver
- Hilda Ross
- Eileen H. Sampson
- Mary H. Sievwright
- Roland D. Thompson
Bachelors of Science.
- Lyndon B.E. Bastings
- Robert M. Bruce
- James Hall
- Athol Hudson
- Montague Ongley
- Harry S. Tily
Bachelors of Law.
- Henry Havelock Cornish
- George Gould Ross
- Andrew John Thompson
- George W. Morice
- Ivan W. Weaton
- Howard D. Adams
- Charles F. Atmore
- Joseph Byrne
- Harry D. Chrisp
- Werner Heine
- David Perry
- George G. Rose
- Andrew J. Thompson
- Lyndon C. Hemery
- Frederick Howard
- Norman F. Little
- Alexander F. Meldrum
- Archibald F. McCallum
- Cecil Quilliam
- Eric S. Smith
- Richard F. Ward
- Ronald C. Adlam
- Henrietta Blacker
- Edith J. Crawford
- Eileen M. Duggan
- Rona P. Karsten
- Thomas Lyons
- Hugo A. MacKenzie
- Graham G. Matheson
- James McMaster
- Constance H. Shields
- Irene K. Wyllie
- Thomas E. Beard
- Daniel C. V. Bowler
- Alexander Cumming
- Eurfryn Evans
- Eleanor Kidston
- Annie C. W. S. MacKenzie
- Edith Martin
- Ita McCarthy
- Albert Paisley
- William H. Stevens
Amid the Weather.
We shall walk towards the South
And a mist of rain will wet
Our faces, but the drops are kind,
They only fall against the petals
Of your upturned cheek and lull
The music of your wreathing smile.
The rain is gentler than the wind.
Yet if your voice grow faint and never
In my had these fingers rest
Again, no tender rain will fall,
The south will wrap itself in storm,
Although the rain come soft to-day.
—M. E. H.