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SMAD. An Organ of Student Opinion. 1935. Volume 6. Number 3.

Ken and Kingi Collide

Ken and Kingi Collide.

In seconding the motion, Kingi Tahiwi, in his usual mellifluous tones, denied the possibility of a bloodless revolution and, urged on by his inevitable right hand, offered as the only alternative an international co-operation guided by the benign influences of the League of Nations Ken Scott's argument was on the futility of modern capitalism. Mentioning the dumping of Japanese wireless sets, he said that under a national economic system the Prime Minister would go down and gratefully receive the sets in person. "Dump him, too," flashed back a listener (loud and prolonged applause), Pointing to the senselessness of modern trade relations, Scott said that nations, so inefficient in such matters, could not be expected to show intelligence in the avoidance of war.