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Page 29 text:
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Carlisle Hall, B t Providence, R. I Pug” Agriculture Cjas s Football (1) (2); Glee Club (1) (2) (3); Assistant Manager (2) (3) ; Vice President Aggie Club (3) ; Stock Judging Team (2) ; Soph. Hop Committee (2) ; Corporal (3). Pug” is the apparently bashful boy who wears out his sole carrying back and forth from the college to the postoffice little missives of Cupid. Those close to Pug are not deceived, for his desk decorations reveal his true self. Aside from his affection for the women, this portly gentleman keeps in training for track by a continual munching of dining-hall hard- tack as he smiles with a happy air of wisdom and satisfaction that he is getting more board than lie really pays for. If “Pug” had gone out for track when he was a boy instead of waiting until he had accumulated his present corpulency, he might have been a winner. William Frank Hanlin, PI K Cranston, R. I. “Boob” Agriculture Class Football, Captain (1); Baseball (1) (2); Varsity Football (2) (3); Soph. Hop Committee(2). This handsome personage. VV. F. Hanlin, better known as Boob,” fell off a train at Kingston in 1911 and occasionally gets back to his city (weekends). Boob first registered as an engineer but because of his ability to handle stock he soon shifted to the farmer’s course. When he is in his native haunts he can be found at the corner of Westminster and Dorrance streets in Providence watching the crowds go by. (Mind you. he isn’t a newsboy. ) In connection with the aggie work the rangy one often slides over into Edgewood where he does a little certifi-Caton for a friend of his. What we want you to understand is that he has a “best girl.” As an athlete Frank has made an enviable name for himself, holding down the varsity end in clean style. Some day, let us hope we may all visit “Boob ' s” little farm and use with him that square box of sawdust that will rest in front of his kitchen stove. Ada Laplace Harding, 2 T A Lvnie, Conn. Home Economics Secretary Y. W. A. A. ‘(1) ; Secretary 1915 Class (2); Northfield Delegate (2); Davis Hall Social Committee (2); President S ' . W. A. A. (3); Vice President Y. VV ' . C. U. (3) ; 1915 Grist Board. Ada comes from the Nutmeg State and has been welcomed into our midst. She is a girl of strong character, dignified, and with a powerful initiative. She is a leader among the women of the college and her advice is often sought for by the co-eds. In addi- tion to this Ada has been prominent in social affairs at the college throughout her stay. The course in Home Economics is her burden, and as conditions point she will undoubtedly use her knowledge for its original purpose rather than for teaching. Good luck, Ada. 21
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Page 28 text:
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William Earlf. Dodge, Block Island, R. I. Scup” “Tal Civil Engineering Varisty Track (1) (2); Relay Team (2); Olee Club (2) (3) ; President Tennis Club (2) ; Secretary Athletic Association (3). This great personality joined us in the latter part of our freshmen year after being rusticated from Brown for over-indulgence in heaving H2 U. in which art and science he yields to r.o one. In ap- pearance •‘Scup reminds us of the Salamander of of the Silurian Age. To those disbelievers of Dar- win’s Origin of Species” “Scup” is a good reminder of our monkey ancestors. He has willed himself to the Rockefeller Medical Research Society so that future generations may have the missing link ot Darwin ' s theory. . . . The following inscription will be chiseled on Ins monument: „ W. E. Dodge, R. I. S. C.. 1915. The Second Shelley, Ingersoll, and Hubbard. Eugene Joseph Flaherty, PIK N. Attleboro, Mass. “Gene” Electrical Engineering Class Football (1) ; Member Class Executive Com- mittee (1); Class Basketball Manager (1); Class Baseball (1) (2); Soph Hop Committee (2) : Class Track Team (1) (2) ; Corporal (2) ; Class Basketball (2) (3); Class Secretary (3); First Sergeant (3). Xorth Attleboro? Where is that place? Well, that question was permanently settled when “Gene blew into Kingston back in 1911. Although an engineer, “his Knibs finds plenty of time for other pursuits and is there strong when it comes to rough-housing or the manly art. His is a familiar face on all our class teams and he unfailingly succeeds in winning the ardent support of the fair sex on the side lines. During the early part of the Junior year “Gene joined a certain club but on account of a chronic case of Lilabilitis. (a disease affecting the pericardical tissues, and generally occurring in youth), he was forced to quit. However, it was his own desire to resign and you can tell by the continual serious look of his countenance that he has more on his mind than he tells us about. Curtis Wolcott Gates, P I K New London, Conn. “ Lizzie” “Curses” Chemical Engineer. Scholastic Honors (1) (2) ; Beacon Board (1) (2) (3); Assistant Manager (3); Corporal (2); First Sergeant (3t ; Business Manager 1915 Grist (3). Before you read further, stop a minute and care- fully study what may be pictured here. It is a person, our Lizzie. The first time we realized his boyish importance was when he received an appoint- ment of office boy for the Beacon management. He was a very dutiful child and at the beginning of the present year we were informed that he had been promoted to the janitorship of the same concern. He also has been lady-in-waiting for Prof. Tyler’s cow and in the capacity of chore-boy for one of our village matrons attained the supermasculine breadth of chest you see here displayed. With the fatherly guidance of his two beloved roommates he will possibly amount to something some day. Their motto is “Where there is life there is hope.” 20
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