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Page 107 text:
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PHYSICAL. The average weight of our class is about 145 pounds, as nearly as can be calculated from the not quite complete returns sent in, making the entire weight of the class about five and one quarter tons. Whittlesey's little legs support the greatest avordu- pois-205 pounds. Freeman, R. P., carries around 195, Mull and Hardy following with 185 a11d 183 respectively, and quite a number weigh more than 175. Baum is our bantam at 105 pounds, with Wright at 114 and Levy at 117 following in the featherweight class. The Colossus of the class left us last year in the person of Dennis O'Neil, so that Baldwin Qthanks to an inflexible pompadourj, and Larkin are the tallest men left, each being six feet and one-half inch tall. Callahan, Durant, Goodman, Haskell and Merritt claim six feet of stature. Levy says he is only hve feet tall, but if this is true, there must be a continual 77ZZ.7'fQQL' above the desert near his crown, making him seem sev- eral inches taller. Wright is five feet two and one half, while Baum claims live feet five. Bosley wears a seven and one-half hat, while But- tle finds seven and three-eights a suitable size all the time except in the morning. Seven and one-quarter is a very common size, while an eighth less is worn by the average man. Carey, Farrell, Moore and Wright wear six and seven-eights, the smallest size reported, while a dozen wear sevens.
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Page 106 text:
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,- . . . Q ,- . 100 llllz X.-Xl.l'. Slllhi-l.l'.. to a circus. These animals showed an alarming capacity for that beverage. These are fair samples of what we have done to help ourselves, although endless other occupations have been named, from telegraphing to running a faro den. Fifteen men have themselves paid all their expenses incurred since entering the Law School, and several others have earned the chief part of the money they have used for their support. Some say they have paid all that has been paid, a phrase only to be interpreted in one way by those who know them. Cromer says he has supported himself for the last twenty years. Two have written athletic and college news for the papers, and two have coached foot-ball teams. Haskell, one of the latter, has also drawn heavenly strains from the Dwight Place Church organ. Teaching in Night Schools has kept Woolf from the street, and protected R. P. Free- man's door. Many have made a generous use of tick, and two have borrowed money outright. The rest of us have either drawn checks or cashed them. Weiser, after a trip to England on a freight- steamer, calls them cheques Bonsall f' has drawn a few checks, and cashed others, and Hawkes says he won six cents matching. Hayden Ends fan-tan a lucrative game, but says it can only be played success- fully with a stolidity of mien and absence of expression.
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Page 108 text:
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102 Tllli YAl,l'l SI'lINGl,l'l. Donovan has a neck which the Dennis in Bar- naby Rudgeu would have gloated over--it takes a sixteen and one-half collar to surround it. Dennis- ton also wears the same size, but ordinarily a collar is not worn as a disguise. Sixteens are quite common among the larger men in the class. Only fourteen inches are necessary to conceal Dowd's larynx. Hayden llike many others, wears only fourteen and one-half, but he compensates for shortness in length by immense altitudes. Number ten is the size of the receptacles in which Marvin and Adams enease their feet. No other size above nine is reported. Dowd wears the smallest shoe, three and one-half, VVright next with a four and one-half, Baum following with a five. Of course our eyes are of many different colors, blue being the most common. Gray follows next, and then comes brown. The rest are all different, from Breckenridgds Cimmerian black to Bonsall's liquid, cerulean gray. Several with yellow-green claim blue eyes, and two say their eyes are hazel. One says his are mottled, and another says his are white, gray and black in zones. Our noses are all shapes from Weiser's pronounced Roman to I-Iardy's plain American. Bonsall's varies with each football season. Hayden claims a Titian style. A harmonious blending of all extant styles, pug, very best, large enough for ordinary, the only style I've ever used, correct, proper, Roman, Graeco-Roman, Grecian, 'flineal para- bola, present style, . etc., are descriptions of all kinds of noses, from Moore's retrozasse to Sherman's gibbous style.
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