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Page 29 text:
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1919 SUB T U RR I 1919 EUGENE ARTHUR BERNARDIN 635 Haverhill Street Lawrence, Mass. Gene Smoker Committee (I); Lawrence B. C. Ciub, Secretary (I), Vice-President (2), Presicient (3, 4); Cap and Gown Committee (4); Sodality; Promoter League of Sacred Heart; Plattsburg. Next we offer for your consideration the quiet and sedate Mr. Bernardin. It would be difficult to con- ceive Lawrence as being a troublesome city if all her citizens were of such a type as Gene. Always calm, peaceful and of sunny disposition, he can count many a man his friend. Gene has distinguished himself throughout his course. From the date of entrance, his work soon stamped him as a man who was sincere and energetic. While a Junior under Fr. McCluskey, our friend became quite prominent as a philosopher and was called upon to solve many a subtle question. Mr. Bernardin can talk French as well as English, and often have we been bewil- dered listeners to a rapid stream of unintelligible words. Gene usually speaks French when he is in an argument with other descendants of the Land of the Lily. At Plattsburg, and especially at Cliff Haven, Gene ' s ability to parlez-vous won him many a fair acquaintance with whom the rest of us were unable to talk. Since Gene has come to B. C., he has constantly been endeavoring to bring his home town into prominence. To do this the, more effectually, he helped to originate the Lawrence B. C. Club and invited his classmates to its annual socials. All who had the pleasure of visiting Lawrence will admit that it is some place. Gene and his classmates now part, and in leaving this open, frank and sincere youth, we trust that he shall gain a prominent place in the world. As a man of medicine and surgery he must quickly rise from the realms of cat and rabbit dissection, and no doubt will have designs on many of us. Per- haps some day, Gene, we may permit you to practice on us. ' J We may perchance allow your implements to infringe upon our bodily members — in other words, sometime we may need a hair-cut ! ! Good luck ! 23
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Page 28 text:
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1919 SUB T U RR I 1919 HENRY FRANCIS BARRY 97 QuiNCY Street Roxbury, Mass. Spider arsily Track ( 1 , 2, 3, 4) ; Captain Track (4) ; Roxbury B. C. Club; Mathematics Prize (1); Smoker Committee (1); Social Committee (3); Sodality; Plallsburg. It is with the greatest pleasure that we present the first of our number, Mr. Henry F. Barry, more com- monly known as Spider. To say the least, Henry is a man of ability. To him all things are easy and unworthy of any undue exterior manifestation of alarm or nervousness. His nonchalance as to difficulties in- volved in the questions hurled at him by his professors has caused these learned gentlemen to pause, wonder and then doubt whether their pet subject was so deep after all. Under no conditions has Henry ever allowed anything to distract his equanimity or weaken his confidence, and it is no doubt this happy faculty that has won for him great success. Way back in 1915, Henry decided to display his form ethereal in a running suit and in that year made a successful start. His progress in track athletics has been rapid and after many brilliant feats, he finally won the coveted honor of captain of the varsity track team. It is enough to say that he bore his honors with due modesty, and his quality of quiet leadership guaranteed a successful season. Spider ' s endeavors displayed along different lines have been consistent and reliable, and we prophesy that this constancy of purpose will win for him, later in life, a great success. Whether or not he gains his desired position as general in the Peruvian army, we are sure that he will be found among the big guns, and just as he has been a leader on the class roll and has served as a ready means for the pro- fessors to become acquainted with the boys, in future years he will glance back from his throne in the hall of military strategy and will spur the rest of us along the pathway of fame.
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Page 30 text:
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1919 SUB TU RRI 1919 ARTHUR EDMUND BURKE 1010 North Union Street, Rockland, Mass. Art Arthur B.o:nahan (1); Marquette (2); Sodality; Class Baseball (1). This young gentleman is the beau brummell of the c lass of 1919. His handsome countenance, his tail, slender frame set off by a natty society costume make him our tailor-made man and cause many of our would-be dukes to bite their lips in hopeless chagrin and useless envy. They say that clothes do not make the man, and of course we make no claims that they do; but in this case we have both the clothes and the man. Yes, and a man in every sense of the word, true to his word, loyal to his friends and earnest in his work. Although rather quiet m class, and as a rule a firm believer in the maxim, silence is golden, still after the classes are over, after the day ' s round of lectures is completed, you can find Art among the merry groups of our wits and songsters either telling a new one or humming the latest. As a debater during his first two years at college, Arthur showed that he possessed a powerful voice, an easy, graceful delivery and the happy faculty of quick and accurate judgment. In Junior we looked for him to shine forth in all his glory as an orator, but we looked in vain. The entrance of the U. S. into the war gave Art food for more serious thought and he wavered between remaining at school and enlisting. Finally he went to Plattsburg, where, as a reward for his consistent work, he was given a lieutenancy. Art has even proven himself a man. His ambitions, his words, and his actions have always been worthy of a true B. C. fellow. And in closing, what greater praise than this can we give him? For though not born nor bred in the wiles and ways of the Hub, but rather hailing from a quiet, subdued, peaceful little town, he has nevertheless caused the city fellows to watch their step and guard their laurels. We give Art back to Rockland, the same earnest and capable youth that we met four short years ago. 24
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