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Page 49 text:
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www.-Qttiuafwumynmy ..,......-..www W x Q we-.www .1-W is Q3 W' is W1 Q:-f-'-M.. ...N Ng SI' A-x,,...N,,...fI......, ..... Nc.,www....,,.,................. x '-v-sis NJ tumultuous year the destiny of the class was in the hands of Thomas White as president 5 Thomas Corbett as secretary, and john Felin as treasurer. XV ith a remembrance of the successful climax with which 1923 has closed its Freshman year, another smoker was arranged, and once again the fond farewells were passed through the haze of My Lady Nicotine. A still different scene was portrayed to the observer as a smaller group of men emerged fro-m the Union Station in the fall of IQZI. A grim look, the lines of determination upon the face of each, for this was the year when the cruel shoals of philosophy were ready to catch the unwary. But these grim, determined looks meant one thing, an intention to open up T.'s notes as wide as the pages of an elementary primer. However, 1923 could not neglect the other side of its life. At the beginning of the year john Quinn was elected president, Francis Moroney, vice-presidentg Arthur B. Meah, secretary, and Frank Conway, treasurer. The success of the junior Prom, with James F. Rutledge as chairman, reached new heights of glory in the social world. The big event of 1923, as Juniors, was undertaken and carried through with much splendor and gayety. Tea-dances and smokers occupied their usual place in the social life of the class, and to round the year out, the embryo philoso- pliers stepped out of their roles and won the Inter-Class Basketball League. In September, upon reorganization, surprisingly few had been left by the wayside. The class officers were chosen: Edward A. McCormick, president, J. Burke YValsh, vice-presidentg Charles B. Lowndes. secretary, and Joseph C. McNamara, treasurer. Things started with a bang the second week with the Senior Tea-Dance. Soon after that, attention turned to athletics, and tl1e Northern Lights, the pride of the Seniors, went down to defeat before the team across the quadrangle, who not only had premeditated signals, but even practiced. Twenty-three inaugurated another new step by adopting the honor sys3 tem, which has worked successfully all year. Through the long, hard winter, they boned philosophy, held their own in basketball, and staggered along through the social program. In April, the Senior Prom marked the striking of the eleventh hour of college days. Under the chairmanship of Frank Maloy, this dance was hugely successful, as was the rest of the social flurry which was '23,s swan song. A few short weeks, exams-and its all over, and ,23 is on the Alumni list. XVe bow-and retire. S w X-.--S Eg -' 'A ws 'wx SXNXXX ws NWNAN KNAW was XX www N A XRS ks Nw X Q www A wtXss kkrffi-A-Q s .JM . i . FSXSF . s. sms Q X S .KSA X W .N .X Mm' 5 NV S . , .X AWN Xwa NK0 .N . Awww x XQ
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Page 48 text:
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. .x. ....LQ X 'sg,x .X .X Xasx X XXX ..f1:: N . .x.N.x . -s::::'i'sw s. ,Q N -N N ,S .. sg: Q ws- is X Wu NNN' Sm QQ- fa..c.N..M x N X 5 N l,.af..a.c.a...w Xxx f'.5wi wmv Upon the recapitulation, after the mid-years, it was found that the Call of the Wild, sometimes dehned as 'l'he Allyj' or HF Streetf' had proved a greater attraction and a more fascinating study than Horace and Virgil, and a mnnber had departed for parts unknown. The attention of 1923 was next centered upon the Inter-class Basketball League, and after vanquishing the dignified Seniors and the carefree Juniors, went down to defeat at the hands of the Sophomores in a glorious battle, Marquis of Queesberry Rules! After such notable achievements in athletic and academic lines, 1923 thought it time to show its proficiency in the art of Terpsicliore. So after Easter, the floor at Rauscher's having had an extra application of wax, each Freshman, with a fair bit of feminity on his arm, waited for the kick-off which would mark the first social activity of 1923. This event was such a success that one more social activity was undertaken, and that in the form of a smoker at the Lafayette. ln a few short days silence reigned on the Hilltop and 1923 had completed its most memorial of all years. A very different scene was enacted the following fall. lt was quite a 'fcollegiateu group of young men who emerged from the Union Station, to nonchalantly hail a taxi and stop at Barts, It was their privilege to welcome each other with a loud cry and a blacksmith's grip, and to speak remines- cently over Our Freshman yearfl But there was something immediate and pressing to be accomplished. A fresh deluge of unsophistication had swept over the college, and it was the duty of 1923, who were now known as Sopho- mores. to inform these youngsters that Georgetown was no place for their Prep School provincialisms, and all these tokens of bygone days must be laid aside in favor of bright colored lids and other various humilities. To the everlasting credit of 1923 let it be written upon the archives that 192.4 walked the straight and narrow path. i ln their new authority and prestige the Sophomores continued the vic- tories which they had so nobly begun in the previous year. NVhen the Varsity football season was over and all interest was centered upon the pending under- class battle, 1923 added more laurels to its crown by showing the Freshman that football was no infant's game, to the tune of 7-0, in spite of the odds which the renowned firm of Fatima K Dunhill laid against them. Having accomplished their allotted tasks, more pleasurable activities were undertaken in which there was a IOO per cent perfect participation. Tea-dances, dates, together with suspensions, came fast and furious. Time out was called at different periods of the year for studies and then basketball, and finally, base- ball, in all of which 1923 held its colors high. During this strenuous and slit xx Q. .X - vs- . .. .N sv- N.-s x ' W -' tw- -X X N v Q1 -w xws Q gi' tie E X N x .STSRC fr-.w.-.I -- Q f--.--.-rvs.'-vf-- ....... .... ........ , ......... f ' 2.123959
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Page 50 text:
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