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Page 30 text:
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Sophomore Class—1905 First Term. Colors—Red and White Yell—Vivo, vivo ! Vivo, vive! Hobart 1 Hobart! N aughty-five. Officers Second Term. Warren Ray Hadsell, President, Walter Frederick Nutt Hugh St. Elmo Miller, Vice-President, . Jerome Kates John Lawrence Frierson, . Secretary, John Archibald Sinclair Walter Frederick Nutt, . . Treasurer. Henry Bartlett VanHoesen Herbert Rockwell Hollands, . . Historian, . Herbert Rockwell Hollands 28
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Page 29 text:
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Harry Dailies Marshall, Letters with Latin, . Geneva, N. Y. Robert Tarrant McCutcheon, Classical, k a, Chicago, 111. Henry George Meacham, Classical, . Lewiston, N. Y. Fielding Whitman Mead, Classical, Whitehall, N. Y. Robert Ellsworth Monagle, Scientific, Stanley, N. Y. Henry Oliver Palmer, Scientific, k a, Geneva, N. Y. Leonard Scott Partridge, Letters with Latin, e a X, Phelps, N. Y. Roy Huddleston Rogers, Letters, k a, Seneca Falls, N. Y. Guy Emery Shipler, Special, 2 4 , Clyde, N. Y. Joseph Lorenz Sporer, Special, Owego, N. Y. Frank William Sterrett, Classical, Middleport, N. Y. Robert Duncan Wait, Letters, gax, Watkins, N. Y. Louis Rice Wasey, Letters, 2 4 , Detroit, Mich. David Henry Weeks, Letters with Latin, . Marcellus, N. Y. George Allen Weeks, Letters, e A X, Phelps. N. Y. 177 Lewis St. . 1 Geneva Hall . 23 Geneva Hall 8 Geneva Hall . 181 Lewis St. . 554 South Main St. Theta Delta Chi House . Kappa Alpha Lodge 3 C Medbery Hall 11 Geneva Hall 2 D Medbery Hall . 7 A Medbery Hall Sigma Phi Place . 2 C Medbery Hall Theta Delta Chi House
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Page 31 text:
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Sophomore History T is with great pleasure that we review the career of '05. Nearly two years of our course have passed and as we pause and look back we cannot help but feel a thrill of pride and satisfaction at the record we have made. Our contests with ’04, our first banner scrap, and our Freshman banquet have all been mentioned in the first chapter of our history. When College opened last fall most of our old men came back by the end of the first week, and we were reinforced by a few new men who entered the class. When the time for the class events arrived we showed our superiority. Out of courtesy to ’06 I shall not mention the football and baseball scores, but can only say that they were fair practice games. When it came to the cane rush the Fresh- ies were again snowed under in a contest in which the odds were greatly in their favor. Of course we all feel sorry for the poor “Fresh,” but what little respect we had for them went with the banner scrap. After placing the banner forty feet up a flag pole they had to be assisted by one of our oldest Professors to keep it there. But let us pass from class affairs into the larger range of “college affairs” and glance for a moment at our standing. In athletics eight of our class have won the football “H,” which is the best showing made by any class. But we do not stop with football, for out of the five on the basketball team we are represented by three men. When the time comes for the spring sports the ’05 men will be among the first to be in the field and will form the backbone of our lacrosse and baseball teams. But it is not upon the athletic field alone that our men are prominent, but in other fields as well. In the Dramatic club our men are seen taking the prominent parts, and we are well represented in tire Musical clubs. In the class room it is easily seen that ’05 does not put aside her studies for outside work and sports. Among her number are some of the most brilliant men in college. As we look into the somewhat hazy future we venture to predict that nineteen-five’s career will continue the pa;h she has begun ; and with this cheerful prospect we close the second chapter of our history.
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