Kalamazoo College - Boiling Pot Yearbook (Kalamazoo, MI)

 - Class of 1896

Page 26 of 92

 

Kalamazoo College - Boiling Pot Yearbook (Kalamazoo, MI) online collection, 1896 Edition, Page 26 of 92
Page 26 of 92



Kalamazoo College - Boiling Pot Yearbook (Kalamazoo, MI) online collection, 1896 Edition, Page 25
Previous Page

Kalamazoo College - Boiling Pot Yearbook (Kalamazoo, MI) online collection, 1896 Edition, Page 27
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • High-resolution, full color images available online
  • Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
  • View college, high school, and military yearbooks
  • Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
  • Support the schools in our program by subscribing
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 26 text:

l.. 'Ji L . G X- it ,. i.. .. a , 2 ,f i 1 2 W f i . V 1, , 1 VZ, ,- , li '.!lli,,'i?l,lS l Y, il l I l fl ffl ,, y I l K ii' f lillylfl'll,illl Q 'ill .Ulf l f i ' ligliilri lyl f' L' it ,ff ' illl' l ll' 1 1 'dv X l...a .f Z.f u of l 'J ffea d lff fz fi l N . ll' HISTORY OF TI-IE SENIOR CLASS. HE Seniors had been having one of those jolly class meetings for which they are famous, and the boys were straggling back tothe dormitory from the various homes ofthe youngladies, One of them appeared to be in a revery. Forgetting to lock his door he sat down in the darkness to dream of the past. The scenes of four years were rapidly shadowed on the sensitive plate of his brain, but little did he imagine that another sensitive plate was making a permanent record of the same pictures in a form that everyone -could see. Long he sat there with his recollections while our Cathode artist, who had stolen in unawares, stood behind him reeling off the yards of sensitive paper on which his visions were faithfully recorded. A At last the paper gave out and the artist stole away just in time to escape detection from the dreamer who awoke to find that it was long after midnight. It would be impossible to give more than a brief sketch of the wonderful panorama secured in this surreptitious manner, but in a few words we will try to describe some of the visions that floated before this senior's mind. The first picture is a group of verdent freshmen in a back yard on Carmel street. The boys of the class appear in full baseball armor, and their stern and per- spiring faces show that a fierce battle has just been fought. Gallantly have they borne themselves in the fray, but the sophomore regulars were too much for such raw recruits. Ah mel Little do these rash and inexperienced youths dream that before the year ends many of them will be defeated and mortally wounded by the arrows of the youngest of the gods. The girls of the class are present to reward their champions, and the boys soon drown their chagrin in sweet smiles and juicy watermelons. The next scene is at a house on Main street. Behold twenty-two freshies seated on the floor around a big basket of peanuts. The lights burn low and the pale, scared faces of the innocent young students tell of the wierd and frightful stories that are being related. Already the verdancy has begun to disappear. There is one who tries to be dignified and gallant but only succeeds in making doubly conspicuous his real bash- fulness. l-le is destined ere long to develop into the great politician of the college. The deliberate move- ments of his neighbor unmistakably point out the future dignified orator and preacher. The girls are all fresh and beautiful and it is easy to see what a tumult they are already stirring up in the hearts of these inexperienced and defenseless youths. But bashful- ness wins the day, for at the close of the scene all that

Page 25 text:

SENIOR CLASS. Uuluri.-Nile green and Hunter's green. 5l'IIUiin.4Ergatai anepaischuntoi. fljfll.-Razzle, dazzle! Hooolo, gooblef Ra, ra, fix! Kalamazoo ! Kalamazoo ! Nz'1zczj1-six! Qffirzrs. b President, H. C. JACKSON. Secretary, Miss ISABELLA BENNETT. Vice President, Miss PAULINE LATOURETTE. Treasurer, Miss FANNIE BARRETT. Qllaas gap Hnnnra. President of Day, H. C. JACKSON. G. V. PIXLEY, . V Class Prophesy, Salutatory, Miss ISABELLA BENNETT. S. J. l'lALL. Oration, E. E. DE XFOE. Class Song, Miss PAULINE LATOURETTE. Class History, M. J. NEWELL. Charge to Undergraduates, A. J. HUTCHINS. Class Poem E. JENKS. Fannie E. Barrett, B. S., Kalamazoo Albert Ernest jenks, B. S., Kalamazoo Isabella Grace Bennett, A. B., Kalamazoo Pauline LaTourette, B. S., Fenton Frank Eugene DeYoe, Ph. B., Richland Walter David McVVilliarns, A. B., Rives Junction James Butler FOX, Ph. B., Seattle, VVash. Marquis joseph Newell, A .B., Richland Samuel Jasper Hall, A. B., Meade George Vail Pixley, A. B., Lennon Almon I. Hutchins, A. B., Paw Paw Francis Burt Sinclair, A. B., Climax Herbert Clair jackson, Ph. B., Kalamazoo Edward Lewis Yaple, B. S., Mendon



Page 27 text:

we can see is a single solitary freshman, plodding his weary way homeward. I-low the others reached home we do not know, but from this circumstance and future ones it is probable that each of them went home alone as sober freshmen should. Interspersed with these scenes, often in a strange and jumbled way, are pictures of the old man Cato, Greek roots, sines and tangents, midnight lamps and excited freshmen vainly trying to convince the doctor that their sight translations of Livy do ample justice to the one-eyed enemy of Rome. Now the scenes take on the verdure of spring. There must have been some strange influence floating onthe breezes ofthe spring of '93, for now we never see a freshman alone. Even in broad day on the well beatenipath to the class room the girls seem to need escorts. Awkwardness and diffidence have been van- quished by the mischievous little boy with his arrows, and for a time he reigns supreme. Never were inno- cent youths so smitteng never was Cupid so malicious in his treachery. But Apollo claims a share in their devotions, for the culminating scene of the year is his annual festival, the great Freshman Contest. One by one the twelve speakers appear and make the 'old church ring with the music of speech. Breathlessly they await the decision, and heartily do they cheer when Mr. Jenks and Miss Vifilkinson proudly mount the platform and receive the well earned prizes. Here for some distance the pictures are very ob- scure. Whether this is due to some fault in the apparatus or to the dirnness of the images in our subject's brain cannot be precisely determined. At any rate we shall have to pass over the next two years with a few brief outlines. L Only thirteen of the original twenty-two are class- iied as sophomores, and when we reach the junior year but nine are left. During these two years we get faint glimpses of various individuals as they put the finish- ing touches on their Greek and Latin, or wander through the mazes of calculus and analytics. Logic and literature have their day, and the sciences exert their influence to hold the attention of these dreamers to the realities of life. Faint outlines of tennis rackets and footballs appear at different places, min- gled with pictures of boats and cottages at Crooked Lake. Venus' son is busy all this time shooting his arrows, and although many, many of them go wide of the mark, some of the shafts find a permanent lodg- ment in tender hearts. But Minerva has been the leading deity as the expanding brains and the large size ofthe junior caps infallibly prove. Another con- test in which Mr. Fox and Miss Bennett are victors closes this part of their college life. By some strange coincidence, the subject of the first picture of senior life is the sameas that of the nrst freshman scene,-watermelons in a back yard, but this time on Main street with a greatly altered corn- pany. Many ofthe old faces are missing, but several new ones have come in and some who had dropped out have reappeared, so that the year begins with fourteen learned and dignified seniors. The old green- ness and timidity have given place to that self-control and self-conhdence which only seniors can maintain. Election of OICI,:lCC1'S is the order of the day, and the orators for which the class is famous wax eloquent as they extol the merits of their various candidates for office. just watch Mac hustling about as if he were managing a presidential campaign. Listen to Hutch and Jenks and Sinclair and Jackson as they plead for their favorites, and the girls, if not eloquent, have their way just the same. So with jokes and puns and eloquence, and a splendid array of senior caps they are launched on the nnal voyage of college life. But soon another picture presents itself to view. Visions of frightened seniors on Hallowe'en care- fully securing their best suits from the expected raid of the dormitory boys. Hurried consultations, the wild

Suggestions in the Kalamazoo College - Boiling Pot Yearbook (Kalamazoo, MI) collection:

Kalamazoo College - Boiling Pot Yearbook (Kalamazoo, MI) online collection, 1902 Edition, Page 1

1902

Kalamazoo College - Boiling Pot Yearbook (Kalamazoo, MI) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Kalamazoo College - Boiling Pot Yearbook (Kalamazoo, MI) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Kalamazoo College - Boiling Pot Yearbook (Kalamazoo, MI) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

Kalamazoo College - Boiling Pot Yearbook (Kalamazoo, MI) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Kalamazoo College - Boiling Pot Yearbook (Kalamazoo, MI) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938


Searching for more yearbooks in Michigan?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Michigan yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.