Milwaukee School of Engineering - EMF Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI)

 - Class of 1920

Page 206 of 480

 

Milwaukee School of Engineering - EMF Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 206 of 480
Page 206 of 480



Milwaukee School of Engineering - EMF Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 205
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Milwaukee School of Engineering - EMF Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 207
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Page 206 text:

 EZZ3agr CHAIRS Chairs are sometimes useful and sometimes merely ornamental articles sprinkled with great profusion throughout all edifices. Those chairs which arc ornamental seem also designed for the purpose of discouraging sedentary habits, although they sometimes do make excellent objects on which to rest the eyes. . . The functions of useful chairs are many and varied: They are stood upright by those who cannot reach the top shelf; they arc fine things to stumble over in the dark; rightly placed, they make an excellent device for covering that worn spot on the carpet; their proper arrangement about a table shows who is the head, or at least, in the case of family tables, who is the figurehead; they furnish welcome storage facilities for tacks and pins which have been discarded by small boys. An easy chair is one which will suffer all kinds of personal abuse without retaliation. Such a chair stands in marked contrast to that which tips over backward just as one begins to think that it is easy. Chairs which look easy are not always to be trusted. Treacherous chairs have unusual opportuni- ties for deception, for the reason that, regardless of the amount of suspicious attention one bestows when contemplating their use, when put into common use one always turns his back to them, thus flaunting temptation in their faces and putting himself at an exceptional disadvantage. It would probably be wasted time which was spent trying to invent a chair which one could sit in and face at the same time, as a chair's back is also its front, and its top may be its bottom; but this is not true of human beings. CLASS FAULTS AND REMEDIES OF II-F Victim Fault Remedy Aiken .................Debating with Stewert ..................win a debate Mether ................Stuttering ................................Whistle Meyers ................Sleeping in class .............Do less night work Morton ................Curiosity ....................Why and wherefore Muttart................Poetry ....................................English literature Olsen .................Quick Temper.............Less coffee before school Pagel................. .Those ancient jokes.....Inherit a new joke book Pirie..................Grumbling..............................Try a smile Rogers ................Going to movies.....................Harder lessons Rudic..................Red Hair .................................H2 02 Schumacher.............Chemistry fiend .....................Call “Doc Slowick................Too quiet ................................A little pep Slye ..................Asking questions ........................Answer a few Svcen..................Inventing...................................Padded cell Wells..................Concentrating ...............................See a specialist Wiggins ...............Bashfulncss..................................Theda Bara Zimmerman..............Homesickness.................Back on the Ole farm Taylor.................“I want results”.............................Try a rest Hayes .................Too “Hard .........................’....Look human Hiller.................That terrible music..........................Music teacher Walker ................Breaking test tubes...........................Iron tubes Strand.................Too much speed ...........................A damper Van Antwerp............Too ambitious......................A little hard luck Page Two Hundred

Page 205 text:

M ' % -f HE 1920 A TIP FOR II-F ENGINEERS 1 Upon starting in on a new term's work, make out as complicated a schedule «'is possible. The office force will appreciate your efforts. (How about it, Miss Koehler?) 2 Kindly inform your instructors as to how they should deliver their lec- tures. You will make a big impression on them by so doing. 3 While in chem. lab. blow up a few generators. You will be surprised to see how it breaks the monotony. (The pleasure is all yours, Slye.) 4 Do not bother your electrical lab. instructors by asking them for fuses. After three or four months of school, you should be able to help yourself. 5 Develop the habit of throwing chalk and waste paper in the lamp bowls. It will make a good basketball played of you. 6 After completing term one you are qualified to .step into the limelight. Wearing an S. O. E. tic and a red and white chrysanthemum down Grand Avenue will get you the spotlight as quickly as anything. 7 Make as much use of the elevators as possible. The operators enjoy the work immensely. (Ask Looic, he knows.) 8 While in class, cultivate the habit of whistling and scratching on the chairs and walls. Your instructors will immediately inform you as to how highly they appreciate these habits. 9 If possible, specialize in deaf and dumb language. It will save a great deal of time and trouble for both the Chamber of Commerce girls and your- self. 10 Remember, it is patriotic to be economical. If you cannot smoke all your cigarette during class intermissions, go fifty-fifty with a friend. Perhaps he will return the favor later on. 11 Mingle as much as possible with the crap shooters. Your donations to the good cause may save some of the boys a long Sunday night walk. 12 Attend all the smokers given by the school. Make it a point to get to every otic if it is only long enough to grab off a good cigar. O. E. S. 4 0 0 LITERALLY OF COURSE Bright Elcctrotech (to Editor Maiers) : “I sent you some suggestions telling how to make the E. M. F. more interesting. Have you carried out my ideas?” Maiers: “As you came in did you meet the office boy with the waste basket ?” Elec-tech.: “Yes, sir, I did.” Maiers: “Well he was carrying out your ideas.” Page One Hundred Ninety-nine



Page 207 text:

 -THE H920 EHBF '‘ ■ ■■-- ., Z.—— '::y ' ' ' . - ' Sttginmtng I-A NAME AND HOME TOWN OF I-A ENG. «I Almendinger, H. A Anderzak, Ray S. Ludington, Mich. Bancroft, Delbert Barnett. Claude Chunn, W Chie, J. H Fredericks, Robert M Fasick, Burl I Gartner, 1. C Hardgrove. R. W Jacoboskc, A. L Keller, Geo. W Kcirn, Paul A Long, Forest A Lehmann. Elbert W Lovering, Paul W Leavens, Burton Masters. Dean B Melien, E. Rex Norman, Alvin J '. Branyan, E. A Assumption, 111. Porter. Frank M Ricdy. Walter L Robles, G. E Hcnnequin, Harry McClintock, A. C Runge, Walter A Rice. John A Worth. W. Va. Smyth, R. L Silver, Harold S Sandoval. Carlos See vers. Arthur Wagner. Walter Weltmer, Clifford M West, Kenneth A Page Two Hundred One

Suggestions in the Milwaukee School of Engineering - EMF Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) collection:

Milwaukee School of Engineering - EMF Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 415

1920, pg 415

Milwaukee School of Engineering - EMF Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 169

1920, pg 169

Milwaukee School of Engineering - EMF Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 430

1920, pg 430

Milwaukee School of Engineering - EMF Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 226

1920, pg 226

Milwaukee School of Engineering - EMF Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 355

1920, pg 355

Milwaukee School of Engineering - EMF Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 162

1920, pg 162


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