HEN now for the fourth time the Class of ‘og appears in the Annual it is with more than usual pride that we are filled; for ours has been a glorious past. We consider that the four years we have spent in college have been the most eventful of any that have been spent in this good old place. Our members, who have come from every corner of the state, have brought to us inspiration of every sort and the conflux has been most fruitful. We have famous men in our number and we have fulfil led our duties amid an exciting environment. Some of our fateful situations and accomplishments we will again recount. Never can the day be forgotten in our Freshmen year when looking out into the night we saw our old Administration building on fire. That above all things we must tabulate for we believe it has made the most lasting impression on our memory. We believe that the oaths which we swore then to preserve our college have made us a united class. Working under a disadvantage in regard to Univer- sity equipment we have grown more friendly and when we have worked, have worked more earnestly. We may consider now that this circumstance has blessed us and brought us good. Now, when glanc- ing toward the campus, we see an Administration building larger and roomier than the old one we feel that we have done a great deal to build it. They are spirits such as ours that have cause to rejoice. The deeds of our Freshman year need not again be recounted. They have all been told in former books. Our Freshmen scraps have become famous. The desperate deeds of the Sophies will long be re- membered as well by us as by the members of the 08% aggregation. The glorious Freshman Glee we gave in the old Club house has also often been retold. The Sophs, poor things, were too much afraid that night to appear and spoil our pleasure. The debators from our class that defeated the Iew- iston Normal have done great things since then, but their first success has not been forgotten. The class that graduated last year will long remember the de- feat they suffered in football, when Sophs, at the hands of the Class of 1909. So, too, our Sophomore year. The Sophomore picnic, the banquet at Hotel Moscow, the party in Moscow public park and the Sophomore frolic all show how we congregated in enjoyment when re- leased from the social ban. By this time our Fresh- man spirit had not relaxed but we were becoming more closely united and were becoming more hope- ful than ever before. It was mere hope that was
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