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Page 67 text:
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-..-....,,.-.,..,.,.........,...,......W--...........---...4-.,...,.........-....,,--y.... ,-,, af f : 7 1, ' , 1 , 1. .f - 1:1 Y: W:-,f -.-:A-gf-1 , , . ,,.,:,,.1g,-rv' .:1,,A-.az ,. -551,4 -11 ---- 1: ,rg AT.'Ii:-T'-'3:J-':E1'.T.'- ,Iii lffLTfInJ-i'vf-'I.'!- .TZLZ21'7+'2T12'n f- -'-1 were ,ca ..., .-as gina ,aa ---- f:--. ,.,,::-:- 22 A ,'. ,, ,..g5t. ...,.... ., ,,,,.. 1-Ma.. -r7ivx2,...:..if:::4L1Z:iiif:fi' ilf---'m1x::f-T:e:::t:73:Tf'L r:::Tff 1iff'f Z:fT:i1ariQf'f:Tg:L:::'.. ',.4V' 4 V' ....,.-,agar :'-:--..-:-- s- W. -.Y . --H W- ---Y -- --- V-v V V' - - ' - AND lT HAPPENS TWICE A TERM! NOEL STEARN-June, 1914 PROLOGUE Alas! the glorious dream of power and praise, For the all-powerful seniors, soon decays. However life is sweet to them those first few claysg For them the lotus taste of grand omnipotence delays The dark, clespairing thought of all the escorts they must raise In so few days! But when the seniors, wakened from their trance, Of real life begin to catch a glance, Behold, with fatal slogan in a body they advance, Each comely under-classman falls beneath their piercing glance, And is challenged thus, Ya goin' to th' dance F INVITATION One comely under-classman was waylaicl. The senior list was brought forth and displayed. Oh, yes. You'll take Miss So-and-so. F-he's very pleasant, don't you knowf' lifithout a word the trembling youth obeyed. I-Ie was dismayed. ACCEPTATION Just after school he met the pleasant maid. The color from his cheeks began to fade. Ah-e r-ahem-er-aw-you knowl I wonder if ah you'd er go l'd simply be be dee-lighted, sirf, she said. He turned and fled. PREPARATION T hat night he overhauled his Sunday clothes. The pitiful results increased his woes. llfis only collar was too smallg l-le couldn't button it at alll And what he said, no one will ever know. 'Tis better so. TREPIDATION An hour'too soon, before her house he paced, He simply coulcln't get his courage braced. Thrice he retreated, thrice returned, While in his heart blank terror burned. Again his weary footsteps he retraced. She must be faced! Sixty-three
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Page 66 text:
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3.-::.'::.z-2.11 . -:a2a4:.L:-.::m4:4r::.:r.g'7::nv::.11L2:::....... ..w:::..-::r:::.:1::.:. .::::::r ------.,-.... 1 L . , - - V YW A -- I ceremonial of ingenious weeping-Smollet style. Item 11. To the Knight owlsl' of June, '14, we bequeath such redeeming occasions as a speech by an unexpected and prolix visitor and at about 10:30 o'clock such joyful remarks as Hurrah, no Latin lesson to- dayf' and Truly, the gods are with me. Item 12. To Mr. Fuller we bequeath such ailments as headaches, due to unreasonable physiography lessons, or aching muscles, resulting from a two-mile walk completed in about twenty minutes. Item 13. To Miss Krumeich we will our sable uniforms, 'lgymu slippers, and such menaces as dumbbells and wands, together with -broken combs, stray bodkins and old bricks used for base marks, hoping that she will cherish them tenderly as tokens from those who meant well, but accomplished little. Item 14. To Mr. Lehrmann, we bequeath such awkward alfairs as a Jump-not-yet , a step or two out of time, together with the groans of the oifenders. Item 15. To our friend, Mr. Stellwagen, we bequeath all the cracked and changing voices, fake notes and nasal solos, which we have outgrown, together with out-of-tune pianos and boisterous applause. Item 16. XVe lastly bequeath to our suc- cessor, our most cherished possession, june, '14, the goodwill handed down to us by our Yeatmanite ancestors. VVe bequeath, fur- thermore, our earnest efforts and our loy- alty, together with the joy and happiness which must need result from such a par- entage. In testimony whereof, we have signed and sealed this instrument, and thereunto set our hands this 23rd day of january, 1914. A. D. 1Vitnesses : XYILLIAM BU'rL1sn, CHARLES B. Gonnxrm. LAVE TAKIN' JEWEL ANTL12-June, 1920 Sure and it's lonesome I am to lave Yeatman, Begorra, I thot I'd be happy, The lockers, the gym, ivery hall, Oh, it's longing I am to stay wid ye, Oi don't want to lave at all, at all. Sure it's sad and I am at the parting, A lump reses up in me throat, I to be after trying to whistle, But I can't sound a shingle note. To lave the zeroes and Pls But there's something else beshicles zeroes, In fact, wan orr two says there's G's. Naw. but spaking now in rale earnest, I love the ould school rale well, And I'1l treasure a sphot in me heart here, In which this grate luve shall dwell. And Illl think of our Yeatman rale often, And Yeatman, I hope, won't forgitt, A student who went there in '20. 7' . In spirit a X eatman-ite yit. Sixty-two
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Page 68 text:
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