The record of the class of 1914 . HOWARD WEST ELKINTON ?HIRAM, -TAURUS- Siniilis est Elkinton,Bufoni laiiguidoTameii si vexatus sit,Heu ! (spinaculo) ;Bufo se exerceatCum libris et pilo. Yes, the above doggerel is in Latin; we have, nevertheless,other reasons for making use of it. Poetry—should it teach ormerely delight? Obviously, reader, it should teach mid will therefore worry out the meaning of the verse and come tothe inevitable conclusion that Elkinton is a languid toad. Thatthis characterization is not accurate is disproved by our emphatic as-sertion and the bright light in
The record of the class of 1914 . HOWARD WEST ELKINTON ?HIRAM, -TAURUS- Siniilis est Elkinton,Bufoni laiiguidoTameii si vexatus sit,Heu ! (spinaculo) ;Bufo se exerceatCum libris et pilo. Yes, the above doggerel is in Latin; we have, nevertheless,other reasons for making use of it. Poetry—should it teach ormerely delight? Obviously, reader, it should teach mid will therefore worry out the meaning of the verse and come tothe inevitable conclusion that Elkinton is a languid toad. Thatthis characterization is not accurate is disproved by our emphatic as-sertion and the bright light in his eyes. As he searches for the letterA on his typewriter you can catch a trace of the persistency which haswon him his laurels. This wild adventurous gleam is produced justas efifectively by the noise of a «> ll K key as by the aforementionedspinaculum. Howard, as athlete, journalist, student and convivialspirit generally, is distinguished by his relentless perseverance, per-vaded at times, it is true, by a quaint far e
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjecthaverfo, bookyear1914