Liber brunensis . Ed was born in Easthampton, August28, 1888, and came to Brown viaWilliston Seminary. Whether it wasin Easthampton that he became a philos-opher or not, we cannot say, but it iscertain that he is a philosopher as wellas engineer when he says, Marriagemay be likened to a ship without arudder. He will become a civil engi-neer. Chub is a full-fledged Rhode Islandnative and labors under the sad delu-sion that R. I. is the only state in theUnion. It certainly did assume a ter-rible responsibility when it gave birthto, and reared and educated him. Butin an altruistic manner we will
Liber brunensis . Ed was born in Easthampton, August28, 1888, and came to Brown viaWilliston Seminary. Whether it wasin Easthampton that he became a philos-opher or not, we cannot say, but it iscertain that he is a philosopher as wellas engineer when he says, Marriagemay be likened to a ship without arudder. He will become a civil engi-neer. Chub is a full-fledged Rhode Islandnative and labors under the sad delu-sion that R. I. is the only state in theUnion. It certainly did assume a ter-rible responsibility when it gave birthto, and reared and educated him. Butin an altruistic manner we will forgiveit of this error and warn it not to beguilty of a second offence. The engi-neering building has held him in itsclutches and taught him to be that he has almost arrived at thestate of perfection of civility he intendsto turn his knowledge on the world. This is the serious man with theintellectual noodle, ready to smoke apipe-full or talk over knotty philosophi-cal problems at any hour of day ornigh
Size: 1311px × 1906px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectuniversitiesandcolle