The record of the class of 1914 . WILLIAM SHEPPARD PATTESON ?PAT,-CLIll) Pat is a good boy now. t, you will understand me, that there was a time when he was not. hut since the dayswhen Cupid first flew into our horizon there has come a new seriousness that well becomes that massive brow. A come-edian of the first water. Pat has kept us in one continuous gale of good-natured laughter for four years, and we now offerour tardy thanks. .Mso. was he not the genius from whose fertile brain sprang the never-dying Skinny-Wah-Wah ? Itis for his many talents that we all appreciate him, but those of us w


The record of the class of 1914 . WILLIAM SHEPPARD PATTESON ?PAT,-CLIll) Pat is a good boy now. t, you will understand me, that there was a time when he was not. hut since the dayswhen Cupid first flew into our horizon there has come a new seriousness that well becomes that massive brow. A come-edian of the first water. Pat has kept us in one continuous gale of good-natured laughter for four years, and we now offerour tardy thanks. .Mso. was he not the genius from whose fertile brain sprang the never-dying Skinny-Wah-Wah ? Itis for his many talents that we all appreciate him, but those of us who know him as a keen observer of life and an eversympathetic friend, will always see him as one of tlie brightest gems in the crown of iqi4. 95. ROWLAND STAUNTON PHILIPS •BUD, ?PHII,- Biul first flaslied in iipun us from his native Kennett, a g^Iory in brown and Yankee sense of Innnor soon endeared him to Dick Schoepperle, of sainted mem-(irv, 1)v whom he took up his abode. Not for long, however, for Bud soon made his ap-pearance amongst our best people in North, and stood well in the foreground of thegoverning class. His artistic development has been rapid, a fact of easy proof for hisaccurately-kept note-book has varied monthly in characteristic items. First it was cigarettes,then Latin trots, then shirts, then football liniment, and finally we found last week,item—Plato (complete works)—$ The word pep was first coined for Bud. Nat-urally aggressive, he has waxed more so under Sangree, and the Havcrfoniian owes itsboom almost entirely to his efforts, .\thlete and business man, and blessed with the per-sistence uf a library notice, Bud must succeed, and blind to what he would not see, willtriumph even in


Size: 1077px × 2320px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjecthaverfo, bookyear1914