. Mirror, 1921. UndergraduatesAddress to Halls and Campus Prophecy for WomenProphecy for MenFarewell AddressClass OdePipe Oration Music Music Music Millard D. Webster Edward A. Morris Ruth Colburn Minerva E. Cutler WiNSLOw S. AndersonCharles M. Starbird Irma Haskell Frank H. Blackington Carl W. Belmore Florence G. Lindquist Robert Jordan Pipe of Peace MusicPresident and Master of Ceremonies, Stanley W. Spratt 122 Tune: Folloiv the Gleam From the years that so swiftly have flownFull of memries so bright and gay,Shines the light of our college daysGuiding us with its gleaming us, guide


. Mirror, 1921. UndergraduatesAddress to Halls and Campus Prophecy for WomenProphecy for MenFarewell AddressClass OdePipe Oration Music Music Music Millard D. Webster Edward A. Morris Ruth Colburn Minerva E. Cutler WiNSLOw S. AndersonCharles M. Starbird Irma Haskell Frank H. Blackington Carl W. Belmore Florence G. Lindquist Robert Jordan Pipe of Peace MusicPresident and Master of Ceremonies, Stanley W. Spratt 122 Tune: Folloiv the Gleam From the years that so swiftly have flownFull of memries so bright and gay,Shines the light of our college daysGuiding us with its gleaming us, guide us, guide us, oh Bates,Binding our hearts ever to us, guide us, guide us, oh Bates,With the light that is loyalty. In the years that are yet to far from these halls so dear,Twenty-One, may thy spirit renewAll the ties that have bound us upward, upward, and on,Led by the hopes fostered by thee,Ever upward, upward, and on,Twenty-One, we will faithful be. Florence G. Lindquist. 123. 05reck f lay—l^tp^nlytUB Under the guidance of Prof. Robinson, the Senior Class will this yearpresent the Hippoli/tus of Euripides on the evening of Class Day, June21st. This is without doubt the most dramatic and best balanced of theEuripides dramas and well suited for a pageantry effect in an out-doorproduction. Queen Phaedras secret love for her husbands son, Hippolytus, is dis-covered by her nurse, who treacherously betrays her mistresss , learning of this, upbraids her for her wickedness, and then in herdesperation, kills herself in order to save her honor. King Theseusreturns triumphant to greet his queen, and finds her dead. Enraged athis son, he exiles him, and Hippolytus, true to his oath not to tell theking, goes without a word. It is not until he is brought back dying ofserious wounds, and until Artemis herself intervenes, proclaiming theinnocence of Hippolytus, that the king at length asks his sons forgiveness. The cast follows: Prologue


Size: 1202px × 2078px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookpublisherbates, bookyear1921