The record of the class of 1918 . chief from February to December,1917. He asserts, without qualification, that the Neivs is a better money-making propositionthan the Scarlet, of which he was also business manager during Sophomore year. 1918 was represented on the business staff of the A^ea5 by Morris Shipley, who, afterhaving served faithfully for two years and a half as a subaltern, was rewarded with thepost of business manager. His incumbency in that office was, unfortunately, short, owingto his departure for France last May with Base Hospital No. 10. Modesty is powerful with us, but still


The record of the class of 1918 . chief from February to December,1917. He asserts, without qualification, that the Neivs is a better money-making propositionthan the Scarlet, of which he was also business manager during Sophomore year. 1918 was represented on the business staff of the A^ea5 by Morris Shipley, who, afterhaving served faithfully for two years and a half as a subaltern, was rewarded with thepost of business manager. His incumbency in that office was, unfortunately, short, owingto his departure for France last May with Base Hospital No. 10. Modesty is powerful with us, but still some mention must be made of the superhumantoil expended on this masterly work here before you. Far be it from us to state that thefourteen lackeys of the Record Board composed the brilliant scintillating half of the class,but it is sufficient to the evil thereof to say that we feel convinced that never again can gettogether such a fine lookin body of men as that which helped Walt and Ken put outthis Haverford 1918 Record. 51 iWW. / ?<- 5 * . \ .i.^^j^Z 918 CLASS RECORD 1918 Cap niib pcUst We are not histrionically inclined. We never have been. We delight in giving youcold facts without gestures. Hence it comes that only two of our members ever weredramatic persons. The illustrious two were Steve Curtis and Henry Schenck. InFreshman year, Steves masterly facial contortions won him his laurels in the role of LadyPennybroke in Eliza Comes to Stay. But his big success came in Sophomore flying circus was playing All-of-a-Sudden Peggy, and Steve, as Major ArchiePhipps, factotum and general bungler, brought down the house with his artistic swearingfor the good of the family, and his ingenious use of a monocle. It was in this same play that Schenck showed to the admiring throng his latent shall we forget the night we were doubled in spasms, listening to the testy youngspider hunter. Lord Crackenthorpe, thundering forth, Well, lohy not? Why not? afterhear


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidrecordofclas, bookyear1918