Mizpah . i One Hundred Seventeen. idOB BEFORE AFTER Four years of school at B. Y. many a striking picftures of four years agoNow seem so quaint* and strange. For instance take these picturesOf our jolly Clarence note the many changesThe kind, and in what way A little boy in knee pantsHe was four years hes a 1912 sportSay, dont B. Y. U. grow? One Hundred Eighten Q)ftat tfje Panpon arijinks; of ©g A stalwart race by harmony thus boundWho laid opposing barriers to the ground;We, in derision, scorn despairing throes,Pluck diadems of victory from our foes. This is


Mizpah . i One Hundred Seventeen. idOB BEFORE AFTER Four years of school at B. Y. many a striking picftures of four years agoNow seem so quaint* and strange. For instance take these picturesOf our jolly Clarence note the many changesThe kind, and in what way A little boy in knee pantsHe was four years hes a 1912 sportSay, dont B. Y. U. grow? One Hundred Eighten Q)ftat tfje Panpon arijinks; of ©g A stalwart race by harmony thus boundWho laid opposing barriers to the ground;We, in derision, scorn despairing throes,Pluck diadems of victory from our foes. This is the way in which the 12s H. S. see themselves. And^in looking back over their class history one will see that theyhave some grounds for this rather egotistic attitude. Immediately upon entering school, they showed their aggres-siveness by dragging the lis H. S. through the mill-race. Eversince then they have been up to their tricks (especially withthose unfortunate foes) by taking the first inter-class baseballseries in which th


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidbanyan1912br, bookyear1912