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Page 24 text:
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LANGUAGES THINGS WE OUGHT NOT TO FORGET: That endless German grammarg Miss Goulet's French III exhibit in the libraryg Cicero's flaming denunciation of Catiline as taught by Miss Lewisg That there is no English equivalent for joie de vivreg Miss Canniff's collection of Spanish and Mexican dollsg That Mrs. Davis has taught in five universitiesg Miss Staadecker's excursus from the lessong The disillusionment upon finding Spanish just like the other languagesetough g That you are aces with Miss Bissell if you keep silence on the gold standardg And that whether it is-a votre sante, prosit, or vuestro brindiswhere's how! MATHEMATICS THINGS WE STILL CAN'T UNDERSTAND: Why angle isn't spelled Hangelug How Mr. Baum laughs just like thatg Whether King Midas calculated his gold by logarithmsg How Mr. Eberth can' be so patient and-well, niceg Why the whole is greater than any of its parts Ceven if it can be proved in sociologyjg Why Brazil nuts are not called triangular polyhedronsg How Xmas treeiornaments can be made from tetrahedrons and pyramidsg Why X, y, and z should not remain unknown quantitiesg Why a straight line is really the shortest distance between two pointsg And how we are going to apply all the rules, laws, theorems, etc., that we are supposed to know! A SPHERICAL TRIANGLE WORRYING HIGHER MATH STUDENTS 'l Mr. Foley Miss Goulet Miss Humphrey Mr. Kirk Miss Krueger Mr. Lake Miss Gould Miss Hamilton Miss Keplinger Miss Kirkby Miss Kudzia Mr. Langstaff Page Twenty-two
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Page 23 text:
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Miss Cockayne Mr. Corbett Miss Dallet Mrs. Dean Mr. Eberth Mrs. Featherstone Page Twenty-o e Miss Collins Mr. Cramer Mrs. Davis Mr. Dunn Miss Elliott Miss Fields SOCIAL SCIENCE THINGS WE CAN'T HELP BUT REMEMBER: Mr. Cramer's daily proposals to his many students in commercial lawg Those stifling American government contracts given by Miss Kirkbyg Mr. Langstaff's engaging digressions and unique manner of teaching everythingg The Bill of Rightsg The law of supply and demandg That the Allies were as guilty as Germany for the War as is shown in contemporary historyg The importance of the Mendelian Lawg The Statute of Fraudsg The intricacies of foreign exchangeg The names of the members of the President's Cabinetg Those thirty minute talks we gave in sociology the first semesterg Mr. Timmons's quizzesg Miss Masten's probing questionsg Henry VIII, even if we only met him in an English history bookg Those lovely little lyrics Miss Paschall got out of her ancient history classdof all placesg Miss Mather's dimpled smiley The Darwinian Theory, but we still don't know whether we be- lieve it plausible or notg Miss O'Brien's grand sense of humorg Economics, and how not to become a victim of an Insull or a Krugerg Mr. Kirk's jovial greetingsg Miss Gould's sociological advice on Whom not to marry and whyg And the importance of an ever-broadening and unprejudiced View point! MR. LANGSTAFF'S WORLD HISTORY CLASS
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Page 25 text:
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Miss Larkin Mrs. Le Gron Miss Lewis Miss Masten Mr. Meissner Miss Morgan Page Twenty-three Miss Lecklider Miss Lester Miss McGuinness Miss Mather Miss Mills Mr. Muellich A I2 T THINGS WE OFTEN WONDER ABOUT: Why everyone who wants a poster made waits until the eleventh hour to tell us about itg Why so few people know that Miss Morgan and Mrs. Dean are among our foremost women artistsg That sign on the art room doorg What Miss Morgan would do if her clippings were lostg Why Miss Morgan and Mrs. Dean don't start a loan office to take care of those requests for scissors, glue, cardboard, and Xmas sealsg Who really sandpapers those drawing boardsg The official name for the little room between the two art roomsg And why some people are harboring the illusion that art work is all play! S C I E N C E THINGS THAT OFTEN SURPRISE US: Those double lab periods and the people you get to know during therng Mr. Weldayls cheerful bluntnessg That driving power Miss Collins exhibits in classg The number of fair students who take up astronomy Cstill- Mr. Bradford is the teacherjg The greenhouse appearance of the biology labg The force that compels Miss Wachter to seek new laurels-now it's a doctor's degreeg Not finding Mr. Brunson in the physics laboratoryg Miss Larkinls familiarity with contemporary literatureg That the new course in geology is really interestingg And the variety of odors that issue forth from the chemistry laboratory! DISCOVERING THE LAWS OF THE LEVER
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