«GfcuP LA LUMIERE 1923 Page Fifteen Class Will E, THE SENIOR CLASS OF ’23 of saint Joseph’s ACADEMY, CITY OF PRES- COTT, STATE OF ARIZONA, EXPERI- ENCING THAT HEAVY FEELING THAT PORTENDS OUR IMMINENT DISSOLUTION FROM THE STUDENT body of st. Joseph’s academy, DO CONSIDER IT WISDOM TO MAKE —AND DO HEREBY GIVE TO THE PUBLIC—OUR LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT. To the faculty of S. J. A. we bequeath our trophies for Tennis, Track and Basket Ball, provided they will call attention of the under classes to same and say to them frequently: “What man has done, man may do.” To Miss Shea—our riding boots and crops, to be treasured souvenirs of Class 1923. (We find it a practical impossibility to get them into our Memory Books.) To Miss O’Daniel—all crayons, spoonbill pens, Iliggin's ink, etc., left from our sketches—in gratitude for her timely response to our “SOS” when compiling “La Lumiere.” We, petites Francoises en herbes, leave to Mademoiselle Bots our— SAVOIR-FAIRE a pres une “ecole buissonniere.” To Senora Belchere we leave the fragments of our castanets and tambourines in memory of the recently defunct “Fiesta.” To Richard McCormick—Hanson’s generosity in supplying pies for the famished Seniors after a weary day’s work in making posters for the Dramatic Club.
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3Se »' LA LUMIERE 1923 35« Page Seventeen Senior Class History Officers President Vice-President Ranson Drew Marguerite Bridges Aileen Powers Kathryn Bianconi Secretary Treasurer It has been said that an accurate history cannot he written until a hundred years after the happening of the events. You ask me for a resume of the achieve- ments of the Class of 1923, but my usually eloquent pen falters and my most swashbuckling expressions but inadequately portray the glorious record made by this peerless Class. Descending upon the Academy like a meteor out of a clear sky, in the fall of 1919, the Class of ’23 struck the student body with awe and the faculty with admiration! Now that we are about to depart into the shadowy future, is it any wonder that this dismal announcement seems already to darken the countenance of our Alma Mater? Too numerous to detail are the triumphs and trophies proudly carried away by this grand old class. To none other has Alma Mater pointed, with pride, w hile exclaiming, “These are my jewels,” than to the banner Class of 1923. Gentle readers!—now that wre are to go out into the wride, wide world, leaving these classic halls desolate, tell me, who will lend priceless counsels to the faculty when some matter of moment is at stake? Our dignity as Seniors has been unqualified excellence. A word—or even a look— from us has been enough to quell anything of a riotous tendency in our inferiors—even the incorrigible Sophomores! In feats of brain and brawn, 1923 has not been lacking. Behold the medals for Oratory won by Roberta McDonnell and Marguerite Bridges; prizes for Expression by the same Marguerite, Opal Cross, and Aileen Powers. And what of the tennis record left by Kathryn Bianconi? Our standard of debating has carried off the honors, even though our opponents did give us a hard battle. Dear friends, witness the splendid achievements of that noble organization, a “child of our own brain,” the Dramatic Club, whose conquests are recorded elsewhere in this volume. And now that we have reached the end of our beginning, may we be permitted to voice the modest hope that those who follow us on our triumphal march may uphold the spirit, honor, and traditions of our beloved school and that the Class of 1924 may strive to make themselves worthy of the mantle of wisdom which we now let fall upon their shoulders. —Kathryn Bianconi, '23. Yell Rah! Rah! Rah! “The Rose and Gray” I ong live S. J. A.
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