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1930-1931 Literary Editors Maude Beaton ' 31 Leonard Bryant ' 31 Josephine Caruso ' 31 Marie Conroy ' Jl Constance Nash ' 31 Sue Harper ' 32 Alumni Margaret DeBoer ' 30 Athletics Frederick Andrews ' 31 Editor Mrytle Pray ' 31 Associate Editors Business Manager John Anderson ' 31 Advertising Board Filomena Amoroso ' 31 Catherine Leahy ' 31 Alan Bryant ' 33 Mary Reidy ' 33 Faculty Adviser P. B. Brown Secretaries Catherine DeLuct ' 31 Eleanor Dwyer ' 31 Mildred Ellis ' 31 Marion Philbrook ' 31 Mae Wood 31 Exchange Edith Baker ' 32 Art Edward Guindon ' 31 ®abl? of (ttntttettta Literary Section Page Star of Bethlehem 3 Mabel Plays Cupid (With Results! ! ! ) 4 Strange Happenings 5 A Christmas Stocking With a Hole 6 Christmas on Sandy River 7 Bashful Dick 8 Ganga 9 Intoducing Sam 10 Christmas 11 Our First Snowstorm 11 Destiny 12 A Good Time 13 Concerning My Christmai Emotions 13 A Woman ' s Strenth 13 Now Won ' t You Study? 14 The Lone River 14 Christmas Voices 14 The Blizzard 15 Society Bridge 15 The Flapper 16 Christmas In Russia 17 A Back Seat Driver Goes on a Flight 17 Shop Early 17 The Stereotype Plate 18 John ' s Mistake 18 Page How Girls Study 19 Mummies and Window Shades 19 The Salesgirl ' s Night Before Christmas 20 White Magic 20 Some Movies at W.H.S. 20 The Sea of Destiny 20 Mv House 21 Her World ' s Work 21 Life 21 My Dream of Christmas Joy 21 Sandman 25 Crazy ( ?) 25 Student Opinion 22 School News 23 Le Cercle Francais 23 High School Visited 24 111 or Convalescing 24 The Varsity Club 24 Alumni News 25 Exchanges 25 Athletics 26 Jokes, 27 The Perfect Teacher 29 Crystal Ball 30
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Eef lector (HhrtBtmaB ilaam 1930
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Star of Bethlehem It was December. In two more weeks it would be Christmas. In Bethlehem, a little town in New Hampshire, the townspeople were preparing for a community play to be given Christmas Eve. The heroine, who was Lucy Dennis, fitted into the part very well. The play was pro- gressing rapidly towards perfection. There was only one thing the matter. A hero could not be found. Now in the opinion of everyone except Lucy, David Curtis was just the person for the part. Lucy thought he was simply atro- cious. ' ' There were two reasons for this con- clusion. In the first place, once, when the two of them went to school together, David had caught some mice and had put them in Lucy ' s desk, so that he and his gang might laugh at her. In the second place, when Lucy, in her righteous indignation, had snobbed him, he, instead of being chagrined, didn ' t mind at all and had snobbed her, her, Lucy Priscilla Dennis! Nevertheless, the play must have a hero. For whoever heard of a play without a hero ? Lucy had declared that if David had the part she would not stay in the cast — and who- ever heard of a play without a heroine? Finally the coach, Mrs. Jones, decided to have David learn the part in secret, telling Lucy that her cousin, an accomplished actor from Lisbon, would play the part. As this did not exactly please the people, she dropped a hint here and there as to the truth of the matter. To Lucy, who already was wondering what the fare to Hollywood was, the people reporting these hints (in slightly exaggerated form, it must be remembered) were hateful gossips. However, the stories interested her more than she cared to admit and she listened eagerly to the reports that placed Mrs. Jones ' s cousin next in rank to George Arliss in the profession and equal to Buddy Rogers in looks. Imagine her disappointment, then, when in a rehearsal shortly before the performance, Mrs. Jones announced that her cousin was seriously ill and that another person had con- sented to take the part. Picture her embar- rassment when David Curtis was introduced as the leading man. It was enough to make anyone angry, and Lucy, being a temperamental actress, did not hesitate to tell the coach what she thought of anyone who, after taking the part, had the nerve to get sick; of the coach who had the nerve to appoint him, and of the person who had the nerve to take his place. All her anger might have ended then and there if she had not noticed the grin on David ' s lips. But to see that he wasn ' t down- cast urged her on, until Mrs. Jones told her that if she didn ' t want the part she need
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