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Page 30 text:
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h Class Will E, the Ambitious Class of 1915, with tears in our eyes and happiness in our hearts, leave to our friends-the Faculty and Student Body, the following pieces of per- sonal property-be thankful, we have done our best. ARTICLE I. To B. H. S.: Another modest, lovable, studious, accom- plished, obedient Senior Class like ours. ARTICLE II. TO THE FACULTY. To Miss Finley: A bottle of wavoline-she looks pretty with her hair curled. To Mr. Minnick: A large room to accommodate his girls' penmanship class. To Miss DeBolt: A short notice on How to Comb Your Hair in a Psyche. To Mr. Cutts: A place on the joke committees and a book entitled How to Keep Young. To Miss Johnson: Several boxes of stationery for letter writing during her Assembly period. To Mr. Carmack: A curling iron and a pleasant look from the students. Miss Alspaugh: Another diamond ring for Christmas. Mr. Hicks: Permission to go over to his room about To To 10:30 to get his daily letter. To laugh. To Miss Wood: Another Senior Class as talented in oral composition as ours. I To Mr. Muncie: The right never to change his mind Miss Bishop: An art of frowning: she never thinks to about giving E's and E+'s. To Miss Eaton: Another long green dress like she wore several times. To Mr. Reagan: Another forward like Johnnie Fast, and a refrigerator to hold his classes in. To Miss Duncan: Vernon Castle's pamphlet ent-itled How to Teach Dancing. To Mr. Campbell and Mr. Minnick: We wish to change their names to Sue and Lucy, and dress them in blue skirts and middies. To Miss Herr: Some new folk-song records and another show for Mr. Shaw to direct. To Mr. Daub: The special privilege of keeping a deport- ment list. To Miss Andrews: A man. To Mr. Keller: A new High School building and success as Supt. of the Schools. To Miss Pickens: Aposition in the Well-worth-it store. To Bobbie : The privilege of sweeping out any room during any meeting. To Miss Kidd: A chair by Mr. Minnick on the platform during Chapel periods. ARTICLE III. To the juniors: We leave our good manners, our clever ways and our F's which were few-this year. To the Sophomores: The right to skate with next year's Seniors and more modesty when asking for dates. To the Freshmen: Four years of hard study and F's in return-that's what we got. '95
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Page 29 text:
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BRAZIL DAILY NEXVS, SEPTEMBER 1, 1925. New Basketball Coach For Brown. Brown College has closed a con- tract with John C. Fast to coach their next year's basketball team. Fast comes well recommended. He has had considerable exper- ience, playing one year of high school ball in Brazil, four years of college ball with Indiana Dentals, and since his graduation from that institution has been coaching a fast semi-pro team in Chicago. By the employment of Fast the Athletic Board of Control hopes to change the usual program of defeats into victories for Brown. Here is Some Bowler. One man has been doing some great bowling at the Elk's alleys this week. This man is Mack Gumm. He has bowled seven- teen games this week with scores over the two-century mark. He broke all records Thursday night when for four games he averaged 294. His games were 300, 296, 292 and 288 for the evening. His average for the week is 286. Noted Speaker Coming Dr. Uzzie Phillips, B. A. P. D. Q. B. C. M., will give his famous lecture, The World in a Nut- shell at the Chautauqua this summer. Dr. Phillip's lecture is said to be very entertaining be- cause of its dry humor. We are sure the people will be pleased to hear Dr. Phillips again as he is well known here, having formerly been pastor of the United Brethern Church of this city. Track Record Lowered ln the I. A. U. track meet held at Harmony last week, Will Pick- ett, running under Harmony University colors, ran the 100 yard dash in 972 seconds. The former record was 93A seconds. This is not the first record broken by a H. U. man. About twenty-five men and women went through here to-day from different localities near here, enroute to eastern countries where they will take up missionary work. Among them were Misses Irene Stinson and Vivian Hughes of this city, who will go to India. They have been studying for several years to be missionaries and de- cided that there was a larger field for their work in India than in any other country. -1915 Teachers Institute The Teachers Institute for the Summer Term was held at Ind- ianapolis yesterday. Two lectures were given after the business hour was over, by Miss Mary Wolfe, teacher of English, at Butler Col- lege on the subject of The Value of the English Course in High School, and by Miss Emma Stewart on the Average Work of a High' School Student. Miss Stewart is teacher of math- ematics in the Staunton, Ind. High School. New Kindergarten A new kindergarten class has been started at Harmony, Ind. Miss Inez Nussel and Katherine Muncie who have been studying this work at Indianapolis will be the teachersl
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Page 31 text:
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ARTICLE IV. To Theodore Andrews: A reserved place on the deport- ment list. A Te Helen Finch: Katherine Muncie's modesty and a fel- low-just anyone. To Neal Carr: Don Brown's ability to make public speeches. To Margaret Rawlev: A latin pony and a book on How to flirt. To Frank Kamm: A box with a Yale lock on it to keep Mary's notes in. To Blanche Seery: Helen Dandurand's ability to look pleasant and some more hair to fuzz around her face. To Joe Ringo: Bernard Havercamp's gracefulness. To Susan Rojohng Gaar's plumpness and Anna O'Dowd's dreamy eyes. To Bill Hutchison: We should elect him Editor-in-Chief of the Student so he could ubawl out somebody. To Peggy Rouse: Odetta's dates with Hugh and Lucy Cutshall's method of curling hair. To Edgar Morgan: Bob Stevenson's bashfulness. To Louise Houck: The privilege of copying all of Gaar's styles-such as velvet mandarines. To Elbert Watts: Don's abundance of dates and Bill Zeller's old ties. To Ruth Casteel: Nelle Collier's case with Van Carpenter and Gaar's coiiiure. To Dan Davis: George Beach's funny ways. To Jean Bucklin: Elorence Moore's slenderness. To Tevlin Scheutz: An interpreter. To Dorothy Kerfoot: Anna's ownership ? of Smack, To Russell Leachman: Bill Zeller's ease in singing. :'9'5 ' To Magdeline Mershon: Helen McCullough's excitement when a stranger comes to town. To Myron Finley: jim Adam's haste-and the privilege of being yell-leader. To Mary Wilkins: Gaar's and Hazel's place at the oiano. To Hugh Lenhart: A book entitled A Sweet Girl Grad- uate. To Martha Turner: The right of skating with the Seniors. To Linneaus Kidd: Jim Adam's place in all offices. A To Dorothy Bard: A powder pull-her nose shines. To John Currie: Bob Stevenson's remedy for staying thin and a book entitled How to Lead Yells by M. B. F. To Lillie Eppert: A book How to be Cute. To Harold Payne: Don Brown's place as interpreter of modern dances. To Lois Grimes: The right to tell everyone all about her dates-from Greencastle. To George Fielding: A place on the stage and a copyright on Fir yuh. To Mary Jane Melissa Decker: Mary Louise Davis' super- fluous names. To Oscar Stinson: A girl-and also a book on 'Etiquette. To Evelyn Byrkit: Flossie Moore's babyish talk and actions. To Worth Stigler: John P. Jones' dates down south. To Lucia Kerfoot: Harriet's graceful walk as she comes in the Assembly. A To John Clark: Mack. Gumm's backwardness when around girls. To Zelma Leachman, Helen Mc's art of holding on to the fellows coat sleeve. Undersigned: GAAR TURNER NELLE COLLIER.
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