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Page 16 text:
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The Class of 1918 Intermediate II Class Colors, Brown and Yellow Class Flower. Yellow Chrysanthemum Class Officer MILDRED ZIEGLER. . ...... . . . . .President Class List Bettie Alter Gretchen Kroger Madeleine Rowe J ane Dinsmore J osephine Livingood Clarissa Stem Eleanor Herron Marion Rawson Mildred Ziegler The Class of 1917 Intermediate 1 Class Colors, White and Gold Class Flower, Shasta Daisy Class Officers JULIE GALVIN. . . . . . . . . . . President CLARA LOVELAND. . . ....... . .Secretary FRANCES J OHNSON. . . . . . .Vz'ce-Presz'dent MARGARET ANDERSON. . . . . . . .Treasm'er Class List Dorothy Anderson J ulie Galvin Helen MacDonald Margaret Anderson Frances J ohnson Hannah Shipley Alice Barnard Clara Loveland Madeleine Rowe Virginia Burkhardt Louise McLaren Ruth Wilson Natalie Powell E141
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Page 15 text:
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Intermediate III HERE are thirteen girls in Inter- A mediate 111, all neat, except after a - romp at recess, when we are as red as Indians from running, or after an inky battle with a long composi- tion when we resemble Ethiopians. We are not brilliant nor are we foolish. Our teachers do not worry about our becoming wonders, and yet, with a little help we com get through our examinations with very few failures. Our class has one pleasure, however, which no other class enjoys, and that is a full meal at recess. We all bring lunches and eat them, exchanging bites instead of sandwiches, for then we have a variety. The lunches consist of sandwiches, slices of pie and cake, cookies, and sometimes prunes, pickles and nuts. After the lunches are finished a lively game of mcagl, usually follows, which sometimes ends in knocking an ink-bottle on to the floor, upsetting the waste-paper basket, or breaking a vase. E131 One of the girls visits the school occasionally, about once or twice a week. I should think she would find it hard to keep up with the class. Another is the jester of Intermediate III. She is never tired of joking and is always full of fun. A third is very restless. She is never in one city a whole year. This year she went to California and the year before to Florida. She probably will go next to Alaska, and then to the North Pole. This must be her way of learn- ing geography. It is a delightful way to get an education, but she must miss her teachers and classmates. We have six teachers and they often speak of our wonderful agility during our recitations. We often think ourselves overworked, but soon recover and are as gay as ever. We may have a few faults, but we truly try to improve. PAULINA STEARNS, 1919.
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