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Page 49 text:
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THE ARROW ,...,,,.. ,. I 'NIMH lv ' iff Q: 3 ' - . 4 P, 1 J S if F1 5 ,M 1 llc? - Q 'I I I M ,tlllt l 1 I x X ,,,, .... ..... -A I K MQ, ly V1 , Y, - - fam lfmmm , . -f' -r ' 8. lw,:fgE.pZ l 1 , --.IIllllllllllIIIItIIIlllllllllltlttlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIImlmIIIIImIIIInIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIItIItIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIlllllIIIIIllIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIInIIIIllllItIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIImIIlIImlImllIIlItllllllIIIz'f-r ' -.. - - II, Page forty-three Senior Class Poem Seer, why aslcest thou this query? Ah! you lcnow better than to ask If our toil has made us weary, Or our work and our daily task? Four long years we here have tarried 'Neath our Alma lVlater's wall, And cheerfully her standard carried, Since we answered to her call, When she called in tones entreating, And held to us the hands of might. Then we faltered, ever pleading That it was too hard a light. Dim before us loomed the pathway, About us then were shadows cast. Yet, lo! soon a gleaming ray Led us onward to the last. If we, while working here and there, ln the schoolroom, in the throngs, Ever a thought of self did bear, Then now to us no praise belongs. But if we have some burden lightened, If we have each moment seized, Or one countenance have brightened, And some pain or sorrow easedg If we have a true friend made, Or some lesson taught or learnedg If we have a lcind word said That within a heart has burned: If one problem we've unraveled fAre you listening to me, Seerflj Then far on our road we've traveled. What matter if the cost seemed dear? Did I hear you ask again, As our lives you are beholding, Has not your toil been all in vain? Ah! no-character we've been molding! So, seeing the world's outstretched hand Pleading for those in tears, in grief, were going forth to take our stand To help the weary gain relief. VIRGINIA BRYAN, '21 .
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Page 48 text:
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2 54 Am ,-. .uf V.. Xi ...N- -'iglg :G S' :- iQ V 123 In 'J K -V-N Z Hllllllllll lm' lllllll f. ..,... ,, . ..mllmumm..sm... ..... -I-LE f A f T All f f-E N:e':f,, 7 Ei Y ' 'mmm Amis 'li Y A V ll Senior Class History r W HE year l9l 7 was marked by two notable events: In April, l9I 7, America 15 entered the World War, and on September l5, l9I 7, a number gf the present Senior Class entered the Wo-man's College of Due West, fifty-five strong. We were strong from a numerical standpoint, but as a trained and organized class, the greenest and freshest of us were not unable to comprehend that we must get together, get to work, and get somewhere. We were ready to begin the fight for a diploma, and it did not take us long to realize that there would have to be much maneuvering, much skirmishing, and many hand-to-hand battles with ignorance on our part to be able to come out victors. So organize we must, and at one of our first meetings we elected a president. We went to work with a will, and in our first year we were able to bring order out of chaos and accomplish a goodly share of work. In the fall of 1918 very few of our former class returned, and it looked as if we would have to draft members to fill the huge gaps made in our ranks. Betty Morrah, Susie Pruitt, Mattie Sue Witherspoon, Lillie Pruitt, Minnie Lee Stone, and Alice Agnew made up the regulars, but we received recruits this year who have remained with us the last three years. ln our societies we were found doing our part, and in the classrooms we continued the good work we had begun as freshmen. One of our members, Lillie Pruitt, won the short story medal. Even if English in our freshman and sophomore years had not proved so easy, yet in the junior year we had to buckle down to our work more than ever and wrestle with Shakespearean plays. fWe want to give a little advice to the Junior Class next year: ln order to make yourself more comfortable in class, and in order to give Miss Clinkscales a satisfactory answer, you had better memorize I-ludson's Introduction to English Litera- turcj Regardless of our strenuous curriculum, Lois Pressly got the scholarship medal. And now the battle lines are fast crumbling and only a few strongholds remain to be taken-an English test, a sociology quiz, or an examination or two. We are battering these day by day, and we believe all the barriers will have fallen by June. Then we will have entirely outwitted old Mr. Sheepskin, and he, after cluding us and keeping far in the distance, will fall an exhausted but a willing captive at our feet. But we are proud of all the rebufls, of all the knocks and kicks we've had. We've learned to fight the winning game, to know it's no disgrace to fall, but to lie there, that's the shame. If the fight has been hard, the victory is sweet. And now we march breastforward into the big, wonderful world to fill in our places in the army of life. ALICE AGNEW, '2I. Page forty Iwo 'L' -JllllllIIIlIIIllIIIIIIIIIllIllllllllIIIIIllllllIIIIIlllIIlllllIIlllIIlllIllllllIIllIIIllIIIIIlllllllIlllIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllIIIllIlllIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll 'Ill
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Page 50 text:
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5' 4 QE-X L,- .E I , g 2 ,...Q -- W ,5'Af2 -lx. N: , Q ft ' t V Q, ' ff 4 no 1 A Ei ! '--. llllll .... imlliimmm.....i-.... E I k.: '17-'1..77'Z'f1'H III Illll II ll lllllllllllllllllllllllIllllll I II III un lllllllllll llllll llllllllllll Illllllllllllllllllllll l lllllll u It T in umm nlmluu I IlllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIII Ili: The Will of the Class of '21 STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA TOWN OF DUE WEST. V' E the Senior Class of the Woman's College, being of unsound mind and uncer- COUNTY OF ABBEVILLE F7 I I ' .2 .I , tain age, feeling that we are to depart from this life of tests, exams, and flunks, hereby do declare this our last will and testament here on this earth or any other that might be mentioned hereafter. I ITEM l: The said class beseeches that each member be held in due respect and reverence after her departure. ITEM 2: To the faculty of the Woman's College we bequeath our love and appre- ciation for all they have done for us. ITEM 3: We, the Astronomy Class, will to Miss Moore our love for astronomy. ITEM 4: To the juniors we will two of our senior privilegeskweelcly callers' night and the 90 per cent method. ITEM 5: We will to Miss Clinlcscales the right tot give unexpected tests and lectures about tardies and overcuts. The members of the Senior Class do hereby will and bequeath these personal effects in such a way as seems best to them: ITEM l : Miss Virginia Bryan, having lived on the White Side of life long enough and realizing that Miss Ferne Bell has been enjoying the red side, now wishes her to feast on the White Side. ITEM 2: Miss Florie McGill, seeing the need, wills her dignity to be equally divided between Miss Elizabeth Johnson and Miss Belle Dale. ITEM 3: To Miss Veola Johnson, Miss Katherine Pressley leaves her soothing words, which are guaranteed to cure anything from a homesick fresh to a wounded heart. The temper which she displayed the day the seniors had their pictures made she leaves to Miss Eunice McKelvy. ITEM 4: A Miss Mary Less Abernathy wills to' Miss Mary Pressly all the midnight visits which she made to Miss Clinlcscales, room during her three years in college. ITEM 5: To Miss Mary White Pennel, Miss Essie DuPre leaves her paints, pow- ders, artificial curls, and her misfortunes in love affairs. ITEM 6: Miss ,lean Roddey Black wills her love for The Beautiful to any of the fresh who has a wonderful gift of appreciation for the aesthetic ITEM 7: Miss Betty Monah wills the family care of the remaining line of Funder- burks to Misses Mallie Cade and Leila Kennedy, with the hope that they will replace the brotherly and cousinly affection with untiring devotion. ITEM 8: To Miss Ruth Hayes, Miss Isabel Choate wills the feigned timfdity which she uses on special occasions, with the hope that Miss I-Iayes will preserve it in cold storage when she is not using it. ITEM 9: Miss Allie Rush gladly wills to Miss Myrtis Rush and Miss Katherine Stewart her room, No. 47, in Carnegie Hall, hoping they will keep it as long as she Page forty fo r
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