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Page 14 text:
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Xot .Toe E. Brown. iu.st Bill Barry . . . Camern Club . . . ■ With the greatest of ease . . . Get two, .Tohn : . . . The Science Wine . . . Wh - the books, Ceorge? . . . Turn arouii ' 1. Hank! , . . 1. 2. :! S v- vinK ! . . . Our euess — Size 12 . . , Set for the hieh, harfl one . . . The Three Jiusketeers . . . Ballet In the Carrlen . . . Stu ly in Study . . . Three Slalwart sons of J ' nKlisli . . . Tncle Klnier . . . Page Ten m t mmmmmmmm mmmmmmt mmmmmimmmmmmmmmmi m
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Page 13 text:
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Alex Adams leaves a whiffle that had us worried. Paul Coleman leaves to see On the Avenue for the eleventh (or is it the twelfth?) time. Roy Williams leaves the box tops from ten packages of Wheaties. Ralph Ryan leaves a couple of broken records. John Crimmins leaves — always the Perfect Editor. Larry Stone leaves for Dorchester. (Why?) Sam Abany leaves the number one spot in the catalogue vacant for the first time in four years. Al Lopez leaves to open a Bank. Lawson Ott leaves, still wearing his uniform bedecked with a flock of Rifle Team medals. Alcott Larsson leaves for Maine or Vermont. John England leaves, a gentleman and a scholar. The Cavarnos boys leave quietly and with dignity and honor. Red Devine leaves, the perfect example of what the well-dressed English High man should wear. Stu Peirce leaves the way he came in. Dave Smith leaves a lot of personality. Tommy Burns and leaves a trail of smoke. John Dugan leaves a couple of cut slips he couldn ' t fix up. Santo Piazza and Brendan Sheehan leave a used typewriter ribbon. Ray Scannell leaves his opinion on some weighty matters. (He had to get rid of them somehow.) Glasier leaves a couple of A stars. Bob Field leaves, still looking for the formula for red ink. Jimmy Sullivan leaves for points west. (Quality not quantity.) Marshall Hahn leaves, still convinced he ' s an artist. Gabby Slavet leaves an echo. George D ' Arcy leaves with Bob Bloom. Louis Michaelson leaves by diploma-cy. Doug Brown leaves two extra names. Kittridge leaves a couple of Wild West Stories we couldn ' t use. Saad and Rados, the Demon Mathematicians, leave us in a daze. Sydney Tushin leaves for a better land we know. Don Amara leaves like a flash. Duke Nazzaro leaves — (moment of silence). Paul Murphy leaves — still a strong, silent man. Johnny Grabski leaves a liking for aviation. John Tevnan leaves — still the life of the party. The Brothers Rogers leave in their Model T (which is quite a trick whe.n you see the old wreck). Baker, Rosendorf, and Carroll leave a few swell knock-knocks which they did not have a chance to use. Pollock leaves one of Tizzy Lish ' s recipes. Piatelli and Meldon leave like Damon and Pythias. Yours truly leaves by popular request. Hear ye and heed ye this, our last will and testament. Seek not at great peril to break said will or to misinterpret its meaning! Signed, sealed, and delivered this seventeenth day of March in the Year of Our Lord nineteen hundred and thirty-seven. John de Piccolellis Maker of Wills and Testaments. Page Nine,
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Page 15 text:
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Fire! . . . 4 A.M. or P. M. . . . Track MannRer . . . Fnur Ace.s ... A frienrl indeed I . . . Associate-Kditins . . . Just plain Editing ' • . • Don ' t .lump to conclu.sions. It ' s a left turn . . . Wore towers . . . Captain, coaches, co-captains . . . Over somebody else ' s shoulder . . . All that glitters is not gold; it ' s Colder. . . . The Ifl-in Olympic track team. Page Eleven
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