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Page 18 text:
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Alberta Lee Lowery Helen Sawtell Mauck Mary Louise Scothorn Ethel Hinds Robert McPherson Ray Heady gngfiogt Miss Alberta Lowery was destined from the cradle to become an actress. She once joined a company of actors who did not know their art. She became so disgusted with their mumbled jargon of assumed stage rhetoric that she decided to spend her talents teaching children, actors and actresses to be, the correct way to say I have been to Bos- ton and other similar constructions. In the meantime she directs magnificant histronic productions on the side. - - Mrs. Helen Mauck, for reasons best known to her- self, has to conduct a lost and found system besides a reg- ular English course. But she would like to meet that fel- low. alluded to by Kipling, who admitted to Gunga Din that he, Gunga, was the best man. She believes that this is a very rare occurance, because men seldom agree that they are not so good, especially those who are exponents of the game of golf. - - Miss Mary Louise Scothorn would like to write poetry but she cannot get the meter right. Not only that but she cannot find a word to rhyme with kilowatt. So she has decided to give it up. She can however, still study it. She likes poems by Franklin P. Adams CF. P. AJ and Burgess and Girmm but she still likes that one about Early to bed, early to - - - - Miss Ethel Hinds also was an actress. She was starred in a stage show once at the Shubert but learned more about the art of make up than acting, so, after assisting Max Factor for a number of years, she came here to teach. She directs plays and teaches one how to daub his or her face with clay and cream to remove wrinkles. Besides, by a cu- rious admixture of cajolery and admonition, she elicits from her pupils some semblence of a correct translation of Chaucer. - - Mr. Robert McPherson, according to pop- ular rumor, had something to do with the editing and publishing of this tome. At the present time, Vance Dubs, intramurally famous detective, and a corps of op- eratives, are working on the case. If the rumor is proved to be true, The Blue Jay will publish an extra, won't they Mr. Heady. - - Mr. Rav Heady, although an instructor in journalism, likes to coach. This fact has been dis- covered. His crowning disappointment is that no sooner does he get a class at the point where it can write good news stories, than it leaves and a class of greenhorns takes its place. He likes to sing and his favorite tune is, l'm The Last One Left On The Corner Of That Old Gang Of Mine.
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Page 17 text:
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324142 f-tis Mr. Robert K. Heald, according to the findings of an intricate espionage system, has become so confounded by his efforts to maintain a balance in the schools financial ledger that he writes sentences in pure Castilian on the board for his Spanish classes and punctuates them with dollar and cent symbols - - Miss Pauline Molesintimates to her classes in Latin that she is soon to publish a book which will explain to all students of Caesar just why Gaul was divided into three parts and who did it- - Miss Mary Wilson has endeavored with such enthusiasm and conscienciousness to teach her glee clubs to sing on pitch that the gold fish in the music room were heard by one of the janitors singing O Sole Mio which is the official piscatorial love song - - Mr. Phillip Olsson blames Horatio Alger for starting him on a musical career, but his fiddle failed him so now he spends all his spare time trying to find someone who can toot a tuba well enough to be entered in the international tuba tooting contest which will be held in Havana next fall. - - Miss Evelyn Besack tells her art classes that there is really no mystery about Mona Lisa's smile. She says that Mona Lisa is not trying to say anything to somebody as everybody has supposed for sometime, She did not want to smile. She wanted to laugh but da Vinci thought her gold teeth would spoil the picture. Robert K. Heald Pauline Moles Mary Wilson Phillip Olsson Evelyn Besack
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Page 19 text:
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afncnaaiica Miss Geralyn Anderson is about to make a bold ges- ture against all mathematical conventions. Because every- body else teaches the time-tried axiom stating the sum of two plus two, it is her intenton to inaugurate a new system of study based upon a 7-step analysis of mathema- tical conclusion. This agressive move will revolutionize the work in this field and be a source of consternation not only to mathematicians but to newspaper men as well. - Miss Yvonne Gagle once saw a picture in an art gallery painted by a famous artist. It was a picture of a very handsome man, black hair, black, expressive eyes, and of brave and noble stature. She knew at once that he was her ideal of mankind. She later learned that he was a count. And now, long afterward, she does not care whether her pupils know how to add or subtract but they must be able to count. So if you see one of them approaching you along the corridor, counting in time with his steps, you know that he is but striving to attain an ideal. - - Mr. Victor Clough bases his course upon a paragraph taken from a book compiled by one of his ancestors who was of decided Scotish extraction. The excerpt runs as follows: Hoot Mon. Dinna teach the bonnie laddies an' lassies anything of subtraction or division for if ye doe thee will be tempten to draw from or divide their wealth. Teach 'em addition an' multiplication so thee will alus want to en- largen their moneys, begoraf' Maybe this fellow was Irish. - - Mr. T. I. LaRue thought that intramurals had some connection with pictures at first, but now, sad lot, his dreams are punctuated with visions of a miserable Newton seated beneath a large tree from which agrinning Pythag- oras is throwing basketballs at Newton's head. Geralyn Anderson Victor Clough Yvonne Gagle T. J, LaRue
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