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Page 31 text:
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YE PEDAGOGUE .. .IQ34 FACULTY MISS PIERSON MR. PLOESSER DR. PRICE Librarian Science Social Science MISS SERL English MR, SI-IIRLING MISS STANLEY MISS STRACI-IAN Science Clerk Psychology I f gli.. gi 'V ,, ' ' 1 MISS WARD Education MISS WILSON Parent Education Page Twenty-nine
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Page 30 text:
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YE PEDAGOGUE. .IQ34 FACULTY MISS ABNEY MISS CANNON MISS CLOUSER MISS COOK Speech Music Education Nurse MR. GILBERT MISS GLENN MISS GREENE MISS JONES Psychology Art Dean Swimming fOn leave of absencej I I E I r S 5 I MISS KIRK MISS McCAUL MISS MCCOLLUM MISS McKAY Physical Education Education Registraf I Education Page Twenty-eight
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Page 32 text:
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YE PEDAGOGUE .. . 1934 CALENDAR OF EVENTS SEPTEMBER 5. Here we are back in classes again after three months of lo-afing. SEPTEMBER 9. lt seems funny to be going to school on Saturday. Oh, well, it is still just five days a week. SEPTEMBER 16. T. C. steps out ahead again. The day demonstration classes are exciting considerable com- ment here and elsewhere. SEPTEMBER 19. You have to hand it to those club girls, Just two weeks of schoo-l and they are talking of dis- continuing the lit contest. The student council held its first meeting with Roberta Hayden directing its destiny. They appointed the ing committees for the first semester. SEPTEMBER 20. The freshmen won the grand prize of Mr. Shirling's flower show. CThe goat probably should have received at least honorable mentionj SEPTEMBER 26. Mr. James Green, a graduate of Yale and representative of youth groups at the League of Nations, talked in assembly today of the activities of the League. OCTOBER 3. Today the Scout Weekly becomes a bi because of economic reasons. OCTOBER 14. A red-letter day for T. C. The all-school picnic sponsored by the Nature Association was held this afternoon at Swope Park. OCTOBER 16. Dr. G. V. Price turned literary on us and published a book. Optimistic America sounds interesting. Page Thirty -weekly Good luck, Doc, you'l1 need it: so many authors are starving to death. Seriously speaking, however, it is a fine book and has received favo-rable comment from such famous people as: President Roosevelt, ex-President Herbert Ho-over, Newton D. Baker, Howard C. Hill of Chicago University, Merl Curti of Smith College, Pitrim Sorokin of Harvard Uni- versity, Eugene Fair of Kirksville State Teachers College. C. L. Ellwood, Howard C. Jensen, Superintendent W. H. McDonald of' Trenton, and Mayor Bryce B. Smith. OCTOBER 19. Election week! II The directors of two great publications are to be chosen. Results of election: Lavery with the assistance of Shirling will edit Ye Pedagogue. while Dillenbeck, Robins, and Wright share the honors on the Magazine staff. fThat confusion ticket polled a great majority of the votesj OCTOBER 24. Mary Louise Keirnan is nominated for the luckiest girl of the week. Mary Louise received a letter this week from Bess Streeter Aldrich. CNeed I add that Bess Aldrich is the author of Mziss Bishop?j OCTOBER 31. Dr. Slutz gave an interesting talk, This is a Truth Session, in assembly. NOVEMBER 4. This is the week of music and song. The Pall Festival has taken us around the world in music to Hawaii, England, Ireland, and other countries. lt's hard to get used to American jazz after all of this good music. NOVEMBER 9. Debate try-outs start today. We have an abundance of good material, but time will tell. NOVEMBER 13. Mr. Zolly Lerner of the Y. M. H. A. talked today of the current production at the Resi- dent Theater, the Dybbuk. The student body would like more of this. NOVEMBER 14. Second quarter starts and the juniors and seniors again are engaged in that ever popular pastime, practice teaching. NOVEMBER 29. Now for a short but welcome vaca- tion, Thanksgiving. Satur- stand- 1 l
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