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Page 38 text:
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ma X157 ws. lr 1' - . 'xf V - r. Q.: 7 xxx W li ' .. A. --,,,.. W. V , 4 'll' L k .' .l ,141 ,,-,,,,,, ,,,,,,,M ,, ,,-,4 X ,X I gk Li,g,.Sv,jl,.xg,, . ,,fip.,f,.i'f f:2:, f.QI-'jf,:.f','j15,74jA3ZQ'Qf:.T.c? r f X 1 at a 1 J X bv Nr X X.. 1 x m. x r ' Y s A' f r 's l L, r, .f -,- . . ,, .N5-u X. wi- 4 . EK. ? .Aix .ir X A i s L RM L il 5 . 'M x MX . IX ,s I 1 fp X . lb! MX1 'N 'XX X N . s W av - rf are -First ,, if :iff-..Y ,. ll k , f 3, X F- 1 Lf: ' ., fi! 1-V, x EEF, ' think what an eventful year that was. Talk about nvaunting ambition ! It :ertainly overlapped itself when Adele actually had two lines in the big girls' play. The time passed too quickly, for before we knew it, Santa had come and gone, not with his usual doll for l..enora, but with-guess what?-a pair of high-heeled shoesl January brought heavy snowdrifts and exams! What fun we had on that eventful day when Dorothy ,lane took a dare to coast down the hill backwards and then was ushered to the infirmary for repairs. Then came the big event-our Valentine Dance! How we argued and planned! There were many hearts lost that night-Irene Farrell coming out first with a total loss of her heart to Juanita. , Woes did tread upon each others' heels when Lent and retreat came together. Lent closed the movie house and candy store. The proprietor of the latter would have become insolvent had he not invested in a peanut farm. We soon changed our minds about the retreat, for did not the Reverend Martin J. O'lVlalley, C. lVl., make those days of silence and meditation days never to be forgotten? Lurita became so serious we thought she would have become a tall, slender, graceful nun long before nineteen hundred twenty-seven. Easter day dawned fair and bright and with it came the stirring spirit of adventure. The Tower! We had not yet been to the Tower. Every Loretto girl enjoys a trip there, even in broad daylight, but a stolen trip in broad moonlight, how thrilling! I-low were we to get there? Avenues of corridors had to be trudged through. All was dark, very dark. A ghostly stillness filled thel' air. Shall I ever forget the sudden horror that took possession of us when Juanita gaspingly announced: There's someone tugging at my skirts, the air is full of spooks, an ice-cold hand touched my face. All rushed pell-mell. How those floors did creak! Finally, we reached the spiral steps leading to the cupola. Hand-in-hand we mounted and then our beautifully illuminated city spread out before us. When I remarked that the moon, which was partly hidden in a cloud, looked. like a silvery comb in the dusky hair of an Egyptian prnicess, Mary exclaimed, How extravagantly bombastic, when I thought that I was exquisitely poetic. We were reasonably proud of Marcella, who starred as Patsy in an Irish play. But we were reasonably ashamed of Gertrude, who foolishly took scarlet fever and lost several weeks of school. We didn't mind the school part of it, but we 'thought it a bit puny of her to take so childish a disease. The air was balmy. Loretto park was a dream of beauty-trees, hedges, and shrubs were laden with a wealth of foliage. Bridal wreath, snowballs and lilacs fell in luxurious clusters. The birds sang their sweetest lays. And what is so rare as a day in June? Exams were over. Adieus were told. And all departed for fresh woods and pastures new. September brought a happy band of Sophs back to Loretto. Can you believe that for days all we talked about was school? After a delightful vaca- tion spent among the pines and mountains of picturesque Colorado, the charming drives of the Adirondacks and other resorts around the Great Lakes and 1 r gl Y. 1? l-i' V, if P l l u l ,. JK fy X, Th iffy-Iwo 'fix ,Q A is - tcm-.- ce.- . --c-.,-----...,-....,e....... W 'if'Af'v! lf ,iq Zi-i:5Lif'54' fv1'tf-firifgiir'5'w170Z?z:.fvz4 :4e . Wil 1 F lfifzwllur , 1
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Page 37 text:
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. If -t - X .xxx f it 1 , 1 4 if - f I' M ' l, f g fx e 'L s V V 2 - rg F H5331 ' . 3' :ig5u,ll1,H F fly D l -Qfaw ..,,- -. x ur 5 tory 6 O, for a muse of fre, that would ascend The brightest heaven of invention! ll A kingdom for a stage, princes to act And monarchs to behold the swelling scene. hx 15 Then perhaps the inspiration, which would enable me to record the mighty deeds of the Class of Twenty-seven, would not be lacking. if With what horror did we anticipate our first year as high school students! A fidgety and rickety group were we. Why fidgety and rickety? Well, because some of our highly enlightened ff' elders had told us that the academic courses were utterly beyond the petite brains g of the Freshmen. They told us that there were volumes and volumes of history, ,lfij containing gruesome tales of giants like Alexander, who sat astride Mount lff Olympus and dabbled his feet in the Hellespont. A Our heads were in a perfect me daze when they mentioned unpronounceable heroes like Aeschylus and Sophocles, Af Euripides and Pericles, sea nymphs and satyrs, pyramids and sphinxes who N gppled it On the light fantastic toe to Moonlight and Roses, played by rp eus. A These very smart elders of ours told us of a distressing kind of square root and proht and loss solved by symbols, in which the students were principally lost. You may ask: Did you believe them? We did believe them, for were ,-- 1. there not admired Seniors among these falsifying elders? But when the day actually dawned, the memorable September tenth, nine- teen hundred twenty-three, things were not so bad. It is true, busy nuns, a bedlam of girls, books, bells, and other things were somewhat confusing. But by degrees our poor little minds began to work. The gigantic misproportions of our sagacious big sisters assumed Liliputian shape, so they were easily admitted into the not-so-petite-brained Freshmen. Q We found that their Alexander was after all only an ordinary individual who did conquer worlds, but who could not conquer himself. And all the other 'M so-called heroes fell into their respective places. The hrst thrill of the season came when we were the guests of honor at ' ., . ,, . . . ,Xl the get-acquaintedidance. Imagine' one hundred or more girls in lovely blue ufriforimi with shining white collars and cuffs going through a grand march paye y a real orchestra. Did we get acquainted? Yes, indeed. Mary ,il Sullivan was a real fairy that evening, for she certainly did help the helpless with her gift of gab. is The next affair of importance was the Juniors' Snow Dance. The auditorium was a veritable fairy dell. Decorators had been busy for days hzlngifmdg srgzw, snovl: everyxglfhere. hlfly, how imrgortant we felt that evening. ou a enior as us to ance? ow some o us envied Hazel Juanita as ' she gracefully glided the length of the Hoor with Helen Stewart. This was lr followed by the Grad's Apron Dance. I shall never forget that lovely picture. fill How sweet the girls looked in those many-colored, dainty frocksl And just l. for .wylllf ' 'Um il. g r r Ml inrfl' .4'4,, J A will ,...,,,, bil, wi ul i lllllvllllllllmiall Thirty-one
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Page 39 text:
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X -i lllllly .Y M . , X 'f , .iff gf lflf I wlllur ' C 27 ' , X- s C n ,T - , N ' s, E me e lvflv 1 X 7 Eli 'V ,nf E ' 1 ' ' ' 7 elsewhere, all were happy to settle down to hard work'and the daily routine of school life. We were Sophs and we considered ourselves truly sophisticated. Were we not intimately acquainted with Julius and able to make inroads into Call even without him? And Archimedesl his inventive genius was nothing compared with that of our ingenious Margaret Mendus, who compiledfa treatise on x-y-z combinations: l think she invented a few screws, too. In the field of poetry, Adele, Juanita and Mary Joe could not, like Milton, restrain their poetic tendencies until their scholarship was ripeg and so their flights of imagination found expression in odes and epics without number: like Alexander Pope they ulisped in numbers and the numbers came. Our social life was not different from that of other convent girls. It just teemed with things-to-do. There were parties for every festive season, dinners, theatricals, musicales, concerts. We appreciated being allowed to come in to the Alumnae party. How proud we were of the splendid musical program given by our big sisters. The artistic Christmas play and lovely farewell dinner of that year were unusual events. A And as each season tripped along gowned first in autumnal splendor, russet, rose and gold, then wearing a kingly mantle of ermine with crystals hung, then robed in fairy costume of summer's dainty shades, so each life moved in harmony with the changes nature made. It was a beautiful day. The sunlight flooded everything. Great streams of it sent golden red and violet hues through the lovely art windows of the Chapel. The corridors, halls and classrooms seemed to have taken on a new beauty or to be actually drinking in the sun's mellow rays. A The library with its books and tables, velvet-cushioned chairs, its statuary, its gorgeous windows looked unusually inviting. Groups of happy girls, laughing, dancing, singing, chatting, went linked arm-in-arm through the building and out on the campus. It was the opening day of the school year nineteen hundred twenty-five. We were Juniors, just think of itl It would be our ,privilege to entertain the Seniors, to lord it over the Sophs and to cultivate the Freshmen. How were we to entertain the Seniors? That would depend upon our pocketbooks. We were not quite sure what the festive occasion might be-perhaps a beef- steak fry in Penn Valley Park or a weiner roast on the Campus. After endless discussionsand unlimited mathematical calculations, we decided upon a theater party followed by dinner at the Muehlebach. It was -a delightful success. And do not forget, girls, that we were amply chaperoned. This bit of information may be valuable twenty years henceg we shall be able to say, the girls of my day did so and so. There was not much danger of our lording it over the Sophs, for those precious maidens, the Juniors of today, were well able to care for themselves. And although the adorable Freshmen have mounted one step higher, they are still adorable. The year sped on, giving us the Grad's Kid Party, a charming affair, the interesting opera, Martha, Miss Buckley's splendid dramatic program, K, X Q all l. W fs 1. luv If' , Xi lg' lla? 1 N lil! fs I Q fl I 5- j M li, lx ' KV? lf rll XJ lf, 51: li? Uiil i l ll fl K rl A 'se L., . li W' all +-all .2 l i I it i ' Mrll.,.flll wffu-ffm
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