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Page 9 text:
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'W' YW - W 'Z ' . 77'T ?' '---' - '? : .. ,, 1.-' 7 ' . . -. L -' A--I--W,-x V -- :sm 4 Lg, 991, Jfibfy, ', ' .j...g.L.,,,Q- .sh ig -V -A -- ' A L 3.14 ff 1.9-', -X-. . , A. -x- ,- .. . . ' I .. +.v:.f'- -1- J . . - ,,' 1- --.,..-Q.-4' ,-.-. -mv.---.Q ug , ' , -. .5 A .V . H . .,, ' --I1 - . - I . V - A- 1-,, L, .4.J,,..-,,.v..L.,..-..': g4mi:'1.g.f1..-,,,-v . ,. ,, ,, , ,gl 'Y' ' , 3 The Pennsylvania Yankee 5 And in the blood, ,sweet sun- gleams come and go Upon the hills, 'inlanes the wild flowers blow, And tender leaves are burst- ing everywhere. for we felt the stir of new life ?in all our blood, and we did not realize any more than do the Freshman of to-day how very green we were. We must sum it all up by saying of ourselves at that time: Once came six and sixty ba- bies Through our magic gates to pass, Scattering If you please and lViaybe's - Weren't they as green as grass? ' Sophomore CSummerD But the March winds and April showers brought forth an abundanceof May flowers, and the Summertime came up- on us almost before we knew, so delightfully did the one season blend into the other. We found they skies so much bluer and sweeter and the sun shone warmer upon us. We had stuck our heads high enough to see nearly as .much above the ground as we imag- ined we' could. We held our heads very erect and kept the stems that supported them quite straight. They were not yet very heavy with their ac- ff-f ' W 12 , -as . , Q ,g1 , ., -- . W ,,..., T. Y . ,.,-....l-,f . .M . . .. . 4... Y..Lq-'JA.,,:nt. .. V... ...-.....-......,......f.... cumulation of wisdom and so did not droop with the weight. But our flowers were unfold- ing little by little. We were slowly but surely coming out into the light of day. F This year three new experts were put in charge of us: Misses Blaesi, VanKirk and Dorner. Now we cultivated our flow- ers of knowledge. Julius Cae- sar and French and Spanish were added to our garden. It was with us then even as Longfellow writes: O summer day beside the joy- ous seas! - O summer day so wonderful and white, T So full of gladness and so full of pain! ' Forever and ever shalt thou be To some, the gravestone of a 4 dead delight, To some, the landmark of a new domain. Some of us were regretting the dead delight of our ver- dant days, while others looked ahead, longing for the new domain where the Juniors ruled so royally. But our buds had become blossoms, and the color of our dormant charac- teristicshad changed with the unfolding of the larger bloom. Had we been asked to explain it. it might be expressed like this: - ' ff: +i'4'Q?',fC4f- ' Af f' - Lf?-.-' .. A ' gl., H-:cf , if V. V , .V - . .. ..,.,. ,..., - ..--n-.4.......
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Page 8 text:
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,, 4 The Pennsylvania Yankee Gertrude Yarnell John Carpenter Perle Corey Norman Donaldson , I Margaret Hall Schuyler Hibbard Harriet Jorgensen Margaret Gelder 5-135.-Q ge--I-1-ull--Ill-11 1-l1lll--lll'-'l'l '- Mabelle- Lathrop A Genevieve Lounsberry Agnes Nielsen 'Carl . Quenan Katheryn Schroder Harry Sutherland Elva J ean ,Turner Paula Windnagle ' 3 ..g..pq1-mln-1-ull1nsg1 lstllilil lrilllhiq I Class History, p lu un ma- un ml un K Ill 3-nu l p.1p1aLnll-I-I -Ill III Ill!! Life is a full-blown year, With' all-things in their 'sea- song J Thus, in our schoolcareer, J Each changes hath' rhyme and reason, ' g The seasons come and go, Each With its gifts in hand, That we may-see and know How well all life is planned. Freshman iSpringJ I G -G G Spring isrthe time of all green and :growing things, fresh and verdantf in -their newness to all life. What more lfltting, then, than-that -the Freshman, in this green time of his life, shouldenter school? The March winds and the April showers were very- neces- sary to the budding of the shoots of knowledge' in the Freshman -mind and we ex- perienced ours in abundance. We, so green and sweet in-'our dewy' innocence, received at . this time the f1rst seeds of i knowledge and felt thefirst pull of theplowrand the culti- vator in this spring of our ca- reer. ll bf ' T A T Under the care of such ex- perts as Chief Gardener, Mr., Challis, and his assistants, Misses Kelly, Simpson, Werle, Glynn, Landon, Yillinger, Sherman, Marks, Hewes, Reusswig, Griflithfx and Messrs. Wettel and Macc.-i1man,v-,Our shoots of knowledge were be- ginning to sprout. We found fit difficult . for Algebra to 'thrive in our garden of knowl- edge. Latin required' much cultivating for some. Biology, too, needed gnofend, of eiiperi- menting for perfect culture, while English seemed more or less to have natural growth. Truly in our delightful' ver- dancy. might we then 'sing with the poet: A . . To-day the Spring is in the air mi1 '
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Page 10 text:
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If :.:gj- I-'Q A , 6,, , : Q1 T-..-f!g..,.-igrn.-A, 'g pf , 6 The Pennsylvil Next year how their heads were swelling With the lore Wise Fools ac- quire! n Ask them what they failed 11'1 telling b And they turned as red as fire! But red is the color of sum- mer warmth and light and sunshine and glow, and even on the cheek it speaks of hope. Junior CAutumnJ But verily, in school life, even as in Nature, Leaves have their time to fall, and flowers to wither, and the au- tumn of our days came as soon as we were ready. Very bril- liant was our foliage that year, very rich our fruitage, as the little buds of the Fresh- man year, grown into the flow- ers of Sophomore development became the richer, more neces- sary and more satisfying fruit of autumn. It was indeed the harvest of all our early plant- ing-the reaping of the re- sults of all our dreams and hopes and efforts. The glow of our radiant knowledge flushed the whole year with the mellowness of sunset splen- dor. And it brought with it the glad Thanksgiving of No- vember-thankful we knew so much, thankful we were no longer Freshmen, or Sopho- mores, thankful that we would 'fit nia Yankee so soon be Seniors and that we had been able to achieve S0 much. This time we were put under the care of other new garden- ers: Misses Kennedy, Post, Remer and Mrs. Kelchner and Messrs. Dwinelle and Guyer. At our first meeting, we elected Edward Pond, Presi- dent, Mary Mitchell, Vice- President, and Dora DePew, Secretary and Treasurer. Since our work was much the same, but more advanced, we could find time to obtain money for the great dance of the year, the Junior Prom. So, under the guidance of Miss Kelly, Class of 1926 staged a play, the first part of which was called, Fads and Fan- ci-es, and the last, The Schoolboy's Dream. In the latter, Mother Goose charac- ters were portrayed by the boys of the class. Johnnie Carpenter as a perfect Hump- ty-Dumpty, Henry Gelder as Jack Spratt's wife, and Eddie Pond as Little Lord Fauntel- roy, with many others of nur- sery lore, furnished much amusement. On Friday of Commencement Week, we held the Junior Prom. to bid farewell to the Seniors. The colors of sweet lavender and the heart of the daisy were used for decorating
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