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Page 30 text:
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MTEPULjiS Rocks, clods and a hose were used. The clods produced the effects of bursting shells. The water added to the devastating effect. Note—Terra firma plus aqua pura—MUD). After the battle the victorious and the conquered betook them¬ selves around the corner. Here they engaged in coasting on the side¬ walk, while the pedestrians did their pedesting on the street. Mrs. Panky returned from town and contemplated, not without emotion, the havoc of war. Steve stopped coasting and was involuntarily ushered home. A private family scene followed. Moral: Sherman was right. HENRY RAVENSCROFT, ’23. AfflDFim Will HAPPFN (Freshman Prize Story ) ANNETTE CLARK, looking over the smooth surface of Lake Tahoe, was fascinated beyond words. The majestic expanse of water changed to gold by the sinking sun, the snow capped Sierra Nevada mountains in the background, and above, the deep blue skies, all blended into a picture which no artist could improve upon. Nannette took a long breath of the pure air and wondered how she could ever have preferred going to Canada to coming to California. It was Nannette’s first trip to the West and she had come only because her brother insisted he would show her a better time in the West than she would have if she went to Canada on her vacation. As she gazed over the lake she decided that if California could boast of other places like Lake Tahoe it certainly was the Golden State. Yes, Mark Twain had been right when he said that Lake Tahoe was the fairest picture the whole world afforded and - “See the boat coming, Nannette?” Her reverie was broken by the voice of Lawrence Whitten, a friend who had been at the sum¬ mer resort several weeks. She was suddenly very much alive. “Where? I don’t see any boat!” —26—
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Page 29 text:
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SATUEDfff TFiE MUD FiGUf VICTORS y? TRIPLE TT 2 (Sophomore Prize Story) S TEVE was a light-hearted, loose jointed, long-legged, skinny, sunburnt, twelve year young Panky—Panky being his last name. ‘ ‘ Ste-e-eve-e-en. ’’ “You get up and down here in five minutes.” Fifteen minutes later Mrs. Panky laid aside her dish towel, and climbed the stairs. Steve had been dozing with one ear open and when he heard footsteps on the stairs, he tumbled out of bed. When Mrs. Panky reached his room he was in his union suit, pulling at a stocking. Being surprised that he was up at all, she forgot her threat and with¬ drew. As there were no further chances of dozing, Steve finished his preparations for the day which consisted of:— 1. Putting on the rest of his clothes. 2. Running a little soap and water over the parts of his hands and face which were visible in the mirror. (This often necessitated a second scrubbing by his mother of the parts the mirror neglected to display). 3. And last, dragging a comb through the forward part of his hair. This over, Steve stamped down to breakfast. During the morning his attention was divided between his friends Tom, Dick and Harry, the cat and a few other things. The cat had a reputation as a tenor robusto and on warm summer nights, he ren¬ dered odes to the moon. When fireworks could be obtained, the cat was treated to a brilliant demonstration. Experience made it obvious that the cat should not be held while he absorbed these principles of combustion. Dinner was eaten between twelve and one, after the appearance of Steve, due to Mrs. P.’s vocal efforts. During the afternoon, Steve and his erstwhile friends, Tom, Dick and Harry, participated in a sham battle. Steve’s cellar stairs had been selected as the only available site. Of course Mrs. Panky was safely down town.
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Page 31 text:
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;iitee i “Here, take my field glasses. Now right out there; no, you’re looking too much to the right. Don’t you—I” “Oh, yes, I see it! Isn’t it tiny? Oh my! it must be great out there! Have you ever been over there in a launch, Lawrence?” “Not in a launch, but I went in a canoe one day with Robert Hunning. You remember Robert Hunning don’t you? He was the man who acted so beastly in that accident at Long Island. I remem¬ ber, though, that you liked him and made all manner of excuses for him. He has a canoe up here. Maybe that’s it. Let’s see the glasses a minute, will you, Nan?” “Yes, providing you will stop calling me Nan,” she replied with a roguish smile as she returned the glasses. “Forgive me, Miss Clark,” he said with mock solemnity as he adjusted the glasses, “but you see accidents ivill happen. That’s Hunning’s canoe all right! Now here’s your chance Nan, to see the most adorable lady’s man. I remember your taste for them.” “Lawrence Whitten, you know that isn’t so! I don’t like a lady’s man any better than you do, but I do like a quiet man who isn’t forever telling what he can do. Besides Mr. Hunning isn’t a lady’s man. I got to know him pretty well when I was at Long Is¬ land and believe me he’s a perfect gentleman, and there wasn’t a word of truth in that talk about his running away from that accident. Perhaps if you had been brought up the way he has been, by an in¬ valid mother who idolized him and gave him everything money could buy—maybe you wouldn’t be the strong, self dependent man you are.” “Now, there you go, if that isn’t a woman for you! You start in by saying he isn’t a lady’s man and coward, and now you end up by making excuses for his being one. Oh, you women!” Just then Nannette’s brother, Theo, came up and hearing the latter part of their conversation, said, “Well, have you found some¬ thing more to fight over? That’s the second disagreement you’ve had in the last hour. Don’t you know, dear children, that it isn’t nice to quarrel like that?” The last was said with such an attempt at paternal affection that they both laughed. Never the less Nannette could not hear her sex criticized without rising to the occasion. “Lawrence, you’re forever talking about women shifting from one thing to another and doing this and that. 1 don’t suppose men ever make mistakes, do they? Well, you’re making mistake number one right now in saying Robert Hunning’s a coward.” “Robert Hunning? AVlio said anything about him?” asked Theo looking from one to the other. “Oh, Mr. Hunning is up here this su mmer and Lawrence says he is a coward. He believes that he really did run away from that acci¬ dent on Long Island last summer. You don’t believe that stuff, do you, Theo?” “Now, looky-here, young lady,” Theo said evasively, “I wish you to understand I am absolutely non-belligerent.”
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