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Page 14 text:
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Affair? TO ?++++++++++++ i l ?++++++ A FRE HMA - 41 lt is an Ancient Senior And he stops a new Freshie 'tliy thy long drawn face and glittering eye Now wherefore stopp'st thou me? jc-llerson's doors are open Wide They're there to let me in The students met, the school is setg Cans't thou hear the classroom din? He holds him with a knowing eye The Freshie now stood still, And listens like a three year child The Senior hath his will. The hell has rung, the school halls cleared. Nlerrily the students Hew, Past the ottice, past each room Past the teachers too. The Freshie, he turns his face Yet he cannot choose hut hear And thus spake on, that Ancient Klan Now in his Senior Year. And now he told how late he was To every class head had. And thus he told his tale of woe To this young eager lad. 'Uh Freshman! This soul hath heen Late eyen to a Regents Class. So late I was, that I myself Saw no Way l could passl Sweeter than the graduation. T'is sweeter tar to me To walk in on time to eyery class. XVith a goodly company Oh a ,left S.P. taught me well To get to my class early. And forced me to tell my tale And only then he lelt me tree. ulfarewell, lkarexyell, hut this l tell To thee, thou lfreshuian hoy llc passeth well, who goeth early To eyery class with ioyf' The Senior whose eye is hright, And came late neyer more ls egoneg and now the young Freshman Turned quickly to his classroom door. lle went like one who hath heen stunned And is ot sense forlorn A sadder and a wiser Freshie, lle rose the morrow morn. Marilm XVHIIUCI1
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Page 13 text:
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W ff gf J- ZF' V1 - 4 f 9 '- Z ff ff ff? f if ff' ' , Am nv A bil 1 - ' IF I UF Y flf fp N7 I .1 I f ,, . , , X I , mn! 0011, Emi Q , L ..,.,.. 1w1L+-M . y WW, SPOT yilswssa 1 fi .2 'e -' wi . . -vs lr 1. '. . .-Q ,I ,.,, .. ..s..:a1:5-. q w , giyyyybrigrjwmx BS is - The case you are 2ll7Ollt to hear is positively, without a doubt, 1U03f4',k, a farce. Everything Qexcept uaniesl was changed to protect the norinal. Any siinilarity to absolutely anything- pull llp a couch, buddy, youlre a sick boylu S125 ASI. The student patrollers were working the first shift. Suddenly the building shook. It was tl1e chiefs yoice. XVant 111c, Mr. Lapidus'?'i, I answered the call. 'iYeah. just got a report from the Bio lab. Tell her about it. Captains Sheila Kanowitz and Martin Nlendelsolnif' 'iXVe've got a big case. Fred Altschuler spoke up, The Bio class dissected frogs today, and o11e slimy green leg left the room without a pass. Your job-find itlv' But a student patroller's job is to sit on a post and check to see that students haye passes. XYe'ye never worked with frog legs before. 'iThe lab is counting on youf- warned Leonard Schindler and Ierry Geier. i'But where do I go? XYhere would X011 go if YOII were an a1np11tated leg? asked Capt. David Sable. I checked the infirinary and just as I suspected-bandages were gone. This was no longer a niere l'lll1llXVZ1y caseg it had become a bandage robbery. I heard screaming, then cryi11g COll'lll1g from the fifth floor. Might be a leadl I flew up the steps, threw open the door and heard the sobbing. Wrong easel just a girl who passed her first test. Subject-geometry. Then it hit nie. iThe falling plaster canie through klgilllld I went to the lab and I saw it: a table full of bandaged frog legs. I played a h1111cl1 and I was right. 1 UNO matter where frogs' legs inay roani. They always return to the lah, their hoinelnj Trial was held i11 Dept, Science in and for the sectio11 of East New York, borough Brooklyn. I was found guilty of annoying the science depart- ment and was sentenced to anotlier terin of checking passes o11 the student patrol. Rochelle Snyder X wsu W.ms wwwwQ 9
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Page 15 text:
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QUR E IOR TEACHER Four years have swiftly passed us hy. And we are leaving old .lellerson High. XYe extend to you, teachers, our appreciation, For adding a ehapter to our education. On many occasions we argued. it's true. It was only because we worried aliout you. Like the times you said. Test and we said Noi XVe thought only of your marking, papers, you know. Or the times we forgot homework. you lieeame mad, You had less to eorreet. we thought you'd he glad. Youll miss our kindnesses. hut try' not to fret. Previous students like us. you are soon hound to get. t ------be .. ...d M ,Wm 'W From left to right, front fUlL'.' Nlrs. Nordell, Nliss Wlirtli. Xlrs. Gilhert, Mrs. Sehor. Mrs. Roth, Mrs. Lasker, Mrs. Solow. Buck row: Nlr. jahin. Xlr. Fenton, Mr. Beek- man, Mr. Hecht, Mr. Amienherg. Missing: Mrs. Gallagher, Nliss Xlillson. Nliss Sarquis. Xlr. Beekenstein, Mr. Drucker, Mr. Pfeffer. Little did we realize, however, how important she would be to us . .
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