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Page 51 text:
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1, W ,Wg 5 ,it L' lil llli9llDlllGlIf0DllRlllfMl9 6:5 THE PARTING -3, Q. ITH the approach of commencement, the culmination of three years of effort, the night to which all seniors look forward with joyous antici- pation and anxiety, there is a feeling of sadness and remorse that gf,-5 seems to permeate our minds, sadness which arises from the realization that one must part with the friends and activities which three years have made so inexplicably and infinitely precious, and remorse that originates from the fact that we have not made the most of our opportunities in Town- send Harris Hall. Our career in high school has not been one of empty chimeras, but of pulsating, throbbing life. From term to term, we have upheld the traditions and standards of our school. Defending and sustaining its spirit and morale has been our daily task, and it is with a feeling of profound gratification that we can affirm that our work has been performed successfully. We have set our ideals and aspirations, molded our characters, in such fashion that we may competently struggle with the responsibilities and seem- ingly-insurmountable obstacles of life. Nor are we oblivious of the part our instructors have played in this development-our instructors whom we have often unjustly and ungraciously condemned as pompous pedagogues. It is to them that we owe the splendid education and discipline we have acquired in Harris. They too are responsible for the ethical code and spirit of sportsman- ship inculcated into our minds. Never have they withheld advice, nor failed to offer their whole-hearted co-operation in a crisis, and it is with a feeling of sadness and regret that we bid them and the student body adieu. vm Q 'S 4 1 . 4 ll 1 5031 ag-if KD Q s. w Q 'A N fl 5 ri ,m I' 452 kg, y iii: If I, P4 GH , 4 I itty-Seven
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Page 50 text:
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N 5 WWW 3 f f? Q e ' Z X ff E Q X S IIBIIHIUIEIIRACJIFUMUIEQ - IW 1 X X S EDITORIAL I , T SUBWAY SAMARITANH C Q ? 6 S fx T M O Wk ! K F B L f 'N , W D x D C ff QA X QE C Q 2 f S QQ XX f X K Q R C 75 k 42 1 C -- QT T N XX X nf C N 1 11 up I-'n1'tv-SIX
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Page 52 text:
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X. . X s ' Q :f P I fn 5 .Il if J - i 4 in l Pa 3? tilt. riff' A Ng r Dx. ri i 0 T A 01 . .QM as s 'fi Page Forty-Eight . f i ' 5 . -sa- lsa ll SHORT STORY CONTEST First Prize A SUBWAY SAMARITANH NORMAN J. GOLDFARB. U. A. 21 GILBERT I. HYMAN, U. A. 21 S Edith Wilder entered the last car of the Brighton express she recalled some of the high- ' lights fbut that wasnlt Edith's wordj of the evening just What an unqualified Hop that Inglis party had turned out! And at first it had looked so promising. But now she vowed she had never seen such boots in all her years of party- going. To say that Edith was as thorough- ly disgusted a girl as ever trod a dance-floor would be putting it mildly, so to speak, but disgusted she was. And here she was, unaccompanied, go- ing home at two o'clock in the morn- ing, with plenty of time ahead of her to ponder upon the idiosyncrasies of the male of the species. Of course, Jimmy had offered to take her home, but to go home in his company or in the company of any one of that bunch was unthinkable, to go home alone, even at two A. M., was much safer. Why the way that Jimmy had behaved-simply abominable! Taking a seat in a far corner of the car, she made a wry face as she re- membered that kiss jimmy had meant for her lips but had landed on the tip of her nose. A non-partisan observer would have hardly blamed him for his temerity as Edith was the unknowing possessor of really kissable lips-and a very passable nose if the lips should prove unattainable. Edith, you may Q53 l I qi, aj L A passed. ff? 77M 51: rf rilllt WH ,fl w fwwayqyvwyuvy ELEJ I-V9-'l well imagine, had not thought of con- sidering these all-important factors when she passed judgment on jimmy, she had long ago decided that he had deserved to have his face slapped properly. No matterf' she comforted her- self for not having followed that course of action, i'I'm rid of him now -he and the rest of that gang can go straight to the devil-lot I care! Having thus summarily dismissed the Inglises, men in general, and jimmy in particular, Edith all at once realized that she was literally all-in. She did not want to doze for fear of missing her station, so-probably from force of habit-she reached in the pocket of her coat, fetched out a vol- ume of Rex Beach, and commenced to read. Edith soon felt that Beach's virility was not to her taste this night-or
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