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Page 26 text:
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20 THE CRIMSON AND GRAY How many inches in a foot? Mr. Goodreau (in Physics) : Reducing four feet nine inches you have forty-four inches. Louise Rowley (in Review Geom.) : Four quantities are in proportion by alteration (alternation). Miss Crocker: This isn ' t a dressmaking establishment. Lem (in American History) : I don ' t know the name of the Lord who came over here. 1921 McGilvray: Did you ever take chloro- form? Green : No, who teaches it ? Wanted in Room 5 — A Cat. Miss O ' Keefe: The Ancient Mariner was swooning on the deck. West: The Ancient Mariner was spoon- ing on the deck. Mr. Goodreau (waxing eloquent) : The man is fifty-five years old, going on sixty- five. Miss O ' Keefe (talking about dumpcarts) : The dumpcarts I have seen have two high heels on the side. Cheney : Do you believe in palmistry ? Fair Junior: Only on summer evenings when there is nothing else to do. Mr. Goodreau: What is a vacuum, Miller? Miller: I know but I can ' t tell you. I have it in my head. Sam Williams to Mr. Cheney : I received a letter from your son the other day, stating that he wished to have his Ford buried with him. Mr. Cheney (slightly mystified) : Well, Lawrence, what is the idea of having your Ford buried with you? Lawrence: Why, Pa! It has got me out of a good many holes, so I thought maybe it would get me out of that. Miss de Sloover is specializing in lectures, and we think that she has been taking a cor- respondence course. The juniors of the commercial department think it is about time that the pupils of the Mary E. Wells High School would take up a collection to send them flowers. Because they are being worked to DEATH. letter Miss Mack: Laviguer, write about a European tour. Part of the letter — I would like to know about the roads to Europe, roads in Europe and how much it would cost to go to San Francisco. Miss Mack : What does yd. stand for 5 S. Jordan : Yankee Division. Miss Sheehan: Miller, now can ' t you talk loud enough to wake up this class? Miller (translating) : I don ' t think so, etc. DorotHy Pratt AlicE DuPaul MorRin NEaler Julian W. CurtiS Louise Turner Ri ta RicHards IrEne Proulx TheCla Fitzgerald AlLard Paul Bob Allard DugaS Pat CaSey JOhn Day Florence Wixted Majory CurtiS LAriviere BoUcher RiChard O ' Neil Mary CheneY LouiSe Durgin COnstance Grant Beatrice Page Dorothy Hall Olive SpoOner Mildred Apte Peg ConOlly LawRence Curtis Evelyn PoEton LouiS Le Pain
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Page 25 text:
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CLASS NOTES 1920 Lemmelin: I can ' t learn music. Mr. Clement: Yes, you can; go to the music room, open your mouth, and take something in. (Why not let something out?) The Ten Most Useless Things at High School The dust-pan in the office The brooms in Domestic Science Lab. The court The drinking fountains on the second floor The erasers for the blackboards The telephones The library The editor ' s box in Room 5 The time between 8.30 and 8.40 The Freshman Class Isabel: Men are always late. I ' ve wait- ed here for him since eight o ' clock. Eleanor : When were you to meet him ? Isabel: At seven. Miss O ' Keefe: Wake up, Sherman. Are you asleep? Sherman (from force of habit) : I don ' t know. Jordan : Why do you think I am a poor judge of human nature? Elizabeth : Because you have such a good opinion of yourself. Ticket seller : How many ? La Rochelle : Two standing rooms — to- gether. Mr. Goodreau: What formula did you use? Lib Morse : I didn ' t use any formula- just common sense. Mr. Goodreau : Well, pretty soon ! we ' ll use that Miss O ' Keefe: I positively cannot allow more than one to sit together. Goodreau to West: Everything contains one hundred per cent, of something. Lemmelin: What does West ' s head con- tain? Goodreau : One hundred per cent ivory. Mr. Hofsted to Industrial Boys: Write a composition about President Wilson. Phil Monahan: All I know about him is that he has been in office two terms and has been married twice. Mr. Hofsted : His being married twice is the most important thing, of course. La Rochelle, telling the story of Gavain and the Green Knight: If he ' d wanted to, the Green Knight could have sued his wife for a divorce. Wonder Why? Miss O ' Keefe (in English) : I ' m sorry I couldn ' t go into the Hundred Years War with you. Mr. Clement in Cicero, telling a story on the side: You know about the man who lives on Long Island Sound, and hears the sea (see) and sees the sound. Fran Troy: Gee, you sprung that last year ! Mr. Clement in Cicero : Did you look up that rule, Miss Troy? Miss Troy: No. Mr. Clement: Well, Miss Dartt did. Miss Troy : Well then, what ' s the use of the rest of us looking it up?
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Page 27 text:
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THE CRIMSON AND GRAY Margaret Connolly. When shall I paint the rocks? Miss Eager : When the sea is dry. Miss Crocker : Cheney, what are you talk- ing for? Cheney: You spelled ' Clarke ' wrong on the board. Miss Crocker: Of course you had to tell Cole all about it. Cheney : No, ma ' am, I didn ' t have time. Miss Crocker : When you know what you don ' t know, it ' s almost as good as knowing it. McGilvray: Laurie, what ' s your record for making town? (while ri ding in Cheney ' s Ford). Cheney : I don ' t make any records. West : No, he breaks them. Mr. Clement: The Nervii were a very bold, fearless tribe. Connie Grant: Is that why they were called Nerv ' -ii? In English Class Miss O ' Keefe: What are the characters in fables? Constance Grant: Donkeys. 1922 Mr. Goodreau (in General Science) : In what three states is substance found? Bright pupil: Massachusetts, Rhode Is- land and Connecticut. Miss O ' Keefe : Curtis, your hands will be all dirty. Curtis: There ' s water downstairs. Miss O ' Keefe : But it ' s cold. Curtis: May I buy a pencil, Miss O ' Keefe? Miss O ' Keefe : Yes ; here ' s one I just shar- pened. Curtis : Looks it ! Paul (signing slip) : What am I sup- posed to write? Miss Sheehan: The time you leave and the time that you come back. Paul: I don ' t know what time I ' m com- ing back. Mr. Clement, translating Latin very rap- idly— Paul : Is all that in the book ? In geometry Miss Grant takes many things for granted, remarked Miss Crocker. Marjorie Curtis: Some one is always picking on Mildred Apte. Irene Proulx: I ' d like to have seen her before they started picking. Mr. Forbes : I want you boys to put your papers on your drawing-boards straight, and take your thumb-tacks out with a tack puller. Cameron Shaw : What will we push them in with? Mr. Forbes : Use your heel, or your head. Miss Crocker : What are you doing? Thecla Fitzgerald : An original. Miss Crocker : Certainly very original. Miss O ' Keefe: Miss Hall, what kind of adjectives are there? Dot: Proper. Miss O ' Keefe : Yes, and the other kind ? Dot: Improper. What Impertinence! Miss Earls: What is your name? John Casey. Miss Earls : And yours ? Paul. Miss Earls : And yours ? Jones. Miss Earls : John Paul Jones, leave this room. Miss Grant (translating Latin) : These tribes being subdued and — er — Mr. Corbin : Where is that ' and ' ? I have- n ' t an ' and ' in my book. Miss Grant: Oh! Mr. Clement always says that ! T. Fitzgerald : Isn ' t it just as well to say the triangles are equal as to say they are congruent? Miss Crocker : Yes, it ' s merely fashion to say they are congruent. Miss O ' Keefe : What is the moral of ' Sir Roger in Love ' ? LePain : Beware of widows. Miss O ' Keefe : Don ' t you play some mus- ical instrument? Curtis : Oh, yes ! the Victrola.
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