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Page 30 text:
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l ' 1 T , .... : l Egg:-?3.Xj.-...3E...-,.ii,-...W ..,.4.,...,.:xR.-C.-Ta....-.1 37-Ev .-..:...-..,..z2...-2: I -1 ,gf sy' .Is Q, E g n g ,' VM! yr -gf. , i' sin 'Y 3 .Nr ga Q , ' wa' f 4 fl. - it ata ff -f , K ,lily ,V il 1 rl if Fl- -'M-G. Sfrninr Gllewa will YVe, the Senior Class of 1922, being of relatively sound inind and in the possession of the Faculty, do hereby make and declare our last will and testament for the purpose of shedding our responsibilities, privileges, joys, griefs and cares, and do solemnly devise and be- queath the said goods and chattels as follows, to-wit: First. To our Alina lX'la.ter we leave our love and devotion, plus any knowledge we may have iinbibed in unguarded nloments, as We will naturally have no further use of it, either in the present life or in the life to conie. Secondly. To President Waldo we leave our profoundest sym- pahy and the assurance that the Junior Class only appears so very inferior by contrast with our cxtreinc brilliant-y. To Dr. Nlash we send our love, our gratitude, our best wishes for his highest possible success and the assurance that his ineinory will always be fresh in the hearts of his former students. Thirdly. To the next Senior Class we bequeath: First: Our patient, hard-working, long-suffering, inimitable C, lass Advisor, Mr. Bever, with full instructions for winding and set- tin Second: The Library, in which they may talk, lunch and re- create themselves we have done. Third: Our places in 'he soup-line at the Cafeteria. Fourth: The sacred obligation of arranging a satisfactory al- liance for the Eligible of our faculty. Fifth: Our noble, soul-stirring example in all things, which they can only hope to iniitate at a distance. -- Fourthly. To the Junior Class we bequeath: First: Our blessing. Second: Certain note-books and papers, ready to be handed in, which, being disposed of, will leave theinl more leisure for the real business of life, i. e., inovie-fanning, etc. Third: Our earnest request that they do not work themselves to death or develop nervous break-downs from study and worry. Fifthly. Individually and collectively, we do bequeath the fol- lowing: To Dr. Miller we leave our undying gratitude for his short form of lesson plan, over which we have spent so many hours of exquisite enjoyment and wild delight. To Mfr. Bever we leave six dozen large-sized handkerchiefs to be distributed by him among the faculty, who will be stricken with grief at being obliged to part with us. To Mr. Bond we leave a Couch on which to relax during As- sembly, after the fatiguing process of teaching Juniors, Why is 6? To Miss Edens we leave the task of catching all the slang phrases running loose about the institution, warning her not to romp, frisk or cake-walk during the process, and advising her to shut them up in 77 28 I V rum? MFVWQ ' -lbxmt 7-L 1 .V rfasf' sa u E- a ' -l K
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Page 29 text:
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'r .I e ' 3 ,F r I f , ,' U -A I f, -' D-,rv'- Af'.a-mth T,- 52 ' ' :1.L........ ....,... . .. ..... . ....., v...... ........-,..,-....-.-.. f 4 , -.. Z l 'l ' HM-Mr . -.1 iv ET fb ve. '-.2 gnr lm-1 45,1 ep, 4- ,, H Ng- f n . Eli ... .1 , 14 QPF 'Jax L. gn ' e-Wg l gh ll,p4?a4 , X V my 55 34 - F gg - 1, -Us is 5, .ig Q9 wx.-:ui .f A 124. .,n:c.zexaa as - A -Begg.-.tv '2':N,,.s :A Lf .-in Mildred Sll2lI'I1lJ1'OlCl1 goes baek to Ausiria on a visit and does not return for 'lfonr years. Gladys YValker is known as the ragtiine lady, because of her singing and dancing. llllaliel Lewis is still 0Ol,lCff4l1lf.f frog for Hatelnnn University. Florence Pilier is the world's champion tennis player in l924. Lillian C. Dixon has discovered a new Way to get away to danCeS. Ask her. . Franres Still has started a, hospital for drowned eats. Pearl Stonglron sells a short story for a large sum and then gets married. Alice lll2l,VCl'lllH,ll tours the world looking for a, pretty man, but finally returns for Carroll Haeske. Maria Jepsen is still driving her own ear. Her husband sits be- side her. v The old woman stopped talking. I looked up. She pointed to the door. At the open door I pleaded for her to tell my fortune. At first anger spread over her face, then she began to laugh. Oh, what a joke, she kept saying. She sereeched and laughed. I started running down through the valley. As I ran I could still hear the dry, crackling laugh. L IS -George Stephens. 1 DQ: Q94 T t ..,' , Q C .rs Q J f 7 e's,1 qi7g 5 If 62.5 O , Ilgb..--n:'fl,5f 4 6 , -Cla, do j9?.,..L. '2 2 zo' 25 6-mi se . fx 3, A gen I am is lr . we X 3 HMM QVXQ 27
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Page 31 text:
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SQQ- .ei l mp' A 'll Z -fi., Q 'bf' 'T Il ll E? .M .DJJ A .M 4'-.L-.2 AV legit 92-ml' ff-U-1 . ' l I ia- ' -V - - .i.f.' df- vi 9- iss. ,bg-b2i52E3:,.i ......-............. ., ..,.. . .............-.-.:.-.-ss:....,. .ritfrg ' 'i 5 ,'2 q22'.4?fQ.'f' ,- -we san ' s -ivnferre. ..-,nam L: 1 -, 1 J, f'.' l 1 1. 579' gg i t2: ga i! i'-if .- i Q41 fs. 4 Lg - my al - f' .- L- :Eye K..- X ag. if f a-,ms if - 'ss K Room 216 Elllil stand guard. To Mr. Kolstad we bequeath: CU An A stamp and a mieehanieal device for turning 60 pages a minute to relieve him of the immense fatigue of correcting papers. C25 A warning, viz., that a married man is much safer at Normal than a. single one. QZSQ A pair of rompers for his teddy-hear. To Miss Sperry we return Shakespeare and Browning, which some of our number took from her. A To Miss Gregg we leave specimens of our business penmanship, on two conditions: First, that she suppress them, until after gradua- tiong second, that she never use them for horrible examples in her future classes. To Miss Mead we leave our permission to try out any douhiful prescriptions on our successors, together with our love and thanks. To Miss Earhart we leave a. sellireiurning pink card, copyright- ed, and the dreadful accusation that she has the kindest and best heart in the world. To Mr. Hoppe we leave our congratulations on the success of the Senior Playg also an ear-trumpet, smelling salts and fifteen stretch- ers, to be used on the shy little Juniors in Expression I. To Mr. Coughlin we hequeaih all the chick-weed on the campus, suggesting that he transplant it to the Training School garden, thus giving his To Mr. Carver ive bequeath lllr. Coughlin's treatise on The Art Still, suggesting that he read and apply itg also our sin- cere thanks for putting our school hack on the football map. To lllr. Hunt we leave the upper hand which he got over us in Nature Study classes a long-needed rest. of Keeping the very original standardized tests we wrote for him. To lllr. Caskey we relinquish all claim to the simplified mode of spelling we demonstrated for him in the spelling tests. To Mr. Rahskopf We leave Tipperary in the Spring, over which We were Wont to wax profane. To Mr. Grady ye leave six new pairs of white trousers and rol- ler skates to aid in eorralling students escaping fromi Assembly. To Mr. .Kihhe we leave a megaphone, so that he may not strain his voice in making himself heard from the Training School to the Science Annex, 'together with the suggestion that there are synonyms for exactly and exceedingly. To llhrs. Thatcher we leave all the records we failed to appreciate in Music Appreciation, assuring her that, after trying them out on the next Senior Class, she will appreciate us. To the Training School supervisors we leave noiseless moeeasins in which to stalk their prey, also devices for printing t'Unsa.tisfac- tory, Rewrite, on fifty plans a minute. To Miss Cummins we leave our scalps and the eonsoling thought that she has stumped', every one of us at one time or another. To Mr. Philippi We leave: CU Many specimens of prehistoric man unearthed by future football teams in Battersbuy's Field, and, C25 21-J K
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