Page 31 - 1933 Hartridge
P. 31
The Senior Will
WE, the Class of 1933, being to all appearances possessed of a sound mind, do solemnly declare this to be our last will and testament.
To the Junior Class we leave:
1. First rights on “Le Petit Larousse Illustre,’’ which, as every scholar knows, easily teaches one to define the most difficult of words in the French tongue.
2. The pleasant and superior duty of sharply ringing the bell for—“Order in Study Hall!^^
3. The impressive dignity that, like some mystic cloak, garbs every Senior.
4. English conferences, relinquished with a keen sense of loss because of the chance they give to develop real ideas and real writing.
To Jean Albin, Dorothea Rice leaves her deep distrust of Socialists and the accom- panying combative frame of mind.
To Hope Hendler, Alice Lloyd leaves a bit of her originality, and to Eleanor Dill, those enormous dark eyes which ought to swell Eleanor's to almost unbelievable proportions.
To Pamela Anderson, Judy Hamblet leaves that outdoors air and the ability to sprint both near and far.
To Harriet Cleveland, Camilla Hayward leaves a few of those perturbing golden curls, and to Catherine Dill, her romantic nature, hoping it will not prove too great a burden.
To Betty Sparks, Peggy Tietjen leaves her abounding capacity for being sympa^ thetic and helpful and also that worried expression, assumed when baffled at bridge or swamped by study.
To Pudgie Fargo, Janet Alison leaves her good disposition, not that we think Pudgie needs it, but then there can never be an excess of so excellent a thing!
To Jane Treglown, Mary Green leaves her rosy cheeks and all the included features of the muchwaunted Schoolgirl Complexion.
To Jane Edwardsen, Louise Brooke leaves her ability to do several hundred things at once and also, as a generous afterthought, a few (big question mark???) souvenirs from Philadelphia dances.
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