Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 26 Jan 1933, p. 27

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ber entered,. and t he resuits have been awaited with more than the usual ixterest. The winners of the various branches of. the tournamient have beenheartily ajîid sinicerely con- gratulatcd, and condoleiice offered to the losers with a genuine tone of re-. gret. Asidè from the reali mportance of pinig-pon-giii the evolutionof mani, wesuppose that,in view.of its present prestige and recognuition, .ande the placé it has carved for itself in the aunais ofý sporting history. it-vvilIl>be accorded the honor of a major let- ter soon. A well publicized U. 'S. Hisetory class carried on recently through an other'siege 'of, musical efforts, thi timle.ini the fornm of a phonograph record(l N-ich enitted strange 1Soui1ds purported 'to be a man's1 voicée. The sounrce of the straiige souinds 'is imy's- terious ami as vet iuascertaîn7d. \Ve were bewilderedi, for wve thought thai ail such fornîs of education liad heen relegated.to their proper place-iu the mnusîc roomns. If the person who (lis- ol)ee(l these accepted standards of co,îdultct heý apprehiended, Jet him flot l>e deait with too severelv, however; for, possiblv, lhe afforded somieone a bit of pleasure, and certainlv, that we kniow of. several laughs. except by its victims. There is no soap in the boys' shioýers! Think of it,! No soap-ino .ie at ail! .But-if we. get out Our -Echoes, -perhaps the township ýwilI ignore the soap less sit- niation, and >so vill theélboys. 1 et's give it a trial, anyhow. How many of Y>ou have forgotten the famouls aud iinspiring tax warrant canipaign' which the presetit senrio 1r clasýs led for quite. a timie How mnany of you-have. forgotten the thrill of watching the mnark on .the board. in; the front hall'- Mount hliglier and highî.çr, until the goal hiad- been reached, and' the object achieved? How many of 'you have found that, you sincerely j]oped school wvoul1d stay open, even if you .%ereii't of the gradatLing. cIass~? And Sur4Iv votA reniember how the undercIassnme, stood up under the competition. This year lias. been comparativelv quiet, and free from the cry oh "Hýelp), we're sinking!" But. now the tinte is comning when we are to be faced with another emergency, a cri- sis in which ail must work together, seniors and underclassmen as .well. That is the only way this campaigul can_ hope to have a successful conclu - PLAYING AT DANCE Bobby McÇPloud of Keni1worth and bis-Normnandy orchestra will play'at the. carnival and dance February 4. at .a'e Forest acadeimv. Returuiag: On mftermoom. and eveuiIiig trains saune st.e. A4sk, A gentfer Pall Patilularts CHICAGO & NORTH, WESTERN RY. passed ou to coilege as capable -Aid seniors at the head of the list, and intelligent students, but, through mnake this Echoes mor ,e your own somne error, revealed they had' neg-. than any other could be, for~ this letdto acquaint themselves with vear. that tell-tale dollar maikes yon th school sufficiently in four vears. ýa part of .Echoes. VVle've al put across Yes, omie nighit recently. they bluin- more difficult projects than tItis one dered into forbidden territorv and before. Let's show the people of glided through the then dark and New Trier township. and our facuitv.. silent boys' locker troom tili, amnazed, what workers we are, and how mutcli they reached the exit, and "exitedi" %e think of our Echoes. Say. -Vel- Say ~ ARTHUR ANDERSENE PubMic Accoumtants "entering business in this period of rapid economic change, 1 would* prepare imyself for larger respopsibilities by attending the school of commerce of a great university." "If Iwere a young ma n tiodaCy"

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