is, mi ETIC P08TLUDE Neil on C I A Campus dining-room. 5—tnd naturally Sat- night. |Ti. l\ iM \ red young man, aa- . g nonchalance that never do credit to a I • , * d fair, overdoing that :ive graciouftneas. [of faces (composed im- itely of ten other table inta.) He—Lovely school! (Mow’d I ev- ef 1 t dragged into this durtifr? Wonder how many there are here—Looks lillions—All eyes-Nev- v a bunch stare so~ it’s hot in here—And they eat for hours—) it is nice. (I hope that : gad-about Mary James him. She thinks her losed date’s so much. 1 Korean I make him remem ber j?o stand till they return thadts? I’m afraid to kick if ft y . 19 s him. GocmI grief! His nai are black! And he’s not so good-looking as he to be.) 1, I - 1 ■ 1 i 1| '1 ii He—Nice and cool. (I’m roasting ! * -She looks hot too and her nose is shiny.—Funny how much more you notice things like that when you put ’em | with so many others.—Now that blonde across the table, ; ' for instance !-She’s not half bad!) I 1 ' I * I'] es, it is. (Isn^t he ^ever to stop eating? Ev- *s been through for hours! I winder if I’d bet ter kick him-) L u' xl 1 the painful lack of companionship) 4- Steak's (good. Too good * to leave. J(Gosh! They musrt be v: in^ to a fire or sompinVI never saw girls gobble so—But she needn't have kicked me—Tm no horse!) m er She—Yes, it is. (Why doesn’t he She*-—It's been nice having you. wake up and pass the glass- ack, ; One eye was black; 1 His pal, you see, had V i — -■ *■ mm ^ f * 1 * — u! 1 II , 'i /l' P 1:1 V-, ■ 4 » It. i *