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Aaron, Fannie | to Mother, Father, and Pete, 1920 November 18

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Date
1920-11-18
Creator
Transcript file(s)
Details
Identifier
vassar:44145,vcl_Letters_Aaron_Fannie_1920-11_020
Extent
1 item
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: Page 1, vcl_Letters_Aaron_Fannie_1920-11_020
November 18, 1920.

Dear Mother, Father, and Pete:

I surely have enough to keep me busy today:--the large meeting of Speakers' Bureau, French Club meeting, and class meeting all seventh hour. I haven't decided yet to which to go. And then at seven-thirty tonight I have my third attempt at debate tryouts. I am among the last twelve up, but that won't do me any good unless I am among the last three. We shall see--. I was on the affirmative last night and was also responsible for organizing the material of our side. I am the unlucky one tonight again, on the negative, in addition to having the rebuttal this time. I would much prefer having the affirmative rebuttal.

Thank goodness our history topics this week don't have to be in until Tuesday, of next week, I mean.

I have an English Speech conference tomorrow morning. I am curious to see what will happen. I am told they put you on your back on some sort of the Red Cross stretcher and teach you how to breathe!

I had a letter from Mlle. Douteau yesterday, and the day before I got into the worst mail rush I have ever been in, all to find nothing but a letter from Phil.

I wish I had time and intelligence to write more, but I surely am one busy lady. I got off Scenery committee of First Hall, as I decided that it would be too strenuous--there is a great deal of lifting, etc., I think, and that would be just taking cahnces[sic] on a recurrence of the old discomfort.

That was another great letter, Pete. I wish there were football games every week. However, I am afraid our honorable law-student would not learn very much of the honorable law if there were. I know what I have been missing in your letters this year--I thought it was sleeping lying across your desk for two hours every Sunday, but it was going to Renwick's and having a double shredded. Can't you write that once in a while from Cambridge--even if you don't do it--just for old times' sake?

Love,

Fannie