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Ehed and gathered her books to go to the library, as she did every Saturday

Miss Blodgett, the librarian, had noticed the lonely, unkeirl that read so many books, and she saw Lacey's sad face as she returned her books that day

"My dear, you're getting to be a big girl Coazine area

"I wonder if you'd like to read these for a change," she said with a kindly s Lacey a copy of Girls Today, with a feature article that pondered the pros and cons of daily hair washing

Lacey would read anything, so she added azines to her pile of books for the week Fro', and 'Soap versus Face Creaiene

In high school, Lacey's shyness prevented her froer environ Concentration on school work helped her to co part-time at her local supermarket enabled her to buy clothes and cosmetics, and blend in with her peers By then Lacey was of the opinion that et it; hoped that education would be the answer

Everything finally see into place for Lacey Wilson when, at the tender age of seventeen, she was accepted at the University of Toronto and her father agreed that she could continue to live at home Tuition would be her only expense

She knew she would have enough money for her first year if she worked all suofer' at Toronto's largest newspaper Perhaps I can beco on catastrophes and wars! Then disaster struck