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Page 25 text:
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1,1 X HEART BEATS or RY . xr? . N 1, -'xx . xx , . . 1 N FJ N . A 3 ----ff ki -e fx-9. -Klx' X X '! img 1 i N . ja 'f i . x 5 f li N X I l hw QAQ, ' A ' l X l v ' , if N -1 'al H ll? H K - .if f l 'H Pl -. 3 - 13 gggggwggg .K f H ZAFFSPTGEZNY X , ff' ltfl . i.. if-'s f ' xr f P -i Q , ff! l J L l ' I l lv ll- 14' fl f' Ng ROMEO -.1uuaT 54 Q if 1 Q H-isa. fly ' 11 PARIS - H ELEN SIR LAUNCELOT QUEEN GUINEVERE 41.74 During our years in CenIral's classes XVe'ue seen many lads and lasses Talking happily of fun and joy, Of heroines in hooks. like Helen of Troy. As heroes and heroines. they too have acted. .Vot knowing the altention Ihey attracled. Robin Hood. as slories haue Iold. Was uery handsome as well as hold: Marian. his loue. stayed by his side. Hoping that Ihere she'd always abide. Fred and Eyleen fit rhe parts so well That the rest of the srory I need not Iell Twenlu 1
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Page 24 text:
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I e' w s. . an ,- fic-ie ., g N R W my , vs aa. I T T' limi: -.--- 0- -. 'iig-!e1'Zi1i'i:'zif -rif -.-.r gQ - -.gr in w i Qatar: Inr.-,.,ag,,,..,-f -A ,,,gggu,,6g,ntD...am-.avf.,.ac:c a.-rc:...a1cL.,AND...c1r...f.-:cc.,.ms:c....11c..,s.f.ffz, BLAci1,..asi.aQw skim through the pages, and, when they reading matter we wish with little or no have finished, know no more about the difficulty. story than when they first began. You have to read a book twice and read between the lines before you seize the actual plot of the story. Alcott said, That is a good book which is opened with expectation and closed with profit. These words are per- fectly true and anyone well-versed in read- ing will verify them. Books are the means to knowledge. worldly and spiritual: and even the most casual readers-those that read a book not for any definite purpose, cannot escape cer- tain passages which the eye meets and the mind records. O. W. Holmes brings out my idea when he declares, The foolishest book is a kind of leaky boat on a sea of wisdom: some of the wisdom will get in anyhow. I, through books, as in the storming of the Bastille by the French peasants in A Tale of Two Cities. have learned of the ways of the aristocrats, of various person- alities, of moods and passions of all classes of people, and the works of genius, besides much more information than I can men- tion. I-Iow thankful I am that although our forefathers had not an easy way of printing and securing books, we of this mechanical age have. Printing has made tremendous strides and our various dis- tributing agencies, such as our public library. have enabled us to get almost any I .- M I 9.1 lumlll lllllllllllx . Elllfll-1 1- Since that historic year of 1929, unem- ployed men, and employed men with leisure, have found, as one man once said, that books are the children of the brainY Those men, because of nothing else to oc- cupy their time, and the men with leisure, are steadily learning this, and are taking advantage of their discovery. As citizens of this glorious land of ours, one of our many duties to our country is to help better it. It isn't a one-man job. and, from my point of view, I don't see how any person, man or woman. boy or girl, can help to further his government if he doesn't know and read about other types of governments that were established and that have fallen or grown great with the passing generations. I Venture to say. how- ever daring it may seem to the reader, that many of us, at the end of our four years of high school, know more about the his- tcry of the world than do our fathers. This might not be true in business matters. but I am thinking of such subjects as geography, history, and literature. There are still many modern students, however. who need to learn that knowledge through books, observation by the means of one's mental capacity, and actual experience, are the fundamentals for worldly contacts, and that the true university is a collection of books. Y -.1,5- . ' '.. i X 'z l if java? L, fat., 2 2818 ' ig . rw Eu- ln if , f. Twenty ..,.m-11ez f , ,f ,v 1, I f--fy , arf i i,7'j'I'lf . U-ffffI-4M.aowmfftwfaoganna'fwir .mimi-it .' ,ma flaw. tp'
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Page 26 text:
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tessfff-argl' A -- .A gi f Fm-iriver' me - ' i Y , W . V: 8 IA ,--.-Q ,K.,,,w,, , H.,-. - , i nf-f . . .. ,V .Y , --- -..,..-' . -3, -A.-- ---?,efXT.co,--kg O ,e ,-- - , - - ,. ,, ,f'.F.H'!?f,Q'17f'fe,-1.--ug ,u f 722 , ' ,gg 1 35253-42? ' 7 ?.1s1 9Zf.f :.2uli15'2: , Afiifvl fgft Aspirin. AKC ,src Arif? .419 A-QLRLDA.-eff Ariggff 40 ,rc AAND.4'P are -QQ --fn.-1zKlQBLACK AQ-ll Of Paris, noted for his looks, We've read about in Homer's books. He stole the fair Queen, Helen of Troy, Who was very lovely as well as coy. Jost, as Paris, is doing his part To steal our fair Virginia's heart. Antony and Cleo, as we see here, Stayed together through strife and fear. Andy and Alene. portraying their parts, Have both been hit by Cupid's darts. Will they stay together through joy or tears, Hand in hand through the future years? Lancelot loved King Arthur well, But for his charming queen he fell. He betrayed his king for Guinevere- He held not anything more dear. A lucky knight is our friend Wayneg For the friendship of Esther is quite a gain. Everyone on earth must know That Juliet loved young Romeo, While he, a noble Capulet, Left home and friends for Juliet. Behold Rich Hutton playing this part, Besieging Martha Cushman's heart. -Ruth Kirk, '35. SEVENTEEN By Albert Gerding, '36 Oh gosh! it's swell to be in love: She must have come from up above. Her eyes of blue, her golden hair, Her silvery voice-face, soft and fair, Are all I care for. She's my queen- Because, you know, I 'm seventeen. I walk on air when she is near, Birdies a-singing's all I hear. I love to hear her baby talk When she and I go for a walk. Boy, O boy, but love is keen, Because, you know, I 'm seventeen. But one fine day she went away: That day I 've ne'er forgotten. Now she is gone, and I must say That I feel awful rotten! Oh, me! Oh, my! it's not sokeen, To lose your love at seventeen. Twenty-two
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