Westwood High School - Chipmunk Yearbook (Westwood, CA)

 - Class of 1924

Page 30 of 58

 

Westwood High School - Chipmunk Yearbook (Westwood, CA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 30 of 58
Page 30 of 58



Westwood High School - Chipmunk Yearbook (Westwood, CA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 29
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Westwood High School - Chipmunk Yearbook (Westwood, CA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 31
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Page 29 text:

LITERARY PAGE THIRTEEN our natural u-MiurcM means making tho best possible present use of them and at the sum ' lime «»u-guarding their reproductive power for ibe future. Thin will require careful rutting and handling by the great lumber organization»». 13- gether w.th the ♦xpenditure of great sums or money by the government to protect and replant our fowl». Project, Economics Class. Paul’s Wife To drive Paul out of utiy lumber camp All that wan Head d was to say to hint, •How is the wife. Paul? - and hod disappear Some said it was because he had no wile. And haled to be iw.lUd on the subject. Others because he’d route within a day Or so of having one. and then been jilted. Jthers because he d had one once, a good oue. Who'll run a-.ay w.ul some one else and left him. And others sl.n oe.au he had one now He only had in »»e reminded o. He wus ail duty to her m a minute; He had to run rignt otf and look her up. As if to say, ‘ Ihai a «». how I» my wife? I hope she Isn't getting tnto mischief. No one was anxious to get rid of Paul. He'd been the htro 01 the mountain camps Kver aline, Just to show them, he hau slipped The bark of a whole tamarack off whole. As clean as boy do o»f a willow twig To muke a willow whistle on a Sunday In April by subsiding meadow brook . They seemed to ask him just to see him go, ••How Is the wife. Paul? and he always went. H«- never stopped to murder anyone Who asked the question. He Ju t disappeared Nobody knew In what direction. Although It wasn't usually long IP-fore they heard of lum in some new eamp. It., name Paul at the same old teal of logging. The question everywhere was why should Paul Object to being asked a civil question— A man you could say almost anything to, Short of a flghtlng word. You have the answer». And there was one more, not so fair to Paul. That Paul had married a wife not his equal. Paul was ashamed of her. To mutch a hero. She would have had to be a heroine; lusP-ud of which she was some half-breed squaw. Hut if the story Murphy told wus true. She wasn't anything to he ashamed of. You know Paul could do wonders. Everyone's Heard bow he thrashed the horses on a load That wouldn't budge until they simply stretcho.1 Their rawhide harness from the load to camp. Paul told tho boss the load would be all right. The sun will bring your loud In —and It did — By shrinking the rawhide to natural length. Thai's what Is called a stretcher. Hut I guess The one about his Jumping so's to lund With both his feet at once against the celling. Aud then land safely right side up again Hack on the floor. Is fact or pretty near fact. Well this is such a yarn. Paul sawed his wife Out of a white-pine log. Murphy was there. Aud. as you might say. saw the lady born. Paul worked at anything in lumbering. He'd been hard at it taking boards away For—i forget—the last ambitious sawyer To want to iind out if lie couldn't pile The lumber on Paul 'till l’aul begged for mercy. They'd sliced the lirst slab off a oig butt log. And the sawyer had slummed tho carriage hack To slam end on again against the saw teeth. To Judge them by tho way they caught themselves When they saw what had happened to the log. Th-y must have had a guilty expectation Something was going to go with their slambanging Something had left a blaek streak of grease On the new wood the whole length of the log Except, perhaps, a foot at either end. Hut when Paul put his linger in the grease, It wasn't grease at all, but a long slot. The log was hollow. They were sawing pine. First time I ever saw a hollow pine. That comes of having Paul urouud the place. Take it to hell for me. the sawyer said. Everyone had to have a look at It. And tell Paul what he ought to do about It. • They treated it a his. I You take u Jack-knife. And spread the opening, and you’ve got a dug-out All dug to go a-fishlng In.” To Paul The hollow looked too sound und clean and empty Ever to have housed birds or beasts or bees. There was no entrance for them to get in by. It looked to him like some new kind of hollow He thought he'd better lake his Jack-knife too. So after work thal evening he came back And let enough light Into it by cutting To see If it was empty. He made out in there A slender length of pith, or was it pith? It might have been the skin a snake had cast And left stood up on end inside the tree The hundred years the tree must have been growing. More rutting and he had this In both hands. And. looking from it to the pond nearby. Paul wondered how it would respond to water. Not a breeze stirred, but Just the breath of air He made In walking slowly to the beach Blew it once off his hands and almost broke It. He laid it at the edge where it could drink At the first drink it rustled and grew limp. At the next drink It grew invisible. Paul dragged the shallows for It with his fingers And thought It must have melted. It wus gone. And then beyond the open water, dim with midges. Where the log drivo lay pressed against the boom. It slowly rose a person, rose a girl. Her wet hair heavy on her like a helmet. Who, leaning on a log looked back at Paul. And that made Paul In turn look back To see if it was anyone behind him That she was looking at instead oT him. Murphy had been there watching all the time. . Hut from u shed whore neither of them could see him. There was a moment of suspense In birth When the girl seemed too water-logged to live. Before she caught her lirst breath with a gasp And laughed. Then she climbed slowly to her fe-t and walked off talking to herself or Paul Across the logs like backs of alligators. Paul taking after her around the pond. Next evening Murphy and some other fellows Cot drunk, and tracked the pair up Catamount. From the bare top of which there is a view To other hills across a kettle valley. And there, well after dark, let Murphy tell it. They saw Paul and his creature keeping house. It was the only glimpse that anyone Has had of Paul or her since Murphy saw them Falling in love across the twilight mill-pond. More than a mile across tho wilderness They sat together half way up a cliff In a small niche let Into it, the girl Brightly, as if a star pluyed on the place. Paul darkly, like her shadow. All the light Was from the girl herself, though, not from a star. As was apparent from what happened next. All those great ruffians put their tnroats together And let out a loud yell, und threw u buttle. As u brute tribute of respect to beuuly. Of course the bottle fell short by a inilo. Hut the shout reached the girl aud put her light out. She went out like a firefly, and thut wus all. So there were witnesses that Paul was married. And not to anyone to be ashamed of. Everyone had been wrong In judging Paul. Murphy told me Paul put on those airs About his wife to keep her to himself. Paul was what's called a terrible possessor. Owning a wifi- with hint meant owning her. She wasn't anybody else' business. Either to praise her, or so much us name her. And ho’d thank peoplo not to think of her. Murphy’s idea was that a man like Paul Wouldn’t he spoken lo about a wife In any way the world knew how lo speak. By Robert Frost. I Courtesy Henry Holt Co.» Immigration For more than seventy years foreigners have come to our shores iu ever Increasing swarms. The stream of Immigrants which poured Into the United States between 1846 and 1315 was the greatest movement of population in all history. Within those yeurs nearly thirty millions of people left foreign countries to seek homes In America. In tho earlier years of the movement the Im- migrants came front western Europe, from Eng- land. Scot laud, Irelund. Germany and France. After the close of the Civil War a tide of Immi- gration began to flow steadily from Norway. Sweden und Denmark. The immigration from the northern countries of Europe continued until nearly one-fourth of all the Scandinavians In the world had settled in the region thut stretebeu from laike Michigan to Puget Sound. In the last years of the nineteenth century another great stream of immigrants set in. This time they came from southern and southeastern Europe- -Italians. Greeks. Slavs. Poles. Bohemians. Slovaks. Ru- | then la us, Serbs. Magyars and Croats. In opening years of the twentieth century the new stream became a flood. In 1907 over a million and a quarter foreigners entered our country; the great majority of them came from southern and southeastern Europe. The result of the mighty Influx of recent years went far toward chunging the character and the complexion of the American population. At the outbreak of the war with Germany one-third o? our people had to he classified as being of foreign parentage, while the foreign born numbered ono- sixth of all the adults. -1 The regulation of this Incoming tide oi ’uil- manity devolves upou the federal government Before lXus. because of the terms of the consti- tution Congress could not regulate Immigration. Since that date, however. Congress has full con- trol of immigration and the federal government has pursued a liberal policy jn dealing with It. It has thrown open the doors of hospitality and given a welcome to the strangers of almost every land. About 1SSO. however. America began to feel thal immigration of such a large character was no longer desirable and demanded restriction. First the Chinese were excluded in 1882. In the same year Congress ordered that the character of all immigrants he looked into, and restricted from admission all lunatics, convicts. Idiots and other persons not able to take care of them- selves. By the law of 1885 It is made unlawful for certain classes of labor lo enter the United States, if they huve previously entered Into a contract to perform luhor here. Any person brought here under a contract to perforin labor cau be sent back at the expense of the vessel which brought him. While putting up the bars against immigrants, consideration of the part immigration has played in the development of the country must he taken, for in the building or America we have rolled in no small degree upon the Immigrant. Had not the great influx of foreigners occurred, much of the country would still be a wilderness, and today in the Industrial and agricultural life of the na- tion tho services of the immigrant are immense. Now. however, the United Slates Is populated by about one hundred and ten millions of people, who have occupied all the habitable lands except those covered by forests. It is true that Americu has uot as many people as China or India, but neither is the standard of life in the United States as low- as in cither of these two coun- tries. It is bocause of the danger of lowering the standard of life, that some of the foremost stu- dents of the immigration problom think It is high Cont. on Page 1 (Second Section)



Page 31 text:

PAGE FOURTEEN ALUMNI Alumni In an old iwue of tlio Chipmunk un ulumni (.■ditor couipaml a high school without alumni bucking to a cannon hull without a cannon. We arc glad to suy that Westwood High School has never found Itself In this deplorable condition. Ileginning with our first alumnus, who graduated in Ibis, and continuing to the present time, we can truthfully say that the cannon has always neen In good working order. At the present lime the alumni association boasts of thiity-flve members, several of whom are students in various universities, where life Is always very busy, but they have found time t send a few words of greeting to the present stu- dents and friends of their old High School. Hey Frosh! Faced ut the very beginning with perhaps the hardest problem of his college career, many a freshman stands annually at the forks of the road. Into his hands Is Intrusted the momentous decision, the result of which tuny keep Inin in th • University or. again, may put an end to h J happiest days before they have scarce begun. At one road let us erect a sign hearing the legend The Kvll of Carrying Too Much ; at tho other, one which reads. The Kvll of Carrying Too Little. To the average llrst year man these two roads constitute the only ways through a college course, and many a man today would have graduated from the University of California if the medium or u middle route had been ap parent. Too much study or too much activity means a neglect of one or both, with most disastrous re- sults to the student. In a like manner, too litti'- study or uu interest in too few activities has eve , a worse effect. Those who hold themselves aloof from contact with activities and from the com «fV.yi.J'lterests of their Alma Mater lose the most precious heritage of college years—-KitIKNUS. At no university are there more opportunities ror part let I pat Ion in literary, forensic, or ath- letic Helds than at the University of California. In addition, the social life of class and university absorbs its quotu of new blood, and ever longs for more. Of prime interest to the high school senior at the present time is the freshman year which faces him or her in college. President W. W. Campbell of the university has said that If a student survives the first semester he stands an excellent chance of completing his four years or education. Realizing the Importance of correct guidance during the initial month of a college career. California has an extensive advisory sys- stem with a personnel made up of faculty and senior students. This group of advisors have a dual purpose. They are responsible not only for tin freshman's course of study, but also the kind and number of activities in which he participates. Jack of all trades and master of none. is a time-worn adage which, while ancient, is the most descriptive term which may he applied to tile average college man or woman interested In activities at California. Without exaggerating on present conditions it Is safe to say that half who become “flunkouts are relegated to this class simply because they attempted to do too many things. In a similar manner a large percentage of first class athletes fail to make the team because In their freshman year they were not advised to limit their activities to one sport. It is impossible in college for the average person to follow the high school custom of being on two teams at the same time. Perhaps the greatest problem of all associated with university entrance Is that Involving the question of Shull I become a rraternity man? In after life the thrusts of the world may dull your sensibilities and east a haze over tho mem- ory of some college events, but nothing can over dim or tarnish the recollections of rush week. The night that a new found friend pinned a symbolic pledge button over your wildly beating heart will never be forgotten. Put. like all good things, entrance into a fraternity stands consid- eration and bears the giving oi a little sound udvlce. Call It the don't of the frateruily aspirant if you wish. Don’t he too eager, don't bo forward, don't anticipate your bid. and then find out before you accept with what kind of a group you are afitl.at.ug yourself. Hotter wear uo pin ut ull than one ot which you are not proud. Wealth does noi recoin mend a fraternity, neither does it condtlun it. Men aie men for all of that. What is true of u men entering a university D likewise true of a girl. The problems of the one ar • the problems of the other in a slightly altered form. Faculty advice, while always intended foi the best, may full simply because the instructor did not have enough lac.s concerning the student at his disposal. ' enior advisors are upt to be prejudiced aiu oiased lu their decisions. The fact that they are always personally interested in some house or activity cannot help but have a bearing, however small it may he, upon the ad- vice they offer. In the innumerable problems which dally come up during the freshman year, there are alumni to whom the newcomers may always turn for help. At California toduy are men and women who once chanted the fighting gong of Westwood High. From them can be gained help, if the person wishing It will only let them know. Uit- foriuntcly, advice in the freshman year is ten- deied by most upper classmen very sparingly, for few appreciate laughter for their pains. The salf- suhlciency of sonic freshmen is actually pitiful. The alumni ure never too busy to talk to you longer than a faculty Instructor or a senior ad- visor. At California today ure alumni of Westwood High who but a few short years ago drank from tho same fountain of clear mountain water as you today will drink. Today these same alumni mey he drinking from the marble fouutain on the Sathcr Terrace from which you some day will drink. What, then, can he more tilting than that from them you may learn, and that to you may ever extend the common and binding tie of comradeship in the school among the pines. Sincerely yours, H. E. CASSIDY. Berkeley. Cal., March 31. 1924. Dear Editor; I wus greatly pleased to have been called upon for a contribution for this year's publica- tion. If the little I have to say will do someone some good by influencing them to go to college, I will feel that 1 have accomplished a great deal. I have been more than repaid for the efforts I have expended toward my schooling and each day 1 am hotter able to appreciate the real value of education. I used to think that tho college or university was a place where well-to-do people sent their sons and daughters, but that Idea certainly has been changed since 1 came down here. Eighty per cent of the students of this university are work- ing their way through, and it Is an houor, rather than a humiliation, as some are prone to think, to work in order to continue education. The University of California has been severely criti- cized for the apparent prevalence of social func- tions, dances, etc. Every one. I think, will ad- mit that a certain amount of play distributed at the right and proper time is desirable If not nec- essary. Our institution is so large and thore arc so many groups that the public is led to believe college life here Is Just one big party. We who urc here can best testify to the error of this Id ». As far as most of us are concerned wc buy our A. S. U. C. cards which admit us to all contests in the way of sports. Including base- ball. basketball, football, soccer, wrestling, box- ing and crew races. Through some of these channels one can get a little diversion from bis studies, as well as a lot of enjoyment. If there is anyone in the graduating class who I; planning to go to college, just recommend to them this university and give them my ad- dress. I shall be glad to help them register, ar- range their toursc, and do auything 1 can to make the hist few weeks u little easier. With best regards to the faculty and student body. I am. your friend. LEWIS E. ERUES. L of N.. Reno. Nev., April 3. 1924. Dear Editor: Purliaps you would like to know how some of tho Westwood graduates like Nevada and how they are making out. Nevada Is recognised as one of the best small universities in the west; the student body num- bers about seven hundred and fifty. As you know, a small university has certain advantages over a large one. We come in closer contact with both students and faculty than is possible at the larger schools. If there Is something that you do not fully understand your professors are always ready and willing to help you. which is not always possible at a larger Institution. We have a very good faculty, all of whom are capable, and some even are nationally known. A small school tends to be more democratic, because studeuts and faculty get better acquainted with each other. Along the line of athletics. It is much easier to make the team in football, busketbull, track and other sports. You have more attention and are recognized quicker. One of last year's West- wood grads, for Instance, made Ills class numerals iu football here and he had never been In a a suit before. This can be duplicated by most anyone, not only in football but in other sports as well. One may think a small school can not put out as good a team as u larger one, yet Ne- vada, last season, put out a team that held California’s wonder team to a scoreless tie. The varied departments of the university art- all well organized and equipped. Courses In mechanical, electrical and mining engineering, arts and science, agriculture uiid education arc offered. The Muckay School of Mines Is the best lu the west. The College of Agriculture is also very good, the dean of agriculture being a na- tional authority on soils. There are numerous social events each semes- ior such as dances, musical entertainments, dra- matics, etc., all of which tend to make college worth while, for It rs there that one makes new frionds and new acquaintances much more rpad- lly and you learn how to get along with other pooplo. At present the student body is fairly small, but It huH more than doubled In the last few yoars. New buildings ure being built as the size of the universRy warrants. It will not be long before Nevada will rank as high as any of the universities on the coast. We hope that in the future we may have the pleasure of seeing more W’cstwood graduates here. All of us are getting along very nicely and fully intend returning next fall, and we hope to accomplish even more than we have this year. We, the undorslgned. wish succ;ss to Westwood High School and the Chipmunk. Sincerely yours, AUGUSTUS M. DIXON. JOHN CARNIATO. ERWIN J. MORRISON. Berkeley, Cal.. April 2. 1924. Dear Kids: I have now started my college career and 1 just want to tell you a few things about roy ad- vent Into college and how it ull appeared to me. College ain’t all It's cracked up to be.” Looked at front the outside, things always appear dif- ferently from what they really ure. und niy first sight of the University of California scared rather than inspired me. Through all the rush of registration and getting started 1 was wishing that I was back in dear old Westwood High. ' (Continued on Page Two—Second Section.)

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