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Page 23 text:
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memories of learning
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Page 22 text:
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academics
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Mr. Marashio finishes reports before deadline. Assistant Superintendent Jerome Lynch discusses school affairs. Superintendent’s Message to the Class of ’69 These are happy days. These are troubled days. They are happy because you have reached a first milestone, culminating in these hectic, carefree days of graduation from Woburn High School. Happy, because you can share your success with friends, parents and teachers. Happy, because you have youth and ambition. They are happy too, because you have a clean sheet before you on which to write the fulfillment of your dreams. Then too, these are troubled, turbulent days. Your generation has been called upon to witness a great world upheaval. Dissention, riots, and cold wars saturate the news media. Three high ranking men, all proponents of peace, have been shot down by assassins’ bullets. It is small wonder that the youth of today is crying out for a change of order. It is at this point, however, that youth must arrest its drive to rush in unthinkingly. That which is good must be kept; the bad must be erased. Youth must reflect upon the past and the principles upon which our country has grown. Are those principles set forth by our founding fathers unworkable today? Upon study of our Constitution and Bill of Rights one can see that they closely relate to the teachings of One who gave His life for Man two thousand years ago. The trouble then must lie in Man himself—his greed, his selfishness, his bigotry. It is my sincere belief that you, the youth of today, will change this world; that you will change it by casting out those baser instincts which have brought the world to its present condition. To paraphrase a now famous quotation “Ask not what I can get for myself. Rather ask what can I give to others.” As a journey of a thousand miles starts with a single step, so the changing of the world starts with the individual. My wish for you today is that each of you will use his talents, whether great or small, to the service of others; that he will reject the chicanery of those who have brought the world to Its present condition, and that he will make this world a little better place because he has lived in it. May God bless each of you. Dr. J. Frank Hassett Superintendent of Schools 20 Superintendent J. Frank Hassett.
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