Angola High School - Key Yearbook (Angola, IN)

 - Class of 1934

Page 25 of 60

 

Angola High School - Key Yearbook (Angola, IN) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 25 of 60
Page 25 of 60



Angola High School - Key Yearbook (Angola, IN) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 24
Previous Page

Angola High School - Key Yearbook (Angola, IN) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 26
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • High-resolution, full color images available online
  • Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
  • View college, high school, and military yearbooks
  • Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
  • Support the schools in our program by subscribing
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 25 text:

SALUTATORY OUR INSPIRATION Friends: Did you ever stop to think how much may lie underneath the surface of this word that I have chosen to speak to you? Welcome! — the word that endeavors to assure you that you have Well Come, — the word that we try to express in so many ways, and yet that may be so beautifully summed up in the words of that clever hos- tess who proposed the enigma: My first, I hope you are; My second, I see you are; My whole, I know you are! For after all our fine words and high sound- ing phrases, how much more can be really put into this greeting for our friends — We hope you are Well, we see you have Come, and we know you are Welcome. Sometime during my high school life I have read the following from Longfellow ' s Psalm of Life : Lh ' es of great men all remind us, We can make our lives sublime, And departing leave behind us Footprints on the sands of time. Such influence and inspiration from the lives of great people come only from reading and studying aliout them. One of tlie most in- fluential workers in our world today is Jane Addams. We seniors need inspiration if we are to live up to our class motto, Life Is What We Make It. Jane Addams first in- spiration was her father ' s thumb. She would sit for hours and rub ground wheat between her thumb and fingers, hoping that in time her thumb would become flat too. When but a mere child of six, she went to the dirty, crowded residential district of a large city and saw the way the poor people lived. She asked her father why people lived in such surroundings when they might have the beauty of the woods and wide skies that she loved so well. There it was ! She vowed to have a spacious house, set apart from the beautiful homes and placed amid the squalor of the city. Years later she stood on a Inisy street corner in London on a Saturday night and watched the poor peo- ple buy the spoiled food that had lain in the markets for several days. She remembered Page twenty-one her vow of an earlier date and set about qualifying for settlement work. The result was the establishment of Hull Hoiise. Jane Addams and Hull House stand for teaching the poor to appreciate beauty and the value of having good health. The blot on her hap- l)iness at the present time is that she has only two hands, one woman ' s strength, and only one great heart to share with the teem- ing world that she loves so well. Another famous woman is Helen Keller. When I think of Helen Keller, I think of a deaf and blind woman who has learned to see the beautiful. One day when she was still but a little child, she said to her teacher, 1 am blind and deaf. That is why I cannot see God. Then iliss Sullivan taught her something about seeing that many people never learn — there is a sight different from phy- sical sight that helps us to see the beauty in the visible things around us. A few years later ] Iiss Keller said, I am not shut out from the region of the beau- tiful because I have no physical sight. I know many persons who have jjerfect eyes but are really blind. Their eyes are open but their hearts are closed. One time Mr. Joseph Jefferson was ex- plaining to her what the bumps on her head meant. That, he said, is your prize- fighting bump. I never fight, she replied, except against difficulties. And she spoke the truth, for her whole life has been a struggle against difficulties. Think of going through school — and finishing college — with eyes and ears closed ! But knowledge to Helen Keller opened up a world of beauty that nothing else could have won for her. We, the senior class of 1934, wish to ex- press our appreciation to you, dear parents, teachers, and friends, for the inspiration you have given us during the last four years, and we hope that we may prove deserving of your untiring efforts in our behalf. — Harriet Ewers.

Page 24 text:

VALEDICTORY HORIZONS The twelve years we have spent in school have been a time of tremendous his- torical significance resulting in a period of criticism, unrest, and dissatisfaction out of which a new era is developing. History re- cords that the struggles of past ages have resulted in the birth of new ideas, the de- velopment of new materials, new methods, and the beginning of an upward step in the progress of humanity. During the period of greatest turmoil the Greeks developed the column and beam construction system which is still in use today. The Romans adopted the contribution of the Greeks, the arched vault and dome of the Etruscans, perfected construction, and introduced con- crete. The Gothic added new and insi iring form, and filled the spaces with great stained glass windows of the thirteenth cen- tury. Hundreds of years later, we are iiegin- ning the period of steel, which will probably rank with the contributions of other ages. Our magnificent buildings of steel today are crude preliminary models of the ulti- mate example that will be achieved in the near future. Are we ready for the changes that are coming? The model houses at the Century of Progress indicated that the houses of tomorrow will not much resemble the houses we live in today. The new materials and new processes of this age are undergoing rapid changes in order to make our daily life convenient, comfortable, and congenial. The airplanes, automobiles, trains, theatres, cities, and industry itself will probably un- dergo as rapid transformation as the horse- less buggy which developed into the present day motor car. As a result of the modern inventions and economic readjustments, man is con- tinually being given more leisure time. In the near future the day ' s work will be done in two or three hours; therefore, the work- ers will have time for recreation, travel, the arts, and the enjoyment of life generally. Leisure is not so much a time for freedom from tasks as for the development of all- round individuals. It is said that if one em- ploys leisure as a sponge soaks up water, satiety is soon reached. If, on the contrary, he faces it as a doer and a creator, we are a.ssured of an individual who carries his edu- cation into life. The future problems of this country can not be solved by returning to the golden age of the past. We, as members of the coming generation, must take a critical survey of what we have, keeping the benefits, reject- ing the dross, working out a i olicy for a directed development. We still need re- search in hygiene, disease prevention, de- centralization of industry, the elimination of monotony and drudgery of urban life, the discover} ' of an intelligent manner of dis- tributing the world ' s goods, and the dis- banding of nations as armed, sovereign pow- ers. A glimpse into the not-far distant fu- ture will show many of our present notions discarded. Most of the features of our ev- eryday life will take on new aspects for the greater economy, efficiency, comfort, and happiness of our lives. We are entering a world in which op- portunities for earning a livelihood are more scarce than in 1929, but we have an ad- vantage in that the schools have given us a deeper insight into the problems of the future. We may often fail in solving these prob- lems, because we limit our horizons to what our eyes see. We are more likely to be in- fluenced by the immediate consequences than to see the situation in the light of our whole lives. Too often we allow the obvious to ott ' set our imaginations. Terrific changes have come to pass in the last four years, which demand leadership in all fields of work. There are few limitations placed upon man other than those of his own mak- ing. It is up to the individual alone wheth- er he broadens his viewpoint or not. Our teachers, parents, and friends aid in the molding of our characters, but our horizons are of our own making. We might com- pare our vision to that of a person standing on the shore of the ocean and looking out to sea. His horizon is two and one half miles away. If he is leaning on a rail of the promenade deck of an ocean liner and is looking out to sea, his horizon is eight miles away. If he climbs to the crow ' s nest, his horizon has increased more than six times what it was when he stood on shore. Now is the time, for the world is changing, and the men on top when the smoke clears, will be those who changed it. Our success in life does not depend upon the amount of money we are able to make but upon our contributions for the better- ment of society. After all it is not what we do that is so important as what we are. — Margaret DeVinney. Page twenty



Page 26 text:

THREE DOWN.. ' ' ' Zr S - y ui 1° row— Richard Booth, Willis Roberts, Paul Rvder. Edgar Wei He she! Eberhard, Koben James, Noble Allen. Gerald King, Carl Wei Billy Chaudoin. Victor Orwig, Thoma s Owens. Craig Clark Jack Ellioi yniond Ritter, Wade Cleckner, Dale Green, Thomas Grain In September, 1923, a group of eliil- (Iri ' ii entered the first grade in the Angola Public Schools. One year later they left ] Iiss Gleekner ' s supervision and were in Miss Sehovill ' s grade. The .school year 1925-26 .saw them in Mi.ss Train ' s room. Miss Zim- merman was their teacher in the fourth grade. The- following three years found them in : riss Smiley ' s. Miss Covell ' s and liss Sliuman ' s grades respectively. In the spring of 1930 Miss Bates presented this class their eighth grade diplomas. These students are now .juniors in Angola High School. laiiy mi-mbers have been outstanding in outside activities. In the high school or- chestra we are represented by Robert James, Janet Elliott, Irene Bodley, Paul Ryder, El- len Reese, Eileen Dick, and Hershel Eber- hai-d. Robert James has been first violinist in the orchestra for four years and will hold the first desk next year in this organization. liobert is also a memlier of both the string i|iiartet and the string trio. In the band our .juniors are represented by Paul Ryder, Irene Bodley, Ilershel Eb- erhard, Ellen Reese, and Robert James. In the girls ' a eappella choir are: Ellen Reese, Eileen Dick, Virginia Parr, Opal Blackburn, Ava Shank, and Martha Fisher. In the mix- ed chorus we find Herbert Beekman. Opal Blackburn, Eileen Dick, Doloris Eisenhour. Tai-tlia Fisher. Robei ' t .James. Gerald King, ' irginia Parr, Ellen Reese, Ava Shank, and ( ' arl Wert. Three junior girls, Eileen Dick. Ellen R.pese, and Virginia Parr, have organ- ized a Modern Melody Trio. In the field of sports the junior class is well represented. Tlie following members were on the baseball team : Kenneth Fast. Hershel Eberhard, Craig Clark. Robert James, and Wayde Cleckner. On the bas- ketball team we have Gerald King, Wayde Cleckner, Carl Wert, Hershel Eberhard, and Page twenty-two }

Suggestions in the Angola High School - Key Yearbook (Angola, IN) collection:

Angola High School - Key Yearbook (Angola, IN) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Angola High School - Key Yearbook (Angola, IN) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Angola High School - Key Yearbook (Angola, IN) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Angola High School - Key Yearbook (Angola, IN) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

Angola High School - Key Yearbook (Angola, IN) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Angola High School - Key Yearbook (Angola, IN) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937


Searching for more yearbooks in Indiana?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Indiana yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.