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Page 27 text:
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Page 26 text:
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TEN COMMANDMENTS FOR SCHOOL CHILDREN CThese beautiful ideals for children ' originated in CzechoslovakiaD Love your schoolmatesg,they will be your companions for life and work. Love instruction, the food of the spirit. Be thankful to your teachers as to your own parents. Consecrate every day by one good useful deed and kindness. Honor all honest peopleg esteem men but humble yourself before no man. Suppress all hatred and beware of insulting your neighborg be not revengeful but protect your own rights and those of others. Love Justice and bear pain and misfortune courage- ously. Observe carefully and reflect well in order to get at truth. Deceive not yourself or others and beware of lying, for lies destroy the heart, the soul, and the character. Suppress passions and radiate love and peace. Consider that animals also have a right to your sympathy and do not harm them or tease. ' Think that all good is the result of workg he who enjoys without working is stealing bread from the mouth of the worker. Call no man a patriot who hates or has contempt for other nations, or who wishes and approves wars. War is the remains of barbarism. ' Love your country and your nation but be co-workers in the high task that shall make all men live together like brothers in peace and happiness. A' JZ V. A' 1- 'lx NThe object of teaching a child is to enable him to get along without his teacher.H
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Page 28 text:
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..19.. THE SOPHOMURES The total number of our class is nineteen, eight girls and eleven boys. In 1928 the total enrollment in the first grade was thirty-eight, and the net enrollment was twenty- nine. Ten of these have continued through the years and are now full-fledged Sophomores. They are Maxine Carter, Betty Bookwalter, Mary Ellen Dawson, Ona Margaret Hurtt, Joe Ater, Solon Graham, Robert Hamman, Wendell Morrison, Donald Moss- barger, and Willis Taylor. Our class was the first to enter the seventh grade under the new junior high system, in the school year 1934-35. As junior high students we had the high school faculty as teach- ers, changed classrooms, and were permitted to study in the study hall. We were governed by the same regulations as the senior high pupils. In the 1935-36 season our junior high basketball team won second place in the county tournament. This year, 1938, five of the Sophomore boys received let- ters for achievement in basketball. They are Robert Hamman, Donald Mossbarger, Solon Graham, Wendell Morrison, and Willis Taylor. Joe Ater and Morris Templin received their letters during their Freshman year. June Faye and Maribel Speakman were the first girls at Clarksburg to receive letters for cheerleading. In 1937, Wendell Morrison won second place in the local Prince of Peace Contest. Other participants from our class were Mary Ellen Dawson, Ona Margaret Hurtt, and Wanda Templin. Mary Ellen Dawson won first place in the girl's vocal solo in the County Oratorical Contest in 1937. Many members of our class sang in the chorus that year. 'L L JL 1 1 v J ' Wx as is 7? 'xi' TC n NMost people have an innate desire to make something of themselves, to have friends, to go places, to do interesting things, to be a more worth-while person...what to do about this situation is a puzzle. All of us are looking for some sort of T9C1P9 which will lead to a satisfying personal development-- 5 FeC1P9.SOmewhat like this: To ten parts of work on some int'e1'e?t11'-18 Job B53 two parts of play, at least half of which - is active participation in music, art, or sportg one part investigations or activities which contribute to improvement on the Job, one part exploring, either in person or through the mind, into new worlds of people or thought, and one part of some special interest or hobby, the whole to be flavored by friends who enjoy the Same things. Shake frequently so as to keep the mixture fluid envush that other elements may be added fr0m time to t1me,N
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