Des Moines Technical High School - Engineer Yearbook (Des Moines, IA)

 - Class of 1928

Page 19 of 100

 

Des Moines Technical High School - Engineer Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 19 of 100
Page 19 of 100



Des Moines Technical High School - Engineer Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 18
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Page 19 text:

PRESIDENT'S ADDRESS VVe are the last pupils who will be so honored as to receive diplomas from VVest High. It is a great privilege and we should make the most of it. As we look back we see many great men and women listed among the Alumni of our school. ls not this sufficient incentive to make us strive to succeed? XYe are the last of XYest High to have the chance to carry its name to the heights. Let us work and labor to bring only honor to this last class of ours. XYest High has given us something which is priceless and which it is our duty to use. Our education can make successes of us if it has taught us to work, if it has taught us that success lies in helping others and making this world a better place for those who follow us. lf we are to do this it is for us to consider seriously some of the prob- lems confronting the world today. First, it is our duty as coming citizens to try to understand each otherg and by each other I mean not only those of us who are present, but all the millions of young people in the many lands whose environment is dif- ferent from ours. XYe should attempt to realize how our French friends feel concerning debt settlements and tariff lawsg how foreigners feel about our immigration laws. We should study the matter so that we can do the right thing concerning the foreigners and our own manufacturers and laborers. lt is also our duty to spread our doctrine of equality all over the world so that all our brothers and sisters in foreign lands may have equal chances. This would remove much of their discontent and prevent many disagreements which start wars. , Then we must strive to become a nation of law observers, so that our National Constitution shall remain supreme, and all acts and amendments under it shall be honored and obeyed. It is, of course, a great tempta- tion to mock some of its laws and make light of them, but this is very disastrous. lf the law were not good and necessary, it would not have been passedg therefore, we must obey it because of its worth. Also, it tends to decrease the worth of all other laws, if one is disregarded. So it is evi- dent that we should obey the law because disobeying brings such dire re- sults. lt is taking an awful responsibility for one young person or any one person to say something is wrong which at one time the whole nation said was good and just. ln addition we must, as future employers and employees, strive to be fair so that the industrial difficulties of today may be eliminated. We must, as future workers, strive to be fair to our employers by giving them as much work as we can. As future employers, we should study living condi- tions and costs, and give our workers sufficient income that they and their families may live decently and have some pleasure in life. Correspondingly, the worker must learn to save and budget his income so that he can receive the most good from it. As employers we should study hygienic problems so that our workers might work in the conditions which will be best for their health and likewise give them the highest efficiency. As you see, then, it is a very serious problem to live today. and its solu- tion must demand our fullest attention. -NIILTON BLANC. 4 44+ Scent tcm:

Page 18 text:

++++ .UERNICE HAFNER I druam of bring a second Helen llf ilIs W. G. A. A. '25, 126, '27 Girls' Basket Ball Volley Ball Tennis Girls' Soccer PAULINE INTARMIN I dream of bring thc' .vccond grrafavf typisf' Tatler Annual '26, '27 Tatler XVeekly '26, '27 Home Economics '27 SENIOR CHRONICLE Senior Get-Together Picnic Kid my ..,....,.,......,.,,,,.,,.,,,,,,..,,,,,,,,,,, Informal Dance ,,,, Formal Dance ,..,,,., Baccalaureate Program ,...,. Parents' Tea .....,. 'Class Dinner Class Day ...................i.i....,..,,i....,, , COI1lI1'lC1'1CCI11C11t P1'0'gI'2lITl ...,... Final Day of School ........... .S'in'fcc1z ..,,.,October 12, 1927 .......October 30, 1927 December 3, 1927 lwulariiiary 6, 1928 .,,,,,.,,,.j'a11i1ary 22, 1928 ......Ia1n1ary 22, 1928 ,..,,,...,.Jal1i1ary 23, 1928 .January 24, 1928 .,..,.jam1a1'y 26, 1928 .,.........Jan11ary 27, 1928 ++++++++++



Page 20 text:

CLASS ORATION The XYorld War, Peace, and the League of Nations For centuries nations have been at war, yet for centuries they have been trying to preserve peace. This gigantic problem has confronted the leaders of the world and it has not yet been solved. The monster war has continued to advance. Although war produces a few beneficial results, no man of normal intelligence will deny that it is detrimental to the welfare of society. It diverts the energies of the nations engaged in it into unpro- ductive channels. It plunges nations into debt and annihilates their youth. It demoralizes their public spirit. In the midst of a splendid attempt to stay its rapid advance, the world war came. America was caught in the meshes of intricate European entangle- ments through her commercial, rather than political, relations with the na- tions of Europe. Such energetic action, and such unity of purpose had never before been known in the history of America. America gave her heart and soul to win the war. One million American boys and men marched forth with sorrowful hearts but determined souls to end war by war, and make the world safe for democracy. Eighteen XYest High boys marched gallantly with them, and now they lie, our honored dead, in foreign fields, in foreign soil. Many a khaki clad American lad died with a smile on his lips, contented, because he felt that he had fought and died in the last great war the world would ever know, and because he knew he had helped to free the people of the world from the powerful grip of the tyrant's hand. Our activities at home were, perhaps, even greater than those abroad. Each man, woman, and child did something in service for the noble cause. Vlihen the enthusiasm reached its highest pitch the armistice came. Amer- ica rejoiced amid showers of confetti and lusty shouts of the happy multi- tudes. The peace conference was held at Paris. Germany was stripped of all her power. Boundaries were adjusted and new nations were created. But most important of all was the introduction of a plan which, looking into the future, would make sure that another such war could never occur. It called for the formation of a league of nations, which league was to arbi- trate the quarrels of nations by means of a world court and enforce, if necessary. its decisions by military force. Today all the leading nations of the world belong, except the United States of America. Our congress re- fused to join because it believed our forces would be called upon to fight in quarrels which have little or no bearing upon the welfare of our nation. In our position we keep company with Mexico and Russia. Nine years have passed swiftly since the signing of the armistice. Yet it seems as though the recollection of it were but a distant memory. The tumult of the war has ceased. Men and women have returned to their peaceful pursuits. As we look back upon the war, sorrow saddens our hearts. Wie see the result of the war and feel our increased responsibility. Did the war end war? Did our soldier boys make the world safe for democ- racy? No, I believe not. But they made a wonderful beginning. It re- mains for us, the living, to complete their unfinished task. Many of us have thought our duty done when we won the war. Sad it is, indeed, that many labored during the war to put an end to war and oppression, but ++ ++++++ +4 Eighteen

Suggestions in the Des Moines Technical High School - Engineer Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) collection:

Des Moines Technical High School - Engineer Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

Des Moines Technical High School - Engineer Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

1926

Des Moines Technical High School - Engineer Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Des Moines Technical High School - Engineer Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Des Moines Technical High School - Engineer Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Des Moines Technical High School - Engineer Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946


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