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Page 22 text:
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metal workers, stone masons, structural-iron work-ers hod carriers, and other construction workers, including a growing number of building fore- men and supervisors. Can it be said that this field is limited? The defense program is surely opening a vast field which is much broader than it has been in any previous war. Ship-yard employment is being increased by government spending. It is estimated that more than 150,000 men will be working in private shipyards by the spring of 1942. If the present rate of growth continues, as many as 10,000 young men may have opportunities to become apprentices in some of the skilled shipbuild- ing crafts, although work may be only for the duration of war. But young men will have had experience. Every sailor learns a trade. If he leaves the service, he may be a ma- chinist, metal smith, patternmaker, musician, cook, baker, radio-expert, or a motion-picture operator. New opportunities for pharmacists will also occur in our armed forces. Pharmacists enter such governmental work as the Public Health Service, Bureau of Narcotics, and Veterans Administration. There is employment for pharmaceutical chemists in manufacturing laboratories, hospital dis- pensaries, drug research work, and in production of synthetics. Women also are employed in the defense program. The expanding manufacture of textiles, shoes, and clothing will need women. Women who excel in work requiring the use of light instruments such as gages, microm- eters, vernier calipers, wil. be hired for inspection of castings, machinings, and finished parts of routine powd-er analysis, and of testing electrical equipment. Women are experts in as-semb.ing delicate instruments and machines, loading shells, and filling powder bags. They have been used in operating all types of machin-es wh-ere lifting devices and other machines can do the heavy work. There are also new opportunities for women in biology, architecture, public health. It seems fairly certain that there will be opportunities for employment of girls in industry in the next year greater than at any time since th-e last World War. It is believed and said that all fields of work are overcrowded. This changing world has made that belief wrong. The ne-ed everywhere for trained occupational therapists is far in excess of the number of girls avail- able. The therapist deals with cardiac, tuberculosis, orthopedic, and mental cases. There are also opportunities for youth in radio. With 821 radio sta- tions in the country, all hungry for ideas, there certainly are opportunities for jobs. There are many branches to this work-script writing, dramatic producing or action, news editing and broadcasting, publicity, sound effects, research and interpretation music, sales, and market research. Another expanding field is photography. Pictur-es as a medium of news have greatly grown, and there is no reason to think that the public in- terest will decline. Opportunities in commercial art are rapidly expanding. The artist has a choice of two fields in which to work: the fine arts, and commercial art. People engaged in fine arts at the best make an insecure living, but usually do not find work at all. Commercial art is not overcrowded .ike the fine arts. Department stores engage staffs of artists to make attractive adv-er- tising displays. Newspapers need artists both for their advertising and for their editorial departments. Magazines need talented p-eople to illus- trate articles and stories. The same is true of book publishers. Since the fall of Paris, a talented and aspiring young designer has a chance with a situation full of golden opportunities. i201
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Page 21 text:
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HONOR ESSAY Youth in a New Age What opportunities lie open to us graduating tonight? Is the future to be sunny or cloudy, hopeful or discouraging? What can I, or any of us, do after we graduate? We are youth. The spectacie held up before youth is marching men in uniforms equipped with deadly weapons-terrible looking children in gas masks: fearful youth being rushed into bomb proof cellarsg youth, afraid, hysterical, timidg ogres and monsters only seen in fairy tales but now be- coming real. But this is a dynamic world. It is as never before a challenging world, not a world of defeatism. Although it is believed that youth is cowardly, cynical, and selfish, it is not so. Youth is an adventurer going into a changing world of magic, of triumph, and of adventure. Youth is thought to be soft . How can it be when it was found that of 50,000 recent graduates from thirty-one colleges in twenty states two-thirds of the men and almost half of the women had earned part of their way? Is youth afraid of work? A placement director of one of the state colleges says that young people of today beg for work. In one college a student c.ass-president worked nights in a garage, Qreasing and washing cars. One girl could not find workg so she lived on stale bread from the bakery. She said that she could eat on ten cents a week. It is not a diet for a young girl, nor is it a diet for softies. But what can we do after we graduate? For what shall we train our- selves? Plato, the great Athenian philosopher, said, No two persons are born alike, but each differs from the other in individual endowments, one being suited for one thing and another for another, and all things in superior quality and quantity and with greatest ease. when each man works at a single occupation, in accordance with his natural gifts. So it was about 400 B. C.. and it is still true. In that one respect, youth is not different. Today every young man and woman is different and has different natural abilities. If one is an artist, he should not become a plumber. This new and mobile world! There are many opportunities open to us today, which were not open several years ago. In the early 1930?s building construction was the weak sister of the big industry family. Today, the upsurge in private and national defense building has made this field-hiring more than a million workers-one of the nation's mightiest industries! To a young man who wants to break into construction, the pr-esent building boom means that his chances of getting job training are probably better right now than they have been for a long time. It takes dozens of different types of workers to turn planks of lumber, heaps of bricks, and tons of iron and cement into finished buildings of every description. This work today requires brick-layers, carpenters, cement finishers, electricians, painters, plasterers. plumbers and gas fitters, sheet- l19l
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Page 23 text:
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There are fields which some people do not even consider. For instance, Bunny Rabbit may be just a character in bedtime stories to some people, but to 10,000 rabbit breeders he is a most important source of income. Los Angeges alone eats more than a million rabbits a year. There may be op- portunities for nearly 100,000 mor-e commercial rabbit raisers if rabbits are popularized as meat. The war has interfered with the supplies of Australian rabbit skins. I have tried to list a specific number of fields which are open to us. Our motto is Life is what you make of it. It has always been true, and still is. If we want to become something in this world, there are more opportun- ities now than ever before. Only the sluggish and lazy see no future, because they do not try. But the alert and active see a happy future of wisdom, wealth, and wit. We must not see only war, worry, and weakness. We must look forward, not backward! This is a world for youth, a world simply bursting with new opportunity! FRANCES BURNS E211
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