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Page 9 text:
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THE EXPONENT BOARD Editor-in-Chief . Associate Editor . School Editor.. Student Council Member . Harriet Salway, ’26 Talbot Aldrich, ’27 Marjorie Kelly, ’26 Margaret Leith, ’26 Faculty Advisors Mr. Smith Miss Atherton Mr. Pennegar , j Alecia Osgood, ’28 Department Editors. f i Harriet Salway, ’26 c Katherine Fleming, ’28 Jokes.) Kathleen Pitfield, ’28 ( Helen Finnie, ’28 Exchanges.Donald Hamilton, ’27 Alumni Notes.Anne Crowley, ’26 Athletic Notes.. . .Edward Koziski, ’26 Club Notes..Philip Witty, ’26 Entered as second-class matter April 3, 1920, at the post-office, Greenfield, Massachusetts, under the act of March 3, 1879. Accepted at special rates of postage for second-class matter. Published twenty times during the school year, October to June, seventeen times as a newspaper and three times as a literary magazine, appearing twice a month except in June. Newspaper five cents a copy; literary magazine December and April thirty-five cents, June fifty cents. RENEWING MEMORIES OF G. H. S. We hope, dignified Seniors, that after you have left us you will put aside all past grievances or sarcasms bestowed on you and be willing to bear in mind that old G. H. S. is ever waiting to welcome you back. It is eager to hear your merry voices ring¬ ing down the corridor as they have in the past, and to listen to the tread of the feet that have passed out into the world. Then, too, there are the faculty who are always glad to see your faces once more, and talk over your future activities. You surely must not forget to stop in and see Mr. Smith who always greets you with a smile and an occasional humorous side-remark. So, Seniors, here’s a farewell to you all, and may you make use of the welcome now being extended to you. H. F., ’28. THE CLASS OF ’26 Again the time of year is here when another class leaves G. H. S. to return no more as a class. The class of ’26, so long together and so long a part of Greenfield High, will soon become divided, each one going
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Page 8 text:
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a Miu ' k oj Appreciation Jor What She Has Done for Us, as Friend and Our Teacher During These Four Years, We, the Seiiior Class, Dedi¬ cate Our Number oJ the Exfoyient to MISS MARIAN B. ATHERTON
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Page 10 text:
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4 THE EXPONENT his way through life. The Seniors have so well carried out their part in G. H. S. activities that it will be with a bit of regret that we shall return next fall without them. The class of ’26 has had a fair representation on the honor roll and is well supplied with abilities of various types. The athletic teams, as well as the band and orchestra, will lose a great deal of valuable material by graduation. The Seniors have shown their drama¬ tic talent in the Senior Play, which was a roaring success. The art de¬ partment has also shown the talents of many. We could say that the Senior Class has been ‘‘the best class yet”, if it did not savor of insincerity. We can, however, truly say that G. H. S. can be as proud of the Class of ’26 as of any other class which it has graduated. T. A., ’27. ADDRESS OF Classmates: These exercises suggest to me the challenge of a great opportunity. For four years we have been on the same level, thinking ordinary thoughts and doing commonplace things. Now there suddenly rises before us a splendid opportunity. This is called “Commencement”, the .commencement of a business of a more serious nature than we have heretofore experienced. Hard tasks are just ahead—Weaklings will fail. Moral cowards will be put into the discard. Loafers, who were dream¬ ing when they were supposed to be SALUTATORY Friends and Parents of the Class of ’26:— We extend to you the heartiest of welcomes to our Class Day exercises. We wish to thank you for making it possible for us to be before you now, but we realize that our future lives will most truly manifest the amount of appreciation that we hold. “Life or Living” Now that we are living in such a highly civilized industrial age, when nearly everything depends on speed and accuracy of both mind and body. As the class of ’26 joins the regi¬ ments of the alumni, it goes with the light step and happy expectation that comes to the hardy adventurer. The members of ’26 are now adven¬ turers in the unexplored depths of life and living. But bordering on a certain natural rejoicing there is a slight tinge of sadness as they look back over days of carefree abandon and pure unadulterated joy, for there comes the vision of days ahead with¬ out the close association of all these high-school traditions and influences that have done much to mold and stimulate the minds of those who are departing. And yet, with such train¬ ing, the class should feel, with the over confidence of all youth, that the time has come when they are to make the world better by their deeds. “And, departing, leave behind us. Foot-prints on the sands of time.” R. HARPER, ’26. WELCOME thinking, following the line of least resistance when they should have been putting up a good fight, will go down like nine-pins before a well placed ball. It will be no child’s play to live a useful life and do a real work in the days just before us. Some of us will enter higher institutions of learning, while others will go direct¬ ly into the work of life. May we so use our opportunities that we may be fully prepared when the work of active life shall call. LESTER HODGEN, ’26. AND ESSAY the question often enters our minds in our moments of leisure, “Are we really living?” or “Is this life?” The answer to this question rests on our idea of the meaning of the words life and living. The dictionary definitions of the two words differ but little. Life meaning the quality which distinguishes an animal or plant from inorganic or dead organic bodies, especially manifested by the vital activities; and living being life in its operation. However, taken freely, the two
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