Guilford High School - Rostrum Yearbook (Guilford, ME)

 - Class of 1944

Page 23 of 106

 

Guilford High School - Rostrum Yearbook (Guilford, ME) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 23 of 106
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Guilford High School - Rostrum Yearbook (Guilford, ME) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 22
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Page 23 text:

THE ROSTRUM 21 we can say to ourselves, 6'VVe can do the job, we will do it, and we must do itfi All of us are in this world for a purpose, and we should do our best to fulfill that purpose. So let us remember that if we have a desire to do a thing and if we feel that we must do it, we can and we will do it! Bernice Foss ,44. OUR BONE NEIGHBORS There are over two hundred bones in the body, but I donit believe many aver- age persons can name these promiptly, if at all. There are a few of these bones, however, that we all know. These bones represent some of the people we know very well, although I doubt if we often think of classifying people according to bones. There are the wish-bonev people, for instance. In this group of people we find the people who are always wishing for something, but who are doing very little to make their wishes come true. They wisfh that school lasted only three days a week, they wish and dream about breaking the dishes instead of washing them, they wish money grew on trees, and they wish they could go to college next fall. These people live in a dreamy world full of their desires, but what do they do about these wishes? IVhat do they do about the money they need for college next fall? They dream about possessing it, but they donit dream of doing any work to obtain it. Yes, I think we all know some of the Wishbone peo- ple, but we donit care to have them for close friends. There are also the 'funnyboneii people. XVho comes in this group? XVhy, the person who laughs because his wife has left him, the boy who grins when he Hunks an exam, the woman who bursts into laughter when she runs her stock- ing, and the girl who giggles when she has kept her date waiting an hour for her. VVe all know these people who laugh when it rains, laugh when the sun shines, laugh when they are late for school, and laugh when they burn up a cake. Of course we all want to be able to laugh at the humorous side of life, but do we want to be a person who gig- gles at everyt'hing? I think you will agree with me that the answer is definitely No . Then there are the ujawbonev people wiho are nearly opposite the ufunnybonev people. Here we find the person who yells, Turn that radio off! It sounds as though a hurricane were raging in this roomlv You promptly turn the radio off and then he complains, You'd think some was dead in the house, itis so quietlv In this group we also find the elderly aunt who raves when you are a long time doing the dishes, but if you speed up the process she scolds for she knows you canit possibly have wiped them dry. VVe also find here the person who jaws because the room is too hot, you open the window and itis too cold. Certainly everyone knows and spends some time avoiding people in this group. I will try to tell you of only one more of the borne people, like 'gbackbonev people. Among these people we find the persons we like to know and the persons we like to be. VVho are some of these backbone people? The man who started a small novelty store and is today the townis leading business man, the awk- ward country lawyer who later became one of the greatest Presidents of our na- tion and the Negrois emancipator, the young man whom people made fun of when he walked down the streets of Philadelphia with two loaves of bread in his pocket, but later he became the cityis most distinguished citizen, and the poor boy across the street who worked his way through school and is now caring for an aged father and mother. In other words, these are the people, the aback- boneii people, that are the backbone and foundation of our great nation. Donna VVelts '44,

Page 22 text:

20 V THE ROSTRUM Then things changed. War came and potato chips went. With them went the pleasure, the bother, the fun, the heart- aches they had caused. No more do you have nice potato chip suppers. No more is suspense broken by potato chip-eating children Qnow they use peanuts and popcornj. No more do you dread pot- luck lunches or the night after the fair. Of course, itis natural for you to feel had not being able to buy your favorite food now. But soon you hear there are some in town. If youire smart you leave everything and rush to the store to get some, but if youire just average you put it off itil another day. At last, being aver- age, you enter the store, and, after look- ing around cautiously, you ask if they have any potato chips. VVe,re sorry, but we just sold the last packagef, the answer you receive. You cuss at yourself for being lazy and the wonderful taste which you have been harboring in your mouth the last few days suddenly becomes flat. Next time you promise to be the first one there. Then the rumor reaches you there are some more potato chips in town. Rush- ing up to your dealer you ask with a hopeful gleam in your eye if he has some. He answers that he hasnit any potato chips, BUT Qyour hope is again roused, he has some potato-pops which are the same only made from dehydrated potatoes. You take one out of the cello- phane. It is thicker than the old kind. VVondering if it tastes as good as it looks, you sink your teeth into it and crunch, crunch, crunch, it feels like good old potato chips. At last a perfect substitutel But waitl VVhere is that salty tang? XVhere is that undefinable flavor that you have been anticipating? You find these chips 'have no particular taste to them. Alas! There is no substitute for good old potato chips. But perhaps it is just as well if you donit have any potato chips. For if there arenit any, you wonit go spending your money foolishly for something you donit need and that money you save can al- ways be put into use for the government when it asks us to give all we can for War Bonds. XVith these bonds in future years, even if times are tough, you will he able to buy all the potato chips you wish. lVhat a beautiful future to look forward tol C. Johnston ,4-1. I CAN, I WILL, I MUST There are many opportunities for those of us who are young today-oppole tunities which many of us do not see. XVe have parents, schools, churches, col- leges, and so many other places which are both amusing and educational. Each ol' these opportunities has a challenge- a ehallenge to build our ow11 character and to build a better America. Are we going to say that we can accept these challenges, or are we going to continue lo go our own selfish way and never give thought to others? To any of us who will say, 1 can,', there seems to be greater opportunities and greater chal- lenges. For example, take a young boy who has just completed grammar school. He is faced with the question as to Whether or not he will go to high school. He has every opportunity that a boy would want, but he doesnit know just what he will do. Finally, he says that he can go- Ifor there is nothing to stop him. The next question is Whether or not he will go. What else is there for him to do? Yes, he can get a job, but without his high school education it is apt to be a small one, and probably it will not be a lasting one. At last he says he will go. .-Xfter giving the question still more thought, he comes to the conclusion that he must go if he is going to prepare him- self to give America his best. It is not only a boy about to enter high school who is faced with these three things, but all of us, sometime in life, will come to a place where we donit know just what to do. It is then that



Page 24 text:

22 THE ROSTRUM THOSE WHO DIE According to the records, Pellitier is the best qualified man we have for this job. Jeanne Fortin and Theresa Pirout, who works in the generals office, can help himf, spoke the man in the shiny blue serge suit, looking up from his book of records. K'Pellitier can come here. You will go to the house of Pellitier and give him do it then. Jacques, Monsieur Henri this note. He is to return with you. Be one sees you come in careful that no here. You may go nowf, Later Jacques enters with another man. The man speaks, You sent for me -Henri Pellitier?,' Yes, I did. Sit down. So you are Pelli- tier. I am Raymon Foulon. Have you not heard of me in my work in the under ground systems of F rance?', Without waiting for a reply, the outspoken Fou- lon continued, Your record speaks well for you. You have done well in your ef- forts to hinder the Nazi hordes, who are trying their best to orush our gallant spirit. They can starve us, they can tor- ture us, they can kill us. But they can never kill the true France that every Frenchman holds fast in his heart, never until they kill every Frenchman who has been born into this world of hatred! 'Enough of sentiment, we must never give way to sentiment. If we do, it will be our downfall. The real purpose of your being here is to give you your or- ders. They are simple. The Tennerie factory, where you work, must be de- stroyed. Your helpers will be Jeanne Fortin and Theresa Piroutf' aBut not Jeanne, this is dangerous! Canit you put someone else in her place? You see, I love Jeanne Fortin. We were to have been married in June4but the Germans camef, I am sorry. I didn't know, but ilt can not be changed now. The plans are made. You must carry them out to every letter of every word. You know all of the people who will aid you. Jeanne can secure the explosives. Theresa will get the plans to the factory for you. She can do it easily enough. You and Jeanne both work in the factory. It will be simple. Have it happen when there are as few as possible there. We can at least try to be human. Will you do it?', I will do it. The task will be com- pletcd by Friday night. Today is Wednesday. It shall be donef, After say- ing this, Pellitier left the room. He had work to do tonight. He must see Jeanne. Fifteen minutes later, a tall, dark, un- shaven man in an old suit of work clothes, which had been shabby for a long time, walked quickly up the steps of a house in the suburbs of a once beautiful, but now ruined, Paris. He glanced cautiously around him. Seeing no one, he opened the door and stepped in quickly. In the corner of the room, bending over her book, trying to catch the fading light of a dying sun, sat a beautiful French girl. Jeanne,v the tall man murmured as he walked across the floor. Jeanne.v Henril I thought perhaps they had gotten you. I have been waiting a long time. WVhy are you so late? I have something to tell you. You and your friend, Theresa Pirout, have been chosen to help me destroy the fac- tory in which we work. It must be done by Fridayf, c'Henri, do you know that a new ship- ment of French soldiers, for the Nazis to send to the Russian front to be slaught- ered, passes the plant soon after we get out of work tomorrow? Why not kill them now? It would save them from the horrible fate that is in store for them. XVould it not be better to kill them be- fore they can become traitors to Franceiy K'Jeanne, you are right. At four-forty we will blow the place as high as the elephant who jumped the fence. If We can just get it close to the powder room, the shells which are in there will ex- plode and destroy the track and troop

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