Hallowell High School - Venture Yearbook (Hallowell, ME)

 - Class of 1928

Page 12 of 42

 

Hallowell High School - Venture Yearbook (Hallowell, ME) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 12 of 42
Page 12 of 42



Hallowell High School - Venture Yearbook (Hallowell, ME) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 11
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Hallowell High School - Venture Yearbook (Hallowell, ME) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 13
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Page 12 text:

8 The VENTURE remembrance, and wish you every great and perfect gift in life. Again, we bid you welcome on this, our Commencement Day. Greetings to you, Undergraduates from the Class of 1928: At the beginning of another year, you will step into those places made vacant by our retirement, and stride forward in an effort to attain the goal which only comes to those who keep in step day by day, year by year. Friends, and schoolmates, do not marktirneg advance! - ,li.l.11-i SI-IQRTHAND AND ITS . 1. ADVANTAGES The ordinary long-hand script is utterly inadequate for the purpose of rapid writing. Not only is the outline of the letters needlessly long and complicated, but the letters are not sufficient in number to represent the English language phonetically. With only twenty-six letters, of which three are practically useless, we are required to write a language which contains more than forty ele- mentary sounds. So, as far back as 1787, and perhaps earlier, a method of shorthand was devised by the use of curved lines, dots and dashes which made possible the taking down of speeches as fast as they were ut- tered. Since that time there have been various systems of shorthand worked out, the best known perhaps being the Pitman, Graham, and Gregg methods. The Gregg text book is the one generally in use in Schools of Commerce and High Schools at the present time. The advantages of a study of short- hand are threefold: first, the mental discipline secured in the mastery and the application of its principles, sec- ond, the educational value of the writing and re-writing of the matter taken in shorthand, third, its prac- tical or commercial value. In the mental process there are the hearing and the comprehension of the words and the grasping of the thought of the speaker, the transla- tion of these words into soundsg the selection of the shorthand material from which they are to be con- structed into tangible form, then the manual execution of the forms. All these processes must be put through in the smallest fraction of a second. The close affiliation of shorthand with language gives to it, I think, one of its greatest educational ad- vantages. Nothing can so familiar- ize one with the wonders and beau- ties of the English language as does the constant practice of shorthand. It compels a study of the grammati- cal and rhetorical phases of language and gives an acquaintance with the details of it that could hardly be acquired so easily in any other way. The shorthand writer in his work is constantly brought in contact with what is brightest and best-where brains are the busiest. He is con- stantly copying the cultivated diction of eminent speakers, writing out the thoughts of great educators and pub- lic men. He is thus enabled to study, to absorb, to compare, to criticize, to enjoy, to broaden his general infor- mation, to familiarize himself with the work of the world. Shorthand is an indispensable art in commerce as is attested by the fact that hundreds of thousands, pro- ficient in it, are employed as stenog- raphers. In the courts and in the legislative halls of the state and national gov- ernments, the shorthand reporter makes an absolute record of the pro- ceedings, and thus the thoughts of statesmen, great teachers, and law- makers are preserved for the use of the world.

Page 11 text:

A rw Q-giliqfqin 0m4 'l'Infau r 'mi Il' , QQUAUO 'W' F5 Allow SPR GR I 5 Ln A 7 G I R 'xiii :Jie pad -.,. 1 QUQHQ I: B53 , -l fi Si tfii SALUTATORY Citizens and Friends : The mantle of Salutatorian has, this year, fallen on my shoulders, and, although it has been worn near- ly threadbare by a succession of my predecessors, there is, I feel, still enough of it left to bring to you its symbol-welcome. So in behalf of the class of 1928, in the hackneyed words of that long procession gone before, I greet you this day. We are glad to see you hereg for by your presence you give us courage and confidence to present the essays we have prepared for this occasion. You will listen, we know, with un- derstanding hearts and with lenient ears to words which, coming from untried youth, lack much of the wis- dom of experience. Again, dear friends, I salute you! To the Superintendent and Mem- bers of the School Board: At a time like this, we realize full well the limitations of our vocabu- lary. We can only repeat and em- phasize our greetings to you who have so successfully guided our bark over waters sometimes smooth, more Y -..Q ,W Y often rough, into that fair harbor we have reached after a four years' course in scholastic navigation. We appreciate your efforts in our behalf, and know that you will always keep a hand on the helm of the good ship Hallowell High. Your attendance here this after- noon gives us great pleasure, and we only hope our exercises, will, in part, repay you for your trouble. .- .. ..... - T5 6zi5-iiPfin5i1i1z, 'Mr. 121351612 and to Teachers of the Hallowell High School: When you return our handclasps to-day, we would beg you to forget, if you can, many, no, all of the petty annoyances we have caused you by our seeming indifference and lack of attention in assembly and class-room. Blame these to the exuberance of youth and not to malice afore- thought. We realize, to the utmost, the fact that it has been through your tact, your guidance, your encouragement, we have reached the place where we now stand. Believe me when I say, we are not ungrateful for your untiring energy, and we shall hold you ever in loving lllll'



Page 13 text:

The VENTURE 9 To the young man or woman, shorthand offers a great opportunity either as a career or as a stepping stone. Many of our most prominent public men and women owe their positions to the start shorthand gave them. Among these, to mention only a few, are: Charles Dickens, Frank Vanderlip, Edward Bok, Irvin Cobb and Samuel Insull. That stenography requires appli- cation and hard study, anyone who has taken it will not deny. Quoting from that inimitable author, Charles Dickens, who gave in David Copper- field something of the struggle he himself had with shorthand symbols, we learn its difiiculty: I bought an approved scheme of the noble art and mystery of stenog- raphy and plunged into a sea of per- plexity that brought me in a few weeks, to the confines of distraction. The changes that were rung upon dots, which in such a position meant such a thing, and in such another position something else, entirely dif- ferent, the wonderful vagaries that were played by circles, the unac- countable consequences that resulted from marks like flies' legs, the tre- mendous effect of a curved line in the wrong place 3 not only troubled my waking hours, but appeared in my sleep. When I had groped my way, blindly, through these difficulties, and had mastered the alphabet, which was an Egyptian Temple in itself, there appeared a procession of new horrors, called arbitrary char- acters, the most despotic characters I have ever known. When I had fixed these wretches in my mind, I found that they had driven every- thing else out of it, and thus the struggle went on. But success crowned his efforts, and his knowledge of shorthand be- came a stepping stone to fame. Such it may become to some of us, to all of us it is a definite aid to economic independence. Lyndon M ayers. PRESENTATION OF GIFTS I have no apologies for my appear- ance here today. My classmates have seen fit to invite me to disclose to an interested world their intimate characteristics, and I have accepted their invitation. Very likely, it is my reputation for truth-telling that has influenced them to select me to perform this difficult task. My mod- esty forbids me to believe that jus- tice prompted them to choose me, as the only one who approached abso- lute perfection, and so was in no need of friendly admonition myself. Perhaps they fancy that my grati- tude for the honor that they have conferred upon me will induce me to close my eyes to the more flagrant of their faults, or, at least, to smooth over their rough edges before pre- senting them to the laughter of the public. Such is not my purpose, however, for, while I have the great- est desire to retain their friendship, I have also the highest appreciation of my duty, and feel myself bound to delineate as accurately as possible their peculiarities and idiosyncrasies. Iva, your reputation among your classmates is that of a person who delights in the profuse use of words, big and little, mostly big. As a re- minder of your high school days, I have chosen some particularly long ones for you. Use them to good ad- vantage. Elizabeth, for you I have selected a most appropriate gift. We all know of your fondness for letter-writing, especially to those of the opposite sex. This stationery is sure to please any young man. We have fashion well represented in our class in the person of Olive. Her dresses are the envy of the school, at least of the feminine por- tion, but in this style book, I know she will find some patterns that will go far ahead of any that she has yet rie .

Suggestions in the Hallowell High School - Venture Yearbook (Hallowell, ME) collection:

Hallowell High School - Venture Yearbook (Hallowell, ME) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Hallowell High School - Venture Yearbook (Hallowell, ME) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

1953

Hallowell High School - Venture Yearbook (Hallowell, ME) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 1

1956

Hallowell High School - Venture Yearbook (Hallowell, ME) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 35

1928, pg 35

Hallowell High School - Venture Yearbook (Hallowell, ME) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 10

1928, pg 10

Hallowell High School - Venture Yearbook (Hallowell, ME) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 39

1928, pg 39


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