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Page 14 text:
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Editorial rpHE fates have long since decreed that the year 1933 be the date of our graduation. Little did we know that that year was to be also the date of one of the worst depres- sions known to mankind. And thus we graduate with prospects far from rosy and a future that is none too clear. Some of us will go to work, some to professional schools, some to college, and for us all there will be more difficulties than others in easier years have had to face. But in spite of them or even be- cause of them may we become stronger and finer men and women. Let us all make the best of the ed- ucation we have acquired. Let us welcome every opportunity that life offers. Let us acquire the qualities of honesty, perseverance, thought- fulness, and diligence. Let us have ideals which are worthy and follow these ideals. If we do all this, sure- ly we shall achieve happiness and success. And even if we do fall short of our fondest hopes, no matter where we may travel, we will take with us the pleasant memories of our high school friends and associations and all the days spent in dear old Man- ning. Cub Staff, 1933 - 1934 Editor-in-Cheif, John Alexander, ’34 ; Business Manager, Charles Crossman, ’34 ; Literary Editors, Edward Rhodes, ’34 ; Robert Laite, ’35; Charles Bailey, ’35; Theodora Burbank, ’34; Barbara Wood, ’35; John MacKerron, ’35; Alumni Edi- tor. Martha Hinckley, ’34 ; Social Editor. Martha Stevens, ’34 ; Ath- letic Editor, Charles Sayward, ’35 ; Class Reporters, Marion Perkins, ’34 ; Raymond Klinger, ’35 ; Helen Campbell, ’36; Exchange Editor, Virginia Patch, ’35 ; Art Editor, To be announced ; Joke Editor, Curtis Haley, ’34 ; Typ- ists, Gertrude Gwodz, ’34 ; Helen Lazaropoulos, ’34 ; Leona Earley, ’34 ; Helen Frederick, ’35. Literary. The Old and New B EAUTY and antiquity, but not on the surface. Only beneath do we encounter these two. Surely beauty was in the air which our an- cestors breathed two centuries ago. But do we find them now? Now we must stop a while and think where we are. Yes, it is the twen- 12
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Page 13 text:
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THE TIGER VOL. XIV IPSWICH, MASSACHUSETTS JUNE, 1933 5 Published by the Senior Class of Manning High School Staff EDITOR ANNE PATCH FACULTY ADVISORS MISS E. MARGARET ALLEN MR. HENRY MERSON BUSINESS MANAGER ERVIN LANGMAID ADVERTISING MANAGER JAMES AUSTIN ASSISTANT ADVERTISING MANAGERS JOHN HAYES ERNEST SMITH, HAROLD SHOLES, GEORGE BOURNAZOS ANTHONY BUDZIANOSKI, JOHN BIALEK, EDWARD CRELLIN ASSOCIATE EDITORS ELEANOR MITCHELL, HELEN KOZENESKA, JANE BOKRON, CHRISTINE SCOURLETIS CATHERINE LUCEY, BARBARA ARTHUR, LAZARUS LAZAROPOLOUS ATHLETIC EDITOR PETER RETALES ALUMNI EDITOR MARGARET McLEOD EXCHANGE EDITOR SYLVIA TODD SOCIAL EDITORS BEATRICE AUSTIN, THELMA DAVIS JOKE EDITORS GEORGE BOURNAZOS, EARLE McCORMICK TYPISTS DOROTHY MILLER, MARGARET HAMM Contents Editorial Cub Staff for 1933 - 34 Literary Department Graduation Essays Class Day Parts: History Prophecy Gifts to Girls Gifts to Boys Will Graduation Program Class Day Program Honor Awards Honor Pupils Class Pictures Who’s Who Sports Review Social Review Senior Play Operetta Alumni Class Celebrities As the Poets See Us Exchange Jokes Our Advertisers 12 12 12 16 25 27 35 36 39 42 43 44 44 45 67 69 71 72 73 74 75 78 78 2-82
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Page 15 text:
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tieth century — industrial organi- zations have been built up : stone, bricks, and steel have been brought together in architectural monstros- ities. And in our own community we have one of these buildings. For many years the blowing smoke from the mill sent into the air germs, dirt, and grimy soot for the townsfolk to breathe in. Its waste material clut- t tered the streets. Many lowly f shacks of stereotype design, which, to me, seem in perfect accord with the minds and the exterior living of their dwellers, still huddle closely together. Along with the mill came the railroad and another industry which naturally becomes associated with it — the coal sheds, the depot, the dusty shanties with their colloquial gate-tenders in dusty work-clothes, the coal dust, and the soot which cakes in layers on the window-sills of nearby houses. Altogether, quite an untidy affair! And the business section, the dear old business section, which, though | architecturally horrid, has achieved that touch of homeliness which is attached to all the things that you know well. Naturally, we do not expect to find beauty on “Main Street,” but we do frequently wish that it could be snuggled away to some place where it would not ob- struct some of the old, delicately lovely features of the town. Of course, we could not expect towns and cities of the post-Civil War days to have given much thought to the intelligent planning of beautiful cities. The population, then, was intent upon acquiring in- fluence through national, “Big-Busi- ness” development. We are shown clear proof of that interest today in the slums of most of our American cities, but we hope that in the near future we shall have more time to devote to beauty, and to save it from complete obliteration. Al- though we may be in pursuit of new activities, however, let us look for hidden beauties. A visitor, or a resident who has not yet discovered the town, may climb to the summit of our “old Town Hill.” His gaze may encoun- ter the bright red lights in the East as the rounding sun comes looming up over the cold blue of the vast ocean, its rays dancing with joy across the shimmering water and winding their merry way to the sandy dunes — or he might prefer late afternoon when the su n begins to retire into the great West, and a gentle murmuring runs through the pines. There the great limbs of an apple tree point like arms at the two wooden and tawdry towers, in the direction of the setting sun — fixed in solidity, at this moment, like two gilded towers, pointing proudly heavenward — a symbol of all that our New England might have been or might be. Or, if he becomes lonesome, he may trip to the beach on a misty storm-dreary day, where the surf beats threateningly upon the miles of sand. A spray of salt water splash- es over his raincoat and boots, and 13
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