Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA)

 - Class of 1934

Page 9 of 40

 

Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 9 of 40
Page 9 of 40



Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 8
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Page 9 text:

Lawrence High School Food Administrator during the World War. Now, to shift from the field of politics to the field of literature. John Greenleaf Whittier’s family were hard working and deeply re- ligious Quakers. His days were spent mostly in work, but in his spare moments he wrote poetry which he hid from everyone except his sister Mary. One day when he was helping his father mend a fence, the postman, passing his gate, tossed him a newspaper, and to his great surprise Whittier saw one of his own poems in print. He could scarcely believe his eyes. Later he found out that his sister had secretly sent the poem to the Free Press, a paper published by that famous foe to slavery, William Lloyd Garrison. Not long after this, Garrison came to see the poet and urged his father to send him to some higher school. There was no money for the purpose; there- fore young John learned to make ladies’ shoes and slippers. With the money he made from this, Whittier put himself through two years at Haverhill Academy. He realized that such an opportunity comes but once, so he grasped the first chance he had to make good. William Cullen Bryant was the son of a country doctor. He was sent to Williams College; but his father was too poor to permit him to finish his education at college, so he continued his studies at home. It was during this period, when he was still little more than a youth, that as he was wandering alone through the woods one day, his thoughts framed themselves into the famous literary achieve- ment, “Thanatopsis.” Having writ- ten the poem down on paper, he laid it aside and forgot it. It was not until several years later it was accidentally discovered by his father, who took it to Boston and had it published. It produced a decided impression, for no Ameri- can poet had written anything equal to it. All war songs have come from the hearts of the writers. When Francis Scott Key wrote The Star Spangled Banner, he could not have foreseen that it would become the national anthem of his country and that it would be played every night when the flag is lowered, at every fort and on every flagship in the navy. Key’s opportunity came through his being a prisoner on board a British ship, during the bombardment of Fort McHenry in Baltimore. When dawn revealed the flag still waving above the fort, he knew that the British attack had failed. In his joy and relief, he drew an old letter from his pccket, and on the back of it wrote the first stanza of The Star Spangled Banner. In the fiel d of invention, Edison, Ford, and Goodyear are a few who have made use of their opportun- ities. Thomas Alva Edison was the son of poor people, poor because his father did not keep a settled oc- cupation. As a boy, he was a quiet but observing lad, extremely in- quisitive — always wanting to know the why’s and wherefore’s of things. In school he was considered stupid because he asked so many questions. At twelve he started out in the world for himself. His first job was as a newsboy on a train. He was given a corner in the luggage car in which to keep his stock of papers and magazines. To this corner he moved his little laboratory and his library of chemical books. One day

Page 8 text:

The Lawrencian THE OPPORTUNITIES OF SOME GREAT AMERICANS Salutatory : Members of the school committee, our superintendent, our principal, members of the faculty, parents, friends, and schoolmates: It is my pleasure on behalf of the graduating class to welcome you to our graduation exercises. We wish to thank you for the never-failing interest and help that you have given us throughout our school life, and we hope that you will enjoy our program tonight. If the foreign accusation that Americans are natural-born hero- worshippers be true, we might right- fully answer that we may well be, for we have heroes and heroines about which any nation could boast. To read their lives is to d iscover that each took advantage of his opportunity, whether it be in poli- tics, literature, invention, or any other field; for in the life of nearly every great American there has been some outstanding thing that has brought him fame. Let us briefly see what the opportunities of some of our great men were. Passing over a few of our presi- dents briefly, we know that most of them were bom of poor people and during their early life suffered hardships and received but little education, their great opportunities coming in various ways. Washing- ton’s great opportunity came when he was but twenty-one from carry- ing out successfully the dangerous commission of repelling the en- croachments of the French. Then followed his military career, which later won for him the title of “Father of His Country”. Abraham Lincoln’s stand on slavery and his debates with Douglas made him known throughout the country. Andrew Johnson was the son of a poor sexton and never attended school a day in his life. It was his wife who later taught him to read and write. He became a hero in the eyes of the nation when he stood firmly against secession. The untir- ing efforts of Ulysses S. Grant toward the reconstruction of the Union after the Civil War added much to his popularity. Grover Cleveland was the son of a poor minister and was compelled to go to work while he was still very young. His first job was clerking in a coun- try store for fifteen dollars a year. He was comparatively unknown un- til he won a name for himself as the “honest veto mayor” of Buffa- lo. McKinley gained his fame through a military career. Let us not forget our own beloved Calvin Coolidge, whose stand on the Bos- ton Police strike brought him prom- inence. People in the United States who had never before even heard of Coolidge read in their news- papers of his telegram to Samuel Gompers proclaiming: “There is no right to strike against the public safety by anybody, anywhere, any- time.” Not for years had a single utterance by a man hardly known outside his own state so thrilled the entire nation. It immediately raised Coolidge to national stature. Herbert Hoover was the son of a blacksmith and an orphan at ten. With an ambition to be a mining engineer he worked his Way through Leland Stanford Univer- sity. His rise as a shrewd and ex- pert technician was rapid. Hoover’s record of public service is long, but perhaps the thing that brought hjm his presidency was his efficiency as



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The Lawrencian a bottle containing phosphorus broke and set fire to the baggage car, for which accident the con- ductor soundly boxed his ears. As a result of this boxing, Edison lost his hearing. With both his hearing and his stock lost, he was appar- ently without a future. Soon, how- ever, an opportunity was presented to him through an act of bravery on his part. At Clemons, Michigan, he rescued the station agent’s son from an oncoming train. To show his gratitude, the agent offered to teach Edison telegraphy. He took advantage of this opportunity and began his wonderful experiments, which gained him the title of “The Modern Wizard’’. The family of Henry Ford was as poor as that of Edison. All during his early life he worked on a little farm, hoeing and cultivating, and thinking all the time. “I hoed at least ten thousand miles,” says he, “and I hated every inch of it”. His own experiences made him yearn to bring into existence machinery which would relieve human beings of this drudgery. Not only his es- cape from farm work but also his opportunity was gained by way of one of Edison’s factories, where he became an expert mechanic. When he had saved a little money of his cwn, he started in business for himself and decided that in his spare time he would try to make the machinery about which he had thought all of his life. Charles Goodyear was an unsuc- cessful hardware merchant who be- came interested in trying to find a process whereby rubber would be rendered more durable. He per- formed many experiments, but for a long time he was unsuccessful. His great opportunity came in 1839 when he accidentally dropped seme rubber and some sulphur on his kitchen stove and found that by chance he had succeeded in doing what his experiments had failed to do. He had created a rubber which would withstand all weather. This remarkable discovery marks the be- ginning of the great rubber busi- ness. And so I might continue through the long ' , list of great American men and women who have become famous through making the most of their opportunities. It is said that opportunity knocks but once. Opportunity awaits us, and may we take advantage of even our smallest chances. FRANCES CLARK KNIGHT. PRESENTATION SPEECH It is my great pleasure to be able to present to the Lawrence High School on behalf of the class of 1934 this radio, which we hope will be the basis of a speaker system in the high school. With this radio Lawrence High School will no longer be without the educational programs which come from the far corners of the world. May this token of the esteem in which we hold our school remind the students and the faculty of Lawrence High to think kindly of the class of 1934. LESTER J. DAVIS, Pres, of the Class of 1934. PROPHECY Flash! Hello, Mr. and Mrs. Amer- ica. This is Jacina Costa bringing you news from here, there, and everywhere. Flash from Hollywocd! A new brunette in the making, no less a star than the blond Marjorie Sim- mons. Flash! A hot tip from New York. The latest gossip from the street of

Suggestions in the Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA) collection:

Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Lawrence High School - Lawrencian Yearbook (Falmouth, MA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938


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