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Page 17 text:
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IIPD lol EAD MASTEIPS MESSAGE Y year with the Class of 1937 began prematurely at the final Conference last Iune, when the unhappy announcement clashed upon your ears that radios and phonographs had no future at Lawrenceville. To be sure, I was protected from your fury by an intervening phalanx of outgoing fifth formers, to whom the news could make no difference. Nevertheless it was clear that my statement did not receive what is sometimes called a good press, and the later announcement of the Harkness gift, which l had hoped would rouse the student body to a joyful outburst, was received in grave silence. Now the memory of that occasion is one of Hold, unhappy, far-off things and battles long agof, By September you found it possible to sustain life without a dial at your elbow. It seemed for a while, indeed, that the radio had so lost caste that it would be difficult even to introduce one into the precincts of the House of Lords. The ultimate arrival of a machine for the Common Room marked a return to stability. Your fifth form year has witnessed a number of innovations and new departures. Perhaps because of the absence of radio, or perhaps, more flatteringly, because of the presence in the form of a group of gifted songsters, you have sung more and better than any fifth form in the past twenty-five years, which is a short period in the memory of Woodie. To be sure, some of you demonstrated in Conference a tendency to sing an octave lower than the proper pitch, but even so, you have given us good singing and it has added to the gayety and pleasure of life at Lawrenceville. You have been the first fifth form to study under the Conference Plan, and have exhibited an almost superhuman power of self-restraint in failing to-carve on the fresh maple surfaces of the tables your names or the names of others dear to you. You have been the first fifth form to enjoy the liberalized smoking rules, which have made the beer-gardenu an incredible memory and have caused the esplanade to sprout a row of sturdy urns, which even now you do not fully understand are intended as receptacles for butts and matches. You have been the first to play fifth form games with the senior teams of other schools, by means o-f which you have, we hope, cemented rather than destroyed our friendly relations with our chief rivals. You are the first fifth form which has danced till four o'clock in the morning and has indulged itself at the same time in the magnificent gesture of employing the great Hal Kemp to submit his genius to your approval at 2 a.m. You are the first fifth form which has seen the discontinuance of day as well as evening study, a loss which you have borne with fortitude. You are the first fifth form which has seen the Periwig connive in the production of a play with actual girls in the female parts, and thus destroy a bugaboo which has for generations given the head mistresses of America unquiet slumber. You are the first fifth form to enjoy the so-called leisure provided by advancing the time of daily chapel to eight o'clock, an action which, it is hoped, will have a civi- lizing and otherwise salutary effect upon you and your successors, In summary, it would seem that your life has consisted of one shattering of tradition after another, and that you have shaken Lawrenceville life to its deepest foundations. Indeed the contemplations of your extravagant iconoclasm is a little awe-inspiring. lt is comforting, therefore, to observe that your devotion to the Lawrenceville traditions of throwing chewing-gum and peanut shells on the gymnasium floor at the movies, Th irteen
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Page 16 text:
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Page 18 text:
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ll D and of chinning yourselves on the awning bars on the esplanade at Prom time marks you as essentially normal fellows, to whom progressivism is not an inward passion but something you can take or leave, as you please. . For myself you are unique in the fact that I had known some of you for two years before you became the Lords of Lawrenceville. My ripening acquaintance with you while you were still in the Circle has made my contacts with you particularly rich and gratifying. You have been a pleasant company to live with and to live next to, the latter always an important attribute in any fifth form. I have greatly enjoyed, and so has Mrs. I-Ieely, talks with you and tea with you, and various other unpremeditated pleasures which the year together has brought forth. We shall look long for better neighbors and more satisfying friends. It has meant much to the School as a whole that you have been cooperative, intelli- gent, and responsive. It is an old Lawrenceville saying, reminiscent of unhappy Republican memories of the last national election, that was goes the fifth form, so goes the School. The saying is no less true because it is old. The problems of administra- tion and morale in a school of this size are dilhcult, subtle, and intangible. That they have been on the whole so seldom troublesome and so happily solved is largely due to your performance. Iior this the School is sincerely grateful. Ihit it is not with gratitude that I am mainly concerned in this brief valedictory which you have courteously permitted me to make. What I Willll to say finally and with full emphasis and sincerity is that you have left your imprint not only on the history of Lawrenceville, but on our hearts. We shall follow your progress with an interest which you will discover to be sympathetic and inexhaustible. Under the necessary artiliciality of barriers and regulations which school life is bound to repre- sent, we have come to look upon you as our friends. It is the faith of schools that they may make some permanent contribution to the lives of their studentsg that they may have some hand in the great job of making boys into men. I hope, therefore, that part of you is imperishably Lawrenceville, and I hope it is the best part. IDo not, we beg of you, let your affection for this place grow cold. You can mean much to it in the future. as it has meant much to you in the past. We hope you will keep coming back to us, for the School lives only in the lives of its sons. Whenever you come we shall welcome you with warmth and affection. May all good fortune go with youl ALLAN V. I'IEELY Fomlewz
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