Le Roy Central School - O At Kan Yearbook (Le Roy, NY)

 - Class of 1923

Page 21 of 52

 

Le Roy Central School - O At Kan Yearbook (Le Roy, NY) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 21 of 52
Page 21 of 52



Le Roy Central School - O At Kan Yearbook (Le Roy, NY) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 20
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Page 21 text:

Commencement Number T H E R E D A N D B L 1-1 C K Page Ninetee any engineering feat in the annals of our land, is this great issue of conserving or dwindling resources. Do you re-ali..e what may be done i11 this magic palaze of chemistry in the intertst of coal alone? Do those thou- sands who shivered through two months of winter, as the millions who were inactive because there was 110 coal to develop the power necessary in the great manufacturing plants of the world. realize that under our present system of burning coal the I'nited States alone loses two-million dollars a day? It is time that every man interested i11 the future of our wondxrful country, awakens to the fact that unless something is done, we will be lacking many of the things we consider the necessities of life. Science stands ready to help. Already she has takn the refuse of the sawmill and given us the great energizer, sugarg already from the useless cttion seed she has developed a valuable article of food: already from the wastes of our high explosives she has fashioned ivory which rivals that of the mightiest elephant that ever brathed. Yet these are but pygmies in size compared with what she stands ready to do if YOU but summon he1'. -William Wansor. The Genesee Valley of Yesterday The old order changeth yielding place to new. Sweep from your vision the great cities, the rushing trains, the broad-highways. speeding automobiles and well culti- vated lields. In their place imagine villages composed of long houses, wigwams and tepee, skilfully manned canoes, dirt trails winding in and out along river bank or lake shores and vast forests in which wild life abounds. You will have Western New York as it was a short time before the French and Indian Wars. It is unfair to say that the Indians were entirely cruel or barbarous. for early settlers tell of the moral tone and high sense of honor and loyalty of their copper skinned neighbors. Proud of their mighty lliltltlll, they upheld its traditions and customs with rigorous care. As the Indian was a constant traveller it was neces- sary that he have trails. So, centuries ago a network of trails bound the Indian villages together, just as to day broad highways bind the thriving cities and towns in closer union. The trails winding in and out through the dim lofty recesses of the forest were but fifteen or eighteen inch- es wide: worn smooth and hard from a century of tramp- ing IIl000ilSlIl9ll feet. They crossed the crests of lofty hills looking down into deep wooded valleys. They followed the banks of swirling streams and babbling brooks skirting the marshy and rough places. Could the Seneca of two hundred years ago visit the Genesee trail to-day. he would tind all l1is old surroundings so altered that he would not be able to realize that this was once his home. Strange vehicles whirl, at an un- believeable pace over the trail broadened and covered with macadam. the wooded slopes are covered with towns and farmsg the hills dotted with green and brown fields re- lieved here and there by la1'ge orchards. The only famil- iar thing he would see would be the muddy Genesee. which goes on its lawless course forever. But, no longer does the redskin roam the woods and plains. He is fast disappearing from his native land. Be- fore many years have passed the remnants of the true Americans will have departed. They will be but the dim memory of a far distant yesterday. -Marion Pfisterer. The Builders of Success The XY01'lll judges a man by his success. and his success by the same practical standards as it does real estate- You have walked down the street and have noticed the sign For Sale, tacked on a house. You stop to look at the house and snmetimes the lot even attracts your attention. You think. I'd like to own that house, or else you say- Who would want to live there? Did yo11 ever stop to estimate your success as you do the value of that property? Your advantages and opportunities might represent the lot, and your success the house. Are you the type that is admired? There is the man who has had countless oppor- tunities. money and influence and yet he has done noth- ing to bring himself above the ordinary level of people. He is really the personiiication of a beautiful building lot. dis- figured with a run down house and surrounded with faded bill boards. Tll91'9 are so lnany people who belong to this class of opportunity wasters that no one has made him- self important enough to be used for an illustration. Then there is the man who has had the average opportimities. a limited education, a little money and some influential back- ing to start him in life. He can be compared to the aver- age city house built upon the average city lot. He neither benefits nor distigures the 'world. There is the man who has started in the pursuit of great things, but who tired of his task' and capped his structure when he had completed but one story, thus making it out of proportion. He belongs in the class with the man who has started many things but who has accomplished none. with the man whose struc- ture is like that of an old fashioned farm house with wings that have been added from time to time ni-nrring the beauty as well the usefulness. Butt there are different types of men like Roosevelt, Milton and James. who have had opportunities. money and iniiuence and who have made the most of their advantages. erecting structures like state- ly colonial mansions. their beauty set off by their natural surroundings. But there is a higher type than this. men like Lincoln, who have built upon the barren rock a castle, wonderful both in art and inspiration. So magnificent is this structure that in gazing at its beauty we forget the jagged rock. the years of trial that were needed for its completion and lose ourselves in admiration of Lincoln, our greatest builder of success. --Doris Noble.

Page 20 text:

illiam Shakespeare and Page Eighteen T H E R E D A ND BLACK Co mmencement Number EXTR. C ., FROi CO The importance of Little Things Dear Friends: The class of '23 bids you welcome. In the olden days whe11 the crops had been harvested and the work for the year accomplished, the farmer invited his friends and neighbors to feast and rejoice with him. This is our harvest feast, our work is done, our reward at hand. Your generosity and care have made possible our harvest and we thank you, If it is 11ot great, we beg you to be- lieve that this little will serve as seed from which greater things will grow-until each of us shall reap an infinite harvest. The importance of little things cannot be emphasized enough. There is some little idea in the life of every business man that, if properly developed, will bring great. great results. Students in high school! Students in the grades! Do not neglect the little things! The little things we are neglecting today may be the very ones that, if worked out. would complete our lives. The work that seems unimportant may carry in its accomplishment the destiny of a nation. Jar one chord the harp is silent, Move one stone the arch is shattered. Une small clarion cry of sorrow Bids an armed host awake. Une dark cloud may hide the sunlight. Loose one string. the pearls are scattered, Think one thought, a soul may perish. Say one word. a heart may break. -Velma Smith. ,-,i,i.i-1 The Greatest Force in Civilization Literature i11 popular conception is a thing apart from life: it is regarded as a bore by the unimaginative school to be conquered: by a society lady from her social round to the real student. a serious study. What is literature? It is the laoy or :i tiresome study as a nnzments' diversion feeling. the thought and the emotion expressed that makes universal appeal. livery generation has its task to do and its record to leave. All tween Sparts and Athens in the year 500 B. 4'-. has sunk into insignificance. Their mounment remains in AesopS Fables and Homer's l'llliad. that quickens into life the the passionate heroic exertion be- heroes of old and serve as an inspiration to the ages. Had Greece depended upon the bravery of Miltiades, the wis- dom of Pericles, she would long since have ceased to in- fluence the world. but old Homer perpetuated her greatness and there is not one of us here tonight but has been mightily influenced in his material and mental life by this writer's innnortal piece of literature- 4' 4 4' ik . C ENT But, says the practical man, look at Henry Ford's large auto plants. at the discovery of the the invention of the submarine a they not obscure tl1e works of W Ralph Waldo Emerson? But we ESSAY ' X-ray and radium, and nd the aeroplane! D0 must. not forget that be- fore these material achievements must be the vision and this vision of the poet or writer. More tha son: Dipt into the future, as far and. ll are accomplished there or prophesy is the gift tifty years ago Tenny- as human eye could see. Saw the vision of the world and all the wonder that would be Saw the heavens filled with magic sails. ct immerce, Argones of Pilots of the purple twilight. costly bales. Heard the heavens filled with a ghastly dew From nations airy navies grapp All of which we see to-day-bu the battle flags are furled, dropping down with shouting and there rained ling in the central blue. t he saw beyond Where In the Parliament of man: the federation of the World. It is true indeed that a dro1 D of ink may make a mil- who said Let me write the songs of a nation and I care not who makes its laws- for literature is the most powerful lion think. Wise indeed was he makes greatness- It informs, it re propaganda for all that ceates the dust of buried . As material achieve- emotions, it influences. it inspires ments are the body of the national 'soul and like the soul immortal. Science to the lifefliterature is the -Margaret Fay 0'Neill. Rescue As our forefathers gazed upon they discovered larger and more v they little thought the day would be exhausted. Yet slowy, surely, Our great forests are a thing of inexhaustable coal and oil fields t the the spacious forest. as aried deposits of wealth, rrive when these would at day is drawing near. pastg our supposedly are becoming smaller and smaller through the increasing d age, an age that demands as a d ness alone. as many tons of coal Somehow these demands must be be preserved or the commercial si Greater than the immigration iss attention of our legislations for question of international peace, years has held the center of the mands of an industrial ,y's supply for one busi- as formerly supplied the for more lumber in one state of Maine, an age that calls week than was demanded by our met, these resources must 1 iiuence, yes. even our personal l' ue, ancestors in a decade. wremacy, the political in- herty will be imperiled. that has occupied the onthsg greater than the .hat for more than two world stage. greater than



Page 22 text:

Page Twenty T H E RED AND BLACK Com mencement Number The Tree Standing tall and stately. the tree gleamed white as the 111001178 titful beams played upon it. It swayed, and its leafy branches seemed to stretch farther upward to meet the dappled sky. A gentle breeze ruffled its leaves and wafted to us stories of life, of people: of Indians: 211111 of birds. It told us its secrets: with what joy it is hailed in every land, of its adventures and its benefits to man- kind- Hk Pk 44 its The question now facing the Ivllitl-'ll States is tl1e pre- servation of the tree. Our forests originally covered 883.- 0tt0.00tb acres. now, including some burnt over tracts. they extend over about half that area. William Penn. even in his day. realized the danger which the country would have to face in the near future. and ordered the colonists to leave one acre of woodland to every live of cultivated la11d. The national government is doing its best to keep the tree. Bulletins and circulars of warning are sent out all over the country- Foresters keep careful guard against danger and tire. Rangers ride over the territory and save thous- ands of trees that would otherwise be destroyed. The farmers are 'urged to conserve wood and to plant trees. trees are now planted. the story that Jupiter and Mercury, in disguise were traveling through a Phrygian town. From door to door they went asking for hospitality, but received no-ne. Finally. two poor peasants took them in a11d treated them with the best they had. After the dinner, the guests reveal- ed themselves as gods. They submurged the village and its other inhabitants under a broad lake, but turned the peasants hut illtO a beautiful temple- The aged couple were the attendants until they were too old to perform their duties, then they were transformed into two stately linden trees which guarded the portals'of the temple. Ili I ik if H ' , 1 v - N Many young There is I think that I shall neiei see A poem lovely as a tree. The Need of World Peace Throughout the ages. the world has taken giant strides toward -1 higher civilization' sinc the dawn of history, . 4. . . e man has been continually letting himself and his posses- sions He has gradually spread frot one section' to another ,. .. , . , . n upon this mud-ball. until today practically. the whole earth is but the exponent of his teachings customs and conditifns cf the cave- centuries of gradual change finally d a id ideals. The ideas, ian after many long veloped into the com- paratively high civilization of the early Egyptians. The lowly caves of the primitive grew into the mighty pyramids 'of Egypt. This process of enlightenment was not destined to continue in Asia only. for within a built up on a peninsula of the con few centuries. it had inent of Europe, the powerful Grecian state with its learned men and magnifi- C9l1t works of art. From a mera handful of men not many miles west' rose the IIIIHIITV Roni- , . ., , . .1 centuries of uninterrupted supernxacy n Empire, which far carried in the wake of its invincible armies. its wonderful ideals, teachings and justice to all the people of the the ages that followed death blows known world. In all were dealt to imperi- alism. The masses influenced. enlightened. and encourag- ed by the works of such great philosophers as Locke and Voltaire. began to think for themselves. As a result of this enlightenment. revolutionary ii proud monarchs came tumbiing from people are no longer led blindlv int res were kindled and their thrones. The bloody and unfruitful . , . o battles. Their speech. their thought. and their products of genius are no longer suppressed. They are rulers of the world: they are maste1's of themselves! This civilization which our ancestors through centuries of struggle built up for us. is the White Rat-e's most im- portant inheritanceg its preservation our highest duty. The maintenance and advancement is of this greatest of ancestral gifts can never be assured. until the world is steeped in perpetual peace. This q cannot be prolonged. It is 11ot mer mental issue: it is a question of uestion of world peace ly a moral, or senti- dominating and not A t1'ee whose hungry mouth is prerti must have it' Of we' who are th - v ' ' f Against the earth's sweet iiowing breast A tree that looks at God all day. Andi lifts l1er leafy arms to pray. A tree that may in summer wear A nest of robins in her hair. l'pon whose bosom snow has lain: lVho intimately lives with rain. Poems are made by fools like me. But only God can make a tree. the largest race of today. will in a ace supremacy. We W hundred years. lose our supreme seat in every internat'onal body. While the white people are warring against and the yellow races, which now m of the total population of the ear a11d closer together- While we are homes. pillaging each other's lands, youths by the millions in the horror races are rapidly growing in stre -Grace Crocker- common ideals. The cost in money 4 New Confections was enormous, but it cannot be COII the millions of lives. iVe may in from the pecuniary loss, but we cal our wouneled. nor life to our dead Recent discovery in complimentary closes found in an laid down their lives in that giga English I-B theme. Your aftfectionary cousin. ir wonder that the i11c1'ease in our when we over mere jealouses and d ach other, the brown ke up over two-thirds h, are drawing closer devastating each other's and slaughtering our of terrible wars, other gth by uniting under if the Great War alone tpared with the loss of a few decades recover never restore limbs to who for us, so willingly tic struggle. It is no Opulation is retarded, isputes send the flower

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Le Roy Central School - O At Kan Yearbook (Le Roy, NY) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

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Le Roy Central School - O At Kan Yearbook (Le Roy, NY) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

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