Leavitt Area High School - Angelus Yearbook (Turner, ME)

 - Class of 1944

Page 15 of 52

 

Leavitt Area High School - Angelus Yearbook (Turner, ME) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 15 of 52
Page 15 of 52



Leavitt Area High School - Angelus Yearbook (Turner, ME) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 14
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Page 15 text:

LEAVITT ANGELUS 13 HONOR ORATION To each of us our motto has a dif- ferent appeal, according to our tastes and abilities. To most of us it means out of school into life's school of business, and with that point of view in mind, I think first of an old saying, Beginners cannot be choos- ers . What we need is experience. No matter how hard the task we under- take, the success depends upon our own efforts and initiative. There are, without doubt, a few abilities and skills which We should cultivate if we expect to be success- ful. Among these is that of self dis- cipline, which is very valuable for each one of us to possess. Upon accepting a position, we should not think about the job in it- self but consider it in relation to the business as a whole. We must real- ize what our Work means in connec- tion with other departments. No mat- ter how small our job may be, it plays some part in the whole scheme. If we are able to fill a small position steadily and efficiently, We shall be more capable of handling a larger one when the opportunity offers it- self. We must cultivate an interest and liking for whatever we are doing. If We put all our attention on our work, we may be surprised to see what a difference it will make in our whole attitude toward our position. We shall feel that our job is as im- portant as that of the next person. Wherever we are placed, there will be things about the oHice and work that may not please usg things that are distasteful and difficult. Self dis- cipline demands that we force our- selves to do our work satisfactorily? give the best that we have in usg never be satisfied with work t'hat is half done. We may never be praised for the good Work we have done, but there is the satisfaction which accompanies a task well performed even though others do not tell us about it. In other words, let's not give up if the going doesn't always seem smooth. Rather, let's go on and con- quer. If there is in us a feeling of inse- curity and lack of preparedness, now is the time to do something about it. With the splendid educational oppor- tunities which we have, there is no reason why we cannot improve our- selves. It may be impossible for some of us to continue as we wish, but busi- ness is a broad field. and there are night schools which one may attend a few nights a week for a small fee. Of course, one must have some recrea- tion and rest, but along with this we should plan to improve ourselves. It has been done by many who have cared enough about their future ad- vancement to make a determined ef- fort. To sum up we should be alert and learn all that we can. Success in a smaller job soon leads to a more im- portant one. Then no doubt some- thing better is likely to develop. We will do our best to remember that the only way in which one may obtain success is through his own earnest efforts. Crystal Reed. l..-0...-1. PROPHECY FOR GIRLS One afternoon in the last week of March, I strolled off into the depths of the woods where I could be alone to peer into the future and discover what might take place in the year 1950. Then out of a chaotic mental confusion, a panorama was unrolled before my eyes. Within the haziness of my vision I could plainly see, rush- ing before me, the classmates with

Page 14 text:

12 LEAVITT ANGELUS In closing: It has been through your help, guidance, and friendship, and the mercy of God that We have been able to go on from day to day, struggling to overcome the trials that are always awaiting one. Through your help, We have been able to reach, at least in part, the goals of education. It is because of your ef- forts that we are here today. As we leave school life for life's school, let me say once again to everyone of you: Welcome to our graduation exercises. Esther Dunn. 1-...O-.-.T HONOR ESSAY Out Of High School Into Life's Military School Time was when an innate noble of the Dark Ages could hire a profes- sional army to fight his bloody bat- tles. However, as time went on, the poorer classes of men filled the ranks of the nation's armies, while its no- bility contributed the officer mate- rial. World War 1 changed this pio- ture in many respects, so that no longer were battles confined to small armies on small battlefields, and no longer was the man with the gun the only combatant. Then Whole na- tions were mobilized and, to some ex- tent, civilians were also actual com- batants. Our people fought this war with t'he earnest hope that it would make the world safe for democracy. After twenty-one years of peace, the barbarous German armies once again started on the road to world domination. Their march into Poland in September of 1939 touched off the powder keg of Europe which explod- ed with a force never equaled in his- tory. Peace was no more. True, there were a few nations like ourselves that tried to take a neutral stand but this status lasted for a compara- tively short time. Whether it would advisable to enter have been more the War in '39 or to wait for the war still being debated. to come to us is However, all our debate on the pro's and con's of entering the war was settled for us by the Japanese War Lords . On that fateful Sunday af- ternoon of December 7, 1941, t'he ar- guments were closed. We were at- tacked while their peace emissaries were in Washington discussing ways and means of keeping Japan and our country at peace. The yellow Devil sons of Nippon gave us but one choice and to this day, I think, we have nobly met their challenge. For the greater part of us fellows who are graduating from Leavitt this June entering the military sen- vice seems to be our chief goal. Last year at this time, it seemed reason- able to our military leaders that older men than ourselves could speed this war to a successful conclusiong but, lessons to the contrary have been taught us on the world's battlefields, lessons which have cost us precious American blood. America needs young men to fight its battles. It is only the younger men, those from 18 to 26 years, who can best carry this war to our enemies with the violence and velocity that today's all out war demands. And so as we reach the age of eighteen and go before our draft boards to discover who s'hall serve on the battlefields and who on the home front, we do so with the hope that by putting our shoulders to the wheel and by working with all our might we may bring to our land the long hoped-for peace and may preserve our threatened freedom for ourselves and our posterity. Edward Murphy.



Page 16 text:

14 LEAVITT ANG-ELUS whom for the past four years I have struggled onward to the ultimate vic- tory of this graduation day. Natural- ly there were some of the boys of the class in my vision but the only ones in whom I was interested were the girls. ' Suddenly it seemed as though I were traveling from place to place in some kind of a fantastic rocket-pro- pelled plane, and had just perceived ahead of me an airport at which I was scheduled to land. Upon landing, I discovered that I was in New York City. Then I saw coming toward me ,L group of spectators among whom was one of my former classmates at L. I., Laura Timberlake. She was clamoring for news as she had re-- cently become a news reporter on the Metropolitan Daily Planet, after her period of service in the WACS. This was not surprising for she had al- ways had, in the good old times, a nose for news. She told me that she had just come from the Navy Nurs- ing School where she was seeking news, and had met Shirley Bempkins, who completed wi-th flying colors the Nurses' Course. I was glad to hear this, for it had always been her greatest desire. As I had to stay over night at one of the hotels in New York, I chose the Ritz. Whom should I meet but the wife of one of the most prosper- ous hotel owners, Elaine Gilbert Lit- tlehale. The passing years had changed her somewhat but she was still the Elaine Gilbert I had known at L. I. After a good night's rest in one of Ameri'ca's softest beds, I woke at 5 a. m.g and after a hearty breakfast, I came out on the street and hailed a taxi which, I soon discovered, was driven by Nellie Gordon, who, I am told, had sometimes driven the Leav- itt bus. She engaged me in conversa- tion during which she explained how she had acquired the job. She said that after two years of driving for the Maine Central Bus Line she had been transferred to the more impor- tant job of taxi driving. When I reached my destination, the airport, I got into my rocket ship and headed for Florida. Upon arrival I was greeted by Airline Hostess Esth- er Dunn, who was about to take off for Chicago on one of her daily runs. She informed me tlhat her good friend, Celia Russell, had been very successful in her Nurse's Aid Course at the Chicago Hospital, and that she was to be transferred to regular duty in a week. I was not a bit surprised to find that those classmates had such good positions, for Esther was al- ways a quiet person, and Celia very determined. I don't know w'hy my instinct should have guided me so, but as I was walking downtown on the Tampa Boulevard, I went past a beauty salon which bore the sign above its door, Norma Roberts, Beauty Expert . As I entered the front door I saw the ex- pert herself at work. She said that in a month she would be on her way to a Hollywood Studio to work on male movie stars. She used to be quite a Star Gazer at L. I. After a good look around I took off again and landed in San Francisco at 12:00 o'clock noon, I hailed a cab and went to an overtown restaurant which I discovered was operated by a former soldier, who had returned from overseas duty, married Barbara Hathaway, and established himself in the restaurant business with his wife as the cook and Helen Williams as treasurer of his company. After one of Bab's excellent meals and a friendly chat, I decided to return to the Auburn Airport. I arrived there at sunset and found that Crystal Reed Murphy, wife of chief mechanic

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