North Andover High School - Knight Yearbook (North Andover, MA)

 - Class of 1945

Page 21 of 68

 

North Andover High School - Knight Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 21 of 68
Page 21 of 68



North Andover High School - Knight Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 20
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North Andover High School - Knight Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 22
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Page 21 text:

THE GOBBLER-1945 JOHNSON HIGH SCHOOL JUNE M. CHAMBERLIN June is a quiet little miss with a smile for everyone. She is only five feet two, has blue eyes, and a brown feather cut. In her spare time she sews and cooks. Her ambition, how¬ ever, is in the business field. PHILIP RUGH Quiet Phil spent many of his happy hours at Hampton. In the few months he stayed with us we liked him. Good luck to him in the Navy. DAVID PICKLES Ass’t Sports Manager 3, 4 Dave’s a friendly carefree sort of fellow who is a little shy where girls are concerned. He left us at the half year to join Uncle Sam’s navy. Our loss, their gain. SALUTATORY □ N behalf of my fellow students present tonight and those who are now in the service of their country, I wish to extend a sincere welcome to the School Committee, to our principal, Mr. Hayes, to the faculty of Johnson High School, and to the parents, relatives, and friends who are present this evening. Racial Tolerance From all sides voices are raised to urge on our leaders to secure unconditional surrender. Nazi barbarism, and the treatment of the Jews are only two of the arguments raised against the Germans. I have never seen any Nazi barbarism. I could only repeat stories you have already heard. But before we condemn the Germans for their acts against the Jews, I would suggest we clean out our own back yard. The proverb, “People who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones,’’ applies to the American people as a whole. Democracy is our ideal. That is the purpose and entire aim of the war for most of the American people, and yet we permit race riots and racial discrimi¬ nation through the entire country. No one section can be blamed. It is a com¬ mon failing. Negroes compose approximately one-tenth of the citizens of the United States, and approximately three per cent are Jewish. Negroes find that there is a great deal of job discrimination in both the North and the South. If jobs are scarce, it is almost impossible for them to obtain a position for which a white is in competition, and the jobs which they do secure almost entirely consist of menial tasks. They are even denied the right, except in rare cases, to rise from the social and economic caste to which they are born because they are unable to plead their wrongs with a labor union 17

Page 20 text:

THE GOBBLER-1945 JOHNSON HIGH SCHOOL EUGENE F. BOHNWAGNER Gene has brown eyes, dark brown hair and tan complexion. He likes swimming and hunting. He reads westerns. Gene is interested in avia¬ tion and wants to go to aeronautical school. LeROY W. MARLAND, JR. Gobbler 4 Roy is the sportsman of Johnson. His favorite haunt is any brook where the fishing is good. He is also a smooth dancer. ETHEL A. RAITT Journal 4 Drum Majorette 1, 2, 3, 4 Gobbler 4 Ethel has blue eyes, brown hair, and is of average height. She enjoys swimming, camping, playing the pi¬ ano, and reading Ellery Queen books. ELIZABETH M. RIEDEL Betty, one of the tiniest members of our class, is very quiet. Her favorite pastimes are reading mystery stories and playing the piano. IRENE M. COSTELLO Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4 Basketball Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Journal 4 (Sports Editor) Gobbler 4 (Sports Editor) Renie loves to swim, dance, and play basketball. She will make a nifty physical ed. teacher. THOMAS CRABTREE Football 2, 3, 4 Prom Committee 3 Tom was the football team’s spark plug. He didn’t care too much for the fair sex (?) but was a good all around guy. CLAIRE F. DORAN Gobbler 4 Glee Club 4 Girl Reserves 1 Claire has brown eyes, uses dark lipstick, wears her brown hair in a feather cut, and is always well- groomed. She is always happy, and, I might add, always talking. Lots of luck in the Cadet Nurse Corps, Claire. ROBERTA P. HUTTON School Play 2, 3 In addition to her friendly smile, Bobby has pretty black hair, spark¬ ling brown eyes, and a peaches and cream complexion. Need we say more? STEWART P. WILSON Gobbler 4 (Business Manager) Football 2, 3, 4 Baseball 2 Basketball 2 Stewart is talkative, brown-eyed, and likable. He likes to listen to opera, and read and write mystery stories. We hope to read some of his stories in the future. THERESE H. ENAIRE Girl Reserves 3 Gobbler 4 Even though Terry is our class baby, she is always willing to lend a helping hand. She likes dancing, but her recent operation has put a damper on this. Terry would like to be a sec¬ retary. 16



Page 22 text:

THE GOBBLER-1945 JOHNSON HIGH SCHOOL and secure justice in better jobs, better working conditions, and higher wages. They are denied the right of membership in a labor union. In some parts of the country, particularly the South, the Negroes are segre¬ gated from the whites. They are forced to live in small Negro settlements. These areas are so badly congested, the recreational facilities are so run down, and the associates met are so bad, that it is not surprising magistrates declare, “They are unruly, and overflow the courts and jails.” Living quarters, recrea¬ tional space, parks, hotels, amusement houses, railway coaches, street cars, and even churches are plainly marked,“For Negroes Only,” or “No Negroes Allowed.” We talk about the injustice of German law, but never consider the injustice of American law as applied to the Negro. Actually hundreds of Negroes have been lynched or sentenced to death by good, sound, honest citizens for “Talking back to a white man, testifying against whites, destruction of property, threat¬ ening to sue a white man, and allowing dogs to chase white men’s sheep.” True, many of these lynchings and sentences of death were carried out in the heat of anger and mob violence, but our American law provides for an unprejudiced trial by jury, and protection while under the custody of the agencies of Ameri¬ can law. Negro suffrage was obtained by Abraham Lincoln, but, in some states, it is practically impossible for a Negro to vote. He is required to pass educational qualifications and tests which are not applied to any of the whites. In the words of Langston Hughes, a negro poet, the Negro frequently “must pay taxes but refrain from going to the polls, must patriotically accept conscription to work, fight, and perhaps die to regain or maintain freedom for people off in Australia, when he hasn’t it himself at home.” In certain quarters the Jewish find it just as difficult to obtain work as the Negroes. Hotels and residential districts refuse to permit Jews to room or live there. Then there are the propaganda agencies which start whispering cam¬ paigns to prejudice us against the Jews. They maintain that the Jews are in control of big business; that they own a large section of the press; that they exert a great influence over public opinion; and that they are very powerful in the government. The magazine “Fortune” recently made a survey which proved conclusively that with only a few exceptions, such as the clothing busi¬ ness, the industries are in non-Jewish hands. If asked my opinion for the reason behind the prejudice against the Jews, I would reply, “Jealousy.” The Jewish range, like all races, from the very poor to the enormously wealthy. They make their money and increase it by thrift, economy, industry, and frugality. That is their privilege, and most Gentiles could learn a hard lesson from the Jew’s unceasing industry. We should not condemn the Rothschilds and Bischoffscheims any more than we are willing to condemn the Rockefellers and the Astors. With such events as these race riots and racial discriminations taking place commonly in our own dearly beloved democracy, I do not think we have any room for criticism. Mr. Eric Johnston states, “Race hatreds and group intolerance simply do 18

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