Paris High School - Chronicle Yearbook (South Paris, ME)

 - Class of 1956

Page 34 of 92

 

Paris High School - Chronicle Yearbook (South Paris, ME) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 34 of 92
Page 34 of 92



Paris High School - Chronicle Yearbook (South Paris, ME) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 33
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Paris High School - Chronicle Yearbook (South Paris, ME) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 35
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Page 34 text:

32 TH E CHRONICLE SCHOOL DAZE Oh, June of 1957, I hope you'll soon be here. I'm tired of education, For I've studied many a year. In math I've worked to solve for X, Or maybe Y or Z, Though what can be the use of it Is more than I can see. In French I've tried to parlez-vous . Mistakes made my face red. A Frenchman would be mystified To know what I have said. Those essay questions in hist'ry Were really my great despair. I've thought and thought and and writ, But much of it's been hot air . writ My English I thought was easy. It never caused me much fright 'lill during my vacation A poem I had to write. When it's June of '57, And I think I'm through with kno-wl- edge, I'll find it's futile after all, For I must go to college. Stephen Hicks '57 JUST LIKE A MAN! Quote: A man may work from sun to sun, But a woman's work is never done. Up at dawn to do the mopping Hurry home - from my shopping. Dust the tables, lamps and chairs. Lightly scrub the cellar stairs. Make the beds and shake the rugs. Flit the crevices for bugs. Plan a menu. Start the meal- Always those darn vegetables to peel! Set the table and - oh, yes! Not to mention bathe and dress. I dare you, husband dear, again to Say, What'd you do today? Carol Moffett '56 COMPLAINT Ah, that I could take a thought And hold it in my hand And turn it into shining words! No one can understand The aching of this heart in me Because it cannot build With simple, commo-n well-used words A poem! Learned and skilled In the art of making verse Though I'm supposed to be, Can no one teach me how to turn Verse into poetry? Anita Chase '57 oH, swam LIFE Alas, this grim portray of life, Of dull routine and mortal strife Has ceased. It will no longer be. The man is dead, his soul set free. But he has not yet found the peace, With which his death he hoped to lease. For he, poor man, was led astray, They save for him, another day. He will be born to live again, To earth, this poor man they'll send. He'll moan and groan and sigh and Cry, For it doesn't pay to ever die. Robert Moorehead '56 SNOW The snow is falling through the air, Among the trees and everywhere, Covering roads and creeks and lanes, And peeking in the windowpanes. It trims the gray fence rails in frills Turns the haystacks into fleecy hills, Gives all the posts round wooly caps And fields white aprons for their laps. Janice Reynolds '57

Page 33 text:

'TH E CHRONICLE 31 TOO LATE It was raining again. To John Ma- son it seemed to rain continually with- out any sign of ceasing. He turned up the frayed collar of his coat against the cold and tried to remember when he had last seen the sun. His head whirled as the memories returned. He thought of Bermuda with its sun- ny beaches and starlit nights and he recalled his honeymoon and the hap- py hours there with Jane. He felt sick with longing as he pictured her again. She had been dead ten years now, or was it eleven? It could be even more for he had not kept track or time. He could o-nly remember the day he had been called to the war- den's office. Jane had died of shock shortly after he had been imprisoned. He fought to stop the past from returning and raised his head into the rain. Ahead were the lights of a shabby diner. How long it had been since he had eaten? Somewhere in the night were the noises of the peo- ple living in the delapidated apart- ment buildings. A wife yelling at her husband, a child crying, and other noises that echoed through the clutter- ed alleys. The memories returned and his thoughts wandered to the trial. He remembered the headlines scream- ing of a young lawyer's dishonesty. Life had been full before that and the future had looked even brighter. Then came the bombshell. He was ac- cused of embezzling more than one hundred thousand dollars in company funds. Everything was against him. He had ready access to the Fullbright Sz Laughton Law Firm. The books were also available to him and they had obviously been tampered with in an effort to cover up the crime. He had spent many hours working late at the firm alone and he was held responsible. The trial was quick and was follow- ed by a sentence of ten to twenty years. After eleven years he was re- leased but ruined and he looked to the bottle for consolation. Now he walked slowly through the slums in hope of finding a meal somehow. A pain in the pit of his stomach no-w added to the constant pain across his chest and he decided to find a place to rest. It was still raining when he sat down on a vacant stoop. The pain was sharper now and he closed his eyes as if to shut it out. If he could only see the sun. This thought brought a smile to his lips. How stupid could he be? It was night and he co-uldn't even see the stars. With this thought he fell asleep. In the morning a bright sun was shining down on the stoop where John Mason lay. A look of peace and con- tentment was on his face. Not even the yelling of a newspaper boy awakened him as he shouted, Extra! Extra! John Mason cleared in Em- bezzlement case ! The article went on to say that the firm's bookkeeper had been caught in absconding with more funds and had confessed to the first crime. It told of efforts being made to find the lawyer who had been miss- ing since his release from prison but as yet, no trace of him could be found -David Irons English IV, THE REASON WHY He died because someone must die. Whenever wars are fought. Because in war someone must lie, And bleed in pain and rot. 3 Ask him for the reason why, Ask any of his sort. They will not tell you, but they might If dead men could but talk. Robert Moorehead '56 l



Page 35 text:

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Suggestions in the Paris High School - Chronicle Yearbook (South Paris, ME) collection:

Paris High School - Chronicle Yearbook (South Paris, ME) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Paris High School - Chronicle Yearbook (South Paris, ME) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

1957

Paris High School - Chronicle Yearbook (South Paris, ME) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

1958

Paris High School - Chronicle Yearbook (South Paris, ME) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959

Paris High School - Chronicle Yearbook (South Paris, ME) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 31

1956, pg 31

Paris High School - Chronicle Yearbook (South Paris, ME) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 54

1956, pg 54


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