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Page 25 text:
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THE PILGRIM .LUIllllIIIIIIIllllIlllllIllllllllllIIIllllllIllllIIIIIllllllllIIIllllIIllIlllllIIlllllIllIIIllllIIllllllIIIllIIll!IIlllIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIIIIllIllIIIIIIIIlllllllIIllIIIUIIIIIllllIIIllllIIIlllIIllIlIIllIlllllllllllllllllllllll MOTION PICTURE REVIEW She Couldn't Take It Doubting Thomas G-Men The Iron Duke Lady Tubbs Les Miserables No More Ladies Orchids To You Public Hero No. 1 Alibi Ike Bad Boy Here Comes. The Band Under Pressure Freshman Love Captain Blood Red Heads On Parade Daddy Long Legs Little Caesar Mutiny On The Bounty Five Star Final Animal Kingdom The Milky Way Show Them No Mercy The Perfect Gentleman Dangerous The Chatterbox Mister Hobo The Man Who Knew Too Much When A Man's A Man Little Man, What Now? Here Comes Trouble You May Be Next The Singing Kid Last Outpost Age of Indiscretion The Big Broadcast Breaker of Hearts Broadway Melody of 1936 Crime and Punishment We're Only Human Pace That Kills Your Uncle Dudley The Good Fairy The Great Impersonation The Melody Lingers On Mr. Dynamite One Way Ticket Shadow of Doubt Traveling Saleslady Our Little Girl Forsaking All Others The Gilded Lily The Irish In Us Vagabond Lady We're In The Money Strike Me Pink Way Down East The Lady Consents I Dream Too Much The Payoif Go Into Your Dance Black Sheep The Daring Young Man The Farmer Takes A Wife The Flame Within Goin' To Town Goose and the Gander Hold 'Em, Yale Splendor This Is The Life The Public Menace These Three Don't Bet On Blondes Althea W. Bagnell Garuti, Gilman, Govoni, Goodwin Dr. Davis E. Belcher The Flunkers Vinnie Baietti Mrs. Raymond Proifetti Gildo Govoni Fred Zaniboni Basketball English IV Period IV Pete Secondo Mr. Bagnall Rose, Sarah, Neal, M. Fox Phil Chandler Mr. Romano No more homelessons Pilgrim Biology Lunch counter Incoming Freshmen Frannie Poirier Pat McCosh Comiie Bobby Hall Lamborghini Mario Garuti Matinzi Peter Peterson To dunk Webster Moores June Cneuter gender? High School days Room 11's assembly Tubbs Our Class Song Pupil vs. Teacher Faculty Homelessons Mr. Shipman Our oflice girl George Campbell Beauty Eternal Mr. Poluzzi OUT! Getting all our points, Betty Gardner Ruth Huntley Cap Whiting Pauline Viau M. Donovan Natalie Caldeira After the treasurer's report We're Graduating! Ward Clarke His graduation partner Spalluzzi Commencement Day T. Garuti Jacob Shwom Dicky Harlow Charles Barengo Kay Sampson For graduation clothes A Richard and Eleanor Our football squad Girls' Dressing Room School Days Tavares Arlene, Betty, Arlene Ruth Valler -willIIllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIllllllllIlllllllIllllIIIllllIIIKIIIIIIIlIIIllllllllllllllllllIIIllIIlIllllllllIIIlllllIlIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllIIIlllIIIIlllIIIlllIIIIllllllllIIIllllllIlllIlllllllllllllllllllllli
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Page 24 text:
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22 THE PILGRIM lIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllIIIIll!IIIIIIIIIllllllIIIIIIIIlllllIIIIIIIIlllIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllIllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIllllllllllllllIIIIIIIl!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE EJ Thoughts on the Advent of Commencement 2 KEEP CLIMBING I wandered in a land Where all was sunshine and joy. I lay down 'neath a shade tree- Where sleep o'ertook me and I dreamed. A mountain rose before me. On its sides, Youth was eagerly climbing. 'Twas the Hill of Success they were mounting With the Temple of Faith at the top. I saw one who was agile and eager And left his companions behind. He was Genius. When Pleasure and Pride beckoned, He lingered a while and his followers pushed on. I saw another climber who made his way along. He patiently moved each obstacle While keeping his eye on the top. He was Wisdom. He resisted the call of the sirens, While others forsook their paths And were led away to the huts Of Ignorance and the hovels of Misery. I noticed one of these abductors In her gentle, easy way, drawing More deserters to her innumerable court. She was Laziness. As I watched this endless crusade, I thought, How happy are they who ascend to the top! A being appeared before me. She looked at me, then spoke, Success may take thee to heights unknown, But I alone can lead thee to Happiness. I am Truth. As I reached out to touch her, my slumber was broken. The sunshine was gone, And the shadows of evening had descended On that beautiful land. ARLENE RAYMOND '36 PROSPICE As one who, cast above a cataract, Naught but a broken paddle for his guide, Tries wildly, futilely, to reach the shore, And failing, Hings it far aneld, to fall Among a patch of goldenrod, while he Shrinks down in his canoe and waits for death, The roaring growing louder in his ears, I gazed with trepidation on the road Which wound ahead of me up rocky steeps Impossible to scale without a guide. Alas, cried I, how useless all the toil And struggle of poor mortals bound to earth! The way is tortuous, and my eyes are dimmed From striving to see through the fog of life. Then spake a voice from out the blue of heaven: Do not despair, O mortal, for the way Is clear to those who put their trust in God! He is thy guide, however steep the path May seem to those who look for help in man! That is the lesson, Class of Thirty-six. Believe not you can self-suiiicient be - Strive not for selfish gains and men's acclaim - Seek to be guided on your way through life! Thus only will you gain the goal you seek: Thus only may you win divine. reward! . by I - PRIscILLA ROBERTS '36 THE RIVER E I stood before a wondrous map E And meekly watched its Maker 5 T1'3,C8 Olll' C0llI'S6. He spoke, 2 And pointed to the highlands: E The Class of Nineteen Thirty-Six 5 Began here where a multitude - z Five score or more - of tiny streams E Came together in their course E To form an ever-widening river. 3 His finger followed down the course 5 As in my mind I saw the shoals, E The rapids we had safely passed. c Again the great One slowly spoke: E Growing ever stronger, swifter, 5 You raced on toward a roaring torrent '- Where all the smaller streams unite. E Each single unit here is lost: : While mingling with the others, 5 Your class, too, joins the common Hood : To spread throughout the river. E I protested, ever hoping 5 My class would stay as one- E But from the map the Being turned E And calmed my fears by saying, E Even if those waters once divided E Shall never flow alone again E And your classmates soon to be parted 5 Perhaps shall never meet again, 5 The cherished mem'ries of these years E Will live forevermoref' E ELIZABETH BELCHER '36 E E THE SILENT MESSAGE E On a grassy knoll I lay and watched the clouds E Float silently across the blue expanse of skyg E Each seemed to know wherein his journey lay, 2 Intent, and questioning neither how nor why - E On softly-sa-ndalled feet they moved, and fal- E tered not, E As if each one were by its own ambition stirred E To heights of fame, here on this arching sky. 3 But, as I gazed, there rose a murmur in the Q breeze, E A hint of coming coolness everywhere, 5 And through the heaped-up clouds, the sun E Had disappeared, and sullen, burdened seemed E the air. E I must go, I thought, still I lingered there, E Content to glimpse anew each darke-ning cloud, E And while I dreamed, the sun, a golden proph- g ecy, E Shone through the haze, to gild each one more E fair. E So, class of nineteen thirty-six, may we Q Strive valiantly, by steadfast courage led, 5 Though strangely dark at times our way may E be F To persevere, nor fail to look ahead. 5 And through the years that God to us has given, E May We, inspired by higher, worthier things, 5 Not mourn the flight of passing time, E But toil, content, accepting what life brings. E vu E ' - , H ' DOROTHY PERKINS '36 E sflllIIllllllIllIillllflIIIIUIlllIIill!!IHIIIHIIIIIlIIlfllllILIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUllllllllllIllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIFIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIllIllllIllIIIIllllllllllllIllllllIlllllIllllllIIIIHIIIIIIIIIHIKIIIIE
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Page 26 text:
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24 THE PILGRIM LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT Continued from Page 5 To Miss Dowling: A wheelbarrow in which she may carry all her belongings to the new school. If it is snowing, however, she may send a requisition for a dog-sled. A -A To Miss Johnson: A pair ofcas- tanets to prevent wear and tear from snapping her fingers. 1 1 1 V To Miss Rafter: A pair oflfsfhoes, with cleated heels, to be used 'for -exact- ly the same purposes as usual. -,After all, shoes do wear out. ' To Miss Lang: An automatic desk- lifter-upperf' We realize that it is -ex- tremely difficult and annoying to reach down and get paper from those lower drawers. To Miss Wilberz' A Senior Latin class whose ranks contain at least one boy. A To Dr. Davis: A magnetic baton which will attract the eyes of our music lovers to prevent the embar- rassment of a Senior's booming bass voice cutting in upon a soprano solo. To Mr. Romano: A bright red scooter that he may police the study hall swiftly and effectively. - V To Mr. Packard: A class of budding Edisons and Einsteins who will gjnot claim that an ohm is a dwelling place To Miss Carey: A rocket ship,..that she may spend her week-ends Qawritlfiva- cations in France. We seek tofeinove the unpleasantness of mal de iiierl To Mr. Knowlton: Our regret that we did not meet him sooner, and our sincere hope that he enjoys being with us. To Mrs. Garvin: A hockey' team., j ust half as good as our girls made it .ppl To Miss Jacques: A French class with surnames that can easily be pro- nounced in French. We know how awk- ward it is to say Monsieur in flawless French and the last name . . . not. To Miss Coombs :fi A pair ofifwhlged sandals and a Western Union uniform in which to flit, appropriatelygfgvarbed, about the new school building'?o1fi-,her daily errands. ' To the Class of 1937: Our congratu- lations, and, we confess, ourpoorly- disguised envy sincefffit is to be the Senior class in the new school. COh, well! they'll see lots of us as HP. G.'s J. To the Class of 1938: Our hope that they can find enough outstandinglper- sonalities to serve as class ofiicers. To the Classof 1939: A Big Ben A: Qfirst it whispers, then it shoutsj, to awaken them in the morning now that their hours have changed. Signed, sealed, and mailed with a three-cent stamp from the luxuriously furnished ofiices' of ' Bulrushe, Bulrushe, Bulrushe, and Weed, and to be executed by whatever courageous soul deems it advisable. H-ereunto, whereunto, and whatunto, we have aiiixed our signatures: Alice the Goon A ' ' Jenny the Gink 3 ' Minnie the::Tewt Eugene thjegfeep , ,AWARREN BRADFORD '36 .DOUGLASS TUBBS '36 5llIIIIlIIllIIIlllllllllllllIllIlIIIllllllllllllllllllllllfiIllllIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE 2 CLASS SONG E 2 UP AND' ONWARD I E Friends and classmates, E E Up and onward! Q E Toward the goal E E That we pursue: g Q Forward ever, E E Backward never, E 5 Seek to make E E Our hearts more true. E E Bright the future E E Gleams before usj 5 Q We have youth- Q E Life's greatest prize, 5 E May its ' fervor E 5 Help to lead us, E E - Upward, onward, 5 - Ma.?!.'1w9 3535- E E Friends and classmates,-A 2 g Up and onward! ' ' E E Look not. back-fr ' 2 A To days goneby, ,Q : 5 Always forward : Q To the treasures E 5 which beside A 'V , E 5 Our path may, lie: ' E Q Reachinggupward-g X 5 5 Ne12er1llltZdwii11fdTd,5' ' QQ : : For tneeiw-briyntrgffi' f'l'fjj4 i E And not tive -dimj lf E E Let us keep' ' ' E 5 Our ,lives unsullied E ' T 'll h t E i we c an A E 5 Our triumph hymn. E - Friends and classmates, 5 E Up and onward! E E One gate has E E Been closed behind .' E 5 There are others 5 E Open to us, E E I f we strive E 5 With heart and mind. E E Shirking never, E : Working ever, : E Light illumines E E Souls that climb , E E Upward, onward, ' A E 5, Ever onward, ,' 5 E Till we conquer , 5 5 Even Time: M E E SARAH CLARK '36 E HIIIlIIlllIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllIIlllllllllllllllllllllf
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