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Page 12 text:
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10 THE CHIMES tudes in ringing notes of loyalty this se lfsame defense of his school's principles. Now school is the time to show your school spirit. Pay your dues. Go to the games. Cheer your loudest. Defend your school. And show your loyalty by getting many subscriptions for the Chimes. You have heard the call Respond ! Herbert Dwyer, '30. THE SEA OF LIFE While sitting on the beach one day this summer, I found myself noting the differences in people, and their different reactions to the sea. There are young people and old ; there are good swimmers and those not so good; there are fearless and fearful, — all splashing about in the same great ocean. Some of the so-called swimmers are making remarkable headway with powerful strokes, but their strength lasts for only a short period of time, and when they gain but a few yards, they become tired and cease to swim. Then I see another group. It is a group of surf -bathers ; they are near the shore, splashing about and apparently having a wonderful time. And yet again, there are some who are trying to teach others to swim. Both parties seem to be struggling and swallowing several gallons of very salt water. The waves are quite high and a few of the swim- mers appear to be having great difficulty in getting past the section where the waves are breaking and the surf is too great to swim ; they seem to be waiting for a lull which never comes. Some are merely standing on the sand, looking at the water and wishing they had the courage to venture in. But worse than these are a few who have just extended their largest toe into the water and have withdrawn it to return and lie upon the beach. Then far out I see a lone swimmer ; his easy, sure stroke proclaims him to be a real swimmer. His progress is slow, but sure ; he is always pushing onward toward his goal. Let us consider. Can we not imagine that this is the sea of life? We are all splashing about in the same sea. The people who are such brilliant swimmers are those who start off with surprising celerity, but who, because of their great exertion, soon are tired and have to stop, and so lose out in this great swim. Then, there are the surf bathers. They are content with the mere surface of things. They find enjoyment in playing, whereas, they might find far greater happiness out in the deep, swimming alone. Those who are endeavoring to help others along deserve great credit; theirs is a praise- worthy lot. They will not only make their own lives more suc- cessful but will make others' lives better too. Theirs, perhaps, may be a hard lot and bitter, but in teaching others their experience will help them. Now we come to those who are
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Page 11 text:
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THE CHIMES 9 however, meant little in Edison's life. It merely meant that he would have to work all the harder on something else. Mr. Edison says, ''One secret of my success is my ability to spend years of siow, patient experiment on some seemingly trivial and uninteresting problem. It is the ever patient and sacrificing effort of men, such as Edison, which has brought this world out of the darkness of yesterday into the light of today. Gertrude Jones, '29. A PROFITABLE HOBBY John, who is in the grammar school and beginning to study history, asked his father to take him to different places of historical interest. His father got the camera and told him to come along ; and off they started. The place they visited that afternoon was very interesting and John snapped a picture of it. He returned home with an intense desire to learn all about it. John made a practice of visiting all the interesting historical landmarks until finally he grew so much interested in this that he made it a great hobby. Every week John would manage to visit something new. Sometimes he would go to the home of a great painter or a tomb of some great man. John became so much interested in these places that he studied, that when he was called upon to recite in class, he had a very good recitation. His hobby was profitable and helped to develop a good edu- cation. Can there be anything more thrilling than suddenly discovering that one's hobby is profitable as well as inter- esting? Helyn Matthews, '30. SCHOOL SPIRIT What this school needs is school spirit, — not the spirit that pays its dues and obligations when asked, but the spirit that pays before the thing is due ; not the spirit that gives ridicule and laughter to the person who has the seeming temerity to get up and ask the group to cheer, but a school spirit that says, ''Get up. We'll support you. We'll give you hearty cheers in- stead of cowardly jeers. There is a school spirit that conquers all obstacles, that en- livens a team, and that keeps a school in good community standing; but this school spirit cannot be made by one or two but must be fostered and developed by the whole student body. A student does not like to hear his school ridiculed. For example : A boy is walking along the street with another boy from a different school. The stranger may make a slanderous remark about the local school. Instantly it is taken up by the local boy, who bravely defends his school. This boy has school spirit in a slight degree. He will have the true school spirit in a high degree when he is prepared to screech to the multi-
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Page 13 text:
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THE CHIMES 11 trying to get started; those who are trying to get past the breakers. They are waiting for a lull ; their whole lives are at stake and yet they dare not venture forth. ''Nothing ven- tured, nothing have is still true. This may also apply to those who are trying to scrape up enough courage to even wade in. They are in a wore predicament than any ; they are afraid of life ! Then there is another group who, even in mildest terms, would be called quitters and cowards, those who having had but the slightest experience in life have become discouraged and dropped out of the race entirely. Finally, our thoughts turn to that swimmer, far out, breaking the waves, pressing forward. Are we not most interested in him? Does he not typify our ideal? Let us try our best to profit by the experi- ence of others ; let us be wise ; let us always be ready to lend a helping hand to a struggling brother; let us, each one, en- deavor to be strong, steady, successful swimmers on this great sea of life. Nellie Mitchell, '29. THE ADVANTAGES OF LIVING IN THE COUNTRY There is not a time in spring, summer, winter, or autumn when boys of the country are not enjoying themselves to the highest degree. In the spring when the buds begin to burst and the birds begin to flock in from the South, the country boy has the most exhilarating thrills to start out the year with. The trees and plants, like human beings, are starting a new life. All this calls him and when Saturday comes along, he leaves his studies and shoulders his fishing rod. On his way to the stream or pond he breathes in with zest the pure invigorating air, free from impurities. Perhaps when he passes a corner of a stone wall, he comes suddenly on a family of young skunks ; or while passing a bush, is startled with the sudden flight of a mother bird from her nest. As the spring slowly melts into summer, the water warms, and the flowers bloom. The swimming hole, free from factory oils and diseases, rings with laughter and the splashing of water by the boys. And after the swim, back to the garden pulling up weeds. Oh ! What life ! All summer long is spent in the great out-of-doors, boating, fishing, swimming, and gar- dening. Then follows winter. Though cold and boisterous it brings sliding, skating, and skiing, and the wonderful art of Jack Frost to cheer us. Though all life seems to be dead, we feel something in the air cheering us up with the remembrance of summer. Can you blame a boy when he says, ''Me for the country ? Charles Colman, '32.
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