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Page 12 text:
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STEELE SPOTLIGHT 7 EDITORIALS , IN 'Q .1-E, E 'I 'Qlq E 9:5 at-144 5 x s Q-,A lg 5 ll 4' ,5- 54 I?-kgs? x K 4 'Ee an S nl .fm . , , Ill .x v 5 - , ETS!! s f 3 'Q- . TQ: 9 ' x 2 94 . ,lil .. Y re ' w- .JU -q1PfQ::b.B' -ggi: QE..- Wim Cuz by Fun Homcomu IF I HAVE TIME There are four words in our language which, when put together, make an excuse we all find useful. How many times have we pos'tponed an obligation by saying, 'AI shall do it if I have time ? What a difference that little word if can make! Substitute for in its place and an entirely different thought is given: I shall do it, for I have time. VVhen one stops to think, he realizes that he really has as much time as others have, but that he isn't quite so smart as they in budgeting his leisure hours. We prefer to think ourselves superior, so we use that telltale word if, We who are in high school pegging away for endless hours, as we like to say, at les- sons, are always promising to do things by if I have time excuses. Many so-called stu- dents even put off their lessons because they think they haven't the time for them. Why do such people go to school at all? One might answer that they go to school to acquire cul- ture. It has been said that culture is what remains after everything one learns has been forgotten. The fact remains, however, that we cannot become cultured by forgetting something we have never learned. There are some seniors who will continue their studies in colleges next fall. How would these students get along with excuses in an institution where studying time is arranged and loafing is not tolerated? How far would those seniors go who will be trying their mettle in the business world? One can imagine a secretary telling her employer that she will write his letters if she has time! How many orders would an industrial execu- tive have, or how many clients a lawyer, if he were to put off orders and clients until he had time, in a very, very dim future, to attend to them? Are there many of us who really in- tend to act if a little time seems to drop around to call on us? You doubt it, don't you? Well, don't we all? Mary Frances Randall, '36. EXCELSIOR-EVER UPWARD Up, lad, up, 'tis late for lying: Hear the drums of morning play 5 Hark, the empty highways crying Who'll beyond the hills away ? A. E. Housman expressed a beautiful and universal sentiment in this quotation. It could well be directed toward the graduates of 1936. Our hopes are high, our aim is true. Nothing, except ourselves, can prevent our ultimate success in our chosen line of en- deavor. We have all had adequate opportu- nity to prepare for the tremendous task ahead. Whether or not we have grasped these opportunities, we alone are responsible. The job of moulding our future is ours alone. We can not count on anyone to pave the way for us, for the way is too rocky. If We can avoid the obstructions ahead, so much the better! If we can't, we won't give up. Our victory will be all the sweeter in the end for the difficulties we have surmounted. We should adopt as our motto that famous one of the state of New York, the one that has led it to a place of eminence in our great Union: EXCELSIOR-EVER UPWARD. Clay lies still, but blood's a rover: Breath's a ware that will not keep. Up, lad: when the journey's over There'll be time enough to sleep. Ted Levy, '36.
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Page 13 text:
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STEELE SPOTLIGHT CARL A7 ROBE ANDERSON 5545! 6 G R PAUL AN R . A, cf -9 DICE DER H ARY LEN ROBE ASH MUN QSSDX BETTY JANE AND!-:R CHAR TTIC FRANCES ANDERLE MARGARET ATTICK
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