Tecumseh High School - Echoes Yearbook (Tecumseh, MI)

 - Class of 1935

Page 23 of 44

 

Tecumseh High School - Echoes Yearbook (Tecumseh, MI) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 23 of 44
Page 23 of 44



Tecumseh High School - Echoes Yearbook (Tecumseh, MI) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 22
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Tecumseh High School - Echoes Yearbook (Tecumseh, MI) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 24
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Page 23 text:

ECHOES OF 1935 VALEDICTORY Classmates and Friends: Tonight is the last time we shall be together as a group — the last time we shall meet under the direct supervision of our parents and teachers. Tomorrow marks a new era in our lives, and we should now try to look ahead and see what the future holds in store for us. Our lives are scoreboards, and tonight we all mark down our first score — the first score which will start us in our attempt to win the game. The plans we have made and shall make will determine the number of scores we can mark down to- morrow. If our plans are formulated carefully, we can be sure of winning the game; if they are made in a haphazard fashion, we shall no doubt fall behind and perhaps be forced to cheat a bit to meet the opposition of the world. We are the men and women — the citizens of tomorrow; we should plan our lives so that we shall have made the world a little better for our having lived in it. We realize that it is now time for us to take our lives into our own hands. Let us see how fine and clean we can keep these scoreboards; let us mark down only those scores which we have earned honestly, so that we can say we have won the game through fair play. We should attempt to develop our characters in order that we can abide by the laws of God and man to such an extent that we shall not have lived in vain. Alexander Pope said, A little learning is a dangerous thing. How true that statement is! With a little learning, we can do but a small bit toward developing our characters and aiding our country, but with a great deal of learning, we can meet the opposition of the world and accomplish great things. Many of us will not be able to go on to institutions of higher learning, but we know that all learning is not to be found in books. The world, outside of college, is full of things from which we can learn, if we only try to find them. Our search for education should not stop with a high school diploma, but should be inspired by it. If we cannot continue our education in school, we should seek out the partially hidden opportunities and learn from them. In doing this, we shall be mat king down many scores, the scores which will help us to win the game. Our class motto — Today we follow, tomorrow we lead — clearly illustrates what tonight means in our lives. Our parents and teachers have been leading us care- fully, and we have been following. Although we shall be influenced by their leadership, tonight stops our deliberate following, and begins our career of guiding. What we do with our lives now will determine whether or not we are good or bad guides; what we do will have a marked influence on those who look to us for en- couragement. Tonight let us all utter a fervent prayer, asking that we be good, strong leaders — leaders whom anyone would be proud to follow. MARY BELL Twenty-one

Page 22 text:

ECHOES OF 1935 Just a few words from the Staff Miss Allen says: When a man ' s word is law around the house, he ' s usually repeating what his wife said. ' Mary Brainard says: There are never any upsets in beauty contests, because they always come out according to form. Dorothy Babcock says: Be careful if you go out riding with a magician. He ' s apt to turn the car into a side road. Fay Munger says: Where can I get a nine shot revolver? I ' wanta ' kill a cat. Edna Breese says: Whenever some men see a belle, they aren ' t satisfied until they ring her. Fred Buchheimer says: The last word in motor cars usually comes from the back seat. Mary Bell says: If all the people who slept in church were placed end to end they would be much more comfortable. J. C. Heesen says: Do you recall the absent-minded professor who said, ' Now who was that girl I was going to try not to think of? ' Clover Guy says: If you ' re wondering what a Scotchman goes through before giving a girl a string of pearls, we ' ll tell you — the five-an-ten-cent store. Ray La Bounty says: Caution is a great asset in fishing, especially if you are a fish. Sally Heifman says: If looks could kill, most husbands would die with bridge cards m their hands. Frank Harris says: The heighth of foolishness is a dumb girl turning a deaf car to a blind date. Jeanne Allen says: It ' s not always what you know, but who you know. Henry Hamilton says: Another fellow who lives on the fat of the land is the girdle manu- facturer. Betty Anderson says: The modern girl believes in the survival of the Hippest. James Buck says: The distance between some people ' s ears is one block. Jean Crittenden says: If a golddigger will just stick to her knitting she ' ll eventually be able to pull the wool over some rich man ' s eyes. Maurice Tuckey says: One way to make a wife swallow her pride is insisting that she eat her own biscuits. Jack Wilson says: When a fellow gets so fat he can ' t get in a telephone booth there ' s no use talking. Twenty



Page 24 text:

ECHOES OF 1935 SALUTATORY By BETTY LINGER Members of the School Board, Parents, Teachers and Friends: Another June has arrived and it is again time tor a graduating class to depart from Tecumseh High School. Tonight marks a new era in the lives of fifty-eight young men and women, and we welcome the opportunity to extend cordial greet- ings to each of you who have come to this great event. Hitherto, our ships have sailed on a narrow and sheltered stream. Our lives for the most part have been quiet and calm because of the efforts of our parents and teachers to make them pleasant. We owe our sincere gratitude to them, for they have sacrificed at all times in order that our lives might be tranquil and happy ones. Often on this short voyage, we have been tempted to permit our fragile little ships to drift idly along the way with no apparent goal ahead, but we have been guided safely onward by our parents and teachers. They have taught us that our aim determines our true worth, and that we cannot rise higher than our aim. They warned us against the dangerous sand bars and rocks on which our ships might have been wrecked had we not aspired to something higher and more worth- while. Tonight, we, the class of 1935, are going to christen a new ship and are going to set sail on a vast and unknown sea — the world. There have been failures in the lives of each of us, but this one success which we are enjoying tonight gives us re- newed hope, and so we venture forth seeking new worlds to conquer. Each of us will aim to do this with a greater degree of success than he has attained in his high school education. Each of us will strive to guide his ship in the direction which he most desires, and although by the time we anchor we may be separated by many miles, still our purpose is the same. Even if we do not reach our goal nothing will be lost if we have given our very best. What I aspire to be, And was not, comforts me. Before departing from Tecumseh High School, we glance backward at the things we have accomplished and look into the future to the things we shall do. We shall be confronted with many hardships and difficulties; our ships may be tossed many miles from their course, but we shall quide them safely back to their original route with great skill and care, because we know that somewhere in the sea of life there is success and that we must not anchor until we have attained that goal. A winner never quits, and a quitter never wins. As we pause for a brief time before launching our ships on this unknown ocean, I welcome the opportunity to wish you, dear classsmates, success and happi- ness. To our parents and teachers who have guided us so safely to this goal and who have prepared us so diligently for the future, I wish to offer thanks from the bottom of my heart. I hope you w ill consider your time well spent and I hope that you will feel through both words and actions my sincere gratitude. And to you, dear friends, who have also contributed a large part toward our success — to each and everyone of you, I bid you a most hearty welcome. Twenty-two

Suggestions in the Tecumseh High School - Echoes Yearbook (Tecumseh, MI) collection:

Tecumseh High School - Echoes Yearbook (Tecumseh, MI) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 26

1935, pg 26

Tecumseh High School - Echoes Yearbook (Tecumseh, MI) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 38

1935, pg 38

Tecumseh High School - Echoes Yearbook (Tecumseh, MI) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 12

1935, pg 12

Tecumseh High School - Echoes Yearbook (Tecumseh, MI) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 28

1935, pg 28

Tecumseh High School - Echoes Yearbook (Tecumseh, MI) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 41

1935, pg 41

Tecumseh High School - Echoes Yearbook (Tecumseh, MI) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 16

1935, pg 16


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