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Page 8 text:
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I, J J J J I, J J (L J I Foreword 1 t 1 t i } } } J. I I r r r j j (L I lie ( ' .lass of 10 7 ' oled to iniblish a Yearbook as a reminder of the four years of work and pleasure which we have enjoyed at Wakefield I ligh School. The Staff has given much time to the project represented by I Mb OKACLli. In later years, our classmates will desire, perhaps, to return for a few moments to the school life which is now drawing to a close. If this book can in any way gratify this wish, or can make some dark day brighter, we, the staff, shall feel highly repaid for our efforts. In perpetuLim. frater, a e atque vale!” X ' lNCENT R. Collins Work and Win Our class motto. Work and Win,” is an excellent one to remember and to try to live up to. not onl ' through our school years, but all through life. Nothing in this world is ever won, nor are any goals ever gained without work. Throughout our school-ilays we have labored for an ideal — graduation! Now it is won, and another should be chosen and worked for until it also is obtained. The rewards of work are well worth the time and efforts spent to procure them. If we are tempted to achiex’e our ambi- tion in other ways, we must not ’ield. W ' e shall be prouder of our prize if we have stri ’en for it. The glory of work is that no matter how high upon the ladder of success we climb, we can always find opportunities to go higher. Sometimes the future may look dark and full of trouble, but continue working and the sun will soon shine through just as brightly as e er. Too many times a little hard work is evaded; then failure is almost certain. Classmates, do not shirk! For success, keep constantly in mind our motto, Work and Win”. ’ivL N Cook, ’37 1 r (p (T n Page Four
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Page 7 text:
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G i= J ) i J) J) J J; J I, J J (L .( r ' - ' .( r -.(r ' r ' ' ' r,f r ' ' V ' .( r . ' Jr ' . r ' - 1 : Yearbook Staff Rditor-iu-Chiel ' lNCENT R . Coi l INS Associate Editors IvosEMARiE D. Batty Albert Arsenault Nancy 15ro vn Anne Burke I.AWRENCE Burns P in ' Li.is Collinson Vivian CA ' iok liDITU CiLUECK W alter LeBlanc Ernest L.obacz Kiciiard II. I5ridge ssista nt Editors Helen Lo.mbard JOSEEIIINE .McCjRATH Myrtle Oliver Flora Pal.meter I vuPERTiA Plummer Paul Sa lip ante Eleanor Seablry Marion Shanahan 1)RENDA StURGESS Ehotoi ra p h A! a nager Pierre Hartshorne E acuity Adviser Bernice E. CP s vell Business Staff Lance C. Ballou E. Burnham Davis William Kimball Robert Ramsdell Special typists Doris Anderson ■Mary Baril Rosemarie Batty Florence Blair Charlotte Chelman Mildred Cjiristenson Alice Eral ' Ghton Dorothy I Iarti.ey Helen Hariley Helen Lo.mbard ' ( A r ' 1) T r A ( A r ’ A ? A A A A A ). 1 J J (L J J I, J I, J J I, J J J J I, J J I Page Three 1 r
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Page 9 text:
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Our Future I ' it ' ty out of our graduating class will go to some other schools, col- leges, and uni ersities; about thirty more of us have really well-formed plans for what we are to do after graduation. Ifut what about the others? b ' or them there are two choices: to begin now to make plans and to wt)rk to realize those plans, or to flow onward with no purpose in mind; to pick up aiiN’thing that presents itself and to drop it when it becomes burden- some. Is yours going to be one of those names which, when your former comrades glance through this record, will be skipped with a passing glance and the thought that you haven’t amounted to anything ' el ? Or will you be one whose friends are proud to say that they knew ' Ou in high school ? Between these two levels is the place where the majority will fall. Let each one of us do his honest best to be above the average, and our class, the Class of 1937, will set an example for every subsequent graduat- ing class to emulate. Rich.xrd 11. Bridge, ’37 Work and Win ' Back in our junior year, during a class meeting, why did we vote overwhelmingly for the motto “Work and W ' in ? The thought foremost in our minds was to choose a phrase that was short, snapp g and simple, yet one which would express our objective in such a way that we could easily remember it. In this we succeeded. But there is something more to a motto than the remembrance of it — a fact which most of us have over- looked. That is, obc ioLisly, its meaning. Word hv word, let us analyze “W ork and Win . “W ' ork” means simply to labor, either mentally or physically; “and” implies that there is more expressed in our objective than mere toiling; and the key is “Win”. The result of our work is what we must never lose sight of. As we have expressed in our motto, may it always be to “win’’ o er e ery obstacle we meet. Rich. rd II. Bridge, ’37
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