Windsor Locks High School - Herald Yearbook (Windsor Locks, CT)

 - Class of 1922

Page 23 of 38

 

Windsor Locks High School - Herald Yearbook (Windsor Locks, CT) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 23 of 38
Page 23 of 38



Windsor Locks High School - Herald Yearbook (Windsor Locks, CT) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 22
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Windsor Locks High School - Herald Yearbook (Windsor Locks, CT) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 24
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Page 23 text:

THE HIGH SCHOOL HERALD 21 real pleasure of the World. Books like all true friends are ours forever. And so on through the years has our appreciation for literature been developed. Old age has no terrors for us now, because through reading we can still be transported to any condition or clime to which our fancy directs us; romance, travel, adventure. Every door is opened to us. It is simply the reali¬ zation of the Bible lesson, “Ask and you shall receive” “Seek and you shall find” “Knock and it shall be opened unto you.” Teresa Cerri, ’22. -(o)- AN ANCIENT SETTLEMENT Last year people from all parts of the country flocked to Plymouth to celebrate the three-hundredth anniversary of the landing of the Pilgrims. Here was the real beginning of our American nation. But his¬ tories deal so much with this point that we forget that other settlements of im¬ portance were made before this. As soon as a path had been found to the “New World,” Spain sent out ship after ship with men to explore, claim and settle the land in the name of their king. Following in the track of Columbus these early explorers landed in Mexico, and mak¬ ing the settlements there, their bases, pushed out in all directions. The rumor which led them to what is now New Mexico and Arizona was that some¬ where in that vast region to the north were seven cities richer in gold and wealth than anything that had yet been discovered. What is the country through w ' hich they passed? A desert, stretching far and wide; peaks often rising to a height of 12,000 feet, lofty plateaus, cut into by deep gorges, flat topped mesas of gorgeous coloring. By day the sun beat down on a parched land; at night the cool winds blew down from the mountains. On the higher elevations there were forests, but on the low, sandy deserts they found sage brush, mesquite and nu¬ merous varieties of cactus. Nearly a whole century before the land¬ ing of the Pilgrims at Plymouth the south¬ western part of our country was being ex¬ plored. In 1540, Coronado led an expedi¬ tion through this territory. Later several more explorations were made and though the search for gold was a failure, having bold, daring natures they braved the hard¬ ships and dangers of an unknown land in their quest. America has been known to white men for a few hundred years, yet occupation by the First American Families dates back to the dim ages. For centuries the Indians in¬ habited this land unmolested, and have left the evidences of their civilization to puzzle the archaeologist. On the ruins of two old Indian villages the foundations of Santa Fe were laid. As nearly all Spanish towns have a plaza, here it forms the center of the town around which the Spaniards built their Mission, the house for the governor and forts. It has had a history marked by hundreds of tragic, thrill¬ ing episodes. It was the center of Spanish and later Mexican government until it be¬ came an important military and trading post, under American supervision. The Indians resented the efforts of the white man to gain a foothold in this country. For a while they seemed peaceable but there was steadily growing an intense hatred against the invasion by the Spaniard. This was brought to a climax in 1680 when the Indians gathered their forces and besieged Santa Fe, killing many, while only a few escaped. Later a force was collected from the Spanish settlements farther south which came upon the Indians and subjugated them. The eighteenth century marked the com¬ mencement of overland traffic by way of the Santa Fe Trail. This had its starting point in Kansas, and across the plains and over the mountains the caravans found their way. They disposed of their goods here and car¬ ried back gold, jewels, hides and other mate¬ rials to the East. Santa Fe itself was a center for this trade. From there other trails led to California opening up this vast territory for development. In spite of fre¬ quent attacks from Indians and highway robbers, this trade continued with growing importance until replaced by the railroads about thirty-five years ago. Santa Fe still cherishes its old traditions. The Governor’s Palace, the scene of so much fighting, still remains, bearing on its walls the marks of many battles. Here, under American occupation, General Lew Wallace made his home while writing “Ben Hur.” There is a mingling of “Old Spain and New America;” the up-to-date city preserves the artistic Mexican and Indian style of archi¬ tecture. Old adobe houses may be seen with their out-of-door ovens as well as modern

Page 22 text:

THE HIGH SCHOOL HERALD 20 service. But how often do we hear this expression from men and women in almost any p rofession. “Oh, I would give a great deal if I could do that.” There seems to be an almost universal longing for a medium which enables us to get down on paper rapidly and accurately our thoughts and those of others. Shorthand is recognized not only as an indispensable time saver in business but an instrument of personal utility. And there is no reason why short¬ hand should not be learned by everyone who has any writing to do. Longhand is absurdly inadequate for many of the uses to which shorthand can be put outside of the voca¬ tional field. Tradition has decreed that college, pref¬ erably the classical college is the goal of all education and the energies of the public schools have been and are still largely directed to this end, practically ignoring the application of education to marvelously changing social conditions. But the colleges are recognizing the value of stenographic courses. The University of Georgia offers regular courses in shorthand and credit will be granted upon the completion of the com¬ bined shorthand and typewriting courses. The colleges are gradually falling in line in this matter of credit as well as giving the work a place in their regular programs. The Boston University has a course in Secretarial Science covering four years of study, with certain modifications of it pro¬ viding shorter course for those equipped to pursue them. Chicago University has also instituted such a course. A number of other univer¬ sities and colleges have definite high-grade courses in secretarial subjects. These schools are doing a much needed work. Stanford University and the University of California have each given shorthand and typewriting a definite place in their courses of study leading to the baccalaureate degree. We all agree that the power to organiz e, the power to conceive big objects and carry them out, the power to think thru to the end, to analyze, construct and reconstruct belong to the highest type of mind. We know that this sort of mind needs the biggest, richest, broadest sort of educational environ¬ ment to develop it to its fullest activity. Is there any question whether or not the vocational courses in our schools and col¬ leges do not in a large measure develop such a high type of mind? Francis Wallace, ’22. £ BOOKS AS FRIENDS. Ruskin has said, “A good book does for us what a true friend can.” Contact with books is the same as contact with friends. We meet a person, we glance at him, speak to him, and consider him in our minds, de¬ ciding unconsciously whether or not we like him. If he meets with our approval we inclu de him in our friendship list. It is thus with books. First we take a book from the library shelf. We look at the name, the author, the binding, and finally the type. Its main features appeal to us. Perhaps we glance at the first pages, recalling other books we have read and enjoyed by the same author. We read these first pages and en¬ joy them. Becoming interested, we read on. As our tastes develop an infinite number of new heros loom up to satisfy our insa¬ tiable thirst for literature. Quite as un¬ consciously as with first acquaintances we give our stamp of approval or disapproval. I am sure we can all remember the many happy hours of our childhood spent in living through the thrilling experiences and ad¬ ventures of beautiful “Cinderella,” brave “Jack the Giant Killer,” and demure “Little Red Riding Hood.” As we grew older, our book friends seemed to have grown with us. In real life we may not be surrounded by a host of charming friends at all times because our friends may be few in number whereas our moods are many. But in our world of books there is no such deficiency. We have the thoughtful friend to inspire us in our more serious and pensive moods, sug¬ gesting and guiding our noble impulses. For instance, Milton, speaking to us through his “Comus,” and Bryant inspiring us through his “Thanatopsis.” And too, there is the resourceful friend who cheers us when we are down-hearted, diverting our thoughts from our own troubles by all sorts of enter¬ taining and fascinating tales. Such a one is Mark Twain, whose “Tom Sawyer,” “Huckleberry Finn” and “A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court,” are tried and proven remedies for ennui. Again when our minds are dull, and life seems to drag along without much zest, such friends as Shakespeare and Dickens come to coax us out of our depression. What a world of exciting and interesting events they present to us! High School English has introduced them to us in “Macbeth” and “The Tale of Two Cities. These books set our imagi¬ nation to work and in work is much oi the



Page 24 text:

22 THE HIGH SCHOOL HERALD homes. On the streets appear the Indian in his blanket and moccasins selling baskets and beadwork; Mexicans and Americans; the burro with its load of wood, and the Ford. Today the forts are in ruin, the caravan is no longer seen, but still the city is sur¬ rounded by snowcapped mountains and the desert with all its silence and mystery. “Stretches of yellow, glaring sand, Gray dust smarting with alkali, Mesquite huddled on either hand, And a beaming sun-drenched sky. Creak of leather and clank of steel, Khaki village and sun-burned men, Rising clouds when the horses wheel Back to the camp again. Mess and gossip and drill and rest, Night and the white stars thickly sown, Moonrise over the ragged crest, And the coyote’s dreary moan. Hot gray rocks where the lizard runs, Skulking greasers in haggard bands, Swift brown horsemen, the click of guns, And a splash of blood on the sands.” Alice Morse, ’22. -(o)- WHY GO TO COLLEGE? In the period of Reconstruction in which we are now living, the need of big minds to guide the nations of the world stands out as of vital importance. As a result of the World War, all the nations of the earth have been thrown into a state of chaos with armies of unemployed and great busi¬ ness depression in every country. Men with an understanding of the seriousness of the situation are endeavoring to restore order and bring about the return to normal con¬ ditions. Who are these men ? Men from the uneducated classes ? No, they are men with college educations. Why have they been chosen to undertake the momentous task ? Because their education has made them fit. The ability to meet great crises nas been attributed to the results of a col¬ lege education and now I shall attempt, in a small way, to answer the timeworn ques¬ tion, “Why go to college?” Many people go to college with the idea of becoming a financial success upon the completion of their studies. We all wish to be prosperous but we should be prompted by higher ideals than the purely material. ’ One of the first things taught in college is the art of studying. We may all think we know how to study, but how many of us can really absorb the underlying truths of a subject and apply these to our daily prob¬ lems? No one faces the same problems as his neighbor since we were all created dif¬ ferently and each one must work out his own solution by good hard study. Educa¬ tion aims to teach us the best method of attack for those problems, and trains us to master all difficulties. The experience of four years of college life, under its ideal conditions, is a means of character building, and “character is the best diploma” we can carry with us into Life. Vice-president Calvin Coolidge, a graduate of Amherst College, in an address before a meeting of the New England Asso¬ ciation of Colleges and Secondary Schools said. “No one can examine the history of America calmly and candidly, and escape the conclusion that in its main features it has been a success. The foundation and sup¬ port of that success had its main source directly and indirectly, in the learning, the piety, and the reverence which American col¬ leges had been established to promote. They have been the great builders of character.” History is perhaps, the greatest of all studies, in that everything has its historical side. We learn that the people in the ages which are past, labored and suffered to discover Truth. Man realizes today what a privilege it is to live in this wonderful age of accomplishment when, through edu¬ cation and application, he can enlarge on the truths the scientists before him have dis¬ covered, and apply this fund of knowledge to his every-day life. Man lives according to his standards. His duties and responsibilities are increased with his increase of knowledge, but his ability to cope with these new cares is in direct ratio to his knowledge. So, dear classmates, let us cherish the education we have received in our high school course. Let us not be content to stop here, at the very threshold of oppor¬ tunity, but let us strive to go on with our studies, at any personal cost and sacrifice. Then too, we should encourage higher edu¬ cation for those who may come under our jurisdiction in the years that are to come, that they may be better men and better women, trained and equipped to face the keen competition which America must meet in order to keep her preeminent position as “Peeress of the World.” Marion Egan, ’22.

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