Woodstock Collegiate Institute - Oracle Yearbook (Woodstock, Ontario Canada)

 - Class of 1946

Page 31 of 104

 

Woodstock Collegiate Institute - Oracle Yearbook (Woodstock, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 31 of 104
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Stories and Essays o The House of Tomorrow We are entering a new agel lt is one of atomic energy, modern inventions, huge in- dustrial developments, and the planning of a world peace. All this is of great import- ance to the average housewife. War brought many women out of the kitchen, and the assembly line taught them to appreciate ef- ficiency: consequently they are vitally con- cerned about the House of Tomorrow. What will it be like? The modern kitchenfworkshop of the home, is a housekeeper's paradise. An el- ectric dish washer is a very important feat- ure. How much time and drudgery one of these eliminate. The refrigerator has re- volving shelves which enables the house- wife to see instantly just what she wants. There is no need to remove all the contents to reach that small dish of fruit in the very back corner. And the Presto Cooker! That is why Mrs. Housewife can have a delicious dinner prepared in such a short time. Vege- tables are cooked in two or three minutes and a roast is ready in much less than an hour. The living room is really full of sur- prises. Push a button, a glass wall changes its position, and there you have a new room! It can be made larger or smaller as you wish. The furniture in the room is of metal or plastic materials that stand up under any number of jitterbug parties. Remember how the old furniture used to look even more worn than usual after a iam session by the teen-age crowd. The wall next the garden is completely built of glass, perhaps, and there are no chilly draughts either. For a cozy evening by the fire, the housewife just draws the easily-cleaned glass curtains. Many other improvements are revealed in the modern house. lt is lighted throughout by fluorescent lighting which eliminates glare. The bathroom has non-skid tubs and showers. There are no heavy wool blankets on the beds. ln their place are light, electric- ally heated ones. The furniture in baby's nursery is unbreakable. Crayon marks on the walls can be removed with soap and Twenty-Six water without doing any damage to the sur- face. There might even be a Baby Tender! The modern house is built for the family rather than have the family adapt itself to the house. It is aplace where young and old can work, play, and entertain their friends. Edgar Guest said,- lt takes a heap o' livin' in a house to make it home. The House of Tomorrow is, indeed, a home. Isobel Hart l3B. My Native Land British Columbia, my beloved native land, is the third largest province in the Dominion. The wealth of the fruitful Okana- gan Valley, the yields of mines and fisher- ies, the snow-capped Rocky Mountains, the humming industries of Vancouver, Canada's largest Pacific port, and the pulp and paper towns of the coast are all well-known. Nat- ure in her grandest mood, paints the beauty of towering mountains, dense forests, and mighty rivers. On Canada's Pacific Fron- tier the pride and vigor of the New World is revealed. There too is apparent sincere loyalty to the Empire. Two years ago l migrated east and adopted your province, Ontario, the land of treasure! Her wealth in nickel, copper, iron and gold, from mines whose names are world famous is beyond a king's ransom. Her rolling acres of tidy farms and wood- lots surround numerous thriving industrial cities. Power developed from the natural resources of Mighty Niagara plays a leading part in developing her industries. Besides the Great Lakes, thousands of acres of scenic parks invite an ever increasing flow of tourists to enjoy varied recreations. This is Ontariof-proud of her history and loyal to the traditions of true democracy. Perhaps you would be interested to hear of a few of the sharpest contrasts between my former school and yours-the high school tnot collegiate? where l went, with about two hundred. The pupils had only four grades, not five as we have here. ln it, our teachers moved from one classroom to another while the pupils remained in their home forms. I prefer the rotary system of W.C.I. as it adds variety to the day. I have noticed also sev- eral slight differences in curriculum. For THE ORACLE

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His adventures reveal that he was admired by the unfortunate from the Chilkoot Pass to Bucharest and Moscow. With lines borrowed from Robert Service, a friend of Colonel Boyle's, Queen Marie of Rumania fittingly sums up this man in the epitaph that she sent to mark his grave in England. A man with the heart of a Viking, And the simple faith of a child. Ioseph Thompson XIB Who Dare To Live Lt. Commander Frederick B. Watt, R.C.N.V.R. Exciting, dramatic, breathlessly interest- ing is Frederick Watt's odyssey-of those who go down to the sea in ships to serve their country in time of war. The book is dedicated to two close ship- mates of Lt. Commander Watt, who appear in the book in spirit urging him, and who, since its writing have been lost at sea. Among the early 'events in this war the poet mentions Dunkirk and then mentions later events as seen through the eyes of a merchant seaman. This book is one of all too few about Our Silent Service e-the Navy. Parts of it will remind you of that popular movie ln W'hich We Serve. On reading Who Dare To Live , others will recall The Wreck of the Iervis Bay . For a modern poem with life-like characters and suspense enough to keep your interest to the very last page, you will look long before you find another yarn to beat Lt. Commander Frederick Watts- Who Dare To Live . Ellen Moon 12A Latin America: Twenty Friendly Nations Latin America: Twenty Friendly Nations is an interesting book of special interest to students. It is well and beautifully illustrated, and contains maps giving detailed informa- tion about the different countries. The book is in three sections. The first, The Past to the Present , explains why the term Latin America is applied to the twenty countries which make up Mexico, Central and South America. lt goes on to tell the history of the Incas in South America and THE ORACLE the Mayas in Mexico and Central America and gives an account of the rule of force by the Spanish and Portuguese, the fight for in- dependence begun by Bolivar, and the struggle for democracy. The second part tells the stories of the wealth and progress of the twenty modern Latin republics. ln the third section entitled The Americas Learn to Work Together , the authors try to promote a better understanding between the United States and South Amer- ica. The three authors are Prudence Cutright, VV. VV. Charters and George I. Sanchy. Pro- fessor Sanchy wrote in the foreword that he hoped through this book the people who read it would become better acquainted with their neighbours to the south, and he closed with the Spanish phrase Hasta leuga, amigo , f So long, friends .l. Patricia Poole llA Frenchman's Creek Daphne du Maurier, famous for Rebec- ca and Hlamaica Inn, has given us another vivid romance in Frenchman's Creek, which is set on the wild south Cornish coast, during the Seventeenth Century. Impetuous and beautiful, Dona St. Col- umb suddenly rebelled against the empty life that occupied her time in London with a husband she had never loved, and fled to her husbands estate, Navon, in Cornwall. Free at last, she enjoyed the soft climate, the lazy hours, and the long walks in the after- noon. Her peace, however, was suddenly dis- rupted when, one afternoon she discovered that Narvon , was the refuge of a notorious Breton pirate. Impulsively, she signed her name to the ship's company. To reveal the story of the rest of that summer and its conclusion to those who have not read the book would be unfair. In this story, Miss du Maurier has matched, if not excelled, her other famous novels in swift tempo, suspense and vividness. Every chapter contributes to the greatness of this novel. Frenchman's Creek is a book, which the reader, having read the first chapter, will not wish to leave before he has read the last. Alena Cody-Williams 13A Twenty-Five



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instance, I formerly studied physics and chemistry simultaneously, instead of in sep- arate years. Here our annual field day is held in the autumn, but in my last school we held ours in May and had a May Queen cor- onation as part of that day's activities. Woodstock although a small city, is an ideal place in which to live. Woodstock Collegiate Institute is one of the best schools that I have attended and I hope to continue my education here until I graduate. Chiyoka Takeda 12A The Robot Bomb On the night of Iune 12, 1944, a lookout on the south coast of England heard a sound like a distant motorcycle engine. Looking up, he saw what appeared to be a small aeroplane with its tail on fire, coming inland at high speed and at a low level. This was the first appearance on the stage of history of the robot bomb, the weapon of the next war. The rocket, like many so called inven- tions, is not new to war. The ingenious Chinese used it centuries ago, and its use by the British in the Napoleonic Wars and the War of 1812 has been immortalized in the line, by the rocket's red glare . Warfare is a thing of which we are not proud. It is a stigma on our civilization. Nevertheless, warfare is a time of stimulated advance in many fields. This has been par- ticularly true of the field of science in the war just ended. Radar, new drugs, the full real- ization of the potentialties of the aeroplane, and many other things are a beneficial legacy to coming generations. The roots of all these forward steps lie back in the days of peace, and among them was the germ of the ideas embodied by the Germans in the robot bombs. Even before Buck Rogers and Flash Gordon , men speculated on the possibility of travel through the solar system. To this end, International Rocket societies were organized. The German government has always fostered scientific research and it carefully encouraged developments in the field of rockets. The Germans concentrated all their researches on the isolated Baltic is- land of Peenemunde. When war broke out in 1939, the Germans had advanced far THE ORACLE enough in this field for Hitler to boast of his secret weapon . Now the British were not altogether in the dark as to this secret weapon and soon discovered by good fortune and patient re- conaissence, the base at Peenemunde. It was decided that this viper's nest must be destroyed at all costs, and accordingly, on the night of August 17, 1943, 500 R. A. F. bombers devastated the island. Most of the technicians and scientists were killed and much of the models, equipment and data were destroyed. This single blow set back German research six months, and saved Britain as an invasion base for D-Day. British Intelligence kept the Allied Su- preme Command informed of German pro- gress, and even before the first bomb was launched against London, a great decision had been made. Rather than set forward D-day enough to capture the launching sites on the French coast before the Ger- mans could use them, it was decided to sac- rifice the city of London. As is was, constant Allied Air attacks, excellent defences, and Montgomery's breakthrough in Normandy, spearpointed by Canadians, combined to save London. The V-1, or buzz-bomb, was not a true rocket, and had only a limited range. Its successor, the V-2, was a true rocket and at the end of the war the Germans were almost ready to launch the mightly V-10 against North America. To those who say, it can't happen here note the following. On March 19, 1945, six U-boats put out to sea. They planned to launch robot-bomb attacks against the Atlantic Seaboard. Fortunately, concentrated efforts disposed of them all be- fore they could do their work. German scien- tists said that in six months they could have been bombarding America with the terrible V-10, enhanced by their own development of the Atomic Bomb. The next war, and we pray there will not be one, may be a Hpushbutton war . Buried deep in underground burrows, men will launch super rocket-bombs against each other. One such bomb may lay waste a whole city the size of Detroit. Defences? Radar could give only thirty minutes warn- ing of a bomb launched against us from across the Atlantic. A whole broad contin- Twenty-Seven

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