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About The Chemawa American (Chemawa, Or.) 19??-current | View Entire Issue (June 1, 1913)
THE CHEMAWA AMERICAN 5 ed in th is school: and if we have b u t heeded th a t teaching and advice, we have unconsciously been absorbing those th in g s w hich go to form character; finding and developing those pow ers w hich will be called forth to m eet the situ atio n s in life w hich will confront us w hen th ere is no one b u t ourselves upon whom to rely. T h en , indeed, will we m ore fully realize the im portance and w orth of th at equipm ent w hich has been given us here in th is splendid in stitu tio n , when we find how well it enables us to take and to successfully hold, a place in our chosen profession. For, in th is in stitu tio n , we have had greater advantages then have pupils of the public schools, in th a t we have had given to us the vocational tra in in g w hich is now looked upon as being so very necessary to fit young men and women to take th eir places in th e world of today. And the w orld needs us now: for the hopes of th e world of today lies in its boys and g irls who are to be its great men and women of the fu tu re. It is to us, the th o u san d s of you n g m en and women w ho are passing out of the schools and colleges th is m onth, th a t the world is looking to find the fu tu re men and women who shall attain to such high distinction in the trades, professions, and literatu re, as have th e men and women of the past generations and who did so m uch to spread abroad A m eri ca’s fame in all p arts of this great world; and who have m ade it possible for her to hold a place of distinction along w ith the oldest nations of the earth. A nd of these men we are ju stly proud; especially so w hen we th in k of the hardships and difficulties th ro u g h w hich so m any of them had to struggle in order to reach th a t place w hich they now hold. In our past y e a r’s school w ork we have become acquainted, th ro u g h good lx>oks, w ith some of the men who have been th e creato rs of our n a tio n ’s fame, and a very lasting im pression has been made upon our m inds by one great fact—th a t a num ber of them have had to overcom e such physical infirm ities as m ight well have been m ade an excuse for inactivity and lack of am bition on the p art of any m an. T here was Dr. K ane, who carried A m erica’s fame into the A rctic Sea, as he w ent forth upon th a t m ission of mercy in his search for th e lost party of explorers. H is lack of physical stren g th , his days of illness, are in m arked co n trast to the indom itable will w hich carried him th ro u g h all those m onths of h ard sh ip and suffering. Or we may th in k of the fam ous historian Prescott, w ho, th o u g h d e prived alm ost entirely of his eyesight bv an accident in his yo u th , was, nevertheless, able w ith th e assistance of others, to mem orize, arrange and dictate so great an am ount of historical lore as has enriched th e literature of th e whole w orld. T hen, too, w here can we fi id a greater exam ple of th is than in our