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Page 24 text:
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- - - e ,ef , iff f' f-1-yas..-ffeszefft-3.1m - zsaessgpwfgffgf -:if-,1 geese: ees:-i...f ...e.e-2.45 ..f-.er-Q.. ..--'gif any erases exe swiss, s ae T T discontinued to make room for the weekly, the Frankford High- lVa,y. The Pioneer, however, still survives as a literary journal issued but once a term. 1 During these four years the pictures about the school have increased in number by several valuable additions. The fernery on the boys' side of the building has given a line finish to what was a bare corner. - The clubs have increased in number and interest. The House and Grounds Committee has continued its unique work in keeping the school clean and fresh looking. In athletics we have not Won many championships except in the girls' sports, but at all times our teams have shown sportsmanship and fight. Interclass and intersectional athletics have developed very much. And so there have been many developments and we feel that they have made for progress in these our four years at Frankford. Q Q wuts nf Zlpprenatiiuu 1 Frankford High School is blessed with a faculty the members of which deem it no hardship to give their time in generous measure to the many student activities. After school hours, on the athletic field or in the gymnasium, teachers of the various departments may be found coaching varsity teams or encouraging inter-class contestsg in the auditorium, they may be seen, through- out the year, directing rehearsals for the many class and club plays which are given in assemblyg in the classrooms they may be discovered at work with committees and with clubs, advising and encouraging students in their special interests. - Typical of the willingness of the members of the faculty to help in student activities is the valuable aid rendered the graduating class by many of the teachers. The class Wishes to thank in a special manner Mr. Williams, Dir. Murphy, Mr. Kunz, Mr. McCann, Mr. Troxell and Mr. Mansley, who have rendered great assistance in the activities of our senior term. Skvfeen L af 44.4
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Page 23 text:
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class s raft, asses V - was - 1 - 1 ' 4, . 'es ., ,W .k.,. 1 ,, .,,h.s,, --:::- jg-,L-Q' , ,Ja ff-.3.,.-, .-ez:-as-:grwfg -,Q-'s:.'36Qf . , . - -' Ss I s i , , 'fflff ' f?:1YL1t'foi?! ' years from Board dues. The rest of the money the students agreed to raise by contributions. The Fathers' Association, always to the fore in the matter of giving to the school, contributed generously to the fund, as did many of the graduates and faculty. During the month of installation our curiosity could scarcely be restrained. YVe heard llilll1lIlel'lI1gS and bangings, saw immense piles of boards, mortar and bricks, the stage was always dusty and a great draught contin- ually bellied out the curtains. Finally, however, the great day arrived and another dream was realized. Ghz Staineh Glass winhnms IDRACTICALLY all of the space available for murals was occupied by the end of last term, but this did not mean that our collection of art work could not continue to grow. In order to further the beautification of the first Hoor corridor, the class of February, 1928, contributed two hundred dollars to estab- lish a fund for purchasing a stained glass window. Soon afterward the Student Board announced that it would purchase and install the first window. This work of art represents Egypt's contribution to civilization and continues liir. Sinnock's series, of which the murals form the first part. This window was installed during the Easter holidays, 1928. F ol- lowing the short vacation, groups of students could be found at all times of the day admiring the distinctive design and the beautiful coloring. Already Frankford High boasts of a main corridor without peer in the city and on completion of the plans for beautification, it is safe to say, no school in the country will have a finer one. The class of June, 1928, hopes that by adding to the sum given by the preceding group it will hasten the day when another one of the windows in the first floor corridor will be filled with beautiful stained glass. what Clthents DURING our four years' stay at Frankford we have seen the school grow from an institution of moderate enrollment to one with a student popula- tion numbering over twenty-five hundred. VVC have seen the school day ex- tended so as to include ten pe1'iods and then by readjustment reduced to one of eight periods. The separate boys and girls assemblies, on Mondays and Vtfednesdays, respectively, with the general assemblies on Fridays have been abolished in favor of two mixed assemblies on Fridays. The irregular third periods have been made of standard length. VVe have seen old friends on the faculty leave for high positions in the educational world and have welcomed new teachers to Frankford who in return have become our good f1'iends. An old institution, the monthly Pioneer was Fifteen, i 1 -.J
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Page 25 text:
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