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Page 51 text:
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THE ARTISAN W ' 39 47 THE MANUAL ARTS FACULTY Floyd Roberts Honn, Principal William Bruce Kirkpatrick, Hoys ' Vice Principal; Jessie Ray Hanna. Girls ' Vice Principal; Helen Vinyard Peasley, Registrar; Carla Louise Roewekamp, Li- brarian; Mary Bess Henry, Counselor. Art Department: Frederick John Scwhwankovsky, Florence Ames, Max Aron, David Webster Kenyon, Hazel Small Martin. Jessie Sherwood Smith, Ermina Cutler Whitney. Commercial Department: James Seely Mullen, Fred J. Armstrong, Maud Lynn Austin, Harold E. Baner, Bessie Bergman, Lois Elizabeth Curry, Josephine Thompson Harrison. Alice S. Maile. William Watterson Payne, Ethel Douglas Phelps. Gary F. Voboril, Margaret Althouse Walsh. English Department: Ethel I ' , S kes, Edna Joy Addison. Edith L. Bruckman, Austin E. Dixon. Lillian C. Eby, Mae Edwards, Iris C. Crosby Field, Agnes I- ' risius, Alex F. Hansen, Lucy A. Hil ' le, Anne Ogden Johnson, Florence Lillian Koehler, Margaret Loretta McLaughlin, Guy Clinton Moore. Maude ( lyler, Pauline Peipers, Florence Sprenger, George Thomas Walterhouse. Household Arts: Essie Lavina Elliott, Hadassah Beecher Cheroske. Anna H. Hussey. Winifred I ' .. McDonough, Florence McDougall Pierce, Sarah G. Hicks Rowe. Industrial Arts: Charles Merwin Andersen, Frank James Britts, Walter Wilson English, Campbell H. Greenup, Bryan James Haralson. Herman Hess, Ernest J. Honk, Harry Lincoln Myers, George A. Nelson. Fred Niederwerfer, William H. Reed :r, Meredith S. Reynolds. John A. Richards. Eldred Bon is Sanborn, Walter Allen Woods. Languages: Nellie S. Cronkhite, Belle Arbour, Bertha Drabkin Goodwin. Evarose Griffin Lloyd, Constance Manning Moir, Gwendolyn Ladoris Patton, Catherine M. Stewart Snow, Erva A. Taylor. Mathematics: Eva Crane Farnuin. bonis Merton Bloch, Rollen Harrison Drake, Ida Isabella Jones. Lila Marie Nelson, Karl Edwin Turnquist, Louise Parizek Nash. Music: Ina Margaret Davids. William Taliaferro Killgrove, Harriet Dow- ling Laidlaw, Virginia Blyth Madsen, Elizabeth Rudy Mottern, Helen W. Bick- nell. l ' .o s ' Physical Education: Sidney Francis Foster, James Preston Arm- strong, James Joseph Blewett, Herbert E. Lougheed, M. Wendell Smith, Arthur Elery Williams, William Rosser Wilson. (iirls ' Physical Education: Genevieve Kelso, Charlotte Albright Caldwell. Mae Baird Gephart, Marian Estella LeMoyne, Marjorie Ann Miller, Madge Jackmau Redin. Dorothy Jane Smith. Science: William James Bovee, Russell Ximtz Doescher, Siegfried Fischer, William Abbott Goddard, L. R. Langworthy, Lyman Dalton LaTourrette, Margaret McLachlan Ludy. Martha Helen Montgomery. blarold Klmer Schroed- er. Isabel Swenlfeger, William G. Wo, ilex. Dale H. Stutzman. Social Studies: Anna i. Wiggs. Helen Miller Bailey, Mary W. Blanchard. Lizz ' e May Brown. Lulu Albia Brown, Marjorie J. Howling Brown. James Austin Davis, Robert S. Maile, [sobel Niven Murphy, Frances Nelson-Casasola, Willis T. Newton, Clifford Vernon Oje, Nellie E. Stephens. Beta Josephine Whinery. Office: Freda L. Michael. Secretary ; Clio B. Cousins, Marie C. Jones. Zelah Marshall. Marcia Wooster Perryman, Frankie Walton. Mary Helen Wilson.
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Page 50 text:
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4 6 THE ARTISAN W ' 39 Girls ' Self Governmenl Ro s ' Self Government Council
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Page 52 text:
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4 S THE ARTISAN W 39 THE CLANS There arc about sixty clans which make up the Highland folk of Scot- land. The other clans are merely a part of these main clans, but at one time there were more. Only the fittest survived however, and the smaller clans sought protection from the larger clans and became known as septs. They retained their own name but adopted their mother clan ' s customs and ways. Each clan had its own area of land and was known by the chieftain ' s name. The clans came into possession of their land by gifts from the king as a reward of bravery or in payment of a debt. To regard the chief of one ' s clan with more respect than one ' s own father was the Highlander ' s bond. The chieftain ' s rule oyer his clan was absolute and unquestioned. His clans- men did not regard him as a feudal superior but to obey him without question and to die for him was the highest of privileges. He in turn re- garded them as children to whom he was to give protection. His eldest son was regarded in the same light, for some day he would be their chief- tain. If the son of the chieftain was too young to become ruler of the clan. a tanest or regent was appointed from the highest men of court. He was absolute ruler until the voung bov became of age and had satisfactorily proven that he was worthy of becoming their chieftain. He proved his worth by invading neighboring lands and bringing back all the cattle he could find grazing on the fields of his neighbors. He did this in the face of great danger for the neighboring clans were always prepared for such a visit. As a result of this, the feuds between neighboring clans were even fiercer than those between highlands and lowlands. The clan system of ruling was however by no means restricted to the Scottish Highlands, as there were clans of Elliots and Faas on the Borders and Romany clans wandering throughout the Isles. Although these and the Highland clans existed at the same time, the Highland clans were the most notable because of their practices and their undisturbed contin- uance long after the lowland clans had gone out of existence. The High- land clans, moreover, were favored by sheer geographical circumstances of glens, moors, mountains and islands. The tradition of birth was an important factor in internecine strife and the great clans were distinguished by family idiosyncrasies. The Erasers were born a subtle race, the MacDonalds were fighters and the MaOlnsca were gentlemen. And you remember the pride of face that dis- inguished Robert Louis Stevenson ' s Alen Breck in Kidnapped.
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