Southold High School - Snuffbox Yearbook (Southold, NY)

 - Class of 1924

Page 12 of 76

 

Southold High School - Snuffbox Yearbook (Southold, NY) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 12 of 76
Page 12 of 76



Southold High School - Snuffbox Yearbook (Southold, NY) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 11
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Southold High School - Snuffbox Yearbook (Southold, NY) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 13
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Page 12 text:

EDITORIAL THE NEW SCHOOL HOUSE Perhaps many of the taxpayers who are building the new school house fail to realize what it means to those now attending school. Yet we students, some of whom will enjoy the increased educational facilities for but a year, appreciate these new conditions that have been provided for us to work under, and these the more by comparison with conditions during the school year of 1923-24. The school building has for some years been very crowded. This was especially noticeable in the primary department and eighth grade. When the “Recitation Room” (a remodeled fire escape) was torn down to make room for the new building, it was necessary to divide the large High School room into two smaller rooms. One of these was used for a class room and the other for a study hall, with consequent crowding that made it a very unfit place for anything like intensive application to study. The ventilation and heating system were affected by this division. It was impossible to open windows without creating a draught and many days it was necessary to wear sweaters or coats during the whole session. We lacked proper facilities for physical training, for dramatics and holiday exercises. For athletic games we were forced to hire a poorly heated, poorly lighted hall which was much too small for the purpose. Much of the beauty of the grade entertainments and exercises, the fruits of hard labor on the teachers’ parts, was lost because of a crowded space for performing. The high school assemblies with two pupils in each single seat and some in chairs were indeed evidence of our need for more room. But now we have it! Now we can thankfully say “All that is over.” In classes there will be no more of the “Two in one seat” style. When we seek the principal, we shall no longer find him in his “private” corner of a room that seems to be an assortment of library and athletic supply department. In the new building there is an amply large office and a supply room. We have the best modern facilities for heating and ventilating the rooms—not only in the new but in the old building as well; and the plumbing is of the best. And the new auditorium—what more could we wish? Here the grades can present their entertainments with a stage and lighting arrangements to aid them and here, too, the higher classes can carry out any dramatic work they wish. Then with Page Eight

Page 11 text:

 CHARLES JOHN SIMON You never made much noise or fuss about it, Charles, but you were always “there with the goods.” We all appreciate the splendid work you’ve done in athletics, and fear that, with your “business head” lacking, our enterprises will suffer. We give you a vote for success in Cornell, and in whatever you take up afterwards—no!—not a single vote, but a vote for every mile that you and the trustworthy “flivver” have covered since you started to “commute” to S. H. S. from Peconic. Delegate to County Athletic League ’23; Track Team ’23; Basketball, ’22, ’23, ’24; Baseball, ’21, ’22, ’23, ’24; Manager Baseball Team ’23-’24; Business Manager, “Snuff Box” ’24; Secretary, Class of ’24. JOHN JOSEPH PURCELL “The sailor’s life is wild and free; The sailor’s life is the life for me!” Drop us a card, “Quack”, when you are sending some to the “girl in every port”, on your seventh journey around the world! Yes, we will miss your bright and many-hued neckties, that have dazzled our eyes for four long years. Seriously, though, John, we are going to miss your cheerful grin, and the sound of your laugh, to say nothing of your brilliant athletic work. Basketball, ’21, ’22, ’23, ’24; Manager Basketball Team, ’22-’23; Baseball, ’21, ’22, ’23, ’24; President Athletic Association, ’21, ’23; Treasurer, Class of ’24; “Miss Molly”, ’23; Track Team, ’23; Associate Editor, “Snuff Box”, ’24. Page Seven



Page 13 text:

the removable chairs folded and placed to one side, we have the one place in a hundred for our games, with a floor that is equally good for athletics and dancing. Surely no pupils will ever appreciate this new building more than we who have been working in the old. To us, although we may have no classes in the new part, it means plenty of room, air, light and heat, and a place for assembly and games. Surely we can in no better way thank the townspeople for this gift than by utilizing every added facility, that we may make the most of our education and be a credit to Southold. WE’RE CHEERING AGAIN! Some years ago, the pupils in Southold High School had organized cheering, chiefly at baseball games. This, however, “died out,” and previous to this year, there has been little or no organized cheering at school games. However, under the Athletic’s Association, organized cheering was renewed this year. Charles Vreeland, James Cogan, and Helen Thompson were chosen as cheer leaders, and several practice meetings were held. With the increasing popularity of basketball games, and the larger and more enthusiastic crowd that attended them, our teams were helped along by some lively, organized, cheer-ing. Let’s keep it up! ART EXHIBIT On the evenings of June 5 and 6, an Art Exhibit was held in the new school auditorium. There were about 200 pictures loaned by Elson Art Publication Co., on exhibition, all of them copies of masterpieces. The showing of these pictures in the auditorium was supplemented by an exhibition of pupils’ work, in the various grade rooms. On June 5, an entertainment was furnished by the pupils of the third, fourth and fifth grades. Under the direction of their teachers, these pupils presented a clever and well-carried-out “Travelogue”, with excellent dancing, singing and recitations throughout. Pupils of the first, second, sixth and seventh grades entertained on the evening of June 6. These grades presented very pretty playlets, which spoke for themselves of the efforts the teachers had put forth to produce such a remarkable showing of dramatic ability. The proceeds of the Art Exhibition, about $150, and of the Page Nine

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