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Page 19 text:
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Lincoln's first officers were: Mr. Burt O. Kinney, Principalg Mr. Homer Martin, Boys' Vice-Principal. and Miss Florence E. Blunt, Girls' Vice- Principal. The assemblies were first held in front of the Administration Building or by the steps of the Woolwine Building, later in Room 101. The library was in Room 320. In October, 1913, Lincoln was made a member of the city league in basket ball. The first track squad was organized in 1914. In 1915 Lincoln was admitted to the city league in football and baseball. Through a change of policy in the Board of Education, in 1916 Lin- coln changed ofiicers. Miss Ethel Percy Andrus, of Manual Arts High School, was appointed Acting Principal and did the work of the Girls' Vice-Principalg Mr. John H. Whitely came as Boys' Vice-Principal. The same year the name of the school paper, The Echo, was changed to The Railsplitterf' The S'16 class gave The Enchanted Hillside, by Louis Woodson Curtis and Miss Agnes Peterson, a musical pageant of Lincoln's history. The Music and Library Building was added the same year. The athletic field, excavated from the solid hill, was completed in the fall of 1917. In October the first football game on the home field was played. The first military unit at Lincoln was organized, later developing into the R. O. T. C. In the spring of 1917, also, the auditorium was built. Mr. Ralph D. Wadsworth, formerly the head of the Science Department, was made Boys' Vice-Principal, Mr. Whitely going to Gardena High as Principal. In 1918, the annual, formerly called the Orange and Black, came out as the Lincolnian. The last intermediate class graduated in 1919, and Lincoln became a full-fiedged high school. In 1920 the auto shop building was erected. The long-promised gym was ready for use at the opening of school in 1921, a renovated stable of the Woolwine estate had served the purpose before. In September, 1922, the Vocational Building was completed and put into use. . Now, in 1923, we are on the threshold of a new era. What it will bring to use we can only wait and see. Lincoln hopes to have many more line buildings in the future, to carry on its high ideals to the end, and to further the ever-glowing spirit of Lincoln-that ideal which is best expressed by the immortal words of the Athenian Oath of Citizenship, We will trans- mit this city not less, but far greater and more beautiful than it was trans- mitted to us. 16
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