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Page 24 text:
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Brattleboro High School Brattleboro, Vermont '20 Competent Instructors U g Modern Equipment in Charge g :Z ' Throughout The curriculum includes the usual High School courses of study augmented by many special courses found in none but the largest and most modern schools in New England. The student body, averaging 425, has numerous advantages in the Way of clubs, band and orchestra. Its physical activities are in charge of a competent instructor. Colleges admitting by certificate accept students from the Brattleboro High School without examination. H I For further information, apply to n DONALD B. STEVENS, Principal, High School lBuilding, Brattleboro, Vt.. University of Vermont I Instructions offered in The College of Arts and Sciences The College of Agriculture The Collegelof Medicine I The College of Engineering A Music Department has been established this year. Efficient athletic instructors supervise physical education. Expenses are Moderate I ALL coURsEs ARE OPEN TO WOMEN For Catalogue, Bulletins and Other Information, Address, THE REGISTRAR, - to 01 40 Q, Vermont I - - Burlington, Vermont ew A 'lf A I l l
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Page 23 text:
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Page 25 text:
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Our Slogan PUBLIEHED O' Precedezzf, Not ' 4 Ogglgiiggeeirigger. Tradition. and June ..sW 5c '-'Jo SUbSCflP'fl0!'l, S1 21 YC31' lil ACIVHIICC S Entered at Brattleboro, Vt., Post Office as I 5111316 COPY, ZJC- Q Second-class Matter. ee I f5SAssouMlGf' PUBLISHED FIVE TIMES A YEAR BY THE STUDENTS OF THE HIGH SCHOOL AT BRATTLEBORO, -VT. VOLUME XXI DECEMBER, 1925 NUMBER TWQ ESSENTIAL TAO CHRISTMAS We are forgetting the true meaning of Christmas and must abolish much of our unnecessary celebration. Well then, let us adopt a simpler plan. First we will discard the custom of giving gifts, and by doing so we will save expense and labor. Then we will cast aside the green wreath with its gay red bittersweet berries, and the spruce tree adorned with its tinsel baubles, its colored baskets and its silver star. But that is not all. We must deny the child its Santa Claus and let the stocking remain unfilled. The Christmas carols sung by the children on Christmas Eve must no longer be sung, and pictures like that of Beacon Hill with its windows filled with lighted candles must be hidden from our sight. A thousand other unnecessary trifies like these must be destroyed. Now that we have abolished all of this unnecessary manifestation of Christmas we must be filled with only the true meaning of Christmas, the Christmas of love within us which fills the soul as nothing else does. But no. By discarding the presentation of gifts we have discarded the joy of giv- ing, and a way to show the love which accompanies it. By forgetting the green wreath and the Christmas tree we have de- nied ourselves a phase of beauty-some- thing which never should be denied. By destroying Santa Claus we have deprived the small child of the anticipation and of the old soul who is so lovable within the child's imagination. By forgetting the Christmas carols We have deprived our- selves of an emotion which only beautiful music can create, and by doing away with beautiful pictures of reality similar to the lighted candles in every window on Beacon Hill, we have destroyed a symbol of beauty which for the soul's sake must not be de- stroyed. Where then, would the Christmas within us be? It is through these material ex- pressions that we show our deeper appreci- ation for the day, and by so expressing our appreciation, we create a still deeper feel- ing. Are not these, then, necessary symbols of Christmas? I BOARD or EDITORS Editor-in-Chief ...... Marion Rice Managing Editor .. Franklin Sears Assistant Editor, Charlotte DeWitt Literary Board Dorothy Pettee ................ Helen Booth Parva Sed Apta ..... Katherine Locke Science ............ ......... C lara Crosier History ..................... Doris Robbins French ....................... Alice Darling School Notes Carlotta Nido .................. Lee Sexton Sophomore Reporter . ...... Eleanor Adams Freshman Reporter ...... Dorothy Metcalf Jokes Robert Coombs ............. Robert Culver Alumni Miriam Fitts ........... Marion Fairbanks Exchange Marguerite Wellman .......... Doris Wood Athletics Max Gissin Winston Brasor Faculty Advisors I. Mathilde Huse ...... Georgia Kauffman Business Board Advertising Manager .. Timothy O'Connot Circulation Manager ........ Thor Olson All business communications should be addressed to Managing Editor, The Dial, Brattleboro, Vt. All other communications to the Editor-in-Chief. '1 CONVENTION The snow is lying very deep. My house is sheltered from the blast, I hear each muffled step outside. I hear each voice go past. But I'll not venture in the drift Out of this bright security, Till enough footsteps come and go To make a path for me. -AGNES LEE. It would be a stagnant civilization if the world were made up of people who failed to venture out upon some new phase of life until the path was trodden for them and the way proved safe. There are a surprising number of people, however, who think that progress is a natural step in the history of the human race and that civilization needs no stimulus to better its past accomplish- If fewer people ments or make new ones. were afraid to leave the bright securityn of their own life, who can deny that civili- zation would be much farther advanced than it is now. lf each person would carry out his object instead of failing to do so because it hasn't been done, then who can conceive what a brilliant civilization would await us? Fortunate for us there have been men who have defied convention in religion, in science, in industry, in politics, in writing, -in fact in every phase of advancement which would not have been 'advancement except for them. Let everyone class himself in either of the two groups-the group of people who are willing to break the path, or the ones who wait until the path is broken for them. Which are you? IGI IEE IGI The following students have been ap- pointed typists for the DIAL: Katherine Haus, Marjorie Ober, Edna Peterson, Flor- ence Hallgren, Geneva Johnson, Dorothy Evans, Marjorie Martin, Louise Pier, Edith Streeter, .Alice Hallgren, Beatrice Underwood, Lewis Thomas and Robert Stebbins. Since much of the accuracy of the printer depends on the accuracy of the copy from which he works, all can see the importance of the typist's work for the DIAL. We are fortunate in having capable and conscien- tious students to do this exacting work. AND WE WON A parade to the football field . . . a band . . . the school song . . . purple and white banners . . . horns and harmonicas . . . peppy cheers led by four boys in white. What does it mean? It means that every member of B. H. S. was loyal to the football team and was backing it every minute of the last three games. What was the result? Our team won those three hard-fought games for us. It pays! Christmas vacation-a good time to make up all that studying we were going to do over the Thanksgiving recess. lf Christmas comes, then Midyears can't be far behind. V
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