Clairton High School - Clairtonian Yearbook (Clairton, PA)

 - Class of 1950

Page 69 of 128

 

Clairton High School - Clairtonian Yearbook (Clairton, PA) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 69 of 128
Page 69 of 128



Clairton High School - Clairtonian Yearbook (Clairton, PA) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 68
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Page 69 text:

social studies view future in light of past How people should live to live together hap- pily on a tamily, town, country, or world scale promises to present more and more problems as the twentieth century progresses. An enlightened citizen is the better one. He will do better thinking on the problems society must solve, Four courses designed to give enlightenment on local, national, and world attairs are ottered us CHS students: World History, to tell us how other civiliza- tions met problems like ours, and to trace what have been to date our own troubles and accomplishments. United States History, to give us the story of how people closest to us in time and place have conducted their lives, beaueathing to us the nation as it is today. Problems of Democracy, to analyze our so- cial, political, and economic institutions so that we understand why we live as we do, and to get started our adult thinking about what we want to do to change or improve it. Economics, to explain past and present dis- tribution and use ot goods, land, and wealth, so that we can begin to judge how much of what we want we can expect to get, over what obstacles. ln each course we review historical facts, and follow current affairs. How intelligently we as adult citizens use our knowledge depends wholly upon us. At the top standing are social studies teachers Miss Mary Stokes, Mr. Larry Critchfield, Miss June Morgan, seated, Mrs. Grace Lacey and Miss Margaret Barclay. The next pictures show world history students tracing NapoIeon's trails, a United States history class checking on Lewis and Clark, Below, economics students practice interpret- ing statistics graphs, while a POD class examines the weekly world events map. :sm

Page 68 text:

,awp I 'Q mathematics is basic to man occupations So much of our lives is based on the con- cepts of how many and how much that we take for granted we must learn to count. tt is also safe to assume that we will not return in the next fifty years to exchanging our best cow for a neighbor's three fattest pigs. So we have to understand basic facts about money, its uses, and its values. Beyond this elementary knowledge, the sur- vey of student occupational interests made for March 29 Career Night showed definite need for emphasis on mathematics courses. For we stu- dents are planning futures which involve the use of numbers on all levels. Many of us plan to work with the new, com- plex business machines. Among us there are prospective bookkeepers and accountants, pay- roll and disbursing agents, traffic experts, bank- ing, insurance, real estate consultants, salesmen and sales clerks, engineers of all types, techni- cians and statisticians, pharmacists, nurses, doc- tors, contractors, architects, draftsmen, surveyors, chemists and bacteriologists, home budget mak- ers and users of recipes. All of us expect to be family income spenders and investors. Not many of us can hope to get by without mastering the basic principles CHS mathematics teaches us. Math teachers pictures above are Mr. Charles Patton, Miss Jane Walker, Mrs, Agnes Hebner, and Mr. John Soich. In Mrs. Hr-:bner's Algebra l class, all grades, including ninth, are represented. Mr. Soich's trig wizards know all about tangents and secants. Miss Walker teaches general math stu- dents to calculate interest on bank accounts and loans, while Mr. Patton's geometry class practice bisecting a few angles.



Page 70 text:

C 5 Iibrar has 4300 volumes Mrs. Marjorie Smith, library clerk, checks records with Miss Janet Nixon, head librarian. If Miss Janet Nixon, head librarian, doesn't know the answer, she knows where to find it. Students take for granted her ability to help them without realizing they are being served by an expert. During the past year, chapters on the use of the library written by Miss Nixon have appeared in two new books which will have national circulation. One is English, Fourth Course by Matilda Bailey and Alex- ander Stoddard, the other is English Hand- book by Matilda Bailey and Gunnar Horn. Mrs. Marjorie Smith, new library clerk has taken over much detail work, leaving r Miss Nixon free to answer more of those stu- dent questions. book for Phil Work at the main desk Mary Alwilda Taylor, head student ll brarian, and Charles Barrett charge a

Suggestions in the Clairton High School - Clairtonian Yearbook (Clairton, PA) collection:

Clairton High School - Clairtonian Yearbook (Clairton, PA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Clairton High School - Clairtonian Yearbook (Clairton, PA) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Clairton High School - Clairtonian Yearbook (Clairton, PA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

Clairton High School - Clairtonian Yearbook (Clairton, PA) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951

Clairton High School - Clairtonian Yearbook (Clairton, PA) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952

Clairton High School - Clairtonian Yearbook (Clairton, PA) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

1953


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