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Page 12 text:
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Page 11 text:
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Page 13 text:
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CLASS BOOK 13 7 hitnrial ITH this the last issue of the UTELUM for this year the time is opportune to review the events of the year now closing and to portray the oppor- tunities for advancement possible next year. In school administration Darby High School can now boast of a school office with a fixed and known office routine and a very capable office force of students. Attending school has become more and more a serious business, with each pupil assigned to a definite task at a definite place and at a definite time. Only on rare occasions have pupils been at other than their scheduled places, and then only to be caught in the office dragnet. With rare ability have the members of the school become intelligent parts of co-operative machine. The correspondence and records of the school have been well handled and valuable data gathered that will be of great value in solving school problems in years to come. For this efficient work the school is greatly indebted to a hard-working and self-sacrificing office force, some members of which it now seems to be almost fatal to lose by graduation. While the services of all who graduate will be greatly missed, the long hours of hard and efficient work given to the school by Mae Wilson will always serve as an inspiration to service and industry to those who knew of her work during this year. However, a nucleus of the office force remains, around which another and, it is hoped, an even more efficient one can be built. A force of librarians was organized which gave loyal service to the school and made possible a school library for the use of all. Under trained leadership this force would have become very efficient. The success attained, while helped by all the librarians, was due largely to the courageous way in which Edith Oswald attacked the problem and tenaciously stuck to it. If a library-trained teacher can be secured, this department bids fair to become one of the most important in the school. When gymnasium work threatened to be abolished through lack of an instructor, twelve loyal students willingly took charge of the classes and conducted the work in a splendid manner. They were greatly helped by the installation of a faculty gymnasium instructor in February. VVhile no public gymnasium exhibi- tion was given, the work of Samuel Eckerd and Frank Carpenter was notably good. Through graduation, the splendid services of Paul Spahr, Philip Sipler and Charlotte Ogden will be lost in this department. With nine remaining leaders, a competent instructor and equipment for physical testing and measurement, the department of physical education has bright prospects ahead. The athletic fortunes of the school have been strengthened, through reorgana ization, financial backing and equipment, and training in both good sportsmanship. and athletic ability. The Athletic Association loses by graduation the spirited leadership of its president, Paul Spahr, under whom the reorganization took placeg the painstaking services of its treasurer, Roland Tansley, under whose guidance the finances were put on a firm and business-like basis, the careful and precise ability of the secretary, Mildred Barnes, and the wise counsel of the Senior representatives on the Executive Committee, Elizabeth Bonsall and Evelyn Pearce. Every pupil in the school became a member of the Athletic Association and took part in the various campaigns for funds, so that the association now finds itself with a balance, rather than a deficit, and in the possession of considerable valuable equipment for all athletic teams.
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