Dorchester High School for Boys - Red and Black Yearbook (Dorchester, MA)

 - Class of 1949

Page 61 of 92

 

Dorchester High School for Boys - Red and Black Yearbook (Dorchester, MA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 61 of 92
Page 61 of 92



Dorchester High School for Boys - Red and Black Yearbook (Dorchester, MA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 60
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Dorchester High School for Boys - Red and Black Yearbook (Dorchester, MA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 62
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Page 61 text:

Frederick A. Zajac representing Dorchester High School for Boys is greeted by Mr. T. F. Murray at the Navy Yard on Navy Day . cnce in industry and at the same time is carry- ing on his schooling in subjects such as English, science, history, drawing, and mathematics. Yes. the woodworking course is a good one for a fellow who has the aptitude and manual skill. In all three shops will be found boys from the tenth, eleventh, and twelfth grades. And it naturally follows that the upper class boys are working on the more difficult jobs. This acts as an incentive to the lower class boys to work for greater skill so that they may be given such jobs as making a Governor XVinthrop Desk, a Pie-crust table or a Phono-Record Cabinet. But thereis another course that Iid like to mention and that is the upholstery course. It is the only one of its kind that I know of. Here in this shop under Mr. Ernest Oetingeris expert guidance boys are trained in all branches of upholstering from the frame out. The various kinds of wood that are suitable for chairs, couches, or divans are studied. The various operations that go into the making of an up- holstered piece are learned. The pupils get to know materials and coverings, how to tell the good coverings from the shoddy, and how to evaluate the wearing qualities of materials. Naturally the boys learn how to measure, cut, match, and fit coverings after the hidden but essential work of tying springs and adjusting padding is done. Yes, a boy who takes the upholstery course has a good trade to follow. Ile is also a handy fellow around the house. I know one boy who did over his motheris parlor set. Ilels been a hero at home ever since. The boys must work carefully for they are frequently using coverings of value. In fact. as much as 81535.00 was spent this year for just one job consisting of a davenport and two chairs, which points out the necessity of careful cut- ting. The Cooperative course at Dorchester is a good one. I hope that more boys may come to realize as I have that what we can learn and do at school is like money in the bank. RED AND BLACK 57

Page 60 text:

Industrial QPrepared and read by Jolm Howard of the Industrial Department over Station YVMEX, May 19, 1949 - Dorchester High School for Boys on the Airy I suppose the best way I can give a picture of what our Cooperative-Industrial Course con- sists of is to show you what boys do at school in this course. In Mr. Clarence Goodridgeis woodworking shop, for example, as we enter we see a boy cutting a piece of stock on a band saw. He is cutting the wood along lines he has drawn following a pattern which he may have designed on the drawing board in Mr. Stewart Shawis drawing class. The boy is using the machine skillfully and carefully. He realizes that with proper operation he can turn out work in minutes that would take hours to do by hand. And the machine does the work cleanly and accurately if the boy is careful. XVe see another boy using the circular saw and another using a planer or joiner. Similar operations may also be seen in Mr. Frederick Rauls shop. In the so-called Mill Room, Mr. Habib Deratany and Mr. Joseph Lawton teach the operation of such power machines as band saw, boring machine, circular saw, joiner, jig saw, lathe, mortiser, swing saw, sander, shaper, thickness planers or surfacer and the tenoning machine. The boys of Dorchester not only learn how to run these machines, but they are marked on the skill with which they run them. It shows up on their report cards, Practically all the boys in the woodworking course will be able to work as wood workers when they graduate. It has been the experience of the Dorchester High School Cooperative-Industrial Course super- visor, Mr. Arlon Bacon, that nearly all of the boys who have taken the course in their tenth, eleventh, and twelfth grades have found em- ployment in the woodworking trades. Thereis a fellow right now in Mr. Rau's shop who has the promise of a job in one of the best furniture and cabinet-making shops in the city as soon as he graduates. In fact he is working there part time now. Of course, many of the boys have been work- ing on alternate weeks in shops while they are enrolled at school. In other words they work and go to school at the same time. The arrangement is that in his third and fourth year a boy may work for pay in an out- side woodworking shop on alternate weeks dur- ing the school year. The school arranges his program so that he is getting practical experi- 1 56 lllill AND BLACK l



Page 62 text:

SCENE IN CAFETERIA 0ur Cafeteria iq fafm fagce Under the new management of Mrs. Birdella Harrington our service with a smiley cafeteria has become extremely popular. Both the teachers and boys who buy their lunches have commented on the improvement of the food in the past year. Mr. Coulston also informed me that the purchasing of food in the lunchrooni has greatly increased this year. The cleanliness of the cafeteria has also been greatly praised by all who enter it. Many thanks and much praise is given to the ladies who donate their services throughout the year in order that the boys of Dorchester High may have the Proper things to eat. In closing, we the seniors of Dorchester High, as well as the undergrads say. thanks againu, and hope that next year will be as successful as this. Musical Urganizatiuns iq 8644! 147. Kale Band The school band got off to a bad start this year but progressed slowly through the year. Through the careful supervision of Mr. Dono- van, the band has obtained the necessary boost that it needed and now stands a very good chance of winning top honors in the annual schoolboy parade, this year. The Captain is Peter Davidson who is assisted by Lieutenants, Saul Medoff, Clint Harrington and WValter John- son. Other members of the hand are: Howard Brown. Edward Callahan, Harry Douglas, Charles Edgerly, Robert Finn, Ernest Canem, john Cately, Robert Kral, Iohn and Thomas Pic- 58 RED AND BLACK ard, Frank Quigley, Richard Rain, Edmund Rear- don, Richard Souza, George WVinn, and Robert W'illiams. Drum and Bugle Corps The Drum and Bugle Corps has shaped itself into one of our finest oraganizations this year under the direction of Mr. Donovan. It is not quite as large as last year, but the quality sup- places the lack of quantity. The drum major is Elliott Mogul assisted by Harvey Goldstein, the Captain of the corps, and his assistants, Elliot Cohen and James YValsh. Right- Band, Drum and Bugle Corps, Orchestra

Suggestions in the Dorchester High School for Boys - Red and Black Yearbook (Dorchester, MA) collection:

Dorchester High School for Boys - Red and Black Yearbook (Dorchester, MA) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Dorchester High School for Boys - Red and Black Yearbook (Dorchester, MA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Dorchester High School for Boys - Red and Black Yearbook (Dorchester, MA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 23

1949, pg 23

Dorchester High School for Boys - Red and Black Yearbook (Dorchester, MA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 60

1949, pg 60

Dorchester High School for Boys - Red and Black Yearbook (Dorchester, MA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 69

1949, pg 69

Dorchester High School for Boys - Red and Black Yearbook (Dorchester, MA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 92

1949, pg 92


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