Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA)

 - Class of 1923

Page 12 of 68

 

Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 12 of 68
Page 12 of 68



Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 11
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Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 13
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Page 12 text:

2 THE EXPONENT tions you have laid during your four years’ course in G. H. S. Remember that, and pay your debt by continuing to stand back of your school in later years. We extend the heartiest of wishes for the future to you. We shall miss you next year in every branch of school activity, especially in ath¬ letics. About half the men on the teams this year were of your number. This fall, when you seniors were most forceful, we won the banner at the County Fair and had the best football season in a number of years amid a fine show of enthusiasm on the side-lines. You, as a class, are now at the climax of a very successful high school career. You have a high scholarship record to your credit as well as spirited participation in school activities. iour honor roll and the membership in the Pro Merito society are proofs of this. Then there have been several dances, a debate with the juniors and a notably good senior play which you have put on this year. Mention of numbers of other activities appears elsewhere in this Exponent. We who are left to continue our high school work wish you all the greatest of success in your new work—not “good luck” but the success that crowns an honest worker’s toil. Many thanks are due to the retiring board of editors and managers of the Exponent for their work of the past year. W. B. ’24 SALUTATORY Friends of the Greenfield High School: At this time of the year the word “saluta¬ tory” is being used all over our country with very little thought as to its original mfeaning. The dictionary tells us that it comes from the Latin word “salus”, which at first meant being well or in good health, then welfare or prosperity, next a wish for one’s welfare and finally a greeting or salute. The ancient Romans when meeting friends upon the street or in their homes said, “salve,” in greeting. Therefore, I say “salve!” to you, our parents and friends, tonight, expressing a most cordial greeting and sincere wish for your wel¬ fare and prosperity. Because Massachusetts is such a small state, her importance is frequently belittled by her own children as well as by citizens of other states. A certain little incident may prove the latter atti¬ tude to be wide-spread. A Massachusetts man was visiting in Montana. One of the men there was praising the fine copper mines of that state. The eastern man listened for a time but finally asked, “Who owns these mines?” It was found that Massachusetts men owned them. Again the western man boasted of the wool produced from Montana sheep. “Yes, but men from my state own it,” answered the other. Let us consider some of the points which make our state important. Massachusetts in the Indian tongue signifies the place of great hills, meaning the Blue hills south¬ west of Boston. As a whole -our state consists of eight thousand, five hundred forty-six square miles of territory, including mountains, valleys, rich, level fields, sandy plains and barren, rocky hillsides. In our own section and farther to the west and south¬ west are the Berkshires, some of the most beauti¬ ful and picturesque hills in our country. Although Massachusetts’ hills cannot compare with the western mountains in lofty magnificence, the vari¬ egated tints of green make them beautiful. But hills and dales alone could not make Massachusetts beautiful. The mountains need clear brooks, dashing down their rugged slopes to in¬ crease their charm and enhance their grandeur. The streams are what have made the broad val-

Page 11 text:

THE EXPONENT VOL. X. GREENFIELD, MASS., JUNE 1923 NO. 5 BOARD OF EDITORS Editor-in-Chief .Malcolm Stearns ’23 Assistant Editor .William W. Ballard ’24 Literary Editor.Louise D. Hunter ’23 Assistant Literary Editors ..Robert A. Pratt ’24 Catherine E. Putnam ’24 Business Manager .Philip B. Stearns ’24 Assistant Business Managers Frank R. Bryant ’25 Richard G. Minott ’25 Illustrators .Russell H. Jones ’23 Thurston W. Munson ’24 Senior and School Notes . . . .Annie W. Carroll ’23 Junior Notes.Mary E. Ballard ’24 Sophomore Notes.Helen MacGowan ’25 Exchange Editor.Ramona A. Brown ’23 Commercial Editor.Weino M. Riddell ’23 Music Notes.Margaret M. Murphy ’23 Drawing Notes.Wilton Dean ’23 Alumni Editor .Doris W. Whelpley ’23 Athletic Editor .Wadsworth Croft ’23 Grinds .Robert S. Hall ’23 Mr. Smith FACULTY ADVISERS Mr. Pennegar Miss Atherton Entered as second-class mail matter April 3, 1920, at the postoffice at Greenfield, Massachusetts, under the act of March 3, 1879. Accepted at special rates of postage for second-class matter. Published five times during the school yeai - in October, December, February, April and June. 35 cents a copy; except June number which is 50 cents; $1.50 a year. Another school year is past, and another grad¬ uation is taking place. To us, who will again take up High school work in the fall, the summer vacation brings a welcome rest from studies. But to the seniors, who will not be with us again, the summer will mean much more. You who will not enter collegei or keep on with your studies next fall, will begin your real work of life soon. Many of you, we hope, will continue to live in Green¬ field, helping to make it better by what you have learned. But all of you will owe your progress, be it in college, school or factory, to the founda-



Page 13 text:

THE EXPONENT 3 -—-- leys fertile. As these valleys attracted the early set¬ tlers so they have held their attraction and use¬ fulness to the present day. The streams were what caused Massachusetts to become one of the first and leading manufacturing states of the new country. They now are the means of obtaining electricity, that all important factor of everyday life. On our eastern coast are the broad salt marsh¬ es, far less productive than the river valleys, but picturesque with their stacks of marsh hay. In spite of our “stern and rock bound coast” there are some excellent harbors, for Boston harbor is considered one of the finest in the world. When we think of the man-made beauties of our state we find that magnificent buildings grace our cities and towns, and slender, white church spires nestle among the hills. Nor are buildings the only things of note. Massachusetts is a perfect network of hard, fine roads of which there is an ■excellent example to the west of our own town. Our commonwealth contains many other things of natural beauty and usefulness but we must con¬ sider our state not only as a section of territory but also as an institution. First, as we contemplate the foundation and those who made it, into our minds instantly flashes the picture of a tiny sail¬ ing craft bearing sturdy men and women to an un¬ known coast; of the little settlement clutched in winter’s grip, and of the struggle with starvatior. I do not need to speak further of the Pilgrims, for you all know by heart, their part in the early his¬ tory of our commonwealth. Encouraged by their example more settlers came, founded Boston and other towns, and the state prospered. But it was always a struggle, and strong, true men were needed for the task. Then came the thickening clouds. But great men such as John and Samuel Adams, James Otis, John Han¬ cock and General Warren arose to the occasion. Samuel Adams was the one who pleaded with the governor to remove the British soldiers from the city after Boston Massacre. It is said that he was one of the “Indians” who threw the tea into Bos¬ ton harbor. As one historian expresses it: “To George Ill’s eyes the capital of Massachusetts was a center of vulgar seditions, strewn with brick¬ bats and broken glass, where his enemies went about clothed in homespun and his friends in tar and feathers.” Other Massachusetts patriots were Paul Revere, Elbridge Gerry, Robert Treat Paine, and Captain Parker, the commander of the Min- utemen at Lexington. Benjamin Franklin was born in Boston, although his great life was spent else¬ where. On the other hand, Daniel Webster of a later period, whose early life was spent in New Hampshire, became most famous when working for Massachusetts. Our state also has the honor of being the home of John Quincy Adams. In the present day Massachusetts is no slacker in the political world with the vice-president of the Unit¬ ed States and the Speaker of the House of Rep¬ resentatives. In military projects, Massachusetts has also been first. The first battles of the Revolutionary war were fought on the soil of Massachusetts at Lexington and Bunker Hill; the Sixth Massa¬ chusetts regiment was the first to arrivq at the scene of action in the beginning of the Civil war; and in the World war our boys were first in bravery and prowess. Massachusetts has been active in literary lines as well as in the political and military. Massa¬ chusetts writers hold a very important place in the literary world. Who has not heard of that illustri¬ ous group, the members of which were such inti¬ mate neighbors? The kind, thoughtful Emerson; the nature-loving Thoreau; Bronson Alcott, the impractical; his daughter, Louisa, who was the sun¬ shine of the whole neighborhood, all blended into the atmosphere of Concord and Massachusetts. To another group belonged Longfellow, Whittier and Holmes, all writers of great merit. The famous preacher, Wendell Phillips, and the evangelist, Dwight L. Moody, may be mentioned with this lit¬ erary group. Future generations will see the merit of present day writers, although our contempor¬ aries show remarkable abilities. Some of the best known are Henry Cabot Lodge, Bliss Perry and the late Geo. W. Cable. Turning rather abruptly, but still on the sub¬ ject of books, let us consider the number and standing of our schools and colleges. When the Puritans came to this country one of the first things they did was to build churches and schools. As a result Massachusetts has some of the best schools and colleges in the land. In 1636, only six years aft¬ er Boston was founded, the Massachusetts legisla¬ ture voted 400 pounds to found a college at New- towne, what is now Cambridge. This was the first body in which the people by their representatives ever gave their own money to found a place of edu¬ cation.” Although Harvard is the oldest and largest, there are many others of high standard: Williams, Amherst, Wellesley, Mount Holyoke, Radcliffe and Smith. There are several technical schools and innumerable high schools, seminaries, and acad¬ emies. Massachusetts may boast of ten normal schools. The public school system is not excelled in the country. Massachusetts is not naturally an agricultural state, only nine per cent of its laborers being em¬ ployed on farms. Therefore, its great source of

Suggestions in the Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) collection:

Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

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Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

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Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

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Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

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Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

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Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

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