Hope High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Providence, RI)

 - Class of 1903

Page 11 of 71

 

Hope High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1903 Edition, Page 11 of 71
Page 11 of 71



Hope High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1903 Edition, Page 10
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Page 11 text:

All schools have their customs and traditions, and all its customs and traditions are good for a school. Although Hope High is yet new and yet forming, already it has fallen into some good customs. We at Hope have certain fixed habits in athletics, we have as a regular event the Senior Dance 5 the custom' of having theatricals two or three times during the year seems to have come to stay, and The Blue and W hitel' is a Hope High institution. Hope St. High is, like most other Rhode Island High Schools, a member of the Interscholastic League. This League is a very commendable organization, for it has promoted in the schools a keen interest in athletics. The definite competition which League membership has encouraged has been the sole means of raising High School athletics to their present standard in Rhode Island. But why be limited to Rhode Island? Would it not be a good scheme to arrange for the champion team of the Inter- scholastic League to play the champion teams of the High Schools around Boston? In track events the League might pick a general team consisting of the winners in the yearly track-meet. These arrangements would, of course, occasion some expense to the League, but all the schools could easily meet that. Such competitions at the end of each season would determine the relative athletic standing of our League, and, con- sidering the ability of teams to be found in our High Schools, it can be expected that Rhode Island's Interscholastic League would be very well represented. The Senior Dance is an established custom at Hope St. This is the only dance of the year, for, as Dr. Dennis expresses it, our High School is not a dancing academy. This year the dance took place on February the sixth. and, naturally, was our great sacial event of the season. Although we are not going to follow newspaper style and enter into a detailed account of beautiful gowns, charming dancers, delightful repast, enticing music, etc., it isn't because of lack of opportunity. As the name shows, this dance is a Senior Class affair. The Seniors, through the dance committee, invited their friends-undergraduates, alumni, and specials'l, went to the assembly hall, and had a good time. To the dance committee, President Dorrance Cchairmanj, Miss Freeborn, Miss Spink, and Babcock, great praise is due for its arrangement of details. It was the good work of the committee together with the geniality and good-fellow- ship on the part of everybody that made the affair such a pre-eminent success. Outside of the Senior Dance, the principal events of a social nature were the few ''entertainments,'' or parties,H given by the Juniors to themselves. Through Mlle. Saniewska's efforts, these are becoming part of the life of the Juniors. The name of these affairs is somewhat deceptive. In fact, the '04's themselves are at a loss what to call them. The Principal does not permit them to be termed Hdances, ' i but leniently allows dancing as a side feature, and in most cases, it was a side feature made special, and if the affairs were ''entertainments, then everyone present must have been the entertainer and the entertained. The last of these entertainments, one given by the Classicals to the English, was particularly successful. Congdon, being the President of the Classicals, started the fun, and there was a rollicking good time. It ended with an exciting Virginia Reel. If the .Iuniors are as good hosts as they are self-entertainers, next year's Senior Dance will certainly be a success. The only play at Hope St. that has been presented in its completeness was the long-awaited German entertainment, that took place on May 7. After a short curtain- raiser, the play, 'tOne Must Marry, began. The actors had been trained by Miss Weeden, and did excellent work. Martin was in his element as he made love. Snow furnished great amusement by his impersonation of the lover who gets left, and bore his disappointment, as is usual with him. The difficult task of listening to Martin's

Page 10 text:

i-'vrhnul nies The 1Iun1her of pupils in 2Llll,Cl'1Cl2L11C9 at Hope St. High School is Four hundred and seventy-five. The corps ol' teftcliers numbers twenty-one. Eluntrurinra at 1611412 ifatrrvi High Srhnnl GIIARLEs E. DENNIS, JR., PH. D., Principal WMALTER J. TOXVNE, A. M., Matlienizttics ELLEN DODGE, English llflARr A. TUCIQER, A. B., English VICTOR FRAZEF1, A. M., History IRENE SANIEXVSKA, French A ANNE T. WMEEDEN, A. M. German CHAHLEs E. TILLEY, A. M., Science FRANK A. T IBIIETS, Gonnnereial Studies .lEss1E L. BEERs, A.. B., Greek and Latin GRACE H. PARKER, A. B., Science IDA B. SMITH, Grade Studies ELIZA M. PEIRCE, A. M., English ALICE W. HUN'll, A. B., Latin and Grade Studies BEssIE S. WARNER, A. B., Greek and Latin SUsANNA G. CUSHING, Modern Lzmguzrges FLORENCE H. SLACK, Eloeution Svtuhrnt Urarhrra ESTHER D. GRISXVOLD, A. B., Latin W. Esrns NIACGOXVAN, A. B., Science CHARLI-Qs R. HASLAM, A. B., History I. MAUHE WMARRICN, PH. B., Science Since the lust Blue :Ind White came out, the class of '02 presented the school with it large, liandsonie statue of Diana. The Figure is of especial beziuty, firni and graceful, and is H. fine reproduction of the original. 'In choosing it, the class added greatly to its own credit as well as to the artistic and classical appearance of the hzrll. In the third quarter of this school year the Classical Departnient of the Senior Class made nn unprecedented record. Out of the thirty-four I11G1l1lJG1'S only one failed in any study, and that person failed in only one.



Page 12 text:

proposal of marriage was gracefully performed by Miss Fuller. To Miss Lyon belongs the highest praise, for she threw herself entirely into her part and gained great ap- plause from the spectators. If the play had occurred sooner, it would have been re- ported with greater fullness in these pages, for the excellence of the performance at- tracted the attention of everyone. The price of The Blue and W hitef' ought to be higher. There is no good reason why the Senior Class, which has all kinds of extra expenses, should have to bear the brunt of the cost for publishing a book that is edited for the whole school. There is no reason why the Business Manager of this publication should have to spend so much time in getting ads. so that the members of the school can have a book for twenty-five cents that costs the publishers thirty-five. There is no reason why the writings in The Blue and W hite should not be enclosed in a cloth binding. The book is, in a way, representative of Hope St., and the school owes it to itself to have a substantial cover of cloth, not a thin one of paper on which the best of designs loses much of its original richness. T he Blue and White ' ' should sell for no less than half a dollar. All its customs are good for a school. Athletics improve our bodies, and bring the fellows of the school together. Dances and entertaimnents'J produce that good feeling among the members of a school thatcan come only from having common sources of enjoyment. And theatricals, whether presented in the English or in some other- language, give us opportunity to show what we can do. All our customs tend to pro- duce school patriotism and unity of school life,-great things where so many persons are brought together who have so many different purposes and ideas, with the sole common tie of studying under the same roof. The few traditions that our school has are connected with graduating. Of course the custom of presenting class gifts to the school is well known, but the mysteries of the last few days evolve with graduating, and cannot be told of here. They are to be learned of only in the last few weeks of the final year at the school. Where is the debating club that we Hopeites have been recommended to form? On April twenty-eight, the boys began the boycott of the lunch-counter. No explanation needed. il B ' I 9 9 B A 72, J' ll lf i ef i ifefe l i A V ' 2 ,f i , , ll.. fe' it-1 t ,, ,, .,., . ii 'X ' - - - I SEEN rx THE Boys' I,oeKEn-Romi.

Suggestions in the Hope High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Providence, RI) collection:

Hope High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

1904

Hope High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1905 Edition, Page 1

1905

Hope High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911

Hope High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

1912

Hope High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Hope High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931


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