New Haven High School - Elm Tree Yearbook (New Haven, CT)

 - Class of 1910

Page 12 of 104

 

New Haven High School - Elm Tree Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 12 of 104
Page 12 of 104



New Haven High School - Elm Tree Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 11
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New Haven High School - Elm Tree Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 13
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Page 12 text:

Q ,,,. ,f 3 sr 1- IE gud --aa, 8 NEW HAVEN HIGH SCHOOL CLASS BOOK Senior class present their play, Davy Crockettf, Enthusiastic over the huge success, we firmly resolved, if vve ever became as this great country. Here thepoorest may reach the top if he Seniors, to make the play presented by the Class of 1910 as great a success. HOW sadfly, indeed, our hopes were shattered. The junior Fair, presented early in December, cannot be forgotten, nor can the Charity Concert presented by the Senior Class. The four years of High School 'life may be pointed to as proving the theory of The Survival of the Fittestf, XYe made friends and comrades that first year. XVhen we returned we looked them up. Some -of the old faces could not be found. They had fallen by the wayside, either voluntarily or from necessity. Some started 'again at the first mile-stone. How glad, we then were, to have reached the second. To be more explicit, the weeding'! was in progress. This annual and monthly house- oleaning had already become familiar to us, as We had Watched it with interest during our Freshman year. It has continued. as you know, through our High School life, leaving the class of 1910 with less than four hundred members. the f'fit. Many of us, that year. wished that Caesar had never been born, but we trotted through it. fthe yeari, however. and reached the goal sought, the junior year. And now my memory fails me. Irecall no more. I leave you to retrace next, that hardest of years, the Junior year. EdTE'I.1Z T'Vz7lI'1'a11z Purdy. NIV 7-Q 1 Wx ? IIIK5

Page 11 text:

S. Sophomore Year Y DE.-XR Classmates. Return with me in memory to that year of fun and comfort, the Sophomore year. How glad we were to return to the school, which We began to speak of with endearing tones, after that first long vacation. There was another reason. It was to annoy the Scrubs. We considered it our duty as Sophomores. That duty we kept, and with interest. ' The football team that year was fairly successful, winning several difficult games. The Middletown game was exceptionally so. we Winning by the score of 6 to 5. In the other athletic de- partments, basketball and baseball, the school was also successful, winning and losing about the same number of games. But the class teams cannot be forgotten. Capt. Farrington of the Sophomore basketball team played through a very success- ful season, winning the championship. We lost the baseball championship, but can anyone deny, that if was -one of the best ,teams presented in several years. To be sure, We lost the decid- ing game to t-he Seniors, by a score of I to O. but it was a Won- derful team we played against. Teas appeared to be popular that year. The B. T.-. Phi Sigma, Alpha Alpha Sorority, and Kappa Mu Sigma each giving one. Vtiere you present at any of these, or at any of the follow- ing dances given that year? Theta Rho, Theta Sigma, Alpha Delta Sigma. during which the last named society presented a farce entitled The Music Plaster, Alpha Iota Epsilon, Senior Promenade and Dance. and the last big social affair of the year, the Crescent Entertainment and Dance. This latter society pre- sented a farce entitled The Peacemaker. Most of us saw the



Page 13 text:

unior Class HO of the Class of 1910 does not remember how proud he felt to be an upper classman, a junior, when he came back to old Xew Haven High on that September morning in 1908? And who did not look forward to the pleasure which comes to an upper classman? This junior class was the largest that had ever entered New llaven High School, and what hopes of its prominence and success did its members not entertain? The first excitement among us was felt chieldy by the tuition pupilsg for had not the Board of Education. in a rash moment. passed a vote putting all tuition people out of school? tThat Freshman class of 1912 was altogether too large for our com- fort ll But the main excitement died away when word came that out-of-town people would be allowed to finish the year IQOQ, but could not come back in the fall. Still the suhurbanites dreaded having to leave just when they were becoming Seniors: but there was hope that the vote might be rescinded, which happenezl later in the year. Soon invitations for the B. T.- tea appeared. That affair was a novelty in that the hostesses wore Colonial costumes. The Alpha Alpha, Phi Sigma. and Kappa Mu Sigma teas which fol- lowed were all well attended and greatly enjoyed. The Hrst affair in which the class took part was the junior Fair. Cf course, we were going to have the best fair that any junior Class in New Haven High School had ever held. And it certainly was a success, for didn't that Dutch Fair net us over two hundred and fifty dollars! That surely was going far ahead of our predecessors. Z

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