Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda)

 - Class of 1966

Page 22 of 80

 

Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 22 of 80
Page 22 of 80



Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 21
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Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 23
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Page 22 text:

20 MONTHS In January school begins, So does football and bruised shins. February, to be quite frank, I will have to leave a blank. Windy March brings the Spring, When we hear the bluebirds sing. The month of April brings the rain. Coaxing flowers to grow again. After all these April showers, It is a joy to see May flowers. June is the time to plan vacations. Make arrangements and reservations. Hot July ' s the end of term, And with report cards. Dad ' s quite firm. August is the time for swimming. Rowing boats and going finning. By September, sad to say. Holidays ore over ' til Christmas Day. Late October brings Halloween, Popcorn, apples and ice-cream. Early November brings Guy Fawkes ' Day, Bangers! and rockets turn night into day. In cold December comes Christmas Day, Joy and gladness to all, we pray. T. W. T. HALU Jr. V. 1st XI FOOTBALL - 1965 The 1965 season was not one of the best experienced by the Saltus 1st XI and the team ended up with an unimpressive record. The results obtained were not due to a lack of potential amongst the team members but rather to the absence of any cohesion between them. The passing was not as accurate as one could have hoped and players showed a lock of imagination, in most instances, when it came to using the open spaces available. Perhaps physical fitness, or rather the opposite, was another pitfall in our bid for success. A good example where fitness would have made a great difference was the game against Dellwood. This, the first game of the season, was drawn.

Page 21 text:

19 EDITORIAL The 1 1 + has come to Bermuda. Free education will be supplied in one or other of the schools in the Island which run academic courses to G.C.E. level, to those students who pass the Board of Education ' s examination. The Board has been reticent about the form and content of this examination, but all the primary school children in Bermuda have now taken it and presumably places will be awarded to children who show sufficient promise to lead the Board to hope they may pass a number of subjects at ' O ' level in four years time. A good deal can happen in four years. But there has to be some sort of test if the good are to be separated from the not-so-good, and for many years an 1 1 -|- examination was used in England. This examination, incidentally, is now being replaced in England by a system which is less mechanical and less of a sudden. death play-off. It was felt that it was unfair and inaccurate to judge a child permanently on his performance on two days out of the year, and it was also felt that although an impersonal and stereo- typed test might effectively sort eggs or tins of tomato sauce it was less reliable in sorting human beings. Naturally, most of the pressure to do away with the English 1 1 + came from the parents of those who failed it, but be that as it may an increasing number of Local Education Authorities (equivalent to the Board of Education in Bermuda) now use a series of smaller tests set at intervals over a year or more of each child ' s schooling, the results of which are taken in conjunction with a report from the head teacher of the child ' s primary school. Undoubtedly this kind of assessment will hove completely replaced the old method in England by 1970, and few can doubt that the change will be for the better. However, a move in Bermudian education which aims to make secondary education to G.C.E. levels available to more boys and girls is clearly to be welcomed. It is in the Island ' s interest thot fewer expatriates be imported to do work Bermudians are not qualified to do, and free education for the able but poor should result in a larger reserve of brainpower in the future. Thus the now embarrassingly pressing need to bring in qualified people to teach or administrate will become less acute. The proof of the pudding, though, is in the eating: we shall have to wait and see how the scheme works out. No doubt the Board will find that many adjustments ore needed before they can consider the recipe for this pudding proved.



Page 23 text:

21 With a lead of 2-1 our strength petered out in the dying minutes, allowing the opposition their equalising goal. This was perhaps our best game of the season OS far as skillful playing and determination goes and had we kept up to this standord throughout the season perhaps our record would have been better. J. R. SIGGINS, Sr. V. JUNIOR LEAGUE For the third consecutive year, the School ' s under thirteen players won the coveted trophy for the B.S.S.A. Junior League Football Competition. The com- petition was ogain conducted in one league and Saltus drew only one home again. In the School ' s first encounter at Dellwood, goals by C. S. Brown and P. S. Welch, paved the way for an encouraging 3-1 victory. In their only home match against Sandys, the School were hardly extended in winning comfortably by eight goals against a youthful but plucky opposition. In the next two matches, the eleven showed their ability to come from behind. At Warwick, although always behind until the last few minutes of play, a concerted drive resulted in the winning goal only seconds from the final whistle. At Cavendish, the following week, the School team was one down almost from the start. The margin of play slowly but surely swung and adapting to the confines of a smaller field, the School snatched the equaliser and were unlucky not to win. The final game against Gilbert Institute would decide the competition winners, and again playing on a small field, the boys settled right down to ploy constructive football and a goal in each half by Tyler Moniz set the stage for the successful defense of the league title. Junior League Players: J. C. Conyers improved rapidly in goal. P. M. Lamont and Moulder proved a solid defence with R. Lines as reserve. P. G. Leighton was a steady and constructive wing half, while M. F. J. Barritt on occasions, added to the attack. B. W. Mollis and P. S. Welch combined well in attack on the right side, P. A. Card worked hard both defensively and on attack, while C. S. Brown filled the centre spot with drive, Tyler Moniz, experienced left winger, was the out- standing forward and always a dangerous player when on the move. R. J. Ahern controlled the play from the centre half position and proved a capable captain. Results: S.G.S. 3 Dellwood 1 8 Sandys 0 3 Warwick 2 1 Cavendish 1 2 Gilbert 0 P.S.W

Suggestions in the Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) collection:

Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

1958

Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959

Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967

Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

Saltus Grammar School - Yearbook (Hamilton, Bermuda) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
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