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Page 13 text:
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' L V Sv 1 I L 5 . H I the best and the f ll rr L L it V ,2L f lllllllllllllllllilllll ifnu o ' 'fllv 3 rg. 1 9, W? , 44 -,Wd in-,eib:Tj,17,T2.T - 1 ti' - , 7 +,g,,. f Qi ff , L f 11.1 Cie: -H1 Y-n..,,,y V.-:' s KRQ-1 X 5 i -cu NM 5-lf, Y ,L-fm 11-iggff ff: , ef.. -g:,Y,Mf,- 1:24 .Z - L .L , L Z , ,J J f if ,W,i'fI'.'?'3lHTWllillllll illlllllllllllillilllllfllflll1lllllllllll l fxllllxllllliiy Vlxlxlll mph nialpll mwnlvilyt iwrlyi ,UU I A ! l .'lf:, W'il.,,llllli3l ll. llllll T lil ' l , L Awful flllll-iltllgllnl Ill, W, ,,,mllllWM.An it ify.,,',iqli'i,m,ml,.. , -ie, ' Y, 1513 gf-f , ,ff ' ' 141 I . TH' - .f 4 , L F-'Rs-Q. a i gl will S ' TO THE CLASS OF 1916. WE leave the high school after four short, happy years as students here, we hand down to you a sacred trust: to up- hold the high standard of our school and of our magazine. The motto of both has always been: Honor to whom honor is due. Do not depart from this tradition. Make your class, your paper, and yourselves reflect nothing but highest, and may the coming staff of the Olive and Gold feel behind it the same hearty co-operation of the students of the school, and the same friendly interest of the citizens of Santa Barbara, that we have felt in the year now drawing to a closel Good luck to you, 1916! A RECORD YEAR. The Senior class of this year has already enrolled sixty-one students. The total attendance for the year will pass the five hundred mark. This is a record year in numbers, at least. THE SCHOOL CALENDAR. Before the close of last year, the Faculty Committee worked out a schedule of events for the coming year, making the fixed dates, such as the Thanksgiving game and the Senior play, centers about which to group the movable feasts. All went well until the first date was broken, then began shifts and the whole system was deranged, event piling up on event until, at the end of the year, the congestion was deplorable-witness the jam of the Senior Play, Track Meet, Barbecue, May Festival. Let us profit by this experience and work off our events next year as slated. One thing is certain: we must have our student-body-money-making event in the fall and leave the spring open for the Track Meet and the Senior Play. The psychology of this is evident, in the fall, we return to school with money to burn , in the spring, we have nothing but the holes in our pockets to attest that the money has been burned. A May Queen Contest is the kind of lucky accident that can never happen again. T THE NEW SYSTEM. A new system of checking tardiness has been inaugurated. The entire attendance of school is taken every period during the day, and the absences
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Page 12 text:
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TO YOU, O LOYAL FRIENDS. This book goes forth to you, our loyal friends, To carry thence our greeting and our cheer. Reflected in its pages here you see Our daily walks and ancient neighborhood. To you, O, grave Alumnus, may it bring The backward look, and gentle mem'ries dear. To us it forward points the mystic way, Along the veiled vista of the years. Commencement Day! We linger, loath to go, Our heart-strings bound to each accustomed place. For four short years we've wrought, and played, and sung Within these classic halls, we here have learned High rubiayat of life from mentors Wise, Here friendships forged that never will us fail. Now go we forth, as you, our loyal friends, To battle for the right against the Wrong. True to our teaching, we will highest aim And plant our standards in the foremost van. O, Alma Mater, guide our footsteps sure, Thy lessons go with us thro' all the years! With thy long, levell'd rule of streaming light Thou shalt be our star of Arcadyf' -Ruth Culver, '15
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Page 14 text:
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12 OLIVE AND GOLD and tardinesses are immediately reported to the homes by student-committees. As a result, the attendance has been improved and the number of delinquent students has steadily decreased. THE NEW GYMNASIUM. In spite of financial handicaps, the Board of Education has been, during the last year, particularly generous in supplying the needs of the high school. Notably among these is the new gymnasium. We have now one of the finest open-air gymnasiums on the coast. Built on the site of the old basketball court, the building is now complete, with its hardwood floor measuring one hundred and six feet in length and thirty-one feet in width, its dressing rooms, its twelve showers, and its two large rest-rooms. With this splendid equip- ment, the gymnasium teachers are now able to give real physical training. By this addition, moreover, the school has at last gained a much-needed place in which to hold the social activities of the student-body. STUDENT NEEDS. As each year the student-body grows larger and larger, the student needs grow in proportion. One of the most difficult tasks now confronting the council is the problem of caring for the automobiles, motorcycles and bicycles of the students. Heretofore, they have been kept along the east and north sides of the high school building, but these spaces have become overcrowded and, as a result, the parking around the building has greatly suffered. The luncheon problem also calls for solution. We have no cafeteria, and, as two-thirds of our students come from a distance, many order luncheons from the down town stores. These brought to the schools by the different delivery wagons at all hours of the forenoon, interfere with the work of the secretary who must needs stop what she is doing to dispose of them. Valu- able time is lost in this way, and many luncheons never reach their owners, as there is no definite place to store them. Perhaps the most urgent of all student-body needs is an office, with a desk and a filing-case of its own. We respectfully submit these problems to the school-board, realizing fully that there are other and perhaps graver needs, but hoping, however, for a solu- tion of the above. IMPROVEMENTS. Now that De la Vina street is paved, we wonder how we ever stood the inconvenience of it otherwise. No noise of heavy traffic, a pleasing approach to our building-we certainly thank the city for this improvement. MISS DOROTHY DAVIS. The position in English made vacant through leave of absence granted to Miss Grace R. Southwick has been very ably filled by Miss Dorothy Davis. Miss Davis was, for one semester, instructor in English in the University of Southern California. This is her first high school position, yet there is no amateurishness in her work which is, in all essentials, professional.
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