Stoneham High School - Wildlife Yearbook (Stoneham, MA)

 - Class of 1935

Page 21 of 46

 

Stoneham High School - Wildlife Yearbook (Stoneham, MA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 21 of 46
Page 21 of 46



Stoneham High School - Wildlife Yearbook (Stoneham, MA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 20
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Stoneham High School - Wildlife Yearbook (Stoneham, MA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 22
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Page 21 text:

PUBLISHED STONEHAM BY THE SENIOR CLASS OF THE HIGH SCHOOL, STONEHAM, MASS. VOLUME 52 JUNE 1935 NUMBER 4 EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief John Bergman Dorothy Amo Assistant Editors Maryalice Conley Rose Madison ’36 Associate Editors David Dewhurst ’36 Advertising Manager William Garside Business Manager Thomas Carroll Assistant Advertising Manager Helen Barnes Athletic Editors Dorothy Oppen Philip Riley Circulation Manager George Van Etten Alumni Editor Joyce Clark Art Editor Lucille Isabelle Asst. Circulation Manager Albert Dyson Exchange Editor David Kirkpatrick Humor-Gossip Leslie French Virginia Adams Dorothy Hynes Clerical Committee Dorothy Cleveland Dorothy Amo Kathryn Meehan Margaret Landers Cttmitenta President’s Address 18 The Development of the High School 18 History of Class of 1935 20 Class Prophecy 22 Prophecy of Prophet 26 Class Will and Testament 28 Graduation Honors 30 Senior Hop 32 The Senior Play 32 The Dramatic Club 32 Commercial Club ! 32 Traffic Squad 34 Class Statistics 34 Football 36 Cross Country 36 Field Hockey 36 Hockey 38 Basketball 38 Baseball 38

Page 20 text:

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Page 22 text:

18 THE STONEHAM HIGH SCHOOL AUTHENTIC PRESIDENT’S ADDRESS We, the Class of ’35, welcome you to our gradu- ation day exercises. This day marks the climax of twelve years of fond school memories. We hope, parents and teachers, that this event will linger as long in your memories as it will in ours. Having arrived at this important occasion with the help of your combined efforts and sacrifices, we deem it fitting to extend to you our sincere apprecia- tion and thanks. We realize the obstacles which have confronted our parents in guiding us through school. Although unseen by others, their sacrifices are recognized and appreciated by us. The patience and co-operation of all those teach- ers with whom we have been associated for so many years will always be foremost in our memory. We are gathered here as a class for the last time. Our high school education has thus far led us along the right road. From the many paths of opportun- ity open to us each must now choose the one for which he is best fitted. Inspired by your fine example, may we go forth to what lies ahead with a determination to repay the sacrifi ces of our parents, and to put into our daily lives the lessons of truth which our teachers have in- stilled in us. We now invite you to share and enjoy with us our graduation day exercises. John Buckley. THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE HIGH SCHOOL Inasmuch as the 300th anniversary of the found- ing of the Boston Latin School is being celebrated throughout the nation this year, it is fitting and proper that we briefly survey the history of the high school. The growth of the high school has been closely re- lated to all of the social, economic, and religious advances in our country’s development. It has to a large degree moulded the character of the American people and in turn the needs of the time have had a profound influence upon the curricula offered by our schools. The development of the high school may be divid- ed into three different stages. First, the Latin school, beginning with the Boston Latin School in 1635, which dominated our educational system until the American Revolution. Second, the academy, which held sway from the Revolution to the Civil War. Third, the high school, which has held a dom- inating position since the Civil War. Let us analyze the aims and accomplishments of each of these institutions. The immediate aim of the Boston Latin School was to prepare boys for Harvard College, which in turn was founded to prepare men for the ministry. Thus our whole early educational system had for its aim religious education. This is definitely stated in the law establishing the Latin School. It reads as follows: “It being one chief product of that old deluder, Satan, to keep men from the knowledge of the scrip- tures, by keeping them in an unknown tongue, so that the true sense and meaning of the original might be clouded by the false glosses of saint-seem- ing deceivers, it is therefore ordered that any town of 100 families set up a Latin school to instruct youths for university.” This law, which is called the “old deluder law,” clearly indicates that the people felt that men must be enlightened to fight that “old deluder, Satan”. It is easy to imagine one of these ministers, trained under this theory, preaching a three hour sermon each Sunday afternoon to a group of devout but bored parishioners. The curriculum of the Latin school was made up entirely of the study of Latin. Picture the poor Latin school boys! At the very start they plung- ed into the black wilderness of Lilley’s Grammar with its twenty-five kinds of nouns, seven genders, fifteen solid pages of rules for gender, and also the exceptions, with a topoff of twenty-two pages of noun declensions, and every word must be commit- ted to memory. The narrowness of the curriculum of the Latin school was no doubt the cause of its decline, but this school established the principle of public education which probably would never have gained the head- way it has in America had it not been for the acute- ness of the early settlers. Although it was the primary purpose of the Latin school to prepare men to ward off the wiles of Satan, it did not suppress the mischievousness of the boys. The school usually had a floor of dirt which could be ground into a dry dust two or three inches thick. Here was a way of vengeance for an unannounced test in gerundives. With great zeal and perse- verance the pupils would grind and pound with their feet until slowly there would rise a cloud of dust sufficiently thick to warrant a recess of fifteen or twenty minutes. It may be imagined that if the master was inconvenienced for the time being, the pupils were not spared the ferule at the next oppor- tunity. For obvious reasons the Latin school was not pop- ular among the students. As early as 1711 the se- lectmen of Boston decided that there were many boys who received little benefit from the four years spent there, and they suggested that a less tedious and burdensome method of instruction be put into

Suggestions in the Stoneham High School - Wildlife Yearbook (Stoneham, MA) collection:

Stoneham High School - Wildlife Yearbook (Stoneham, MA) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Stoneham High School - Wildlife Yearbook (Stoneham, MA) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Stoneham High School - Wildlife Yearbook (Stoneham, MA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Stoneham High School - Wildlife Yearbook (Stoneham, MA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Stoneham High School - Wildlife Yearbook (Stoneham, MA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Stoneham High School - Wildlife Yearbook (Stoneham, MA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938


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