Valparaiso High School - Valenian Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN)

 - Class of 1915

Page 14 of 102

 

Valparaiso High School - Valenian Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 14 of 102
Page 14 of 102



Valparaiso High School - Valenian Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 13
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Page 14 text:

them with his idle prattle, and copying their work. The parasite is a person who is eonstantly demanding favors, but never willing to grant one; a person who is always growling if favors are not accorded him, but abuses shamefully those already given; a person who believes school exists for him alone and, consequently, is ever ready to become con- spicuous thru his arrogant actions. If the parasite wasted only his own time, he alone would suffer, but when he wastes the precious moments of others who need every second, he becomes a demoralizing influence and should be instantly removed. For example, consider how much disturbance one parasite can cause in our High School. If he disturbs everyone in the Assembly Room for one minute, it means a loss of two hundred minutes. This loss not being evident to everybody, the Principal is forced to take ten minutes of every person ' s time to explain the situation, thereby losing two thousand minutes or more time than one student spends in school in one week. If the para- site causes two thousand minutes to be lost in school, how many will he occasion in a ' lifetime! Another parasitic habit, equally bad, is the borrowing one. If in our High Scliool, one boy was given the task of supplying the demands of girls desiring knives for pencil sharpening, he could do nothing else. If a borrower impedes progress in school, how can he do otherwise in the business world which he must soon enter! The answer is plainly seen. Of what use is all our school training if we only learn to be destroyers, loafers, borrowers, degenerates, degra- tors and parasites ? Our presence would have a demoralizing effect on those about us; we could never succeed in business, for business has no use for parasites; in short, we would be miserable failures, blots upon the face of civilization and humanity. Therefore, let us not l)ecome parasitic in any way. Let us be builders, not destroyers; workers, not loafers; let us be all that is good and right in our sehool life and then with our school training shall come character development. Then and then alone shall we be free from those parasitic principles, and then there will be no such thing as, The School Parasite. F. J. MARSTON, Editor-in-Chief.

Page 13 text:

STAFF Editor Assistant Editor . Business Manager Assistant Business Manager Exchange Editor Athletic Editor . Joke Editor . Daily Doings Editor Society Editor Alumni Editor Fred Marston Howard Dodge Roland Kenny Louise Horn Carrie Turner Harold Gates Gerald Timmons Jewell Hembroff Lou Cartha Pierce Clare McGillicuddy THE SCHOOL PARASITE. PAEASITE, as Webster defines him, is a hanger-on, a depend- ent flatter, a toady. In the school room a parasite has all of these qualities and is in addition a time waster, a borrower, and a general nuisance. If the matter ended here it would be bad enough, but as habits acquired in youth continue in after life, the parasite retains these qualities much to his sorrow, after he leaves the school room. It is easy to locate the school parasite. Pick out the student who is constantly bothering his neighbors, borrowing from them, annoying



Page 15 text:

MR. HOMER M. JESSEE MRS. LU S. BROOKE THE WORK OF THE SCHOOL. INCE 1872 Valparaiso has had a high school with a four years course. The faculty has generally inclined to classical or so called academic subjects, but there has always been a choice given the students l)etween languages and science. At pres- ent the freshmen may choose either the Latin or the Scien- titic courses. In the Scientific he substitutes for Latin, English His- tory, Intellectual Arithmetic, Zoology, C ' hemistry, and Manual Training or Domestic Art and Domestic Science. All })ui)ils have a further opportunity through the electives to become versed in Bookkeeping and Phonography. Eight credits of English, six of Mathematics, six of Latin, four of History, one of Civics, and at least three credits in Science are required of all students who are expecting to receive a diploma. A more com})lete description of these departments will be found in the following pages. SANFORD CAMPBELL.

Suggestions in the Valparaiso High School - Valenian Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) collection:

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Valparaiso High School - Valenian Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

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Valparaiso High School - Valenian Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

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Valparaiso High School - Valenian Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

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Valparaiso High School - Valenian Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

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