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Page 22 text:
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-P- --,--.,.........-..i:q-faaf-1- f-zfzf-51211 .Arn -.-..4-5-- . a . V- 4 ' -- - .--.4--fi--1c:?1t1. ,A .' --e-Ar - 'f :1' ' ' T , - - - ' '- ' . ...eaf....Q.5,..,,eii-gf:-f.-ex-:..-- f.-- --'H 4 : - - L e - -v 20 THE WESTPORT HIGH SCHOOL HERALD The dramatic classes of Mr. Humphrey and Miss Short presented an unusually artistic pro- gram in assembly February 7. Mr. Humphrey's class gave a scene from Everywoman, while the class of Miss Short put on two scenes from Hamlet and two from Macbeth. The parts were taken by Carlyn Lehman, Helen Hinshaw, Helen Flynn, Eleanor Siebert, Elizabeth Turner, Claude Bowman, Gladys Exline, Irma Kevan, Lois Van Evera, Beata Slusher, Edith Landes, Floy Rob- inson, Martha Harding, Clara Hoelzel, Hulda Siedel, Corrine Craig, Virginia Duval, Myrtle Nelson and Isadore Ross. The assembly given on March 4 had a double purpose, first to present the basket ball W's to their proud owners, and, second to give West- port the opportunity to hear Mrs. George B. Baker, Dean of Radcliff College, give a short talk on the college with which she is connected. The blushing athletes received their letters with their customary bravery and Mrs, Baker's talk was un- usually interesting. .i. Mr. George Huff, athletic instructor at the Uni- versity of Illinois, talked in assembly March 11. He spoke on good sportsmanship and a more gen- eral participation in athletics and deplored the fact that so many people take their exercise by proxy. ll . The boys' Central-Manual debate was given in an assembly on March 13, and the girls from the same schools met here March 24. li.. , The program for the assembly given on March 31 consisted of three musical numbers by the girls' and boys' Glee Clubs and talks on the need of the school bond issue by Donald Wren, Fred- rick Scharles and Edmund Platt. 1 . A talk on Wellesley by Professor MacDougall of the Music Department of that college was the first number on the program April 5. After the debaters and their coaches had praised each other for a while, they presented the hard earned de- bate pins. 1. April 25 Col. Ruby Garrett talked in assembly on the necessity of a boys' day and urged that all loyal Westporters should prove their loyalty by marching in the parade. Dean Pennypacker of Harvard said many things worth remembering in an address he gave in assembly May 9, He spoke first of the im- portance of examinations and said we would be judged in life by the things we can do in a crisis, not by what we think we know. The second bit of advice he gave was not to be satisfied with getting by, and the third was a warning to keep the esteem of our most valuable critic, ourselves. i A LAMENTATION. I've often wondered why it is that girls of every age, Have made some sort of memory book or diary all the rage 3 To hand out to a fellow with a smile and, Just a line- 5 Oh, any little verse will do, ,whenever you have time. Q And then you have to stop and think and think and stop some more, And rack your brain for all the verse you've heard ten years beforeg For something that's quite apropos, not heavy or too light, In fact, the thing you're looking for, must fit the lady-quite. Then after you have searched in vain for some- thing ready made, By Shakespeare or by Tennyson, Walt Mason or George Ade, You take your notebook, pen and ink and try to write your own 5 You start, and then-Alas! Alack! She's gone! The muse has flown. So after struggles hard and long with words and rhymes unruly, You know you're licked and so you write, The best of luck, yours truly? -EDIVDUND PLATT, '21 Altho of their defeatec of one ' decision team, w votes of The 1 two tea entirely. who wo in the I fecting and Mis time ani and girl The n Richard Robert Trimble Girls, ll Ginsbur Robinsoi The lg girls' M firmativ to Manu The v at Nortl ernment gration anese ar Lucile manner seemed speaker Hulda that the Her gest and witlr subject. . , - 1 -., , , . ,-f J, T, se .- ef , . emi, ff.AL..e,.ee uegaagee .aye,:Lau-a..t:a:.:u1::,ua1.a.m.:m2.faq:.w.:.31:.aaaS-aac.aaaq4...:...:xQ+ifs'-HJ-5:5 11,4-1-reclfa---:neva-.aaQ:.1.a.4-... J..,..' ul Y ,-
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Page 21 text:
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. . . .eu -411-1-.., .-.,. -.-:fp 1-.- -.v .,-.Y ,f--,,. T, wx, 7 I Q ,n in --an xzx in IN! null 'ax N10- ull. YI'-I ...ex 1.-u. s a most features of and chocolate er to be lled a de- rely they iasium on ballroom my flags, 'e in evi- scarcely Clionian- 1 Tablers consisted mber, an nal poem. nd all the iterest of m. 'devoted subjects. hird hour ig future rtainment lditorium. e gave a . April 15 who met :ly recog- r festivi- ld the re- icism by THE WESTPORT HIGH SCHOOL HERALD 19 ASSEMBLIES 9 The large number of assemblies this year may be due to the division of the school into two groups so that many of the pupils attended only about half of the assemblies, but that does not account for their variety, interest and originality. Edgar Guest gave a short talk which he fol- lowed by reciting some of his poems, in the first assembly of the year, October first. Although the assembly was during seventh hour there was a very large audience which was loath to let the poet depart even after he had recited six or eight of his poems. mi..l- The assembly on October 5 was given to awaken interest in the different school activities. Mr. Booth explained why the Crier was necessary to Westport, Mr. Humphrey presented the claims of debate and Coach Edwards and Mr. Harman talked about athletics. . iilia How to Keep Alive was the startling subject of a talk given in assembly on October 20 by Mr. J. L. Smyth, director of the Safety Council. With the aid of a blackboard, Mr. Smyth explained not only how to avoid the careless motorists, but how to avoid being a careless motorist or pedestrian. -mii- October 26 the assembly consisted of a very interesting talk by William Mather Lewis, an of- ficial of the United States Treasury. Mr. Lewis discussed the advantages of an education and the need for thrift. -.m.l.i- Mr. Wilbur Grogan, an instructor in the Coast Guard Training School at New London, Conn., spoke in an assembly given after eighth hour November 9. He explained how commissions may be obtained and urged the boys to take advantage of this opportunity. ml.-i Two former Westporters, Elizabeth Hanawal and Jessie Smullin, returned to Westport on November 15, when Heirs at Law, the play 111 which they both had leading roles, was pFGS0Ht9d in assembly by the Dramatic Art Club of Junior College. After the play, Mr. Fristoe awarded the tennis W's and Mildred Pearson received a prize for her Fire Prince poster. + o The Kansas University Band attracted a large crowd in the assembly held after the seventh hour November 24, and no one who stayed was disappointed. Dean Kelley of Kansas also gave a short address in whichihe emphasized the ad- vantages of a collegeieducation. A Miss Elizabeth Bain, representing the National Society of Social Hygiene, spoke in two assem- blies December 6. ,Her subject was Morals in the High School. The first assembly wias for the girls and the second- for the boys. Miss Bain worked for three years among the American sol- diers in England and France. - JA member of Robert Mantell'sK company, Mr. Guy Lindsley, gave a short talk on English and then gave several dramatic selections. His' aud- ience refused to let him depart before he had given the quarrel between Brutus and Cassius from Julius Caesar. This assembly was given December 23. T 'N ' To celebrate the three hundredth anniversary of the landing of the Pilgrims, a programiwass given on December 21 under the management of Mrs. Machaughlin. Appropriate poems and sel- ections were given by Ellen Dod, Audrey Miller, Myrtle Nelson, Harold Wahrenbrock, Julius Bischofshefimer and Willard Deutsch. As many Westporters as could find room in the auditorium after six wards schools had been seated, listened to the health lecture given Feb- ruary 12 by Cho Cho, a clown from the Chu Chin Chow company. Cho Cho turned out to be a most surprising, interesting and instructive person. , y The Processes of Sculpture was the title of a delightful illustrated lecture given by Robert Merrill Gage in assembly February 9. Mr. Gage, who is an instructor at the Art Institute and a very successful sculptor, didn't seem to mind giv- ing away the tricks of his trade. He even used a real model and oozy clay. February 30, Dr. Emory R. Johnson, Dean of the Wharton School of the University of Penn- sylvania, gave a talk in assembly on the advant- ages of going to college and to Pennsylvania Uni-- versity in particular.
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Page 23 text:
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-5- ------M--rv . -2-5-1----9-as--G:-rur.,-v:-H-H-elxgffsm-'ffu:1z.r:v1s-x:a1fY:-.1,:..- .-.1-wav-1 9 ' fi- -H-eifh-E' 4'-:1 id many 5 he gave E the im- would be 1 a crisis, econd bit fied with gf to keep ourselves. of every or diary nd, Just you have ,nd think 've heard heavy or st fit the or some- flason or id try to e's gone! :mrds and te, The 'T, '21 9 I-'E'-sf: '? 'X V -If? - 'N 5 Q--fi ,-fr'-.1 . ,, .,,.,,.,1,.,, , ,,- Y, t..-l,... .. .... .--..ii . V 1, A - ' ' -- 3- Q ' 71: P V '51 H T- 'fi q'lE5- zlff'-ffi '.. ' ' A .. . -I-. .., ,I .Yap -Z' ,TAN ' ., ' ,rl ' 2 I a I. 3 Y X 15- 7-5 . .A-sr-1 'V .--1' '. Y - ' -- . ' -'-ST .-if-K . 'Q -3' k Y . ' - 4 fp ffii: ff - ,f-i-.ft ' -5.7-- .l1 .f, --f' . v ' .1 f' .1- f ,Fr ff-- . - ' YQ- . V '. T', ig '1-. ' '. Q.. 1' 5, 3 4- -is .- if 16.1. . b pf. -. I gr .alt-J'!.,2 . ,myjk jg' ,V A A I, ,- A I. N- A -1:14 j if 7 , ,Q In -, N 4 ,Q-Li.5gLE5.'jg l'gf,1-,,',-Q-5.31, - 1 . l' 5' ..,. , . ,F in4j:f,fQf.::1f,'i. -.3 ' i - '-- ' 'Q 'T ' 'ff-E: . , 2 . ., -.3.v,.,I.,V. 1. .Hi ,,- .,,. .,, ,,, , - .........-- V . .. ., . . ..-.nr ,Le-,... ., .. A . -A . . . K - Ah 5.--, -Q. -- -. . -f. ,.-7-.A-LJ Although our debaters found favor in the sight of their judges in only one contest, each of the defeated teams lost by the very narrow margin of one vote. There is honor in defeat when the decision is so close. And the girls' affirmative team, which came home victorious, captured the votes of four judges. The talent displayed by the members of the two teams wias not acquired by personal effort entirely. Much credit is due the second teams who worked unselfishly and struggled valiantly in the task of gathering information and per- fecting arguments and style. Mr. Humphrey and Miss Short, the coaches, were unsparing of time and effort and won the devotion of the boys and girls with whom they worked. The members of the second teams were: Boys, Richard Cohn, Robert Hecker, John Melcher, Robert Rosenwald, Frederick Scharles, Edward Trimble, Edward Weatherly and Dean Wood, Girls, Martha Cowan, Helen Farrel, Henrietta Ginsburg, Clara Hoelzel, Julia Mastin, Floy Robinson and Elizabeth Turner. The boys' debate was March eighteenth, the girls' March twenty-fifth. In both cases the af- firmative teams went to Northeast, the negative to Manual. Girls' Affirmative The victorious girls' affirmative met Central at Northeast. They proved that the federal gov- ernment should prohibit further Japanese immi- gration into the United States, because the Jap- anese are undesirable. Lucile Richards spoke first for Westport. Her manner was calm, her delivery forceful, she seemed more at home on the stage than any Speaker who followed her on either team. Hulda Seidel was second speaker. She proved that the Japanese are undesirable economically. Her gestures were convincing, her manner direct, and withal she showed a remarkable grasp of the Subject. Ruth Hall, captain of the team, was third speaker for the affirmative. The constructive arguments which she presented were so strong and explained so clearly that the affirmative-'s case seemed almost proved even before rebuttal. Miss Hall not only established her own argu- ments convincingly, but so summarized her col- leagues' speeches that the entire proposition was laid before the judges as if it had been her own argument. Hulda Seidel, as first speaker in rebuttal, was never better. Every figure of speech, every ges- ture, added force to an already forceful argu- ment. The second speaker for the affirmative re- buttal was forced to face one of the most serious charges ever made against a statement. Ruth Hall met that charge, answered it completely, and swept the opposition clear off its feet. And then by a happy bit of most effective humor, she placed the affirmative again on top, and it stayed there ever after! Lucile Richards answered the dramatic chal- lenges of the negative with a coolness even more dramatic. With one stroke she showed that Cen- tral had not answered our main point, and there- fore had failed. And after that, there was no doubt. Dorothy Martin was alternate on the negative team and Verona Stuart on the affirmative. Dorothy was the official encourager of her team, and Verona was always enthusiastic and capable. Boys' Affirmative At Northeast our affirmative met Central's negative on the question: Resolved, that the federal government should establish a permanent policy of price control for the so-called necessities of life. Jimmy Reeves, captain, opened the debate for the affirmative. He proved that a permanent policy of price control was necessary, because the public needed protection from profiteering, which
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