High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 23 text:
“
EDITORIAL Now that this Elm is published, we feel that it is fitting that those people who labored upon it get the recognition which is their due. The pupils in the Senior typing class and the Art department have done a great deal of work upon this book. The Senior typists stayed after school for hours, copying the work of the contributors. Theirs was not the kind of labor which commands its own reward. It was, rather, an extremely dull and uninteresting task. The authors of the stories used have the satisfaction of seeing their own creations in print, and are able to take pride in their Work. The typists have not this feeling, for there is no pride of creation in mere copying. The pupils of the Art department have faced a similar problem, al- though they do get a little more recognition than do the typists. Their task has not been free from drudgery, for some of the more delicate work requires the utmost patience. K It is with a feeling of real respect that we of the Staff extend our thanks for and appreciation of the excellent co-operation given us in these departments. EDITORIAL We have often been told that there is a great value in an education when one looks at it from the business point of view. Many of us are not satisfied with letting the usefulness of our education stop at this point. We want something more. We want our education to improve us culturally. An education is like a searchlight. When it is used properly, it brings many obscure but important things to view. If it is not in the possession of a person who knows how it should be used, its power of revelation is often wasted. When a person has finished school, his thoughts are usually centered upon his work. He is quite likely to allow his finer feelings to stagnate while he pursues his business in too diligent a manner. It is up to each of us to cultivate a taste for the beautiful and to keep this taste alive by feeding it with the best. Trash will kill finer sensibilities just as quickly as it will kill young plants. Once we have acquired a keen sense of the beautiful and have learned to nourish it properly, We shall find that our lives have become richer and fuller and that our feelings have been so attuned as to give us an understanding of things we had not realized were in existence. When We are happy, our happiness will be a deeper happiness than we had been capable of previous to this time. When we love, our love will be a greater love. We will live more in the same length of time than we formerly would have done. Our sole aim during the formative period should be that of develop- ment in all directions and the cultivation of well-rounded interests.
”
Page 22 text:
“
s--xuxus-wxvxnsnxnxnx wx--xn suxus- ng-.Q xuxnsxnxns-as-nxnxnxnsnsnxusus-nsnx.-sux--x S3 QLNLYI EDN Q E M EEN I P R O G R A M ALUMNI DAY JUNE 1930 CLASS NIOI-IT JUNE 1930 GRADUATION JUNE 1930 SENIOR RECEP1'ION JUNE 1930 Valeclictorian ..... lVlARY ALLEN snsnsnsnsusn-sus-wx'-Q4-suxnsf-sus-as--susan Saluraroriun . . DOUGLAS GLADXVIN cLAss FLOWER White rose CLASS MOTTO Scientia suos cultores coronatu C Wisdom crowns those who seek hcruj CLASS HYMN Dear Wethersneld, in our hearts are tears, Symbols of love as our parting nears. Old loved dreams and hopes you hold, Sweet as cherished tales retold. When thoughts of you upon us steal, Strange poignant tenderness we shall feel Tho' thy memory dim appears In the dusk of passing years. WhcvI My Mother Sings . . . Anton Dvorak ns--sus-wsuas-vsnnsnx-mx-asf-sux-ns -ns-,sux 1 ns'-sn s
”
Page 24 text:
“
We now have our education. What we do with it depends entirely upon ourselves. What we are in later life depends upon our ability to apply theory practically, and upon our ambition. - G. Y., '30. THE NEED FOR STUDY ROOMS What Wethersfield High School needs is more study rooms. It has been necessary during the past school year to make pupils study in rooms where classes are being held at the same time. This has proved to be very unsatisfactory, both to the pupil and to the teacher in charge. If a pupil Hnds that he has nothing in particular to do, he immediately starts to divert the attention of someone in the class or one of the study pupils. Thus the teacher is interrupted from her explanation in order to reprimand the persons causing the commotion. It is also very hard for a student to concentrate upon his work if the class is having a gen- eral discussion. Studying in class rooms has proved inefficient to the teacher, to her class, and to the study pupils. Let us hope that when school re-opens in the fall, there will be separate study rooms. -C. H. PRACTICAL ARTS DEPARTMENT At the beginning of the school year of 1928, a department of Practical Arts was created at Wethersfield High School. Mr. Alfred M. Anderson was engaged as instructor. The capacious shop-room was equipped with benches for woodworking, four benches for metal work- ing, and with the necessary hand-tools. During the year 1928-29, students of the Junior High School carried out simple projects in woodworking. A few members of the Senior High School elected two periods a Week for instruction in this course. The keen interest evinced in this department was responsible for the inauguration of a regular ten period program in September of 1929. The shop-equipment Was increased by the addition of a power- saw table and an electrically powered wood-turning lathe. A try-out course, conducted in the seventh and eighth grades, en- ables the pupils to discover whether or not they have aptitudes for in- dustrial vocations. These boys elect printing, woodworking, and the supplementary course in mechanical drawing. Many useful articles for both the home and the school have been completed. Students in the ninth grade and Senior High School have executed projects of material benefit to the student body. They have constructed bleachers, stage scenery, and bulletin boards. They erected the baseball backstop and have made repairs on the school furniture. The printing phase of the department has made very great progress. The students engaged in this work have produced the tickets and pro-
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.