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Page 24 text:
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20 TilE QUIVER Harriet Vose, one of the class of 1914. was awarded the V Jlesley Scholarship during her Junior year at that college. The winner of this scholarship must have maintained a required percentage from the time of her entrance until the middle of her Junior year. Besides all these splendid records, the superintendent and principal frequently receive communications from the schools wh.re graduates of Woonsocket High are studying, telling of the very creditable work that is being done by them. W oonsocket High School is to be congratulated upon her alumni. AN APPRECIATION The members of the graduating class will miss, from among their member, Veronica Shea. She always took a great interest in her school work and had looked forward to the day when she would graduate. She was a very quiet girl, who held the esteem of all her classmates. Her death was a gmat shock to her many friends. She died on March •3th. the day before her eighteenth birthday. SARA L. SHEVI.IN. By the death of John Quinn, the Sophomore class lost a member hose character will cause him to he long remembered by his school-mat.s and by olh rs who were fortunate enough to know him. Ills one ambition was to make life enjoyable for his beloved mother, and his every effort had that aim in view. As a friend, to know him was to love him. He died August 7, 1916. JOSEPH McGEE. '19. MY TOAST Here's to our class—1917. Here’s to our school, the best ever seen, Here’s to our teachers, wise and kind, Here’s to our athletes, the best you can find, Here’s to our friends, loyal and line, Here’s to our underclassmen, we pledge them too, Here's to underclassmen, we pledge them too, Here’s to our classmates with records that shine, Here’s to good times, I’m glad they were mine; Then : Here’s to our school, the best ever seen, Here’s to our class—1917. HARRIET OLIVE CARD, ’17.
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Page 23 text:
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Til K QU1VEU U) Our school is now the proud possessor of a stereopticon. A curtain on which to throw pictures has been hung on the stage of the Assembly iiall, so that in the future speakers may entertain us with lantern slides. Wo all sincerely hope that next year there will be an athletic field djoining the school. 1 his field, the granolithic walks surrounding and 1 ading up to the building, and the lawn, which is being made, will all combine to aid our school in rivalling the appearance of any other in the state. 1 iie past year has been a successful one in many ways. Our entertainments, such as the Junior and Sophomore dances, have been plea.'ant affairs. Our athletic teams have won many games. The chief reason I or our victories was the splendid team work of our boys. It would be well for us to make these two words, team work, our motto tor every one of our school interests. So long as we “pull together”— ii our work as well as in our play—Woonsocket High School will stand for success. Since most people know of the fame Woonsocket High School has made fur herself in athletics, it may not be amiss to tell them about the spLndi 1 name she is acquiring in the various colleges through her graduates. She has representatives in practically every well-known college, . nd t' e reports of the good work done by these students are both interesting and gratifying to the present pupils of W. H. S. as well as to the teachers. During his three years at Harvard, Harry Leon has won schokir-ships amounting to $1100; this year he received the $tooo Sheldon I raveling Fellowship, which, if he accepts it, will mean that he must graduate in June and study for a year in any other university he may choose. Hour boys entered the State College at Kingston last fall. Samuel AlcKee and Dorald Beasley did so well that they were excused from all examinations at the end of the first semester. The four received 19 A’s, j4 B s, 8 C’s, and no D’s, although D is a passing mark. McKee took eleven courses and received eleven A’s. Two girls are upholding very well the honor of Woonsocket High at Brown University. Helen Kelley received the President’s collateral premium for the highest rank in a Latin examination given one month after the opening of college; she not only received a higher mark than any other girl, but one higher than any man in the Freshman class. Nellie Woolley is one of seven out of one hundred and two, whose names are on the honor list in mathematics.
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Page 25 text:
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Till-] QUIVER 21 The Interscholastic League football pennant for 1916 was carried oil by Woonsocket. 1 he first game with Technical was a scoreless tie. Woonsocket won all the oilier games of the regular schedule, being scored upon but once. . t the end of the season, Woonsocket and Technical ware tied for first place. In a post-season playoff at Clinton ()val, Woomockct came out victor with a score of 2 to 6. The work of the team as a whole was excellent, with Nichols, Savaria, and Davis as the sp.cial stars. At the Tech game, Woonsocket cheered lustily und r ;h direction of Frederick Drown. Some nights after the Tech game, a parade was held, followed by exercises at the Park Theatre, kin dy loaned for the occasion. The attendance at the games was good, .wry Davis, ‘17. was captain, and Fred Flynn, '17, was manager. Scores, 1916-17. Technical 0 0 East Providence 2 0 Kcpe 1!) 5 Cranston 44 n Pawtucket 20 0 Classical 2!) 0 Technical I‘J • 7 BASKETBALL WTonscyket’s basketball team also came out well, losing but one game, that with Rogers High of Newport, the members of which outweighed us nearly twenty pounds per man. The score of this game was 48 to 25. All the games except this and the game with Fitchburg, which was a close one, were won by large margins. Woonsocket has to its credit victories over such strong teams as Durfee High (Fall River). Reading High (twice), Fitchburg High, Foxboro High, and many others. Franklin was beaten at home and in Woonsocket, as was Uxbridge, this being the first time in several years that Woonsocket has beaten Uxbridge on the Uxbridge floor. Gaspard Savaria, '17, was
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