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Sheridan Road News-Letter (1889), 14 Nov 1903, p. 3

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EDITED BY STUDENTS OF THE HIGH SCHOOL. EDITORIAL.- I Comment bu drawn out nttenl flonton minute in one of the‘ ptevioul iuna of the paper re; gnrding the authorship of a oer- hin rhyme. This bit of poetry ‘33 merely n conception of tho writer and was not, as tepoi'tod, recited by the physioglnipatrnctor. The quarterly examinationsto be ' held the 18th and 19th, and the roports given out afterwards, will show the students just hbw they stand in their studies, doubtless astonishing many of them. Thel general good class work, however, leads to the hope that few, if any, will fail in their subjects ' and be _.obliged ‘ to take them V over next “hr-iu-Ohiel. Alla Emma. '04. Anibal-to Editors. Dual. Conn. ’06. Autumn, Joann E. Gout)", Bum Blow. Mn! Moon. {"13“ UK; ' The ofiiuet doubted Everhart has cofie and? / ' wick and Mr. Av__ " 7' beling and arran 1: a] imens. ' Mr. Egan has given of interesting fossils unfl; . ill has added agood mannymt kinds. of rocks and stones thin the ‘ Rocky Mountains. Mr, Moore A has kindly given a chambered neutilus, an addition of great in- terest; About fiftfin guns, which enmefrom the Chinese war, are , in the museum. These guns were left on the field by the Chinese and picked up after the battle. ‘ Nearly all of them are different and work iii a curious way. The museum when completed will cer- tainly he a great addition to the school. ' ‘ E. B. ' VOL. I. THE LECTURE 0N VIENNA. ’ On Monday night Prof. Ray- mond ga‘ve a very interesing lect- are on Vienna. Perhaps the most interesting of any of the HIGH SCHOOLEW \NS. Baum? ouch havil mated by Hal arms but the stage matte bw‘fli 031111. T '1 fi ‘ 1' (Mann we f a nvid [: given K «film the mind Isilsanfll‘ur. ’Aver- 30d 'many'aiflerent IT MK“ m: course so far, paddy on account of the line View of the bountiful wow, and Inge pnbliqbuildingl of vstions styles of uéhitoetm which sbonsd in Vienns. Along the Ringstnsso msy hs sesn buildings whose bountyl equals thst o! my other in the world. Perhsps the finest of >these is the gust University of Vienns, in which srs non thsn sis thousands students. With the churches and palaces ta of the Royal Monarch, moat mag- nificent structures. and the well I defined city government, Vienna . . P is in many respects a model city. in It has always been a great pat- , ron of art and music and has I handed down to moderu,times ‘ manuscripts from such great ] "artists as Beethoven, Hayden and A Schubert, remembering their i names after death by the erection l of monuments. Theatres through‘ « out Vienna are numerous, and are among the finest in the world. On one occasion Prof. Raymond ' told of his visiting a theatre ' while' in this country, where the play yes the dramatization of the ‘ Belle of New York. In the chorus were pictured Americans, oath having a little American flag hf {fifhxs hand and strutting about “stage as if they mined the ”1th. The views that were flown were so clear that they left a‘hvid picture of Vienna upon Uthemiud ‘ f A. D.f.J rr MIGHT HAVE BEEN wonsa. There was a young man attom‘the .7 Park, K Who thought he would go on a Sp to Highwood he went, All his money he spent, And had to waik home in the dark. There was a young Miss named Cole, ' Who climbed up a telegraph pole, But as she got higher she step- ped on alive wire And burned a great hole' 1:: her‘ sole. This is the first intimetion we have had that Misc 0 had a soul. Can it be true? HIGHLAND PARK. 1L1... savanna 14. Thin term; for the first time in ‘ in Make ocieuoé dam-lent amused Eu beenphcod in' an one o! I new humour. Upon the "ligation of the Millet W. Kilo Stewart, who had been with no time science first begun to be taught in‘ the high ”bod, ,thia educational branch was taken iti 0W8. 5! William Averill, the present Hr. Averill's heme was former- ly in Wisconsin. but the greater part of his education was obtained in this state, about Chicago. Two years of his time he spent in the ‘ preparatory department of North- western College and the Amber Institute, and he then entered the Austin high school, graduating in ’98. He was a member‘of the graduating class of i02 of the University of Chicago, at- which school he won the senior scholsr- ship in geology, an honor which he held for one year. At the com- pletion of his college course he was sent, vyith Prof. J. E. Webb, ‘to New Mexico, to investigate the pleistooene geology of the Santa Fe range of the Taco Mountains. Upon his return he was given the position of asSistant'chemistry in- structor in the high school at Sill.i liven, Illinois, and from there 5 caifle to Deerfield township high- school, where he is now teaching cheniistry, biology and‘ physics. 1 ‘4 LR'Aggg‘illis a most enthusia» tic s’cientfit and has by his own interest amused that of, his fpu‘pita’ju “these fascinating anb- 1 l'jectasl. In, teaching, he does not merely rely on matter in book; and in. the school, but takes his classes out on instructive tramps, and, as it were, turns nature her? self into a laboratory. fl >Wednesday mowing in the‘ acienca lecture room, Miss Brad- shaw. gave an illustrated talk on the work of the artists Corot,rMil- let, anreand Troyon. The gaso- line vapor lamp wan mafiaged by Mr. Averill, and threw clear repro- duction: upon the wall. WILLIAfl A. AVBRILL. Ilia Pinion dated the rend- ing clubs among tho freshmen thh wool. All adieu till he organ. ind next week. The Math.» mun-chm: ' iu ofloén, uppointing Henry Ball captain and Culver 85%:qu captain and Culver 81 picked pt. u than an no my likely undid-kl t“ it h in! to make nohoioo, but by tho ad of the week we .shnll undoubtedly Jane u flat teun. The lengue games will begin directlywtet the tooth“ m clones. Beside theee guine- we shall mange other: with «life!- out Chicago teams, and than keep our schedule full. Mr. Honie’ ankle in much better, and he in now back again coaching the hu- ket bell team. The team is select- ing its uniform and will try and have it ready for the first league We are glad to be abka to report that 'Lake, Biufl has been him-en as’the new ngval training fiction to be heated on theJakes. The apart of the board otuznml office-raw been tendered so Sect-emu Mandy and will go to congress at once. \ H favorable action can be obtained {A bill will be introduced appropriating 3this necessary money to build the station. Racine was second choice. The choice of Lake Bluff ‘ has been expected ever since it became known the board favored a site near Chi- cago. The board examined the cites last spring. A large approptintion [bill will be necessary to purchase land equip the station. School, 10: 30 3. n. Epworth Learn, 7 :00 p. 11:. Evening net-vice, 0:00 Bun- dnyl and Thursday." Ais for Amy, . Angelic, quiet and prim, Inclined to be “pie-one" And fond of 3 “him.” swash M. a.â€"â€"mghwood, Ills. B is for Benn], Tall. lanky and. lean, That he’s trained in athletics Ia easily seen. 0 stands for 0-â€"ver, Who wanders along, Borrowing J mob," ‘ Since B-â€"-thie hag flown.

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