Your search within this document for 'schools' resulted in eleven matching pages.
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“...C.S.A. MAGAZINE A History of the China Inland Mission School at Chefoo, China By DR. F. H. JUDD Chapter IX ' I ‘HE pleasant monotony of good domestic service was interrupted in the Easter holidays of 1940 by a strike of the school, servants. Many of them had no desire to do so but just followed their leaders. The Schools however (staff and scholars) rising to the occasion, carried on the work, and after a day and a half the servants returned to their duties as if nothing had happened. A poem in The Chefusian commemorates the incident in more humorous language. Some ambitious literary members of the Boys’ 2nd Form brought out at this time a magazine called The Children's Monthly. This was followed by 'a more pretentious and humorous periodical entitled The Gasbag produced by the 4th Form. Though bravely attempted they did not really rival The Chefusian now in its thirteenth year of production, and soon ceased publication. Old Chefusians had a grand time on August 28th, 1940, when they held...”
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“...seems to have reached its zenith this year, for the, 1939-1940 School Prayer List records 105 boys, 98 girls and 135 prepites— a total of 338. This would include a number of day scholars, especially among the prepites. The total is 87 more than in 1929 and 40 more than ih 1919. , The Schools lost several members of the staff this year : Miss Edwards and Miss M. Broomhall from the G.S. for furlough. From the P.S. Miss Galloway left to be married, and from the B.S. Mr. Bentley-Taylor for work among the Chinese in the interior, in which he was joined the following year by Miss J. Moore. Of the 17 entries for the School Leaving Certificate 7 boys and 6 girls obtained the Matriculation exemption, and three passed. The Toll of the Second Great War had now begun. The School Honour Roll included Rev. T. Douglas Emslie, C.F., Pilot Officer M. Aurel King and Lieut. Howard B. Taylor. During the winter holidays of 1940-41 over 100 scholars remained in the School, for the Sino-Japanese war made travelling...”
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“...C.S.A. MAGAZINE. in August. In August the Hospital, Doctor’s House and Staff Block were requisitioned, and the occupants went over to the Sanatorium. There was an air of uncertainty as to whether the School would be able to open in September. Meanwhile the packing of boxes went steadily forward. In September the. Senior School was able to carry on till half term, and then was obliged to hand over the co-tuition building. The Authorities offered to the Schools for their occupation the Cathay Hotel, situated on the sand between the road and the sea near to The Rocks. It was iH built, insanitary and altogether inadequate, and was occupied by sick and wounded soldiers. “ The intervention of the International Red Cross Representative was, under God, the means of this plan not being carried out.” The offer was not accepted. Mr. Egger, the Swiss Consul in Tsingtao, tried to arrange for the School’s evacuation. Efforts were made to secure premises in Shanghai. The suggestion to remove the School...”
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“...don’t recall that the chill of the cake did us in the back rows much good. CARRINGTON GOODRICH. Anent Dr. Judd’s appeal (his history and reminiscences are much appreciated) somewhere around the house I have a booklet of photos accumulated by my mother in the period roughly 1906-1911. Some of them are personal, but most of them are school groups ; e.g., the prep, school, the boys’ school, and finally, when the great risk was undertaken to have the girls within eye-shot of the boys, all three schools together. Here in a “progressive” college students are fascinated to hear I passed through “ Transition ” ; they feel that they are talking to something exhumed when I appear to regard it as a normality, of no consequence that I was a “ fag •’ in the lower school, but that the custom died out as I reached the upper school. And in this Co-ed atmosphere they are incredulous that anyone could have lived in a regime and survived, when to speak to a girl without being ordered to do so by a Master...”
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“...that this gang developed into the Boy Scouts at Chefoo, which is a respectable organization ; and with the British background of Baden Powell and South Africa naturally combined the idea of military patrols with civic usefulness. I have only the word of Zenos Miller for this transformation, so it may not be a fact. But if it is true, I am happy to have been associated in the dim mists of antiquity with the start of what is, no. doubt, now an honoured and honourable organization in the Chefoo Schools. ERNEST HAYES. Girls’ School Song 1. School that we love, to thee we owe More than mere words can ever show. Homage full reverent may we pay To thee and to thy laws each day. Refrain : O Chefoo School ' May God defend Unstained thine honour to the end. 2. School that we love ! thy motto true Imprint on every heart anew,. God’s Word of Wisdom is the source, Who drinketh there gains vital force. 3. School that we love ! for others’ weal . Our parents toil with selfless zeal, Oh ! teach their children...”
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“...very real and tangible. On brief holiday visits I soon realized that I was becoming acquainted with a great and greatly beloved personality. He had left his native Sweden for the United States in 1884, at the age of twenty, and within the time allowed him had taken out naturalization papers. When he arrived in America he could neither read nor speak a word of English, yet in two years he acquired what he refers to as “a working knowledge of the language ”. This was accomplished by attending schools in Omaha, Nebraska, apd by home study and business contacts. Upon completing a specialized business course in book keeping and accounting he was offered the position of book-keeper and accountant of the Omaha Y.M.C.A. by the Y’s Board of Directors ; a position he held until he received an 1 appointment to serve as a Missionary in China with the China Inland Mission, by which time he spoke, read and wrote English fluently. Converted a year after his arrival in the United States (and his was no...”
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“...good in business in later years until the fortunes of war or aggression squeezed out foreign enterprise in China. To start all over again when one is in the middle sixties is not easy, but John PROFESSOR W. ' | ’HE death took place on June 6th at ' St. Edmund’s Hall, of Professor William James Entwistle of the King Alfonso XIII Chair of IJispanic Studies at the University of Oxford. He was born at Chen Yang Kwan, Anhwei, on December 7th, 1895, an<3 was educated first at home, then at the C.I.M. Schools in Chefoo, and at Robert Gordon’s College, Aberdeen, for one year. At the University of Aberdeen he took First Class Honours in Classics in 1916, and by 1918 he was the sole survivor of his class of five, all First Class Honours men. He was wounded in 1916, and spent his Convalescence studying Spanish. He went to the University of Madrid for two years, became reader in Spanish in Manchester, 1921, Professor of Spanish in Glasgow, 1926, and had been twenty years Professor of Spanish in Oxford...”
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“...to this place. There is a splendid vicarage right next to the church, a large garden and a tennis court. The church work is very much alive, especially among young people. We have been given a very warm welcome. Friends will be interested to know that the previous vicar was the late Rev. E. M. Benson, the father of MRS. DOROTHY HOUGHTON, and he did a splendid work here. DOUGLAS and MURRAY have both arranged to work in Wolverhampton, and the three younger children are all settled in their new schools. If any Chefusians are in this neighbourhood, we shall be glad to see them ”. ' MRS. DANSEY SMITH (nee BAL-LER) stayed with MRS. PARRY (nee EASTON) when she went up to London for the C.I.M. Valedictory Meeting in September. At the meeting she saw several Old Girls and one Old Boy, who took her back to the days at Tong-shan. NEVILLE and his wife went to Switzerland for a holiday this summer, leaving the children with their grandparents. ADRIAN went to France with a party of boys and later to Shanklin...”
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“...REV. JOHN D. HAYES had been released by the Communists (his last prison was in Canton) and had arrived in Hong Kong, October 8th. His daughter, Janet (Mrs. P. M. Guba), whose husband is stationed in Tokyo with Caltex Oil, Ltd., had talked with him and reported him in fair health, considering. His plan now is to fly to Japan to recuperate with his daughter until October 24th, and then come on to the States. JOHN was in the Boys’ School about 1902-08; He was also interned at Weihsien when the schools were interned there ”. WANDA HAZELTON is taking a four year course majoring in Christian Education at the Bible Institute of Los Angeles, and is enjoying her studies as well as part time secretarial work in the school office. Her address is 238 South Ave. 51, Los Angeles 42, California. Her sister ROBERTA (now Mrs. McCoy) was expecting to move with her husband and children from Oregon to northern California. The HULSE family, with the exception of HUGH, is established in or near Toronto. Mr....”
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“...to commence medicine at the Melbourne University next year. EVELYN BLYTH (nee LINKS) was married early in the year and is now living in Adelaide. JOAN WARD (nee CROFT) was in Sydney for sixteen months, but she left a while ago to go to Canada to meet her husband, who was leaving China. Unfortunately it was only after she had left Australia that we heard she had been here. MISS L. WILLIAMS, who was on the staff of the Girls’ School for so long, is now on the staff of one of the biggest girls’ schools in Melbourne—the Church of England Girls’ Grammar. She seems very, happy there and has a room overlooking the Botanical Gardens. MRS. LACK returned from England early in September, and is at present busy settling in to her new home in one of the outer suburbs of Melbourne. HENRY is now a fully fledged architect. Both Henry and his wife, Sheila, hope to leave Melbourne in February for England. JEAN has another year to do at the Leeds University before taking out her degree— Ph.D. ERIC NICHOLLS...”
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“...Chefoo Schools Association Presidents : Mr. F. McCarthy. Rev. P. A. Bruce. Vice-Presidents : Miss L. Blackmore Mrs. L. Clinton Miss I. A. Craig Miss D. Trudinger Bishop F. Houghton Mr. H. G. Judd Mr. J. B. Martin Mr. W. D. Mudditt GENERAL COMMITTEE (Acting also as the Committee for Great Britain Branch). Chairman : Mr. H. F. Joyce, Brook Cottage, Scrase Bridge, Haywards Heath, Sussex. General Secretary : The Rev. J. Beresford Weller Emmanuel Parsonage, 36, Lingfield Road, S.W.19. Treasurer : Mr. D. F. Parry, 107, Southdown Avenue, W.7. Editor: Miss D. Rouse, 36, Grovelands Road, London, N.13. News Editor : Miss K. Strange, 45, Woodland Rise, N.io. Secretary for Great Britain Branch : Miss E. Preedy, 24, Woodlands Road, Redhill, Surrey. Mr. T. P. Welch. Mr. D. Clarke. Miss G. Bobby. Mr. D. Vinden. Mr. J. S. Hirst. “ Norbury ’ Mr. J. S. Green. Mr. C. Fairclough. Miss M. Hoyte. NORTH AMERICA BRANCH. Chairman : Professor L. Carrington Goodrich, 640 West 238th Street, New York City, U.S.A. ...”