-
Rose gold laptop gifted to Sydney in 2020. Decorated with an assortment of stickers.
-
Phone purchased in 2022. Samsung S8. Black with rose gold case.
-
Black water bottle with an assortment of stickers.
-
Squishmallow named Stanley. Gifted to Sydney in 2022. Blue octopus with panda face.
-
Bookbag given to Sydney in 2020 for her scholarship. Black Nike bag with an assortment of pins.
-
Black leather jacket gifted to Sydney Coyne in 2021.
-
Outside the house
-
Outside Boys & Girls Club
-
Aerial view of fort Wayne Purdue campus
-
This is a picture of my Iphone.
-
This is a picture of my Macbook that I use for school every day.
-
This is a picture of my bluetooth headphones which I use to study with every day.
-
This is a picture of my desk and my office chair where I study and do homework every day.
-
This is a picture of my car that I use to travel.
-
treadmill true
-
1976 Magnavox Scholars (left to right) Gary Nahrwald, John Mohr, Daniel Figgins and William Yankowiak pose with Chancellor Donald Schwartz (center) behind a Magnovox stereo system.
-
-
-
1976 Magnavox Scholars (left to right) Gary Nahrwald, John Mohr, Daniel Figgins and William Yankowiak pose with Chancellor Donald Schwartz (center) behind a Magnovox stereo system.
-
Students relaxing outside of Helmke Library
-
First organized by Mr. Philip Leonard Green in New York, the Pan-American Student League dates as far back as 1920, having Latin American student federations represented in its membership. The North Side Pan American Club, started in 1942, purpose is to promote friendliness between the United States and the twenty-one other American republics. During this period, it strived to lay a “firm foundation for the unity and order which must come about in the future” (1942, Legend).
One of the unique aspects of the club is its organization, for membership is limited to forty-four members, a boy and a girl to represent each Pan American nation, plus the United States and Canada. Despite this small membership, the Pan American Club has grown so in importance that it is now one of the outstanding clubs at North Side. Throughout the year the club host programs and talks on these various countries by their representatives, with a hope to foster new appreciation for our Spanish speaking neighbors to the south, their cultures, language, and so much more.
-
Many former students gave their lives for the country. The school honored them by placing their names on a plaque in the second-floor circle and planting elm trees in their memory in front of the building.
-
In 1930, as a onetime thing for the school, Mr. Oscar Foellinger, publisher of the News Sentinel stated that the four students ranking highest in their respective classes would be given rides in the Yankee Clipper, the News Sentinel airplane.
-
Purchase of war stamps and bonds totaled $150,000 in 1943, enough to buy a pursuit plane which was named "Redskin Raider." Legionnaires gave assemblies on patriotism, and military drill classes held army-type marches.
-
Long standing traditions and the elegant architectural lines give the school a commanding and herculean presence during the bleak, barren winter months, while the abundance of foliage surrounding it in the spring and summer give it a regal setting. However, there is more to the front steps of North Side than meets the eye. For instance, seniors have their own entrance, where anyone who isn't a senior should be scared to tread, to marriage proposals long after high school is over, come to represent the importance of the school to many.
North Side High School provides its students with more than an architectural wonder, it also offers a place of wellbeing and belonging. “Peace with its full measure of living is the ultimate aim of all that goes on within its walls. Ability to earn a living, maintain a home in security and happiness, enjoy a wise use of leisure time, appreciate the best of our modern civilization,” are the goals of the class of 1940, “these are included in the ends for which our North Siders are being developed.”