Dear Elsie: The Christmas assembly rehearsals aren’t going so smoothly at Central High School

Author(s):  
Rosamond McPherson
Author(s):  
Mark Dyreson

This chapter examines the passion for Indiana high school basketball that social scientists Robert and Helen Lynd tackled in their 1929 book Middletown: A Study in Contemporary American Culture. In their study the Lynds revealed that Middletown was a real place—Muncie, Indiana. The Bearcats was the actual name of the high school basketball team at Muncie Central High School. They explained how basketball captured the magical essence of Muncie, insisting that “Magic Middletown,” the cultural essence of the community, appeared more fully on the high school basketball court than in any other realm of heartland tribal life. The Lynds's work on “Magic Middletown” marked a turning point in American social science and placed the idea that sport forged community firmly into the scholarly lexicon. This chapter also considers the history of race in Muncie Central basketball that reveals how “they” became “we” in Magic Middletown, raising a variety of questions that remained far beyond the boundaries of the Lynds's sociological imaginations.


1924 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 120-121

The Philadelphia Section of the Association of Teachers of Mathematics of the Middle States and Maryland held the following program in Philadelphia, October 25, 1923: “High School Class Instruction in the Use of the Slide Rule,” Mr. Harry Ginsburgh, Department of Mathematics, Central High School; “The Problems of the Solar Eclipse of 1923” (illustrated), Dr. John A. Miller, head of the Department of Mathematics, Swarthmore College.


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