Newspapers / Bailey High School Student … / Oct. 6, 1950, edition 1 / Page 11
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BAILEY BUGI.B BAILEY, N..OC. 0C.T0Bp,19^Q , Alumni Differ In ' Commerieol Dept. Aids Buttle Stoff Office Occupations . j ~ > Bailey graduates of 1950 are norr found in their in dividual wallcs of life. College, marriage, array, and nursing are some of the fields that have claimed this class, . College bound are LEGTLI: BISSETTE to Dukej LEO HORNER, E.C.T.C.; JEiiN B GLOVER, Saint Mary’s BARBAItA FARi;iER, A. C,; and ANNA L. JOHNSON, E.C.T.C. C LENZIE MORGAN, valedicto-, rian of the class, is tak ing a civil service course while SCOTT LLT/IS, most versatile, is studying television at Coins Elec trical School in Chicago. His love for ice cream has led one of the alunnus, DAYLE JOHNSON, to work at the Kello Plant in Wilson. Three members of the class believe in saying. In sickness and in health** and are taking nursing. JE/iN F. GLOVER and JEAN PACE have entered Norfolk General Hospital in Norfolk, Virginia, and CORINNA IVILLIAIS, Carolina General in IVilson, E/*RL E>kRP is also in ’/Wil son, working at Hackney Hotor Company. wedding bells rang for klLDRED FINCH, Miss i-'opu- larity from the senior class. JOYCE LIORRIS is expecting these same bells to ring soon as she is en gaged to JAI'iES EiiRL TIIORNL The army enlists one of the senior boys, C. H. MANNING, v/ho is in Penn sylvania studying radio. Others of the class are at home assisting vfith the farm and homework. By assisting the Bugle staff and the principal’s office, the commercial de partment is receiving first-hand v.’-orI:-e3q5erienc% recounts ’ li-s. Laurine Lassiter, commercial teacher. Plans are being made for the typing Il-students^to aid the Bugle staff by typing the articles and ^cutting thp stencils nec essary to publish the Bugle. By using this plan each student will have valuable Tv'crk-experience in stencil cutting. The 125 students in the commercial department are divided into six'classes. Under Mrs. Lassiter is typing I and II mth forty- five students; book keeping, tackeled by nine teen students; and com mercial geography vath 33 pupils. General business has 26 students, with Miss Edith Farmer, math teacher, as instructor. New equipment received thus far is four type- in'iters vdth desks. This added equipment enables ii’s, Lassiter's largest typing class, 23 t;j^ping II students, to have a ma chine for every future typist. Other equipment secui'ed is a series of -six wall charts to be used to teach the bookkeeping cycle tjuickly and effectively. Printed in red, -blue, and black, each chart is Ii8" by 52". It is possible to illustrate relationships which cannot be shown in the limited space of a textbook page, BookkeepinoCiassAids Principal With Work By letting the book keeping class keep the financial records of the school, Mrs. Lassiter, teacher and bonded treas urer of Bailey High, expects to . give her pupils "some ' ig-al'y.able work-experience" as well as help Principal ITeaver. Heavy Schedule Ahead For Music Students \ n- ’'There definiteij^ will be a change in the students' work," says Mrs. Eloise Johnson, piano teacher," The students vrill be graded on three specific points—practice, scale vrork, and memory vrork." Added lirs. Johnson, "This year I hope to produce better students than I have before and students better prepared for heav ier vrork." Tvventy students are en rolled; three are new mem bers : Sonja Manning, sixth grade; Mary Eliza beth Glover, first grade; and PatrjLcia Dew; freshman. There are only two voice students, Carolyn Bissette and Shirley T'ebb. Plans are being made to present a number of the students at least once a month before the other piano students.
Bailey High School Student Newspaper
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Oct. 6, 1950, edition 1
11
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