Newspapers / Bailey High School Student … / Sept. 1, 1952, edition 1 / Page 4
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EAILd:Y BUGLE. BAILEY. NORTH CAROLINA SEPTEMBER. 1952 School Gets Off To Good Start Betwes'JheCovers School, it seems, has started off wonderfully well this year. Better co-operation, harder work, and less noise are some of the fine qualities that have been noticed and commented on by teachers and students alike. Every student who is helping to make this so, should be proudj and, certainly, he is to be highly'commended. Every Parent's Support fleeded • Strength is gained first through cooperation, second through numbers* This paper reveals that the students are cooperating well, but we now lack numerical streng th and cooperation of the parents. Represented in our school are 3^8 homes, yet the Bailey Buple is in only 38 per cent of these homes. There are approximately 700 parents of the Bailey students, yet at the first meeting of the P.T.A. only about $0 of these parents displayed their interest in the school by their presence. Upon moving into the new cafeteria in December much new equipment will be needed to make it con^Dlete. We must have the voice of the parents, if we are to know whether to "dig" into the P.T.A. funds for these supplies or to procvire the money elsewhere. The school will grow in proportion as it gets the parent's support. We need this loyalty. BUGLE Receives Letter 2208 L street Auburn, Nebraska EDITOR, BAILEY BUGLE Dear Sir: Please send me as many issues of the 1951-52 Bailey Bugle as the enclos ed dollar warr^ts. If you have insufficient number of copies remaining, please apply the dollar to a yearly, or part, of 1952- 53 subscription for Bailey Bugle. Thank you. With almost every turn of the head, the youth of to day are met by chaos creat ed either by the Korean conflict, by crime, or by deaths caused by reckless driving. It is no wonder then that you see us youth seeking an escape from all the cares of the day. May I offer a suggestion to all youths and also ex tend an invitation to join me in learning about some thing that will give us a chance to travel, to learn about new people, and to understand those at home. This that I speak of is not new, for it has been around for ages. Some of us, however, have failed to take advantage of this opportvinity to "escape". My article will be about books. Books that I have read and would like to pass on to you so that maybe you will find some~ thing in them to inspire you enough to suggest them to others. Often many of \is "dravr up" at the thought of reading books because we think they are unexciting. We must begin ^ to realize that books are stories about people like our own back door neigh-, bors and that by reading them we become more toler ant, Won*t you join me while I go "BETWEEN THE COViES"? COMING The following letter is typical of the number of requests that come to the Bu^e staff. BAILEY BUGLE Published monthly 10^ per copy EDITOR: Mary Ann Edwards ASSO. EDITOR: V/ayne Lamm Lois Thigpen BUSINESS M®. Jerry Perry STAFF;Ann Earp-Bruce Finch Peggy Liles—Shirley Webb Vivian Glover-Tanya Glover Jimmy Harris—Bertha Bass Rena Bissette TYPISTS; Carolyn Howell Frances Carroll Joyce V^illiaros-Jackie Bragg ADVISORS..; Farmer—Lassiter, Sincerely, Etheridge, 'U8 grad-» HojxAjl 'late, tells his summer ex- periences with the cast of "Unto These Hills" in the Claude C, Noirdbrock Oct, issue of the Bugle.
Bailey High School Student Newspaper
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Sept. 1, 1952, edition 1
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