'Sweet Anne fhge WHAT? A Musical Operetta WTO? Senior Class XJHERE? Bailey High WHEN? April 10-7:59 p.m. row MUCH? 2$ti-hOt Staff Works For RoosonablG Fee S eni^r Plciy, A fj* il I' J B U M l\G0p5 KqI I n Q Of Previous Year Again the Bugle attained the highest rating, the Medalist, offered by the Colmbia Scholastic Press Association by ranking as the best in its respective group of those papers rating first place. ^ This is the second suc cessive year the paper has reached this goal. The exact grade will not be known until it appears in the convention's "School Press Review." STAFF CHAIRMEN Two staff members acted as chairman of two section al meetings. ' LOIS THIGPEN presided over "The Sharing of Re- sponsibility-Staff and Adviser"; MARY ANN EDWARDS, editor, served as chairman of "A Top-Notch Job of Interviewing." Thursday and Friday the staff members attended lectures, clinics, and roundtable discussions dealing vjith all phases of jotirnalistic work. PRESS LMCHEON Climaxing the three-day convention was a luncheon in the Grand Ballroom of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, Saturday. Guest of honor was the famous SARAH CHURCHILL. Speakers at the luncheon were HONORABLE ERNEST A. GROSS, United States Representative to the General Assembly, United Nations, and GENE RAL CARLOS P. ROMULO , Philippine Ambassador to the United States. VOL. 13, NO. 7. BAILEY. N.C.. MARCH. 1903_ "Sludbints Hssume nffice Duties Office ^rork and calls are taken care of by five senior girls and one junior girl, since PRINCI PAL WEAVER is occupied by class duties the entire morning. The senior girls are CAROLYN HOWELL, GERALDINE STRICKLAND, MAGALINE WIL LIAMS, FRANCES CARROLL, and JOYCE VJILLIAMS. PEGGY Liles is the junior. These girls work in the office on their own free ■ will. If they file, type, or OTite letters, they are paid at the rates of $0 cents an hour. This is paid by a $lS per month clerical account allotted to each principal by the C0unty Board c^f Education^. Op en House Success fu I Favorabl'e comments and "large attendance" on the part of the parents proved the third annual Open House "to be a success" at the March P.T.A. meeting, according to Principal M. W. Weaver, Observing work displays, hearing an interesting musical program, and tour ing the new building were features of the program. Principal Weaver says^"We have had Open House three years, and we hope it will become a pei'insiient activi ty. It is good public re lations ." Bugle staff members have helped with community ad vertisements for a nominal fee by making two separate sets of handbills for the town merchants and one for the Bailey Feed Mill. Usually WAYNE LAMM, with the aid of a typist, cuts the stencils for outside work, while MARY ANN ED WARDS and LOIS THIGPEN run off the stencils. FEE To date any extra work done for the benefit of the community was done for a reasonable fee, adding to the Bugle treasury little beyond the cost of paper, stencils, and ink. The staff believes that in the future, if it con tinues doing this work,the time element required in cutting the stencils and doing the mimescope work should be given more re munerative consideration than has been the case in the past. Attractive-The arrange ments in the classrooms for Open House,

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