Newspapers / Goldsboro High School Student … / Oct. 9, 1936, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO GOLDSBORO HI NEWS October 9, 1936 Goldsboir© Hi Hewj Published nine times a year by the Journalism Students , Goldsboro, N. C. High School Volume X INTERNATIONAL Number 1 i EDITORIAL STAFF Edltor-in-Chirf Ozello Woodward, ’37 Asgisiunt Editors Rosanna Barnes, '37; Mary Baddour, ’37 Staff Writem—Mary Sherman, '37; Hazel Shaver, ’37; Dot Parker, ’37; James Heyward, ’38; Harry Ho'lingsworth, ’38; Jim Manly, ’38; Clell Riggs, ’38; Ross Ward, ’38; Hardy Lee Thompson, ’38. Feature Writern—Helen Moye, ’38; Bobbie Anne Sanborn, ’38; Nancy Pipkin, ’38 Siiorts Editor Seymour Brown, ’37 Exchange Edi'nr Nancy Pipkin, ’38 Artii'ities Editor James Crone, '38 Alumni Editor Hazel Shaver, '37 Staff Photographer Ridley Whitaker, ’37 Staff Cartoonist Ozello Woodward, ’37 Staff Typist Hellon Ellis, ’38 Adviser Ida Gordner BUSINESS STAFF Rwtiness Manager George Ham, ’38 Circnia^ion Manager Mary Sherman, ’37 Advertising Manager Edward Luke, ’38 Assistant Advertising Manager Aileen Herring, ’38 Advertising Solicitors—Members of Class of ’39—Addison Hawley, R. T. c'ozart, Evelyn Coley, Ann Morgan, Billy McClure, Hugh Dortch, Grace Hollings worth, Evelyn Dillon, Mary Louise Parks, Berta Parks, Edith Jones, Marv Frances Barnes, Carolyn Langston, Frances O’Steen, Juanita Hunt, Dorothy ' Turlington, Virginia Mod'.in, Charles Liles, Jack Smith and Gabe Holmes. Adviser B. P. Johnson CNcwspaper I Member) Subscription, 50 Cents a Year. Advertising rates; 35 cents per column inch for a single-issue ad; special rates on ad contracts. Entered as second class matter October 26, 1931, at the Postoffice at Goldsboro, North Carolina, under the act of March 3, 1879 Welcome; Newcomers! GHS is Glad To Have You Freshmen, new students and new teachers, welcome to GHS! We are glad to have you with us this year; so '‘Come along; join the throng' and have the best time 3"ou ever had. That’s part of one of the pep songs, you know. Gome then, all of you, and enter into our activities. That’s the Avay to enjoy GHS. We want you; so make yourselves at home. Don’t feel green and out of place. Anytime we can help j^ou let us know, for we’ll be glad to do it. The Hi A^ews, the football team, in fact everything out here, is as much yours as anybody else’s now. Get acquainted with the teams many students as pofisibie, and soon you will be just ‘*‘one of us.” We’re glad to have you. Welcome! Students, Campaigning Time Is Here Tread cautiously, students! The next few weeks will see the election of class officers and the completion of the Hi News subscription drive. We are having many more advantages and the right class officers will help us use them. So forget personalities and let wisdom guide you when you go to the polls. You are now holding the first issue of the Hi ]STews in your hands. Read it carefully. If you like it and subscribe, the paper will be financially insured. In turn you will he kept informed about what is going on in school. Hi, There! Study Hall Students, Look What You're Missing (Written by James Crone on an English III class) With 27 choices of learning and enjoyment facing the 800 students of GHS, the study halls on the first day of the activity period found approximately 100 students within its doors—students who apparently wanted only the required subjects for graduation, missing all the fun the new courses add. There should be no one in the study hall during this interesting period. Those who are reporting to room 16 are missing the very thing they want—fun while they learn. Even most of the new students have entered into an activity with a cooperative school spirit. The activity groups with the lowest number of members should play up their club work in the form of an early chapel program and posters. Through these efforts we should be able to reduce the study hall to an empty room and a place for another activity. In Appreciation of Miss Nellie Cobb— A ^X^ell Known and Beloved GHS Teacher When the doors of GHS opened to students this year, one who has tor many years been in her room to welcome students after their vaca- tions was not there. This was Miss Nellie Cobb, who has been one of Goldsboro s best known and most efficient teachers. Her absence was due to an attack of pneumonia which she suffered this summer and now she is recuperating at her home on Walnut Street. Long before the high school was moved into this nine-year-old building, Miss .Nellie, as most of us know her, taught the boys and girls of her home town. At onp time she sponsored the senior class and at the close of each year she gave a senior party. For several years Miss Cobb sponsored the stamp club. She was much interested in this and had very outsta,nding clubs. Before this she had taught chemistry and home economics and was the freshman sponsor for the present senior class For the last several years she has been teaching algebra in room 4. The student body extends to you, Miss Nellie, their best wishes for your speedy recovery, and we hope that you will soon be back with us. A STUDENrS PRAYER By Maky Baddour, ’37 Dear Lord, help me for the day To do Thy will in every way; Light my path, so I can see The way to make the best of me. Guide each step, each word, each thought; Help me to learn what I am taught. Make Your way be my way, too Keep me honest in all that I do. Keep me clean in word, in deed; Give me all the strength I need. Lord, for tomorrow I do not pray— But keep me, God, just for today. DO WE NEED RULES? New Board Member As schools become more ad vanced, will set rules disappear? Educational circles say so. The schools are going forward because the superintendents, principals and teachers are realizing there is a science in teaching. In classrooms students are given liberties, but there are always some who take advantage of these by loafing and misbehaving. Thus the cooperative student loses these privileges, which are rightfully his. This happens because some have never learned to think of others first. Would our rules be necessary if, for instance, students would say to themselves; “I won’t break in lunch line because it is cheating the people behind me?” Perhaps our students will awak en gradually. The Spanish people today, breaking away from laws made without their representation, have proved incapable of govern ing themselves. The students of GHS can be rule-free when they prove they can be trusted. 4# To Freshmen Only My Dearest, Littlest Cabbage Blossoms, Now many a time befo ye’ve beared frum ye ma an’ pa that experience’ll tell. Maybe ye’ve b’lieved hit an’ maybe ye’ve not, but granma’s gonna tell ye whut she’s a larned in her three yars out har. Now dis am a swellascrumptous place an ye kin hab mo fun thin a barrel o’ monkeys, but theys a few thangs thit ye oughta know. In the papers we see wher theres always them automobile killin’s where de peoples am a walkin’ on de wrong side ob de road. So, honeybunches, ye better keep to de right in the halls and fo goodness sake ivalk down de halls and down de steps. It’s best, little cotton bolls, causin’ granny knows. Until ye git yoself adjutated to de situation its a ganna be power fully strange. Dem thangs that look lik big bad wolves am actuly nice and dey’ll hep ye ober all de difficulties possible. And don’t mind them callin’ ye ‘‘freshie,” chillin’. It’s a, gonna be hard fo ye not to run to de eatin’ line., an’ see dem seniors walk in ahead o ye, but yo time’ll com©. Mrs. Yeber- ton’ll sabe some victuals fo you an’ dey’ll be blessed peacefulness when ye are seniors, little grass hoppers. Now try to hab a good time, but let de homewok and text books cum fust. Dem football games am a gonna be the heapinest, thrillinest times around an’ when dat band starts playin’ ohhhh man. I’ll ad mit I ain’t got much wisdom but if ye’ll try to do de best ye kin ye’ll hab de bestinest, gloriousest time ye eber will hab. Dood luck, my dumplin’ pies, Granma.. Attention^ Girls!! When looking for a husband, take my advice and pick one of these carpenters, ’cause they sure ly do know their stuff. Save odd- job bills and buy more clothes! Courtesy of Goldsboro Herald DR. D. J. ROSE Doctor David J. Rose, newly ap pointed member of the Goldsboro Graded School Board, is certainly a strong supporter of any affair concerning Goldsboro High School. According to a recent interview he has a keen interest in schools gen erally. Doctor Rose took a very active part in the drive to secure the sup plement for the Goldsboro Graded Schools, but he says a tribute should be paid to the women of Goldsboro who really made possi ble the nine months school term beginning again this year. No other man in Goldsboro is a greater sports enthusiast than Doctor Rose. When questioned as to high school athletics, he re marked that he is mighty proud of the Bejuvenated spirit in ath letics here, and while he would like to see a winning football team he feels that athletics should be so ap plied in the schools as to afford a variety of athletics to as nearly all the pupils as possible. When asked about his hobby Doctor Rose declared that he is certainly unable to afford one, but if anyone should accuse him of such it would be farming. He really likes farming but hates to do anything in the orthodox way of working it. His keenest inter est on the farm is in livestock. He now has more than three hundred cows on one of his nearby farms. Along with the preceding inter ests Doctor Rose has many other Wayne County interests. He is altogether a very busy person, be ing on the surgical staff of the Goldsboro Hospital, president of the Wayne County Medical Soci ety, a Kiwanian, Building and Loan Director, president of Farm ers Cooperative Association, owner of Carolina Dairy Farm, a mem ber of the American Legion and a member of the local Red Cross board. “Gone With the Wind” by Mar garet Mitchell realistically tells the life of the Southern people left in the homes during the Civil War and of the reconstruction period, bringing out facts that authors have never unveiled before. Scar lett O’Hara, whose mother was from the aristocracy of the South and whose father w^as an Irish ref ugee, was the belle of the country —beautiful with remarkable green eyes but unscrupulous to the nth degree. When gentle Ashley Wilkes, whom she loved, refused to marry her, she captivated Char lie Hamilton, who died unheroical- ly of measles in the war She de spised Rhett Butler, as unscrup ulous as herself but who under stood and loved her very much. A New York Times reviewer says that the readibility of the book is unsurpassed. By Mary Elizabeth Rackley, ’37. IN MEMORIAM Mr. Clarence Crone Father of James Crone Mr. S. L. Rose Father of Delphia and Doris Rose Mr. Richard B. Britt Father of David Britt Browdice Triece Brother of John Triece Editor’s Note: This is the first of a series of articles introducing the school board. In Pursuit of Knowledge thebe any Vif- c nocHer OETWC£H A neeoi-E ahd NrfOLE KMlTxmG ACTiVtT£S A Freshie Has Her Say I am a fine and mighty fresh man, pitied by seniors, looked down upon by juniors, and jeered at by the snooty sophomores. Even so, I am very glad to be here. It makes me feel very small and young and foolish to see so con fusingly many tall, businesslike, upperclassmen, casually going to their classes, with firm and unhesi tating tread,, chattering as they wind their way through crowded halls. My work in this school is pleas ant, and I seldom study more than is absolutely necessary to put on a brave front, and to pretend that I know it all. It never pays to talk while the teacher is looking. It is much more advisable to wait until she turns her lovely back; I have learned through long classes of experience. And oh, such fun it is to look down on the lowly grammar grade kids, to glare down one’s nose at them with a pitying, but far su perior stare. I have found that in spite of everything, that I actually enjoy it here! —Kala Rosenthal, ’40. Editor’s Note: In spite of the old saying that children should be seen and not heard, the staff de cided to publish the above pressions of a freshman.” ini- THE TRAGEDY OF FATE He wanders through the darkened hallways, Seeking friends he can not find. He stumbles into angered strangers— (What’s the matter? Are you blind?) He shies away from Recognition. Hoping thus to stand his ground. He seems misplaced in his surround ings— (Won’t someone show him around?) Yet, he is present in our classrooms. Unshackled! (Stark though it may be). “Living example,” someone called him, “A tragedy of Fate.” Not a freshman (Heaven, help 'em), but a POST GRADUATE! —Allen Andrews, ’36. Read the Ads Wanted: 220 Room Directories. Notify class of ’40. For Sale: 220 Green Sprouts. Very fresh, but wild. Apply G. H. S. Lost: One frosh—can’t find him any where— Note: Look in Senior Engl’sh Class.
Goldsboro High School Student Newspaper
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Oct. 9, 1936, edition 1
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