Newspapers / Goldsboro High School Student … / Feb. 6, 1942, edition 1 / Page 6
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PAGE SIX GOLDSBORO HI NEWS February 6, 1942 GHS Strives to Help Uncle Sam By All-Out Defense Effort a SUMMARY OF ACTIVITIES The above picture is of the scrap metal drive Bill Stafford was appointed a captain after the the names of all captains see the story below. committee and captains, picture was taken. For One hundred girls have learned to knit. Twenty-eight girls are enrolled in the First Aid class. Twenty-eight girls are enrolled in the Home Nursing class. Defense stamps are being sold in school. Waste paper is being collected. Scrap metal is being collected. Forty stretchers have been made by industrial arts classes. Lapboards, letter holders, etc., are being made by art classes. Books are being collected for the Victory Book Campaign. A class in radio communications for adults is being instructed at night by a GHS teacher. Nine teachers have completed a Red Cross First Aid Course. The pictures above classes. Evidently GHS part in defense. were snapped at the knitting and first aid girls are getting ready to play an important 109 Books Collected One hundred nine books had been turned in to the library up to Feb ruary 4 for the Victory Book Cam paign, which is sponsored by the American Library Association, the Red Cross, and the U.S.O. The purpose of the campaign is to collect gifts of books for soldiers, sailors, and marines; and to pro vide reading matter for the U.S.O. houses outside of camp. Types of books needed are: fic tion, westerns, detectives, crime, and adventure; non-fiction: current affairs, crime, English grammars, arithmetic, algebra, geometry, shorthand, business and salesman ship, photography, sports, music, travel, and history. Co-chairman for Wayne County are Miss Mary F. D“ Vane, librarian Goldsboro Public Libr-ary, V ,xr. Herman Weil, representa- ^for the Red Cross and the j.O. Grace Ennis, chairman of the A library committee, is the GHS chairman. GET YOUR BONDS & STAMPS from ♦ -K * Goldsboro Building and Loon Association THE QUICKEST, SUREST WAY TO WIN THIS WAR IS TO B U Y DEFENSE BONDS and STAMPS Says A. T. GRIFFIN MANUFACTURING CO. PHONE 1400 Seniors Back Metal Drive Thirteen enthusiastic senior boys have been ap pointed captains of different districts of Goldsboro in the Scrap Metal Drive under the auspices of the Senior Class. The captains were appointed by a committee elected from the senior homerooms to plan the drive. Dickie Weatherly, chairman of the committee, in assembly on January 30, asked for volunteers to work with the captains in their districts. Approximately 100 students responded. The captains assigned the helpers differ ent streets in their districts and named central points to pile the metal. There will be a house-to-house can vass by the helpers. Superintendent Ray Armstrong, chairman of Civi lian Defense in Wayne County, has named a three-man committee; headed by Mr. Frank McGinnis, to work wUh the Seniors in their drive. They have agreed to furnish trucks in which to haul the metal to the dealers. The other members of the committee are Mr. Frank Seymour and Mr. Robert Musgrave. The captains are: William Westmoreland, Keith McClenny, H. F. Ferguson, Lyndon Hart, J. D. Pike, Alberi Handley, Joe Glascox, Billy Wynn, Dick Borden, Clifton Daniel, Philman Ham, Bill Stafford, and Lee Adams. The members of the committee which did the plan ning are: Dickie Weatherly, chairman, Alice Graham, Billy Wynn, Joe Glascox, Helen Bissette, Barbara Ed wards, Elaine Brown, Hazel Brady, and William West moreland, with Bob Powell an ex-officio member and Miss Ida Gordner, adviser. 56 Girls Enroll In New Classes A total of 56 junior and senior girls from Mrs. White’s, Miss Gordner’s, and Mrs. Bradford’s classes have enrolled in the new First Aid and Home Nursing courses, which have recently been organized as a part of the defense work in Goldsboro High School. The First Aid class, taught by Miss Martha Camp bell, requires twenty hours of training to complete the course. The Home Nursing class, taught by Mrs. Milton Clark, requires thirty hours. The girls from Mrs. Bradford’s room taking First Aid include: Nancy Paige Swift, Elaine Brown, Ger trude Edgerton, Hannah Shrago, Ruth Weil, Helen Bissette, Hilda Bell, Barbara Edwards, Betty Ward, Jane Lee Waters, Mary Emma Rouse, Agnes Hallow, Frances Gaddy, Fanny Lou Parker, Leona Potter, Dorothy Jessup, and Annie Howell. The girls from Miss Gordner’s class taking First Aid are: Margaret Holt, Susan Lupton, Jeanne Man ning, Jean Gibson, Miriam Sholar, Elizabeth Stanley, Mary Ann Hunt, Lyda Winslow, Vann Lancaster, Martha Blue Purser, and Hilda Liles. . The girls taking Home Nursing from Mrs. White’s class are: Lizzie Mae Adams, Mary Lou Austin, Marian na Best, Lorraine Baddour, Hazel Brady, Ruby Grump ier, Eleanor Crocker, Geraldine Daniels, Doris Good- son, Alma Griffin, Mable Hilton, Virginia Hopewell, Eunice Highsmith, Lucille Johnson, Jewel Keen, Janice Knight, Jean McLean, Virginia Mercer, Gloria Massen- gill, Juliette Nassif, Jane Lee Parks, Junite Person, Lucille Pope, Barbara Roberts, Frances Stafford, Ester Tilton, Lois Weigand, and Dorothy Grice. WALL PAPER and PAINTS WILLIAMS PAINT & SUPPLY CO. Phone 496 Buy Defense Stamps THE MORE BONDS YOU BUY THE MORE PLANES WILL FLY PHIL'S TAVERN OTIS A. MAGILL PHONE 1582 “KEEP ’EM FLYING” RIDE BIKES SAVE CARS QUALITY BICYCLE SHOP REMEMBER PEARL HARBOR GET YOUR BUY HELP UNCLE SAM SHARE OF DEFENSE BUY DEFENSE U. S. DEFENSE BONDS BONDS & STAMPS BONDS and AND STAMPS ■K + STAMPS BUILDERS SUPPLIES A. M. HARRIS D. B. BURNS DAIRY COMPANY Purl Two—Knit Two Knit one—purl one—knit one and purl two (er something). Frankly, I think that I’m about the only one that didn’t quite learn to knit but 99 others did, and they will help keep the war refugees warm this winter by knitting sweaters and other things for the Red Cross. Miss Miriam Koch and her Home Economics classes taught these girls the fundamentals of knitting in three lessons. Classes were held January 15 through January 22 during regular school days.—H.D. Stretchers Being Made To provide stretchers needed by the Red Cross, Mr. J. H. Askins’ industrial arts classes are under taking the project of making forty. The building trades classes are constructing the wood framework; metal trades classes, the metal parts; and the home economics students, the stretcher covers. “REMEMBER PEARL HARBOR” BUY DEFENSE BONDS & STAMPS ->c -K ★ BORDEN BRICK AND TILE COMPANY I I I I I I I I I I A I SELL YOUR SCRAP IRON And METAL TO THE GOLDSBORO IRON AND METAL COMPANY ★ ★ ★ , REMEMBER EVERY POUND OF SCRAP , HELPS TO SCRAP THE JAPS
Goldsboro High School Student Newspaper
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Feb. 6, 1942, edition 1
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