SPECIAL SENIOR EDITION JT«U ilMnnn SPONSORED BY JOURNALISTIC CLUB ALBEMARLE, N. C., FRIDAY, MAY 28, 1937 Vocational Work Offered Next Year Elective Course for Seniors. By JANE LEFLER. Plans are being made to give a great deal of attention to vocational guidance in the high school during the coming year. The state has prom ised to give aid in the expansion of this program. There are at present several seniors working in various institutions in town an apprenticeship basis. It is a plan of the school to give seniors who are interested in a particular work an opportunity to get practical experience in that field before leav ing the high school. During the past two years, hospitals and industries of Albemarle have indicated their will ingness to co-operate in such a pro gram. Many students have already been benefited by the work done. With the expansion contemplated, it is hoped that no senior will go out of high school in the future without having had a definite and effective guidance of vocational nature. The school hopes to make clear to its graduates that its interest in them does not stop with graduation but continues throughout life. Registra- (Continued on Page Nine) CLAUD GRIGG, Supt. IV During the three years of Mr Grigg’« leadership, the Albemarli City Schools have made rapid prog ress. Added equipment, increase, building facilities, widened cur riculum and lengthened school tern are but outward evidences of th. Grigg’s Mr Hi Y Club Organized Under the leadership of T. W. Bremer, secretary of the Albemarle Chamber of Commerce, the Hi Y Club for boys was organized here this spring. The purpose of the Hi Y Club is to create, maintain, and extend through the school and com munity high standards of Christian character. The membership is limited to boys in high school above the eighth grade. The local club has a member ship of thirty, with the following of- Jack Jordan, president. Edward Whitley, vice-president. Jimmy Crowell, secretary. James Morgan, treasurer. The club meets each Monday night in the Christian Education Building of the Lutheran church. Membership in the local club includes the follow ing boys: Bobbie Austin, H. M. Aus tin, Jack Castevens, Roy Coggins, Douglas Cranford, Jimmy Crowell, Wade Denning, C. B. Efird, Jack Jordan, Edgar Lefler, Sherman Low- der. Bill Mann, James Morgan, Er nest Safrit, Vernon Underwood, Ed ward Whitley, Sydney Smith, Charles Hopkins, John Snuggs, Ben Slack, Paul Brooks, Clyde McDowell, Sid ney Gulledge, James Fry, Robert Moose, Franklin Niven, Bailey Gul ledge, Bill Morrow, Grady Moyle, Carl Parker, and Lee Copple. ALBEMARLE HIGH SCHOOL BUILDING Dr. Rondthaler To Address Graduates Diplomas Awarded Tuesday Night. Plans for Commencement Exercises for the Albemarle High School are almost completed. Dr. Howard E. Rondthaler, president of Salem Col lege and one of the outstanding edu cational leaders and speakers of the state, has accepted the invitation to deliver the commencement address Tuesday evening, June 8, at 8 o’clock in the high school auditorium. The Baccalaureate Sermon will be preached on Sunday evening, June 6, 8 o’clock by Dr. T. H. McDill, pas- • of A. R. P. church, Gastonia, N. Dr. McDill is rated among the t.standing prea'-hers of the state. His interest in young people makes him a particularly desirable preacher for the occasion. The school is for tunate in securing two such able as Dr. Rondthaler and Dr. Mc Dill for the commencement program. There are 104 members ’ of the graduating class this year with 62 girls and 42 boys. This is one of the largest classes yet to finish at Albemarle High School. The class St year was abo\it the same size. At the Graduating Exercises, Tuesday evening, the senior proces- (Continued on Page Six) Science Department Is Greatly Increased By HELEN MORGAN. Among the many improvements made in the Albemarle High School recently, the new science equipment ne of the most beneficial. Realiz- that no science can be accurately studied without the proper equipage, the school has expended approxi mately $500 for science materials this year. The new laboratory, equipped with tables, stools, and a large sink, will be put into use next year. The biology department has been increased by one member—“Jerry." (Continued on Page Five) School Installs Movie Projector By GWEN JONES. The installation of a Bell and Howell sound picture machine has made it possible to devote attention to visual education in the high school. Arrangements were made with the University System of Georgia for the booking of a number of Erpi Educa tional Films this spring. Among these were “Animal Life,” “Choosing Your Vocation,” “How Nature Protects Animals,” “The Nervous System,” “The Solar Family,” and “Heads Up (Continued on Page Six) Commencement Exercises BACCALAUREATE SERMON June 6, 1937. Processional Hymn—Lead On, O King Eternal Invocation—Mr. W. J. Bradley Anthem—“Rejoice in the Lord”— Baines Scripture Reading— Rev. J. S. Gibbs Hymn—Love Divine Introduction of Speaker— Rev. C. D. Whiteley Sermon—Dr. T. H. McDill Anthem—“Send Out Thy Light” Benedici Postlude (Music —Goun n—Rev. Arnold Slate der direction of Ann] n and Paul Fry) Processional—“Follow the Gleam” Invocation—Rev. Geo. B. Clemmer “Dear Land of Home”—Sibelius —Glee Clubs Address— Dr. Howard E. Rondthaler “A Brown Bird Singing”—Wood -Selec ed Gro Presentation of Diploi Mr. F. N. Patterson Presentation of Class Gift “Keep On Hopin”—Maxwell —Glee Clubs Recessional Commercial Dept. Is To Be Added Typing, Shorthand, Bookkeep ing Offered. A well-equipped commercial de partment will be opened in the high school next fall. Provision for this department was made in the new addi tion to the high school building. The plan is to develop as rapidly as pos sible a well rounded commercial course for high school students that will equip them to go directly into business offices. Miss Doris Cockerham, rated as among the best commercial students at W. C. U. N. C., will have charge of the department next year. Among the couroti that will pr-^ > fered are general business training in the ninth grade, typing and book keeping in the tenth grade, and typ ing and shorthand in the eleventh grade. Only a limited number of students can be accommodated in this course the first year. It is hoped that approximately seventy-five students can take typing, about forty students, shorthand, and forty students book keeping. The selection of students will be made on a basis of vocational plans, grade of work done in the past, and determination to do excellent work. It is planned that no student who does not give promise of success shall take this course. The school expects to be able to recommend its graduates to the business and professional men of the city. A large number of students have in dicated their desire to take the course, and it is probable that the de- partment will expand rapidly. Senior Play Proves To Be Big Success 'Big Hearted Herbert” Given. By LYNNIE EAST. The Senior Class presented an hilarious three-act comedy entitled Big Hearted Herbert” before two record-breaking audiences in the Al bemarle High School audito ium. The matinee performance at 1:30 on May 20 was attended by five hundred children from the elementary schools. The evening performance at 8 o’clock May 21 was attended by as appre- tive audience as an amateur cast could wish. The play, written by Sophie Kerr and Anna Steese Richardson, deals with the open question as to whether father or mother knows best how to bring up the children. Herbert Kal- ness is a self-made business man who insists that his family must be brought up in the plain traditions. When his daughter becomes engaged a Harvard man and his wife has t only ice cream but Harvard men dinner, Herbert nearly goes out of his mind with rage. Herbert’s home becomes safe for Harvard men only after his family has embarrassed him by embracing his plain tradition lit erally. The sight of his wife in the (Continued on Page Five) SENIOR CLASS LEAVES GIFT TO SCHOOL Pictures Presented for Use In Study Hall And Class Rooms After having made approximately $310, $200 of which was clear, on the play, “Big Hearted Herbert,” the Senior Class held a meeting in the auditorium Monday morning. May 24, for the purpose of obtaining sug gestions for the class gift. The floor was thrown open to discussion, and after several suggestions were made by members of the class, the presi dent appointed a committee to meet with Mr. Grigg, Mr. Gibson, and Miss Laws, the senior adviser, to consider the various suggestions made and to decide just what form the parting gift of the class of 1937 should take. Pelham Whitley, Jack Jordan, Dona Gantt, Ed Whitley, Gwen Jones, and Homer Carter composed the com mittee headed by Ernie Safrit, presi dent of the Senior Class. The final decision was to continue the project of furnishing pictures the school, a plan begun by the gift of W. C. Russell to the Senior Class. It is the plan of the class selecting copies of pictures by out standing artists to create conscious ness of art appreciation throughout the school. A brass plaque bearing the r of the class will be inserted in each picture. The Senior Class of 1937 wishes to be remembered as a class which will inspire an appreciation of beauty that a love for artistic pic tures gives. The following pictures were bought with the money donated by W. C. Russell and have been placed in the study hall and the senior home room: “Avenue of Trees,” Hobbema; “Harp of the Winds,” Martin; “Age of Innocence,” Reynolds; “Sir Gala- had,” Watts; “The Gleaners,” Millet; “Children of the Shell,” Murillo; “The Boyhood of Raleigh,” Millais; “Dance of the Nymphs,” Corot; “Feeding Her Birds,” Millet; “The Angelus,” Millet, and “The Boy With the Apple.” A. B. GIBSON, Prin. A. B. Gibson, of Laurel Hill, completing his first year as principal pf Albemarle High School. A gradu- ite of Duke University, he had sev- I of % e befor ssful t o Al- irle. During his firs , Albemarle he has contributed greatly wards creating a fine school spirit ^ulum.*"^ The schooV*'’ ility to dire of 1 Albemarle Ties for First Place In French Contest Two Albemarle High School stu dents, Helen Morgan and Gwendolyn Jones, submitted perfect papers in the state French contest, thus aiding Albemarle to tie with Rockingham School for state honors. Out of 81 possible errors these students made not one. Fifty-five schools were rep resented in the contest with 710 stu dents participating. Katherine Hat- y was the third member of the local Albemarle and Rockingham also tied for first place in team work, each team making a total of three errors. Annual Recital To Be Given Tonight Miss Annyce Worsham will present her high school piano pupils May 28, at 8 o’clock in the annual music re cital in the high school auditorium. On June 1, Miss Worsham will prf 6 sent Helen Morgan and Mary P 8 ham Whitley in a graduating re’ g This is the second recital of its S to be given in this school. Q