TONIGHT WILL BE A TREAT The Lexhipep COME SEE T-VILLE GET BEAT XXVI LEXINGTON, N. C., FEBRUARY 25, 1949 No. 5 Junior Cast For “One Mad Night” Seated on floor: Ross Ritchie, hero; Peggy Costner heroine Seated left in rio-ht. t W.C.T.C. Gives Musical Program A quartet of singers from Western Carolina Teachers College presented a program of music on Monday, Feb ruary 7, in the auditorium and made quite a favorable impression on Lex ington High School students. With the group, who are now making a tour of the state, is Herbert R. Foster, Jr., a former L. H. S. student. Other members are Virginia Barnwell, so prano of Greenville, S. C.; Joan Rog ers, alto, of Robblnsville; and Bran son Matney, tenor, of Waynesville. SUPT. ANDREWS SPEAKS IN DEVOTIONAL ASSEMBLY A varied assembly program was presented in the auditorium on Thursday, February 3. Louise Yountz was in charge of the devotionals. Sa rah ^ssey served as mistress of cere monies and introduced the features of the program. At the piano were Jean Lohr, Joan Kearns, and Jo Deane Swing, all who played several piano solos. A quintet of girls from the Junior Euterpe Music Club .cang several selections. Mr. L. E. Andrews, city school superintendent, made a short talk entitled ‘Things Worth Re membering.’ The title referred to fa mous quotations: Mr. Andrews makes a hobby of collecting famous sayings, and he presented to the student body many worth remembering. Junior Class to Present “One Mad Night” Three Act Mystery Drama, On March 18 Calendar of Events February 25—Basketball — Thomasville — Here ^--English Department Assembly March 7-March 11—Basketball Tourna- ment at Mooresville March 10—^lee Club Assembly Department Assembly March 18—Junior Closs Play—One Mad Night Morch 24—Dramatics Club Assembly March 25—Lexicon Stunt Night “One Mad Night” is the popular new play selected by the Junior Class to be presented on the evening of Friday, March 18, in the high school auditorium at eight o’clock. This is a m'ystery farce in three acts written by James Reach and directed by IVIrs. Fred B. Lewis and Mr. Theodore Leonard. The story cannot fail to excite and amuse, moving as it does at express- train speed with never a breathing speU from beginning to end. The ac tion of the entire play takes place in One Mad Night” and what a crazy night it is! Don Cutter, a playwright, accom panied by Wing, his proverb-quoting Chinese valet, goes to the Cutter man sion, a lonely house in the hills, to complete his latest play in peace and quiet. The house has been deserted for years, a series of mysterious mur ders having given it the reputation of being haunted. Imagine Don’s aston ishment when he finds the house ten anted by a number of very strange people who are lunatics under the care of Dr. Bunn, whose home nearby has burned down. By the time the final curtain falls, the audience will be weak from laughter ready to admit that “One Mad Night” is the last word in rapid- fire hilarity. The cast selected is as follows: Ross Ritchie, Peggy Costner, Robert Mims, Marilyn Saunders. Jo Anne Blackwel- der, Carroll Leonard, Ang Lindsay, Bobby/ Lee Parr, Margaret Hinson, Mary Alice Wilson, Jimmy Dan Red- wine, Emily Russell, Bobby Leonard, and Nancy Poster. Quill and Scroll Presents “Romancers”; Inducts New Members On Thursday, February 10, the Alice Duer Miller chapter of the Quill and Scroll had charge of the assem bly prgoram. The members of the Club presented a delightful one-act play, “The Romancers” by Edmund Rostand, after which Juanita Smith, ciub president, took charge. Different members gave the code of ethics of the club, and the names of the new members were read by Jane Strelitz, Lexicon editor, and Joanne Koonts, Lexhipep editor. The new members are as follows: Jimmy Plott, the only initiate at large, Martha Hooper, Barbara De- Lapp, Jimmy Dillon, Joanne Ferrell, Carolyn Koonts, Elizabeth Clodfelter, Doster Wood, Jimmy Redwine, Har riet Leonard, Eveiyn Fulbright, Bon nie Leonard, Joanne Blackwelder, Jack Evans, Buddy Foster, Sarah Tussey, Pattie Sue Bates, Jeanie Cross, Nancy Koonts, Mary Nell Lopp, Ang Lindsay, and Mary Deane Hedrick. Mary Jane Shirley Is March of Dimes Queen Miss Mary Jane Shirley, only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Shir ley and a sophomore at L. H. S., is the March of Dimes Queen for 1949. Mary Jane was crowned at the Pres ident’s Ball on January 30, 1949, by Mr. Joe Leonard, chairman 'of the drive. Buddy Poster was her cam paign manager. She received a beau tiful bouquet of red roses, a rhine stone necklace, and a ticket to all the^ Piedmont Club dances for the re mainder of the year. Miss Peggy Ann Costner was the runner-up in the contest and re ceived rhinestone scatter I)ins. Misses Barbara Smith. Henrietta Bruton and Nancy Foster were third, fourth and fifth, respectively. This project helped raise $526.98 for Lexington High School’s March of Dimes quota. NEWS BRIEFS SOME PEOPLE SEEM TO think it’s cute to be able to slip books belonging to someone else out of a locker without anyone’s seeing them do -it. What is wrong with L.H.S. that her students tolerate this? L. H. S.’s BASKETBALL TEAMS HAVE won games and they have lost a few, but prevalent through all the games has been good sportsmanship on the part of both girls and boys. Everyone is proud of you, teams. Keep up the good work! ^ shop teacher, has lost no time in seeing that the boys who are taking shop turn out some lovely pieces of work. Why not put some of them on display? THE BEHAVIOR IN THE auditorium has noticeably improved. It has certainly done a good deal to add to the interest and enjoyment of the programs presented. Mary Jane Shirley