Page % HIGH LIFE Friday, October 23, IQ23 High Life Published Bi-Weekly by the Students of The Greezs^sboro High School Greensboro, N. C. Founded by the Class of ’21 Entered as Second-Class Matter at the Post Office, Greensboro, N. C. Management Glenn Holder 1 Editor-in-0 hie f Lindsay Moore Business Manager Ernest Williams, Asst. Bus. & Circ. Mgr. Associate Editors Margaret Ferguson, Betty Brown Georgia Stewart, Carlton Wilder Editors Elizabeth Rockwell Exchanges Marguerite Harrison,. Alumni Claude Sikes Humor Henry Biggs Graham Todd Athletic Editors Paul Wimbish Mary Tilley Typist Editors Annie Younts Pauline Medearis Weldon Beacham Reporters J. D. McNairy John Mebane Fannie Rockwell Nell Thurman Louis Brooks Cartoonist James Clements Marguerite Mason Adelaide Hilton — Edmund Turner Faculta' Board of Advisers Miss Inabelle G. Coleman Chairman Mr. W. R. Wunsch Mr. A. T. Rowe Mrs. Mary S. Ashford COPIED CLIPPINGS A soft answer turneth away wrath— and a harsh answer turneth away many customers.—The Megaphone, Northeast High, Philadelphia, Penna. ♦ Better late than never is a good rule which seems to be used a great deal by people who forget to set the alarm clock. —The Tech, Technical High School, St. Cloud, Minn. 4 Remember that a lost reputation is never wholly regained.—Manual Arts Weekly, Manual Arts High School, Los Angeles, California. Happiness is Efficiency’s most compe tent assistant.—Eine Yarns, Gastonia High School. 4 « ► TID BITS This suspense is terrible, Mr. Wunsch. A little service on that magazine propo sition, please suh Holiday for Teachers’ Convention, October 30. Good ole Convention. Had n’t these district meetings oughta be held oftener? Their effect upon the teachers is so uplifting. STUDENT GOVERNMENT Highest of ideals and principles are those upon which the Student Co-opera tive Council is based. Honor, loyalty, scholarship, co-operation between the student body and faculty—these are some of the things for which the Council stands. It upholds everything that is best in school life, and probably more than any other organization is respon sible for the sort of morale that is pre valent in the student body. The members of the council are not policemen in any sense. Their purjiose is to instill higher ideals and to bring about a smoother working school or ganization. Entirely too many students now look upon the council as a punitive organization, which functions solely to inflict punishment upon those violating some school regulation or standard. This is radically wrong, and they should come to realize what the council really stands for. Heavy responsibilities rest upon the members of the Council. Golden oppor tunities to do great things in helping shape the destinies of those with him they deal and to plan betterments for the school lie before them, but an equal ly great possibility of doing great harm by incompetently handling situations that may arise faces them. Since it’s conception two years ago, student government has proven highly successful at Greensboro High School. Despite the dire predictions of its op ponents, iil has grown stronger each year. This year the Council bids fair to surpass all it’s predecessors in con structive acbivements. The student’s Council is one of the most important, if not the most im portant, of all school organizations. It deserves the whole-hearted aid and sup port of the student body in all of it’s undertakings. — 4 ► letics are indispensable and hold an im portant position in school activities. And yet many other school activities are of almost as great importance. Such activities as music, dramatics, and pub lications deserves the support of the student body as much as athletics. The half-back, when he tears off a brilliant forty-five-yard end run; the pitcher, when he forces the batter to wbiff the air with the bases full; the center, when he cages one from the middle of the court,—all receive their meed of jiraise and glory. But the debater who makes an eloquent argument, the hard-working reporter who cleverly handles a diffi cult story, the cornetist who plays an ex cellent selection—do they receive much public attention and honor (a thing which everyone thirsts for way down deep, however much he may deny it) ? The backing given athletics in G. H. S. could be improved upon, but the sup port given the various other school ac tivities is in many cases lamentably poor. Support athletics wholeheartedly, cer tainly, but not at the expense of the backing given other activities. HEY! WHAT’S THE MATTER? By Ed. Turner ■4 • ► The Acorn Artillery is going great guns these days. The marksmanship seems to be improving, as witness vari ous and sundry small bumps on the editorial cranium. We wanna see some of these barnyard gold addicts win that tournament and Guilford County championship is toss ing the equinines’s pedal gear for old G. H. S. Speek day afternoon. ♦ “Found — The Prince”. Aw, we thought you meant a real scion of roy alty, Mr. Wunsch. Wd haven’t seen any evidences of royal blood in Harvey “Pete” Wyrick. The Purple Whirlwind gets another whack at Winston tomorrow. Come on over and help the boys get revenge for that 7-0 whitewash the other Saturday. Beware, O. Ye, too harsh pedagogues. Take ye this warning to heart, for, un less ye mend your ways, just retribution is likely to visit your door-step on All Hallow’s Eve. The corner grocery store man looks daggers at Mr. Charlie when they meet these days. The energetic principal is entirely too firm in his determination that the students eat at the High School Cafeteria to suit the dispenser of canned beans and sardines. Mr. Edwards, former G. H. S. prin cipal, writes his appreciation of our send ing a copy of “High Life” to him, and of the nice things said about him in it’s columns. They couldn’t be too nice, Mr. Edwards. ATHLETICS Athletics at Greensboro High School are waxing white-hot now. Football, tbe peer of all scholastic sports, holds the center of the stage, with basketball just edging from the wings. A winning var sity football team is in tbe midst of a bard schedule, and pre-season basket ball, together with class football, is well underway. Right now is an appropriate time to stop and consider what athletics mean to the school life. There are two views of athletics—the athlete’s view, and the view of the student who does not par ticipate in any form of sports. Many athletes consider sports the most im portant thing about school. They are as badly mistaken as those few who do not take any interest in athletics and who think sports should be made a minor part of school life. The ideal student is one who partici pates in some form of athletics and yet does not subordinate other school acti vities to them. He makes sports an im portant, but still not the most important, phase of school life. His physical and recreational needs are taken care of through his participation in athletics, while through debating, dramatics, pub lication, music, or other forms of school activities, he develops the mental side and makes of himself a well-rounded stu dent. Athletics develop the student both phy sically and spiritually. No boy can go through a hard football game or even a stiff scrimmage without it bringing out the best that’s in him. It develops all the latent manhood and brings to the surface all the instincts of sports manship. In addition athletics help de velop a healthy, strong body and sound mind. They change the participant’s whole outlook upon life, and help him to see things in their true proportions. Ath- AN INNOVATION Those authorities who direct the des tines of Greensboro High School are not radicals. No one can afford to be, in such a delicate and fundamental opera tion as that of instructing posterity. And yet they have embarked this year in a proposition which probably has no pre cedent in the state. On the surface this would appear to be a risky move; but while it carries its element of risk, like all innovations, in establishing these new classes in the English Department, the authorities have only once again shown themselves men of vision, capable of understanding the scope of all new move ments in education. The trend of the times is toward the develoximent of self-expression in young people who are receiving their prepara tion for life. G. H. S. is keeping abreast of the times. Her student body contains a vast cmount of raw material, which, with the iiroper development, is capable of contributing a huge amount of use fulness to the world. Training in self- expression is a necessity to the develop ment of most of this material. This year the students are being offered three practical courses under thoroughly com petent instructors, which stress this side of development. This is a rare oppor tunity and is not one to be lightly turn ed aside. We believe that the good to be de rived by the school from these classes in Creative English, Dramatics, and News-writing cannot be over-estimated. Through their individual mediums of ex pression—the magazine, the plays pre sented by the Dramatic Club, and High Life—each covering a particular field in creation, these classes will brifig fame to the school in inter-scholastic compe tition and spread the name of G. H. S. abroad. Everything else favoring, she may easily become one of the foremost high schools in the country. She has the raw material; she has the necessary energy; all she needs is the training along certain lines. Now she is in a position to receive that, too. Let’s do our part. Let’s help to make these courses go across and show the powers higher up that we are worthy of the interest in us, the faith in us that they have shown by presenting us with these rare opportunities for ad vancement. Carlton Wilder. The U. N. C. debaters take on the debating team of Oxford University, England, at Chapel Hill, November 9. Gettin’ ambitions, aren’t you, Carolina arguerers? Still we’re behind you, so stick in there and show ’em that Ameri cans can out talk Englishmen any day. FAIR WARNING Notice has been served by the At lantic and Yadkin Valley Railroad through its officials and yard employees that the use of the railroad bed as a street by the high school students be immediately discontinued. Both Mr. Archer and Mr. Phillips were given to understand that the railroad company would not be res^ionsible for any casu alties occurring in the future caused by the use of the railroad as a foot path. This warning has been passed on to every Greensboro High School stu dent, rail-walkers and all, with the ad monition to heed the railroad notice. Now the responsibility rests upon tbe students. If you should accidently trip while walking the rails and fall before an approaching train too close upon you to stop before grinding you into jiulp (which is altogetber possible), your pa rents need not expect to collect damages. You will have to board your own crush ed self at the hospital, if you are lucky enough to come through alive. The railroad does not run a hospital for cross-tie crickets. The railroad keeps its trains ujion the track. It is your duty to keep yourself off the track. A few hundred feet down West Mar ket Street there is a street (Cedar, by name) which runs parallel to the rail road and by the rear entrance of G. H. S. This street is equipped with ade quate sidewalk space and plenty of street to walk on. The time required to go around by the street is just a few seconds more—and may save your life. To walk down the track may gain you a few seconds; again you may lose fifty years of life. Who knows —Henry Biggs. -4 • FORGERY Every day hundreds of notes come to the office explaining absences and tardies and the like. Each note is signed with the name of some parent. The question is: Is the name really signed by the parent? Of course there are times when it is permissable for a child to sign his or her parent s name. A mother might say, Mary, I’m busy so please write your own excuse.” For Mary to do this is not entirely wrong for she is obeying her mother and obedience is one of the first laws; but if Mary is allowed to write her own excuse, James, John, and all the rest will think that they are privileged to do likewise. No one has the legal right to sign another’s name. In business such an offence is punishable by law for it is termed forgery. Do students, who with out permission sign other people’s names, realize that they are beginning to take the first step toward forgery? No, for f they did they would hesitate before even beginning such a thing. Now if by any chance it is necessary for a student to write and sign his own excuse, he should remember to put ‘Mrs. Tom Smith, by son John,” then his excuse would not contain a forgery. However, Miss Mitchell, the Dean and the one wffio receives these notes, wishes it to be stated that she would prefer to have all notes signed by parents themselves. There is no way to check Lp on this without going to a good deal of trouble, so tbe question of whether the future Greensboro is to be peopled with law breakers rests with the students of G. H. S. Students, your honor is at stake—guard it. —Margaret Ferguson. — “»-♦ » AN APPRECIATION Have you noticed in the school library, in the little room to the right, the list of parallel books? A complete list for each semester is posted on the wall and the books can be found in the library. The same list is posted in the City Li brary and there, too, in a sejiarate ca.se, are books that are to be read by the students of Greensboro High School this year. lo Mrs. Orr, school librarian, and Miss Rowe, of the city library, we extend our appreciation for tbeir kindness and though, in posting these, lists and ar ranging the books in such a way that no student will have any trouble in finding the books he wmnts to read. —Lindsay Moore. -4-9 WHITE LINES The Student Council has decided to have white lines painted on the walks and stairs in order to regulate traffic and to prevent the congestion that occurs every time classes are changed. If everyone would keep to the right the traffic jams that occur daily would never happen and an efficient uniform flow of traffic w’ould result. We believe that the painted lines will act as a reminder and keep the students who seem inclined to be “road hogs” on the right side. —Ernest Willia, s. The cross country runners seemed sor- ta run down when observed after prac tice the other evening. ♦ Leapin’ lizards! Mr. Farthing certain ly faithfully imitated one when a live salamander was placed in his chair by Bob Leonard the other day.