Page Four Honor Roll Bronze Number of Times Hubert Rochelle 1 Charles Harris 1 Charles Carjoll 1 Edwin Gambrell 1 Edna Bray 1 Erma Lee Graves 1 Florence Robinson 1 Frances Thompson 2 John Brown 1 Henry Nau 1 Leah Baach 1 Bonnie Cagle 2 T. G. Owens 1 Annie Lee Chandler 1 Moses Way 1 Virginia Antrim 1 Geraldine Bonkemeyer .. 3 Hortense Jones 3 Maurine Moore 1 Marilu Smith 1 Jean Watt 1 Eva Mae Ziglar 1 Howard Cooke I James Carmichael 1 John Fields 4 A. C. Holt 1 Hill Hunter 4 Mack Kernodle 1 Wayne Kernodle 1 Rex Metz i 1 Mary Sutton 1 Edward Hartsook 1 • Irfonard Nanzetta 1 Martha Ogburn 1 Mary Stone 1 Maurice Sellars 1 Margaret Huggins 4 Dick Cann 1 Cornelia Gorrell 4 Cynthia Pipkin 1 Lena Willis 1 Bernard Waynick 1 Jane Sykos 1 Alleine Grimes 1 James York 1 Talmadge Smith 1 Hope Burchell 1 J. E. Bowman 1 Philip Hammone 1 Rosemary Kuhn 1 Powell Banner 1 Ruel Cape! 1 Randolph Freeman 1 Ray Routh 1 Mildred Apple 1 Helen Bowman 1 Janie Caskadon 1 Winifred Penn 3 Helen Stack 1 Marjorie Barker ^ 1 Colum Schenck 4 Myra Bishop 1 Estelle Hayes . I" Nina Keen 1 Charles Sisson 1 Lois Russell 1 Steve Hawes ..,, v 1 Evelyn Capps 1 Dorothy Hardin 1 Bessie McFaddiu 1 Charlotte Porter 1 Emily Sutton 1 Edith Weaver 1 Marie Hedgpeth I Owen Cooke 1 Mirvine Garrett 1 Claude Thompson 1 Virginia Carter 1 Jane Cheek 1 Elizabeth Davih 1 Alvin Meibohn 1 Hilda Pritchett 1 Doetta Willis 1 Frances Foster 1 Mary Kirby ....; 1 Frances Sowell 1 Nell Benton 1 Jean Sparger 1 Margot O’Brien 1 Pete Saerinty 1 Harrison Isler 1 Thomas Millee 1 • Jumina Smith 1 Silver Maurine Polk 4 Jasper Seabolt 4 Filmore Wilson 4 Ruth Hill 17 Dave Levine 1 Jane Clegg 1 ' Ruth Gardner 5 Mary Gentry 5 Phyllis Hagedorn 5 Louise Burnette 1 Margaret Cann 5 Mary King 5 Louise Ryan 4 Frances Truitt !.... 1 Margaret Knight 1 Margaret Wagner 1 Jane Baxter J W. E. Beabow 1 Edward Cone 17 Elizabeth Whaley 17 I^ne Barksdale 5 / Hilliard Cleiii 1 Helen Crutchfield 1 Rebecca JefEress 17 Charles Sharpe 17 Juanita Pickard 17 Helen Short 17 Mary Nau i Eloise Wuensche 1 Martha Tugwell 1 Sara Bogles i Gold Edgar Meibohn 1 James Hodgin i Palmer Holt i Mary Agnes Garrett .... 1 Grace Martin i November 6,1931 F. WARNER GIVES FAREWELL MESSAGE ‘A Prince of a Pal” Is Hi-Y Secretary’s Tribute to C. W. Phillips. SINGS SOUTHERN SONGS “A prince of a pal is C. W. Phillips,” was Frank Warner’s tribute to our prin cipal in his farewell message to the sen ior high students. The school is sorry to lose Mr. War ner; it will be impossible to fill the vacancy caused by his being called to another city. He promised to come back down South to visit Greensboro and senior high, but he ean’t come often enough. Mr. Warner sang his farewell message, accompanied by his guitar and ukelele. He started with “That Lonesome Road,” saying that Fifth Avenue would be his lonesome road. He said that he expected to hear “East Side, West Side” in New York, so he gave us a sample of how it would sound. He also said he expected to hear someone say “I Met That Man From, the South.” Many of his songs reflected his love of the South. Among-these were “You Can Take Me Away From Dixie, But You Can’t Dixie From Me,” “If Y’ou Don’t Like Milk and Honey, Stay Out of the South,” “The Skies Will All Be Blue When My Dreams Come True.” His dream was to return to the South, he declared. He sang English when he rendered “ ’Tis Venice,” and “All the King’s Horses.” Everyone joined him in singing “The More We Get Together,” “She’ll Be Coming ’Round the Mountain When She Comes,” and “There’s a IvOiig, Long Trail a-Winding.” Two other selections were “When It’ Hard to Tell the Depth if the Well’ and “On the Road to Mandalay.” He warned us not to laugh at this play on words: “It’s not schools, it’ principles (principals)” because it i too old. He ended with “Fight ’Em, G. H. S.’ and “Silvery Moon.” The refrain of the last one was “Old Pals Arc the Best Pals After All.” Mr. Warner has been a real pal to many of the high school students, who are grieved to give him up. His advice was to stick together. 93a I! CAFETERIA SCENE OF PARTY; MANY GAMES Everyone enjoys a little fun, seniors. They had this fun on Oe tober 28 in the school cafeteria. At 8 o’clock a Halloween party begun with onjy seniors and most of them in tume. The party was a good old-fashioned le like our parents and grandparents enjoyed. Such typical games as duck ing for apples and telling fortunes played. Refreshments of apples, pea nuts, and pop-corn wore served and all the seniors turned homeward promptly at 11 o’clock. Misses Grogan, Morrow, and Martin, senior class faculty advisers, as we Miss Fannie Starr Mitchell, Miss Mor gan, and Mr. Phillips were present at the party. s. The committee who planned the party and appointed committees was: Eloise Taylor, chairman; Richard Robinson, Dan Field, Leah Baach, Janet O’Brien, Dudley Poster, A, C. Bonkemeyer, Dick Nance, Bill Murphy, Prances Foust, and Pat Knight. Dick Nance, master of ceremonies, started the grand march, which was fol lowed by fortune-telling, ducking for ap ples, peanut.race, clog dance by Dick Nance, a grin contest, and a trip through Hades. Janet O’Brien 1 Dudley Foster 1 1 Atkinson 1 Flora Johnson 1 Mary Scales 1 Bootsie Swift l Elizabeth Yates 1 Archibald Scales 1 Louise Jones 1 Eloise Taylor 1 Joe Knight 6 John Knight 6 Alma Taylor I Elizabeth Buhmann 5 A. C. Bonkemeyer 1 Bill Venning 1 E. F. CRAVEN COMPANY “The I/oad Machincr// Jlcn" GREENSBORO, N. C. Mangel’s 1 Misses’ and Womens' Apparel * Fan-Tan Hose j 2I(i R. Elm St. Greensboro, N. C. t Classy, Style and High Quality in Your 1 HEPLER BROS. School Shoes Fancy Groceries— Prices the Lowest Fresh Meats $1.98—$2.9S—$3.98 Dials Kinneys 2.0724-2-2191 231 South Elm 2] 8-220 Lewis St.—511 Ashe St. So much has been said about Wash ington as a soldier and a statesman that one finds it difficult to picture him as a human being, in association with the gentlemen and ladies of his period. Hewever, we are rapidly getting away from the mythical Washington, a com bination of Hercules, Napoleon, and Little Lord Fauntleroy, and we find the true Washington a man Who if he bad lived in ocr times would probably have set up a university, an engineer’s club, or a Rockefeller Foundation. The real Washington was the public man- soldier, the pioneer, the explorer, the statesman, the patriot. He was the best educated man pf his time because of the variety of his education. A proof of his intellectual power the small extent to which he became educated through hooks and letters, for _he had very little schooling. To mod ern college graduates it is humiliating to notice how very little proper school ing he really had: he probably had tutor who might or might not have been an indentured convict servant, and another who was a clergyman; he was also put to two or three ordinary schools, the most important result of which was that fine handwriting which is such a reproach to men of the pres ent day. One useless embellishment Washing ton spared himself; he never learned to accept the, canons of spelling which were then forming; but indeed, to quote Dr. Bushiiell Hart, “What is th use of being the father of one’s coun try, if one must accept the children’ abnormal notions of the way to spell their own language!” It is generally known that Washing ton owned perhaps the largest private library in Virginia. He read books on military tactics, agriculture, history, and general literature. Washington, during his entire life, was accustomed to statements of high principles in a high manner. For ex ample, there are his addresses to the people and private letters after the Revolution while the question of a fed eral government was still undecided “Today one nation, to morrow thir teen.” “Influence is not government. In that sentence you have a whole po litical dictionary. That Washington was an educated man is shown also by the tributes of various orders, learned societies, and colleges. In education he sat in the seats of the mighty. It is said no man in the United States had been in so ■many places, met so many people, or had had such experiences of conversa tion and friendship. That George Washington was inter ested in education is shown bY the way for 1 School Supplies ' | Wills Book & Stationery Co. t 107 South Greene Street I I Ellis, Stone Company j I I I * Greensboro’s Best Store I for I High School Girls 1 “7'ho Oldest and Best" MILADY’S BEAUTY PARLOR Everytliiiig for Beauty IMrs. J. ('has. Brewer Dial 8T15 Second Floor, McAdoo Bldg. 'I'hia ;id good for 2:')C on any beauty work if used before November 1st Only one to a customer. Headquarters for Students’ Clothes Stetson “D" clothes tailored to your individual Jiieasui'e—$24.30— .$20.30—$.34,30 as shown in the leading universities. ATKISSON-MARLEY FurniHliings—Tailoring 117 South Elm‘Street Finley Atklsson Joe Marley GREENSBORO, N. C. he spent money and time on the educa tion of the young people for whom he was responsible. “Washington first ed ucated himself; then he educated the young people connected with him so as he could reach; and eventually he educated all the people of the United States of America by his lofty charac ter and the power of expression which marks him as one of his country’ greatest writers.” The best proof of Washington’s educative ability is the fact that he led all his countrymen in advocating a reorganization of Ameri can education. He was disturbed at the practice of sending young Ameri cans abroad—principally to England— for a genteel education. Thus we see that the Father of Our Country, besides his other many claims to fame, was a great writer and had great iivtellccteal influence in his abso- ute truthfuness. He had a perfect right to say of himself, “I do not recollect that in the course of my life I ever forfeited my word, or broke a promise made to anyone.” DALE COBB WINS “FAIR PLAY”SLOGAN “Be fair to your school; he fair to your friends; and, above all, be fair to yourself,” was the winning slogan for the Fair Play Contest, the topic for character education program for the month of October. It was written, by Dale Cobb in room 302. Each session room was asked to send in_the beat slogans written by the stu- Jfents in that room. The judges were Miss Dorothy McNairy, Miss Fannie Starr Mitchell, and A. P. Routh. The duplicate slogans B2 from session rooms 203 and 317 were written by Mary F. Sutton and Aria Wynne Gibbs. Other slogans were: “Let there be no difference in your smile of victory and defeat,” Joe Sergeant, “Fair Play is a flower which is opened only by true sportsmanship and honesty,” Linwood Hood; and “To thine own self be true, and you cannot then be false tot any man,” Ben Avery, G.H.S. STUDENTS Nine Posters Made by Art Pu pils on Various Matters and Slogans'of the Church. ARTHUR FLAKE IS AUTHOR When Arthur Flake was preparing his book, “The Sunday School and the Church Budget” of the Southern Baptist Church, he asked the art classes of G. H. S. to make some posters on the mot toes and slogans of the church. Several boys in Miss Lee’s art classes agreed to do the work. Three of the posters were on the Unifled Budget. One explained that it is the Bible plan, which says that “Upon the first day of the week let each one of you lay by him iji store, as he may prosper, that no collections may be made when I come.” I Cor. 16:2. Another told what the budget calls for. It means that one will give only one offering, that that offering will be di vided into all the expenses of the church, and that will be one’s whole tithe for God, The third one contains only six words: ‘These Are the Unifled Budget, Only One Offering.” . Another poster shows a small boy sub tracting his tenth from his allowance, saying that he will surely give his tenth unto God. A fifth poster says that there are just three kinds of givers—non, spasmodic, and regular, and that the last is the Bible kind. It urges all to sign a pledge card. Another gives the quotation from the Bible, “Go ye into all the world” and it shows an envelope containing our offerings being poured over the world. Another one also expresses the idea that we shall send money into all the world. Another says that every member should pledge—even to the smallest giver. The last one, which is also on. the cover of the books, has in the center a silver dollar, around which are ten dimes. On each dime is the purpose to which each dime goes and on one is the word, “God’s.” At the bottom is this inscrip tion, “All the tithe . ... is the Lord’s.” The names of the boys who made the posters are as follows: Wilson Tussey, Ernest Ford, Thor- burn,Terrell, Robert Frew, and Bob An drew. Jubile. Week, Nevember l-X a,““-Be Worthwhile- Girt veoy good tme, dne t. the b.rthd.y rtv . Ilay, • dhepel program, aid !e,eSl other thi.ga. The birthday ba»- 2, wa. held la.t Wedaead.y, N.vem 4 By.rytl.lhg waa tarried o.t .» rto oolor aeheme ot blue, white, and gold. Blue aad white ba.ket. of m.ht. were given to eaeh girl, and each o al.o received an individual eake witt candle in the center, A toaat waa given “ ,1.0 Girl Keaorvea h, Eliaabeth Bnh- man. . . New Members Recognized The recognition service was i'' charge of the membership committee with Eda Walters as ehairman. In this service which took place before the banquet, all the new members were taken into the club. They repeated the code and the salutes to the three flaga-Amencan, Girl Reserve, and Christian. Community Service The service committee, headed by Erma Lee Graves,/ performed several noted community services during this week One of these was -to help Mr. Coofis of the Y. M. C. A. in his Com munity Chest drive. They req.dered service in the office, addressing enve lopes and similar .clerical work. They also took the birthday cake that was used on the table at the banquet to the Masonic home. There were 50 candles on the cake. Chapel Program Colum Schenck was the chairman of the Jubilee Week committee. She was also in charge of the chapel program. Rev. J. C. Vaehe, rector of St. Andrews Episcopal church, spoke on “Peace. Colum Schenck introduced him. The Girl Reserves in uniform sat on the platform. Mrs. Dewey Farrell, sang three numbers. All the Girl Reserves have been wish ing for an overnight hike, and we hope that their wishes will be granted before it gets too cold. Almost Two Times One Hundred Dimes for Winning Rhymes High school boys and girls with flair for rhyming are given an opp^^^ tunity to compete for cash prizes in a contest announced in the Novemher issue of the American Boy Magazine Ten dollars will be first prize, five dollars second, three dollars third; and the American Boy will give additional prizes of a dollar for all lines printed in the magazine. The four limericks composing the con test are printed below, minus, of course their last lines. Contestants must fiij in the missing line and mail their entry along with their name, age, and address tto the Limerick Editor, the American Boy Magazine, 550 West Lafayette Blvd., Detroit, Michigan, All entries must reaech the American Boy office by November 15. This marvelous bird, the combombns, Lays eggs that are shaped like a rhom bus. And flies on its back So it ean keep track Now Pluto, when hiding a bone. Has methods distinctly his own. He stands on one leg And juggles an egg The whukkle's a very queer fish. It’s a native of Ishpeming, Mich. It has soluble gills and celluloid frills Now , Piute has a. huge appetite. It waa only last Saturday night That he ate a Maltese, A hive full of bees -American Boy High School Newspaper Service. OEPAPTMENT Foop^^se Dick Laundry Go. Launderers and Dry Cleaners Dial 2-0127 GREENSBORO GOLLEGE Greensboro College is a member of the Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools of the Southern States. Chartered 1838. Confers the degree of A. B. in the literary department and B. M. in the music department. In addition to the regular clas sical course, special attention is called to the departments of Home Economics, Spoken English and Dramatic Art, Art, including Industrial and Commercial Art, Education, Sunday School Teach er Training, Piano Pedagogy, and to the complete School of Music. For further. information apply to SAMUEL B. TURRENTINE President Greensboro, N. C. I went out to see the Greensboro High School play football, and all I heard was, “Come on ED! Look at ED go”—and oh boy! did that ED shine. Well, there is another ED at — 209 N. Greene St. JUST AS GOOD

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view