Newspapers / Goldsboro High School Student … / March 21, 1952, edition 1 / Page 5
Part of Goldsboro High School Student Newspaper / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Friday, March 21/ 1952 GOLDSBORO Hi NEWS Page Five VACATION TIME 1 CINEMA HITS By FRANK MclNNIS Lana Turner is the most deli cious woman in the world. She is the most scrumptious creature that ever walked on two legs. She is not only the most beautiful woman in the world but one of the six best actresses in Holly wood. Only Ava Gardner can ev er come near her. The bold, extravagant praise rendered above flows fiercely from my heart. Many people have asked me what women in Holly wood I especially favor. As for glamour, Lana’s got it made. As for fire and breathless beauty, Lana’s got it made. As for com bining tremendous emotional power witli majestic grace and stunning warmth, Lana’s got it made. There has never been and will never be again anyone like her. Lana Turner packs more IT than Jean Harlow, but IT is an exotic atti'action that flows in and out of Ava Gardner like a ram paging wind. It took Hollywood 13 years to find someone like her but it was well worth it. In four or five years Ava Gardner will be the biggest star in Hollywood. Like Lana, she is the answer to CREECH'S»h>^ Furniture of Distlnctloi 209 Wecf Walnwt man’s eternal search for allure. She has the potentialities of a very warm and very capable act ress as well as the breathtaking beauty she is already beginning to resemble. As Julie in the re cent remake of “Show Boat,” she turned in the tenderest, most heart-breaking performance I have ever seen, Only two actresses, Lana Tur ner and Ava Gardner, excite me, impress me with their glamour and steal into my heart on the crest of their IT. This world has been a much better place with Lana and Ava around. Down With June Allyson Whoever put June Allyson in the movies had dirt in their eyes. Joan Fontaine is the only genu inely nauseating actress on the screen. The less I see of that smutty-faced, pampered Elizabeth Taylor, the better. I consider Rita Hayworth to be the nearest-noth- ing on the American screen and am also very allergic to Jane Rus sell and Mitzi Gaynor. Who Is The Best Cook In Town? Who is the very best actress on the screen? Who is the First La dy? Who reigns supreme? Well, as you know, for my money Bette Davis can cook up the best ham. But I’d put Ingrid Bergman right beside her. Both are similar act resses and both can reach a pitch no other performers in the world have dared to touch. Miss Davis and Miss Bergman are the joint First Ladies of the Silver Screen but they have two very conspicu ous threats to the throne just be ginning to emerge. Wayn« Realty and Insurance Co., Inc 210 I. Walnut Street Compitt* R#al Estatt and Insurance Sarvlce D. H. Bland, Jr. L. R/Worrell C. W. Peacock SEE THE -HUB- DEPARTMENT STORE for the latest in Young Men's And Women's Clothes - GOLDSBORO - Eleanor Parker is going to take Bette’s place and almost duplicat ed Bette’s success in the role of Mildred Rogers in “Of Human Bondage,” when it was remade in 1946. In the role of Sally in the very fine film version of “The Voice Of The Turtle,” Miss Pai’- ker surpassed Margaret Sullivan who played the role (with tremen dous success) on the stage. Miss Parker is the most notorious child of the New Approach to acting. This is the theory that an actor must show emotion on the out side without ever feeling it in side. It is a theory I firmly be lieve in and have executed in all of my performances. She has been constantly under-rated, ignored and butchered in her long, illus trious screen career. Now with two consecutive Academy Award' nominations, I predict she will rise to greater fame and one day possess the true brilliance of a Grand Dame of the Talking Shad ows. The Swede Viveca Warner Brothers, after having' given Ingrid Bergman the great est roles of her life in “Saratoga Trunk” and “Under Capricorn,” launched another Swede named Viveca Lindfors, who is just be ginning to reveal the same divine dignity, beauty and sparkle of the magnificent Ingrid. I predict Lindfors, if she’s given the right breaks, will take up where Berg man left off. Thus far, despite her fire and electricity, Hollywood has treated her like a Red-Headed Step-Child. Review In Brief “Sailor Beware.” Mr. Dean Mar tin and Miss Jerry Lewis in 100 minutes of solid garbage. English Students Work On Projects Senior English students are making projects on the Anglo- Saxon-Norman period in English literature. They are doing this instead of taking a test. A variety of things were handed in. They include: viking ship models, model hous es, copies of 13th and 14th cen tury manuscripts, dolls dressed in costumes of the period, and pic tures of the Canterbury Pilgrims. •{* *1* The reason some people don’t recognize opportunity is because it looks like work. Andrews Insurance Agency M. B. ANDREWS, Mgr. Bank of Wayne Bldg. J. M. EDGERTON^ And SON, INC. Your Packard Dealers The HAT SHOPPE - Elxclusive Millinery - South Center Street PARAMOUNT STARTS THURSDAY Glory Story 1 i* • ii. . of the I J; :: . U. s. MARINES :: i; . . ? i* I ^^RETREAT, I HELL" In Korea! i ^ ■ "ii Nancetta Hudson, GHS junior, winner of the annual peace essay contest, is seen accepting the medal given by the Junior Chamber of Commerce to the winner. Making the pi’esentation is Bush Andrews, who made the award on behalf of his organization. -^News-Argus Photo. • BIRTHDAYS By ANN MARLOW APRIL Shii'ley Shrago 1; David Shaver, Carl Kassell, 2; Ellen Radford 3; Mary Louise Bizzell, Ann McKen zie, 4; Albert Williams, Ida Bass, Jane Langston, 5; J. P. Quinn, Hilda Moore, Bobby Martin, 6; Betty Phelps, Carole Medlin, Bob by Teuschu, Kathryn Newton, Nor ma Herring 7. Roy, James if, Charles Wiggins, 9, Robert Campbell 10; Vivie Johnson, Donald Keen, 10; Shirley Hines, Barbara Ann West, 11; Dorothy Anderson, Eleanor Nor ris, Jody Pemberton, Billy Ray Woodcock, 12; John Lee, George Summerlin, 13. Billie Lou Grantham, 14; Bob by Crumpler, Helen Ingram, Ed ward Caviness, Sara Horton, 15; Waters, Edith Williams, Ev- erleene Brown, Sara Gwaltney, 16; Billy Rouse, Pete Pittman, 17; John Lynch, 19; Doris Harris, Morris Harris, 21. Henry Shearin, Billy Benson 22; Betty Dixon, 23; Dale Caudill, Thomas Watson, Robert Bedford, 24; Bert Howell, Kay Herring, 25; Janice Andrews, Janet Andrews, Linwood Boyette, 26; Jimmy Hod ges, Henry Mclnnis, 29; Barbara Ann Williams, 30. GOLDSBORO STREETS A fruit tree—Peachtree. A president—Jackson. Another president—Jefferson. A view of pines—Pineview. Meaning Middle—Center. Result of fire—^Ash. | Boy’s name—James. Always green—Evergreen. A nut with a wall—Walnut. A dark color—Black. A chest without a soul—Chest nut. — BUY — from the HI NEWS SHOP MUSIC and SPORTS ”\\ Pays To Play'' COBB MOTOR CO. - Chevrolet - L. E. WARRICK General Contractor - Phone 836-W - PEN N i y "S FOR TESTED QUALITY At THRIFTY PRICES It's Smart To Be Thrifty
Goldsboro High School Student Newspaper
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 21, 1952, edition 1
5
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75