: -C Book Week Nov. 17-23 HIGH LIFE From the Gate City of the South and the Birthplace of O, Henry VOLUME IX GREENSBORO HIGH SCHOOL, NOVEMBER 15, 1929 ;;iRLS’COUNCIL PLAN WORK OF SEMESTER; GROUPS APPOINTED Friendship, Scholarship, Ways I and Means, Needle and Thread Are Committees. PLAN SOCIALS FOR YEAR Fill and .Keep Up Bulletin Boards in Main Building Is Part of Work. Much of the work of. the Girls’ Coun- . icil is to be accomplished by committees. 'These committees have as their chair men the members of the Council. The program committee has charge ' of all the programs put on during the year by the Girls’, Council. This com mittee plans a general topic for all the ' programs, and arranges for each speaker. Something extra is usually put on the program, such as special • music. Through the social committee the banquets sponsored by the council are planned. After Thanksgiving thf^ committee is planning to have a Mothers’ Tea for the girls of the school also several other socials of this nature. ' The bulletins in the niain building are filled and'kept up to date by the bulle tin board committ^. The committees are made up as fol lows : Social committee — Bunny High, , chairman, Elizabeth Wills, Adeliaide Fortune, Margaret Leak, Priscilla White, Margaret Smathers and Kath erine Jenkins; ways and means com- niittee—Margaret Knight, chairman, Inllian Hauck, Sarah Lucas, Dorothy Burnsides, Martha Burnsides, and Eliz abeth Yates: scholarship committee— Mary Greer, chairman, Mary Mitchell and Betty Hansen; friendship com mittee—Mary Lib Cunningham, chair man, BT-ances Jones and Susanne ' Ketcham; bulletin board committee— Anna Wills, chairman, Nancy Hudson, Elizabeth Benbow and I'olly Moore; G. H. S. Girls’ Code—Anna Atkinson, chairman, Margaret Noel, Mamie Leak I’arsons, I3dna I’aulkner and Bootsie Swift; program committee— Sarah Clegg, chairman, Leila George Cram, Ruth Curry and Cornelia Farrar; •i^eedle and thread committee—'BT'ances ^o.gers, chairman. These committees need the co-operation of all the girls. Any suggestions or help will be gladly received, say the chairmen. m. JOHNSON’S CLASS FINISHES RADIO SETS “Radios while you wait is our motto,” declare members of Stan ley Johnson’s radio class. ■One-tube, two-tube, and three- tube sets have been completed by these students during this semes ter. Several of the radio-builders • with _the assistance of Mr. Stanley Johnson have made “A” battery eliminators. One short wave set has been built. Installed in the radio laboratory there is a complete electric plant so constructed as to give any amount of direct current to each table in the lab; one hundred and ten, alternating current, can also be supplied to the individual ta-- bles. Four-tube sets that are now un der construction are being built' with sphaghetti; insulating material and bus wire in order that a neater appearance may be the result. SEMESTER 8 HOLDS FIRST BUSINESS MEETING NOV. 5 Ed Michaels Presides—Committees Re port—Seniors Lay Out Definite Plans for Graduating Exercises. ALL MEMBERS ON COMMITTEES PROGRAMS FOR CHAPEL NOV. 18-22 ARRANGED H. Grady Miller Presents Music Pro gram Before Student Body Friday. Already the chapel programs for next week have been planned. They are: . On Monday afternoon, November 18, there will be a speaker, who will talk on books, since it is the beginning of book week. W. B. Truit of the Carolina Steel and Iron company of Greensboro, will talk to the students Wednesday afternoon, November 20, on “Romance of Iron.” A music program, under the direction of H. Grady Miller, will be furnished Friday afternoon, November 22. There will be some numbers by the orchestra and the mixed chorus, and then Mrs. . K. C. Benbow will sing a song com posed by Margaret Banks, a member of Mr. Miller’s theory and harmony class. Other than these, the whole audience will be expected to sing sev eral numbers. Semester VIII held the first of a se ries of business meetings Tuesday, No vember 5, in the cafeteria. Ed Michaels, president of the class, presided over the meeting. Reports from the chairmen of various committees were made. These chair men are; Social committee, Mary Bur ton High; invitation committee, Mar garet Leak; program committe, Adelaide Fortune; publicity committee, Carl Kel- 1am; commencement committee, William Kimbro; class day committee, Araminta Gant. I ’ ; The Senior calender was read to the class by Ed Michaels, and mil'be pub lished, at a later date. Definite plans have already been made for the gradu ation exercises. There will be business meetings of senior class held every Tuesday from now till probably Thanksgiving or Christmas. Every member of the forty- nine in the class is urged to attend each meeting as they are of great im portance. SENIORS ELECT ' ‘REFLECTOR’ STAFF AT SPECIAL MEET Elizabeth Wills is Editor-in- Chief—Richard Frazier, Business Manager. ABILITY IS CONSIDERED Betty Hansen Is Assistant Editor; Cai^ey Sloan Is Assistant Busi ness Manager. Elizabeth Wills is the editor-in-chief of the “Reflector” for 1930, and Richard Frazier is business manager fir' this session yearbook; these officers with their assistants were elected by the sen ior class Tuesday, November 12, at a special meeting of the class. Betty Hansen was chosen associate editor, and Carey Sloan was elected sistant business manager. Mr. Phillips Talks to Class C. W. Phillips spoke to the senior class before the election was held, em phasizing the importalnce cof careful thought and consideration of candi dates. He impressed upon the students the fact that names presented by the nominating committee represented abil ity and willingness to work. Elizabeth Wills Is Editor Elizabeth ^Vills, editor of the senior publication, Entered G. H. S. in 1^28. While at Curry Training School, which she. attended before entering G. H. S., she was president pf the student body; also secretary for one time. Elizabeth is also a member of the Torchlight Society. She belongs to the Dramatics and Debating Clubs. She is an assistant editor on the High Life staff. Richard Frazier Is Business Manager Richard Frazier, who is business man ager of the senior annual, led his class in points of scholarship, athletics, and leadership at Buffalo School, which he attended before he came to G. H. S. He is art editor of High Life and artist of Homespun, high school maga zine. Richard plays in the high school orchestra. He has attained a high scho lastic standing. Carey Sloan has been a member of the student council for' several semes ters and represents Semester 7 in that organization at present. He is also connected with the High Life staff. High School Teachers Talk at Monthly Meeting of P. T. A. “Failure is not due to mental unfit ness. The causes are physic/l defects, intellectual immaturity, indifference bf parents, inability to study properly, need of individual help, lacls of home study and failure to put school work first. “Students should be held up to high standards.” This was the be.ginning of the general discussion by the parents and teachers, Tuesday night, November -1, at the Parent-Teachers meeting, by Mrs. Braswell. “When Physical Education is men tioned it is customary, or has been in the past, to think of iPtoo much in the terms of perspiration and gymnastic contests, muscle building and spectacu lar exhibitions—their present day phys ical education is seeking to the com monplace—^to develop the ‘ masses, to raise their standards, morally and men tally as well as physically and there fore make them social assets,” said Mrs. Brinkley in her talk on physical education. Health leads the list in the arms of the gym students this year. Another important aim is the wise use of leisure time. I’hysi‘al education is not proposed to make boys and girls who are over weight to become normal or those who are underweight to become fat. It is only to build them up physicj\lly and mentally. “You know the model of your car, You know just what its powers are. You treat it with a dial of care Nor tax it more than it will bear* But as for self—that's different. Your mechanism may be bent, Your carburetor gone to grass Yyur engine just a rusty mass. Your wheels may wobble and your cogs Be handed over to the dogs. And you skip and skid and slide Without a thought of things inside What fools, indeed, we mortals are To lavish care upon a car. With ne'er a bit of time to see About our own machinery.” REFLECTOR STAFF Elizabeth Wills Editor-in-Chief Betty Jlansen Assistant Editor Richard Frazier.. .Business Manager Carey Sloan Asst. Business Mgr, HIGH POINT DEBATES G. H. S. STUDENTS James A. Farthing, Coach of Students, Receives Letter From High Point Adviser. FRESHMEN TO MEET SOON —John Kendrick Bangs. Resolved: That the president of the United States should be elected for a single term of six years, will be the query of the first dual debate for this semester, which the junior-senior der bate with High Point to be held Wed nesday, November 27. James A. Farthing, who is coaching this debate, has recently received a let ter concerning the dual debate from the debating coach of High Point, Earl Andrews, saying that the date and pro posed subject for this debate was sat isfactory with him and that he would have the contract signed and returned. lie also said that the clubs are just getting underway and that he has just succeeded in getting a few people to say that they would try out, al though he said he was very much In terested in having, these debates and hoped that it would be possible to have several during the year. The debaters of Greensboro for this dual debate are Hariy Buice, Mack Heath, and Dorothy Burnside, who will uphold the affirmative here. Clary Holt, Mary Mitchell, and Douglas Cartland will uphold the negative in High Point. The second debate will be held with Salisbury, December 0, on the. same query used by the juniors and seniors. A freshmen debate will be held with Winston-Salem December 33, and the date tor the fourth debate this semes DOUGLAS CARTLAND WINS CASH PRIZE OF $50 FOR PAINTING He Has Earned Thousand and Fifty Dollars Through Painting and Writing. WINS NUMBER OF MEDALS Receives Awards From Greensboro Daily Record and Southern Baking Company. ter has not been decided. HOMESPUN APPEARS FOR FIRST TIME THIS YEAR Magazines Names Issue “At the Rising of the Sun”—Grace Hobbs Writes Leading Poem. K. O’BRIEN CONTRIBUTES ARTICLE Carrying out the theme of the year, “The Caravan of Life,” the first issue of Homcfipun to be published this year is. called “At the Rising of the Sun.’ The lead poem, which bears the same name as the issue, was written by Grace Ilobhs. Kathleen Wrenn has written a charming fantasy which she calls “In •the I.and of Sunrise”; it reminds one of ^the Irish folk plays. Miss Tillett has said that she is par ticularly pleased with the short stories in this first issue. Douglas Long’s “Trials and Tribulations’’ is a story of youth in love. “Teddy’s Triumph” by Ella Leens Latham presents a Booth Tarkington picture of high school boys and girls. Several of the underclassmen are rep resented in Homespun this time. Ken neth O’Brien has contributed an article entitled “Visions.” An attempt has been made to build up the humor department, “Kavelings.” Ed Michaels’ “Soliloquy of a Dignified Senior” is especially delightful. TWO SENIORS ARE GASSED ‘Asphyxiation must be trying to cele brate or something.” That's the way Mary Mitchell and Katherine Jenkins feel about it since they escaped. Douglas Cartland,- Greensboro high school student of Semester 7, has been awarded a cash prize of $50.00 by the Shredded Wheat Company, Niagara Falls, New York. Jmst month Douglas won $100 in the same contest which runs every month ending in December. One hundred dol lars is the fii'st prize buKin the letter received from the SliA’edded Wheat Company November 12, they stated that although his was by far the best painted alphabetical set, contestants were eligible to win the first prize but once during the six mouthy dura tion of the contest.^ Douglas Wins Medals Hence this month no first prize was given and Douglas being ineligible for the grand prize, received the second prize of $50.00. Counting this $50 in prizes, Douglas now has won them since the age of about twelve (he is now fifteen) one thousand and fifty dol lars through painting, writing poetry and stories. He has also won several gold and silver medals. ‘ A few of his prizes are; fifty dol lars in the Shredded Wheat contest for October; $100 in the Shredded Wheat contest for August; both of these were' won through painting the 20 different colored alphabetical inserts. Last Christmas he was the winner of $100., first prize in Santa's- pack (contest, conducted by the Greensboro Daily News and this being entered in the National contest where $l.lj0O was first prize, received honorable mention. The Christmas before he I'eceived $50 second prize in Santa’s sack contest. Bakery Awards Prizes For two successive years he received $25, first prize each time, from the Southern Bakery company for painting the best “Invisible Colored Pictures.” His entries were sent to Atlanta, where they received the praise of the presi dent of the bakery. ' He has received about 20 or 25 ten and five-dollar prizes, among which was $5 in a Mary Dugan coloring contest, $5 three times in various Daily Record contests, $5 in an egg coloring contest conducted by the Sunday American, various small pictures and five, ten and fifteen dollars for various other things, including several dollars each for biog raphies of famous men. Rewarded in Many Contests Douglas has also received fifteen or twenty $2.50 for a prize in a Daily Record Contest, a Know-Greeusboro contest, and $2.50 in a New York con test, also several dollars for various stories and poems and r$10 for a comic coloring contest. Among other things won are a gold medal for an' essay and knives, pen balls, lamps galore iii ad-writing con~ tests. 1.^ The general scheme of his prize win- • ning Shredded Wheat entry this month was this: he drew and painted a piece of beaver board six feet by four a pic ture of the Home of Shredded Wheat, found on any box of this food, drew in tUe sky and grass, and enclosed it in a frame of Shredded Wheat biscuits on which he mounted the alphabet. iHb