Ready For A Snow Holiday! HIGH LIFE From the Gate City of the South and the Birthplace of ©. Henry See^Jabbo Page 6 VOLUME XXXVI SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL, GREENSBORO, N. C., FEB. 22, 1960 NUMBER 9 Homecoming Queen \C^ins May Day Throne Sue Anne Wrenn Is SeniorMaid-of-Honor Betty Tucker, at top, will reign over May Day festivities with Sue Anne Wrenn, top row, left, as senior maid of honor. From left to right other senior members of the May Court are, top, Sondra Childress, Elaine Ellis, Patsy Par ker; bottom, Wilma Kay Pegg, Carol Smith, Linda Upchurch. Ten Senior High Pupils To Receive Art Awards Ten Senior High students will receive Scholastic Art Awards; four of these ten are Gold Key winners, and six will receive Cer tificates of Merit. The four Gold Key recipients are two seniors, Kathy Ware and Jerrie Lynn Pittard, and two sophomores, Frances Kamenatz and Katherine Tucker. Jerrie Lynn is the only one of the four who has taken two- full years of art courses offered here at Senior. Kathy is a second year student, and Frances and Katherine are both in their first year. The win ning pictures of these four will be sent to New York to be entered in the national exhibit. The selec tions will be on exhibit at Elliott Hall. Those receiving Certificates of Merit are sophomores Beverly Wilkenson and Ed Oliver, junior George Andreve, and seniors Kathy Ware, Linda Cooke, and Jerry Sawers. Linda is a second year art student, and Jerry is in his first semester. George is not enrolled in the art course. The works of these six people will be exhibited at WFMY-TV station and at the Mayfair Restaurant in Friendly Shopping Center. The presentation of the Gold Key Awards will be made Febru ary 21 at Elliott Hall. This presen tation is to be filmed and shown on WFMY-TV Sunday, February 28 at 1:45 p.m. Pupils Planning To Take College Board Must Send Applications To Be Eligible Applications for the next Col lege Entrance Examinations should be sent in very soon to be eligible. The next exam will be given on Satmday, March 12, at Senior High School. Exams will be given on May 21 and August 10 also. In order to take the March 12 exam, applications must be filed by Feb ruary 13, and positively no later than February 27. A penalty must be paid between February 13 and 27 for late application. The pen alty dates for the May 21 and August 10 exams are April 23 and July 13. The closing dates for these exams are May 7 and July 27, respectively. The tests will be administered on all test dates in the test cen ters in Asheville, Charlotte, Ra leigh, Wilmington, and Winston- Salem. These test centers are for the Scholastic Aptitude Tests and the Achievements also. These exams are given in the mornings and afternoons, respectively. The Achievement Tests are are given only on certain dates as specified in the test booklet. They consist of tests in English Compo- ■' sition, Social Studies, Intermediate Mathematics, Advanced Mathemat ics, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, A Scholastic Art Award winner Jerrie Lynn Pittard examines sculpture of an art class student. Nine Sludenis Attend World Affairs Parley Greensboro Junior Woman’s Club took nine history students from Senior to the 10th Annual World Affairs Conference in Chapel Hill last Thursday, accord ing to Mrs. Mary Gamble, historj' teacher. Bob Dixon, Polly Friend, Rich ard Haskill, Ann Haralson, Chuck McDonald, Linda McMillian, Linda Moser, and Sue Wade, all seniors, and Phil Pearsall, sophomore, at tended the all-day meet. Five stu dents from Page High School were selected to accompany the nine from Senior. The group met here at 8:15 a.m. last Thursday. Lunch in Chapel Hill was furnished by Junior Wo man’s Club. At the conference the students heard addresses by Ches ter Bowles, congressman from Connecticut, and E. E. Schnell- backer, director of the office of Trade Promotion for the United States Department of Commerce. This year’s theme was “The World We Have and the World We Want.” French, German, Latin, and Span ish. In order to know which tests to take, the student should look up the requirements of the college or scholarship for which he is applying. A student must file an application accompanied by the fee if he expects to take any part of the exam. The application must be filled out accurately and legibly. A few weeks before the exam, the applicant will receive an admis sion ticket and some gummed labels. These should be taken to the test center on the test date. Individual test scores will be sent to the colleges listed by the student within five weeks of the test. No partial scores will be given out. The scores of aN tests will be given. Griffin, Sarfin Represent Underclassmen In Court Homecoming Queen Betty Tuck er and runner-up Sue Anne Wrenh have been chosen by the student body to reign respectively as May Queen and senior maid-of-honor. Gloria Griffin will attend the queen as junior maid-of-honor. Georgianna Sartin was elected to the top sophomore court position. The other six seniors selected for the May Court are Sondra Childress, Elaine Ellis, Patsy Parker, Wilma Kay Pegg, Carol Smith, and Linda Upchurch. Remaining juniors are Virginia Harmon, Martha McKee, Dale Mauldin, and Anne Starr Minton. Gloria Cox, Libby McComb, Carol Roberts, and Carol Sheets, sophomores, will also be honored in the festivities. Queen is Cutest Queen Betty was selected cutest on the list of senior superlatives, while Sue Anne was decided to have the best personality. Betty was sophomore maid-of-honor in 1958. Sue Anne was chosen by last years’ juniors as maid-of-honor. Sondra, Elaine, Wilma Kay, Carol, and Linda were all also elected as senior class superla tives this fall. Sondra was chosen friendliest; Elaine, best looking: Wilma Kay, most talented; Carol, most popular; and Linda, best dressed. Patsy is secretary of Torchlight National Honor Society. Gloria was sophomore maid-of- honor in the 1959 May Day. Georgianna is the only sophomore varsity cheerleader. The student council conducted the balloting for the court. Dickie Bowen, senior class president, act ed as student chairman. Mrs. Mary Alice Moody was faculty adviser. o Yearbook Sales Total 1200 Copies For Year WHIRLIGIG sales for the first and second semesters of this school year jointly amounted to approximately 1200, practically equaling the number of subscrip tions for the past year. Of the total number of subscrib ers, 54 were teachers. There were only 500 students who did not buy yearbooks. According to Miss Virginia Powell, yearbook adviser, WHIRL- GIG went to press last Friday. Dr. Pelham Wilder Speaks To Students In Joint Meet Dr. Pelham Wilder, nationally known cancer researcher, spoke to the combined Junior Engineers and the Medical Club meeting, February 9. Dr. Wilder spoke mainly on his nitrogen mustard researches, which he started for the Army in World War II, and is now con tinuing at Duke University as basic research. Stereochemistry, which deals with the arrangement in space of atoms in a molecule, is very im portant in his work on nitrogen mustard, explained Dr. Wilder. In fact, he teaches a course on the subject to graduate students at Duke. He went on to say that nitrogen mustard interferes with biologic ally important cell functions, and thus it is very valuable in re search into the working of normal cells. ' Dr. Wilder mentioned the grow ing trend in medicine away from patent prescription to a real un derstanding of why and how body chemistry works. To be a success ful physician, a person must also be well grounded in chemistry and vice versa. A person who cannot express himself is lost in this modem world of chemistry and medicine, and for this reason Dr. Wilder concluded, “The most important things you will take in high school will be English and math.”