student Council Sounds Off See Page 2 HIGH LIFE From the Gate City of the South and the Birthplace of 0. Henry Happy Saint Patrick's Day!! VOLUME XXXVII SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL, GREENSBORO, N. C., MARCH 17, 1961 NUMBER 10 Gloria Griffin To Reign As May Queen . Hi Hi Chosen to reign over the May Day fastivities are Martha McKee, senior maid of honor; and Gloria Griffin, May Queen. Election Bulletin! Facts concerning the 1961 student council elections will be released March 21. According to Miss Mary Z. Fury, student council adviser, a meeting of the candidates for school offices has been sched uled for March 28. A second meeting is scheduled for March 29. This meeting is for future candidates for the student coun cil and for class offices. At these meetings the present school officers will explain to the prospective candidates exact ly what would be expected of them, if they should be elected. April 7 is the date set for the final deadline for student applications for the elections. Sludenf Council To Study Hew Point System The Student Council appointed a committee to study the effects of the point system, at its meet ing March 7, this being one. of the suggestions given the Council through the Suggestion Box. Among other decisions made by the council was one to write a letter to the HIGH LIFE staff, expressing their views concerning duties to the council. April 7 was chosen the date for deadline of applications for those running for offices next year. April 25 is to be the pre sentation day for candidates. At the meeting, ice cream was given to those students who sold the largest number of tickets to the basketball game. The 16 girls chosen by the GHS students to be on May Court for 1961 are Donna Lane, sophomore maid of honor; Carol Sheets, Mary Earle, Linda Blair, and Libby McComb, junior maid of honor. (Row one) The remaining members are (row 2) Mary Sessoms, Georgianna Sartin, Jeannie Anderson, Ann Tate, and Anne Starr Minton. From left to right on row three are Debbie Gunter, Jean Shaffer, Beeky Rountree, Joanne Oliver, and Dale Mauldin. Not pictured is Virginia Harmon. DE/ DO, Co-Op Trades Present Employer-Employee Banquet To show appreciation for a chance in the business world, the Co-operative, D.E., D.O. trades and D.O. office practice present ed the 18th Annual Employer- Employee Banquet, with the theme “Nothing Less Than Success.” Mary Joyne Eubanks, of office practice was Mistress of Cere monies. The invocation was given by Joyce Phillips, also of office practice. Dr. Everett Miller, assistant state superintendent of Public In struction, gave an address. Ann Gibson, D.O.-Office prac tice; Robert Bell, D.O. and Trades; Fred Phillips, D.E., introduced the firms attending. Original entertainment by the students followed, including “Pis tol Packing Typist”, a skit about life at Jefferson Standard writ ten and acted by Judy Leonard, office practice; a duet sung by Janice and Jane Cates, office practice; “In Desperation,” a pan- tomine, by Bill Wilson D.E., as sisted by Robert Bell and Phyllis Hislory Honor Society Chooses 19 Members Nineteen new members were selected by the History Honor Society at its last meeting March 7. Those juniors selected were Charles Bennett, Pete Bandanella, Mary Stowe Boyd, Sara Collins, Chip Crumley, and Don Cunning ham. Others inducted were Dave Edwards, Jim Freedman, Bob Groat, Brenda Hanna, Mary Hart man, Martha McMakin, Nancy Martin, and Lucy O’Brien. The remaining new members are Dale Stansbury, Cherry Swar- engin, Camilla Walters, Ed White, and Nora Wilson. To he eligible for the society one must submit a petition, be at least a second semester junior, have a 90 average, and have the recommendation of their teacher. Pledger of D.O.; “Working Time,” a duet about duties of Co-op of fice workers, written and sung by Dot Kennon and Alice Shep hard of Office practice; and an original poem “An Inspiration,” by Libby Yarber, D.E. The program ended with the song, “Twelve Days of School,” written by Betty Caps, office prac tice, and Katherine Pledger, D.O, It was sung by Janice and Jane Cates, Dorothy Kennon, Alice Shephard, Delores Wrenn and Nancy Wright. All the planning for this “Bosses’ Banquet” was done by the steering committee, consist ed of Cookie Allen, Joyce Euliss, Ann Gibson, Phyllis Pledger and Phyllis Hendricks of D.O.-office practice; Robert Bell, Mike Pope and John Whytsell of D.O.-Trades; also, Ronalad Amos, Tommy Lock- amy, Fred Phillips, and Libby Yarber of D.E. Gloria Griffin, senior, will reign land of Lewis Carroll’s Alice at Wednesday, May 3, at 5:00. Other beauty honors have been Homecoming Queen and Valentine beauty honors. Queen Gloria’s maids-of-honor are Martha McKee, senior, Libby McComb, junior, and Donna Lane, sophomore. Martha was runner-up in the homecoming court and all three girls were members of the Valentine Court. Other senior members of the court are Debbie Gunter, Becky Rountree, Jean Shaffer, Virginia Harmon, Dale Mauldin, Jo Anne Oliver, Ann Starr Minton, and Jeannie Anderson. The remaining court members are juniors Georgi anna Sartin, Carol Sheets, Linda Blair, and Ann Tate; sophomores, Mary Earle and Mary Sessoms. Carol To Be Alice Carol Roberts, junior, will play the title role of Alice, while the rest of the cast members will be chosen at some later date. The script of the pageant was completed December 1 by Adele Freedman, Celeste Frontis, Gary Brittenham, Mike Patterson, and Sandra Boyles, seniors. Unlike the scripts of the previous years this script is written entirely in verse. The girls on the May court chose the colors for their dresses at a meeting Tuesday, March 7. Miss Jean Wood, dean of girls, will help the girls in selection as queen of the magic wonder- the annual May Day pageant, bestowed on Gloria this year. Queen are two of Gloria’s top SCIENCE FAIR The second floor of the Science building was flooded ■ March 8 with a sudden barrage of brains, teeth, plants, ants, birds, bugs, and numerous other animals. These were the props used by GHS science students in the an nual Senior High science fair. The projects were many and varied. They ranged from a study of the brain to the activities of the car penter ant. There were several on tropism of plants, some dis plays of skeletons, and bottles of brains and hearts. The hall was filled with the chirps of young chickens along with the squeaks of many scampering hamsters. As in most science fairs, the frog seemed to hold the seat of distinction as the most popular subject. This amphibian went through everything from hiberna tion in ozone to being subjected to nicotine and other chemicals. Tommy \Vhiteside Wins Morehead Scholarship Tommy Whiteside, President of GHS, was told at 2:00 p.m. Tues day, March 7, by the trustees of the University of North Carolina, that he was a winner of a John Motley Morehead Scholarship to the University. It was only after undergoing careful screening by five groups that Tommy was selected. He was first chosen as a scholarship candidate jjy members of Senior High’s faculty. After being inter viewed by county and district committees, he went before a Central Committee to be inter viewed. The Central Committee picked 48 students, 25 from North Caro lina public schools and 23 from private schools in various parts of the nation, to he considered by the Board of Trustees as schol arship winners. Tommy was one of the 48. He was interviewed at 9:00 Monday morning, March 6, by the Board of ’Trustees, as were the 47 other boys. The following afternoon Tommy learned that he, along with all the others passed by the Central Committee, was a Morehead Schol arship winner. They had been chosen according to their records at school, recommendations, and, especially, interviews. There are “no strings attached” to the four-year scholarship, Tom my said. At the beginning of each semester he will receive $625. The John Motley Morehead Scholarship association is the only one in the world that maintains an office of counselors whose only service is to work with and assist Morehead scholars. and making their dresses. As senior maid-of-honor, Martha Mc Kee is the student chairman of this particular area of the pageant. Stout Heads Committee Mrs. Mary Lea Hamilton and Mrs. Marjorie Lithgo, English teachers, are the faculty advisers for the pageant. Roddy Stout, senior, is the student head of the May Day committee. Both stu dent and faculty directors for the various sub-committees will be chosen at a later date. Baccalaureate And Graduation Set Baccalaureate s)ervices for graduating seniors wiU be given by Dr. Charles Bowles on Sun day, May 28, at West Market Street Methodist Church. The graduation exercises will be held in the boys’ gym Friday, June 2. Three hundred, eighty-five seniors ordered 11,223 gradua tion invitations, an average of 29 per student. The number of in vitations ordered ranged from two to one himdred. Students To Participate In Language Contests Selected students from the French and Spanish departments will participate in the upcoming language contests during April and May. The National French contest will be given between April 10 and April 15. This contest, spon sored by the National American Association for Teachers of French, consists of two selections, an oral part and a written part. Winners of the National French Contest receive medals; some schools offer scholarships to win ners, also. The State Spanish Contest will be given on May 3 and the State French contest on May 5. These written contests award to the winner a renewable scholarship to Woman’s College, Carolina, or State. According to Miss Estelle Mitchell, French instructor, the students participating in the con test are chosen on the basis of their high language grades. Pictiu-ed here is the recipient of the Morehead Scholarship from GHS, Tommy Whiteside.