This picture shows the teachers’ parking lot, an area to be cleaned up and beautified by the school Beautiful Commit tee's main project for this year’s competition. TKe committee chairmen requested the help of the entire student body in the work, saying that they could not do all the work alone. TWIRP Day Events include Open House 2llf{ in GRIMSLEY HIGH SCHOOL, GREENSBORO, N. C. 27 410, FEB. 5, 1968 Teachers’ Parking Lot Cleaned For Project Photo Credit—Howard Ratsch TWIRP Day, this year to be ob served on February 16, will be climaxed by an Open Ho.use in the girls’ gym after a basketball game against Burlington’s Wil liams High School in Grimsley’s gym. Standing for the words The Wo man Is Requested to Pay, TWIRP has become an annual custom at GHS. Included in the observance besides the girls carrying books, opening doors, and sharpening pencils for the boys, an all girl Traffic Squad will be chosen by the present Traffic Squad, and a TWIlP Court. Mike Hassell, GHS traffic chief, is in charge of the girls’ squad. Girls selected for this duty will dress in suitable outfits such as metal helmets, cowboy guns and jackets. They will patrol the halls and be allowed t© leave class two minutes early and enter late, just as the regular squad does. Court Nominated Girls on Student Council and the Youth Recreation Committee (YRC) which is sponsoring TWIRP Day, will each nominate a boy for the TWIRP Court. Baby pictures of each nominee will be placed on the bulletin board in the main hall. Containers, numbered to corre spond with the pictures will be placed in the hall near the pic tures and available for voting all day Friday. Students will vote for a TWIRP King by placing pennies in the jars. No names will ap pear on either the jars or the pictures, which will be put up February 14 or 15. “Involve Everybody” “We want to involve everybody n this TWIRP Day,” Cookie Reed, FRC chairman declared, “It’s not air for the same people to do jverything all the time.” The TWIRP Court, to be pre sented at the Open House along vith the announcement of the Vinner of the TWIRP King con est, as a take-off on Homecoming lourt. Preparations for the Open House and all-day activities be gan January 31. The ' Steps of Rhythm will play at the Open House. Admission will be $1.00. “We know it’s (TWIRP Day) going to be ridiculous,” Cookie said. “It’s supposed to be and we want everybody to have a, good time. We have put a lot of work into the planning, and we hope students will appreciate that, too.” School Beautiful’s big clean-up project for this year’s annual competition will be the teacher’s parking lot, which is located be hind the Science Building and the cafeteria. Committee chairmen Patti Har ris, Gary McNeill, and Lynn Moore have made plans to clear out the dead undergrowth in the wooded areas which extend down to Benjamin Parkway, and to plant foliage on the banks which are currently bare. Bushes, flow ers and trees will be planted in the area. Help Needed “We need the help of the en tire student body,” Gary stated. “We can’t do all this work by ourselves.” “So far participation has been poor,” Lynn said. “If we win the competition, the whole school will want to take the credit. If we lose, which is more likely, the committee will take all the blame.” The chairmen requested that students come out for workdays, saying that a tremendous amount of work must be done to accom plish this project. Boys are need ed to help chop down dead trees and to haul them away. Cans Found Lynn reported that in addition to the usual rusted empties, “two cans of unopened beer were found in the woods during the last work day. And there may be more.” Smith High School was in first place at the last judging. “They’re really out to win the trophy this year,” Lynn commented. Page is second, and Grimsley is last. Participation Counts Both of these schools’ student GHS Student Makes Perfect SAT Score North Carolina’s first student to make 1600, a perfect score, on the Scholastic Aptitude Test is Larry Reid, senior. A significant rise in Larry’s scores occurred. Overall, his score rose from 1442 in July to 1600 in December. Mathematical score improved from 744 to 800; the Queens' Men Perform At Surveyors' Reception Singing for a reception at a convention of the North Carolina Society of Land Surveyors Feb ruary 16 will be Grimley’s Queen’s Men. The statewide gathering will oc cur at the Statler-Hllton Inn in Raleigh, North Carolina. Selections to be performed will Include Tell Old Bill, a melody of When Johnny Comes Marching Home Again and Black is the Color of My True Love’s Hair, It Was A Very Good Year, Seek, and Farewell My Tani. Many of these songs have been arranged by the Queen’s Men themselves. Members of the group are Ray Mendenhall. John Penland, Bill Waterstradt, and Steve Wilson. Steve’s father, a surveyor is head of the committee for entertain ment for the convention. He chose the Queen’s Men to sing for the Friday night reception. verbal score went up 132 points from 668 to 800. Larry has applied for admission at Duke University, North Caro lina State University at Raleigh, and the University of North Caro lina at Chapel Hill, with Duke as his first choice. At present, he intends to major in math. He commented on the fact that the first time he took his College Boards, he studied from College Board review books. The second time, however, he did not review at all. 1 Photo Credit Howard Ratsch North Carolina’s first high school student to make 1600 on SAP’s is a GHS student, Larry Reid. bodies are participating as a whole in the work days. “They have enthusiasm, and are inter ested in winning,” Gary said. “Obviously we do not care.” o Hamann Nominated For Scholarship Grimsley High School’s nominee for the Katherine Smith Reynolds Scholarship at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro is Mary Sue Hamann. A girl is nominated from every high school in each of the twelve districts of North Carolina. Twelve scholarships are awarded through out the state. Scholastic achievement, educa tional goals and desirable person ality characteristics are considera tions for selection for this schol arship, which is comparable to the John 'Motley Morehead Scholar ship for boys at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Sponsored by the Reynolds Foundation, the scholarship is for $1400 a year to cover tuition, room and board, and books. Re newal for succeeding years de pends on the good grades made by the student. Collage Presented To Remind Students Of Child's Accident Broken glass bottles glued to a piece of board as a collage, and two sacks of beer cans and more broken bottles constitute a tribute to Grimsley’s careless and sloppy students by the father of a victim of a broken bottle. The Reverend W. Scott Root presented the “trophy” to the student body with an explanatory note after his son Ben leaped over a bush and landed on a broken bottle neck, Friday, Jan uary 19- The note reads as follows; “This collage is presented to Grimsley High School in honor of students who throw bottles, which gener ally break, onto the grounds about the school where small children walk and run and jump on their way back and forth to Brooks School. “'The artist is the father of one such child who on Friday, Jan uary 19, did run and jump and land in a spot which had a brok en bottle neck set just right. “The artist’s son had 80 stitches in his leg, four days in the hos pital and several months of limp ing ahead for such a jump. ’The materials for this collage were all obtained along with another sack full, from the area close by the accident.” Mr. A. P. Routh, principal, sent a letter to the artist stating that he was “very sorry” about the accident and that he had placed the collage in the bnlletin board case in the main hall where stu dents would see it. He further commented on the practice of people throwing down bottles just “to watch them break,” and said that he hoped as a result of the accident and Mr. Root’s presentation of the callage, students would no longer throw down bottles on the school grounds. WHIRLPOOL Editors Strive For New Goai Editor’s note: Editor-in-Chief Pete Lux and Editors Jane Tesh and Craig Pyron of WHIRLPOOL wrote this article to the student body. ' For the first time in several years, the students of GHS are presented with a different sort of challenge. It is the responsibility of th,e entire student body, not just of the staff, to make 'WHIRL POOL a success this year. Achieving this goal involves the same school spirit that prompts the sale of basketball tickets or Whirlie stickers. However, two ad ditional requirements are also im portant: a respect for learning and a respect for the talent of fellow students. Ideas Should Develop Education is not simply the dull routine of homework and school schedule. The ability to develop new ideas from old facts is what makes learning a creative art; writing is a way of expressing these ideas. The people who write for WHIRLPOOL have original thoughts or a style all their own. They should be applauded because they have the desire and the courage to place their talent be fore the entire student body. Participation Opportunity In Athletics, only a few are able to participate on the team; however, the rest of the school supports them by buying tickets and cheering at the games. In WHIRLPOOL, only a few will submit material; the others can participate by buying it. The price is only 50c—less than a foot ball ticket—and it can be kept, like a yearbook, for the years to come. Tradition Established We will publish this year, and we will make' it a tradition at Grimsley. The HOMESPUN lite rary magazine existed at GHS for over 20 years before it was dis continued in 1962. This school needs a way of communicating original ideas. WHIRLPOOL is simply one as pect of a growing desire for in dividual thought and action. If we can make it a success this year, both it and Grimsley will grow stronger in the coming years. o Librarians Take Annual Inventory of Materials Beginning a week before exams and extending through the semes ter break until last week, the library at Grimsley has been closed for inventory. Miss Mildred Herring and Mrs. June Bleakley, librarians, and their student staff have been working not only during school but after school and on week ends and snowdays to account for all the books, magazines and rec ords in the library. The inventory of almost 15,000 books has been made easier this year due to a school administra tion policy concerning overdue books and fines. Permission to take midterm examinations was withheld from those students with an obligation to clear up with the library. Currently, approximately one half dozen people have books or owe money in fines or damages while the usual number would be, according to Miss Herring, “at least 30 or 40.”