PROCONIAN
The Pro^s and Con*s of CHHS Life
SCA Rejects
Two Changes
Members of the Student Coun
cil killed the proposed amend
ments numbered 1 and 3 below
when they met last Tuesday.
CHHers will vote on the re
maining four changes sometime
in the near future. If the
changes are passed, (each will
be voted upon individually) by
a two-tb'vds majority of the
students, they will go into ef
fect immediately.
Signatures of 10 per cent of
the CHHS student body were
required on petitions supporting
the amendments before they
could come before the SCA.
The six amendments which
the Student Council voted upon
are as follows:
1-The clerk of the Honor
Council must be a member of
the senior class.
2- The monitor system will be
enforced by the Honor Council
on an optional basis.
3- The head cheerleader, the
editor-in-chief of the Hillife,
and the editor of the Procoman
will be non-voting members of
the Student Council, with the
power of recommendation only.
4- The Chief Justice of the
Honor Council will have a voce
in the Student Council.
5- The Club Committee wid
consist of a representative, pre
ferably the president, from
each of the clubs, in addition
to the student council members
who are on the committee.
6- The chairman of the elec
tions committee shall be the
president of the Student Coun
cil.
Newton, Kaylor Most Naive
If many seniors were seen
frantically looking at their
classmates pictures in old copi
es of the Hillife recently and
eagerly consulting with each
other about mimeographed
sheets of paper which bore
signs of multiple erasures, the
confusion was due only to their
eagerness to select the “Most’s '
in their class. Senior Superla
tives were chosen November I,
and 80-90 of the 140 ballots
were returned to the Proconian.
The seniors named Bea
Johansson and Kenny Oettingcr
the Most Carefree in a tribute
to their light-hearted spirits,
while they labeled Nancy New
ton and Joel Kaylor, Most
Naive.
The upperclassmen acknow
ledged the loquaciousness of Lee
Milner and Gordon Cievelana
by selecting them Most Talka
tive. Betty K. Hooker and
George Costello, on the other
hand, were found to be the
Quietest.
Seniors recognized pianist
Norva McKnight and drummer
Mike Bounds as the Most Musi
cal, while they selected Judy
Jernigan and Charles House as
the Best Dancers.
Neal Ashcraft and Rusty Ed-
mister were praised as the
Most Energetic, and creativity
won Bev Allen and Dave
Straley the title Most Original.
Peggy Sparrow and Robert
Oakes are the Cutest seniors,
while Andy Beaty and Tom
Broadfoot were acknowledged
Teachers’ Pets. Pranksters
Helen Heusner and John Fox
were tagged Most Mischievous
by their classmates, and agile-
minded Joan McAllister and
Zan Ritchie received the title
Wittiest.
Most Dignified Bet Taylor
and George Costello were also
cited as the Most Courteous.
Sue Ellen Terrill and Rusty
Edmister teamed up to be se
lected both Helpful and Most
boE El.LEN Terrill and Rusty Edmister energetically try to
brighten up the school as they illustrate the two superlatives which
they won jointly: Most Helpful and Most Efficient.
Efficient.
Kathy Jenner and Tom
Broadfoot were recognized as
the Biggest Flirts, and Betty
K. Hooker and Larry Kenney’s
retiring ways earned them the
tag Most Bashful. Easy-to-get-
along-with Judy Timmons and
Rusty Edmister were titlea
Most Congenial, while Julie
Falconer and Sonny Mclver
were found the Friendliest.
Car Wash Success; Play in Production
HispanicHonorGroup ficst
ToUNCStudentfromSpain
DAVID LITTLE and George Thompson work industriously on one of the 100-odd cars which were
washed at the Junior Class Car Wash, October 28. In the second picture, David McConnell finds that
it’s a long way to bend down from 6’7’’ to a hub cap.
Passing Views \
Miss Wilkin guarding Ann
Neville as Ann dribbled a basket^
ball down the hall . . . Arlene
Macklin displaying her mari
juana box . . . Bev Allen blowing
a bubble while walking down the
hall . . . Poum Koch, AFS ex
changee, trick-or-treating at
fraternities for UNICEF . . . Tim
Rogers instructing Jo-Ann Jack-
son and Neal Ashcraft in coin
flipping .
Having pocketed $98.02 from
their October 28 caiwash, the
juniors continue planning pro
jects to raise funds for the
Junior-Senior prom in the spring.
Tentatively they have booked
a powder-puff football game
between the junior and senior
girls and a movie, possibly dur
ing November, said President
John Allcott. Bake sales will
continue for approximately three
weeks, and the class hopes to
sponsor a basketball game be
tween the junior and senior boys.
In answer to duty’s call, many
juniors have already taken roies
in the junior class musical, “The
Singing Freshmen,” set for De
cember 9.
Wally Shytle will play Gordon,
a country boy going to college.
Ann Cleaveland plays Mary, a
co-ed who meets a princess while
she is traveling abroad; Tone
Lunaas as the princess who
comes to college and falls in
love with Gordon.
ny Gouger as a robber round out
the male cast. Toni Dorfman and
Cindy Kouns as co-eds complete
the female east.
The play is under the direction
of Mrs. Beverly Culbreath, music
teacher, and Mrs. King Kouns,
dramatics coach.
Hispanic Honor Society mem
bers were hosts to a UNC Span
ish student when they met at
Mrs. June Basile’s house last
night.
The honor society, initiated at
CHHS last spring, plans regular
meetings every six weeks at the
homes of members. Programs
will be directed by the vice-
president.
Officers elected at the October
23 meeting include Lyman Rip-
perton, president; Jerri Eller,
vice-president; and Noi-va Mc
Knight, secretary-treasurer.
Members elected to hono*’
society must maintain an A ave
rage in first-year Spanish and a
B average in Spanish 11. “Eligible
students will be inducted into
the society during an assembly
in the spring,” explained advisor
Mrs. Basile.
Rec Cards Sold
Recreation cards are now be
ing sold to members of the stu
dent body for 50 cents, accord
ing to Gordon Cleveland, head
of the Recreation Council. They
may be purchased from any
member of the Recreation Coun
cil.
No one will be admitted to
any rec-sponsored activity with
out a memhersbip card. Pur-
...hasers jcu; s’.-n ihe card and
promise to ''Uow the rules
determined by tlie council. There
are both junior and senior high
school divisions. -MLB
Soph Officers Plan Ahead
Dietician Is College Queen
Last July, Mrs. Dorothy Van-
Egmond began her job as diet
ician for the Chapel Hill city
schools.
She is young, just out of
school; her short curly hair is
brown, and her complexion, rosy.
Mrs. VanEgmond first attended
“Ole Miss,” where she was a
cheerleader and Miss University
of Mississippi. Then, after re
ceiving an M.S. degree, she went
on to a Baptist college to get
her B.S. in home economics.
Daughter is Character
She and her husband, who is
a graduate student in English,
live in Victory Village, “the new
part,” and have a daughter two
years old. “She’s quite a char
acter,” Mrs. VanEgmond says,
in her soft, southern voice.
“She’s all boy except for sex.”
Mrs. VanEgmond enjoys her
job of planning menus and pur
chasing food. “It’s difficult be
cause our budget is so limited. It
can get you down. We’re always
ready for complaints that will
help, though, and, once in a
while, for a compliment.
Mrs. VanEgmond
Wants to Please
“We do want to please, but
it’s hard to please everyone. So
often, when students go through
the line, if something looks bad.
they’ll let everyone know. But
if it looks good, they don’t say
anything.
“The little elementary school
children aren’t like that at all!
What appetites! They just keep
coming back for more.” -AW
College Boys Portrayed
Gordon Ryan, George Thomp
son, Charles Jennings, Skip Hud
son, David Little, and Henry
Turlington portray college boys
in the supporting cast.
Richard Ellington is cast as
dean of Yalenova College, and
Jock Lauterer, as a soda shop
owner whose part-time job is
match-making.
McAllister is Quay
Dwight McAllister as Quay,
the Princess’ advisor, and John-
Sonny Picked
Congratulations to Sonny
Mclver, CHHS’s all-confer
ence football player! Sonny,
a co-captain of the ’61 Wild
cats, fills the center posi
tion in the District Three,
Class 3-A, All-Conference
team.
Tom Broadfoot, tackle;
Gene Williams, halfback; and
Don Smith, quarterback,
were given honorable men
tion in the selections made
by the Dtirham Mo'i'ning
Herald.
A.*
Students Collect $1104 for UNICEF
In UCYM^s Annual Halloween Drive
iM
SUSAN PRINCE looks dazed by the large pile
of pennies collected in the recent UNICEF drive
while Mary* Beth Coker gloats over the money
which she is bringing in by the fistful.
CHHSers began gathering at the high
school gym at 7:00 P.M., October 31, pre
paratory to canvassing Chapel Hill in the
annual United Christian Youth Movement
sponsored UNICEF drive. 300-odd stu
dents participated in the collection whicii
netted the United Nations International
Children’s Emergency Fund some $1104.
Although the total was slightly short
of the $1200 goal, Cynthia Seawell, presi
dent of the UCYM, stated that “We felt
that the drive was a success even though
we didn’t reach our goal."
Volunteers were given official tag's
and milk cartoons for the donations.
Under the direction of UNICEF chairman
Ellen Mullis, they were divided into
groups to cover the various UNICEF
areas in Chapel Hill and Carrboro.
Following the drive, UNlCEFers met
in the planetarium parking lot where they
turned in the money which they had col
lected and relaxed with soft drinks.
NEWLY ELECTED sophomore class officers are (I - r) Billy
Horn, Doug Johnston, Ann Cotterill, Deedee Whitney, and Peter
Bream.
Money-making is the mam
goal of the sophomore class,
claim this year’s sophomore
class officers.
President Ann Cotterill stat
es, “We plan, to make money by
giving a carnival in several
month’s. Later on this year we
are planning a movie and may
be a cartoon show.”
Johnston Plans Projects
Vice-president Doug John
ston, who is interested in the
Hillife and Student Council
activities, went on to say, “We
plan to raise money toward
making the ’63 Junior-Senior
the best one we can.” Doug
believes that “everyone in the
sophomore class has some talent
we can use.”
Deedee Whitney, sophomore
class secretary and a lover of
modern jazz and sports, is in
terested in making money for
all activities which the sopho
more class participates in.
Bream Treasurer
Treasurer Peter Bream,
whose business in the sopho
more class is money, claims that
making money is secondary
while first on his list is “pro
moting school spirit in our class
while we participate in school
activities.”
Billy Horn, the associate jus
tice, would like to promote a
sense of honor and trust in the
people with v/hom he is associa
ted. -HT