OCR Text |
Show SCHOOL AWAITS SEMESTER END Ogden High Report Cards Scheduled to Come Out Wednesday OGDEN HIGH SCHOOL NEWS NOTES Constance Ford, Editor Termination of the first se¬mester at Ogden high school comes tomorrow. Students should now prepare their sched¬ules and programs of study for the second half. Sociology, busi¬ness principles, economics, and law are interchangeable sub¬jects. Botany will succeed zool¬ogy. Monday is the day of re¬adjustment. Report cards will come out Wednesday. — Stomo Ochi. NEW MEMBERS Next week, students will be represented by new council members from each advisory class. This was announced last night in weekly council meeting. The new members will meet each Tuesday in Miss Ballinger's room at three-twenty p.m. —Arnold Roe. All English classes were en- j tertained by pictures Wednes¬day. The first film was about William Cullen Bryant, Ameri¬can poet. The second concern¬ed Robert Louis Stevenson, Eng¬lish author.—Margaret Hocking, i: LeConte Stewart told of the 1 procedure necessary to make lithograph prints in his lecture before the Fine Arts society Wednesday. He also treated etching and woodcut prints and showed specimens of his own lithograph and woodblock work. Examples of the work of Ameri¬can artists were critically exam¬ined.—Stomo Ochi. ESSAY CONTEST The junior chamber of com¬merce has announced its an'nual essay contest will close Feb. 15. Prizes will be awarded in junior and senior divisions. The sub¬ject is "What Constitutes a Good American?"—George Jensen. An illustrated "Believe it or not" spotlighted "Tattler," new bulletin of the Writers' guild. Poetry, activities, gossip, and articles were features. The name has been officially chang¬ed from "Spotlight". — Stomo Ochi. OPERA TRYOUTS SLATED AT O.H.S. A appella Choir Members To Present 'Beggar Student' OGDEN HIGH SCHOOL NEWS NOTES Constance Ford, Editor Tryouts for the school opera, "The Beggar Student," will be held Monday after school, an¬nounces Glenn L. Hanson, direc¬tor. All members of the a cap- pella choir are eligible for parts. ; Kathryn Ellsworth. O.H.S. PREPARES ANNUAL OPERA 'The Beggar Student,' to Be Presented By School March 15 OGDEN HIGH SCHOOL NEWS NOTES Constance Ford, Editor Orchestration for the Ogden high school opera, 'The Beggar Student', March 15, has arriv¬ed, said Glenn Hansen, music instructor, and rehearsals are underway. | The opera should be a great success as it contains many un¬usual comical sequences," said Hansen. — George Jensen. Solo work in the girls' glee clubs will be started soon. Names will be taken in alpha¬betical order and every girl will be required to sing. A list from which the selections must be taken is posted in the choral room. — Kathryn Ellsworth. TO SERVE DINNER The high school foods depart¬ment will entertain the board of education members and their wives and the principals and wives at a dinner in the school Friday. Afterward the group will go as a body to the basket- ! ball game between West high j school of Salt Lake City, and ] Ogden in the school gymnasium. | — Gordon Cole. The a cappella choir will en¬tertain the student body Friday morning in assembly. — Gordon Cole. REPORTS READY Report cards for the half year will be given out Wednesday. Students whose report cards are not in to the advisory teacher should have them in before Wednesday in order to get their marks. Tonight on KLO at the weekly radio program is as follows: Talk by Blair Evans, sports edi¬tor of the Classicum; Elsie Mc¬Kay, contralto solo; Joye Gregory, reading; and Glen Milligan, ! whistling solo. — Gordon Cole. The faculty and student body send deepest regrets to the fam¬ily of Allen Ross, student, who was killed in an automobile ac¬cident. — George Jensen. TO PRESENT PLAY At the next meeting of the mu¬sic guild, a one-act musical comedy entitled, "The Family Doctor," is to be presented. The meeting promised to be one of the most interesting of the year. — Kathryn Ellsworth. NEW TEACHING PLAN A new method of creating in¬terest in English classes was initiated Monday. Members of the classes elected officers to officiate in programs and Eng¬lish speeches. The plan creates interest and i gives varied experience to the { officers," stated Zelta Ballinger, j English instructor.—George Jensen. Drill manuals arrived Monday and were distributed among the cadets. Rifle nomenclature and armament of the infantry are being discussed in drill classes. —Stomo Ochi. SCHOOL AWAITS MUSIC CONTEST Intends to Enter Every Pos¬sible Division, Says Instructor OGDEN HIGH SCHOOL NEWS NOTES Constance Ford, Editor The annual region No. 1 music contest will be held in Ogden, April 29 to 30. States Instructor Glenn L. Hanson, "Ogden high school will enter every possible contest this year." — Florence Cashmore. B. Y. U. COMPETITION On Friday and Saturday, Ap¬ril 1 and 2, the annual Brigham Young university senior high school speech tournament and j dramatic festival will be held. The subject for debate will be unicameral legislation. There will be contests in boys' and girls' oratory, speeches to be or¬iginal. Extemporaneous speak¬ing will be on major current events. One act plays will be presented in the afternoons and evenings.—Margaret Hocking. STUDYING DRAWING Art classes are beginning a new semester with the tech¬nique of various types of draw¬ing. Sketches of still and nat¬ural life will be done first in pencil and charcoal and later worked out in pastel, water col¬or or oil. States LeConte Stewart, in¬structor, "These sketches will continue with the same ideas of composition as have already been studied."—Kathryn Ells¬worth. GUILD HAS PARTY The Stagecraft guild held a party Monday, with refresh¬ments and games. Those in at¬tendance, comprising the final membership were as follows; Reed Anderson, Glen Jensen, Jim Summers, Pete Maudlin, James Allen, Richard Carruth, Lyle Connell, Bill Lundy, Mary Huggins, Gordon Huggins, Nich¬olas Joseph, David Lund, Dale Rommick, Joyce Shaughnessy, Emmett Cunning, Gerald Water¬fall, Bill Whitcomb, Gerald Young, Bill Lucas, Bob Swift, Geoffrey Harper, Grace Quinn, Gale Rose, Carl Peterson, George Edwards, and Bernard Farr. The club advisor, Ernest Wangsgard, announced that the guild's next assignment will be to usher at the ballet event Feb. 11.—Reed Anderson. PAGEANT PRACTICE Girls' gym classes are work¬ing on interpretive dances to be used in the Classicalia pageant. The pageants, written by gym classes, are being judged by a committee in charge of Classi-calia plans.—Kathryn Ellsworth. COUNCIL TO MEET New student council members will meet tonight in room 121. Members are representatives of advisory classes. "What Constitutes a Good Am¬erican?" is the topic for a city- wide essay contest sponsored by the Ogden city chamber of com¬merce. Limited to 500 words, the manuscript must be typed or written in ink.—Stomo Ochi. SCHOOL TO BE BANQUET HOST THIS EVENING Educators and Partners Will Be Entertained At Ogden High j OGDEN HIGH SCHOOL NEWS NOTES j Constance Ford, Editor Home economics department j of Ogden high school will serve i a banquet at six o'clock tonight in the school in honor of Ogden and Salt Lake City educators. Among the guests will be Board President and Mrs. M. S. Stone; Weber College President and Mrs. H. A. Dixon; Supt. and Mrs. W. Karl Hopkins, Assistant Supt. j and Mrs. Dave Wangsgard, Mr. ;and Mrs. A. B. Foulger, Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Nye, Mr. and Mrs. James H. Riley, Mr. and Mrs G. J. Kruitbosch, school board; Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Merrill; Mr. and Mrs. Glen G. Eye; Mr. and , Mrs. L. S. Hodgson; Dr. L. J. Nuttall, superintendent of Salt Lake City schools and his wife; Miss Zelta Ballinger, and Miss Viola Clancy. Miss Winifred Hauser stated, "The cooking department is pre¬paring this dinner so that the 1 girls will have the experience of preparing the meal and serving it." The banquet will be carried out in a Valentine style. The j tables will be placed in a "u" ! formation.—Margaret Hocking. WILD LIFE LECTURE Lee Kay, of the state fish and game office, stated there is a possibility of extinciton of some of our well known wild game life, in his lecture in assembly today. His lecture was illustrat¬ed with a colored motion picture film.—Stomo Ochi. ARCHERY CONTESTS | Winning teams in a recenti ! archery tournament in girls' |gym classes are: Second period, j Cougars, captain, Vendell Shumway; third period, Gorillas, captain, Betty Blackington; fourth j period, Leopards, captain Ruth Packer; fifth period, Bears, captain, Rama Eyre; sixth peri- j od, Cougars, captain, Marian Sanders.—Kathryn Ellsworth, j An archery club is planned, j Students interested will meet Monday at three-fifteen. Gilbert Moesinger will head the club, which will challenge other schools' archery clubs. — Stomo Ochi. PHOTOS PRINTED Members of the Ogden High | i Camera club developed, printed, | | and discussed compository pic- j tures at their weekly meeting Thursday evening. W. W. Tag- gert, advisor, explained the process. Dick Thomas, presi¬dent, stated that work on the high school photographic his¬tory will commence soon. —- 1 George, Jensen. | Girls of the homemaking class have been studying hospitality. There have been committees ap-pointed and each day they will entertain the class by having a party.—Virginia Fotis. |