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Show NEWS STAFF TO HOLD ASSEMBLY Frank Francis To Speak Be¬fore Ogden H. S. Stu¬dents Friday OGDEN HIGH SCHOOL NEWS NOTES Constance Ford—Editor SCHOOL WIDENS YEARBOOK TIME Orders Will Be Accepted Until Presses Start Running OGDEN HIGH SCHOOL NEWS NOTES Constance Ford—Editor What's that we heard about the Ogden high school choir singing on the train? All stu¬dents are urged to attend the news notes assembly Friday morning and find out. The as¬sembly will convene with com-munity singing. Frank Francis of The Standard - Examiner will be the guest speaker. Music con¬test winners will be announced in the assembly.— Geroge Jen¬sen. TREE PROGRAM The Kiwanis club will conduct a tree planting program Thurs¬day noon at Ogden high school. George H. Lowe will be in charge of exercises. Members of the club will deliver short speeches. A luncheon will be served to club members by the girls of the domestic art depart- ement. Winifred Hauser has charge of luncheon arrang- ments. The "Avenue of Trees" came from all sections of the country and parts of Canada.— George Jensen. The third period Spanish class elected officers Tuesday to serve for the final term. The of¬ficers elected are: President, Harold Driver; vice- president, Jeanne Scowcroft; and secre¬tary, Frank Bartlett, — George Jensen. An important news notes meeting will be held Thursday at three fifteen in room 116. | "The annual Ogden high , school mothers' tea will be con¬ducted Friday, May 6," an¬nounced Margaret Smith, presi- detn of the Girls' association.— George Jensen. LOWDER WILL TALK TO CLASS Former Sheriff To Discuss Social Control In Utah OGDEN HIGH SCHOOL NEWS NOTES Constance Ford—Editor Oscar E. Lowder, Utah state adult parole officer will address the fourth period social science class Wednesday afternoon. Lowder will discuss "social mal¬adjustment." The former Weber county sheriff will relate inci¬dents concerning social control in Utah.—George Jensen. All students desiring to attend "Alia Nen Del Rancho Grande." a Mexican movie at the Univer¬sity of Utah, Wednesday eve¬ning, are requested to contact Victor Hancock by Wednesday noon.—George Jensen. SHOW BANNER The first place award banner presented to Ogden high school typing students who placed first in the BYU Commercial meet at Provo last Friday is being displayed in B. F. Farnsworth's typing room.—George Jensen. Tomorrow is the deadline for contest entries for the Utah Pi¬oneer Story contest sponsored by the Moose association.—Stomo Ochi. Leonard Robins announced to¬day that the limit for yearbook orders will be extended until the printer starts his press early next week. A firm in Salt Lake City is printing 1,000 copies of the cover, designed by Marian Lund. Those that are not sold to the students will be used for advertising purposes because of the outstanding design. The cov¬er is symbolic of the school, worked out in shades of brown. It is on display in the showcase of the main hall.—Virginia Fotis CARDS OFFERED Seniors may order their grad¬uation announcements from the office this week or next at eight cents apiece. Payment must be made at the time announce¬ments are ordered to avoid the difficulty of last year, when many students failed to pay at all.—Kathryn Ellsworth. The "Tiger Flashes" radio staff will sponsor a trio singing contest, Ross Ekins announces. Two trios will be selected, one for popular songs and one for standard songs. Winners will be picked in an assembly by the strength of applause. All who wish to enter the contest will please register by this Friday with Mrs. Lucille Chambers.— Stomo Ochi. TO SEE EXHIBIT William Abplanalp will send several bookkeeping students to Salt Lake City next Monday to attend an office machine exhibit. The display is sponsored by the University of Utah business de¬partment.—-George Jensen. Two hundred leis will be given to the first 200 girls who come to the junior prom, April 29, nine p.m., in the school gymnasium. The broadcasting orchestra of Orse Hydes, who will be present in person, will furnish music. The dance is not formal, but sport.—Stomo Ochi. The assembly Friday will be an oratorical contest between Blair Burton and Lamoin Suttlemire.—Virginia Fotis. PRINT DRESSES Miss Claramay Browning, sewing teacher at Central, Miss Bonnie Wilson from Madison, and Miss Lucille Chambers from Ogden high will be the judges for print dress week. For each twenty girls in advisory classes the girl with the most becoming dress will be chosen. These girls are to meet in the girl's gym¬nasium Wednesday after school where the judges will choose a Rebecca and 20 attendants.— Kathryn Ellsworth. GIVEN CERTIFICATES The following junior shorthand students today received certifi¬cates from the Gregg shorthand company, showing that they have passed their required tests: 60 words a minute; Arlene Andrew, Betty Baker, Bet¬ty Comer, Salina Cascio, Kath¬ryn Ellsworth, Clara Gilman, i Rena Hart, Emma Martin and MOSIC TESTS WILL BE HELD THISJEVENING Public Bidden To Witness School Elimination Competition OGDEN HIGH SCHOOL NEWS NOTES Constance Ford—Editor Vocal and instrumental stu¬dents of Ogden high school will compete at seven-thirty tonight in the school music room and auditorium for right to enter the northern Utah regional music contest at Hyrum May 6 and 7. Winners of tonight's try outs will be named by Miss Lyle Bradford and Arthur R. Overlade, Salt Lake City musicians. Judging will be based on tone, interpretation, technique, dic¬tion, accuracy, presentation, ap¬pearance, memory and intona¬tion. The public is invited to attend. Admission is free. PARTY NEXT FRIDAY On Friday, April 29, the jun¬ior prom will be held in Ogden high's gymnasium. It is a sport dance. Hawaiian leis will be giv¬en to the first 200 girls. States Stomo Ochi, "Other dances of this year have been the biggest and best. This dance will be super-colossal."—Mar¬garet Hocking. State Adult Parole Officer, Os¬car E. Lowder, will speak to the fourth period sociology class Tuesday on "Social Maladjust¬ment in Utah." The former We- i ber county sheriff will give sta¬tistics on social control. An open ; discussion period will conclude the talk.—George Jensen. RADIO PROGRAM Betty Baker will continue her book review on "The Life of Richard Harding Davis" on the "Tiger Flashes" program this evening over KLO. Ross Ekins will present information on the musical trio contest, which will be conducted starting May 2.— George Jensen. A large group of students from North Cache visited the school Friday. The group was shown the school grounds and parts of the building by A. M. Merrill, principal.—George Jensen. On Thursday the domestic sci¬ence classes will serve lunch¬eon to the Kiwanis club. MEETING TONIGHT An important Sportettes meet¬ing will be held at six tonight in Gilbert Moesinger's room. Report cards will be issued Wednesday in advisory classes. Teachers request that the stu¬dents return them Thursday.— Kathryn Ellsworth. Inez Moser; 80 words a minute, Salina Cascio, and Kathryn Ells¬worth. Miss Cascio also receiv¬ed a Gregg pin for having passed the 80 word test with the highest score in the school.— Kathryn Ellsworth. TEAM CHOSEN FOR REGIONAL SPEEMTESTS Ogden High School Will Send Party To Salt Lake Contests OGDEN HIGH SCHOOL, NEWS NOTES Constance Ford—Editor Members of the Ogden high school debating team who will journey to Salt Lake City to en¬ter the regional debating tour¬nament April 28 were chosen to¬day. The following will repre¬sent Ogden: Debating, Gale Rose, LaMoian Suttlemire, Reed Corey, and Blair Burton; oratory, Barbara Reeve, Mary Kariya, Allen Van Dyke, and LaMoian Suttlemire; extemporaneous, Betty Lou Balch, Betty Baker, Grant Nueteboom, Dan Bailey. Mary Woolley and Willis Smith, in¬structors, will accompany the contestants.—George Jensen. SELECTIONS MADE Claramay Browning, Bonnie Wilson and Lucille Chambers! last night selected a Rebecca and her court of 20 from among the girls chosen in each advis¬ory class as candidates. The identity of the chosen girls will not be known until Firday. Re¬becca will preside over the girls' tea Friday after school and her court will model their print'dresses. — Kathryn Ells¬worth. Fern Marquart, Ogden high English instructor, talked on so¬cial conditions in China, Japan and the Philippines to the fourth period social science class Wed¬nesday. "The Orient is a place of con¬trast—to thoroughly understand this fact, one must visit its coun¬tries," said Miss Marquart. — George Jensen. BOOKS RECEIVED Five hundred books were re¬cently received by the Ogden high school library from the O. J. Stilwell, estate, said Leda Wadsworth, school librarian. The subjects are of great vari¬ety, ranging from English liter¬ature to discussions of the sciences. The books will be shelved for circulation as soon as possible.—Stomo Ochi. The first round of a girls' arch¬ery tournament to pick the best archer in the school was played this week. The second round will be played next Mon¬day and the final round the fol¬lowing week. — Kathryn Ells¬worth. CLASSIC STUDIED Lucille R. Chambers' junior English classes have devoted two weeks to Homer's Odyssey, studying for the story, the relig¬ious beliefs and habits. Upon completion of the book each stu¬dent took some modern subject and, using the Homeric style, wrote it into a narrative.—Kath¬ryn Ellsworth. |