The Westerner World (Lubbock, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, May 13, 1955 Page: 4 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 23 x 16 in. Digitized from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Page 4
THE WESTERNER WORLD
Friday, May 13, 1955
OufatCUtditUy *7^CAfiiCl*U . .
Awards for the best actor, actress, director, supporting actor, and
supporting actress were presented Monday night by the Thalian Theater
at their banquet at Underwood’s. In the picture above president Charles
Blazi presents the trophies to Naomi Johnson, best actress; Wally John*
son, best director; and James Hollars, best actor. Not shown are Terry
Miller, best supporting actor, and La Rue Smith, best supporting
actress. (Photo by Lilburn Smith)
Registration Is May 31
For 1955 Summer School
Registration for the 1955 sum-
mer school session for high-school
students will be May 31 from 8
to 12 a.m., and from 1 to 4 p.m.,
Band Presents
Final Assembly
The Lubbock Senior High School
band, under the direction of Mr.
Paul Branom, presented the as-
semblies Tuesday at the regular
assembly periods.
The assemblies were opened
With the student body singing “The
Star Spangled Banner.” Other
numbers included on the program
were “Inglesine-concert March”
by Cese, “Zanoni,” “Shawl Dance,”
and “Hillbilly from ‘Americana’.”
Dalvin Boone and Troy Felber,
coronets; Ronald Lemon, horn;
Bill Downs, baritone; Bill Myers,
trombone; and Harlan Lamkin,
bass, played “Brass Sextet.” Bob
Harris played a clarinet solo,
“E-Fer’s Holiday,” as an extra.
The program was closed with
the playing and singing of the
Westerner “Call to Loyalty.”
according to Mr. Jay E. Gordon,
who will serve as principal.
^ Twenty-five courses will be of-
fered during the eight-week sum-
mer session, beginning June 1.
Classes will meet two hours a day,
five days a week, from 8 to 12
a.m. No student will be permitted
to take more than two, one-half
courses. Tuition fee is $15 per sub-
ject, with home and family life
and homemaking project free of
tuition.
English teachers will be Mrs.
A. F. Rasor and Miss Lottie Graves.
Mr. Warlin Hayhurst will teach
algebra and plane geometry. Mr.
Paul Bowie will teach non-credit
typing.
Mrs. Reba Bailey will teach ge-
ology and applied science; Mr.
Bowie, commercial arithmetic;
Mrs. Bernice Bearden, American
history and Texas history; and Mr.
Robert Knight, mechanical draw-
ing and woodwork.
Teachers for home and family
life, homemaking project, and ap-
plied math are, as yet, unassigned.
gicd 7tote&
By Jo and Jody
Hello again!
Are you counting the days? We
are! Only 14 more — ten of those
being school days.
The annual Y-Teen Retreat was
held Monday night at the home of
Mary Sue Wilson in the form of
a covered-dish supper. Thirty-six
girls came at 6:30 p.m., each bring-
ing a dish.
Members of the 1954-’55 cabinet,
newly-elected Monterey officers,
Tom S. Lubbock Senior High of-
ficers, and committee sponsors,
were present. Members of the old
cabinet of LHS Y-Teens gave re-
ports, criticisms, and suggestions
to the girls that are to take office
in the two high schools next year.
Jo and Jody would like to con-
gratulate each and every one of
the newly elected officers for Mon-
terey and Tom S. Lubbock Senior
High School. You all have a big
job ahead of you, particularly those
going to the new school.
So long,
Jo and Jody
****££**(
5 Haircuttinij
/ By Experts
at the
SENIOR HIGH
BARBER SHOP
ZESTO
brand new!
College & 3rd Place
across from the
Town and Country Shopping
Center
FREE! FREE! FREE!
Pmen* thia coupes
for free con*
Saturday. May 14
WEEK LONG SPECIALS
• Sunday
FREE 10c drink1 with
Bar-B-Q Sandwich
• Monday
FREE 1 pint of Sherbet with
purchase of 1 quart of
ice cream
• Tuesday
Malt & Hamburger
39c
• WoditMdoy
10c TV Ice Cream cups - -
2‘tbr 15c or
6 for 40c (store them in your
freezer)
• Thursday
FREE 10c cone with purchase
of Nutty Buddy or
Ice Cream Sandwich
• Friday
PAL DAY - - Two Sundaes
for the price of one
Seniors Seek College
Majority Plan
ToAttendTech
By Mary Ann Smalley
Lubbock High seniors will at-
tend Texas Tech more than any
other college next year, according
to the names submitted to the pub-
lications department. Approxi-
mately 80 per cent of the seniors
who turned in their names will be
in Tech next fall.
Seniors planning to go to Tech
are Don Adams, Kaye Aker, J. C,
Alexander, Annez Allan, Linda
Alls, Mona Armstrong, Florence
Axtell, George Baker, Toni Ban-
nister, Kay Barley, Jimmy Bate-
man, Harlan Bearden, Arlyss Ben-
ton, Jimmy Berly, Carolyn Blank-
enship, Mildred Branson, Marsha
Brock, Jeanne Brown, Kay Bur-
nam, A. V. Cates, Margaret Con-
dray.
Martha Cromer, Wayne Culp,
George Dawson, Pat Dorsey, San-
dra Dudley, Dorothy Edwards,
Frances Ellis, Betty Jane Feathers,
Charles Gallimore, Charles Gil-
liam, Yvonne Hamilton, Jim Ho-
gan, Sarjim Holcomb, Brown Hol-
den, Stella Holton, James Roy
Howard, Doug Hutton, Glenda In-
gram, Naomi Johnson, and Janet
Jones add to the list of names.
Others attending Tech will be
Irma Kendrick, Don Kerr, Patsy
Knight, Danelle Kuhn, Barbara
Lakey, Baxter Laymance, Carolyn
Leftwich, Richard Leonard, Linda
Medders, Joe Morahan, Margaret
Myrick, Prentiss Peak, Ann Pend-
ley, Joan Pollard, Pat Rainer, Joy
Reeder, Shirley Rogers, Betty Rut-
ledge, Bill Sandy, and Dick Scales.
Joan Scott, Mary Ann Sharp,
Diana Smith, Elaine Smith, Lil-
burn Smith, Karl Spuhler, Jo Ste-
ger, Frances Stephen, Carolyn
Tapp, Willis Taylor, Damon Thom-
as, Joyce Thrush, Roy Tunnell,
and Juanice Turner are also pros-
pective Tech students.
Completing the list are Gloria
Waller, Carol Wiedeman, Terry
Williams, Frances Wilson, Suzanne
Wilson, Joan Wimberley, Charles
Witty, Mike Wofford, and Phyllis
Wright.
'Winnie' Churchill
Honored In Poem
By Sophomore
(EDITOR’S NOTE: This poem was
written in one of Mrs. H. R. Keeton’s
English 22 classes. After studying a unit
on ballads and short stories, the students
were asked to write a ballad on some
school event or some story in the daily
paper. This ballad was submitted by
Jettie Evans.)
/
Churchill Resigns
The queen was in her palace,
seated on her throne.
The people in the courtyard
could hear the bugle tone.
And busy eyes along the way
were hoping they would meet,
The man they knew was coming
from the house on Downing
Street.
The pennant on his' limousine was
waving at the gate t
When he passed through to meet
the queen at this important date.
The victory sign from all the
crowd made Winnie feel quite
gay.
For Churchill knew within his
heart that this was his great day.
His thoughts flashed back to days
gone by and to his country’s
fears,
And how this man had calmed the
world with “blood and sweat
and tears.”
The bombs and British airmen, re-
called our dear old Winnie,
And how so few had done so
much, a debt owed by so many.
.With fifty years of service and
nine years head of state,
The grand old Man of England
has framed his nation’s fate.
The world salutes this statesman
and master of our time
And about his resignation I’ve
written this long rhyme.
I "B. A.-
COURSES
I Streamlined college-grade Bus. Adm.,
I CPA, Secretarial Courses prepare
I quickly for incomes of $2400-$3600.
I Five calls per graduate. Day or Night.
DRAUGHON'S BUSINESS COLLEGE
liMaHM LUBBOCK, TEXAS mmmm
Education
Varied Schools
Attract Many
By Mary Ann Smalley
Colleges and universities from
all over Texas and £arts of the
nation are attracting Lubbock
High seniors. Seventeen schools,
excluding Texas Tech, were men-
tioned in the names that were
turned into the publication’s de-
partment.
Seniors who are planning to at-
tend the Texas Christian Univer-
sity are Liz Creson and Carol Ann
Davis. Pat Stanley will go to Boul-
der, Colo., to the University of
Colorado. Carolyn Tapp, Ann
Pendley, and Kay Burnam are
planning to go to the University
of Colorado this summer and then
enter Tech in the fall.
Sara Victory plans to attend the
University of Texas; David Yocum,
Phillips University, Enid, Okla.
Ken Kaplan, Delbert Mack Rank-
in, Sam Skibell, and Sondra Wick
are to be students in the Universi-
ty of Oklahoma. Cornelia Childs
will attend the Lindenwood Col-
lege, St. Charles, Mo.
Bettye Nowell plans to attend
the Texas Lutheran College in
Sequin, Texas. Thomas Rodgers
will attend the Brooks Institute
of Photography. Richard Wilson
will go to Kemper Military School
in Booneville, Mo.
Nancy Gail Black plans to go to
Northwestern University, Evans-
ton, 111. Paula Smith and Beverly
Witt will be students at Sul Ross
College in Alpine, Texas.
Mother’s Club
Closes Activities,
Chooses Officers
The Westerner Mothers’ Club
closed this year’s activities last
night with a picnic at Chapman
Fieldhouse, Mrs. R. T. McMullen,
Westerner Mothers’ president, re-
vealed.
All lettermen and. their families
were invited to the picnic, and
the mothers’ club prepared and
served the food. Fried chicken, po-
tato salad, slaw, beans, pie, and tea
were served.
Officers for Tom S. Lubbock are
president, Mrs. Marion Benton;
vice-president, Mrs. Roger Wil-
liams; treasurer, Mrs. Bill Lowri-
more; secretary, Mrs. C. M. Polk;
reporter, Mrs. Lamond; and his-
torian, Mrs. George Corley.
Monterey officers will be presi-
dent, Mrs. Aubrey Daniel; vice
president, Mrs. Polly Cathey; sec-
retary, Mrs. Mack Blair; treasurer,
Mrs. S. W. Pinson; reporter, Mrs.
R. T. Herring; and historian, Mrs.
W. L. Stephens.
Outgoing officers of the West-
erner Mothers’ Club are president,
Mrs. McMullen; vice-president,
Mrs. George Cole; secretary, Mrs.
Marion Benton; treasurer, Mrs.
Otha Key; reporter, Mrs. Edwin
Merriman; and historian, Mrs.
Roger Williams.
Dr. C. Earl Hildreth
OPTOMETRIST
242l-B Broadway, Ph. P02-4828 \
Lubbock, Texas
The best in —
• Pianos • Band Instruments
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1207 Main
Dial PO 3-2848
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The Westerner World (Lubbock, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, May 13, 1955, newspaper, May 13, 1955; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth662181/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lubbock High School.