Girls High School - Halcyon Yearbook (Atlanta, GA)

 - Class of 1942

Page 1 of 122

 

Girls High School - Halcyon Yearbook (Atlanta, GA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 122 of the 1942 volume:

- A N f' W ,Zu- E35 -A 'll' 141-.o-f1v J p d 'A'3 , 1 4 ' ,- I 1 4 Nr ,l . I sei 4L 1 s X- Q 5 ' 'Q 4 . in l f f Y 1 ' u . ,. -- Ni ,T ' I k 2 Qp J 1- -X XJ- ! - -- Y - f-xv, X? X ,- -ffl l ,f MW fpfliifff WM? ff Wm MQ, MM ,N if , .ffl , Jw we ' x X' J w gQQW'Q'M W WWE? mn N' N C f Nw we W5 THE I-IALCYQN 19 4 2 llgJH? JW? GIRLS HIGH SCHOOL ATLANTA GEORGIA Composed by the Senior CIass of I ,I L U: inf?-If 1: -1 -I 'flu I pg, II I wW?W ?,ff ffm Mk! - Aff' V MJ' 9 My M gyfw Wfjfwj Www ,WM , ilffftj Gam MMU MW MWAWW MM' fwfr pry! If .1 f M fir 7,410 ,wa ,LTI-.fI,1W7 WMM W MMM I wvL77711j 777, JJ!!! JMQMZTKZQWMWM WM W n Wai L, W jf . f I ff x , M I X WJ J ff f f ' '13 X f I 1 . fx JI by j JM xffva, ' IPA' y . M fa? 'f'JfM,,,f,iwQ Q '1 ,N.f- f f , fXf Cff QZ,1.fL...!X '-fJ VDD K r W ,'J'vvL C ifpfvvinftj .j5,f,fL,d .1 cd fb 7: AAL-fy f . LLVf'- Qhvbaf'-Cf! dy J J rf J yi VU ' lplbnal Ljfuof'- . J, J . fx! ' fm., 7,,,,-.c.,-e.,7M,-.4-'WALP ,wmv - no U41 W il A.A,,D4.A-4, arm l W I UQWJ' ' -,Ai ' KVM, ,L0' X MIAA Uxifgtafnuxly f f ,Alf ,- I '.A 1 I I4' VV, - , 4 f'W 7 A ', ' v 4 .I 2' Jxnfl ifkyljvffl il., ffl f - W 1 Wu I fry' ,W 'A V, - aa' i I ' 1 1 ' 1 . dn , rv ' 'Zlf' LQ! . W' Wiriw-WJWi B key TO CONTENTS A 1 ka B ' C Q- PATTERNS CF RHYTHM The world is filled with rhythmicai patterns Each lite is one ot these Composing the 'ite are smaller rhythms That only the singer sees Will chime in a tempo clear We will never forget the enchantment Ot the song that we ve sung here We step from the chords ot our school lite lnto a meter that s new There will be different patterns ot rhythm But the tune will still ring true . . . . , The memories ot our Girls High days ALL THE THINGS YOU ARE GIRLS HIGH SCHOOL In order to express our respect and admrratron we dedicate we feel that ner notes are nn tune with the melody of our hearts and because we know that the key ot her understand Ing rs an harmony with ours , . the loveliest measure ot our song to Lamar Jeter, because Lamar Jeter DEDICATED TO YOU QS CUR LIVES ARE PATTERNS GF RHYTHM The meloduous harmony of our Gurls Hugh days has given perfect balance to our luves wuth uts delughtful unflectuons and varued moods We want our Halcyon to reveal through puctures and drawungs the pleasing composutuons of our school experuence These days are parts of the patterns of rhythm that make up our exustence for un the words of Tagore The world speaks to me un puctures My soul answers un musuc We have had fun doing our part to make the or chestra of school a success Wuth the faculty as our conductor we are urged on unto new and more enchantung strauns than we by our studues because they are the foundatuon of our knowledge Occasionally our vouces have cracked as we trued to reach a hugh putched note At such tumes when we have been off key our tempo has slackened but we have been able to recapture the tume un chords of perfect cadence Our essentual rhythm however never halts and our luves are smoothly domunated by uts pattern The melodues of each gurls days at Girls Hugh have been composed of varuous measures Some students have p'aced the accent of theur etude on home economucs or art wuth mathematucs or chem ustry as the refrain Others have found better har mony un followung a predomunant count of Latun French or hustory wuth understones of shorthand or typung In almost every bar there have been flats and sharps makung the tune more unterestung Thus well balanced meter of our studues has qualufued every gurl who leaves Gurls Hugh to meet lufe un what ever mode ut confronts her When studues for the day are complete and les sons are thrust asude for awhule each gurl can fund amusement un one of the many unterludes that break unto the consustent beat of the dauly routune of school For those who are unterested un sports the varued appeals of archery volleyball basketball ure Actuvutues that are closely associated wuth va ruous subjects un school are unstructuve and enter taunung At Gurls Hugh there are branches of natuonal defense organuzatuons for gurls who want to do some thung for theur country whule they are yet un school Any group that one mught wush to uoun an organu zatuon for fun and amusement or one for unspura tuonal guidance may be found at Gurls Hugh The song of our halcyon hugh school days us over and each of us has delughtful memorues of ut to take with her to soar to the fullest measure of success as our patterns of rhythm stretch unto a broader space of lufe . have experienced before. The basic score is played bowling, and tennis have brought worthwhile pleas- THE FACULTY XKX -.M Q-J H E FACULTY zrjufuullffl M Assocuatuon un school wuth one s teachers us a mel ody to be remembered Our unstructors the guudung tempo of our luves urge us unto hugher keys they want to see each gurl reach the topmost notes wuth ease and they want our well rounded patterns of rhythm to move smoothly along wuth each desugn perfect un utself We are led by our conductors to work well together un every melody to produce notes of harmony Whule our teachers gave us unvaluable measures of unspuratuon un class and we learn to love and appre crate them there the refraun that lungers un our mem sonal conferences that we have wuth them ln the afternoons when work at school us completed for the day we may seek advuce and know that ut wull be thoughtfully guven These conferences are unflec tuons un the strauns of school days that we enjoy now and wull apprccuate un retrospect To make our school lufe have a more pleasurable meter many of our teachers guve up theur tume to sponsor outsude actuvutues Some take a club that us on the same putch as the subject they teach and through organuzatuons of thus type we have greater fellowshup wuth our teachers and gaun more knowl edge from them Varuous other socuetues have brought about contacts between students and teachers that are bars of a delughtful rhythm that wull be remem bered always by each gurl All these actuvutues are meloduous untermezzos un whuch everyone has worked and cooperated The chords of our freshman year were played wuth esteem for our teachers but we were somewhat tumud then and let assocuatuon end un the classroom Through the song of our junuor year we became bet ter fruends because we had known our teachers longer In our senuor year after three years of unspura tuon and guudance the chords of admuratuon and the strauns of amuty have become a rhythm enluvened by love and devotuon We are regretful that we must part from th s fruends of ours for companuonshup wuth them us a pruvulege we do not want to lose Our leaders have furnushed measures wrutten un joyful tempos that have enruched our luves We take wuth us memorues un our munds and hearts there rungs the melody of theur unfluence 'f 9' 7 . . . . ,' . . . - ' I i 1 I I , , . . . I , , . . , . I I - . . I . . . - j ories and makes our friends dearer to us is the per- , c I - U . . I - Y I I . . . . . . , 3 3 I u Q I I n T ' . T ' : I -l MATHEMATICS -Mt The mathematics department makes the girls aware of the development of form that is beautiful because of regularity. After studying geometry, we are able to see the lovely designs of the snow flakes and appreciate the individual symmetry of each one. Because of our natural love of form we enjoy making graphs which in themselves are pleasing patterns to the eye. In mathematics we learn how to think more clearly,. and we gain a certain satisfaction found in no other subject by successfully solving a difficult problem. Just as in our classroom we struggle with and over- come each mathematical example, in the same way later in life by facing problems and mastering them we restore the harmony which has been lost. The study of mathematics furnishes us with the knowledge of this subject which is necessary for everyday living. The home budgets, income tax, and investments require our knowing some mathematics to handle them intelligently. If one plans to go to college, she must take this subject which is not only important because of its own value, but also supple- ments other courses. I. Mrs. Stephens demonstrates a difficult problem to her geometry class. 2. Miss Patton helps Elsa O'Callaghan with her work in the bank. 3. Miss Claflin uses her spare time to sponsor the A.W.V.S. with Miss Davis, who is a teacher of English. Head of Department l Patton Sue E. Claflin i K kv-'FAX Elma Witcher Martha Barnes Lenora Stephens Myrtice Lynch Head of Department La Verne Garrett Elizabeth Wellington Susan Leonard Gladys Proctor SCIENCE We pursue the intricate theme of science with a basic harmony of mathematics to be able to have complete command and intelligent use of our sub- ject. The science department strikes a major chord in our composition of subjects. This study of life opens our minds to the beauties of nature and the harmony in composition which we should try to bring into our lives. We are made aware of the importance of the smallest particle to complete a pattern or preserve a balance in the world of science. In this study we find that the lack of one substance will spoil a compound as one wrong note will ruin an entire composition. .lust as the planets proclaim their celestial music as they perform their essential tasks, we in our orbit of school life sing a smaller but still important song of our own. Our science classes reach their climax during laboratory experiments which awaken our senses as some new melody which we hear for the first time. In human biology we are al- ways aware of some form of rhythmic movement such as the even in-and-out of breathing or the beat of the pulse. Annie Sue Brown Venetia Cook I. Miss Garrett supervises Lucile Griser as she writes an experiment. 2. Sara McClam, Sarinthia How- ell, Virginia Wolfe watch a reaction while Mrs. Brown explains the results. 3. Absorbed in their work, Mar- tha Wiley and Miss Leonard work with a microscope. ENGLISH I. Miss Gregg plays records of Macbeth to her lit- erature three class. 2. Betty Cohen fills her pen dur- ing an English test in Miss Fulton's room. 3. In addi- tion to helping with graduation speeches, part of the program of the English department is to checlr the dressesg Mrs. Taylor loolcs at Elizabeth Cagle's dress while Dorothy Ann Griffin and June Vaughan wait their turn. Head of Department ...Eg Emma Gregg M Margaret Ridley Sarah Fulton Catherine Parlcer To be able to express the music of the universe or the uplifted feelings in men's souls would be impos- sible if languages did not exist. We use our own in- herited language of English to give vent to this feel- ing in our hearts. The most beautiful expressions known to man are found in this language, and if we did not study it, there would always be an empti- ness in our hearts. We loolc back fondly on our freshman year when we studied the refrains of As You Lilce lt and Silas Marner. We first noticed then the lilting quality of the early lyrics and ballads which so easily gave itself to song. However, one does not have to sing poetry to appreciate the beauty of expression that the poet has given to his thoughts. A poem lilre To a Skylark by Shelley remains with one always and recalls itself lilce a forgotten melody which one happens to rememberi As juniors we learn to appreciate various types of good literature. Our taste develops, and we mature to a more intelligent selection of what we read. When we reach senior English, we attain the climax of our melody. ln composition we reach a crescendo Maude Bolton Alice Gibson Kate Poole Mabel Neal Hunter when Miss Gregg or one of the other teachers of this course helps us with our radio play. We worl: hard on this composition, and when we are through we feel we have this refrain to be proud L01-IlS2 M6'Cl12WSOf1 of. ln senior litera- ture we fondly re- member the days we spent reading Macbeth. With Miss Fulton's guidance we sang together this pleasant chorus. Not only do we learn to enjoy the way someone else has expressed himself, but we learn to put our own thoughts down on paper. At first we write halt- ingly, but we enjoy our early compositions which we try to improve. Gradually, we learn more about life and about ourselves. As our knowledge increases, so does our slrill until we gain a love of the poetry of words and a beauty of expression which lifts our hearts to undreamed of heights. I. By conferences with her students, Mrs. Poole is able he help her classes improve in composition. 2. Miss Culpepper and Miss Mathewson help perfect the voices of Miriam, Sue, Frances, Sara Jean, and Jean in preparation for a radio play. 3. New plans for the newspaper have to be made, and here the staff is ably assisted by their adviser, Miss Parker. - .i..l.... -1 ..l.. .- I. Miss Woolf, with Minnewil Storey, Marjorie Mar- tin, and Edith Stallings, notes this changing world. 2. Cecile Lovelace points to the places on the map, and Sylvia Brodkin takes note in one of Miss Carpen- ter's history classes. 3. Mrs. Taylor collects home- work from her European history class- Are all the papers in? 4. Marion Yancey and Dorothy What- ley discuss the latest world happenings with Miss Culpepper. By studying the different interludes of social science we blend a deeper harmony into our song. We get a better understanding of the composition of the world and become more intelligent in facing many everyday problems. In American history we learn the theme of our melody by studying the ideals of our forefathers. We understand and learn to love the memory of all the great men and the ideals they stood for. Today we can understand better why men died for Ameri- can freedom. Not only in American history, but also in political problems do we study the tempo of American gov- ernment. We hear this well-timed beat more clearly after we study it in detail. ln economic problems our minds turn to the necessary measure of the growth of business, labor, and like problems of the United States. We are better able to understand working conditions by pursuing social problems. of Department 65 Ethel Woolf Myrtle Rushin s i Barbara Chandler Claudius Taylor S In social problems we study American society, indi- vidual and public health, character, education and kindred subjects. These problem courses prepare us to go into the world, live there intelligently, and sing a harmonious song ot life. We must not only study the history ot America, we must join in the retrains ot the past and the songs of the old world. European history begins with an Egyptian chant and ends with the cry ot the Roman soothsayer. In European history ltwol one first hears the pluck of a medieval minstrel's mandalin and the melody dies out with a choral group sere- nading some English king. When we begin European history lthreel our spirits are roused by the trumpet calls before the Bastille in France, and we leave this course by the beat ot the drummer accompanying Napoleon at Water- loo, and we finish European lfourl in a modern tempo. This study ot the past and present helps us to spend many pleasant hours singing the melody of social science after we have been graduated. Louise Whelchel Mae Culpepper Bertha Carpenter OCIAL SCIENCE I. Miss Rushin straightens her desk after a play pre- sented by her class. 2. Miss Chandler smiles approv- ingly at a radio program given by her class. 3. Mrs. Whelchel's American history ltwol class relive their history at a George Washington Birthday party. 4. Miss Woolt, student government's faculty adviser, discusses plans for the dental drive with Conradine Fraser. FRENCH When we study French, another beautitul chord is added to our melody. By increasing our knowledge ot languages we gain another medium in which to compose our songs. At the beginning of our study we do not under- stand all the meanings ot the French words, but we are enchanted with the sound of this delightful tongue. This attraction makes us eager to pursue our study further until we too can talk and understand French. As we read different French writers we enjoy the varying themes that each one displays. Some attract us more than others, but in all we gain a lasting pleasure. The first book one reads in French is an unforgettable experience and is a climax in our melody. By writing poetry a pleasant cadence is added. Bars ot fun and excitement are given to our compo- sition when we work crossword puzzles in French, act in plays, or work on our newspaper. ln French as in the study ot any culture we add a richness to the melody of our lives and complete the composition ot our song. I. Miss Larendon discusses the day's lesson with Geraldine Bullard, Edith Stallings, Marinel Smith, and Minnewil Storey. 2. Mrs. Kimbrough enjoys the French Club program. 3. Miss Cockrell's French ltwol class invited Mrs. Kincaid's French lsixl class to the dinner table skit they put on. Patricia McManmon smiles as Beverly Neely asks, Voulez-vous un mor- ceau de la viande? Head of Department Caroline Larendon Ethel Cockrell Marguerite Kimbrough Marcia Kincaid Head of Department GN? 9: Lizzabel Saxon Lillian Dale Thomas I. Miriam Cooper as Father Anchises begs Aeneas lSara Jean Clarkj not to go to war, while Minnewil Storey and Martha Stevenson express their sorrow. 2. The wicked Sinon lMarinel Smithj bows before the king lEdna Chamblessj. 3. Miss Saxon, head of the Latin department, supervises a study. 4. The moon lHelen Knappj overlooks the scene in Pyramus and Thisbe. 5. The maids help to arm the king. LATIN3- To enrich the harmony of our song we add a pleasant interlude of Latin. With the varying chorus of Caesar, Ovid, Cicero, and Virgil we enlarge this important strain. Latin, our mother tongue, has influenced other languages in a large portion of the world. Over half of our own language of English is a variation on the theme of Latin. We shall always remember singing Gaudeamus lgitur and Christmas carols in our classes. When we become seniors the crescendo of our song is reading Virgil's Aenied, and the climaxing chord comes when we put on the Latin plays which were Aenied and Pyramus and Thisbe this year. Our knowledge increases from the time of our first year when we read Hercules in Mrs. Kincaid's freshman class. As juniors we enjoy Cicero and Ovid under the direction of Mrs. Jarvis Barnes and Miss Maude Bolton. lThese three teachers' pictures ap- pear in the book under another subject that they teach.j By studying Latin, we learn to like and ap- preciate all languages, their value to literature and their personal beauty, and we color our lives with this ancient culture which has lived through the years. MUSIC Everyday the halls of Girls High echo with the melo- dious tunes which drift down to us from the music hall. This accompaniment to our classes soothes our spirits and lifts our minds to a higher plane. Every- one looks forward to that time during the week when she, too, can take part in this never-ending composi- tion. Many songs which we sing here become a defi- nite part of our lives and linger on in our minds and hearts throughout life. Music which is the basis of all rhythm is the noblest expression of happiness that man has yet devised. Music goes hand-in-hand with our emotions, joys and sorrows: it is a great comfort to us at all times. Our school orchestra offers the students an op- portunity for individual improvement. Here under the supervision of Miss Edna Whitmore and Miss Marcia Weissgerber our ability and eagerness to learn grow until we are allowed to play and sing at our own graduation which is the highest note in our orchestral scale. Q, sf! l. The tempo of the orchestra is set by Josephine Perryman. 2. Hands on the lceys of music. 3. Music by the Glee Club enthralls new freshmen. 4. The cello shows its worth when played by Evelyn Tribble. 5. Elsa O'Callaghan and Alice Crowe are taught the art of music by Miss Whitmore. 6. Billie Lassiter blows in here, and the music goes 'round and 'round. 6- . g .. 5 Edna Whitmore Marcia Weissgerber Head of Music Dept. Director of Orchestra PHYSICAL EDUCATION Gertrude Cadwell Maude Parry Head of Department Athletic Association I. These talented girls show the technique of modern dancing in an assembly. 2. A knee-holding exercise will improve the posture of these students of Miss CadweII's posture classes. 3. Physical education classes find a new use for weighty volumes. 4. 'A Woman's Work' is never done , but Sue Reese seems happy in spite of that fact. By developing our bodies in the physical education department we acquire grace and poise. These two inflections help to give a student a more pleasing refrain. We are judged by the way we look and act, and if we sound a discordant note, we do not leave a favorable impression. A well-developed body moving with ease and grace is beautiful and rhythmic. A girl with these characteristics brings joy and hap- piness wherever she goes. As long as we practice fair play in our games, we will at the same time be developing clean minds. The harmony and coordination that we display here is carried into our future lives and makes us easier to get along with and more cooperative with our fel- low workers. By the various tempos of basketball, volley ball, archery, ping-pong, and tennis we finally develop the melodious harmony of well-balanced exercise. When our interest in sports accelerates, we are able to take an active part in intra-mural contests and compete for the championship. There is no thrill so exciting as scoring a point for our teams. Every student takes part in these gym classes, and as we play, our hearts are filled with the music of our hap- piness. R. To develop our aesthetic personality we add the beautiful strain of art. In this department we de- velop individual tastes and preferences. Whether we choose an old refrain in the classic school or the new melody of modern art, we gain a love of the beautiful which is necessary to complete our knowl- edge and to satisfy our souls. In Girls High we believe that art is for all, and Miss Katherine Comfort as head of the department emphasizes this fact in all the courses. Some girls study leathercraft under Miss Annie L. Liggin while others choose a different theme in art work such as costume designing, interior design, modeling, draw- ing and painting, or art appreciation. lPictures of Miss Liggin and Miss Comfort are not in the bookl. We learn the advantages of shading to cause a harmony of color tones. By grouping the various colors or using brilliant or pastel shades we are able to create lasting impressions and vivid pictures. After studying art we hope that our lives at Girls High will have the design and graceful coloring to create a lasting harmonious pattern. I. Mary Poole and Frances Miles pack the kiln with their pottery for a final baking. 2. When finishing touches are needed, Carolyn Davis can easily add them to the graceful figure that she is making. 3. Miss Kluttz shows an interested student the correct way to weave her mat of vari-colored hues. 4. It's hard to believe, but in the art classes rugs, mats, and pocketbooks are made from toweling and yarn. l May Kluttz '51 ,' 4 ' V 1 . Q ,iz , A - Q W , 4 4 ar F if 2'-.ss g,- 3, ,,u,...a.--I-4 '--.I 143 . 5 D 1 few E 4 Rh j D r'?Q, Q ,Q we ww A J: V fa 2 X. f Q VM, I .Mix COMMERCIAL The meter in which the rhythm of the commercial department flows is composed of balance and repe- tition. From the regular mechanical action of typing and the movement of making characters in short- hand to the balance of the figures in bookkeeping, there is a harmonious cadence that is completed by the guidance of our teachers. The classes that are led by Mrs. McElheny, Miss Nell Booth, and Miss Theresa Haack lpictures of Miss Booth and Miss Haack do not appear herel are de- lightful tunes for those of us who take part in them. Working after school to finish budgets in typing or to attain speed in shorthand are inflections of fun for all. The subjects we take from these teachers are in joyful tempos. We find our instructors always ready to help us with a difficult note in our work. We ex- perience much enjoyment in learning each of the tiny details in the work, for we are capably directed through these measures of studies. The commercial subjects that we take are melo- dies that shall be useful in every score of our lives, and we are happy that, if we wish, we can begin singing them now. I. Mrs. Anne Dye McElheny, head of the commer- cial department, watches Mary Katherine Prickett as she types in class. 2. One of the typing classes practices under Mrs. McElheny's supervision to in- crease speed and accuracy. 3. Evelyn Knight takes the part of the banker in her bookkeeping class and acts as a teller to receive Violett Pilgrim's deposit. 4. Violet Shearwood listens to the ediphone while she transcribes on the typewriter. Anne Dye McElheny Head of Department GFFICE LIBRARY CLINIC - Hortense Jenkins Nurse Janie Beall McClure Sara Milner Librarian Secretary In the Girls High office our melody flows into a har- monious pattern. Under the supervision ot Miss Sara Milner Iassisted by Miss Mary Louise Dobbsl our school runs smoothly and efficiently. Another bar ot our lite at school that adds an enchanting interlude is the library. We shall long remember the lasting patience and helpfulness ot Miss Janie Beall McClure who has guided our read- ing into more enjoyable retrains. Whenever our harmony is interrupted by a discord ot ill health or a cut finger, we are directed back on pitch by Mrs. Jenkins in the clinic. Her sympathy and understanding are welcomed by all the students. Every senior greatly appreciates the clinic and the other branches of Girls High that are outside ot our classes, and we shall always remember the warmth they have added to our schooI's rhythm. I. Miss Jeter and Mrs. Jenkins discuss the possibility ot a dental holiday. 2. Miss Milner makes a final re- port at the end ot the day. 3. A library full ot books -all ot which Miss McClure has to catalogue. 4. A sure sign of spring is the visit of the dentist from the Atlanta Health Department. Ai., l f I WHEN WINTER COMES ' .ff . vgw 1, 4 9, ,gf 'fa' -A aw' as 'Wx . -aw, .1 As X K dlix 3 4' AQ ,k. ,if-fx, THE SENIORS A 'Q IT ALL COMES BACK TO ME NOW SENIORS s11'U ' Our senuor year wuth all uts unterestung refrauns has been the most delughtful of our school lufe Meas ures of enjoyment have come from lustenung to ex cutung scores that play only for senuors and bars of glory have sounded for us Gurls Hugh s class of l942 From the day we furst came to Gurls Hugh as senuors joyful harmonues have played unceasungly for each of us We knew that long looked forward to pleasures and honors awauted us un the followung movements we knew also that an even cadence of work and fun would brung these rhythms to us lt was not hard to fund words to typufy our lufe at Gurls Hugh for we had but to look out the wundow and see our fountaun un the front yard to recall the words of Keats An endless fountaun of ummortal drunk The furst and probably the most gratufyung feel ung of promunence came the day we greeted our freshmen susters They made us feel umportant by theur questuonung and evudent admuratuon We were elevated to hugher keys and forgot that only two short years before we had been un theur places The scale of our freshman year was dotted by beats of awe for the senuors we felt that beung one of them would be the hughest key un whuch we could set our notes The next year when we were able to reach a hugher putch we regarded the upper class men wuth apprecuatuon more than wuth awe because they had accomplushed what seemed so dear to us We have reached our last year at Gurls Hugh and fund mungled wuth chords of joy short bars of sor row for although we have found the pleasure of beung senuors all that we had expected we regret to end our song and leave our beloved school Thus year has been fulled wuth the happuest melo dues of our luves and has offered more delughtful EJufFJjFfl tunes than any before We have learned that the dugnufued senuor of whom we have always heard us not a mere phrase but a realuty sunce a senuor must putch her rhythms so that the junuors and fresh men wull know un what key they should play when they are senuors The Chrustmas pageant may always be enjoyed by junuors and freshmen but ut was an unterlude un whuch strauns of great delught played for the senuors As a prelude to thus unflectuon senuors dressed dolls to guve to the luttle chuldren whom they took to the of the boys and gurls as they saw the lovely presen tatuon of Chrustmas un Merrue England gave a joy ful tempo Another tune of great delught was the clumax of our year the senuor play for ut was the beat that each gurl had antucupated from the very furst week of her Gurls Hugh lufe lt was the crescendo un whuch the senuors were at the heught of theur glory The splendor of thus year has been composed of scores for the senuors alone but other meters have furnushed brulluant harmonues for the enture school Clubs assemblues contests all have been refrauns that helped make an accelerated tempo Through the whole year a fanfare has played for us and the scale has been fulled wuth happuness Reachung the end of our senuor year means that we are facung a new measure of our luves that wull have rucher tones because of the experuences we have gauned at Gurls Hugh Although each gurl s notes may be set on dufferent keys we may always turn back un our memorues and luve agaun the melodues of fun and fellowshup that we have sung together s U: D 4-3. .'AV gg Q ' u . I . . . . . I D . . - ,, . . . . ,, . . . - . I . I . . I . . . - I . . . I . . . U - I - i . . I . . . ' I - - pageant. The pleasure and appreciation in the faces I uu - - - Il ' ' ' ' ' , I - . . . . I . I . : ' ' , . I I . I - . I ' . I . I . . . I - , , I I I H . . ' ' I n 1 u . n I ' I bhrlofff qw? H ' 1 HU .,'pl 131 - X, vi' Y 'T 11 Kathleen Andrew Bettie Andrews Gloria Nell Andrews ,J db' 'S' J get Cl tank -mt ijmi . K 4 ! X . Virginia Andrews Sarah Kate Arendell Sarah Asbell . 6 .E sf 0 -f Laura Asher Anne Atkinson Ti.. I -8- fl ll .- La Verne Awtrey Dorothy Ayers Miriam Bazemore Jean Barber Jane Barnes Virginia Barrett a L! 1 3,ff,i7ll,c5- 'fflhfjil -' i Bettie Bailey Sarah Banlcs Hilda Bankston L-fuvfufvwbl We +Q1JLfAf0'N mg Ellen Beacham --A aw ,fir CDU: E+ l-' Am l'QAkl DR, Elzine Beckwith Helen Belcher -V- ll? QI 3 7 Gloria Bell 'ii 6 Martha Belle I N. 1 Mae Bensley Dorothy Benson Barbara Jean Benton Www Hazel Benton Florrie Jeanne Bishop Dorothy Black Virginia Black Mildred Blooclworth UL!! Dowxwf 1'Pf,fr LL! Lff,b1,l ,L l ,uf ,f Le, V. J I L! DJ! ki .X N, I M lfim-wma t wal arm- NZ1 X -.,g.. M72 'f' Y X: -V777 ,M-i 'I M , 4f'f,-,ff i 4 fag f if QE our E f ,W P , ,. I , - U he fi - ii Mary Margaret Blue Elise Boorstin 1 y T'v-' '1 K Dorothy Bouiineau ' Irma Bressler Jeanie Brineman Dot Brintley Barbara Britton Betty Lou Bromley Mary Brooks Betty Brown Charlotte Brown Joyce Brown Louise Bryan Kathryn Burnett Lucy Burns Gloria Busby , Y! l-'V WV? di .w ff' Hester Caffey Charlotte Callaway Louise Callaway ML L 'ML QD' ii' I' ,..-xx Mary Callaway Kathryn Cameron Camp W '- 'wid ,.2V,4fCf0ff'i Virginia Camp Velmalw Cannon Lucy Cantrell 5 it 1 W at Gayelle Carby Mary Frances Carroll Mildred Carroll Carolyn Carson Martha Carter Virginia Carter Z: . Margaret Case Pauline Cassele Janette Castleberry .lo ww., MTH' lfrii J wga, Q, MP7 ' QV, fvf-4.4 rrL T 5 TI 1..,. ,. L-. M, Beity Cavaleri Emily Caviness Lila Chajage Eclna Chambless f..J' l4---A- XX X I f rj mb-W g X X - ll-77 --4,--4,-.ax 53 R I 'F' X fl, l , Q f X I . Mary Frances Chandler Jane Chapman Ann Chatman Louise Chester Pattie Chipman Pauline Chipman 6 dnt Yinnufm ttrm L1 mob gl tx ' 7 .. D M .xr lx xl' fx : I I i-f-A-a ,sg X l , f X x XT, .cg-.5 'lui' I Sara Jean Clark Florence Clements Hilda Clemons Martha Clift l V Fvl i A , , K, Eleanor Coats Louise Cobb Martha Coggins Miriam Cooper Martha Couch Eleanor Cox :-4 wr if-..:i , J 1 yy -+94 il J ' ,D r as .Q 'Q - AHA gli X D- Betty Crites Betty Mae Crumbley Evelyn Cruze Dorothy Cunningham Betty Dailey Annie Mae Daniell Carolyn Davis Jacquelyn Davis Margaret Anne Davis Mary Frances Davis Margaret Dorsey Frances Doss Gwendolyn Doss Virginia Douglas Kathryn Dozier Norma Echols Ruby Dawes Mary Helen Dickson Jane Dobbs Mary Frances Doclys ggixg if. Beverly Diehl Ellen Donald 9 dp-uv-fr 1 , , rf! M ffl 1 ,lf N K Elizabeth Edmondson Leila Edwards Patricia Edwards Evelyn Ellcon Pat Elliott Anne Ellison xx if if gi Virginia Echols Betty Edge Marilyn Edmonds IVA x ffl, .btxoifiniwxl liJ'1-tad bl 517i 77 E Charlotte Elrod Mary Mell Fleming Marion Forbes Frances Ford JYxim Uv WU TJ' if S, ml Qw- wf. ggi Jane Fuller Conradine Fraser Bettie Freeman Gertrude Freeman Nell Freeman Eleanor Sue Fryer Mffjf Jmwew ,RG rv Y' Martha Fuller June Garner Nora Gazaway Bayne Gibson Joyce Gilleland Josie Gillentine U Janet Glass Miriam Glick Anne Furr Jeane Fufrai Evelyn Garber Dont Betty Glutlw Mildred Golden Barbara Graf Martl'1alGrayson Betty Greenbaum Miriam Greenberg Willene Greeson Dorothy Ann Griffin Lorraine Griffin qv' w,0l Linda Griffith Lucille Griser Elaine Gruber B .. , 'V' K .xr -at-10:0 U ,.ll. 'tl-1of- V . wir-1 In - uv ii JEYB il: 'l'6'+PlE mummy U .iL..i-.. E'i - 1 if '1'-1 X Eff, A .Q fw' l Harriet Hargrove Ruth Harvey QD Z ,M Elsie Hammond Cora Lou Haralson A uf YJ f' fp 3 Njffv . , Mildred Harris J. ,, Beth Hart Helen Hart Alice Haskins Vip Peggy Head Nina Ruth Held Wilbur Henderson Virginia Herbert Phyllis Lee t xfllr ....-1 Xfalli. iii! tariff, Mildred Herzog Jean Elizabeth Hester Nita Hewell Ili Marion Hill Dorothy Holder Mary Elizabeth Hornbuclrle V Doris Horton Miriam Hough Sarinthia Howell Dorothy Jarrell Mary Kate Jenkins Dorothy Jenks Betty Huckeby Aileen Hull Betty Hunnicutt Janet Hurley Mary Lillian Hutchins Laura Irby Camille Jackson Martha Jackson Catherine Janoulis ,fx Anne Johnson Gwendolyn Johnson Drppy Dora Jonah Mary Betty Jones I I' 4 Grace Keisler Pam Kieffer Melva Knight Dot Kreider Hattie Kuniansky Edith Lancaster N3 xx? xlw. ,ll -l J lil W Sara Lance Rebecca Lanier Macie Lassiter Dorothy Lawrimore ' witjui Frances Lawson Mary D. Leavell Elizabeth Lee Jean Le Fevre Annette Letlcotf Nell Lettwiclw T e- N fkl r K1 , ,' I 'Q K f :x lj' .wp f 4 - y -L Q Cya. x 1 AV ' Jeanne Lemon X H+, xr . Q. Jr KK K v Kathryn Lester X A-fl L5 'Nyyll' LL ' r L K LK 'lf I, Margot Levy Vivian Lewis Jeanne Lindley Ruth Lindsey Ruby Frances Long Margaret Longshore Tw Martha Lindsey Alberta Loyd S. 'XY Christine Mathews Joyce Mathews Betty Mayo Sara McClam Marianna McCoy Betty McDaniel ' li Jeanne Lulcens Lucile Lyle Magdalene Madurog X Frances Malone Deane Mann Marjorie Martin lv W' 6- -3 ywfvifgf Mary McElroy Emma Lee McEwen Sarah McGarity Doroihy Meaders Frances Miles Eleanor Miller Mariha McDaniel Maurine McDougall Mary McDuFfie ' A 1 l f T 19 . 1-' ' 1 rg' lin, ,- .f . M ,V 5 ' x I 1 It ' P, rl X5 K, L V . . 1 ..- Q-L y, G3 r K ai qt . 0 HULUXAJ lm mul 'tmimf o.Qpv1-2,15 X QQ ST A gf gym Xi,- X Elizabefh Miller rf I . ,rf , I4 Mary Eunice O'Neal Kathryn Pattillo Joyce Patton 6 S Elsa O'Callaghan Katharine Ofallaghan June Olver ar Whypwayig eff -23521 J' mfwgf rf X Fay Pendley Mary Penland '5- oglau dcvd Know fx AT WORK! ow rnuclk Lion. can su.H,m, i: HALC VON STAFF is KX Anna Maude Perry Jeanne Pettay j if Piha f Violett Pilgrim Helen Poole Mary Poole Louise Price Frankie Puckett Jonnie Quidor Sarah Quigley Mary Jo Rainey Etlwelyn Ramey Emily Ransone Sue Reese Au,-mai UQNEQQQ s f, ,.,4. ,AA k,A.J..k, we-Q 1 1343- , ,mir 1515415 215' X, 'cf-1+ v Ljou emgii foffz, in plciwuxc U s I tl I V' 4 R f rNL+fi 'i 'f a 2 HR f ixk-jf hkkl- ' is 'XX Cfi ii ,X , a- a A Q is W : 1 RRR W I ! :Ill Xi if -.-15:-' f i i P ' A ' A Q ' X , X R li, it 2 Beulah Reeves Edna Reynolds '52 1 R 1- Q Virginia Rice Dorothy Rice Susan Richards Lois Roberts Doi Robinson Sue Robinson X Helena Roessler Doris Rogers Louise Roper Martha Roper Lillian Rosenberg Ellen Rosenblatt Regina Rosendort Mary Kathryn Ross Eleanor Rothenberg J MP. - ,LL :uo,.,Mwi5T,1 M C14-fgrvs-L.,4v,3 . '1,ixf'L iff If I lf -a Y Jean Rothstein Marjorie St. John Blanche Salmoncl f X 5 Ruth Shipley Nancy Showalter Florence Shrader fu- Vi 6- 1 wnfffc -'M W if yawn Abifff , irfwfj , f V1 ff ' Rose Samuel Annice Scott Jane Scott Ann Seitzinger Jane Sewell Esther Shafterman X , El: .WV of Peggy Shadburn Edythe Shartar Violet Shearwood 'YS ,fg A, 2 fl .Q A .ffjxxx . w- W j, X, -- -- ----- X, 1 ' lf li-3.0 Gig Bettie Shumate Mildred Shumate Anne Simmons Virginia Simmons if i W, I N11 !',L 1 w,i ,' l , Si Mary Singleton Esther Sloan Carol Smith Evelyn Smith Harriet Smith Helen Smith Tlljllft fn 5? ,2 43 WH Ll,-f'l 5 'lf ,bl rw la... J 'MY-1 Marinel Smith Antoinette Sowell Edith Stallings Martha Stevenson Minnewil Storey Gloria Stow Jerrie Strain Doris Street Ruth Stribling Evelyn Sudcluth .If J' ' A 'Aly Af K, f J x ir, T X Fa x Tt JZ 5 lg e rio T Dorothy Summer Louise Tanner 6 Marrlyn Tanner Betty Jane Tarrant Anne Tarrance Sylvua Tendrrch Jean Thebaut Charlotte Thomas Elrzabeth Thomas Sarah Thomas SW 6 I -4 Lourene Timmons Mary Catherine Timmons Mary Truitt Gwendolyn Tucker Jo Ann Tuggle Carol Turner Frances Turner Martha Vaughan Kathleen Wade X f I Juanita Waits lris Wallace Betty Weinschenlc 0 10 Lura Wellborn Miriam Whatley lrene Whited June Whitley Billye Whittemore Martha Ann Wiley Mary Wilkins Florence Williams Jane Williams l.y?wdJa, cmyh1m,'?' -mf' r f' .-1. -........-.4--Y Ovifv Kate Williams Rose Wynne Norma Zahler Necessary dauly etudes and pleasung refrauns have composed the maun part of our senuor year but we have found many notes of happuness un luttle bars that have not made up a basuc pattern of rhythm For every gurl un the senuor class thus year has been fulled wuth scores of unduvudual achuevement and en uoyment Each of us remembers tunes of everyday happenungs that were partucularly harmonuous the fun of rudung to town on a crowded nousy street car wuth one s best fruend the thrull of makung a good mark on a hard test the delught of knowung many unterestung people the eagerness of wautung for the last peruod bell on Fruday the warmth of fundung a new fruend the pleasure of funushung a duffucult puece Boyce Yarbrough Bette Zwucker Martha Young of work These joys have been the beats that have made our year somethung spe cual they have been the un flectuons that have guven a perfect cadence to the days and weeks and months that wull always be precuous to us Rhythms that are desugned N' wp? especually to guve pleasure to the senuors wull also be held un our memorues The senuor luncheon had a harmonuous tone that made each of us realuze the completeness of the measures of happuness that we have deruved from beung senuors We love Gurls Hugh and we are glad that we have had the wonderful opportunuty of spendung three years here under the guudance of our teachers who have become beloved fruends through the assocuatuon we have had wuth them un both classes and actuvutues There are certaun unspuratuons we have gauned that wull help us to be successful un whatever key we putch our luves We know that always when we hear the strauns of Auda we wull thrull wuth prude to know that ut us our own song just as much a part of us as the famul uar halls and rooms of our school Ever un our mund wull we take the melody of our hugh school song 5- X . X , u , K 0 bf ,, ,ff . . U IXV I 3,94 ' ff , , ' . . ' ' T '-552' . . . . 66 ONCE IN A WHILE RECOGNITION HONORS mlfnf-WJ M Ever sunce we began our Gurls Hugh melody all of us have looked forward to the tume when we would reach the hughest most excutung notes un our song From the very furst day we have worked for the greatest measure we could attaun that of beung graduated from Gurls Hugh School wuth the scale of our luves so well balanced that all of lufe wull ever be patterns of pleasant rhythms for us All along we have known that together we would sung the basuc score and that some of us would sung solos un the spotlight Perhaps every one of us has had a desure to take part un the cadence of the celebruty contest but those seven gurls who best portray our Girls Hugh udeals were the ones who were sungled out to rep resent the enture class The tempo of the occasuon un a regular tume and the votung that followed ut was an excutung score wuth the last note held untul the wunners were announced through the school paper Those of us who had composed the melodues of the school publucatuons the Gurls Hugh Tumes and the Halcyon have felt especually happy un wrutung our musuc Wrutung storues for the paper or funushung pages forthe yearbook has been scores of pleasure We have played gay tunes and seruous composutuons thus year and we have enjoyed each unflectuon un the harmony of our work One lovely sprung day we heard a fanfare and all the seniors crowded excutedly unto the musuc hall Notes of expectatuon and wonder floated through the aur for everyone wanted to know whuch gurls had done theur work un a perfect melody and achueved the wonderful score of Cum Laude The gurls who are now sungung the tones of thus unflectuon well de serve to because only through constant hard work and determunatuon can the honor be attauned Another honor cluffucult to reach us Quill and Scroll It us a melody played by the gurls un the school who have done outstandung work scholastucally as well as journalustucally Each gurl who was eluguble aspured to thus hugh note throughout her senuor year lt took uncessant work and study to wun thus unflec tuon and we are proud of those of our number who have meruted note un thus fashuon The heart of Girls Hugh us student government we elect for our lueutenants those gurls who are best suuted to be leaders to conduct the harmony of guudung our homeroom work From all of our repre sentatuves eught gurls are chosen to play the strauns works together wuth the presudents of student body and student government Each staff member us chaur man of one of the major commuttees that keep the rhythm of the school movung smoothly We delught un the way our school us governed by uts gurls and we are proud of the clear tones un whuch our school song us sung All these honors have sounded for the gurls un our class who have stepped forward to sung un mauor keys but each of us has receuved awards These awards are the fun we had un the refrauns of our work the delught we found un gaunung new knowl edge and the pruvulege we had un attendung Girls Hugh We all youn together now to make the last song of our hugh school days a resoundung one that wull echo in our ears forever remundung us of the hap puness we have had at Gurls Hugh -a 'f 'I 7 - 7 was delightful: the parade was a thrilling tune played of the work gf the Student gqvgrnmgnt Staff, which QUILL AND SCRCLL Each member of the staffs ot the Halcyon and High Times has enjoyed every bar in the strains ot these inflectionsg the rhythm has been the most pleasant score in all our school days. Some of us have stepped forward to the tune of an even more delightful meas- ure-Quill and Scroll, an international honor that is reached by students who sing well in both their studies and their work on the school publications. The tempo ot singing an honor that is aspired to by students all over the world is an exceedingly thrilling one. Our memories ot working on the school newspaper and yearbook will be enriched by the glorious melody of Quill and Scroll. Estelle Anderson Dorothy Boulineau Elizabeth Blair Kathryn Cameron Sara Jean Clark Mary Louise Cobb Evelyn Elkon Conradine Fraser Evelyn Garber W Q Harriet Hargrove Laura Perry .leanne Rochelle Anne Seitzinger Violet Shearwood Martha Stevenson CUM LAUDE Kathryn Cameron Sara Jean Clark Edna Chambless if fy MM, IW, ll if' l ff 1 jj , jak' If i I X V1 K J D f I i 1 X cf, 1 L L' fl ' .1 fm Miriam Cooper Jacquelyn Davis X ' V' Evelyn Ellcon W Evelyn Garber Harriet Hargrove Anne Johnson Joyce Mathews Martha McDaniel Marjorie Naab 4' ff?-N i j 7 4 yu p m x WITH HIGHEST PRAISE The highest pitched melody in our song is Cum Laude, a national refrain that is a symphony of achievement and advancement. Those of us who are graduated from Girls High with praise well de- serve to be able to sing that score with girls all over the nation who have gained the same high pitch. Through the years since I923, when the measure of Cum Laude was added to the Girls High rhythm, girls who best represent the spirit of our school have been invited to sing the final tune of our school days. In order to pitch our notes so that we will be well- rounded students, it has been necessary to balance the tempo of each day and put in many bars of study. We feel that in joining the harmony of Cum Laude we are perfecting the melody of our school days by attaining the most gratifying meter in the whole song. It is honor enough to be graduated from Girls High, but to step forward as the tempo quiclrens and sing a special refrain is an exceedingly thrilling chord. Each girl must worlc persistently to join the ranks of Cum Laude, but the reward for this work is an inflection that will ever be treasured. 51 Billi N I Marinel Smith 'S .352 'JJQUSL 915 a M My 9' . Slfgsgg,-y Edith Stallings Martha Stevenson Minnewil Storey Gloria Stow Jerrie Strain Dorothy Woodall 1, ,L - f THE GIRLS HIGH TIMES The girls on the High Times staff have sung a med- ley of great fun and hard work and have furnished notes of pleasure and entertainment for the entire school throughout the year. Keeping up with all the rhythms that would be of interest to the student 'jbody has been a difficult task, but one that has been ' armonious refrain. Painstakin I com osin stories about current h SY P 9 I I h appenings around the schoo , g adly spending muc y 117, time writing each headline, hurriedly filling up holes E ,fa I gr, V at the last minute, unceasingly looking for advertise- av! ments, joyfully going to the printers before each EVeIY ' Elton KatI'fY Cameron issue of the paper came out, and happily reading Edito, Associate Editor a finished copy, each girl on the staff has played JJ W MQW Sports Editor her part well in making the cadence for this year's Girls High Times splendidly well-balanced and de- lightfully successful. Because Girls High celebrated her seventieth birthday, the high note of the year for the paper was the anniversary issue. The girls spent many hours reading histories of the school and looking Dorothy Boulineau Business Manager Ann Seitzinger Feature Editor Estelle Anderson Jrvaiwwi -rely Aww, Q, Conradine Fraser News Editor Assistant Business Manager OUR NEWSPAPER through files of old copies to make the inflection of their work have the most enjoyable tempo possible. Although the pitch of the work on the anniversary issue was special, every other note was given an equal amount of attention. Each girl in the school is eager to congratulate the staff on the excellent way in which it has sung its melody. Conducted by Miss Catherine Parker, the rhythm moved smoothly because of the inspiration the girls received from their close contact with her. Her de- light in things lovely and her pleasure in things hu- morous endeared her to all the girls and made them realize the privilege that was theirs to work with her. Miss Sarah Fulton guided the business staff in a gay measure, giving efficient assistance in the scores of their work. Remembering the beats of friendship that will always be treasured and the bars of experience that will at all times be valuable, each member of the High Times staff can look back over happy days of fellowship and fun. Evelyn Garber Copy Editor Marilyn Altman Mary Louise Cobb Advertising Manager X s Elizabeth Blair Circulation Manager Laura Perry Exchange Manager Jeanne Lemon W Assistant Art Editor M Sara Jean Clark Jeanne Rochelle Literary Editor 73,40 ,Mu ,WJ Yywbw ,JM IME f4,Vj,4IvJ,Az:-1 .xf GVA0' .rad JA!!-A2 J 43 ' vL 4 al f J A uf 3' QL, -, Humor Editor 'fl 0? k1T i'w -Mx ,R As jr 'VS ' L 'if , , fs. 'W ' ' si .Z QW ,ft Zfffffz: .5 I OUR YEARBOCDK A passage in our melody was marked fortissimo- in relation to the friends we have made and the ex- periences we have gained through our work together on the Halcyon. Each member played her part in the music, and sometimes sang a solo, but always she was accompanied by the staff working together to make the supporting background. In unison as well as in solo, all our Halcyon harmony was di- rected by Mrs. Lewis Gibson and Miss Katherine Comfort, whose love for beauty pitched high the standard of our work and whose radiant personalities made lovely the tones of our song. The pleasure of our work together has blended with the difficulties which naturally arose to give a perfectscadence to the rhythm. The tramping on pavement to secure more advertisements-the scratching of pencils to compose our copy-the click of a camera to catch a typical scene-the crinkling of money to pay for subscriptions-and, as a finale, the roar of presses to print our book-these are the strains which will sound longest in the mind of each member of the Halcyon staff. Annie Perry Nowell Ellen Rosenblatt Make-up Editor Helen Poole Art Editor K Jacqueline Swatts Peggy Gregg Mary Clyde Chapman Freshman Member Junior Member Freshman Member Bayne Gibson Jerrie rain Senior Member Senior Member Marjorie Naab President ot Student Body VW' JJJ Junior Member b 4 When began to sing our song ot Girls Hug stu 4,4 dent government gave us the music lesson on how to pitch our work Through our entire melody student government has been the basic rhythm in school Student government is divided into committees each led by one of the staff members The tempo of homeroom work this year was guided by Bayne Gibson serving under her were Conradine Fraser Jane Murphy and Gwendolyn Johnson The traffic committee with Beverly Neely singing the leading score was carried by Harriett Smith and the other lieutenants working with her The cafeteria lme up committee consisted ot Frances Miles Lucy Burns Frances Turner and Mary Wilkins who tuned the notes ot this chord well Jane Meadows led the cate terra clean up committee and the rhythm ot her work and the work ot Mildred Harris and Miriam Cooper who helped her kept the cafeteria orderly and clean With Mary D Leavell at the head ot the STUDENT GOVERNMENT A W i F . 'X if y . . , K i - I Q ' , l . Q . f ,' ,I lr . ,,' . . . r W T J xy . . I - activities. I . : . . I , . I X N , V . . . . . Z . - I I I . I ' I I I Jane Meadows ffl' 1 ' - 4! J IJJ3, fsafv Mary D Leavell Senror Member Frances Turner Semor Member honor study committee the cadence was harmon lous Dot Krerder Betty McDamel and Dot Summer worked with her Martha Roberts was In charge of the art committee serving with Sara McClam Mar tha Couch and Elrzabeth Thomas Marlon Norrrs managed the recreation commnttee wuth Pat Elliott as her sensor helper sponsorung the mtlectrons that have furmshed dellght for us Through every measure of our school worlr stu dent government rs the major beat The pledge that the lleutenants talce to guvc thelr earnest and con screntlous support to students and 'Faculty IS truly organization .df Rs Dorothy Loeb Gwendolyn Tuclcer Pres of Student Government Wffffit Martha Roberts Beverly Neely .lunror Member Junior Member f Freshman Member Marlon Norris Freshman Member CUR DEMOCRACY . . ' . ' . . , . - V tl v y t ' i . x7 - it the meter in which they carry on the activitues of the '-M ' ' X S klfs 1 ' .. , 1 RN. LA , . at - , , J vf Marjorie Naab BODY AND SOUL 51,7 .,3 J A .yy f-,ri if .4 Q, -Q , AV1,A,'M1Q , U gf ar . . Arm dw'-WAVM-1f7Lu4-fqwkf Z1---7b L44 Z4-+.:'7.mc.,-z.,g f 4-'imaaif ll 951401511 , ,H-5,7 . img! 3 gif 5 - '.,w.'7 5' 4'Z.?! 4 I , -f U.. , ,I .I ' 5-Ihr '-- in ', in - Zu sy, 1-f ff: .ff 2 Evelyn Elkon SMARTY F 1. . JS., - .gf I K .f,2-.vi . ,R Z S S 3. X mx ' mtl' '5 .M -.X ,1 u 1 1 Jfrft o 9 Q .,- 4 L, ,lg fp EQ-, G' 14. viii V A W, M a-ll-J 1.2 A iff, L X R w-.1 .:,.,f, . ' ,' ' ' ' Kin: 1y'i'ff4':, 'f-2152314 A Q ,yzzbzkg-' .fig :ffm 131 4325.4 L, 1 Q f .-,W M, eaa irziwi' ,f ,vfgfr5,sm,, ,ff1a533,w -2.5, f-1+???f2'fffg f 74241. ' 133942-f . f, ffl, 1 wmwf-, ,fy x ' F f, - Wifi: 'ffm ' ,M yfffgq gg Qgfaggf. I 'QA 'Sify 1 ' 15?-uf xl? I rr , wi xi? wifi, s-ffia ,ii g., f f'f.f2b1'i :, ffgJ1UJ,r-W' J 35? ifpifu 5:.Q1. 41?'f.f ' iv ' N fig 1 -1 ,::..'r'w .55 'gf , ' U. 'xfs-33 ' 3fvg1?,.if'Yf4'E4Qr'f3 , 1 4,1 lf- Fai ' if M' 51 ,eff Frances Turner MY BUDDY Yi W ggawvf .Q 271,-.ALJ V, Wea, 1 ,Aww 3.4 74.2-44-412 cn, f 1 G EASY TO LOVE W ff fqM,ff,,,WWfW fifw 3 M' ,I 'Z Q! h 51 I fl Q15 , . N f Q, ,a sf-1 if X ACTIVITIES jf ffwfdxgg Z X A ,Z WHY DON T WE DO THIS MORE OFTEN? ACTIVITIES NWN J fluff JW? Each actuvuty at Gurls Hugh us a movement un our sym phony and un uts own way creates unterest through out the school Many events that take place every year at Gurls Hugh have become tradutuons they are eagerly awauted because the fruendly competutuon that us aroused among the freshmen junuors and senuors tends to make the attractuons excutung Every club has uts characterustuc counts and the combuned rhythms of all the actuvutues make up an umportant score un our Gurls Hugh song Most of the work of the athletuc assocuatuon us un terludes that everyone may enjoy The gurls sponsor the bowlung tennus and pung pong matches and hold the volleyball and basketball tournaments whuch are notes that furnush fun and competutuon Occasuonally fund measures of amusement and fellowshup un varu ous other scales The actuvutues of the Gurls Hugh Players Club are also sources of delught for the whole school Every gurl would luke to see her class numerals paunted on the crow after the yearly contest for although most of us can sung no better than the luttle black burd ut us fun to try to hut hugher putches than the other classes The crescendo of the year us the senuor play uts tempo us thrullung for us and for our relatuves and fruends Other thrullung tempos are the meloduous com panuonshup and pleasure that many gurls fund un the refraun of classroom melodues the chemustry French home economucs orchestra and glee clubs The glee club and orchestra are recognuzed as the fore most rhythms because theur work us a medley of chords bars and measures We are proud of the splendud work they have done and apprecuate the tumes when they have entertauned us wuth lovely musuc In the other refrauns unterestunq and unvutung keys have led the gurls to uncrease theur knowledge of language sewung cookung and practucal chem ustry Strauns of other practucal knowledges are heard un several clubs The photography club has noted the varued melodues of takung and developung bet ter puctures The members of the raduo club set theur bars on a scale to umprove theur vouces by makung speeches on the Unuted States relatuons wuth South Amerucan countrues because they felt that they could accomplush two thungs un thus way The gurls un the Muracle Book Club accomplushed much because the putch of the club was durected on the study of the Buble and from such an etude the members gaun unspuratuon and guudance The Tru Hu Y wuth thus unflectuon were varuous other beats A gay score was the enjoyment the gurls receuved from doung welfare work durung the Thanksguvung and Chrustmas seasons Addutuonal rhythms of delught were banquets pucnucs and conventuons Gurls Hugh branches of the Red Cross and A W V S were major rhythms because of the umportance of theur actuvutues The Red Cross stumulated un each student a desure to do as much as she could for na tuonal defense bv such unflectuons as knuttung sweaters and squares and savung tubes and tunfoul The tempo of the A W V S us sumular for one funds the mem bers knuttung and takung such courses as furst aud and home nursung that wull be useful to them un cuvuluan defense Every unflectuon that breaks unto the dauly studues has a meter that us swuft and deluchtful to each gurl who sungs ut These actuvutues are worth whule refrauns that furnush the opportunuty to have fun wuth one s fruends and to umprove oneself un enjoyable keys I H1-LQ p I the girls go on breakfast hikes and weiner roasts and likewise, devoted Ilme fo Bible 5tUdYu buf mingled xi if S 5 4 5 X X is xx 'e . 1 wif S Q P 4 S , ,Lfjkt y I X4 if-Q 3? if Lg? 111 1 .K ,Y ff '12 Ti .Nl ill 3 . 5 2. ,Z 34,17 iw? ,1 'I Pk, ' t M D B' -1 ,,.. A' ' Q f, - ' , . 2, v ' fs 1: M sw 1 ,z l 1 an ,1 af 'M fl ' 2 M, gf-1f?i2f?f5a Ww ' 106 'sy airf- i 'ff 0 if X 'W ,f 1 ., 4' 1 4 . -gff I A I I ,, , 2? :'A, , 1 I 5. AL nm f 4.15 ff a '12 Vx. Q , ' w. ' x 9 ,sk 'X N , L M Q4 .32 was 'Q xx. 6 Es be Y fu Y. L 'Z-fig 'V x -f-ti 'Jr ,L ,mfstx ! v It --47 TS Q ,pr - 'r 'J 1.1, ,-3:-'V if 5.1 va T -' ff . s fr, f-, - - 1 V - N., '54 W 'A 1 'sa'-4 -r H Q J., ,V Q , nf' ' , . in rw-N. ' A' l .. F' a 1 ,, 4 . M It 0 9 XM K J JK 'fs l x! A 'S xv ' A RADIO CLUB BANK I. Members of the radio club present a slcit to intro- duce their club to the freshmen. 2. Allen Parlcs ex- plains the recording machine to members ot the cast ot Who Done lt? 3. Louise Newson and Frances Klotz present a program on U. S. bases in the Carri- bean to the Radio Club. 4. Performing their duties in the bank, are Margaret Gillespie and Carolyn Wil- burn. 5. Sue Reese sets the needle on the recording machine: author, Jeanne Rochelle, stands by. 6. Who Done lt? goes on the air with Sue, Weyman Gibson, and Ann Seitzinger at the microphone. 7. Courtney Sims and Betsy Blumberg tally the day's bank totals. I. Georgia Tech tencers demonstrate en garde. 2. Star-gazing at Larry lBusterl Crabbe! 3. Seniors and freshmen trolic together. 4. Marjorie Naab pre- sides at an assembly. 5. Cute contestants line up for finals. 6. Dignified seniors dance tor freshmen. 7. Pat Waller delights the audience with her accor- dian. ASSEMBLIES r A -k'f.r ,l r , E Y. '- ' Q IMI 'mf , .n Wy- r 1 1 gwifj- ,,gAs,.:, J .kv Q 59,2 QTL 2 if-r 1+ ' 5 7 1 - 4 - -- ' gif 5 .W. '., -0,., 32 ' , 2 ,Q I AL. .5 Q ' F 1 Q . Q W 4, W3 Q: Q t if ' .5 Q . - K ff: . h .qw I 5.1 A Q K 4 ,x I Ti vft' .5. 5 ' X 5 x I h' f X - I I , ,41- 2 . V rev? ' KAY' 5 fs-an-Q :f?'liv-su.. f..f . A Q 4 f G. H.A. A. The Girls High Athletic Association's activities filled the school with the cadences ot happiness and tel- lowship that gave pleasure and relaxation to the members. The high notes ot the meetings, that were held twice each month, were speakers, games and discussions. On almost every day the club sponsored sports that struck chords of tun: ping-pong, tennis, volleyball, archery, hiking, and basketball. Most of these rhythms were played tor everyone in the school as well as for the girls in the club. The seniors who have sung this interlude are: Estelle Anderson, Laura I. We're proud ot you, Beverly, for your G, which is the highest award that the Athletic Association gives. 2. Up at six tor the breakfast hike at North Fulton Park. 3. Mr. Danforth tells us how the Grecian women compared with us in athletics. 4.Dot and Katharine, the winners, seem very intent on their game. Wonder where the ball is? 5. Beth pours the punch for her fellow athletes and Mrs. Parry. Asher, Lucy Cantrell, Beverly Diehl, Bayne Gibson, Beth Hart, Dot Kreider, Jeanne Lemon, Annie Perry Nowell, Elsa O'Callaghan, Katharine O'Callaghan, Ellen Rosenblatt, Ann Seitzinger, Doris Street, Frances Turner, and Jane Williams. ,ff XZ CHEMISTRY CLUB PHOTCDGRAPHY C L U B Jitsu 7-og NIH I Members of the photography club gather on the school yard to practice therr art 2 Everything s In tocus for the photography club 3 Who doesnt have one7 Bette Zwrclcer grves out name tags to members of the chemistry club at the joint meetmg wrth the Tech Hr Club. 4 Atter the meetmg Bette, at the punch bowl, as assusted by Sara Jean Clark and Sarah Ralcestraw. 5 The program over, the boys and gurls mrngle together and enjoy refreshments. I. Monsieur Harlepp's tall: to the club was full ot hope tor the rebirth ot his country, France. 2. Edith Stallings, Martha Stevenson, and Virginia Worrell lead the French club in singing Christmas carols. 3. Mrs. Kimbrough's French tour class presented the program at the March meeting. Betty Ramsey ex- plained and demonstrated the ballet. 4. Sauras tu passer de ri de ri de ra, Sauras tu passer ceci se sont trompes, sing the girls playing a game at a meet- ing. 5. Learning the words to a French song are Jeanne Rochelle, Bette Zwiclcer, and Kathryn Cam- CFOD. FRENCH CLUB gf WWYKZIT' 4-.BJ i .I ff pt g '2?1fi , J- T uv wif, . K, ' 3 f x. K, gl E have I ' l , O it . pf fj .ff f gffm . :Lew .., .ff 1 . 1 .. www 6 N 5 f ' 5 Q ig, FY n iw' if A 'I 1 -A ,AIA My '1 'ffux I - - Y . V x he -5-ng, ., . , ' A 'Y' 5 f-.deA Af 'TA f, w . ' iqk . . A ,4 ... - M it .N Y. x , Y x Q .., z Jftmw-ff' Pig- Q' . y 1 1 'IA . ' ,I - ' Q x, lr, Q if' ' ' - 1 f .59 '-'X afrwi 4-29- .,, . W' 1 '44 'Yagi-It -, P hgh I ,V b L xy, ' ',- ' 2 . U fi4?557vQ 7 5' f .Q i -..' rrfi l gl h ,TK , f! 'K Ii r N5 3 Q A A' i 3,45 if 'Wim . gf,,f.+ .,-all 'G' nl I 1 E 1 Ns mm :fig --w-:sw 3 1.4 ff J Through the years the melodres ot our yearboolcs have been made possrble by many business trrms rn Atlanta Although the gurls rn the school have com posed and sung the rhythm our advertisers have been the orchestra playrng the guldung straans ot music The tunes ot the pages that tollow are devoted to these truends ot ours who have supported thus meas ure ot our song As we turn through the advertising pages we shall appreciate the part our advertusers have played m publrshnng our Halcyon Now and when we are graduated from Gurls Hugh we shal patronrze our advertisers and show them that the pattern ot our rhythm would be broken wrthout theur he THANKS HER ADVERTISERS JERSEY ICE CREAM CO. 784 NORTH HIGHLAND AVENUE, NORTHEAST fAxtIante, Georgia TELEPHONE HEMLOCKOIZS FRED E. SCANLING E. W. SCANLING POSTER COLQRS K- BRUSHES -- ART SUPPLIES MILTON BRADLEY COMPANY 354 Ecrresi Ave., N. E. D R ' J' C . D U G G A N SCHOOL SUPPLIES Games for Chiidren and Adults OpIOm6LrISL and OpIICI6n ATLANTA CA IIIIIIIIIIIIIII. difw 27 THE LOVABLE BRASSIERE CO For advertisers far and near, We'II eat your products, have no fear. 845-9 SPRING SI-f N- E- Pbrrn-: WA '-1985 22I M Iw II S VV BOWL! For All Around Exercise POISE . . . RECREATION EAST ATLANTA BOWLING ALLEYS FRANCES ADAMS Smart clothes ot every style and shade, You'II find within our ad parade. . 4276 HE. Q35 HERRINGTON 8: MULLINS S. S. ' STANDARD on PRODUCTS AtIas Tires, Batteries, and Accessories Cars CaIIed For and Delivered EGAN coTToN MILLS q BH I A A1 G 886 Mmphy Ave' cARL's s-io-250 sToREs E59 GORDON ST., S. W. ' II54 EUCLID AVE., N. E. 144 N. MAIN ST. EAST POINT, GA. Best Wishes from ROGERS BIG STAR---LITTLE STAR F O O D S T O R E S SETTING DIXIE DINNER TABLES FOR I-IALF A CENTURY J. P. STEVENS ENGRAVING CO. Established I874 WEDDING, RECEPTION, VISITING CARDS MONOGRAMMED STATIONERY STORE LOCATION I IO Peachtree Street, N.W. Atlanta At Peachtree Street Entrance Piedmont Hotel CENTRAL JEWELRY COMPANY Corner ot PEACHTREE and HOUSTON Diamonds Rings Watches Pins Compliments ot Los Angeles Tire and Battery Service IOSI North Highland Ave., N.E. VErnon 2523 JOHN MILLEDOE FRANK BRUICE For 56 Years AtIanta's Leading Homefurnishers N0 FIX UI Corner Edgewood Ave. Xr Pryor St. Walnut 2906 7 8 9 KELPIN CLEANERS Crystal Clear Cleaning Positively Odorless 656 N. Highland Ave., N. E. Phone HEmloclc 4485 BETHANY BAKERY I l56 Euclid Ave., N. E. MAin 2635 BREAD, CAKES, PIES We Specialize in Pastrv i MARSH BUSINESS fi!-riL.'iQLEGE 249 Peachtree Street Atlanta, Georgia C-ieorgia's Largest, Newest, Finest Best Located Best Equipped The Better the Training-the Better the Job For watches, rings of every kind Our jewelers have the best, you'II find. .f-. CRICI-ITON'S BUSINESS COLLEGE ESTABLISHED I885 WAInut934l PLAZA WAY AT PRYOR STREET Accredited by the National Association of Accredited Commercial Schools Day and Night Classes TAILS SUPPLIED on REQUEST E. KATHERINE REID, President PACIFIC MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. R. A. BROYLES, JR. AND CO. ...OFFERING . .. HOME-OWNED GROCERS Complete Personal Protection 1983 Boulevard Drive. S. E. Dearborn 5706 EMORY IENKSV Garza: AG6,.t E47 CBD tal Ale., W. Main 5752 HI7 Fist Natcni Bert Blog- 305 E. College Ave. Dearborn 252I ATLANTA' Q-:Eflpfliyk 233 W I5f S St., N. W. Walnut 9986 BROWN INSURANCE AGENCY SEO. B. BPOAVN I-IAMILTONJ T. BOLLES IBOI Rhodes-Haverty Bldg. E. H. HARPER SERVICE STATION Specialized Auto Service I96 Spring Street, N.W. XXfAlnut SZI7 Phone WAlnut 5609 MQNTAGS Bl-UE I-IQRSE Congratulations and Best Wishes trom the Malrers of Paper School Goods The Kind Your Mother and Dad Used KORG' ARGOf KREMFFI and MAZCDLA MONTAG BROTHERS, INC. C. J. WORRALL ATLANTA District Manager Compliments SCHULTE-UNITED, INC. of The Modern Junior Department Store SAMUEL ROTHBERC-5 tor the Thritty 47 Whitehall Street Two doors trom Alabama NEAL-LENHARDT COMPANY Real Estate Fire Insurance 617 C. Xi S. Banlc Bldg. Institute of Business and Accounting ADULT BUSINESS TRAINING and HIGHER ACCOUNTANCY Red Rock Bldg. WAlnut 2673 Compliments ot P '. MEADOWS I al Frosty Malteds THE DAYLIGHT STORE 588 McDonough Blvd., S. E. Atlanta Repair and Decorating Co. General Contractors General Property Repairing IZO Merritts Ave., N. E. MAin 7069 LOUIS ISAACSON, INC. Fufzs or FASHION ZIO Peachtree, N.W. WAlnut 9776 Tl-lE STATE QE GEQRGIA lias enlarged the University Extension Center in Atlanta TO INCLUDE Junior College-lor day classes Georgia Evening College-evening classes Girls l-ligti now has the largest representation in the big enrollment ot 2,600 students attending Junior College and Georgia Evening College. Private Ambulance Service J. AUSTIN DILLON COMPANY Funeral Directors O2 Pryor Street, S. NV. Main 4680 - Ma 463l J. AUST'N DlE'O RS J USTN D LON inta': n'o'a Q. s r Compliments ot ERNEST P. TITSHAW If it's a college that you need Just read our ads, and then take heed. Our patrons have old styles or new- Furniture which is made for you. A. G. SUMMER I7 Broad Street, N. W. AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE DECATUR,GEORGlA . AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE has tound the graduates ot Girls High School most satisfactory in every way-well pre- pared, tull ot enthusiasm, and ready to take leading parts in all college activi- ties. We always give G. l-l. S. students a cordial welcome. O BRANDON-BOND-CONDON FUNERAL DIRECTORS President CO -,yi-izrirg Str-wit, N. E. Phone l-lErnloclr 600l AMBULANCE sERvicE J' R' MCCMN ATLANTA. cseoreoifx BOX GH O CHAPMAN REALTY CO., Inc. Realtors . SALES RENTS LEASES . 7l Forsyth Street, N. W. MAin I638 WlLLlNGHAM-TIFT LUMBER COMPANY 866 Murphy Avenue RAymond 4l2l THE DRAUGHON SCHOOL OF COMMERCE High School Graduation and Character References Entrance Requirements. All Graduates Placed and More Than IZOO Calls That Could Not Be Filled in I94l. PEACI-ITREE AT BAKER STREET ATLANTA, GEORGIA Raoo ls Our Buslncss, Nct a Side-L new B A M E 5 Inc ANNOUNCEMENTS-Ar HOME and , . RADIOS-ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES Salcg-Sqrvigrg Spccral Prices PI-IONOGRAPI-I RECORDS 60 Breed Sf, N- W. Wftlnui 5776 L. D. SPECHT ENGRAVING COMPANY ATLANTA' GA' ss Przvore sr, N. E. REGENSTElN'S THE LAWRENCE COMPANY 30 Broad Strut, S. W. Success and Best Wishes GREETING CARDS-PARTY FAVORS to all June Graduates oAMr5s-MEMorzy BooKs WHITNER 8: CO. , HIGH MUSEUM School of Art X r' 7 Insurance-Loans-Bonds Ile? PEACHTREE STREET ATLANTA' GA' ESTABLISHED I865 PROFESSIONAL SCI-IOOL ottcrirfg ccrtrticatc K courscs in Cornrncrcial Art and thc' Finc Arts. 22 Mgrrgtta Strggt Building Fully Accrcdit-id. Mod-:rat-3 Tuition. Previous art training NOT nccfssary. WINTER SESSION: Scotcrnbcr I4, I942 - Juni- 4, IQ43. P' Classes in Advertising Art, Fashion Illustration, Dress Dr-sign, Interior Decoration, Pairrtng, Portraiturc and Illustration. JEWELER SUMMER SESSION: June IS, I942 -July?-1, I942. Classes ln Outdoor Slcutctrg, Flgurv Study, Painting, F55hir3r- IIIU5 tration and Advwtisirtg Art. Fame WAInut 3089 I8 Auburn Avv., N, E, Call Ht-rnlocln 3I34 or write school stew tary for illustrated catalog. ATLANTA, GA. ATLANTA NOVELTY CO. WALTER I.. RICHARDS, Rwprittfr Aov- 'tsing Nourlt --2 P R I N T E R S We MF Bu to FQAFPCP. WAIFJI 9343 ATLANTA, GA. MORNING GLORY SANDWICHES Served in Our Caleteria . . . Fresh Daily FULTON SANDWICH COMPANY I - ' - -' -' - 96 Eos-sf-fd Ar--I N. E- Our opticians save precious sight, ATLANTA, GA. And fit your glasses to look right. STEAKS, CT-TOPS, SEAFOOD THE ROOSEVELT TPride of Peachirecl 620 Peachtree St. at North Ave. USE SE-FLY-GO Kulls Flies - Mosquiioes FCP SALE AT CPOCEPV A-'A-Q QPUQ S'C9ES Pr'-1'a'ii'. 'J Z, THE SELIG CO ATLANTA GA WALTER BALLARD OPTICAL COMPANY DISPENSING OPTTCTANS fX EE O ATLANTA GEORGIA LS T-TT H fOTHE ROCFPTES AN AEAT Insure your Trfe wnth patrons here And you II 'Feel safer every year CompTTments AWTRY 81 LOWNDES WA 70667067 DENSON S CAFE HOMECOOKING DELICATESSEN T99 BOT HEATH s Fooo STORE E L L ' O T T 5 W U 9323 Peachtree STALLINGS FLOWER SHOP RA 9747 Flckett Brown Manufacturing Co PS AND BQOOMS Studro C ARLT BROWN P T-1 AL R DC Photcgra hers P RAy Complrrnents KIRKWOOD THEATRE T965 BouTe a CT D S E To the 942 T-Taleyon I of 2 l k Q TT-TP BTCPE : O T 5 TJ-'i 'f'-H Sing-'i ff' ,aT A'ts BuTTdTV'Q 6' ar BH wg 9 C 8 uevard Dr., N. E. GTR G T PS B47 Q , LL T S From l I 735 PCM' dw Lrer- Aff. YT fwgr VE'n2n T663 Gordon St., S. VJ. 6T8 Lee St., S. VY. RA. TT86 . LMdFUT5CfL'C'S Qualrty TVTCTCTTGPCTS-I S'C-3 T895 M C T-T E , ras'dc'f ,. ', D E -E Maysz'-Tu -:' Afcwa ard Savetery L, fs N, Rafwzad 'nerd IT73 Atanta, G-73 a of v r five, . . Ice-cold Coca-Colo offers you de- real thlng Ilclous taste that always pleases lufe and sparkle that always refreshes And you fund at around the corner from anywhere When you want to be refreshed drunk :ce- cold Coca Cola It s the real thang I . 0 D u 9 xx l f I fl Fill' QIlC,R!WC5D sv Ill' IC lf! I J,X3 NW If f S IIQQIHFL Hue S9FNllLS nl Lxperlmnlnd alul expLltll.dtQnnn1 hnnnLd HILNLIN dehnl of thl llF0l9S569 ani llLcltlH F DIIIHIHIQ layout :ml rluufn INIILSLUIIFF printing l lll5l lllllllllf and llllulllvf Tlllllll'5l 0utlllH dlenturx Mus unnpnny has lnunnnrmd nlthe plndulhun ufthu hl2hLSl type of HPIHIHIU Ilux Qerwlmns lnlludn 1 spemulllfdlmde alulu H sails and snrwue lll'!.fdlllZ mon Abundant equlpnlentlnndern and Lunqdete Prums FLDFBSLHIHIU nlnxlnlunl HI value PUUTE lx Il-WIEC3 PIHNTINU LITHIIUIK-XIHINI1 E'NlnH-UIING XTLXNTA , ,41- -1 ' - W r . qlll'lNE99FllL ANNUI-Xlq ' , I 'L n ' , ' 1 s' -15' ' n 'n -1 - ' gn In ' .' , ' ivluy .' .1 -L---A ' --1' ' 3. i ' ru g,-f 3- - - ,1- i ha I .VY .si I A :Nl . ll I . ' ' . I ' ,I ' ' 1 v'-in ' n li b- -' I ,H . i 1, ,Lu .U - a' .U ' ' - 1 ' .U , , L f - 2 Q' Q QQ if I V I p. .. 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Suggestions in the Girls High School - Halcyon Yearbook (Atlanta, GA) collection:

Girls High School - Halcyon Yearbook (Atlanta, GA) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Girls High School - Halcyon Yearbook (Atlanta, GA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Girls High School - Halcyon Yearbook (Atlanta, GA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Girls High School - Halcyon Yearbook (Atlanta, GA) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Girls High School - Halcyon Yearbook (Atlanta, GA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Girls High School - Halcyon Yearbook (Atlanta, GA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946


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