Greensboro High School - Bulldog Yearbook (Greensboro, FL)

 - Class of 1949

Page 1 of 68

 

Greensboro High School - Bulldog Yearbook (Greensboro, FL) online collection, 1949 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 68 of the 1949 volume:

E. FORREST MAY To Mr. E. L. Bowers and Mr. E. Forrest May, we, the class of ‘49, dedicate our edition of the Kaleidoscope, as a token of our gratitude for the kind and gentle guidance which has led us to a successful close of our high school career. 2 PRINCIPAL MR. E. L. BOWERS MISS JOYCE VAN LANDINGHAM SECRETARY MRS. GREEN First Gr«d« A MRS. BRUNER First Grade B MRS.SHEPARD Third Grade MRS. ANDERSON Fourth Grade 5 MRS. ROWAN Second Grade mrs. McPherson Fifth Grade MISS GREEN Sixth Grade MRS. SMITH Seventh Grade MRS. FOWLER Mathematics MR. MILAM Social Studies MR. BEVIS Agriculture 7 MBS BOWLES Librarian MARGARET ANNE BATEMAN Band 1,2,3,4 4- H 1,2 Junior PUy Senior PUy CELIA CHARLOTTE CHASON Bum! 1.2.3.4 Cheerleader 2.3.4 Junior PUy 3onlor PUy G loa C lub 3 4-H Club 1.2.3.4 EDSEL CLARK r. F. A. 1,2.3.4 Band 1.2.3.4 Jualor PUy Senior PUy JOSEPH FREDRICK COWEN Basketball 1.2.3.4 Band 1.2.3 F. F. A. 1.2.3.4 Junior PUy 3onlor PUy Journalism C lub 4 V ERG IE CHASON Senior PUy J oumaliam C lub 4 EDNA ADELINE CLAJUC 4-H CMb 1.2 Senior PUy Jouranliem CUB 4 9 MCMXLIX MCMXLIX BETTY JEAN CROSS 4-H Club 1 Glii Club 2 Journalism Club 4 F. H. A. Club 4 Senior Play HARRIETT ELIZABETH DEAN Junior Play Senior Play 4-H Club 1.2.3.4 Glee Club 3 Band 1,2,3,4 F. H. A. Club 4 Journalism C lub 4 NEEL CROSS F. F. A. 1.2,3.4 Basketball 2.3.4 Junior Play Senior Play J ournalism C lub 4 BOBBY MACK ROWAN Basketball 2,3,4 Band 1,2,3 F. F. A. 1.3.4 Junior Play Senior Play J ournalism C lub 4 REDITH SALLY DYKES Cheerleader 3,4 Band 2 Junior Play Senior Play J ournalism C lub 4 ETHEL LOMAR McIYER J ournalism C lub 4 Senior Play 10 DONALD AUBREN VENTRY Basketball 1,2,3,4 F. F. A. Club 1.2,3.4 Junior Play Senior Play Journalism C lub 4 C lass Motto: C olors: Flower: Song: Work to achieve the best Green and White Gardenia ••A Perfect Day” MCMXLIX 11 CLASS WILL We, the Senior Class of 19 9, being the noisiest of classes do hereby make our last will and testament. To the whole school we will our friendliness and athletic ability To the Juniors we will our classroom and all the memories which it brings to mind: our desks which are badly abused and seem uncomfortable after the first sitting; and our huge chunks of bubble gum stuck beneath the desks. We have chewed the gum faithfully throughout the year, and we hope you will enjoy the taste that remains. Also, we leave you our books which are tattered and torn; our black-boards which will last forever; and our grand case of laziness which is unparalleled in the history of the school. Finally, we make the following personal bequests: I, Margaret Anne Bateman, will my shortness to Jane Suber. I, Vergie Chason, will my ability to learn history to Bernice Edwards. I, Celia Chason, will my ability to get elected to Edith Cumbie. I, Edna Clark, leave my ability to have a slim figure to Lilia Smith. I, Edsel Clark, will my ability to play a clarinet to Norma Bowen. I, Betty Jean Cross, leave my ability to keep calm to Ellie Mclver. I, Neel Cross, will my superb driving ability to Ellis Hill. I, Joe Cowen, leave my ability to write to Reginald McPherson. I, Elizabeth Dean, will my dumbness to Vergie Ola Eubanks. I, Sally Dykes, leave my sweet disposition to Robert Boyd. I, Lomar Mclver, will my quiet ways to Ida Pearl Alday. I, Bobby Rowan, will my ability to work Algebra to Herman Rowan. I, Mary B Smith, will my ability to make speeches to Gene Faircloth. I, Juanelle Vaughn, leave my silent tongue and generous mind to Sara Flotchsr• I, Donald Ventry, will my ability to make A's to Dan Garner. SENIOR CLASS HISTORY We began our journey after knowledge in the year 1937. The class was quite large, so we were divided into two classes. Mrs. Martha Green and Miss Daniel were the teachers of those two classes. The happenings of the year must have made a great impression on Joe Cowen, for he can't remember one single thing about it. In the second grade Miss Kathleen Strange was very patient with us as she taught us to print. We were sorry when the time came to leave this grade, but we were curious about the other grades. Miss Sara Howard was our teacher in the third grade, where we were joined by Sally Dykes from Quincy. In this grade we started learning our multiplication tables, and even now Edna Clark declares that is why her head aches so often. In the fourth grade we were taught by Mrs. C. A. Harrison. This year there was another addition to our class—Bobby Rowan. Bobby liked to pull Joe's ears, and Joe liked to pull Bobby's ears. They seemed to wonder if ears would come off The next year Mrs. Kenneth Maxwell and Mrs. Annie Muriel Fletcher greeted us in the fifth grade. We were now learning to work with fractions. All of us enjoyed our Easter picnic at Fletcher pasture. 12 SENIOR CLASS HISTORY ( continued) Mrs. Tommy Green was our teacher in the sixth grade. Our books were harder and larger than before, but with such a swell teacher we passed to the seventh grade with flying colors. We had our Easter picnic at Fletcher pasture again this year. In the seventh grade our teacher was Mrs. Carl Smith. We were Joined this year by Mary B Smith. We thought we were the stuff since we were in Junior high school. Our home room teacher in the eighth grade was Mr. C. A. Harrison. We had loads of fun this year, changing classes and acting as if we were grownups. Celia and Elizabeth kept us entertained In the home room periods. They ran a contest to see which one could make the most trips to get a drink of water. Betty Jean Cross Joined us this year. Mrs. Brooksie Godwin was our home room teacher in the ninth grade. Our teachers seemed to think we were a little too noisy this year, and since we were inclined to disagree with then we often wondered why we were presented so frequently with passes to detention hall. Mrs. C.L. Fowler was our Sophomore sponsor. This year we had our first swimming party at Lake Mystic and luckily none of us was drowned. Next year we were Juniors, and the class was sponsored by Miss Margaret Johnson, who loved fun but not quite as much as we did. Our Junior play, THE CAMPBELLS ARE COMING, was a humdinger. We entertained the Seniors at Long Beach, in Panama City, and we actually didn't get sun-burned that year. The most exciting day was that long-waited-for day in April when our class rings came. Of course they are the prettiest ones that were ever made. Juanelle vaughn, from Orlando, Joined us this year. Then came that glorious day when we became Seniors, Ifergie Cteson Joined our happy class. All The privileges were taken away from Seniors this year, but who cared? We didn't want to be dignified anyway. Our Senior play was THE MINX FROM MISSOURI, and it really went over with a bang. Mr. E. Forrest May was our sponsor that year. Now we can safely say that we enjoyed our twelve years at Greensboro High School, and the memories of these past years will always be dear to our hearts. SENIOR CLASS PROPHECY I am a ghost. I was killed by the noise made by the class of ,lf9« Back in that year I was a healthy, normal human being. I worked and played and loved and worshipped. I enjoyed shooting firecrackers on holidays and waking to the noisy roar of trains at midnight; and I liked the quiet seclusion of a country walk and the serene dignity of an empty church. I was at home in the noise and bustle of a crowded street or in the pages of a good book by the fireside on a winter's night. I even liked to study—a little. I didn't make A's, but I had a good C-plus average, and I could shoot as many goals as any boy on the B-Team. I was normal and healthy and haPPYi and life seemed to stretch out before me in endless vistas of high promise. Then I heard the Seniors, I was walking down the hall one day, and my girl had Just told me that she loved me, and it was good to be alive. Then—I heard them. It was an awful scream or mixed emotions and seemed to come from many voices, all blended discordantly into one mighty screech. 13 SENIOR CLASS PROPHECY (continued) I was terrified and shaken. I froze in my tracks. My hair stood on end and my eyes popped out of their sockets. Feeling a piercing pain in my right ear, I cupped my hand over it and fainted standing up. That is how Mr. Milam found me. When he saw my eyes hanging below my chin, he thought nothing of it, but when he saw the look of terror in those eyes, he decided that I needed a doctor. He rushed me down to Dr. Gardner. Dr. Gardner put my eyes back in their sockets, but he told me that my right ear drum had been blasted to pieces and that I would never hear out of that ear. He told Mr. Milam to work me out a schedule that would keep me away from the Seniors. Mr. Milam did,and the arrangement worked all right for a time, but now aid then I would get too close to the Senior room and their blaring crescendo would throw me into a state of palsy that would last for an hour. My condition, due wholly to exposure to Senior noise, grew steadily worse, and one day Dr. Gardner looked through a telescope at my torn and tattered nerves and said that it was now a matter of life and death. I chose death, but Mr. Milam tried to save my life by taking me out of high school and putting me down in Mrs. Rowan's room. My condition was improving, but one day I found it necessary to go to the typing room. Since the typing room was a good hundred yards from the Senior room, I thought I might get in and out without harm. I went all the way around on the north side of the gym and came to the back door. My hand trembled as I clutched for the knob. Could I make it? I opened the door slightly. All was quiet. I stepped inside. And then it came. It was louder than all the noises ever made rolled into one. It broke the seismograph in Miami, Florida. I was demolished so thoroughly that they never found a hair or my head. So now you know how I became a ghost. Shepard's Mill is my familiar haunt, but I spend most of my time scaring the daylights out of the members of the Class of ' +9. It was I who put it into their heads to have a reunion at Shepard's Mill. If I could get them all to-gether on my own ground, I might be able to decide upon a method of revenge, and I wanted revenge more than anything I ever wanted in my natural life. They came in 1959. Donald Ventry, owner of Duck's Amusement Center, arrived early in a new '60 Studebaker and went fishing, but he made so much noise that he scared the fish away. As the other Noise-Makers began to gather at the picturesque old mill, Edsel Clark's famous orchestra played Down By the Old Mill Stream. Then Betty Jean Cross, accompanied by Charlie Adams and his Tobacco Tabs and heard every Saturday night over WCNH, sang Jealous Heart. I have put it into Edsel's head to ask Betty Jean to marry him, so she will be singing in his orchestra in the near future. I expect some knock-downs and drag-outs in that marriage and a divorce within three months. I am going to get a kick out of seeing Betty Jean's temper clash with Edsel's iron will. While Betty Jean sang, Vergie Chason strolled along the waterfront and stroked her white Persian kitten, which she held in her arms. The third finger of her left hand was still empty, but she had a gleam in her eyes and seemed to be expecting her ship to come down the creek at any minute. I have a soft spot in my heart for Vergie and have great plans for her. She contributed very little to the noise that killed me. I turned from Vergie to see Joe Cowen rounding up his six children. Joe is the owner of Florida's largest cattle ranch. Mrs. Cowen was unable 14 SENIOR CLASS PROPHECY (continued) to attend. She was entertaining the Flat Creek Bridge Club in her new Flat Creek mansion. She plays bridge while Joe takes care of the children and the cows. I planned it that way, and someday I'm going to get the pleasure of seeing Joe blow up. I believe that he's just about at the breaking point now. Bobby Rowan, calm as a cucumber, helped Joe round up his six little Noise-Makers. I can't make Bobby blow up, but by hook or crook I'm going to get his books out of balance. He is head bookkeeper of Fletcher Company and draws an enormous salary, but Bobby has very little left after he gets through paying alimony to Celia Chason. Bobby proposed to Sally before he married Celia, but Sally held out for a Baptist preacher. She always wanted to marry one, so besides turning Bobby down, she turned down ten Methodist preachers and three Lutherans before the right man came along. I planned that, too. Sally has to go to church and she has to be quiet, and Sally never enjoyed a quiet moment in her life. Her husband is pastor of the Greensboro Baptist church. They live in the new pastorium. E. Forrest May, our old teacher and former pastor of the Greensboro Baptist Church, is retired at the early age of forty-five. He now lives in Hardaway and is President of the Hardaway Chess Club. And while I'm mentioning that fellow I want to tell you that I really have it in for him. After all, he was indirectly responsible for my death. He let them kill me. He was Senior Sponsor, and he could have exterminated the lot of them before they destroyed me. Now I just make him lose at Chess, and that's punishment enought for that fellow. I want to say a word about several dull speeches that were made that day—not that you could hear them above the deafening roar of chitchat. Even their small talk made a roar like a cannon. Edna Clark, Florida's First Lady, made • what she called a speech, but it was as dull as the Congressional Record. Her husband, a small hen-pecked man, read Fuller Warren's HOW TO WIN IN POLITICS and became Governor. Then Neel Cross, President of the State Farmers Bureau and owner of the largest boarding house in Gretna, gave an uninteresting talk on how to raise pigeons. I don't know what pigeons had to do with reunions, but that's what he talked about. But there was one speech iat almost made the ladies get quiet. They liked it so much. It was made by Mrs. Oscar Vantiddle de Winks. Mrs. Van-tiddle de Winks will be remembei ed as that timid, bashful girl, the former Miss Mary B Smith of Sycamore. The subject of her speech was How To Catch a Man in Three Easy Lessons. Even the married ladies liked that. Mary B's late husband, Oscar Vantiddle de Winks, was owner of the world-famous Winks Tooth Pick Company. Mary B's speech was interrupted by a piercing cry of pain and distress. One of Joe's little boys had stepped on Donald's corn. Margaret Ann Bateman, chiropodist, rushed over to show them what a good foot doctor could do in an emergency. Margaret Anne is a specialist on corns. She borrowed a dull knife from Bobby and cut Donald’s corn off, toe and all. Madame Lomar Shampoo fainted when she saw the blood. Her sixth husband, Pierre, threw her into the mill pond to revive her. Madame Lomar Shampoo 15 SENIOR CLASS PROPHECY (continued) will be remembered as the former Miss Lomar Mclver and childhood sweetheart of a certain Methodist boy. In the meantime, Juanelle had been rounding up her three children. She lives on a farm near Greensboro. Her husband raises foxhounds and has won four blue ribbons on Beetlebomb, his prize hound. After the toe had been given a decent burial, everybody settled down to loud talk. While the men talked over politics and cow ticks, Elizabeth di . cussed the latest fashions with the ladies. Yes, I'm a ghost. I was killed by the noise made by the class of ,1+9. I still don't know what to do to get revenge, but I swear by a sack of meal and one of Marco's empty milk bottles that I'll get even—before this day is done. Elizabeth Dean 16 ROBERT BOYD JANE SUBER LYNELL FLETCHER HERMAN ROWAN junior JL. JUANITA BLOUNT RUBY CHASON ROBERT BLOUNT ELLIE McIVER EDITH CUMBIE R. McPHERSON 18 BACK ROW : FOURTH ROW : THIRD ROW : SECOND ROW : FRONT ROW: TENTH GRADE Left to Right: Herbert Holland. Dan Garner, Wright Crosby. Joyce Suber. Gainey Shores. Wayne Spooner. Ellis Hill. Leroy Perkins. Virginia McGee. Maggie Potter. Emmett Clark. Elton White. Jim Posey. Burma Smith. Welburn Rowan. Mr. T. R. M ilam (teacher), Emma Jewel W imberly, Earline Shiver, Virgie Ola Eubanks, Martha B lount, C harlotte W hite, Flossie Edenfield. 19 BACK ROW: FOURTH ROW s THIRD ROW: SECOND ROW: FRONT ROW: NINTH GRADE Left to Right: Sarah Fletcher, M ra. C . L. Fowler (teacher), Jimmy Kimbrel. Lenora Lovett, Herbert Smith, Byron Cox, Raymond Dean. Billy Shepard, Marcus Edwards. Vernon C hester. Buddy Rowan. Deloris McAlpin, Virginia Watson, Patricia Bentley. Carol Jean Clark, Mary Lee Cross. Benita Bevis, Faye Adkison, Mabel Hosey, Laverne Mercer, Ruth Posey, Willard Rudd. Wayne Suber. 20 BACK ROW: MIDDLE ROW: FRONT ROW: EIGHTH GRADE Left to Right: Eloise Goodwin, Thad White,Mulder Brown, Marguerite Ventry, Bernice Edwards, Ernest C heater. Vernon Todd. Ruth Holland. Edwin Dean. Donald Clark. Robert Morgan. Miss Evelyn Johnson (teacher). Dora Mae Clark. Sonya Fletcher. Russell Potter, Billy Perkins. Jack Agerton. James Clark. Wesley Dean, Gerome J ordan. 21 BACK ROW: FOURTH ROW: THIRD ROW: SECOND ROW: FRONT ROW: MEMBERS OF SEVENTH GRADE Left to Right: Clyde Dykes, Shirley Hopkins, Barbara Kennedy, Lorine McAlpin. Grace Phillips, Sadie Mae Wimberley. Virgil Watson. Mack Eubanks. Betty Glisson, Sarah Boyd. Harvey Smith. Johnny Potter. George Lewis Smith. Bertie Mae Shiver, Jewel Hobbs. Edward Gray, Scott C lark, Ronald B arr, G ene S mith. Aubrey Blount, Kathryn Pettis, Forrest May, Billy Adkison, Claude Whiddon, Miriam Dean, Winton Rowan, Anne Perkins. Melton Johnson. CLASS NOT IN PICTURE: Teacher: Mrs. Pauline Smith, Harold C lark. Milton Hunt, Elree Phillips. Z2 BACK ROW: FOURTH ROW: THIRD ROW: SECOND ROW: FRONT ROW: SIXTH GRADE Left to Right: Aline Shiver, Faye Durden, Jimmy Shaw, Earl McAlpin, C lifford J ohnaon. Hazel S hepard, Durwood Sharpton. Maedelle Faircloth, Lorine McAlpin, Alice Faye Smith, Deanne McPherson, Mattie Boyer, Lynette Bowen. Max Watson, Roger Smith, Byron Rudd. James Bauldree, Clyde Blount. Hughie Agerton, JeanOgilvie. Miss Virginia Green (teacher), Betty Bentley. Geraldine Phillips. Iva Nell Whiddon, Helen Chester, Laverne Hill, Ann Holland. Carol Bentley. Eulalie Cox, Betty Hawkins. Anna Lois Clark. Delois Watts, Jimmy Bentley. Carolyn Clark. Otho Watkins, W. C. Jordan. MEMBFRS OF Cl ASS NOT IN PICTURE: Alma Lee Phillips. 32 FIFTH GRADE BACK ROW: FIFTH ROW: FOURTH ROW THIRD ROW SECOND ROW: FRONT ROW. MEMBERS OF Left to Right: F ranklm Shepard, James Shepard. Sidney Doug an. Edward Rowan. Glenn Suber. W alter Sharpton. Preston White. Katherine McAlpin. Margie F muff Gene Autry Edenfield, Ken Spurlock, Carol Clark. Mary Jean Butler. Eva Lera Edwards. Sarah Frances Potter. Jimmy C lark. Ruben Morgan. C harles Shepard. Phillip Blount. Wayne McLaughlin C a r roll Brinson, C harles C lark. Joe S hiver. Harold Shepard, Harry Kennedy., Buddy Johnson, Mrs. Alney McPherson (teachert. WaUace Shiver. Mary Louise Bauldree. Mary Nell Mercer. Myra Nell Mercer. Derlie Adkison. Alice Virginia C lark. Ann Fletcher. Y vonne S herpard CLASS NOT IN PICTURE: Mary Alice Dean. 24 BACK ROW: FOURTH ROW: THIRD ROW: SECOND ROW: FRONT ROW: FOURTH GRADE Left to Right: Jerry Smith. C heater Posey. (M rs. Anderson) Teacher. Deiicia Durden. John Goodwin. Geraldine Weeks. Jewel Shiver. Mary Emma Shiver. E lisabeth Durden. Lois Ventry. Marjorie Posey. Howard Rainer. George Rudd. Jerry Butler. Walter Anderson. Jimmy Bowers. Dorothy Sitemore. Margaret R lount. Luther Bowen, Luther Goodson. Larry Widdon. Franklin Sharpton. Christine Edwards. Larry Crosby, Grady Hunt. Jimmy McLaughlin. Marie Hunt. 25 BACK ROW: FIFTH ROW: FOURTH ROW THIRD ROW: SECOND ROW FRONT ROW: TEACHER: MEMBERS OF THIRD GRADE Left to Right: Betty Sue Whittle, Walter Smith, Freedie Clark, Mrs. Marco Shepard, (teacher), ByronShaw. Mayo Potter, Arthur S hepard. Mary Lou Alday, Otha White, L. C. Scott, Manis Blanton, Jimmie Lee W imberly. WintonSuber, Marvin S pur lock, Roberta Sizemore, Bobby Pace. Tommy Johnson. Paul Goodson. Ruth Hawkins, Dwight Clark, Gary Davis. John McAlpin. Jr.. J. R. Hosey. Hubert Suber, M itchell Rowan, Tommy Fason. Nelson C lark, Leslie Watts, Willard Hobbs, Rena Dean. Kay Fletcher, Ann Bowers, Nancy Suber, Ellis Shepard, Tommy Macon. Mrs. Marco Shepard. CLASS NOT IN PICTURE: Lucile Phillips. 26 SECOND GRADE BACK ROW: FOURTH ROW: THIRD ROW: SECOND ROW: FRONT ROW: TEACHER: MEMBERS OF Left to Right: Bill Hoaey. Larry Haire. Lon Lovett. Judy Blanton, Eldridge Edwards. Henta Fletcher, Carol Haire. Ronald Lemieux, Roy Holland. Hazel Durden. Wayne Bowen, Elise Shiver, Duncan Fletcher. Ezzie Bell Posev. Janice Davis, Lanier Suber, Carolyn Rowan. Ann Finuff. Virginia Dean, Donald Durden, Joanne Shepard, Jean Blount, Kenneth Whiddon, Dicky McLaughlin. Mrs. W. R. Rowan. CLASS NOT IN PICTURE: Clifford Boyer, Betty Jean Goodwin, Lillie Mae Potter, Wilson Brogden, Green Alday, Jr. 27 FIRST GRADE -SECTION B BACK ROW: SECOND ROW: FIRST ROW: TEACHER: Left to Right: Naomi B auldree, Vernon Holcombe. Herbert W eeks. Larry B lack, Robert Pettis. Patricia B lack, Massey W hite, Betty Potter, Edgar Poston. Bobby Adkison. Gerald Williams. Hugh Hosey, Eustice Shiver. Marvin Watts. Jackie Adkison. Mrs. Viola ttruner. MEMBERS OF CLASS NOT IN PICTURE: Marjorie Dean, Annie Pearl Rutherford, Betty Jo Brogdon, Floyd Pitts, Sara Wimberly, Peggy Bentley, Emma Jane Dean. 28 FIRST GRADE - SECTION A BACK ROW: THIRD ROW: SECOND ROW: FRONT ROW: TEACHER: MEMBERS OF Left to Right: Robert Rogers. Ann Suber, Dalin Weeks. Gene Weeks. Kennetn Pitts, Jr. Douglas Jensen. Alvin W eeks, Shirley Spurlock, Lynda Faye Haire. John McGeee. James Davis. Thomas W hittle, Lucille Bentley. Hugh Macon, Joyce Edwards. B etty Jean Hosey, Douglas Shiver, James Hobbs. Ed Hanney. Bobby Shiver, Jimmy Pace. Mrs. Floyd Green CLASS NOT IN PICTURE: Carter Clark, Jimmy Dean, Franklin Edwards, Jimmy Gould, J. B. Poston, Betty Boyer. Lavonia Clark, Annette Clark. 29 ACTIVITIES BACK ROW: ANNUAL STAFF Left to Right: Editor-in-Chief Lomar Mclver Business Manager Virgie C hason Literary Editor Celia Chason Snapshot Editor Sally Dykes Mary B. Smith C irculation M anager M argaret Ann B ate man Juanelle Vaughn Art Editor Betty Jean Cross Edna C lark FRONT ROW: Athletic Editor Elisabeth Dean B obby R owan Joke Editor Neel C ross Eosel C lark Sponsor Mr. E. Forrest May 31 BACK ROW: FRONT ROW: JOURNALISM CLUB Left to Right: Art Editors: Gene Faircloth. Robert B lount. Elizabeth Dean. Humor Editors: Donald Ventry. Mr. E. Forrest May (sponsor). Betty Jean C ross, B obby Rowan. Joe C owen. Circulation Managers: Marguerite Ventry. Ida Pearl Alday. Editor-in-C hief: Associate Editor: Business Manager: Society Editor: Literary Editors: Typists: MEMBERS OF CLUB NOT IN PICTURE: Neel Cross Sally Dykes Edna C lark V ergie C hason Juanelle Vaughn Faye Adkison. Gainey Shores. Ruth Posey. Mary B . Smith. Lomar Melver. 33 OFFICERS: SPONSOR: STANDING: SEATED: LIBRARY CLUB Chief Librarian: Virgie Ola Eubanks Assistant Librarian: Ellie Mclver Secretary-Treasurer: Martha Blount M iss J ulia B owles Left to Right: Ruth Posey. Miss Bowles. Virginia McGee. Ellie Mclver Emma Jewel Wimberly. Maggie Potter. Ruby Chason, Fay Adkison. Patricia Bentley. Martha B lount. Virgie Ola Eubanks. Margaret B lount OFFICERS: BACK ROW: MIDDLE ROW: FRONT ROW: FUTURE HOMEMAKERS OF AMERICA President: Betty Jean Cross Vice-President: Tuanelle Vaughn Secretary: Mary Lee Cross Treasurer: C arol Jean C lark Reporter: E lizabeth Dean Left to Right: Patricia Bentley. Miss Evelyn Johnson (sponsor). Erlene S hiver, Ida Pearl Alday. Joyce Suber. Sonya F letcher. Jane Suber. Lynell Fletcher. Sarah Fletcher. Lilia Smith. Lenora Lovett. Virginia W atson, C arol Jean C lark. Juanelle Vaughn. B etty Jean C ross. Mary Lee Cross. E lizabeth Dean. Charlotte White. F lossie Edenfield. Ruth Posey, Mabel Hosey, Faye Adkison, Benita Bevis. OFFICERS: BACK ROW: FOURTH ROW: THIRD ROW: SECOND ROW: FRONT ROW: FURTURE FARMERS OF AMERICA President: Vice-President: Secretary: Treasurer: Reporter: Sentinel: Conductor: Advisor: W right C rosby Bobby Rowan Herman Rowan J oe C owen Robert Bloi’nt Robert B oyd Dan Garner N. B. Bevis Left to Rig t: Bobby Rowan. W right C rosby, Ellis Hill. Herman Rowan, Joe Cowen, Welburn Rowan. Leroy Perkins, Raymond Dean. Robert Blount. Herbert Smith, Gainey Shores. Herbert Holland, Reginald McPherson, Dan Garner. Donald Ventry. Robert Boyd, Mr. N. B. Bevis (sponsor). Buddy Rowan. Wayne Spooner. Elton White. Vernon Chester, Thad White, Emmett C lark, Burma Smith. Byron Cox. Marcus Edwards. Jim Posey. Edwin Dean, Mulder B rown. B illy S hepard, James C lark. Billy Perkins, Wayne Suber. Russell Potter. Wesley Dean. Robert Morgan. Jack Agerton, Vernon Todd. Willard Rudd. Jerome Jordan. Donald Clark. 36 BACK ROW: FIFTH ROW: FOURTH ROW THIRD ROW: SECOND ROW FIRST ROW: FOUR H-GIRLS Left to Right: Lynell Fletcher. Faye Durden. Celia Chason. Jane Suber. Sarah Fletcher. % Carol Jean Clark. Mary Lee Cross. Elisabeth Dean. Benita Bevis. Aline S hivers. Ruth Holland. Alice Faye Smith. Mattie Boyer. Miss Elise Laffitte (County Home Demonstration Agent). Mary Jean Butler. Carol Clark, Ruth Posey. Delicia Durden. Miriam Dean. Lynell Bowen. Sonya Fletcher, Nell Whiddon. Miss Ivan Woodbery. (Assistant) Home Demonstration Agent. Anna Lois Clark. Eva Lera Edwards. Mary Alice Dean. Mary Emma Shivers. Ann Holland. Yvonne Shepard, C arolyn C lark. Alice Virginia C lark. Derlie Adkison. Elisabeth Durden. 37 BACK ROW: FOURTH ROW: THIRD ROW: FRONT ROW: FOUR H-BOYS Left to Right: Walter Sharpton, Cheater Posey, Hovey Smith, Clifford Johnson, Durward Sharpton. Scott C lark. Mack Eubanks. Byron Rudd, George L. Smith. Sydney Dougan, Ken Spurlock, Edward Rowan, Forrest May. Roger Smith. Glenn Suber, Huey Agerton. W illiam Whiddon, Billy Adkinson, Gene Edenfield, Charles Shepard, O. W. Rowan, Wayne McLaughlin, Jimmy Clark. Buddy Johnson, Phillip Blount, Franklin Sharpton, Jimmy Bentley, Carol Brinson, Bernard Clark, Advisor. 38 BACK ROW: THIRD ROW: SECOND ROW: FRONT ROW: Left to Right: Virginia McGee. Barbara Ann Kennedy. Roy Johnson. Franklin Rowan, Herbert Holland. Ellie Mclver, Juanita B lount. W right C rosby. Lynell Fletcher. Jane Suber, Donald C lark. Robert Boyd. Edsel C lark, Alice F aye Smith. Ann Perkins. Lynette Bowen. M ary J can B utler, Annu Lois Clark. Melton Johnson. Wesley Dean. B illy Shepard. W illard Rudd. Roger S mith. Laverne Hill, B etty Glisson, E hzabeth Dean. S arah F letcher. B enita B avis, C elia C hason. C arol Jaan C lark, M argaret Ann B ataman. Norma Bowan. Joyca S ubar. S arah Boyd, Sonya Fletcher. Ruth Holland. Miriam Dean. BACK ROW: SECOND ROW: F1RTS ROW: Left to Right: Laverne Hill. Delicia Durden, Huey Agarton. Byron Rudd. Miriam Dean, Roger Smith. Mary Jean Butler,Melton Johnson. Jimmy Clark, Lynette Bowen. Jerry Smith. Harvey Smith. Sydney Dougan. Barbara Ann Kennedy, Sarah Boyd, B etty Glisson, Diane McPherson. Alice Faye Smith. Forrest May. Jimmy McLaughlin. Jimmy Bowers. Walter Anderson, Jerry Butler. Ann Perkins. Anna Lois C lark. W ayne McLaughlin. M argaret B lount, George Rudd. Larry C rosby. I O r 39 JUNIOR CHOIR BACK ROW: Left to Right: Forrest May, James Clark. Dora Mae Clark. Mrs. McPherson (teacher), Shirley Hopkins. Faye Durdan. Grace Phillips, Ruth Holland, Lynette B owen, Jack Agerton. Ann Holland. FRONT ROW: Buddy Johnson. Charles Clark, Laverne Hill. Carol Clark. Alice Faye Smith. Walter Smith. Mary Jean Butler, Tommy Johnson. Ann Fletcher. 40 ATHLETICS BACK ROW: Left to Right: SCHEDULE OF GAMES Willard Rudd Forward Marcus Edwards F orward OPPONENT SCORE THIRD ROW: B illy S hepard F orward WE THEY W ayne S pooner F orward Greenwood 35 22 Herman Rowan F orward Blountstown 58 10 Emmett C lark F orward C hattahoocnee 24 31 SECOND ROW: W elburn Rowan Guard Havana 22 36 Leroy Perkins Guard S neads 35 31 Robert B oyd Guard Cottondale 55 31 Donald Ventry Guard B ristol 34 22 Franklin Rowan Guard Quincy 42 26 FRONT ROW: T. R. Milam C oach B lountstown 41 22 W right C rosby Guard Greenwood 52 30 Bobby Rowan F orward C hattahoochee 46 20 Dan Garner C enter B ristol 51 17 J oe C owen F orward Havana 25 43 Herbert Holland Guard Cottondale 41 18 Sneads 44 41 42 CHEERLEADERS BACK ROW: Left to Right: Sally Dykes, Jane Suber. Celia Chason. Joyce Suber. FRONT ROW: Ruth Posey, CarolSue Bowen, Lynell F letcher. CHEER LEADERS--THEME SONG Oh, When those Greensboro Bulldogs fall in line. We’re gonna win this game another time. For Greensboro high, we’ll ever loyal be, And for that basketball team We’ll cheer so faithfully. We’re gonna fight, fight, fight, the whole game through, W e’re gonna get that ball and put it through. For Greensboro’s team. We'll have no fear. Hear us cheer rah, rah, ra-ah” 44 SCHOOL FUN THE LONG AND SHORT OF IT KEEP YOUR HEELS DOWN. GEORGIA PEACH ASK GENE MOVIE STARS WINTER WEAR SENIOR BEAUTIES SLIM WIND-BLOWN AND KNEE-HIGH WHERE’S JOYCE? LIZ AND BEETLEBOMB futocjxafini 49 COMPLIMENTS OF SMITH MOTOR CO. INC. QUINCY, FLORIDA MORROW CLEANERS DRY CLEANING AND ALTERATIONS “BRING YOUR CLOTHES TO MORROW TODAY” QUINCY, FLORIDA CONGRATULATIONS SENIORS! Lester-Munroe Motors, Inc. DODGE - PLYMOUTH SALES AND SERVICE COMMERCIAL CARS AND TRUCKS PHONE 72 QUINCY, FLORIDA AMERICA’S OUTSTANDING 6c CIGAR VALUE FLORIDA QUEEN MANUFACTURED BY Budd Cigar Co. QUINCY, FLORIDA COMPLIMENTS OF Gadsden Feed Mills, Inc. MANUFACTURERS OF MARK MUNROE’S MASTER MIX FARMER’S CHOICE FEEDS PHONE 267 - P. O. BOX 789 QUINCY, FLORIDA Quincy Coca-Cola Bottling Co. QUINCY, FLORIDA COMPLIMENTS OF The J. S. Shaw Co. “THE SHOPPING CENTER’’ QUINCY, FLORIDA COMPLIMENTS OF Florida Cigar Co. MANUFACTURERS QUINCY, FLORIDA NOR DACS - LORD CLIFFORD - SANTA FUMAR - LAKOTA Gifts for Every Occasion MOON'S Quincy, Florida Compliments of The Quincy State Bank Quincy, Florida Resourses Over $8,000,000.00 First State Bank Organized Under the Laws of Florida Bank No. 1 -- Chartered Aug. 1889 Bell-Shelfer, Inc. Complete Home Furnishings Frigidaire Appliances Quincy, Florida One of America’s Greater Weeklies GADSDEN COUNTY TIMES Commerical Printing Quincy, Florida Subscriptions $3.00 per Year Compliments of INTERSTATE ENTERPRISES SHAW and LEAF THEATRES Quincy, Florida Where Pleasure Costs So Little Compliments of F. P. MAY DRUG CO. Quincy, Florida Over 72 Years of Satisfactory Service WOODROW BROCKMAN GULF SERVICE Jefferson and Roberts Street Tires - Batteries - Accessories - Lubrication - Washing Road Service On Hiway 90 Quincy, Florida ELECTRIC APPLIANCE CO. Leon Snider, Manager General Electric Appliance Dealer QUINCY MOTOR SALES. Inc. DeSoto - - Plymouth Telephone 411 61 Quincy, Florida Compliments of FLETCHER - CANTEY North Florida’s Finest Mens Store Best Wishes McKEOWN’S PHARMACY CLINICAL LABORATORY Prescriptions Phone 50 Compliments of JITNEY - JUNGLE Self Service Food Store Compliments of THE SUNSHINE LAUNDRY Quincy, Florida Your Walgreen Agency JESSUP DRUG Offers and Solicits Your Patronage Complete Service - Prescriptions Compounded - Cosmetic Counter Eight Famous Lines to Select from - Sundries Arriving Weekly New Items All the Time - Fountain Service Complete - Serving Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner - Open 7:00 a. m. till 11:00 p. m. Prices made to Save You Money at the Walgreen Agency Quincy, Florida WARD S AUTO SERVICE, Inc. Sales HUDSON Service 122 West Washington Street Phone 456 Quincy, Florida Qreeniboro,


Suggestions in the Greensboro High School - Bulldog Yearbook (Greensboro, FL) collection:

Greensboro High School - Bulldog Yearbook (Greensboro, FL) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

Greensboro High School - Bulldog Yearbook (Greensboro, FL) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

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Greensboro High School - Bulldog Yearbook (Greensboro, FL) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

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Greensboro High School - Bulldog Yearbook (Greensboro, FL) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

1953

Greensboro High School - Bulldog Yearbook (Greensboro, FL) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

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Greensboro High School - Bulldog Yearbook (Greensboro, FL) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

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