E MEW Attend Klumuth Game fc. PUBLISHED Br Tt ASSOCIATED STlHNTS Of THE ASHLAND, ORtGON. HKH SCHOOL .Jj? ASHLAND, OREGON, OCTOBER 6, 131. Beverly Young Daring Heroine Replacements Are Noted In Faculty HUE Pay Your Due IS TWENTY-THREE VOLUNTEERS TURN OUT FOR FIRST FAIJj PRACICE. MATERIAL PROMISING Seven Lettermen and Others of One year's Training Compose Team. Next Four Game Oct. 9 Klamath Falls There Oct. 17 Crascent City There . Oct. 24 Grants Pass There The Grizzlies opened the foot ball season with their first prac tice September . Twetty-three W-s responded to Coacli Bliss's call for volunteers to .ion the moleskins, seven of these being last year's lettermen, and a. few of the others have had a year's experience. The bars have been working hard and give considerable prom ise. The men are all email, with - the exception of Howell, whos six-feet-four stands over the others like a giant among a group of pigmies. But what they lack in size most of them make up in speed and fight; and it's fight that wins ball-games; fight speed, and brains. Most of the boys, however, lack experience in actual games. This is what has our Grizzly Tamer, Coach Bliss, worried. He has used Northern California to gain this experience and the boys are showing up well on the field of battle. The backfield U fairly well Jimmy Hall To Fall For Pretty French Pully With Mark Past. Beverly Young and James Hall have been chosen for the leading parts in the Anniversary play, "Polly With a Past," which Miss Hedges plans to produce in No vember. Beverly Young plays the part of PoIly-wlth-a-French nccent and Is the lure or bait offered to James Hall, as Rex Van Zile, to help him make up "her" mind. LaVerne Ramsay plays Myrtle, the strong-minded young lady with the errant fancies the third angle, angel almost. Supporting the leads are Har old Gillmore and Wendell Ult. zlnger as Harry Richardson and Clay Collins respectively. (Continued on Page 4) JUNE GRADUATES VENTURE FORTH Four Xew Instructors Come To Take their Places on the A. H. H. Faculty. Ashland High lost four mem bers of Its faculty last year. Re placing these are four capable people. They are Mr. Phillips. Miss Beck, Miss Magoon and Miss Kilgore. Mr. Phillips, replacing Mr. Gate hell. Is a native of Colorado. Ho received his A. B. degree from the Colorado Teachers" College at Greeley, Colorado. He later completed the course of study in Oregon State's Department of (Continued on Page S) NEW ACTIVITIES PLANNED BY G.A.A. PLAN IMSTRIHITIOX OF PEARS WHICH AWAIT CAXNIXU BY SAMARITANS. LAW AND ORDER AIM .Mat Thompson Hopes To Further the Organization of AHhland High School Students The G. A. A. met Friday Sep tember IS in the lecture hall. The discussion of the meeting led to the nominations of a Secretary and Treasurer for the coming year. The nominations were pres ident Norma Gorden, Marie Rlg- The June Graduates are Rcat tering far ami wide. Most ofjdon' and Marr Pole),: Secretary them are planning to enter ther"" Treasurer. Iris Atterbury. ana .-vena r-uimau. (Continued on Page 3) SCHOOL SONGSTERS BEGIN PRACTICE realms of higher education. Those planning to attend the Normal School are Hazel Duncan, Ruth Newbry, Ruth Parsons, Eunice Wauchopej Viola Mayberry, Jean ette Stearns, Frances Schilling, Lucille Reeder, James Miller, Ma rion Hitchcock, Maxine Gearhart, June Aikens, Paul Alkens, Flo rence Bellinger. Ruth Billings, and Edna Dantord. Howard and Mary Wiley will attend college at Nampa, Idaho. Those planning to attend Will amette are Nell Perrine and Har old Allison. LeRoy Riley and (Continued on Page 41 Thirty high school boys un der tho direction of Matt Thomp son, have formed a Boys' Council. Clyde Dunham Is president of the group and I Roy Lindner sec retary. Matt Thompson. In a recent Interview, said. "We are doing our best to get the youth of Ash land organized, feeling that a systematic campaign to enlist the help of the young people will further greatly our Y. M. C. A. . activities. The boys have done nicely la soliciting and preparing food for distribution. Here in the building, we have sixty joxes of pears which we plan le can and dk-tributa this winter. I am not supervising this campaign. It is the w rk of the boys them selves, and we expect to accom plish a lot." This group will act as a junior rervlce organization to promote clean, healthful sport, to art as a law and order observing body, and to promote relief among Ashlf nd s needy this winter. New members will be welcomed to this society which makes Other features of the coming year, which were discussed were the games, soccer, basket ball, and volley ball. The soccer games have already started with three practices every week. In order to participate in these sports, girls must take a physical examination. A hike was called for Satur-, y M c A huja iu head day and non-members were wel- j qUaTters. corned to join the adventure Girls wishing to earn their points, may go on the hikes. To be an O. and N. girl, one must have 500 points. She must also be a member of the G. A. A. Approximately thirty-five stu dents have tried out for the boys' and girls' glee clubs in the last two weeks. Although Miss Kil gore has not yet chosen the final members for the two clubs, prac tice has been started on the work for the coming year. In addition to the two glee clubs. Miss Kilgore expects to have a mixed chorus an4 perhaps a sextet or octet. Plans for the numbers to be used this year and the public appearances to be made are not yet complete. ' Miss Kilgore urges all students interested in the glee clubs to see her at once. "I would like to have a large enough group of students try out in order that I might choose fro mlt twenty-five voices for the girls' club and, sixteen for the boys , ' she states. (Continued on Page 2 ) LIBRARY SCENE IS SEEN The two meetings so far have served to start a thorough pro gram for the coming year. No longer can pensive students recline In the big library win dows and listen to the birds and bees or watch the classes In the opposite room. Gone are the days of sitting eight on a side of a i mall table, go that writing was a sort of choice motion. The old library that students of Ashland High have known and loved for years has gone the length of most all libraries that have done their duty. It has been out-grown. We have a new library. The windows are much too high to be used as seats, but aren't needed for that purpose. There is pleut. of space for sufficient tables and chairs for a large number of students. The librarian does not havo to act as a traffic-coo to regulate the traffic between the shelves and the tables. There are even parking si aces now. Industrious students tan spread their elbows 'way out without linking them with their neighbors There Is plenty of light on the subject, either from the six big windows or the big overhead lights. There are shelves and shelves. When a book is with -drawn and then replaced, the operation does not call for the use of a can opener and a shoe horn. Now we are away from tho here-to-for Inevitable buzz of the busy hall and the sla:n of the heavy doors at least we think we are. Since the new library is located downstairs, peace and ouiet, the desire of every self re""ecttng library, are now at hand. IMPROVEMENTS GREET STUDENTS A new library nearly three times as large as the old one. a typing room, a physics, and a bi ology room are the major im provements of the building. The upper part of the building has not been so obviously chang ed. The old library was trans formed into a book mark. Iu Room 6 a new stairway was In serted, which leads to the new rooms. The biology room has now the added comfort of seats placed iu the same manner as the seats in the Chemistry room, the only ob jectionable feature being the nec essity of typing pupils walking through there on the way to the typing room. The new library has sufficient seating capacity for those who go there to study. The girls' and the boys' rooms are also down stairs. (Continued on Pae Si