OCR Text |
Show cord for the four years awarding of honors In order for a student to receive special honors from this him school, it shall be necessary for to be so qualified scholasticallly and morallly as to receive recognition from the college executive council as of the being a worthy representative school at the time the honors are awarded. Sec. 2. Any honors awarded by the student body may be recinded from the student receiving them at any time if said student disgraces his honors by failing to respect the standards of the school. Sec. 3. Not more than five honor sweaters shall be given to the college or the highschool basketball teams. The five members playing in the greatest percentage of the league games in each team shall receive the honor sweaters. In case of a tie the regular members shall receive the honors. Sec. 4. In order for a student to receive special honors in track work it shall be necessary for him to win at least one first place in the division or the state meet. Sec. 5. The honor emblem for college athletics shall consist of a white sweater with a blue Don the chest, with a blue ring around the left arm for each year of participation in basket ball and a blue ring around the right arm far each year of participation as a successful in track and field work. Sec. 6. The honor emblem for highschool athletics shall consist of a blue sweater with a white block D on the chest and a white ring around the left arm for each year of participation in basket ball, and a white ring around the right arm for each year of participation as a successful participant in track and field work. Sec. 7. No student shall receive more than one sweater for participation in highschool' athletics and one for participation in college athletics. The studentbody shall have a ring knit on the arm of the sweater to designate each additional years participation as governed by sections 5 and 6. Sec. 8. In prder to receive a letter for debating or oratory it shall be necessary for a student to represent the school in at least one debate or oratorical contest or one debate or oratorical contest. Sec. 9. The honor emblem for college debating and oratory shall be a plain block D and a ring shall be placed around the D for each additional years participation. Sec. 10. The honor emblem for highschool debating and oratory shall consist of a white block D set in a blue enemal background. A ring shall be placed around the D for each additional years participation. Sec. 11. The most efficient student in Dramatics and the most efficient student in opera work shall receive special honors. Said student shall be selected by the coach of each department. Sec. 12. The school will give two scholarship pins, one to the college graduate having the highest scholastic record for the full college course and one to. the highschool graduate having the highest scholarship re Sec. 1. Every day is community pride day. It is well to have an annual town clean-u- p day but the spirit of the day should extend throughout the year. Streets and premises must be kept clean and orderly always. The value of the clean manifold. It is the best advertising medium, for a known as it appears to passers-by- . It has a stimulating and refining influence on the citizens. It calls for further improvements. Community pride is contagious and passes quickly from one place to another. A clean lot on one block so means o clean block. Well kept public premises mean refined amusements which also spreads. Community pride is a great agent of city and nation building. B. A. C. DIXIE DUAL ARRANGED have been Final arrangements made for the B. A. C. Dixie dual debate for the Judd Medal. The question is Resolved, that the Philippine Islands should immediately be granted independence after the manner of Cuba. The length of the speeches are to be twelve minutes for constructive arguments and six for rebuttal. These contests will be held April 5 in Cedar City and in St. George. ' The debaters for the Dixie are William Snow and Letha Taylor for the negative; Karl Savage and Laron Andrus for the affirmative. These students have been studying the question for some time, and active preparation of arguments is now being rapidly accomplished. The Judd Medal will be awarded on the basis of the majority of judges won by each school. It will remain with the winners until the other school defeats this years MR. NICHOLES TO RETURN It is reported that our former president, Mr. Nicholes, will return next year. At the present time he is studying science at Stanford UniverHe will receive a master of sity. science degree this spring. A little push is often more lasting than a strong pull. nt inter-col-lega- ol Tlie st- George Commer' a Social Service cial Club will give who by decision student to the medal by the club of a committee appointed be accounted as shall school the and service tc having given the greatest meas-urethe furtherance of progressive school. the of out in and No person shall wear an Sec. 14not been ofhonor emblem which has ficially bestowed on him. Sec. 15. An official Honor Day of shall be held the first Monday Commencement Week at which the be honors won during the year shall D set with block The awarded. as a Col pearls should be used only pin. lege graduation WSec 13 It is estimated that there yet mains about nine billion barrel ! petrolium in the earth of our c we Last year try. withdrew this deposit 746,000,000 barrels-0this rate it is easily seen that it only be about 12 more years u!! our supply will be exhausted. tVh 31 will be do then for gas and oil America lest one of her most pro found thinkers upon the passing 0 Dr. Jacques Loeb, February 1924, As a leader in Experimental Biology he had few if any equals Last year, 1923, 6.15 inches 0f rainfall was recorded by our ioca weather station. To date this year we have about 1 inch. From igsj to 1920 the average rainfall for st THINGS THAT NEVER DIE 8.84 was inches. The small George est amount being in 1894 when there beautiful The pure, the bright, the was only 3.55 inches. The greatest That stirred our hearts in youth. rainfall during these 30 years was in The impluses to a wordless praper. 1907 when 18.71 inches fell. Times The dreams of love and truth; are not as dry as we sometimes think The longings often something lost, they are. The spirits yearning cry, Dr. Earnest M. Hall, as a The striving after better hopes two of Stanfords medical men with die never can These things has just published a very scholar? The timid hand stretched forth to aid paper on the Repair Of The Liver A brother in his need, Following The Injection of ChlorA kindly word in griefs dark hour oform Into The Portal System. Dixie is That proves a friend indeed; proud of Dr. Halls achievements. The plea for money softly breathed, When justice threatens high, V. M. T. The sorrow of a contrite heart These things shall never die. THE DAFFODILS The memory of a clasping hand, The pressure of a kiss. And all the trifles, sweet and frail, That make up loves first bliss; If with a firm, unchanging faith, And holy trust and high. Those hands have clasped, those lips have met These things shall never die. William Wordsworth I wandered lonely as a cloud That floats on high oer vale and When, all at once I saw a crowd, hill, host, of golden daffodils, Beside the lake, beneath the trees, Fluttering and dancing in the breeze A Continuous ah the stars that shine And twinkle on the Milky Way, The cruel and the bitter word, line They stretched in never-endin- g That wounded as it fell; Along the margin of a bay: The chilling want of sympathy Ten thousand saw I at a glance, We feel, but never tell: The hard repulse that chills the Tossing their heads in sprightly dance. heart, Whose hopes were bounding high. The waves beside them danced, but In an unfading record kept they These things shall never die. Outdid the sparkling waves in glee; hand Let nothing pass, for every A poet could not but be gay Must find some work to do; In such a jocund company. Lose not a chance to waken love I gazed, and gazed, but little thought Be firm, and just, and true; What wealth the show to me had So shall a light that cannot fade brought: Beam on thee from on high, For oft, when on my couch I lie And angel voices sang to thee In vacant or in pensive mood, These things shall never die. They flash upon that inward eye Which is the bliss of solitude; Selected And then my heart with pleasure 9 fills, AS THE DAYS PASS And dances with the daffodils. March 13. Annual ing Everybody cipal Pride Day. House clean-work- s Muni- - LYMAN ATTENDS CONFERENCE Apostle Richard R. Lyman attendwins ed thet quarterly conference held in St. George, March 14 and 15. Elder March 16. McAllister goes to Salt Lyman speaks favorably of the conditions in St. George, and he is pleasLake City. ed that the Dixie College is training March 17. Everybody wears green leaders in the Boy Scouts and other and dance with Rota Betas in Leg- work. ion Hall. March IS Rain. More rain. Only men and children tell the at least when their birthdays truth; March 19. U. A. C. Glee Club enterare concerned. tains. D March 14. day. debate from Snow.. Dixie March 21. Dixie and Cedar meet in battle. Decision a tie. Music is the language of the soul; iazz is its profanity. |