January 18, 1946.
THE SALEMITE
Page Five.
Basketball
Practice Begins
Basketball practice began this
"'cek .The gymnasium is open every
afternoon for all girls who are
'iiterested in practicing basketball.
Annabel Allen is manager of bas
ketball. Henrietta Walton is the as
sistant manager. The official tour
nament between classes will not be-
S'n until second semester starts.
school-bag with a career—^lively
a rumor and stirring as _ the
o’clock bell. Make yours in a
J'^rk color wool with a brilliant
facing that will show off your
lavorite Disney character to best
Advantage. Pluto, Mickey, Minnie,
~umbo, Bambi, the Three Cabal-
the Three Little Pigs or
■^.humper all come in these large-
Jized Simplicity desig^ied appliques
Jhat are so easy to make and such
to sport!
^utdoor sports take on added sig-
?*ficance if you can bicycle forth
a pair of slick fitting pedal
Ushers, designed by Simplicity,
hat boast Donald Duck on one leg
Mickey Mouse embroidered on
other. These Disney favorites
guaranteed conversation pieces
are so easy to do. Buy your
^ansfer patterns, press them on
a hot iron and then embroider
the outline in your favorite
of colors.
Foreign Students
Still Need Help
(F’rom World Student Service Fund
Newsletter)
Cable from Geneva to WSSP', No
vember 28, 1945; from Swedish As
sociate Executive Secretary, Euro
pean Student Kelief Fund: “Cash
situation has now reached bottom
limit of 100,000 Swiss francs ($20,-
000).—Yngve Frykholm.
Greece—Greek universities (Athens,
8000 students, Polytechnic, Salonika,
1200) reopened on April 1, 1945.
‘‘Nearly all students lack books,
poverished, their homes destroyed.
Many are in poor health and need
are resourceless, their families im-
stationery, writing materials and
money for tuition. Several thousand
extra food to ward off tuberculosis.”
Norway—University of Oslo has an
exceptional enrolment of 6000 stu
dents, composed of two group.': the
veterans of resistance, captivity,
or deportation, and the newcomers
who have been waiting for the re
opening of the university. The most
serious problem is that of housing
and study accommodations. Shoes
and clothing are urgently needed, as
well as great numbers of text and
reference books in foreign langu
ages.
Austria—University of Vienna re
opened in October with 5000 stu
dents in a city where 7r>% of the
people are near starvation.
Holland—All universities have re
opened excepting the Unh'^ersity
of Nijmegen and the Calvinist Uni
versity of Amsterdam which were
almost completely destroyed.
Hungary—In Parmany University
in Budapest before the war 3000
students were housed and 5900 fed
in residential colleges and social
institutions. Today, the housing and
food shortage is such that only
400 can be housed and only 540
fed Tlie clothes shortage is equally
acute. Eotvos College (Teachers)
was badly damaged and pillaged.
“Professors and students aro work
ing together almost every day re
pairing damaged tiles and clearing
away the heaps of debris. The
majority of these students urgently
need clothes and food.”
Germany—In the American zone the
University of Heidelberg was the
first German university to liberate
itself and reopen on August 27,
when first-year medical courses were
started. The medical colleges of
Marburg and Erlangen have also re
opened. 200 students and 18 pro
fessors were assigned to each of
these 3 schools, after a screening
process. The Universities of Frank
furt, Giessen, Wurzburg and Munich
© ESQUIRE, INC., 1943
Reprinted from the May issue of Esquire
. “Father! You keop out of this
are too badly damaged to reopen. In I half of WSSF and of Internation
the British zone, the University of | Student Service, speaking in many
Gottingen reopened on September' colleges and universities, and mak-
I, with 7000 students. The Univer
sities of Kiel, Bonn and Muster
were scheduled to reopen in No
vember in one or more of their col
leges. The University of Berlin in
the Russian zone has reopened.
Japan—-Before the war there were
73,000 university students in Japan.
22% of the Japanese population
has t. b. “Toman Maeda, present
Japanese Minister of Education,
is a member of the Tokyo Quaker
Meeting, and has studied in Friends’
discussion groups. Quaker groups
in Japan have been small, but are
typical of minor segments of the
population steadfastly opposed to
—World over Press, November
II, 1945.
Personal—Andre de Blonay, able
executive secretary of the European
Student Relief Fund and of World
Student Relief, flow back to Europe
on December 4th, after two very
fruitful months in the U. S. on be-
I
I
I
I
I
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■|l'
O’HANLON’S
DRUG STORE
★
AT THE BUS STOP
ing innumerable valuable personal
contacts. Billie Rowland attended a
European conference called by the
Union of Czechoslovak Students in
Prague in November on behalf of
World Student Relief. Roland
Elliott is enrouto to the Orient on a
mission which includes the services
Community Closet
Wouldn’t it be wonderful if we
could pool all our clothes into one
huge wardrobe for the campus as a
whole to choose from! Well, yes, I
know it would be a catastrophe to go
to the closet in the a. m. and find
the skirt and sweater that you had
planned to wear gone, but it could
also be advantageous. Just think,
we’d have our chance at:
Betsy Long’s lusciou.s pink and blue
gabardine suit.s—
Henny’s sweaters and skirts that
‘ ‘ match so bad”—
Julia’s mink hat—
Gaither’s tailored riding habit—
Nell Penn’s good-looking suits—
Lib Price’s array of unusual
shoes—
Bet Epps’ matching hand knitted
soxs and sweaters—
Ruby’s yellow and gray swan
sweater—
Betsy Casteen’s fur coat—
Alice Chile’s black dresses that fit,
oh, so good—
Jane Paton’s tiny black and pink
evening dress—
Teau’s multi-colorsd coat—
Jeanne Dungan’s numerous V-neck
sweaters—
Julia Maxwell’s s-l-i-n-k-y black
formal—
Jane l.ovelance’s green lizard bag
and shoes—
Mary Ann Linn’s dainty blouses—
Doris Brown’s suede riding jact-
et—
But along with all the advantages
of this pooled wardrobe go many dis
advantages. Do you know anyone
who would like to wash Jayne Bell’s
“millions” of dirty soxst
of World Student Relief. Sidney
Lovett, Chaplain of Yale University,
and Chairman, General Committee,
WSSF, will be homo from his Euro
pean student mission around Christ
mas, for wide uae in the colleges and
universities.
Fresh Up With
/
U.1
i**r. Off.
It Likes You
Truelove Dry Cleaners
★
Three Blocks North of College
★
336 S. Main Street Winston-Salem, N. C.
GOOCH’S
“THE STORE ON THE CORNER’
Come over to see our Menu—
We have everything that’s good to eat for that
“IN BETWEEN SNACK”
1
o
D
o
Stationery
Fountain Pens
notebooks
HINKITS Book Store
SALEilfllTES
GO TO
WELFARE’S
FOR
SAHITARY FOOD
TTam or Eat Sandwiches, Devilled or Plain AND the Bert and
Biggest Blilk Shakes In Winston-Salem
Beglstered Pharmacist
W
n
Some of our specials are:
Cream Cheese & Olive on Nut Bread, Ham-Bunn,
Hot Fudge Sundae on toasted Pound-Cake, |
Walnut Fudge Tarts, Frozen Pineapple Juice
I All Kinds of Salads, Soups, Sandwiches and
O Fountain Drinks
‘Ben” and Kathrjne Roberts
Proprietors
D
o
[OnO: