November 7, 1947.
THE SALEMITE
Page Five.
Music Majors Will Perform
In Memorial Hall Tuesday
by Barbara Ward
The Salem College School of Music
will present a students’ recital in
Memorial Hall Tuesday at 8:30 p. m.
Bennie Jo AUchael is scheduled
to open the program with a violin
composition, “Infrada” by Des-
planes-Nachez, a classical tone piece.
Jack Crim, a freshman voice major
and a baritone, will sing the early
English love song, ‘ ‘My Lovely
Celia ’ ’, by George Monro.
The rest of the program is made
up of senior music majors. Barbara
Ward will play “Impromptu in G
flat major” by Chopin. This is the
third impromptu in his Opus 51. The
middle section is interesting in that
the rhythmic feature is two against
three. The modulations are distant
but subtle.
The very dramatic “Ich Grolle
Nicht” by Schumann will be sung
by Mary Wells Bunting. In it a
girl is singing of her lost love when
she says, “I chide thee not, thou
loved me.”
Peggy Davis, an organ major will
play “Two Antiphons” by Marcel
Dupre. Strictly “off the record”
are the real titles of these two pom-
positions in the modern idiom: “I
am black but comely, O ye daughters
of Jerusalem” and “The king sit-
teth at his table while the spikenard
bringeth forth the perfume thereof.”
The “Praeludium in E minor”
from MacDowell’s first modern
suite will be played by Fay Cham
bers. This almost impressionistic
piece is charactized by its contracts
of mood and the repetition or deve
lopment of the main theme in dif
ferent keys.
Betty Lou Ball will sing Mimi’s
iirst aria, “Si, mi chaimano Mimi”,
from the opera, “La Boheme”, by
Puccini. Mimi is standing outside
the door of Eudolpho’s apartment
in Paris. She has lost her key and
her candle has gone out.
Brahm’s “Ballade in G minor”
has two definitely contrasting styles.
The first is allegro and energetic
while the second is soft, melodic,
slower, with an arpeggio bass. IiOm-
ie Lon Mills will play this.
Qenevra Beaver will play Chopin's
“Ballade in P” which she played in
the Choral Concert in Hickory. It
begins with a simple folk-songish,
andantino section which is followed
by a sudden presto cor. fuoco section.
After a quick look back at the be
ginning it is fast and furious again.
Suzanna’s aria, “Deh Vieni”,
from “Marriage of Figaro” by
Mozart will be sung by Peggy Sue
Ask Roomy;
She Knows
One of the most important college
courses isn’t listed in any catalogue
but it might be called “Living
With A Eoommate.” Just in case
your roomie is too polite to tell—■
better give yourself a quick check
up.
Answer “No” or “Yes” to these
Varsity Magazine questions. If you
answer “No” to at least 11, you’re
a pretty fair roommate; 13 to 17
means you’re wonderful; more than
17 indicates you’re too good to be
true. If, on the other hand, your
“ No’s ” are below 9, we suggest
that you become a hermit.
1. Do you lose your temper
easily? .
2. Do you sulk?
3. Do you talk too much?
4. Do you read out loud? ..
5. Do you gossip?
6. Do you fail to consider her
likes and dislikes?
7. Do you expect to be included
in his invitations?
8. Do you brag about your work,
friends or social position? —
9. Do you rely on your roommate
for amusement?
10. Do you talk too much about
your heart interests?
11. Do you always talk about your
troubles?
12. Do you try to be the boss?
13. Do y6u ask questions about
personal matters?
14. Do you share her interests?
15. Do you lack respect for your
roommate’s privacy?
16. Do you play the radio continu
ously?
17. Do you take the best drawers
and hog the closet space?
18. Do you litter the room?
19. Do you neglect cleaning up
after a party?
20. Do you forget to pay half of
mutual expenses?
Taylor. Suzanna is walking up and
down in the garden waiting for her
lover. The smooth melody reflects
not only the mood but the walking.
Fran Winslow will play the first
movement of Mendelssohn’s “Con
certo in G minor”. Dr. Vardell
will play the second piano arrange
ment of the orchestral accompani
ment. This movement is fast and
forceful with a characteristic con
certo beginning.
■'Son
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The Faculty
Reads Widely
by Marilyn Booth
You think you have a lot to do—
no leisure timet
Well, the faculty have lessons and
tests to keep up with too, you know,
and yet they do all sorts of extra
reading on their own. Just listen!
Miss Byrd has recently finished
The Meeting of East and West, by
P. S. L. Northrop, and A Mummer’s
Wife, by George Moore. Now she’s
reading Bredvold’s Milieu of John
Dryden. Next she wants Ambrose
Bierce’s Collected Stories. And
after that—well, a light novel “for
a change.”
Miss Covington’s roster includes
John Maynard Keynes’ General The
ory of Employment and Money; two
books called Monetary Theory by
G. V. Chandler and George Halm;
Freedom and Responsibility in the
American Way of Life, by Becker;
and Doctors of the Mind. At pre
sent she’s on Speaking Frankly, by
James F. Byrnes, with hopes of
starting some good detective stories
in the future.
Then consider Mr. Leach, Since
school started, he‘s read Charles F.
Coffin, Quaker Pioneer, by Mary
Johnson; Folded Leaf; by William
Maxwell; P. X. Cunon’s Trends in
American Christianity; and Wilter
Millis’s Boad to War. Eight now
he’s using four parallel books to
Ruth Lenkoski Has Finger
In Numerous Salem Pies
Ruth Lenkoski
illuminate his text work and doing
weekly research in Bulletin of the
F. H. A. And he already has his
eyes on Challenge of Our Culture,
by Craig, and Latamette’s History
of Japan.
What’s more, these “insatiables”
are open to your suggestions. Can
you recommend a light novel or a
good detective story?
(Ed. note: Any resemblance be
tween this column and the one that
appears in Saturday Review of, Lit
erature listing the current reading
of the nation’s leaders each week,
is intentional.)
TWIN CITV
IdCY CUANiMO col
612 W. Fourth St. Dial 7106
Winston-Salem, N. C.
♦ by Carolyn Taylor
“I can’t write because I’m left-
handed.”
Buth Lenkoski spent an hour the
other night telling me about her
difficulties in putting things down
on paper. This trouble all goes
back to her childhood when she
left-hande dness. Physi olo gically
changed , from right-handedness
to left-handedness. Physiologically
speaking, she seems to be all right
otherwise.
A sophomore, Ruth is from Spring
field, Masschusetts. I asked her
how she got so far south, and she
attributes it all to Mr. Weinland.
Thanks to Mr. Weinland. for Buth
is certainly an addition to Salem.
Interested in everything, Ruth does
ten hours a week in the library,
works on the “Y”, types for the
Sights and Insights, and raises the
flag every morning. She vows she
can’t do both her academic work
and her activities, and can’t decide
which to drop.
A sociology major, Ruth plans to
go abroad after graduation and do
social work. She is determined to
get there if she has to work her
way over as a—well, cook.
Incidentally, Ruth has a hand
some brother who will graduate from
Harvard in June. ’Nuff said.
BRODT-SEPARK
MUSIC CO.
620 W. 4th St.
\
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