March 19, 1948
THE SALEMITE
Page Three
The Happy
Warrior
by Frances ftuleslan
I wandered lonely as a cloud.
And sang a melancholy strain'
The things that man had made of
man
Brought sad thoughts to my^'brain.
‘Tis past! That melancholy dream,
I’m a worshipper of Nature
That still, sad music of humanity
And not too far from insanity.
My heart leaps u]) when I behold
A rainbow in the sky
Ever since'! found tht;e out
My heart to thee does cry.'
The child is father of the man
The man is father of the child
So was it when my life began
So is it now—my mind run’s wild.
'The world is too much for us; late
and soon
We give our hearts away—we’re out
of tune,
We hear old Triton blow his wrea
the’d horn
And know we’re not the only ones—
his music do we scorn,
fcheer Up!
Fears and fancies thick upon me
came;
Dim sadness—and blin*i thoughts, I
know not, nor could name
For ways of men are vain, melan
choly/cause sadness,
And finally end in despondency and
madness.
He sings a mcliincholy strain
And still stays melancholy.
Being, as he- is, oppressed.
With melancholy his life is dressed.
Thou art enough to scar# me melan
choly
With that good and simple face so
jolly.
'Tis past, that melancholy dream.
If Lucy should be dead I’ll scream.
Chorus
Oh let’s lament and let’s bewail
And let’s mock Wordsworth with a
passion.
Though William’s dead lie ought to
know
AVe’re ghosting him in good fasliion.
i{( 9|( 9jc
Hershberger Wins
Chesterfield Prize
Martha Hershberger was the win
ner of the Walking Man contest and
the winner of a carton of Chester
fields.
The Walking Man was Zeno Hoots.
The clues are as follows;
Oh, (1) do you see double?
What comes last (2) shall come be
fore. /
Are Chesterfields worth your trouble
Shoot, (3) try it, and get Chester
fields galore.
(1) Double “o” in Hoots
(2) “Z”, the last letter in the al
phabet is first letter in his name.
(3) Shoot, if you tried it, spells
Hoots.
Elizabeth Price
Frances Winslow
Price And Winslow Give
Second Senior Recital
The second in the series of spring
I graduating recitals will take place
' on Tuesday, April 6, at 8:30 in Mem
orial Hall. Elizabeth Price, soprano,
[and Frances Winslow, :pianist, will
present a joint program of classical
and modern music.
Lib, who is engaged to Charles
Wentz of Salisbury, is from Monroe,
N. C. She is the senior represent
ative on the IRS council and is in
the musical section of the May Dav
Committee. Another organization
in which she has participated whole
heartedly is the Choral 'Ensemble.
Fran, who is from Plymouth, N.
C., also has a diamond, the lucky
man being .Tack Spillers. She won
first prize in the Library Contest in
both her freshman and' sophomore
years. She has taken active part
in the I. R. C., French club, Salem
Players, Pierettes and Modern Dance
club. She has also been a reporter
on the Salemite staff. As a member
of the Choral Ensemble, Fran has
been featured as soloist on concerts.
The recital program is as follows;
"Come and Trip It” by Carmich
ael, “My Lovely Celia” by Wilson,
“ Se Florin do e Fedele” by Scar
latti, and *‘Che Fiero Costume” by
•Legrenzi sung by Lib; “O Hail this
Brightest Day of Days” by Bach-
Lambert, “Papillons’^ by Schumann,
and "Ballade in A Flat Major” by
Chopin played by Fran; "Wohiri’-’
by Schubert, "Die Neugierige” by
Schubert, and "Bergerettes” by
I Weckerlin sung by Lib; "March
Carillon ’ ’ by Hanson, ‘ ‘ Petite Sui
te” by Bartok, and “ Etude-Tableau
in E Flat Major” by Rachmaninoff
played by Fran; ‘‘Le parlate d’-
amor” from "Faust” by Gounod,
"Spinster’s Lament” iiy Hughes,
and ‘ ‘ The Sleigh ’ ’ fey Kountz sung
by Lib; and "Concerto” in G
Minor, Molto allegro con fuoco” by
Mendelsohn played by Fran and, ac
companied by Dr. Qharles Va^ell,
Jr. Mrs. Nell Glenn will accompany
Lib Price.
Students who will serve as ushers
are Fay Chambers, Barbara Ward,
Peggy Sue Taylor, Anne Dungan,
Mary Bryant and Sara Clark.
TWIN CITY
lOttY (UANIMO col
612 W. Fourth St. , Dial 7106
Winston-Salem, n! C.
HINKLE’S BOOK STORE
'> •
HEADQUARTERS FOR
School Supplier—Gifts—Greeting Cards
Fountain Pens — Stationery
452 Trade St.
Phone 8103
SALEM
ELECTRIC CO
contractors
FRANK B. MYERS - E. L. THOMAS
Anything Electrical"'Anytime
24-HOUR SERVICE
Dial 6174
Nights, Sundays and Holidays Dial 6649
315 S. LIBERTY
Salem Press Delegates Attend
NCCPA Conference In Durham
"Tobaccpland”
Will Be Shown
"Tobaccoland, U. S. A.”, an ed
ucational film created to foster a
better understanding of the tobacco
industry, will be, shown on campus
April 2 in Old Chapel.
The movie, filmed, in full color
follows a North Carolina tobacco
planter and his family as they move
through the cycle of the tobacco
year. Many of the scenes show acti
vities in Durham and eastern Caro
lina. It was produced by Louis De
Rochemont, famed for his "Fight
ing Lady”, "The House on 92nd
Street;” "Boomerang”, etc. and is
presented by Liggett and Myers
Tobacco Company. Chesterfield
samples will be distributed to all
those attending.
Tobacco, according to the releases
accompanying th» movie, means a
great deal to America^—both socially
and economically. It is an import
ant crop for the farmer, the raw
material for a major industry, a rich
source of income for the^ govern
ment: and it brings relaxation and
pleasure to the vast majority of
adult Americans. To see the film is
to know the tobacco industry—much
of America and its way of life.
MORRIS SERVICE
Next door to Carolina Theatre
Delicious Homemade Sandwiches of
, All Kinds
Phone 6634
403^ W. 4th St.
-# Four delegates will represent Sal-
I em at the North Carolina Collegiate
Press Association’s second post-war
I convention in Durham today and
I tomorrow. Peggy Davis, secretary
I of the organization, left Thursday
I to participate in registration and or-
j ientation for the three-day meet;
Carolyn Taylor, in-coming Salemite
I editor, Jane Morris, Sights and In
sights business manager, and Toot-
I sit Gillespie, in-coming Sights edi
tor, left for Durham today.
! The Washingtbn Duke Hotel will
be ITeadquarters for the meeting and
j approximately 200 delegates from
I collegiate publications of 39 univ-
I ersities, colleges and junior colleges
I will attend. The theme of the con-
; vention will be "How to put out a
better school publication.”
A forum of nationally-known prin-
I cipals in the field of journalism
I will be featured. Highl|£hts of the
program will be a lun^eon given
I by the University in the Union Ball-
I room today, a banquet at the Wash
ington Duke tonight and various
press clinics and round table discus
sions led by the attending profes
sionals.
RAMON’S GRILL
Sandwiches & Plate Lunches
Corner Brookstown & Liberty
GOOCH’S GRILL
AND SODA SHOP
for that
"IN BETWEEN SNACK”
SNIK’S
Hand'Crocheted Shorties....
Perennial favorites to go with all your, suits,
your cottons, Handmade in finest mercerized cot
ton in white or natural, 2.95 the pair. ^
Glove Bar, First Floor.