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Page Four
THE SALEMITE
Salem Qirls Attend Big Dances
In The Carolinas And Virginia
By Skerry Rich
College campuses in North Caro
lina, South Carolina, and Virginia
have been filled with Salem girls
in the recent weekends. The Val
entine Hop at The Citadel which
featured Jimmy and Tommy Dor
sey was a cause for much excite
ment for Martha Dunlap, Ginger
Dysard, Emily McClure, Martha
Jarvis, Mary Gladys Rogers, Mary
Bell Horton, and Harriet Epps.
Also in South Carolina was the
Mid-Winter's at Clemson where
Billy May and his Orchestra pro
vided fine dancing music for the
crowd which included several
Salemites: Jo Costner, Peggy In
gram, and Martha Dunlap.
Ann Knight made a journey to
P. C. to attend the basketball game
with James McLaughlin and to
meet his KA fraternity brothers.
Mid-Winter’s at Davidson with
Buddy Morrow’s Orchestra attrac
ted a great majority of Salem girls.
Among those on the Davidson
campus and near-by area were:
Nancy Cameron, Suejette David
son, Katherine Scales, Harriet
Harris, Sudie Mae Spain, Kate Lee
Cobb, Marcia Stanley, Marilyn
Stacy, Mary Avera, Judy Williams,
Tinkie Millican, Jean Currin, Mer
edith Stringfield, Jean Stone, Joyce
Taylor, Beverly Brown, Celia Smith,
Suzanne Gordon, Kate Campbell,
Peggy Daniels, Charlton Rogers,
Eleanor Smith, Libby Norris, and
Beth Paul. j
The Carolina campus was just'
much anticipated Winter Germans
and Tony Pastor’s Orchestra. Seen
at the dance and various fraternity
functions were: Carol Cook, Bar
bara Durham, Jody Meilicke, Betsy
Giles, Mary Lou Mauney, Suejette
Davidson, Bren Bunch, Nina Skin
ner, Mutt Parker, Nancy Blum,
Carolyn Miller, Nancy Warren,
Carol Campbell, Nancy Gilchrist,
Chris Clark, Betty Morrison, and
Martha Thornburg.
Phyllis Sherrill enjoyed a Pledge
Dance at Carolina, and Ella Ann
Lee reports a real ball was had
by her and Hank Stevenson at the
Phi Chi Medical Fraternity Party.
Footsteps also turned to Wake
Forest Mid-Winter’s where Betsy
Liles, Jo Smitherman, Barbara
Usher, Jane Little, and Gertie
Johnson attended several functions.
In “ole Virginny” the Fancy
Dress Ball at Washington and Lee
commanded the attention of Emily
Cathcart, Jean Stone, and Emma
McCotter for one grand and glori
ous weekend.
In the weeks to come are shad
owed many interesting and antici
pated events. Louise Barron and
Carolyn Spaugh are already mak
ing plans for the Charleston Medi
cal Ball; likewise is Susie Glaser
excited about her long, long week
end to be had at Yale with Bob.
The Azalea Festival with all its;
celebrities and big-doings is close
at hand, also the Old South Ball,
and of course Easter vacation with
trips to Bermuda, Florida, and
Washington in the making.
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Fourth at Spruce St.
Here And There
(Continued from pare two)
ing as it did was a need for change
in foreign policy. The “peacefu'
co-existence” line had won impor
tant people outside the Soviet
Union, but was not achieving its
basic purpose of defeating German
rearmament. In Asia, Chou En-
lai’s unyielding stand on Formosa
had raised the awkward (juestion
of whether the Russians were pre
pared to support him if he got in
a war with the U. S.
Perhaps an answer to the ques
tion of what will the new coalition
do in regard to China is found in
the fact that both Bulganin and
Khrushchev were the men whc
visited Peking and promised “tc
support the Chinese people . . . tc
liberate their suffering brothers
from the oppression of the Chiang
Kai-shek.”
Formosa—For five days last week
the U. S. Seventh Fleet practiced
the evacuation of the Tachen Is
lands, north of Formosa. Once
considered a necessity in the de
fense of Nationalist China’s home
base, it had now been agreed that
they were too hard to hold. Along
with Nationalist Troops and their
ammunition and equipment all of
the civilians and their possessions
were removed.
Although the U. S. and the Na
tionalists had been afraid that the
Red Chinese would interfere, they
had no reason to worry. As Ad
miral Sabin said, “It would have
been a stupid thing to pay in blood
and lives for something they were
going to get for nothing.”
South Africa—Brotherhood Week
seems a bad time to have to re
port the news from this country.
Last week thousands of Johannes
burg policemen guarded against
riot while some 150 black families
were moved in the rain from the
colored settlement of Sophiatorun
to Meadowlands. Reason for the
move—colored settlements, too near
white areas, which are to be evac
uated. It is improper for whites
and blacks to live in such close
proximity according to the policy
of South Africa’s Boer Nationa
list.
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