PAGE TWO THE S A L E M I T E Saturday, October 27, 1928- The Salemite Published Weekly by the Student Body of Salem College. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 a Year :: 10c a Copy EDITORIAL STAFF fiditor-in-Chief Dorothy Ragan, ’29 Managing Editor Ruble Scott, ’5 Associate Editor ....Laila Wright, ’£ Associate Editor Luclle Hassel, ’£ Music Editor Elizabeth Andrews, ’5 Literary Editor Lessie Phillips, ’30 Sport Editor Sara Eflrd, ’31 Local Editor Edith Kirkland, ’31 liocal Editor Kathleen Moore, Business Mirr. Asst. Bus. Mg: Adv. Manager Asst. Adv. BUSINESS STAFF Isabelle Dunn .Eleanor Willinghs Circulation Mgr. . Asst. Circ. Mgr Asst. Circ. Mgr ie Davis r II kney ..Elva Lee Kenerly Elizabeth Allen ... Carolyn Brinkley Mary Norris Elizabeth Ward REPORTERS Mary Myers Faulkner. LITTLE THOUGHTS FOR TODAY "He serves all who dares be true." —Emerson. “Truth nev er was indebted to a lie.” —Young. “Truth 'js : tc'iihin ourselves; it takes no ri se from outward things.” —Urowning. Co-operation Co-operation is a term we hear used every day, yet how many of understand the real significance of this word or realize what i' to co-operate. There are groups of individuals on the campus from time to time who are trying to put over some plan or program. The student body is always ready to criti cize when any part of this proposed plan goes wrong, but it is not always ready to co-operate with those who are working to make it a success. Herein lies the real meaning of co-operation. It is very discouraging when a plan that requires much time and energy turns out to be a failure s' ply because the people chosen take part do not show enough terest to make it a success. Those girls who have the responsibility feel that they have not done their duty when in reality they are not to blame. When a program is to be given girls are chosen to take part because the leaders think they are capable and will co-operate. After the first practice half of the number either drops out or fails to come, and the leader is left with only a few to put over the program. What is she to do? It is too late to select others and besides the best girls have already been chosen. Are we going to let the whole thing fail because we are not interested enough to give a few minutes to it The next week is an appropriate time for the word co-operation to be put into practice on our campus. Hat Burning, the Junior-Freshman Wedding and the Y. W. C. A. Mem bership Drive cannot be put successfully b ythe several girls who are chosen to bear the responsi bility. The co-operation of every one concerned is of vital importance. We do not want these things to “fall through” because we fail to do part. It is up to us to make them a success. Will we co-operate i Basketball Basketball is one of Salem’s major s))orts, and it has' been for years. However there has been a noticeable lack of interest among classes in the sport. The Athletic Council seems to be trying to get at the bottom of the matter, and to overcome this seeming indifference. When the possibility of changing the day of the final games was announced, the student body unanimously voted to change the games from Thanksgiv ing Day to the preceding Saturday. This should mean that every girl 'ill be present and give her team her most loyal support at tliat time. This vote broke another Salem cus tom, but it is only one which has not been firmly established. At least half of the" students spend Thanks giving elsewhere just because the crowd is bigger and the excitement is greater at some other places. This love, year it may be that Salem thankful that she is free from those who liave complained in the past that they were not lucky enough, as they sav, to get away. Anyway an added number coming out to practice basketball now that they can attend Salem’ games, and tlien a football game Thanksgiving. The faithful few who have been practicing these tliree feeks show that they are material for real teams. There are other girls in the college who liave played basketball, and perhaps starred, while in high school; they are espe cially asked to attend practices. It earnestly hoped that every one interested in the good name of her class and her team will co-operate in making the coming games a success in every way possible. Pierrette Players To Sponsor Contest Pierrette Players wish to an nounce a Play-Writing Contest now open to the entire student body. We offer no reward other than the gratifying pleasure of seeing one’s play produced by the Pierrette Play- public performance—prob ably under the auspices of the Mae- Dowell Club. The rules of the contest are; 1. It shall be a one-act play suitable for the interpretation The subject is left entirely to the contestant. 3. The contest ends on Decem ber the sixth at six p. m. 4. Manuscripts shall be given to Edith Kirkland or Marion Bloor. Manscripts shall be type-writ- flower with the fierce play of a deep and tender and authentic Montpar- nassian passion. For love, Jerome lias decided, was a matter of geogra phy, with an emotion to correspond to each latitude; and the capacity for love waned progressively toward le North and toward the South, :arting from a point, say, in the icinity of Langeais. Jerome had ved in Langeais. So in all nobility Jerome very arefully did flot take advantage f any of the quaint openings which Uni Hansen, in lier naive and inno cent way, created. He stuck faith fully by his theory, though, without actually intending to deviate from his geographical course, Jerome learned many curious Norwegian customs and ideas that would not properly fall under the head of geography, and which did not substantially sup port his hypothesis on the latitude of The publishers use much of a yellow and lavender jacket to ex plain that Monsieur Bedel won with this book the Prix Goncourt, award ed yearly for the most original book by a young writer. This proves that literary prize-giving is not ex clusively an American institution, proves- moreover, that the judges for the Prix Goncourt were gentlemen of discrimination. One feels, in reading “Jerome,” a grow- warm regard for the good taste of these judges, a regard not in- iriably to be extended to the sav- its who award our own novel prizes. The publishers inform us, moreover, that Monsieur Bedel waited over twenty years to write this first novel, after deciding that writing would be his career. We submit “Jerome” exhibit A in the case for deferred literary expression. It is written with a clear, a harmonious, and a penetrating irony. Few American novels of the decade can claim to pass its exquisite craftsmanship. 6. Manuscripts shall bear a nom de plume; the real names of contest ants shall be handed in in a sealed Each contestant may submit many manuscripts as she chooses. BOOK REVIEW AT LEISURE THE LOVER OF DREAMS he was only a dreamer, a lover was a world of clouds furled c moonlight gleams Y paths of mystic night Send blinding visions of shimmer ing light. But the lover of dreams found life, and knew The meaning of pain, trust that wat lost, friends untrue. Her dreaming should die in hope less despair. And yet she finds her dreams are still there. “JEROME, OR THE LATITUDE OF LOVE” By Maurice Bedel It could as well have been “Love the Latitude of Jerome,” or as well, “Longitude, or the Love of Jerome.” When a book is of and by a Frenchman you know what to expect, and no amount of geographi cal scrambling can deceive. You know the central motif is love, struck seductively at the start by muted strings, and pursued with impetuous orchestration until the ancient fugue expires upon a soft and suggestive moan from the oboe. This French man guides his national theme along the alien and sometimes treacherous scales of geography, but even there the sublime note holds true. Even there love remains semper idem, which is not the sort of discovery a Frenchman should need a whole book, and a trip to Norway, to com plete. rle met her on the boat, and so Norway, when Jerome arrived, ap peared only through a soft and ros eate haze. “He had fallen in love with Norway, as he had fallen love with Uni Hansen, because of an accumulation of preconceived ideas; that is to say, fantastically.” But love made Jerome cautious. He must not blast this delicate Nordic Passed Out of Life to Keep Co7itent7ne7it Charles Driscoll thinks he knows •hat death will be like when it comes 3 him. As a boy he was once very 1. He felt life ebbing away, saw members of the family standing Then to the watchers himself he seemed to pass out of ways those glorious visions ahead! spite of heart-ache, illusion gone The past is dead. The future is filled with life and dreams. Because of the Christ, her faith still gleams. life. ' he ; that space was different, and altogether limitless. I was im- measureably interested and content- Returning to consciousness wat like being born again into a strange world. Somebody was pouring whisky down my throat. I opened my eyes and a great sense of loss and disappointment overwhelmed i I sat there a long time trying project myself, in memory, back into that vast country in which I seemingly had been existing for countable ages. For in that country a moment seemed eternity. That experience remains a vivid and plf ant memory to this day. When I think of that eternity I sensed when the earth-life seemed to cease to pull me. And it seemed good, not evil.” —Capper’s Weekly. COMPLETE DEPARTMENTS )ept. Arcade Fashon VR Dept. CTT,^^T1 Millinery D eady L.^dies’ Read ^EAR GOWNS COATS To Weai Footwear and Millinery •182 N. Liberty Street Winston-Salem, N. C. Catering to Salem Girls SPECIAL PRICES TO SALEM GIRLS Nestle Circi line Marcel Permanent FOR BOBBED $7.50 Robt. E. Lee Beauty Shoppe Call Mrs. Padg'ett, 4930, for Appointment W. 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