North Carolina Newspapers

    Saturday, May I 3, 1 933.
THE SALEMITE
Page Three.
Thursday Music Hour
Is Students’ Recital
Advanced Students Perform
Skillfully
On Thursday afternoon at
in Memorial Hall, The Salem Col
lege School of Music presented the
last students’ recital of the )
The program was as follows:
Prelude and Fugue in C minor
Bach
Mrs. Clyde Shore
Barcarolle MacDowell
Ruth Wolfe
Allegro Grazioso T
Mary Celeste Frontis
Hungarian Poeme No. I HuWy
Margaret Schwarze
In Summer Stebbins
Dorothy Moore
Third Symphony BeethoV'
Allegro con brio
Mary Celeste Frontis
Annie Zue Maye
Franees Suttlemeyer
Margaret Johnson
Fanfare . Lemmens
I.ucille Bennett
F'ach one of the students played
with skill and beauty.
INSTALLATION SERVICE
IS HELD FOR Y. W. C. A.
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
on spiritual things?” Many are try
ing to answer this question, con
tinued Miss Williams, but the stud
ents alone must find the solution.
Every girl knows there is God, who
is responsible for her and her being,
yet she feels a hesitanc}', a timidity
in acknowledging Him.
She then bestowed the Charge
upon Zina Vologodsky, incoming
president, and the new cabinet. As
the old cabinet members lighted the
candles they repeated, “I.et your
light so shine before men that they
may see your good works and glorify
your Father which is in Heaven.”
And the new members answered, “I
can do all things through Christ,
who strengthcneth me.”
After a lovely violin solo by Miss
Read, Miss Vologodsky accepted
the charge. She said that she and
the new cabinet members understood
fully the lionor and faith bestowed
upon them, and that they realized
that they had been selected from the
Salem students, not because they
were superior in any way. but be
cause they were loved and trusted.
She expressed her hope that the
entire school would join with the
“Y” in spirit and in actual work,
realizing that the task is partly
theirs. Touching every heart by her
iplicity and dircolness of e.q)res-
II Zina stated that neither she nor
new cabinet would be the same
from that hour on. No one is. F.ach
individual is an entirely different
person one hour and one day from
what he is the next hour and the
next day. She urged all ))resent to
seize the present hour and begin
making the most of his opportunities
and his life.
After the distribution of light to
the assembly and a prayer, led by
Mrs. Rondthaler, the meeting was
cloied with tile watchword.
The cabinet is as follows:
President—Zina Vologodsky.
Vice-Presidenl—Sarah Horton.
.Sreretarv—Susan Rawlings.
'I'reasurer—Klois Padriek.
Chairman of Vesper Program—
S.ir/ih Horton.
Viee-Cliairman—Claudia Foy.
Chairman Communitv Scrvii
Vice-Cliairman -liuth McConnell.
Chairman of World Fellowshi)>
(iertrude Schwalbe.
lairman of Bulletin—Jean Pat-
Frar
s Ad ail
Vice-Chairman—Josephine Reece.
Cliairman of Socials Jiettv
Slough.
Vice-Chairmen — Frye Pettns,
Frances Lambeth.
Chairman of F'inance — Martha
Binder.
Vice-Chairmen—Martha Schlegel,
Margaret Wall.
Chairman of Worship — Mary
Frank I.inney.
Chairman of Industrial Group—
Elizabeth Jerome.
MEMBERS OF EDUCATION
8 ENTERTAIN AT
PICNIC
Publicity Chairuia
a Stevenson.
Mir
e-Chai
Coi:
s 'I’o
iiittee
“Y” Room- Ann.- 'ra3-Ior.
Student ^’'ol^nteer I’.rika Marx.
Music Chairman—Marv Abslu'r.
Vice-Chairman - Jane Rondllialer.
Advisorv Board—Mrs. II. R.
Rondthaler, Miss I’Jizabelh Lillv.
Miss Mary Duncan Me.Anallv, dV.
Minnie J. Smith, Miss Grace Law
rence, Miss Susan P. Brown. Miss
Helen Fuller, .Mr. McDonald,
Anseombe.
THOUGHTS
Sitting alone as I work.
'Flunking my own selfish llioughts:
Friends wlio do not iiave to work-
Friends who have unselfisli IhouglU-
with n
Lord, help me through thes
To drive jealous thoughts fi
Members o
f Edueatio
n 8, Gram-
ma
r (irade Materials ar
id Methods,
crtained in
hon.n- of Dr. W. A.
Ihv
Dwnell of
Duke Uni\
-ersity at a
pie
nic suiijier
in Washii
igton Park
on
Thursday
evening.
The supper
pri
■'cded th’e
lecture gi
ven by Dr.
Br
ownell on
(m of solv-
in-;
; problems
in Arithmt
;tic. I lonor
gui
L'sts were
Dr. Bro
wnell, Mr.
Ca
m])bell. Ml
•. Th(niii)soi
11 and Mr.
If.
W. McDo
^nald, lu'ad
of tlie De-
pa
rlnu.nl of 1
■'dueation.
« SK
I SALEM PENNANTS |
5>; Reduced to §
$1.00
SALEM BOOK STORE |
TODAY'S SHOW
1+iE Famous
rRicK
€V€l^ M€N 1NT£R€ST
EV IN MAGIC?
you wow
S€£,G£N/TL€
MEN, TfiAT
I HAV€ CUT
Tf)£ TOPE
M TWO
FUNNY you
SHOULD MEN
TION IT. I SAW
AWONDCRfUL
5 MAGIC STUNT
LAST NIGHT
you SEE
THAT IT'S
LENGT-H IS
THE SAME
AS BEfORE
I CUT IT.
■ROPf
i^estohed
HOPE
ABOUT TO
BE CUT
KNOW
7?/e
NO_JUST T+1E
FLATTEST. CAMELS
A-RE MiLX>,AND
THEV TASTE GOOV, \
TOO. I PT^ESCTI-BE
A CAMEL FOR YOU.
ATJEN T THEV
THE MILDEST
CIGA1?£TT£S ?
yOU'RE
DOCTO'R
NOT OWE Of
HOW A^OUTA
SMOKE, DOC ?
THOSt.
W/S /S TH£ lOOP
rHAT H£ COTS'.
LIKE MY
VOICE
MAG/C//tA^ S//OlVf
M4/1//) SMPry.
BUr/^AS SMALL LOOP OF
/^OP£ COA/C£Al£D ££H/A/0
£//?SrAA/0 S£COA/D £/A/6£/^S
OF LEFT HANO —
M-M-M, WHAT A SMOKE
IT'S ME FOR CAMELS
FROM WOW ON.
Camels aremadefrom
finer, more expensive
tobaccos than any
other popular brand
They are milder, easy
on the throat . .
better smoke. It’s the
tobacco that counts.
yoU'LL LIKE THOSE COST
LIER TOBACCOS MORE
amp MORE ALL THE TIME
llO TRICKS iM CAMElf — COfTUEH TOj^ACCOf
    

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view