Page Four.
THE SALEMITE
Friday, May 11, 1934.
FROM THE DIARY OF A
VOLLEY BALL
We heard the key turn in the lock
of the apparatus cabinet of the gym
and held our breath with suspense,
wondering which of us wouli be
taken out for exercise. I knew it
would not be I, for I had been closed
up since last spring and believed that
“they” had forgotten about my ex
istence. Then to my joy I found
myself rolling about on the floor.
I was 'longing for a bri& game with
the girls, but someone propped their
foot on me and began to lecture.
From my lowly position I caught
part of what was said: “So you
think Volley Ball ia sissy? . . . Volley
B*ll looms in the background of
many of your favorite actresses, such
as Mae West and Greta Garbo. Pic
ture yourself at forty.” At last
was picked up. Preparing for
grand ride through the air, I was d
appointed when I bounded against
the net and back at the same girl.
But Margaret Maxwell came to my
rescue and sent me hurling into the
air down to another girl who let me
fall on her head without doing a
thing about it. ”This is sissy,” she
ejaculated, putting me into the net.
Then I kept shy of her and bounded
back and forth between Edna Hig
gins and Susan lOalder.
PSYCHOLOGY CLUB
HOLDS LAST MEETING
OF THE YEAR
(Continued from Page One)
countries in which attributes usually
iidered inate in women are found
only in men. As another reason for
opponent inate differences. Dr. Crane
cited the fact that from generation to
generation, children are given toys
which help to develop .supposedly “in
ate tendencies” of their .sex. These
false ideas are instilled in the early
training of children and as a conse
quence, men and women think them-
selve possessing distinctive traits
which are really merely results of
conventional belief. Parent fixations
are other factors in determing behav
ior of the individual, Dr. Crane said,
adding that such fixation may lead
to various forms of psychosis.
With this meeting, the Psychology
Club brought to a close a series of
five talks on problems closely con
nected with the study of psychology.
Plans for the coming year were an
nounced by the president and a nom
inating committee was appointed.
(NSFA)—And they, teir us that
there’s a depression; more than forty
Northwestern students employed by
the CWA have as yet failed to call
for tlieir monthly pay checks.—Duke
Chronicle.
CUMMINGS-STOCKTON
Miss Mary Stockton was married
Sundaj* April 28, to Kemp Cum
mings at Martinsville, Virginia. Miss
Stockton was assistant dietitian at
Salem College.
The
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T?obert E. Lee Hotel Bldg.
Dr. Robert N. Walker
Optometric Eye-Specialist
300-1-2 Beynolda Bldg.
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The anchor CO.
■
^they age good grapes
to make rare wines
the cigarette that’s MILDER
the cigarette that TASTES BETTER
— and they do
something like
that to mellow
good tobaccos
WHERE THE RARE WINES come
from they know that the two
most important things in wine-mak-
ing are the selection of the grapes
and the long years of ageing in the
wine cellars.
IT’S VERY MUCH THE SAME in
the making of a cigarette. You have
to get the right tobaccos, then put
them away to age and mellow in
wooden casks.
You can’t make a good cigarette
like Chesterfield in a day. It takes
over two years to age the tobaccos
for your Chesterfields—but it adds
something to the taste and makes
them milder.
Everything that modern Science
really knows about is used to
make Chesterfield the cigarette
that’s milder, the cigarette that
tastes better.
© 1934, Liggett & Mybrs Tobacco Co.