Newspapers / Salem College Student Newspaper / Oct. 17, 1934, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of Salem College Student Newspaper / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Page Four. THE SALEMITE Wednesday, October 17, 1934. ROUND AND ABOUT WITH SOPHS AND JUNIORS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE TWO) maids. We read about it in the paper and there isn’t one of us who wouldn’t have given up everything to have been there. Little Jo Whitehead went out to dinner again, this time with Ga. Gudson. Ethel .1. went up town shopping last Tuesday and she walked poor Lou right on down to a shadow, then came back without a purchase. (The girl who didn’t know her mind.) Ethel J., you are just like all the rest of us girls, but j'ou shouldn’t walk Lou around so much, you know how powerfully thin she is now! Those two jwpular .Juniors (names aren’t necessary, but—Etta Bert Warren and Cordelia Lowery) spent the week-end out in town. “Kuch popularity as theirs must be well deserved.” Garnell and M. Sears went over to Salisbury for Saturday and Sun day. Jean Robinson, so I heard, had a lovely ride Sunday afternoon! Oh, Harold came over Sunday, can you guess, to see Wilda, of course! She carried him to Vespers Sunday 8:30 ITEMS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) fore you, but what is behind you.” Thursday: Tlie Freshman party given by the Sophomores is post poned ‘ ‘ due to several difficulties. ’ ’ Dr. Anscombe explained to us the situation iu the Balkans. In the Balkans the Danube flows eastward and the mountains face westward but there was no access to the sea at the beginning because of the mountains. There are several dia lects in Bulgaria—each province speaks its own dialect. Raising cows is the chief occupation of the natives. Great factions have been developing in .Jugoslavia. The Cre ations murdered King Alexander II. 'I'he above is one interpretation of the situation. Anotlier is that when liiug Peter died, the son of Alexan- night, then we all could get a good look at Wilda’s much-heard-about man. From all that I can gather in my sorrowing moments, McAnn, Sue Rawlings, and Marianna Hooks, for a change, stayed up here over Satur day and Sunday. We sympathize with them, but we missed the game too, more luck next week to the three cronies. der II acted as regent, and he be lieved iu military principls applied to government, and he set himself up as dictator. Thereupon the Cro- atians were infuriated. If Jugo slavia should break up into factions, Italy might annex Dalmatia and Al bania. Friday: Mary Penn announced that the list of nominees for May Court were posted, voting would take place Saturday. Dr. Rond- thaler took as the theme for Ms chapel talk Corinthians 13. Expe rience is made up of interruptions, of disconnected fragments. The Real is always a fragment of the ideal and the greater the ideal the more fragmentary the real. We ob tain a better because we can see a best. ’Tis not what man does that exalts him but what he would do. When you build fragmentary ex periences into a whole, light eternal shows through and only then do you see the whole. Saturday: Lois Torrence announc ed the beginning of the hockey sea son Monday. Mary Penn explained the rules governing the selection of May Court. Only seniors are eli gible for May Queen and Maid of Honor. In voting for girls one should note their faces, figures, hair. Y. W. C. A. HOLDS RECOGNim SERVICE Freshmen and New Girls To Be Installed Sunday The Y. W. C. A. Recognition Service for the JTreshmen and new girls will be held next Sunday eve ning, October 21, at 6:45 in the college library. This service, one of the most beautiful and most im pressive of the year, welcomes the new members into the Y. W. C. A. Association, its plans, purposes, and activtiies. Thus, new life, new in spiration and new ideas enter into the organization. Search thy own heart j what pain- eth thee in others in thyself may be ■—^J. Q. Whittier . Aardvarks, pig-like animals of crossword puzzle fame, are common in souteastern Africa. A picture is a poem without words. —Horace. walk, postures, poise and the general effect they give. Gertrude Schwalbe introduced each nominee and the voting took place in chapel. Gabby Qertie ‘‘The job of locking for a clew should always be turned over to a good looker.” m % W: 'k* RICHARD VOIGTLANDER ’38, says:"Study ing electrical engineering takes as much out of me as the hardest physical effort you’d put into an active outdoor sport. I’m a Camel smoker. The harder I work the more I like to smoke, be cause Camels help me to keep alert and full of *pep.’ I enjoy Camel’s milder flavor, and they never frazzle my nerves.” You will like this delightful way of "turning on” your flow of energy. Whenever you feel "played out,” try this convenient way of iitoning out fatigue and increasing your energy: Light a Camel. Soon you will enjoy a definite "lift”... an upturn in energy...and in good spirits. Smoke Camels all you wish. Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS and never interfere with healthy nerves. get a WITH A CAMEL! TUNE IN! CAMEL CARAVAN with Glen Gray’s Casa Loma Orchestra, Walter O’Keefe, Annette Hanshaw, and other Headliners — over WABC-Columbia Network. TUESDAY . . 10p.m.E.S.T. 9 p.m. C.S.T.—8 p.m. M.S.T. 7 p.m. P.S.T. THURSDAY . . 9p.m.E.S.T. 8 p.m. C.S.T.—9:30 p.m. M.S.T. 8:30 p.m. P.S.T. SPORTS WRITER. (Left)V&t^oh- inson says: "I ve been smoking Camels ever since they were put on the market. I find they erase that 'done in’ feeling quickly and restore my 'pep.’ I smoke at least two packs of Camels a day and I find that they never interfere with my nerves.” EXPLORER. ^R/gi!>/^Capt.R.Stuart Murray, Fil.G.S., says: "It’s great to be back! IwasinHonduras—Mosqui- tlaTerritory—lOmonths. Fortunately I had plenty of Camels. They al ways give me a 'pick-up* in energy when I need it. I prefer Camel’s flavor, they never upset my nerves." ALL TOBACCO MEN KNOW: : Camels ore made from fi n eri: Mo re Expensive Toba ccos -t-Turkish and Domestic tlian any other popular brand; Copyrlgbt. 1934. B. 1. Beynolds Tobacco Companj
Salem College Student Newspaper
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 17, 1934, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75