\ Page Two. THE SALEMITE Friday, November 20, 1936. I'ublishod Weekly By The Student Body of Salem College Member fjj Southern Inter-Collegiate Press Association ‘‘WE KNEW THEM WHEN — " SUBSCRIPTK^N PRICE $2.00 a Year 10c a Copy EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-In-Cliief Sara Ingram Associate Editors:— Mary Louise Haywood Katherine Sissell Music Editor Laura Bland Sports Editor Cramer Percival Feature Editor Julia Preston PvEPOETERS: T,c(iise Freenifui Mary Turner Willis •Tosephine Klutz Alice Horsfleld Mary Lee Salley Florence Joyner Peggy Brawley Julia Preston Eloise Sample Helen McArthur Peggy Warren Helen Totten Mary Worthy Spense Maud Battle Anna Wray Fogle Mary Thomas BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager - Virginia Council Advertising Manager Edith McLean Exchange Manager Pauline Daniel Assistant Exchange Manager Bill Fulton ADVERTISING STAFF Sara Pinkston Frances Klutz Frankie Meadows Virginia Taylor Virginia Bruce Davis P^ggy Bowen Frances Turnage Prather Sisk Circulation Manager Helen Smith Assistant Circulation Manager Fu.ton Assistant Circulation Manager Virginia Piper National Advertising Representatives NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, Inc. 420 Madison Avenue, New York City Nancy Schalert, now a junior at Carolina, was among the cast when the Carolina Playmakers of Chapel Hill opened its nineteenth season this fall. “The Drunkard, or the Fallen Saved,” was the old-fashion ed melodrama presented. A report of the performance says, in part; “Honors for old-time melodramatic acting may be given to Marion Harts horn, of Charlotte, playing the part of Mary Wilson, a sweet girl; and Nancy Schallert, of Winston-Salem, as Mrs. Wilson .... ” Have you seen that new Chester field girl, the pretty blond with the ! yellow chrysanthemum on her lapel? ‘Tis rumored about Bennetsville that she is none other than Beverly Moore who was a Salem .student several years ago. She and her sister have been posing all summer for McClel land Marelay and Mr. Barclay has several times been a guest in the Moore home. Mcmber Plssocidad GDlleeiate Press Distributors of Co!le6iate Di6est REPRESENTED POR NATIONAL. ADVKRTtSINO BY National Advertising Service, Inc. Cc^’ge Publishvrs Representative •420 Maoison AvE. New York. N.Y. Chicago • Boston • San Francisco Los ANGELES - PORTLAND - SEATTLE PATRONIZE THE “Y” STORE From W'aco, Texas, conies the ru mor that .Jane Brazzleton has been busy designing clothes and has pro duced a perfect knockout titled “The Tiger Lily.” Barbara Fulton, a graduate of Salem Academy, has a part in the current Broadway play concerning Poe’s life—“Plumes In the Dust.” ‘WHAT’S IN A NAME?” The “Y” store is also your store! All Salem students belong to the “Y.” Anything done by the “Y.” is done by us and in our name. Anything done with the proceeds of the store is done in our name. It is your duty and also to your benefit to patronize the store. There are several girls who have volunteered to do the work, to buy the food, to keep the accounts (particularly charge accounts), and to open it every night. But it is not their store any more than it is ours. Our jobs are not hard: We are asked only to patronize the .store and to pay our accounts as soon as possible. We often order candy and crackers from the drug' store at night. It is scarcely any more trouble to buy from the “Y” store, from ourselves. Let’s not wait until the girls have to come to our rooms and ask for the money we owe the .store. That is embarassing for them even if some of us may be used to it. Ijet’s give our store support and assistance! WITH APOLOGIES TO MclNTYRE Familiar scene: Girls rushing to the post office hugging their elbows these cold mornings .... The other morning not a person crossed Salem Square for twenty-five minutes' . . • My guess is that Salem ‘ ‘ gadabouts' ’ will remain in seclusion this week end to recuperate from last week end and to freshen up for Thanks giving week-end .... Problem; Find a Salem girl without the autograph of Christopher Morloy .... Heroine- of-the-novel-name: Lelia Williams .... Look« alike Mi»s Cortlandt Pres ton and Margaret Sullivan, the ac tress .... Everyone is humming the new song hit “Talking Through My Hat” .... Seen at the hotel dance Saturday night, Anna Leak Scott Interesting experience: seeing the Christmas candles made at the Can dle Tea the other afternoon . . . . Spiffy: Marianna Redding’s fur coat .... Popular; Josephine Lea . . . . Lovely: Meredith fiolderby in white ..... Pathetic: The small audience at the last students’ recital . . . . Thrilling: Anna Withers playing the organ .... Something to live for: ■Thankggiving week-end. COLLEGE GRADUATES GET BROADWAY LIGHTS Columbia, Nov. 19—There is only one Job at the University of South Carolina, but royalty galore. There are Kings, Dukes, and Kaisers, ac cording to names appearing in the recently published student directory in which every student’s name is listed. Oddities in the directory show only one Ford at the University, apparent- jly undecided as to which of the three i Rhodes to take.. There’s one Street with a single girl Going. I There’s a Lovem and two Harts; one Solomon and five Scotts. University “wild life” consists of a Lyon, ,a Doe, a Coon, a Crow, two Doves, a Parrott and a Drake. The one Lamb in school seems on the spot — surrounded by six W'olves. Then, there are eight Martins, with but a single “Ness.” Seasonally speaking, there are three Winters with but a single Sum mer. Lending color to tlie list of stu dents are six Browns, three Whites, three Blacks and three Greens. You couldn’t blame the five Thomas’s for being doubter.s, since one of the co-eds is a Newman. The d'rector also shows a Bush with Berrys, a Brook with Bass and a Hamlet with five Hills. I Frank Kiss is probably the most jiopular man with the girls at the TTniversity, and the directory lists but a single Nix to ward the co-eds off. DARTMOUTH HAS COURSE ON WAR New York: Prominent in Variety’s columns are recent and not-so-recent A. B.’s. Increasing in number are tho graduates of American colleges across tho footlights. Leading the list is tho brilliant cast of “Idiot’s De light,” in which Alfred Lunt, once of Carroll College, Aukesha, Wis., disports himself. Bretaigne Windust, director of “Idiot’s Delight,” grad uated from Princeton. With Charles C. Leatherbee, he started the Univer sity Players Guild from which came Kent Smith, Margaret Sullivan, James Stewart, Mildred Natwiek, Joshua Logan and others. Meanwhile Louis Jean Heydt, erst while fo Dartmouth, does thing in ‘ ‘ Pre-Honeymoon, ” while Philip Reed’s name, Cornell ’29, appears in the cast of “Reflected Glory.” Sid ney Kingsley, in “Dead End,” held the Cornell University state .scholar ship at one time, graduating in 1928. Monty Wooley, tricked out with the name of Sergei Alexandrovitch in “On Your Toes,” taught drama at Yale before the advent of Professor Baker. This is Woolley’s debut as an actor. George Abbott, of “Boy Meets Girl” spent happy hours both at Baker and Harvard. Robert Wil- Hanover, N. H.—Dartmouth under graduates are now offered a non credit course on the cause, cost and consequences of war, led by prom inent members of the faculty. The nature of modern warfare will be carefully examined, and the ob stacles which must be removed before international peace may rest on a solid foundation will be studied. The class will consist of weekly two hour sessions with lectures followed by general discussion. According to the “Daily Dartmouth,” lecturers will include Professors Bruce Knight, Francois Denoeu, Ramon Guthrie, Wayne Stevens, Albert Demaree, Donald Stone, Lew Stilwell, Herbi'rt West, William Robinson, Harold To bin and George Thomas. Dr. Colin Stewart will lecture on “Medical Aspects of War.” The class is the result of a petition by Paleopitus, Dartmouth student governing society, to the administration last spring, and the general vote of the student body requesting such a course at the peace rally in April, 1936. liams, appearing in “Lend Me Your Ears,” covered his with the tradi- jtional Dartmouth earmufls until 1927. AT RANDOM LITTLE 1 am the sister of him And he is my brother, He is too little for us To talk to each other. iSo every morning I show him My doll and my book; And evei’y morning he still is Too little to look —Dorothy Aldis. One step — two step Three step — four Can’t travel the floor? Five step, six .step Seven step, eight. Now shall my baby Rest him in state! —Mary Mapes Dodge. Life has loveliness to sell All beautiful and splendid things, Blue waves whitened on a cliff, Soaring fire that sways and sings And children’s faces looking up Holding wonder like a cup. —Sara Teasdale. Angels at the foot And angels at the head. And like a curly little lamb My pretty babe in bed. —Christina Rosetti. KAMPUS KAT Song bird Kate Smith was not tlie only important person at tho game, since Salem went practically en masse to the Duke-Caroana game and Fall Germans at Chapel Hill. Some Sale- mites seen Saturday at the Stadium were: “Frankie” Meadows, Jo Gribben, Mary McColl, “Ginger” Pil>er, Mary Louise Siewers, Ellen Moore, Kate Pratt, Dot Wyatt, Mary Lib Walston, Virginia Flynt, Julia Preston, Mary Turner Willis, Betty McNair, Kay Sneed, Marjorie Crisp, Jane Kirk, Peggy Bowen, Elizabeth Norfleet, Mary Venable Rogers, Liz zie Trotman, Idaliza Dunn, and Jo Kluttz. Chapel Hill keeps close tab on Salem. One Carolina census taker estimated that there were twenty- nine Salemites at the dances. Among these were: Helen Jones and Glenn Griffin with gim-ghouls; Ethel High- smith with Claude and a new leopard coat: Jo Gibson, in a fashion show model, with a law student; Mildred Troxler with Bob and most likely an orchid; Mary Woodruff with S. A. E. Lewis; Virginia Lee with Fred and his tan roadster (ignoring Jimmy, Virginia?) Julia McCorkle, in the Friday night figure with Bil Miller (where’s Joe, Juliat); Alice Hors- field with the A. T. D. she recently made so much time with, El Ivey and a victorious Duke Man; “Tootie” Powell and “Puddin”; Meredith Holderby and her faithful Beta; Bet ty Bahnson, reunited with Scott; “Mouse” Page, Cordelia Lowry, Mary Louise HaywooJ and Peggy Warren (no remarks). Frances Turnage spent the week end in Greensboro. The faculty also declared a holiday on the Hth, and turned out in fine style. Miss Atkinson, Mrs. Sweden- burg. Miss Blair, Miss Preston, Miss Jerome, Mr. McEwen, and Miss Cov ington showed up at Kennan Stadium Saturday afternoon. W’ho was that darling girl who ate Sunday dinner with Ruth Doershuckt I’ve heard that it was her rival, I.aura Mao Shaver, probably bring ing tidings of Buddy. Maybe tho Duke-Curolina game wasn’t the only one of importance to Salem girls. The one referred to is Bee Hatt’s very long distance telephone call Saturday night must have had its points—and for the right team. But could it have been foot ball that she talked about for thirty minutes? Be careful about your business. Be careful in all you do. You can’t run away; you can’t hide away. The Kampus Kat is watching ycul The few who didn’t choose Chapel Hill for the week-end seemed to have had a pretty good time anyway. Til- lie Hines and Janice Baney went home. Felicia Martin, Anne Johnson, Sa rah Pinkston, Martha McNair spent Sunday with Virginia Bruce Davis at Danville. Edith McLean, I'rances Wattling- ton, and Emily Richardson went to Reidsville, Sunday. QUESTIONS 1. In the recent election, did the Republicans poll more or fewer popular votes than they did in 1932? 2. Of all the automobiles and trucks in the world, what per centage is owned by Americans? 3. How long is a generation? 4. Who was known as the “Sweet heart of the A. E. F.? 5. What is the middle name of Francis X. Shields, the tennis- player? 6. Who wrote “Uncle Tom’s Cab in?” 7. What is the meaning of “corn ucopia'? ’ ’ 8. Abont how much was the Be- publican party’s deficit in the last election? 9. How many pieces of gold did the betrayer of Jesus Christ re- cievef 10. Who was known as the “Man- nasa Mauler?” Answers on Page Four