2>eaA ^dUoA: Who’s going to win? This will be the $64 question for the next weeks, for campus elec tions will be held in chapel starting next Tues day’. The answer depends on yoii and your vote! You will want to get the girl elected who will be able to do the most for the organization which she will head. If you make a wise, thoughtful investment when you east your ballol in the next two weeks, you will receive valuable dividends in the functioning of Salem organizations for a year to come. So think seriously before you vote. But be sure to vote ! It’s important that each Salemite participate in every election. Each of us should exercise our right and share in the responsibility of selecting campus leaders. N. P. W. NatltL . . . . . . but praise to the Alumnae House and all those responsible for it. Praise, we think, can never come too late. We would apologize for not recognizing this achievem.ent sooner, but we have just now come to, realize what this House really means to Salem and to us. It represents a great deal of hard, hard vmrk on the part of many. It is certainly one of the most attractive places we’ve ever seen and we congratulate the Alumnae Association on its taste. The completed building has cer tainly added a great deal of prestige to the campus. Especial praise goes to Miss Lelia Graham Marsh who has been behind this work for a number of years. To her, goes a large part of the credit for seeing that the House has been completed. This Alumnae House will mean a great deal to- all of us here now. It will be up to us, too, to see that the House is finished completely. In short—we like the Alumnae House— we’re proud of being a part of it—our hats are off to all those who had any part in making it what it is todav. T/ie Ides Of March Has A Shady Roman History CdUtoA. . . . . . . for this issue of the Salemite was Dale Smith, member of the junior class and a poten tial candidate for the post of editor-in-chief of the 1949-50 Salemite. Staff members are urged to keep in mind the calibre of the junior-edited papers when they cast their vote for editor in the next few weeks. The Salemite wishes to express its sym pathy' to Mr. Suavely in the recent death of his mother. Salemite Published every Friday of the College year by the Student body of Salem College Downtown Office—304-306 South Main Street Printed by the Sun Printing Company OFFICES Lower floor Main Hall by Tootsie Gillespie Backin the times w'hen Eoman Sew age was in a simply a-vv'ful mess, there was a delinquent tax payer named .Caesar who liked to dabble in poli tics. In ease the college graduates in the history department would like that extra bit of knowledge, it is said from a reliable' source (from the diary of an over-sexed Baal worshiper named Afflictius Oppenheim who changed the water in Cattulus’s atrium) that this Cae sar was the first organizer of the Boy Scouts, Alcholics Anonymous and the Mozart Society. He was quite thwarted in the last when he found out that Mozart hadn’t been born yet and had to pay back all the club dues he had collected by selling under-cooked peanuts at the persecution parleys. But that kid warn’t no fool (cf. Julius Caesar, Man and Mouse or My Contributions As I See- Them by Caesar, called old Disjointed Jules by his close friends). Eealizing the possibilities in the under-cooked peanut market, Jules got it from a friend, a lion tamer named Leo, that hemlock stock was in for a crash and so Jules bought up 4000 hemlock or chards, gave ’em dirty looks, and they turned bitter. Just before the persecution parley, old Disjointed (feeling chummy now?) dipped each and every peanut (five cents a bag, get ’em ’fore the bulls miss ’em!) in hemlock, thus kicking off the en tire Eoman population. This is a minor oocurance which Gibbons, Wells, Toynbee, Singer and some of the other A. B. boys seem to have missed. what she is (and you know what she is), a meeting of the only two humans left in the Eoman world was inevitable. Garrulous had cast aside the toga and her reserve, and was brushing up on some of her fan numbers one day (last year’s fans that were skimpy in spots and wouldn’t be worth a dime today) Of All Things by Carolyn Taylor It’s natural to type people. You do it li the time. But if you’ve ever worked on a news paper, you get a different slant on this typinJ bu.siness. ' ® After four years on the Salemite, I’ve de veloped a very bad habit. I substitute head lines for psychology. Here’s the way it hap' pened. Fp at the Sun Printing Company—and you who don’t know anything about that place take off an hour sometime and investigate it-^ there’s a rack of headline type that reaches from the ceiling to the floor. A great deal of it lias gone out of use today, but time was when the Salemite used fifty-seven different kinds of type. Today we use about six. The type in which a headline is set often reveals the characteristics of the story, be it featurd, news-story, or editorial. And just as the headline can reveal a story, so can a type of headline remind you of a person. That’s what happened to me. One kind of headline used often by us is light italic. This type goes well with features. It’'s clever to the point of being witty. There’s a lift about light ital., a sort of warning that something is going to happen and you’re not sure just what. It has a dancing quality about it. Folderol always gets light ital.-^there’s your broad satire, your raucous humor. You can' be sure (unless the .staff loses its touch) that when you Light ital. is see light ital., vou’ll laugh. Joan Hassler when Jules happened along. Un fortunately for Garrulous, Jules was near-sighted and thinking she was an egret, approached to throw salt on her tail, take her home and make Then there’s san serif. It doesn’t have quill pens for signing important that dancing quality we associate with light documents out of her feathers. Jules if^-h Dependability and seriousness mark san is down on the record as observing serif. Ihiassuming, it yet leads off our big stories—it always takes a lead in the Salemite. You expect and get importance when you see san serif. It’s always what it seems,- it doesn’t shy away into unexpectedness. San serif is that that was the only egret he’d ever seen with a Toni, red toenails and a mole on its left fornicus, just above the clavicle. Upon second glance, old Disjointed realized that it was Garrulous Europa, the only fan dancer who could execute a pas de deux while chanting a Hindu prayer in church Latin with fans, a feat not to be sneezed at. Bev Johnson Delicacy marks Handtooled. It has fine lines and fine form. Thoughtfulness is out- ^ , standing. It’s the knowingness of newspaper j , ^ Shades of meaning and shade of thou- Caesar came to be head of this ght-a two-fold quality, as you see in the dark nev stock would be nothing short lines and light lines. You’ll remember what 0 murderously tedious. Suffice it you read under handtooled. It has that fine to say that through careful plan- lasting quality. It’s the Danilova of news- lung, Jules got himself elected First paper type. It’s citizen in the Eoman Society for Subscription Price—$2.75 a year Slobbering Seniles, head proprietor at a nectar nook in a questionable part of town and street inspector, with annual raises. Upon election, old Disjointed, becoming a member 'of ^ a _ secret leftist organization (“Join Catullus and Life Won’t Be Dullus’’) began undermining the government because a certain Eo man North Carolina CoBcpalc Proa ^nriflnilrr EDITOEAL DEPARTMENT Editor-in-Chief Carolyn Taylor Associate Editor Laurel Green Associate Editor Mary Porter Evans Assistant Editor Peirano Aiken Assistant Editor Dale Smith Make-up Editors; Helen Brown, Betty Biles Copy Editors: Joan Carter Bead, Clara Belle Le Grande Music Editor Margaret McCall iiditorial Staff: Ruth Lenkoski. lone Bradsher, Tootsie Gillespie, Ed. Assistants: Dot Arriiigton, Carolyn Lovelace, Helen Creamer, Lila Fretwell, Mary Lib Weaver, Lola Dawson, Winkle Harris, Sybil Haskins, Ro bert Gray, Polly Harrop, Prances Reznick, Nancy Duckworth, Catherine Moore, Sis Pooser, Clinky Clinkscales, Pay Stickney, Marcia Stohl, Ruth Finnerty, Betsy Farmer. Typists: Janet Zimmer, .knn Sprinkle and Ann McConnell Pictorial Editors: Martha Hershberger and Jane Kugler. Faculty Advisor: Miss Jess Byrd. Business Manager Joyce Privette Assistant Business Manager Betsy Sehanm Advertising Manager Asst. Advertising Manager Circulation Manager _— Betty McBrayer Mary Paith Carson Janie Fowlkes Left with a considerable amount of time on his hands and no tax collectors to dodge (a popular sport which has persisted up to the pre sent), Jules grew into slovenly ways. He took to mumbling inarticulate speeches and bowing from the waist, humming dirty songs, biting his toe nails and waxing his ears. These things could have led to nasty habits had he not stumbled upon an oracle one day while he was divid ing all Gaul into three parts. It seems (Toynbee, take a note—you’re a little weak on some of these points) that the oracle -was owned and operated by a wizened, slew footed fan dancer named Garrulous Europa (“Bull” for short) who despised peanuts. As the fate of the Gods would have it (and who else would have it? Not me!), Garrulous refused to buy these fatal peanuts on that fatal day and since the entire Roman population was wiped out, she was forced to give up fan dancing and took to the oracle bus iness. What she hoped to gain from this is so obvious that I shall not take up time telling it. Well, man being what he is and woman being Complexity is Broac(way. There’s nothing staid or certain about this. Cleverness and wit always lurk behind, tlie bold face of Broad way. It’s hard to classify—it has an elusive quality—you think you have it and then you don’t. "We are never quite sure when to use sen-jtnr oo-; -- . I^uoadway. Seriousness and understanding wasn’t svmmet ' 1 ^ cowlick seep through the clever exterior. It’s a many- IDIC. IHILILMIE beautiful. Jules, in temper, set a drone of blood-thirsty mosquitoes loose in the city, drew mustaches on all the female statues and wrote dirty words in the sta tute books. One day, Jules was headed for tlie senate to pass a law on infanticide because an irate infant with an Oedipus complex named Ex Homi- iium De Rerum Naturum had be come insulted when Caesar remon strated his mater for emptying three- months-old garbage in the public square. De Rerum, as he was af Kaufman is our editorial type. We use it when we’re serious. It’s our chance to iW' prove Salem. AYe try to help with Kaufman sometimes funny, sometimes serious. Kaufi .man has a definite purpose, it’s workable, it accomplishes something worthwhile. It’s Formal and businesslike with a sudde fectionatPiv PnimT’ It’s a combination of sa to Caesar’s favorite 'toa-V^? Are serif and light ital. and has elements of senouj truese marquisette with otter^nVt^r .ludiciously mixed with cleverness. ^ Bui I ,u,gL, --itor.'-. it’s adaptable. « headed for the office when he en- f lavorite type with US, just like the perso. countered Garrulous who said to him ^’‘^a^iads me of. Chelt bold is “ English dia- - Mr. Snavely lect, saying, “Beware the Ides of March” (in German, “Gesund- heit”). Through a faulty tym panum, Jules thought she said “Be at the Titan Arch” (their usual trystmg place). Since he’d been isT'pound^'^ELnB™’'''"^- Hut trv working (Continueffn"" for four years and see if it isn’t uat - d on page s..) Ural to type people. I ni not sure what tlie p.sychoIogists woul say to all this. Perhaps the Salemite has war ped my personality. But try working wit