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Gerry Allegood Will Sing
In Recital Monday Night
The School of Music will present
Geraldine Allegood, contralto, in a
graduating recital next Monday
evening, April 4, at 8:30 p. m. in
Memorial Hall. She will be accom
panied by Miss Nell Folger Glenn.
The first part of the program will
consist of two Handel numbers, ^'Te
Heum^' and ‘^Alma Mia^^, followed
by ‘^Nel Gor Piu Non Mi Sento'^
bV Paisiella, and Durante ^s '*Dan~
za, Danza Panciulla Gentile'h Three
German numbers by Schumann; ^'Er,
(ler licvrlichste. von alien’’, *Mch
grolle nicht”, and ‘"Eueignung”
bv Strauss will compose the second
gi-oup. The French group will con
sist of Debussy’s ^^Beau Soir”,
^‘Bonjour Suzan! ” by Delibes, and
^Meunc Fillette” by Dolayrae. The
aria will be the famous ‘^Mon coeur
s ’ouvre a ta voix ’ ’ from Samsbn
and Delila by Saint-Seans. In the
last group she will sing ^^When I
Have Sung Afy Songs to You” by
Charles, Honor! Honor!”, a Negro
GERALDINE ALLEGOOD
spiritual, ' ^Daddy’s Sweetheart ’ ’
by Lehmann; and '^Life” by Cur
ran,
Ushers for the recital are Lib
Kennedy, Prances Summers, lone
Bradsher, Jean Padgett, Molly Darr,
and Margaret McCall.
Curie
witli the Free French and was in
Loudon during the blitz. She then
returned to America to lecture on
the war and the importance of de
feating the Fascist forces. The
Vichy government dei^rived her of
lier French citizenship because of
the nro-ally feeling shown through
her lectures.
During the Avar, she toured the
globe and visited the front lines.
Tier second book, “Journey Among
Warriors”, is an account of this
extensiAm tour. Then in 1943 she
entered the Volontaires Francaises,
tlie French equiAmlent of the WA
GS, Avhere she served for tAvo years.
Since tlie end of the Avar, Mile,
(’urie has become co-publisher of, the
“Paris Presse”, Avell-know'ii French
daily.
Tt is. difficult to be the daughter
of the immortal Curies, but Eve
Curie has done an excellent job of
it, as well as attaining fame in her
own right. Salem is very fortunate
to have such a A^ersatile speaker
to close the year’s lecture series.
List
times before the conference ended,
and the last time President Truman
was his page-turner. From that Mr.
List gained the title of “Potsdam
Pianist”. When he was honorably
discharged in 1946, Eugene List was
a celebrity.
The program for the evening is
as folloAvs: “0\^erture” to the Mar
riage of Figaro by Mozart; “Inter
mezzo ’ ’ to Cavallaria Rusticanna by
iUascagni; Concerto in B Minor by
TschaikoA^sky, Avith Eugene List,
pianist: “Entracte” to Act III,
Carmen by Bizet; “On AVings of
Song” by Afendelssohn; Paul Bun-
yan Suite; “Dance of the Blue Ox”,
“Country Dance” and “.Night” by
Bergsma; and “March Slav” by
Tschaikovsky.
The doors at Reynolds will open
at 8:00 p. m. Tickets are noAV on
sale at the office of the School of
Music, or may be purchased at the
door-'for $1.50.
Evans Prints
New Puzzler
The right answer on a quiz will
give you a good grade, but if you
make the grade here, you can get
five packs bf Chesterfields.
Here’s what you do. Consult the
Chesterfield ad which appears on
page six. There you will find the
answer to the ABC clues given below.
Then, write the three . answers on a
Chesterfield wrapper and bring it to
the Salemite office, located under
the loggia of Main Hall, not later
than 10 p. m. There will be only
two prize winners, each will receive
five packs of Chesterfields. Win
ners will be announced in next
Aveek’s Salemite.
Here are the clues:
A. The floAvers that bloom in the
spring tra-la
Have something to do Avith the
case
This bloom could be called a
“robbea”
But you can’t put it in a vase.
B. Nothing was left, so it must
be right. And right it is in the
middle.
C. Cimmer red hill mud.
Activitus Attacks Laundry
Ends Up In A Quandary
by Harris and Haskins
Poor Activitus squirmed uncom
fortably. Finally she gave a hor
rible yoAvl, and threAv off the cover.
“Child, what’s wrong?”, her
roommate groaned from the other
bed.
The answer came forth in a rush;
“Three months ago I sent my
laundry down and got back one
sheet and twenty-four Avash rags.
I’d already lost five blouses, and
three pajama tops. I could overlook
that, but I knew I’d sent doAvn two
sheets so I Avent to the laundry to
claim the other one.
Miss AVash M. Good greeted me
all smiles. ^ Honey, three Aveeks ago
von sent down tAvo sheets and a
pilloAvcase, the week before only
four sheets, and last Aveek five, so
tAvo plus four is six minus five is
one. I’m sure you understand
that.”
After much meditation, though, I
I got a math major, a general’s dau
ghter, and a speech major to help
me out. I also got a stenographer
to take notes for future reference.
The lady Wash M. Good wasn’t
even amused. ‘ Grrr rrr, ’ was her
first remark. She rolled up her
sleeves and pitched in. ‘Listen,
you,! the first time you complained,
I sent you back four extra handker
chiefs, the next time an extra sock,
the third time three gym suits, size
forty-four. What more do you
want? ’
I Avas almost stumped, but my
aides came to my rescue. ’Don’t
forget the campaign,’ was the battle
cry and this spurred me on. Giving
the jungle yell, I leaped on the shelf
and began to orate.
‘Miss Good, you don’t seem to
understand the seriousness of the
situation. For weeks I have looked
in cA’ery conceivable place, even the
library, and now my search returns
realized that I had begun the year | me to this site. As a free citizen,
Avith four sheets and now I had 11 demand my sheet! ’ I crumpled ex-
three. (Even I know that, hausted to the floor,
News
(Continued from ^age one)
NEW YORK
The men who know, on Wall
Street, say that inflation is dead.
As a matter of fact we have been
in a period of- deflation for quite
some time. This AA^eek the Federal
Reserve Board took antideflationary
measures by decreasing the margin
requirement from 75% to 50% cash
on the price of securities. Such’ a
measure has already stimulated the
NeAv York Stock Exchange. The
price of some securities has increa
sed from one to three points.
only
much about math!) So I figured it j and applause,
all up on the adding machine and
showed her the figures.
This time the grin had begun to
fade a little. She used different
tactics, ‘Honey, I bet you haven’t
even looked for that sheet. You
knoAv those cracks in the floors of
Sister’s House are mighty big. My,
mv, I remember when I liA^ed in
Sister’s, Ave had some rare times!
All those underground tunnels—we
got away Avith murder.’
All this reminiscing fired my in
tense imagination. I Avent away
tliinking how wonderful it must
have been to live in pre-Civil War
Days. I could see myself in billoAving
hoop-skirt Avith a handsome cavalier
making mad love to me.
‘Mali dahling, ah love—’ AValking
smack into, a door shattered my re
verie. My sheet! l' still didn’t
have my sheet!
I looked everywhere and I deci
ded to go to the laundry one more
time. But this time, I was the foxy
one. I had an elaborate campaign
planned. I thought of an ansAver
to everything she could possibly say.
amid cheers
Through the noise
I heard her voice bellowing, ‘Have
you tried the Academy?’
Once more a flicker of hope arose
in my befuddled mind. I picked
myself up and zipped to the aca
demy. There I succeeded only in
disrupting a Virgil class, and found
my purple and yellow striped blouse,
three hair pins, slightly sprung, and
a 1772 edition of the Salemite.
Foiled again! Breathing flame, I
craAvled back to the laundry. This
time I would use torture. The doors
Avere bolted and barred, but with
superhuman effort I plunged my fist
through the wall and crept in after
it.^ I knew I wouldn’t return with
out a sheet.
“AA^ell, did you get one?” came
the tired murmer. ”
“No,” said Activitus, “but it
didn’t take me long to sew these
Avashrags together, it could be
worse!”
“Yeah, yours is really the sad-
.dest story I’ve ever heard!” With
that her suffering felloAv human
pulled up her glued-together pilloAA^--
cases and began to snore.
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