March 3, 1950 THE S A L E MIT E Page Three J Hi si»i; 0)W;-; QonUJte^,,. Ml Former Salem Professor (Continued from page two) file NoniiiuUing' Conmiittee. All re- comnieiulatious 'w i 1 1 be carefully considered by the Committee. Tl is the duty and the privilege of each of us to consider each office and each girl nominated ser iously and thoughtfully. Watch the bulletin boards for notices of nomi nations. If you don’t kno\v some of the nominees very well, try to find out something about them from a reliable source. Don’t wait until coming to .\sseinbl_\- to decide how you will vote. Read over the duties required of every officer in your handbook and ask yourself if you think your candidate can success fully fulfill these duties. When you are in Assembly, listen to the reading of the qualifications of each office and try to match y'our choice to the qualifications. Need anything be said about at- Gray Sees (Continued from pogo two) herself. Pinky, is based on a noved by a Southern author. One is reminded m this story of Kingsblood Royal by Sinclair Lewis. Both deal with persons who have crossed the color line. The film does not give a flatter ing picture of the South. How' much of this picture is true? What is our part in it? Only we as indi- Dies In West Virginia The students and faculty of Salem were sorry to hear of the death of Professor Charles Plenry Hig gins, who headed the department^ of science at Salem College foP more than 27 years. He died in a hospital in Rluefield, West Vir ginia. In 1948 Mr. Higgins became head of the chemistry department at West VH r g i n i a State College, Athens, W. Va. To Mr. Higgins \vc owe the development and im provement of our science depart ment. Born in .Auburn, Maine, Mr. Hig gins received his B. S. and M. .A. degrees from Bates College in Maine, and he did graduate work at Columbia University. He was a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Theta Rappa Nu and the American Chemi cal Society. Mr. Higgins made laboratory iri^ vestigations for the Winston-Salem Police Department. His testing laboratory was the only one in a small college in North Carolina as listed by' the United States Bureau of Standards. Mr. Higgins pub lished numerous scientific papers and he was elected chairman of the Carolina Piedmont Section ot the .\merican Chemical Society in 1943. The faculty and students of Salem College express their deepest sym pathies to Mrs. Higgins and the boys. Training Schedule (Continued from page two) The Y Cabinet will meet on April 3 with the new cabinet. On April 4 the I. R. S. will meet, and the A. A. will meet on April 13. De tailed informationwill be announced later. The Salemite staff will meet on April 18 in the Salemite office. On April 20 the Sights and Insights Staff will meet in the annual office. It is hoped that the newly in vestigated program will be of aid to the officers of 1950-51 and wnll continue to operate in future years. Your Film Developed and Printed 8ex.^ 25^- Mail Your Roll To Skyline Photo Service Winston-Salem, N. C. */. Bimoni FPfiotoqiajifu l£X Across from Salem Square Phone 2-4042 BANNER’S Dining Room is open daily from 8 a. m .to 12 Midnight except Monday. Sizzling Steaks — Chicken Dinners Curb Service For Snacks Call 3-5876 to make reservations for private parties The Best At Banner’s tendance in Assembly during elec tions ? 1 don’t think any college student should have to be reminded of this obligation. ' Remember, as long as yon are interested in the campus organi zations, you will have progressive organizations and good leaders. If you become indifferent and un interested, what right have you to expect anything constructive from yow leaders and your or ganizations ? viduals can answer these questions. The North comes in for its share, too. The doctor is told by Pinky that she is a Negro. He is wilting to marry her, but he gives the im pression that such a match would not be favorably received in New England. He suggests that they- go to the West. Here Pinky makes her decision. She is through with running away from herself. She is a Negro. She is not ashamed of it. This film offers no solution to a larger problem. It tells a realistic human story about an individual problem. The individual issue is resolved. There it stops. How ever, it offers a challenge. A nation is like a railway trestle. A trestle is only as strong as its foundation. A trestle built on bed rock will stand. A trestle built on shifting rock and sand will collapse. So it is with nations. Where do we stand ? Let us make sure of our social bridge span, for it is the central span. II iii WITH SMOKERS WHO KNOW... IT*S Camels for Mildness! y Yes, Camels are SO 31ILD that in a coast-to-coast test of hundreds of men and women who smoked Camels— and only Camels—for 30 consecutive days, noted throat specialists, making weekly examinations, reported NOT ONE SINGLE CASE OF THROAT IRRITATION due to smoking CAMELS! i'l

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