Newspapers / Salem College Student Newspaper / Feb. 9, 1951, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE SALEMITE Page Three Astrid Parmele News Of Ingrid Parmele WhatFirst Began As Danish Has Developed Into Spanish (Continued from page two) Schulberg, Ullman’s River of the Sun and Costain’s Son of A Hun dred Kings. The general list con tained Kon-Tiki by Heyerdahl, Boswell’s London Journal edited by Pottle and Look Younger, Live Longer by Hauser. Film Setting Charleston, S. C. has been chosen as a site for the Army Signal Corps cameras on or about March 1. The film. Pentagon sources re vealed, is as yet untitled, but is designed as an instructional feat ure which will run about fifty minutes and will be used by the military as a training course on the : handling of such violence in oc- j cupied countries. Charleston has 1 been chosen for the mob violence ' scenes because “its streets are re miniscent of the old world and it simulates those in European count ries.” Mark Clark Speaks General Mark Clark, Chief of the Army Field Forces, Fort Mon roe, Virginia spoke in Memorial Hall at the University of North Carolina, Tuesday at 8:00 p. m. Pre ceding his brief address, Clark was honored at a dinner at the Caro lina Inn which was attended by University officials and several members of the Carolina Forum, which sponsors public lectures on the University campus. Chief of the Army Field Forces for the past year. General Clark has received ten different decora tions from the United States, ten from foreign countries and count less honorary degrees. After spec tacular achievements during World War II he was appointed in 1945 Commander-in-Chief of the U. S. Occupation Forces in Austria and the U. S. High Commissioner for Austria. Duke Professor Praised The Reverend James T. Cleland, Professor of Homiletics at Duke University, has been praised by one of Scotland’s leading magazines, “Scottish Field”, for his part in a traditional Scottish banquet re cently held in New York City. “The Reverend held the vast audience spellbound,” the magazine reports,, “provoking prolonged bursts of laughter, ovations and cheers, with his outstanding and fine rhetoric and Scots wit.” Professor Cleland is widely known as an outstanding speaker and preacher, and last year one of his sermons was published in the anthology “Best Sermons of 1949- 50.” By Jane Watson .Astrid spread the last rug and .straightened up with a friendly “Hello”. The Parmele twins were settled and were rearranging their room for the second time. The only things for which they had found no room were their guitars with which they accompany Argen tine folk songs. Besides this Ast rid said she had hidden in her “Ropero” (which Ingrid traitslated as closet) an enormous diploma entitling her to teach piano. In a British accent with an oc casional Spanish word thrown in, the twins told me that they were born in Tucuman, Argentina. From there on out the confusion starts. Their father is a consulting en gineer from Wilmington, N. C. Their mother is Danish and was born in Zululand, South Africa. They met and married in Argen tina. The twins began speaking in Danish. Then they moved to Wil mington for six months where they learned English and attended se cond grade. Then back to Argen tina—this time Buenos Aires— where they went to an English school and began to speak Spanish with a little Italian thrown in. At this point I gave up and changed the subject. They said that their most vivid impression of the United States was—in one breath—“Christmas”. Because they were visitors, the youngest in the family, twins and—as they put it —“freaks”; they received all the presents that Christmas. They ex plained that as Argentina was pre- lominantly Catholic; January 6, the day the wisemen came, is more widely celebrated than Christmas. (Continued on page six) BRODT-SEPARK MUSIC CO. 620 West Fourth St. Phone 3-2241 Music of All Publishers In Charleston, South Carolina, a favorite gathering spot of students at the College of Charleston, is the College Canteen because it is a cheerful place — full of friendly collegiate atmosphere. And when the gang gathers around, ice-cold Coca-Cola gets the call. For here, as in college haunts everywhere—Coke belongs. Ask for it either way ... both trade-marks mean the same thing. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY WINSTON COCO COLA BOTTLING CO. © 1951, The Coca-Cola Company li WIN CIT DRYCUANiNOCO oY We Specialize In Evening Dresses 612 W. Fourth St. Dial 7106 COLL-FGl- Ci esAv r-t -Mortt. Caroba Winston-Saveiu N .he class clown went out on a limb and tried to prove cigarette mildness by the quick-trick method! He tried the fast inhale, fast exhale test-a whiff, a sniff-and they still left him up in the air! But then he got his feet on the ground. He. learned that there is a reliable way to discover how mild a cigarette can be! And that test is . .^ The sensible test ... the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test which simply asks you to try Camels as a steady smoke—on a pack after pack, day after day basis. No snap judgments needed. After you’ve enjoyed Camels and only Camels-for 30 days in your “T-Zone” (T for Throat, T for Taste), we believe you’ll know why . . . More People Smoke Camels ihan any other rigareiie! r.r r
Salem College Student Newspaper
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Feb. 9, 1951, edition 1
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