N October 2 We P^e^a^e This is our year. This is what we cons ciously or unconsciously prepared for all sum mer. We prepared for Salem and Salem pre pared for us. Freshmen prepared by reading letters from the Student Government and wondering what Alice was like; by reading letters from Senior Advisors and big sisters and wondering if they really would help; and by checking credit points with the Salem bulletin. Through the ^summer freshmen tried to picture dorm life and classes under professors with Ph. D.’s; wondering what the catacombs and Scorpions were and if their prince charm ing really did go to Davidson. Sophomores prepared by planning to have more fingers in more campus pies than there had been time for the year before; by resolv ing to be extra nice to freshmen during rat week and then—changing their minds. So phomores also thumbed through fashion maga zines, shopped and then hoped that their black dress would have the prettiest mink trim in the dorm. Juniors prepared by writing letters to little sisters and thinking how time had flown since they were little sister, too, and by thinking seriously about choosing a major. Juniors also wondered how a class of hungry seniors could be fed at the Junior-Senior Banquet and if that battered trunk would hold up for two more years. Seniors prepared by trying to get used to the idea that next year this time the cruel world would be waiting; by wondering how to teach freshmen how to sing the Alma Mater and make them understand that it’s really quite pretty when Mr. Peterson sings it. Sen iors also searched for a hair style that would look ravishing under a mortar board and tried to muster up enough dignity to become the gown. All this time Clewell and Strong were get ting new paint jobs; the dining room walk icas being broadened for the 8:15 breakfast rush; the new chapel was being planned and the Book Store was ordering books and more books. The new station wagon was being broken in, and professors were returning t6 campus with new ideas. Faculty, staff and students have all pre pared for this our year. Since this is our year, we ourselves must use it. How will we use it? Next May we’ll know how it has been used, but getting to next May, remember, takes preparation too. S. J. C., A. P. B. ■'Yow mast be Scnib'«- Advisor. 'X'm o. 'CIO#! At. Editor’s note: This cartoon was drawn by a former Salem student. Small Town By Alison Britt Don’t believe that my town is good or bad or typical. It’s not. But it’s mine. It does not com pletely surround me as it did when I played hopscotch on unpaved streets and sang in its high school chorus, but it has had its effect. It has left me a small-town person who is just beginning to become aware. It’s main street is named “Main Street’’, but arched trees do not meet above it. In summer the sun sets at Its end in a blinding glare, meaning difficult driving for travel ers, but meaning larger peanut and cotton crops for us. The production of peanuts and cotton along with the making of baskets in our mill, keeps my town alive. The stores, built only on one side of Main Street for a rea son that is aimystery to me, sell clothes and hardware only when the farmers sell peanuts and cotton. But whether the peanuts prosper or not, Saturday thrives. The side walks are filled with farmers, their families, and Negro tenants. The boys and girls fight or flirt as is fitting for their age; the men spit tobacco juice and swap stories; the women, clutching handkerchiefs to mop their foreheads, remark enviously on their neighbor’s new hat. The little town girls put up stands in vacant lots to sell old clothes, often lowering the price of a 50c doll for an eager-faced little color ed girl. My town is not a lazy town ex cept on Sunday afternoon; it is not a bustling town except on Saturday; it is not a typical “Main Street, U. S. A.’’ It is a town with its own way of life whose people love, fight, suffer—and go to the P. T. A. The Willow iWie ciOnfiM Pmm ibMcfame OFFICES Lo’wer floor Main Hall Do-wntown Office 304-306 South Main Street Printed by the Sun Printing Company Subscription Price $3.00 a year Published every Friday of the College year by the Student Body of Salem College Editor-in-Chief Alison Britt Associate Editor Connie Murray Managing Editor Solly Reiland Feature Editor Betsy Liles Copy Editor Bebe Boyd Make-up Editor Donald Caldwell Factorial Editor Lu Long Ogburn Music Editor Edith Flagler Sports Editor Lou Fike Editorial Staff: Laurie Mitchell, Jean Edwards, Sarah'Out- land, Barbara Allen, Sue Harrison, Louise Barron, Jackie Nielsen, Eleanor SmU;h, Martha Thornburg, Diane Knott. Francine Pitts, Betty Tyler, Jane Brown, Betty Lynn Wilson, Mary Anne Raines, Freda Siler, Carolyn Knee- burg, Anne Edwards, Sandra Whitlock. Business Manager Joan Shope Advertising Managers Maggie Blakeney, Marguerite Blanton Circulation Manager Toddy Smith Btj.'siness .Staff: Sally Hackney, Peggie Horton, Carolyn Watlington, Betty Saunders, June Kipe, Claire Chestnutt, Diantha Carter, Ann Butler. Thelma Lancaster, Mary McNeely Rogers, Betty Morrison. Bebe Brown. Typists ..' Joyce BiHings, Ann Butler, Eleanor Smith Faculty Advisor Miss Jess B.yrd Etlitor s note: This essay was re- ceived last week from Peggy Chears, Associate Editor of the Salemite last year. The lofty, graceful willow tree stands near Bitting Dormitory. It has been on Salem campus for many years. It has seen many classes of seniors come and go, anxious, yet sorrowful—anxious, to e.xplore the vast unknown, known as “Future,” and yet sad to leave friends and Salem. And, with each of these Senior Classes goes a store of treasured Salem memories which the willow tree shares. There are memories of treasured traditions:—the formal opening with caps and gowns, tree planting. Sen ior Vespers and caroling, the elect ing and installing of new officers. May Day festivities. Hat Burning, the Senior Banquet, the Junior- Senior, and, finally, graduation. Do you remember the trials and the comedy of Orientation week and Rat Week? Do you remember the words of comfort you gave and received ? And do you remembei: the hours you spent reading joke books in the Book Store ? Do you remember the parties on third floor Clewell when boxes came from home ? Do you remember the Hallo ween pranks — pie-beds, greased door knobs, and the ringing of the class bell ? Do you remember sun bathing and sneaking into the swimming pool—dressed or undres sed ? Do you remember racing with the church clock with your dates ? And do you remember those walks to “God’s Acre” and the com fort you found there? Do you re member sitting on the campus after supper singing and talking? And do you remember the gossip ing. the bridge games, and the hours spent in club meetings and in working on the Salemite? With out these things, Salem would be just another school. Betsy Liles Fanny Freshman was herded into the toij with the four others. The blindfold wasi, moved while Fanny’s senior advisor snat|| “Right; left, stoop.” Fanny assumed the hJ position while Slinky Senior whipped outlj cigarette holder and the handbook, a licately began. “Now, guhls, you are flip through the handbook and learn i standards of the guhls of 1772.” Fanny opened the first volume of the 1 book and turned to page 4849. Four | later Slink’s voice was still droning on»i rules and rules while poor Fan’s eyelids J against sleep. Through the window, the moon was tU and whiffs of tobacco wafted throiiil the curtains. Breathing a sigh, (Pan J surprised she still could breathe after theli| rage of tests) Fan began to think ahoi new life as a college girl. College was i had ever hoped for in her wildest momenJ the cute men that beat their knuckles raw ij bloody against the dorm doors begging beseeching her for dates, hen sweet cozy# (Miss Bessie had removed all the broomsj • the walls had been painted in soothing 1 and white stripes with her serial number« broidered on her pillow case), and fhe stii latiag classes on acids, protozoa, uni quantities, and French verbs . . . Then Fan remembered HER: Rosy mate. Rosy was the athletic type. Onllil first Sunday, Rosy had somersaulted in room humming “Mr. Touchdown, U. S, i| and before Fan could even murmur a Rosy threw up the window, let out a 1 shriek at the tainted tobacco air, and I did pushups. After touching her toes 5( Rosy slapped Fan on the back and “Hello, keed. How’s tricks? Hmmmmiii!| With an agonizing grip. Rosy Fan’s hand and pinched her arm to seel| big her biceps were. “Ug, puney. guess you’ll have to do. Grab those bart^ out in the hall and gimme a hand witll footlocker, will ya?” Dragging the redl Rosy’s gym equipment in, Fan smile. By supper, Rosy had fitted her tB ing mat and trapeze into their humble i and pitched Fan’s bed into the closet. “Bi of room for a little mosquito like you, explained. Fan’s hack had bristled, at the thouglt] being called a mosquito but she whim not a word. She was determined to get with Rosy, no matter what! She even [ leapfrog down to the dining room with I At supper her back bristled agaui. being a health addict, squeezed the juice her asparagus for an appetizer and i that Fan drink it. “It’ll make you like me! See, keed? Just feel my bi Rosy made a fist and two mountains a her arm. “Real gone, eh?” That night before Rosy and Fan wbII sleep, Rosy insisted that Fan take fouroij vitamin pills, and join her in pushups 1* she fell exhaustedly into the closet anJ bed ... Suddenly, Slinky^ Senior’s voice broke i Fan’s meditations. “That is all the rules *| gonna go over tonight. Y’all know tkei will be tomorrah. Report in Pain Hall' four packs of notebook paper, and dozen pencils.” Fan gathered her wear)'® body .up out of the Hindu position ■ marched back to her dorm. With supreme effort, she dragged “fj third floor Clewell. Opening the door 1 room, she heard bitter sobs. Rosy the trapeze crying, “Oh, Fan. The dos**] rible thing has happened. I’ve been the,. Infirmary, and the nurse has disc^| that I’ve been leading too strenous a J must give up all my exercising—even It were still very much a part of bells—until I’m better.” Salem because of their memories. Fan managed to say that it was too' The tears shed under the weep- a shudder of relief passed through her bm eS TearToTHs "ow flowed through berl each year holds new things for Fan picked up her handbook and be?fj study with renewed zest. In a half had memorized all one thousand of lb* and all verses of the Alma Mater, bai^ she was putting Rosy to bed. Fan coj College is real goae once you hmaamm, keed?” The serene willow has known all these things, and has seen the ef fects they had on each senior. Somehow, toward the end of the year, seniors seem to be drawn closer to the willow. They sit be neath the tree and reminiscence: for there is a common bond to draw them together. Soon after the seniors arrived, the green willow lost its leaves. Throughout the winter, the willow looked bare to the average visitor, but the seniors kept their eyes on the willow. They strained to see the first bit of green appear. On that Spring morning when the first green ap peared, another event occured. The elections had concluded . and the seniors shed their offices. The juniors took their places, and a new growth covered the campus. The willow had survived another year, and now, its rich, green coat seemed more luxurious than ever to the seniors. To everyone else, the willow’s new leaves were simply a phenomenon of nature, but the change was a symbol to eadh grad uating senior. The seniors had changed too. 'To the average person they looked just about the same, but they had grown and survived another sea son. The seniors themselves couldn’t explain the change. They were no longer integral parts of Salem because new people had taken their offices, and they were going to leave. But they still new people. Others must come and hear the. secrets of the willow. And the graceful, green willow re mains near Bitting to whisper secrets and to remind graduating seniors that each year a new growth comes to Salem.