Four THE SALEMITE March 2, Final Items To Be Auctioned In Chapel On Tuesday, Mar. 6 By Bebe Boyd The annual YWCA Auction was started by the giving of two door- prizes by Donald Britt, auctioneer. The winners, Ann Summerell and Kay Williams received a door and cartoon respectively. The cartoon was one designed by Mr. Britt and E. Shewmake and submitted for publication. Two of the foreign students of fered gifts for auction. A week of ■Spanish coaching was to be given by Mary Margaret Dzevaultaskas and light blue Korean shoes were sponsored by Duksung Hyun. The student body quickly got in the mood of buying and prices were offered excitedly and with anticipation. Two girls will be able to stay out in town the night of the May Day Dance with Frankie Cunning- ham. The music students and anxious admirers bid to be among the 9 girls vvho would be entertained at bridge by the Musical Three, Mr. Stevens, Mr. Sandresky, and Mr. Mueller. Mrs. lleidbreder will sponsor the dinners of four girls at the Robert Lee Hotel. Bridge and dessert at the home of Dr. Africa will entertain two “people.” A sudden turn of orffers created quite a bit of fun for those who plan to obtain Ann Campbell, Susan Glaser, Dale Dawson and "Thornburg and Lee” to present Home Ec Club (Continued from Pace One) by Salem’s fifty home economics majors. High Schools to send representa tives are: Hanes, Lewisville, Wal- kertown, Glenn, Gray, Mineral Springs, Griffith, South Fork, Rey nolds, Kernersville, Northwest, and Clemmons. Campus committees are headed by Shirley Ann Hardy, Sara Marie Pate, Mimi Joyner, Lucinda Oliver, and Nellie Ann Barrow. their own “Talent and Variety Show.” For the bridge fiends of the col lege, there were bids on both Dr. Welch and Miss Whites’ invitation and that of the Gramley family. Two girls were delighted to get' the bid offered by Mr. Sawyer to sponsor horseback riding at Tangle- wood and Deluxe Hamburgers. Running high on the bidding and running high in emotion, eight girls chose to eat a picnic supper with dates—provided and selected by Don Britt himself. Because of the lack of time, the auctioning was called to a halt until next'Tuesday. For those Who are interested in knowing'what will be offered and for those who want to plan their groups to take place in the bidding, the following list will show what will be auctioned. A supper at Hanging Rock, for four, given by Mr. Campbell. Dr. Spencer offers a Steak Patio Supper for four. • ' ■ . Six to have spagetti at ’the home of Mrs. Scott. Mr. Heidemann will prepare pizza’s for six people. , Either an Italian or American supper will be given for two by the jacobowsky’s. At the Forsyth Country Club, dinner for four is sponsored by Miss Byrd. Mr. Medlin will take a girl out to dinner. Mr. Wendt will bake a cake. Mrs. Cash will prepare fudge. Mr. Curlee offers tvy;o wooden hand-made cigarette holders. S^oe-shines, a bronze , jewel-box, rubber shoes, terni paper typed, and a person taken horseback rid ing will be among numerous feat ures offered at the auction Tues day. , ., The total so far a m o u n t s to $153.75. Mary Mac Rogers and Suejette Davidson, heads of the WLS committee, state that the proceeds will go for the use of the World University Service. (Continued from pogo tv«) We will not, for example, reduce race prejudice by denying to areas afflicted with it the means of im proving the education standards of all their people. Certainly we will not improve the present condition or future pros pects of any Negro citizen by coercive Federal action that will arm the extremists and disarm the men of good will in the South who, with courage and patience, have already accomplished so much. 1 suggest no slowing down of the effort to bring to reality the Am erican concept of full equality for all our citizens. We must proceed, as the court has said, with all reasonable speed. But we must recognize that it is reason alone that will determine our rate of continued progress and guard against a reversal of the trend that has made the last three decades the period of greatest ad vancement for our Negro citizens | on all fronts. 1 had hoped the action of the court and the notable record of compliance that still far outweighs the instances of overt resistance Would remove this issue from the political arena and make possible its orderly resolution without the emotional coloration of a presiden tial contest. 1 still consider this not only possible but essential. (The above statement was made by Mr. Stevenson in Portland, Ore gon. Editor.) Margaret Mead • (Continued from Page Three) cerning foreign affairs—“We should not be' doing good things for less gfciod reasons, for to improve our status, as our only goal, is snob bish”; concerning national affairs -4-“Thc longer people contemplate anything they don’t like much in tfie first place, the worse they like iti”' :The interest which Dr. Mead took in each girl’s plans after school and her long, patient, well- at|ended sessions in the Day Stu dent Center are proof of her out going personality. Again, I am not ah anthropologist, but in my opin ion anyone who can drink three cups of dining hall coffee for breakfast ranks as a superior speci men of mankind. Across 1. Student of Salem 8. Mary Curtis* sister 12. Personal pronoun 13. First section of the Bible 14. Salemite columnist 15. Social Sciences (abbr.) 16. Road (abbr.) 17. Preposition 18. Fence ladder 20. Past participal of verb “to see*’ (French) 21. Boy’s nickname 23. Self 25. Official holiday 27. Rhyme and 29. Fraternity 30. Runner-up for Miss America ’52, 33. Student Government (abbr.) former Salemite 35. “ John, John, ” 36. What the Pierrettes do 40. A state (abbr.) 42. Campus organization 44. Exam 45. Athletic Association 47. Emily, Mary Benton, and Bebe 49. Mode of transportation 52. Yes (Spanish) 53. And (French) 54. Language spoken in Italy 56. “As goes, so goes the nation.” 57. Salem’s principal shortage 58. What Salem girls live for 59. They wear caps and gowns The answers to the crossword puzzle can be found in the Salemite office on the bulletin board. Down 1. Salem Librarian (retired) 2. Every senior wants a dip 3. First impression of Salem 4. Degree (abbr.) 5. Pronoun 6. Something freshmen are acquainted with (“periodical checkup”) 7. Head of Household Staff at Salem 8. River in Virginia 9. Part of the verb “to be” 10. Audacity 11. Bears Piece of music 19. Resting place 22. Mrs. Heidbreder 24. “A man now-a-d®s7s ;ls hard to find” 26. Preposition 28. Length of time 31. Acting Head of the Erogliisb De- partment 32. North Atlantic Treaty OrgarfSiafian 34. President of Salem College 37. They snap and crackle break fast 38. Tasty (comparative form) 39. First it killed the Romaims 41. It comes with stamps ©ir 42. That is (Latin abbr.) 43. Big 46. Mr. Shewmake teaches 48. Note on the diatonic scailr 50. Organization for college gradu ates .57. Trite adjective 55. To be born 56. House President 57. Maryland (abbr.) Parents Day (Continued From Page One) Museum. A replica of the Salem community in 1830 will be on dis play ra the Reception Cenler be tween the hours of 1 :(X) and 5:007 The receptionist will be on hand td give some of Salem’s early history and point out other sites which may be visited. The John Vogler Home, which has been opened since last Parent’s Day, and the Wachovia Museum may be toured. Since Saturday's schedule is already heavy, the Salem Restoration may also be seen on Sunday, March 4th. ■YOU’LL BOTH GO FOR THIS CIGARETTE! WINSXON i\Mtd OH / ■ Sure didn’t take college smokers long to find out that Winston tastes good — like a cigarette should! This easy-drawing filter cigarette brings you real tobacco flavor, rich and full. What’s more, the Winston filter works so well the flavor gets right through to you. Try Winston — you’ll see! R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. winstoh tLt ecLALj-dnawiAAq ^e/L ciqa/ifiite.1

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view