Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) - Class of 1933 Page 1 of 164
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COTTON PICKANINNY BOOK 31S.15 S5 P Cl. W r S Bk. 13 3 Accession No. iZ3 74- lanis ana nsia Published Annually • at • SALEM COLLEGE Winston-Salem, N. C. FOREWORD I wish I was in the land of cotton, Old times there are not forcrotten. DEDICATION TP Katharine Boring Rondthaler Whose untiring inter- est in the welfare of Salem girls has won for her a place in the heart of each of us. CONTENTS TIT Boll One . . Campus Views Boll Two . . . The Faculty Boll Three . . The Classes Boll Four . . . Organizations Boll Five Athletics Boll Six Statistics Boll Seven . . Jokes and Ads BOLL ONE Campus Views « MAIN HALL • • ALICE CLEWELL BUILDING • • NORTH ENTRANCE OF ALICE CLEWELL BUILDING • ALICE CLEWELL BUILDING • • NORTH ENTRANCE OF ALICE CLEWELL BUILDING • • LOUISA WILSON BITTING BUILDING • • SALEM ACADEMY • • SUNKEN POOL • • THE PERGOLA • BRIDGE ON LOWER CAMPUS • Dr. Howard E. Roxdthaler President 25 Francis C. Anscombe B.A., M.A., Ph.D., LL.B. Plead of Department of History Professor of History and Philosophy Minnie Atkinson, B.A., M.A. Head of Department of Physical Education Professor of Physical Education Otelia Barrow Instructor in Business Subjects Marian Blair, B.A., M.A. Instructor in English Susie Persons Brown, B.A., M.A. Instructor in French Roy J. Campbell, B.A., C.P.H. Assistant Professor of Biology Mary Frances Cash, B.Mus., A.A.G.O. Instructor in Piano, Theory, Harmony, Counterpoint Evabelle S. Covington, B.A., M.A. Head of Department of Sociology and Economics Professor of Sociology and Economics Arlee Theodore Curlee, B.A., M.A. Head of Department of Mathematics Professor of Mathematics 26 Faculty Isabelle Ferguson, B.A., M.A. Instructor in History Helen Hart Fuller, B.M.Ed. Instructor in Public School Music Methods, Ear Training , History of Music, Appreciation of Music Charles H. Higgins, B.S., M A. Head of Department of Science Professor of Chemistry Eloise Willis Higgins, B.S. Instructor in Science Laurie Jones In.tructor in Piano Mary V. Jones Instructor in Organ Grace Lawrence Dean of Residence Bessie Chambers Leftwich, B.A., M.A. Head of Department of Plousehold Arts Professor of Home Economics Anne Elizabeth Lilly, B.A., M.A. Instructor in English 27 Mary Duncan McAnally, B.S. Instructor in Home Economics Ralph W. McDonald, B.A., M.A. Head of Department of Education Professor of Education and Psychology L V Noble R. McEwen, B.A., M.A. Assistant Professor of Education and P ychology Elizabeth O. Meinung, B.S., M.A. Instructor in Home Economics Hazel Horton Read Instructor in Violin, Violin-cello, Orchestra Katherine J. Riggan, B.A. Assistant to the Dean of Residence Ernest Leslie Schofield Instructor in Voice, Methods of Voice, Glee Club Grace L. Siewers, B.A. Librarian Mrs. Evelyn W. Simpson, B.A., ALA. Assistant Professor of French Faculty Katherine B. Smith, B.A Instructor in English Minnie J. Smith, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Head of Department of Classical Languages Professor of Latin and Greek Carrie Mae Stockton, B.A., M.A. Instructor in Spanish Viola Tucker Instructor in Piano Charles G. Vardell, Jr., B.A., A.A.G.O. Dean of School of Music Professor of Piano, Organ, Composition Methods in Piano Teaching Eloise Vaughn, B.A., M.A. Instructor in German and French Pearl Vivian Willoughby B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Head of Department of Eng ' ish Professor of English Lucy L. Wenhold, B.A., Ph.D. Heed of Department of Modern Languages Professor of Modern Languages 29 Faculty Snaps 30 BOLL THREE The Classes Sicrhts and Insicrhts Mary Louise Spaugh, Senior Mascot Senior Class M 2 $ Colors: Red and Black Motto: “Generous, Sincere and Friendly.” Flower: Poppy Officers Emii.y Mickey Mary Catherine Siewers Dorothy Heidenreich Margaret Johnson Elinor Phillips Adelaide Silversteen . . . Josephine Courtney} Charlotte O ' Brien Mary B. Williams Wanna Mary Huggins Miss Helen Hart Fuller President . . . Vice-President . . . Secretary T rcasurcr Historian . Poet . Prophets . Song Leader . . . Cheer Leader Class Adviser 34 Sights and Insights Ruth Emily Mickey WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Science President of Class (4) ; Athletic Council (3) ; I. R. S. Council Representative (4) ; Student Self-Government Repre- sentative (4) ; President’s Forum (4) ; Pierrette Players (2, 3, 4) ; Business Staff of Salemite (2, 3) ; Societas Scien- tiarum Salemensis (2, 3) ; Mathematics Club ( 1 ) ; Order of the Scorpion ; Bas- ketball Varsity (1, 2, 3); Hockey Squad (1, 2, 3) ; Baseball Squad (2). JV hen ah ax why she keep so busy she say , “Sleepin’ in a daisy fie l’ won’t git dat flower chain on de Seniors’ backs.” Miss Helen Hart Fuller Class Advisor 35 Sicrhts and Insiahts Florence Aitchison WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Student Self-Government Representative (3); Second Vice-President (4); Ath- letic Council (3, 4) ; Order of the Scor- pion; French Club (2, 3); Winner of “S” (3); Class Honor Roll (1, 2, 3); Soccer Varsity (2) ; Class Team (1,2); Manager of Soccer (3); Hockey Var- sity (2, 3, 4); Captain (2, 3); Class Team ( 1, 2, 3, 4) ; Manager of Hockey (4) ; Basketball Class Team (3, 4). De enemy quake wohen she step on dc hockey fiel’ ’case she sho’ do knows hows ter strut her stuff void dal little white ball. Louise Brinkley PLYMOUTH, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Editor-in-Chief Sights and Insights (4) ; Photographic Editor (3) ; Assistant Advertising Manager of Salemite (2); Secretary of Student Self-Government Association (3) ; Order of the Scorpion; Freshman Week Committee (3); Mathematics Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Presi- dent’s Forum (4) ; Alpha Chi Alpha (3, 4); Alpha Phi Kappa; Basketball Class Team (1, 3, 4); Hockey Class Team (3, 4). ’Case while I got my mouf en eyes Ena little wheel in my head,” I ain ' t a- (join ' ter lazy roun’ , I’se gwine ter work instead. 36 Siahts and Insicrhts Mildred Gordon Coleman WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts French Club (i); History Club (2, 3, 4 ). “Dream time, dream time Time to take yer ease:’ JV ork right hard hut not too long Den have fun as yer please. Elizabeth Correll WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Science Hockey Squad ( 1, 2) ; Home Economics Club (1, 2, 3, 4). She kin heat A unt Jemima herself on a- makin’ pancakes an’ all dat whut goes void ’em. n Siahts and Insicrhts Josephine Rowe Courtney LENOIR, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Davenport College (i, 2); Editor-in- Chief Salemite (4) ; Society Editor (3) ; Class Prophet (4); President’s Forum (4); Order of the Scorpion; French Club (3, 4) ; Alpha Chi Alpha (3, 4) ; Alpha Phi Kappa; Elockey Class Team ( 3 , 4 ). JVhen de gals’ heels gits to tappin En de coons gits down to clappin’ Den ' s when I clogs beca’se — oh A ' case I must.” Nina Way Credle WASHINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts President Athletic Association (4); President ' s Forum (4) ; I. R. S. Coun- cil (3) ; French Club (2, 3, 4) ; Mathe- matics Club ( 1 ) ; Delta Sigma Delta. Now dis heah gal am de president of de jumpin ' society — an’ do she keep movin ' . M-m-m- 38 Sicrhts and Insicrhts Ruth Emily Crouse WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Advertising Manager Sights and In- sights (4) ; Assistant Business Manager (3) ; Assistant Advertising Manager (2) ; I. R. S. Council (2) ; Vice-Presi- dent (4) ; French Club (2, 3, 4) ; Vice- President (4) ; Mathematics Club (1) ; Class Honors ( 1 ) ; Basketball Squad (2) ; Soccer Class Team (2) ; Hockey Squad ( 1, 2). “I mostly sets thar quiet, ’till the spirit moves me — then ” I kin say mo’ in a minute dan other folks sez in ten. Mary Ada Douthit ADVANCE, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts History Club (1, 2, 3, 4). “Tarry pin vcatk fast ’nuff fer to go visitin ' ,” she say, “an ' I ain’t a-hurryin’ either.” 39 ; : m K Sicrhts and Insiahts Tommye Eleanor Frye PILOT MOUNTAIN, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Music President of Glee Club (4) ; Member (1, 2, 3, 4); Student Self-Go vernment Representative (3, 4) ; President’s Forum (4) . De apple tree bloom in de winter time, En de leaves shed in de spring, En all wants is a little rhyme To go wid my banjer string.” Edna Ghilan Hall BURLINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Business Manager Sights and Insights (4) ; Assistant Advertising Manager (3) ; Student Self-Government Repre- sentative (3, 4) ; I. R. S. Council (3) ; Order of the Scorpion; Class Treasurer (3) ; History Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; French Club (2); Mathematics Club (1); Hockey Class Team (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Bas- ketball Class Team (3). IV h en she am present she kin do away wid youah blues like a crow kin do ' way wid de corn in de fiel’. 40 Sicrhts and Insiahts Nancy Ann Harris WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Music Glee Club (i, 2, 3, 4); French Club (1). Yas, mister! Dat tune am in mah head , an ' I’se gwine ter play hit, eben if l breaks my neck a-doin’ hit. Dorothy Marion Heidenreich DURBIN, NORTH DAKOTA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Class Historian (1); Secretary (3, 4); Student Self-Government Representa- tive; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (4) ; Salem- ite Staff (3, 4) ; French Club (2, 3, 4) ; Mathematics Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Alpha Iota Pi (3, 4) ; Alpha Chi Alpha (3, 4) ; President (4) ; Hockey, Class Team (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Basketball Class Team (1,3, 4) ; Varsity (2) ; Soccer Class Team (1); Volley Ball Squad (1, 2, 3, 4) ; President’s Forum (4). Massa nash he teef ’case she beat him in jiggers. But, lanvsy ! ’taint no wonder, ’case she sho’ am smart. 41 Sicrhts and Insicrhts Wanna Maxy Hugging LEAKSVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Music Student Self-Government Representative (3) ; Sights and Insights Staff (3, 4) ; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (2, 4); May Court, Maid of Honor (4) ; May Day Committee (4) ; French Club (2) ; Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Colleg Or- chestra (4) ; Class Honors ( 1 ) ; Alpha Phi Kappa; Basketball Class Team (3, 4) ; Hockey Squad (3, 4). When de nights is warm en de moon is full, Mali ol’ urge few entertainment has a power- ful hefty pull. Eugenia Johnson WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts History Club (1, 2, 3, 4). “Taint no use to sit an’ whine When the fish ain’t on yer line, Bait yer hook an’ keep a-tryin’ Keep a-goin’.” 42 Siahts and Insiahts Mae Dobbins Johnson WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Student Self-Government Representative (4); Order of the Scorpion; History Club (2, 3, 4) ; Volley Ball Class Team Captain (4) ; Basketball Class Team (3) ; Varsity (3) ; Hockey Class Team ( 3 - +)• 1 ain’t a lazy gal, no suh. I ‘works , an I gits mail dues. Margaret Louise Johnson RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Vice-President Y. W. C. A. (4) ; Cab- inet ((2, 3); I. R. S. Council (1); Salemite Staff (2, 3) ; Athletic Council (2) ; Order of the Scorpion; Class Sec- retary (1); Treasurer (4); History Club (2) ; Mathematics Club ( 1 ) ; Glee Club (4) ; Alpha Iota Pi (3, 4) ; Alpha Chi Alpha (3, 4) ; Beta Beta Phi; Bas- ketball Squad (2, 3) ; Hockey Class Team (3, 4) ; Soccer Class Team (1) ; Volley Ball Class Team (3) ; Varsity (2). If ’n She’s yo’ frien’ in good times, she’s your’n ‘when de storm comes roun’ ; Yas suh. 43 jtfUse I? u . i Sicrhts and Insicrhts Emma Elizabeth Kapp BETHANIA, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Sights and Insights Staff (3, 4) ; His- tory Club (2, 3, 4) ; Mathematics Club ( 1 ) ; Hiking Club ( 1, 2 ) . She’s got big notions in her noggin ' , an’ on Account of dat she gits aplenty done. Matilda Ches ' son Mann WHITAKERS, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Secretary Y. W. C. A. Association (3) ; Cabinet (1, 3, 4) ; Secretary and Treas- urer McDowell Club (3) ; French Club (2, 3, 4)- “I ' d like to sleep in a holler gum Or roost in a long-leaf pine JVhar nothin’ ’u ' d come to mess wid me Or axe nvhar I’se g=wine.” 44 Siahts and Insiqhts i Frances Louise Mendenhall WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor o f Science Home Economics Club (i, 2, 3, 4). Dis gal know her business, an’ she do hit ’ihnut no pesterin’ ’roun! Mary Louise Mickey WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Chairman of May Day Committee (4) ; Salemite Staff (1, 3) ; I. R. S. Council (1, 4) ; Sights and Insights Staff (3, 4) ; Student Self-Government Represen- tative (1) ; Class Historian (3) ; Order of the Scorpion; Athletic Council (2) ; Manager of Golf (2) ; French Club (2, 3) ; Pierrette Players (2, 3, 4) ; Glee Club (4) ; Alpha Chi Alpha (2, 3, 4) ; Winner of “S” (3) ; Basketball Class Team (1, 3, 4); Soccer Class Team (1, 2); Volley Ball Class Team (2); Hockey Class Team (3, 4). Dere’s no heatin’ dat gal. JFhen she’s in sight, all yo’ troubles is ended. 45 Siahts and Insiahts Anna Louise Mock WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts History Club (i, 2, 3, 4). l ' se most particerly anxious ter state dat dal curly haid oh her’n kivers a lot oh sense. Charlotte Elizabeth O’Brien WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Class Prophet (4) ; Athletic Council (3, 4) ; I. R. S. Council (2) ; Hockey, Var- sity (2, 4) ; Class Team ( 1, 2, 4) ; Soc- cer Squad (2) ; Basketball Varsity (2) ; Manager (2, 4) ; Class Team (1, 2, 4). F.f yer wants ter see a good spo’t — a git-up- an-gitter , jest take a look this-a way. 46 Sights and Insights Elinor Temperance Phillips WINSTCLY-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Class Historian (4) ; Salemite Staff (3, 4); French Club (1); Alpha Iota Pi (2, 3, 4); President (4); Alpha Chi Alpha (3, 4) ; Treasurer (4) ; Presi- dent’s Forum (4) . Light as a feather in some ways, hut where I’arnin’ have weight she am mighty heavy! Alice Wesley Philpott ROCKY MOUNT, VIRGINIA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts May Queen (4) ; May Court (3) ; His- tory Club (2, 3, 4) ; Mathematics Club (1); Basketball Class Team (1, 2); Soccer Class Team (1). Missus say you cat beat this ' ll fer looks; but lawsy, ain’t nobody tryin’ er dispute her! 47 Siahts and Insicrhts Mary Pauline Price CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Science Meredith College; I. R. S. Council (4) ; Home Economics Club (2, 3, 4) ; Treas- urer Y. W. C. A. Association (3) ; May Court (4) ; Delta Sigma Delta. Seems like her spirits stays good even ef de elements is mighty cloudy an’ Ole Man Trouble mighty nigh. Sarah Elizabeth Price CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Science Meredith College; President Home Eco- nomics Club (4) ; Member (2, 3, 4) ; Student Self-Government Representa- tive (3) ; May Court (4) ; Delta Sigma Delta. I alius laks de folks void spunk; Novo see dat gal step, lawsy massy, A ain’t she mighty peart and sassy? Jcs’ my style. 48 Sicrhts and Insicrhts Pauline Williams Setzer Louise Sides WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Candidate for Bachelor of Arts French Club (i, 2, 3, 4) ; History Club ( 1 ) ; Mathematics Club (1, 3, 4) ; Sigma Omicron Alpha (1, 2, 3) ; Alpha Iota Pi (3, 4) ; Hockey Class Team ( 3 ). “I says dis jis bec’se it’s so. I kinder thought you ' d like to know. Don ' t think I ' se tryin’ to bray an’ blow; I alius deals in fac’s.” History Club (2, 3, 4). Ef you ask her, day or night, ‘Anything that’s good in sight?’ This is alius what she’d say, In her uncomplainin’ way — ‘Well, I’m hopin’.’” K 49 Mary Catherine Siewers MORGANTON, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts President I. R. S. (4) ; Student Self- Government Representative (2); First Vice-President (4) ; Y. W. C. A. Cab- inet (3); Sale mite Staff (3); French Club (2, 3, 4) ; May Court (4) ; Presi- dent’s Forum (4) ; Order of the Scor- pion; Class Vice-President (4); Fresh- man Week Committee (4); Hockey Class Team (1,3); Beta Beta Phi. V se genuwinely swamped, I is With trios’ lahrous work, I is, But soon I ' se gwine ter rest , I is — Yeah Man! Elizabeth Adelaide Silversteen BREVARD, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Music Class Poet (4) ; Pierrette Players (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Sigma Omicron Alpha (1, 2, 3, 4) ; President (4) ; Vice-President (3) ; Secretary (2) ; Cheer Leader (3) ; Song Leader (2); Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Hiking Squad ( 1 , 2) . “Fer I know them songs so perfect that when l git the swing o’ the tune they want to go to, kin shet my eyes an’ sing.” 50 Sights and Insicrhts Dorothy Elizabeth Sims WIXSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts French Club (i) ; Alpha Iota Pi (2, 3. 4); Vice-President (4). She ain’t sheered oh hauls like us pick- anninies be, ’case she reads all about ’em in dem Latin books. Rosalie Smith NEW BERN, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Music Student Self-Government Representa- tive (4) ; Sale mite Staff (4) ; I. R. S. Council (4) ; Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Vice-President (4). “People what opens dey mouf ony when dey got sumpin’ ter say am a mighty pleasin’ kind ter have aroun ' , ain ' t dey, Rastusf” Sights and Insights Mary Frances Stockton WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts President Mathematics Club (4) ; Mem- ber ( 1, 2, 3, 4) ; History Club (2, 3, 4). When I ' se blue . her’s cheerful, teasin ' ways sets me up lak possum an ' talers when I’se hungry. Naomi Stone ANCHORAGE, KENTUCKY Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Queens-Chicora College; French Club (3); Glee Club (4). Little an’ light, but Jimminy! how dat gal gits yer. 52 Sights and Insicrhts Mary Katherine Thorp FRIES, VIRGINIA Candidate for Bachelor of Arts President of Student Self-Government i ssociation (4) ; Treasurer (3) ; Secre- tary Athletic Association (3) ; Order of the Scorpion; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (4) ; Sights and Insights Staff (2, 3) ; I. R. S. Counci l (2, 4) ; History Club (3, 4) ; Pierrette Players (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Win- ner of “S” (2, 3) ; President’s Forum; Beta Beta Phi; Manager Track (2); Volley Ball Class Team (2, 3) ; Soccer Class Team (2, 3) ; Varsity (2) ; Bas- ketball Class Team (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Varsity (2, 3) ; Hockey Class Team (2, 3, 4). She kin find ways ter help a body quicker’n Brer Rabbit kin light in a briar patch. Josephine Watlington Walker WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Science Vice-President Class (x, 2, 3); Vice- President Athletic Association (4) ; So- cietas Scietarium Salemensis (2) ; Order of the Scorpion; I. R. S. Council (1); Winner of “S” ( 1 ) ; Winner of Sweater (2) ; Athletic Council (2, 3) ; Basket- ball Varsity (2, 3) ; Class Team (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Soccer Varsity (1, 2, 3) ; Class Team (1, 2, 3); Captain (1); Volley Ball Varsity (2); Class Team (1, 2, 3) ; Tennis Team (1, 2, 3) ; Track (1, 2); Hockey Varsity (1, 2, 3); Class Team ( 1, 2, 3, 4) ; Captain (2) . “She wink her eye an’ she grin at me — De laughin’est gal ah eveh did see. Sicrhts and Insicrhts Mary Lillian White WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate {or Bachelor of Arts French Club ( i, 2, 3, 4) ; President (4) ; I. R. S. Council (3, 4) ; Secretary and Treasurer (4); May Court (4); Class Honor Roll (1, 3) ; Senior Mar- shal (2); President’s Forum (4); Jeanne d’Arc French Medal (3); Mathematics Club (1); Basketball Class Team (2, 3) ; Soccer Class Team (1, 2); Hockey Class Team (1, 2 , 3, 4) ; Captain (4). Aain ' t no molasses in Dixie any sweeter dan her smile. — J ehoshabhat ! But am she pretty ! Mary Buford Williams WILMINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA Candidate for Bachelor of Music President of Y. W. C. A. (4) ; Cabinet (2, 3) ; Sights and Insights Staff (3) ; I. R. S. Council (3, 4) ; Pierrette Players (2, 3, 4) ; Treasurer (3) ; Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4); President’s Forum (4) ; Freshman Week Committee (4) ; Order of the Scorpion ; Song Leader (4) ; Class President (3) ; MacDowell Club Board (3) ; Alpha Phi Kappa. Hit takes a bee fer to git to sweetness out ' n de hoarhoun’ blossom , an’ Mary B. fer t ' put it in a song. 54 Siahts and Insiahts Class Poem We move a tapestry in four short years, Threaded with sunlight, laughter and tears, Toiled we to finish, each pattern complete, Meeting hard tasks, conquering defeat. Deep in our tapestry, woven with care, Are patterns of buildings, and trees everywhere, A church, a tower, brick walks, a brook, Ivy and shadows — a quiet nook. Graven in us, as the patterns we wove, Are beauty and peace and things that we love. We were the workers, and the weavers ’tis true, Yet we wove ourselves memories of life’s brightest hues . 55 K Yes’m, Lize Jane, dat sure was some ’lustrious class, dat dere Class of ’33. Way back in 1928 a whole bunch 0’ girls from mos’ eberywhere made sorta invasion on dat dere Salem College. Dey didn’t take de place by storm lak dose Egyptians did de Israelites — no mam, dey sorta settled peaceful lak, cause dey thought if dey malmagamated de customs of de Salemites dat dey would work dere way up to being de high lights and big chiefs. So dey bowed down to de Softmore court and did mo’ anything anybody told ’em to. Any how, dey did show prowress, and under de leadership of Lyda Womelsdorf dey took dat Defficiensy cup, de Soccer champeenship, and likewise de Basketball champeenship. De nex’ year dey done cast off dat ole name Freshman and took up dat one called Softmore. See I tells ye dey was already climbing dat ladder to supremacy. Den dey got up a court where dey tried new invaders and dey had justice de lak 0’ which ain’t ne’er been seen. I guess dey tho’t t’ would be sorta de thing to do to help de higher classes, so dey helped wid de vespers, acted as — what is it now, er — sure, dey acted as pages. Dey helped dem Seniors burn de hats and plant de ivy. But spring fever set in and since dey was scared their forces might get unpared, dey went into summer quarters. De nex’ fall, it found dem hearty and feeling big, and dey did great things by der leaders, Irene McAnally and Mary B. Williams. On’y thar was one thing — a terrible sumpin’ called de repression settled down on de land; ’twas nothin’ befo’ to equal it. Not eben de plagues ob the Israelites. Ob coursen de Seniors dey tho’t de juniors wouldn’t habe no entertainment for ’em. But de Juniors, ’lustrious as eber, showed jes how pow’ful dey was. Dey got der rings and gave dem der Seniors de time ’f der lives at de Country Club place. Well, by spring dey decided to go into dat summery seclusion so’s to draw up de plans for de nex’ year o‘ triumphin’. 56 Dat der yeah, ’32-’33, was sure what ye call de Golden Age.” ’Til den I didn’t know what dat meant. I knows dat is one shinin’ ’zample. Mary Katherine Thorp lead her campaign wid a plenty o’ energy. An’ b’lieve me, Mary Catherine Siewers and Mary B. Williams sho’ did do der part an’ do it lak it orta be, too. De publicashuns were de mos’ newsiest wif de all powerful aid ob Josephine Courtney and Lou Brinkley. My lauwd, how ye think I can mention all de ’luminous names of dem Seniors. Any how, wif hat burn’, vespers, practice teachin’, parties, an’ receptions and all dat, dey reached de big day. Since dey reached de peak o’ power, dey took dose dar diplomas and started out fur new worlds to conquer. Eleanor Phillips, Historian. 57 On the slope near the old willow tree sat Uncle Remus, his gnarled stick clasped between his wrinkled, chocolate-colored hands, which now were idle. Age had treated his once shining black skin as it does the bark of a stalwart oak, and it had turned the kinky, black wool of his hair to a crown of tufted cotton. The old man basked in the warm, spring sunshine, vaguely aware of the buzzing, lazy comfort which comes with the first warm days. A dog, sniffing along the walk from Clewel, stopped to look at Uncle Remus, but the negro never ceased his meditations. Suddenly he felt two warm, little hands clasped tightly over his eyes, and a stiff organdie ruffle edged against his neck. “Hi-yi!” cried Uncle Remus, dropping his stick. Over his face spread a broad grin. “Who dat blin’ my eyes?” A delicious, dainty laugh answered him, and the stiff organdie collar rubbed up and down. “Guess!” “Whee-ee!” he whistled. “It mought be a butterfly, or it mought be Miss Katy-did cornin’ fer to call, but it ’pears to me lak ain’t nobody wif sof’ li’l hands lak Miss Mary Louise.” The hands dropped from his eyes, and before him danced little Miss Mary Louise, like a bit of sunshine, dressed in a yellow frock with white organic trimmings. “Chile, chile, dar you is,” cackled Uncle Remus. “When anybody gits ter be a himbly-hombly year ol’, dey ain’t no need ter skeer ’em.” His eyes gleamed with merriment. Petite Miss Mary Louise seated herself on the grass beside Uncle Remus, looked into the weather-beaten face that had harbored so many smiles, and allowed her head to fall against the old negro’s shoulder. She was satisfied. The movement was as familiar to Uncle Remus as sunny cotton fields, for among the children that he had known well, not one had failed to lay his head where that of the little girl now rested. “What were you thinking about?” she asked. “Honey, I was a-ponderin’ ’bout de days since I lef ’ Miss Sally’s an’ come to live at Salem College. ’Tain’t been more’n four year come nex’ blackberry pickin’, but it do seem lak I b ' longs to de school. Ain’t it so, honey?” “I can’t remember when you weren’t here, Uncle Remus,” she replied affec- tionately. “Das so, honey, an’ skasely kin I. These Ravyuns is good folks an’ moughty fine to Remus. De college gals deyselves is turr’ble up-an’-comin’. I jes wisht 58 I could see ’em when dey out in de world a-pilin’ up glory an’ riches. A ou’ll ese ’em, chile, an ever las’ one uv ’em gwine make you pleased you knows ’em.” Alary Louise interrupted, “There go Emily Mickey and Josephine Walker.” “To be sho’,” he nodded. “Aliss Emily an’ Aliss Jo. Watch ’em argufyin’. Some ob dese days Aliss Emily gwine do her argufyin’ afore de oder ambassadors in Europe, an’ Aliss Jo. gwine speak English fer ’Fessor Einstein.” “Now, you take Aliss Emily’s sister, Aliss Alary Louise, what thinks she gwine teach music. She ain’t no more gwine teach dan I’s gwine play de orgin. She gwine write a ’stoundin’ book dat’ll set dis here nation to gabbin’, an’ she liable ter walk off wid de big Johnson Prize, what Aliss Margaret give to de bes’ writer in de country. ’Sides dat, she give a prize fer writin’ de bes’ music, an’ bless my soul, if Aliss Tommye an’ Aliss Rosalie don’ win it.” “You see dose two gals yondah- — a big one and a li ' l one? Dey bothers me, kase I cain’t seem to figger whether Aliss Babe gwine be a sublime poet or ’nother Aliss Kate Smith over de radio. One thing sho, hosumever, Aliss Naomi gwine trail Aliss Babe froo dis worl’ an’ de ilex’, an’ efen she write poerty, Aliss Naomi gwine copy it down, an’ efen she sing songs, Aliss Naomi gwine hold her golden train.” “Dat li’l Aliss Alary B. — watch her, now, a-wavin’ so cheerful-lak — couldn’t help singin’ no more’n a meadowlark. She boun’ to show off dat golden voice. I’s thinkin’ dat she gwine sing on de ocean in a great big ship fo’ de benefit ob de passengers. Miss Wanna Alary ’low she leave her fambly a li’l while an’ play fo’ Aliss Alary B. ter sing. Like as not she gwine ferget her trunk an’ haf to borry Miss Mary B.’s clothes.” “Not if Louise Brinkley were there to take care of her,” declared Alary Louise. “Right you is, honey. Mebbe Aliss Lou gwine ’cide to go ’long dat same trip. She got plenty money fo’ ter do so ef she wanter, ’count ob publishin’ books in Atlanta. She gwine own a big book fact’ry.” “What makes you think so, Uncle Remus?” asked the little girl, puzzled. “Ain’t ’at what she doin’ now?” he asked, as Louise ran up the brick steps in pursuit of Ghilan. “Now, you take dat stylish Aliss G’lan. She gwine work herself to death learnin’ to be a clothes buyer for a store, an’ den she turn right aroun’ an’ not buy nuffin’ ’sides her own finery to git married.” “What is Alary Katherine Thorp going to be?” asked Alary Louise. “Who — you mean Aliss Katie? Lawsy, she sho’ ter be a doctor, what wif her win’-ter-alliyou-meetness. Aliss Nancy Ann orter call on her for to cure de nervous breakdowns ever time she get through a big stage recital. Lawsy, dat girl! Now, dat other Aliss Mary Catherine — ” 59 “I know,” interrupted Mary Louise. “She will be a college professor like Dr. Willoughby.” “Not so’s you’d know it, ma’am. Mebbe she start out wid some such notion, but long come Miss Jo. what prints de newspapers, an’ make her out so famous dat Miss Mary C. Ian’ square in Hollywood an’ turn out ter be de queen uv movin’ pitchers.” “But, Uncle Remus, I always thought Billy Philpott would be the wovie queen.” “Reckon she will start in dat direction, but time she start ’cross de country to California, she gwine git stopped in Texas at a ranch, an’ firs’ thing you know, she is missus ob it. Think ob that! Spos’n’ Miss Billy walk out calm-like on her front po’ch one day an’ behol’ in de sky a big airplane, an’ out o’ dat plane come a paremshoot headin’ straight fo’ her cawn field, she mought’s well know dat am Miss Tildy an’ M iss Nina Way droppin’ in frum stunt flyin’ ter say howdy.” “Yon come Miss Ruth Crouse, flashin’ dat diamon’ ring in de sun. Pears lak to me she gwine be a class party-giver, whut wid her heaps ob money. She’d do well ter call on de swell catrisses, Miss Liz Correll an’ Miss Frances Menden- hall. Mebbe she give a party fo’ Miss Mary Ada soon as she strike a gold mine. “Looky! dar Miss Pauline Setzer a-givin’ Mr. Campbell to understan’ dat he boun’ ter take a book back to Miss Siewers’ library. Don’ he look sheepis h? Time ain’ fur off when all de men gwine rush like dat, kase de women am takin’ de government. Even de school superintendents gwine be women — leastways, Miss Setzer gwine be one. Den Miss Elinor Phillips up an’ write pieces in magazines fur de benefit ob de strugglin’ he-politicians, tryin’ to git a li’l say-so in de she-run government. “Looky, Uncle Remus!” cried Mary Louise. “Is that lady a French woman? She’s talking French.” “You mought easy think so, honey. Dat’s Miss Mary Lillian spealin’ away de parley-voos. She gwine start up a French store on Fifth Avenue and sell de Price-less Price creations. I seen ’em on de bulletin board back ob Main Hall.” “Doesn’t that girl have pretty hair!” exclaimed the little girl admiringly. “Dat M iss Louise Sides wid her crownin’ glory. She mought make a fortune some day inventin’ a everlastin’ permanent wave. “Yondah Miss Noobie an’ Miss Shocky, like usual talkin’ ’bout de chillen dey teach. Miss Noobie am likely ter hab a kindergarten, an’ Miss Shocky done tol’ me she gwine draw a picture book for Miss Noobie named Br’er Rabbit ' s Bunnies. I ’low as how Miss Mabel Reid use date same book when she teach down in Pamana. “Those gals coinin’ yondah, Miss Eugenia Johnson an’ Miss Emma Kapp, 60 jes’ a-gigglin’, dey gwine scatter sunshine to de heathen, bless der hearts! De oder Miss Johnson, Miss Mae, am headed for dis all-American Hockey Team I hear Miss At talk about. “M issus Wells, her whyt married de school teacher, proberly gwine teach French, kase she like ter talk it. ’Nother French specializer am Miss Louise Mock, whut feel called on an’ moved by de spirit to write a French lesson book.” “See dat gal gwine in de do’? Dat’s Miss Carolyn Miller. She gwine hab charge ob de kitchen end ob some hospital. Whut if Miss Mildred Coleman drap in frum a wreck atter one ob her frequent trips! How come she don’t run a bus line ’tween here an’ Chapel Hill?” “De Latin student am Miss Dorothy Sims. She gwine — leastways she oter — write all de Latin translations in a book for ter be used by de people whut cain’t read so good as her. You calls it a Latin jack. “M iss Mary Louise,” said the old man, as she suddenly lifted her head from his shoulder, “do be calm. Dat gal whut’s balancin’ a feather on her nose am Miss Dorothy Heidenreich. Watch her hoi’ it straight! Ef she kin do that, she kin keep right on ’till she end up balancin’ de United States budget.” “Ise froo projekin, honey,” announced Uncle Remus. Slowly he lifted his stiff limbs from the grass, took the little girl’s hand in his, and hobbled in the direction of his cabin. 61 SENIOR MARSHALS Georgia Huntington, Chief Marshal Patricia McMullan Margaret McLean Jane Williams Katherine Lasater Elois Padrick Elizabeth Gray Nancy McNeely Anna Withers 62 63 Daisy Chain Senior Snaps 64 J u n 1 o r $ a n Colors: Purple and White Flower: Parma Violet Motto: “Honor, Unity, Fidelity” Georgia Huntington Mary D. Biles Miriam Stevenson Alice Stough .... Marian Hadley .... Miss Mary D. McAnally President Vice-President . . . . Secretary . . Treasurer Cheer Leader Class Adviser ❖ Junior Class Song Junior Class, We just won’t let them pass — We’ve got that mighty line That ever makes time. We’ve got those Three weak and sissy foes Who have such silly lines, And lousy backs, That they can’t even play Rick Rack. Come on team, Let’s show them what we mean When we are out to win the games For the mighty and the swellest of all names, Rah! Rah! for the Junior Class. Georgia Huntington WILMINGTON, N. C. Mary Asher ABERDEEN, N. C. Miss Mary Duncan McAnally CLASS ADVISOR Kathleen Adkins WALNUT COVE, N. C. Virginia Allen WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Susan Calder CHARLOTTE, N. C. Josephine Cohn WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Mary Celeste Frontis MOORESVILLE, N. C. Dorabelle Graves MOUNT AIRY, N. C. 67 Josephine Grimes WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Frances Hill ROANOKE, VA. Elizabeth Leake GREENSBORO, N. C. Marion Hadley charlotte, n. c. Sarah Horton MONROE, n. c. Sara Lindsay lilesville, n. c. Mildred Hanes PINE HALL, N. C. Katherine Lasater ERWIN, N. C. Anne McKinnon maxton, n. c. 63 Ruth McLeod MAXTON, N. C. Veatrice Miller WINSTON-SALEM , N. C. Lena Petree RURAL HALL, N. C. Patricia McMullan WASHINGTON, N. C. Elizabeth Norman mooresville, n. c. Grace Pollock KINSTON, n. c. Gertie McNair LAURENBURC, N. C. Jean Patterson RUSSELLVILLE, TENN. Isabel Follock BLUEFIELD, W. VA. 69 Mabel Reid STATESVILLE, N. C. Miriam Stevenson SALISBURY, N. C. Frances Suttlemyre GRANITE FALLS, N. C. Mary Sample FORT PIERCE, FLA. Alice Stouch charlotte, n. c. Zina Vologodsky HARBIN, CHINA Anne Shuford CONOVER, N. C. Marian Stovall WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Ruth Wolfe WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. 70 Sophomore 2 A T Colors: Black and Gold Flower: Black-Eyed Susan Motto: “True Knowledge Leads to Love and Service.” Margaret McLean Edna Higgins Mary Penn Sarah Jetton .... Mary Penn .... Miss Elizabeth Lilly President Vice-President . , . . Secretary . T reasurer Cheer Leader Class Adviser ❖ Sophomore Qlass Song We are the Sophomores , The undaunted Sophomores. We shine and we glisten, So you stop, look and listen. We are the pride and joy Of Noble and Grace and Roy; Hidy-Hody-Hidy-O-Do! You all will see our name In bright lights here to Spain; They’ll sing of our glory In song, book and story. We hope Salem’s proud of us; We’ll win her praise or bust. Here is the SOPHOMORE CLASS! 72 Sophomore Class Margaret McLean Frances Adams Virginia Bailey LUMBERTON, N. C. MONROE, N. C. HICKORY, N. C. Miss Elizabeth Lilly Rebecca Baynes CLASS ADVISOR WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Martha Binder Emily Blanton Rachel Carroll MOUNT AIRY, N. C. MARION, N. C. WILMINGTON, N. C. Sarah Clancy WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Mary Drew Dalton HIGH POINT, N. C. Helen Davis WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Mary Elizabeth Dobbins WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. 73 Sophomore Class Claudia Foy Mary Louise Fuller Louise Gaither WILMINGTON, N. C. LUMBERTON, N. C. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Elizabeth Gray Lucy Gulick-Rogers WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. NEW YORK, N. Y. Edna Higgins Rebecca Hines Helen Hughes WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. MOUNT AIRY, N. C. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Mary D. Irvine Sara Jetton ST. AUGUSTINE, FLA. DAVIDSON, N. C. Mildred Krites Julia Lee Little Margaret Long WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. ANSONVILLE, N. C. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. 74 Class Margaret Maxwell Annie Zue Maye Marion Mitchell WlNSTON-SALEM, N. C. WADESBORO, N. C. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Dorothy Moore June Morris THOMASVILLE, N. C. RURAL HALL, N. C. Virginia Nall Routh Nash Martha Neal KINGSPORT, TENN. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. WAYNESVILLE, N. C. Elois Padrick Mary Penn FORT PIERCE, FLA. KINGSPORT, TENN. Maurine Perryman Marguerite Pierce Cortlandt Preston WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. AYDEN, N. C. CHARLOTTE, N. C. 75 Sophomore Class Margaret Schwarze Hazel Spaugh Gertrude Stockton WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Anne Taylor Inez Templeman BRISTOL, TENN. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Betty Tuttle Anne Vaughn Ina Wagner SPRAY, N. C. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Margaret J. Wall Margaret E. Ward NEW YORK, N. Y. ROCKY MOUNT, N. C. Marietta Way Jane Williams Lila Womble WAYNESVILLE, N. C. WILMINGTON, N. C. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. 76 r e s ft m a n Freshman. Class i A K Colors: Red and White Flower: Red Rose Motto: “Friendly and True.” Frances Lambeth Theresa Cooke .... . . Florida Graves .... Mary L. Mills . . Celesta McClammy Miss Eloise Vaughn President Vice-President . . . . Secretary . T reasurer Ch er Leader Class Adviser ❖ Freshman Class Song Freshmen of thirty-six We have our goal all fixed. T o the skies, let us rise Loyally and service harmonize. Either on classroom or feld Never to failure we ' ll yield. Red and white! ! Red and white! ! For you we’re gonna fght , fght, fght! ! Ever our standard high , Never our spirit die. 78 Freshman Class Frances Lambeth ASHEVILLE, N. C. Lucile Bennet WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Frances Bowland WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Clara Click WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Edna Alderman LAKELAND, FLA. McArn Best GOLDSBORO, N. C. Virginia Brown WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Margaret Connell CHARLESTON, W. VA. Mary Nelson Anderson MOCKSVILLE, N. C. Louise Blum WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Jean Burroughs conway, s. c. Theresa Cooke WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Miss Eloise Vaughn advisor Anne Bowen pounding hill, VA. Phyllis Clapp WISNTON-SALEM, N. C. Jane Dicks ROCKINGHAM, N. C. 79 Freshman Class Estelle Dixon WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Rachel Edgerton GOLDSBORO, N. C. Virginia Hankla RURAL RETREAT, VA. Melrose Hendrix WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Mary E. Dobbins WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Maria Garrett GREENVILLE, N. C. Rebecca Harrison WILLIAMSTON, N. C. Marianna Hooks WILSON, n. c. Virginia Dobyns DUBLIN, VA. Florida Graves mt. airy, n. c. Charlotte Hauser WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Elizabeth Hubbard CLINTON, N. C. Helen Draper RICHLANDS, VA. Amanda Hallman WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Cora E. Henderson GRAHAM, N. C. Hyacinth Hunter WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. 80 Freshen, a iri Class Arbela Hutcherson WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Mary F. Lawrence RALEIGH, N. C. Celeste McClammy WILMINGTON, N. C. Eugenia McNew WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Lucy James GREENVILLE, N. C. Florence Ledbetter ROCKINGHAM, N. C. Katherine McCall bennettsville, s. c. Erika Marx NAZARETH, PA. Sunshine Kirby GASTONIA, N. C. Mary F. Linney BOONE, N. C. Ruth McConnell leaksville, n. c. Esther Mason GASTONIA, N. C. Dorothy Lashmit WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Virginia Lyons WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Nancy McNeely cooleemee, n. c. Mary Mills WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. 8 ! Freshman Class Willie Myers WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Garnelle Rainey SALISBURY, N. C. Josephine Rf.ece WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Jane Rondthaler WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Stephanie Newman WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Katherine Ratledge ADVANCE, N. C. Ida R. Reznick WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Frances Scales STONEVILLE, N. C. June Patterson PILOT MOUNTAIN, N. C. Susan Rawlings GOLDSBORO, N. C. Dorothea Rights TAMPA, FLA. Martha Schlegel NAZARETH, PA. Ada M. Pfohl WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Flora Redmon WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Jean Robinson LOWELL, N. C. Gertrude Schwalbe BETHEL, ALASKA 82 Freshman Class Calva Sharpe Bessie Reid Shipp Mary Louise Shore BURLINGTON, N. C. NEWTON, N. C. WINSTON-SALEM. N. C Helen Sink WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Lois Torrence GASTONIA, N. C. Betty Wilson WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Madeline Smith KINGSPORT, TENN. Lucy Waggoner WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Anna Withers WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Frances Strupe bethania, n. c. Mary Adams Ward ASHEVILLE, N. C. Anne Wortham ORANGE, VA. Virginia Thompson STATESVILLE, N. C. Eleanor Watkins WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Wilda Mae Tingling SALISBURY, N. C 83 i n s e s s Business Class Barbara Dee WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Louise Kinney WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Marie Pfaff WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Carol Glenn WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Bennie Martin MARTINSVILLE, VA. Henrietta Redfern MONROE, N. C. Margaret Irwin CHARLOTTE, N. C. Pauline Perry WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Marguerite Sawyer ELIZABETH CITY, N. C. Pauline King WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Marjorei Petree WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Jane Worthington KINSTON, N. C. 86 BB —B— HM— — BOLL FOUR Organizations President ' s Forum Dr. H. E. Rondthaler Mary Katherine Thorp Mary B. Williams Nina Way Credle . . . Mary Catherine Siewers Louise Brinkley . . . Josephine Courtney . . Emily Mickey Georgia Huntington . . Margaret McLean . . , Frances Lambeth . . . Mildred Hanes .... Mary Lillian White . Elizabeth Price . . . . Elizabeth Stough . . . Mary Stockton .... Tom m ye Frye .... Elinor Phillips . . . . Dorothy Heidenreich . . Salem College ■ Student Self-Government Association ....... y. iv. c. a. . . . Athletic Association I. R. S. ■ . “Sights and Insights ” . “Salemi ' .e” Senior Class Junior C ass . Sophomore Class . . . Freshman Class ■ History Club . . . Le Cercle Francais . Home Economics Club . Pierrette Players . . ■ Mathematics Club . Glee Club Alpha Iota Pi . Alpha Chi Alpha 89 STUDENT SELF-GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION Mary Katherine Thorp .... President Florence Aitchison . Second Vice-President Mary Catherine Siewers . . Vice-President Alice Stouch Secretary Susan Cai.der ........ Treasurer Freshman Representatives: Gertrude Schwalbe, Nancy McNeely, Eugenia McNew Sophomore Representatives: Cortlandt Preston, Jane Williams, Margaret Long Junior Representatives : Lena A. Petree, Elizabeth Leak, Margaret Ashburn Senior Representatives: Ghilan Hall, Tommye Frye, Rosalie Smith, Mae Johnson House Presidents: Mary Price, Grace Pollock, Marian Hadley YOUNG WOMEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Mary B. Williams ...... President Ruth McLeod . Margaret Johnson .... Vice-President Zina Vologodsky Cabinet Members Sarah Horton Miriam Stevenson Matilda Mann Wanna Mary Huggins Dorothy Moore Frances Adams 91 Martha Binder Mary Irvine Dorothy Heidcnreich Secretary Treasurer Claudia Foy Ruth McConnell Erika Marx SIGHTS AND INSIGHTS STAFF FACULTY ADVISER: Charles Henry Higgins; Louise Brinkley, Editor-in-Chief. EDITORIAL STAFF: Alice Stough, Elizabeth Leak, Mary L. Mickey, Emma Kapp, Wanna M. Huggins, Lena A. Petree, Betty Tuttle, Katerine Lasater, Gertie McNair, Marietta Way, Virginia Bailey, Frances Adams, Charlotte O ' Brien. BUSINESS STAFF: Ghilan Hall, Business Manager; Ruth Crouse. Advertising- Manager; Frances Hill, Elizabeth Norman, Lila Womble, Martha Neal. 92 SALEMITE STAFF Josephine Courtney, Editor-in-Chief; Dorothy Heidenreich, Managing Editor. EDITORIAL STAFF: Elinor Phillips, Patricia McMullen, Susan Calder, Cortlandt Preston, Martha Binder, Mary Absher, Rosalie Smith, Elizabeth Gray, Mary O. Biles, Margaret Long, Emmaline Henderson. Lucy James, Lois Torrence, Celeste McClammy, Gertrude Schwalbe, Virginia Nall. Sarah Horton, Business Man- ager; Mary Sample, Advertising Manager. BUSINESS STAFF: Ruth McLeod. Isabell Pollock, Grace Pollock, Claudia Foy, Mary Irvine, Jane Williams, Sarah Jetton, Mary Frances Linney. 93 Mary Catherine Siewers . . President Mary Lillian White . . . Vice-President Emily Mickey Senior President Georgia Huntington . . Junior President Miss Grace Lawrence . Margaret McLean . . Sophomore President Frances Lambeth . . ■ Freshman President Mary Katherine Thorp . Honorary Member Mary B. Williams . . . Honorary Member . . . . Adviser Senior Rosalie Smith Mary Louise Mickey Mary Price Representatives Sophomore Martha Neal Edna Higgins Elois Padrick Junior Isabelle Pollock Eleanor Cain Lena Petree Freshman Nancy McNeely Jane Rondthaler Lucy James Home Economics Club Elizabeth Price President Mary Price Secretary Frances Mendenhall . . . Vice-President Helen Draper Treasurer Ee Cercle Francais Mary Lillian White President Ruth Crouse . ..... Vice-President Jean Patterson . . . Secretary-Treasurer 95 History Club Mildred Hanes ■ President Jane Dicks Vice-President Isabell Pollock Secretary Mary Stockton . President Lena A. Petree . Pauline Setzer . . Secretary-Treasurer Vice-President 96 Pierrette Players Betty Stough President Virginia Nall Secretary Margaret McLean .... Vice-President Marietta Way Treasurer Sigma Omicron. Alpha Adelaide Silversteen President 97 Glee Club Tommye Fryf. President Elinor Phillips Alpha . President Virginia Allen . . Dorothy Sims . Secretary- T reasurer Vice-President Dorothy Heidenreich, President; Mary Absher, Louise Brinkley, Susan Calder, Josephine Courtney, Margaret Johnson, Elinor Phillips, Miriam Stevenson, Zina Volocodsky, Mary Louise Mickey. 99 Alpha Phi Kappa Colors: Black and Gold Class of 1933 Louise Brinkley Josephine Courtney Wanna Mary Huggins Mary B. Williams Established at Salem, 1919 Flower: Marguerite Class of 1934 Susan Calder Sara Horton Georgia Huntington Frances Adams Rachel Carroll Mary Drew Dalton Claudia Foy Class c Mary Louise Fuller Elizabeth Gray Dorothy Moore Pan-Hellenic f 1935 Virginia Noll Martha Neal Mary Penn Representatives Courtlandt Preston Betty Tuttle Marietta Way Jane Williams Mary B. Williams Sara Horton 100 Beta Beta PM Colors: Red and Black Class of 1933 Margaret Johnson Mary Catherine Siewers Mary Katherine Thorpe Class of 1935 Elois Padrick Anne Taylor Established at Salem, 1911 Flower: Red Rose Class of 1934 Dorabelle Graves Frances EIill Elizabeth Norman Grace Pollock Isabell Pollock Mary Sample Anne Shuford Miriam Stevenson Pan-Hellenic Representatives Isabell Pollock Mary Sample 101 Delta Sigma Delta Colors: Purple and White Established at Salem, 1913 Class of 1933 Nina Way Credle Matilda Mann Mary Price Class o f 1934 Marion Hadley Katharine Lasater Anne McKinnon Flower: Parma Violet Elizabeth Price Class of 1935 Annie Zue May Margaret Ward Margaret Wall Pan-Hellenic Representatives Elizabeth Price Katharine Lasater Class of 1934 Mildred Hanes Elizabeth Leake Ruth McLeod Patricia McMullen Gertie McNair Class of 1935 Margaret McLean Lila Womble Pan-Hellenic Representatives Elizabeth Leake Gertie McNair 103 Alice Philpott Wanna Mary Huggins . . . . May Queen Maid of Honor Members of the Court Elizabeth Price Mary Price Mary Lillian White Mary Catharine Siewers Ruth McLeod Mildred Hanes Elois Padrick. CoRTLANDT PRESTON Phyllis Clapp Theresa Cooke Lucy James Mary Adams Ward 104 Alice Philpott May Queen 105 Order of the Scorpion Florence Aitchison Louise Brinkley Susan Calder Josephine Courtney Nina Way Credle Ghilan Hall Dorothy Heidenreich Georgia Huntington Margaret Johnson Mae Johnson Katherine Lasater Emily Mickey Mary L. Mickey Mary C. Siewers Alice Stough Mary K. Thorp Josephine Walker Mary B. Williams 106 BOLL FIVE BBB BatWBMMPWBHMWBWWBBBMWBaPBWg — - ■ - ■ ■ i bs um m wftTnw?rrrra Athletics Athletic Association Nina Way Credle Josephine Walker Elizabeth Leake Margaret McLean . . Miss Minnie Atkinson President Vice-President Secretary ■ . . Treasurer Athletic Director 109 Athletic Council Susan Calder Florence Aitchison Charlotte O’Brien Grace Pollock Alice Stouch Margaret Long Sara Davis Martha Binder Rachel Carroll Cortlandt Preston Katherine Lasater Marion Hadley Mary Penn Isabeli. Pollock Georgia Huntington 10 Marian Hadley . Mary Penn . Cheer Leader Assistant Cheer Leader MONOGRAM CLUB M. L. Mickey, M. Hadley, M. K. Thorp, G. Huntington, G. Pollock, J. Walker, A. Stough, F. Aitchison, E. Mickey. Ill Senior Junior F. Aitchison, M. Hadley, A. Stough, C. Preston, M. Long, G. Pollock, A. Vaughn, S. Davis, E. Marx, B. Tuttle, C. O’Brien. 1 12 Sophomore Freshman Senior Junior J. Walker, C. O ' Brien, E. Leak, R. Carroll, M. Neal, G. Pollock, M. Long, C. Preston, M. Johnson. 113 Sophomore Freshman Above: Tennis Squad Below: Swimming Squad 1 14 Above : Riding Squad Below : Volley Ball Squad 115 Above: Golf Squad Below: Track Squad 116 BOLL SIX Statistics Alice Philpot SENIOR Mary Lillian White SENIOR Katherine Lasater JUNIOR Ruth McLeod JUNIOR Cortlandt Preston SOPHOMORE Marion Mitchell SOPHOMORE Theresa Cooke FRESHMAN Garnelle Raney FRESHMAN BOLL SEVEN Jokes and flds BEN V. MATTHEWS Photograph s of Quality STUDIO 317 WEST FOURTH STREET . CRAVEN ' S . J. ROBY THOMAS Dealer in Latest Fashion Ideas ICE AND COAL o 120 Academy St. EVENING DRESSES Blue Gem Coal” SPORTS WEAR LINGERIE PHONE 7158 Mrs. Meinung: “Give me an example of period furniture.” Martha Neal: “Well, I should say an elec- tric chair, because it ends a sentence.” Cokey to Mary Penn: “Since the earth is three parts water and one part land, the chances are three to one that you’ll be born a fish.” COMPLIMENTS Commercial Printing Company of Printing That Pleases HUNTLEY-HILL STOCKTON CO. Phone 8235 212 North Main St. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. © W. P. Speas. M.D. Oculist FURNITURE RADIOS Room 324 Reynolds Building Office, Dial 7482 Residence, Dial 2-1381 OFFICE HOURS: 9-12, 2-5 Mary C. : “Which would you prefer in your future husband, w r ealth, beauty, or ap- pearance?’’ Ghilan: “Appearance, my dear, but he’s got to appear pretty soon.” He: “Can you operate a typewriter?” Billy: “Yes, sir, I use the Biblical sys- tem ?” He: “I never heard of it.” Billy: “Seek and ye shall find.” Piedmont-Mutual Building Loan FLAKE’S SANDWICH SHOP City Market You Can Get Your Party Salads and Sandwiches Here, Easily Served, Without Fuss or Bother. PHONE 2-1587 ▼ 16 West Third Street THE HOME OF FRIGIDAIRE AS LOW AS $119 BROWN-ROGERS- DIXON The Best Place To Get It” MAKERS OF GIFTS FOR ALL LIVING ROOM OCCASIONS AND | FIBRE FURNITURE ■ ' W FOGLE Electric Service Company ■ FURNITURE CO. Vargrave and Fayetteville Sts. Everything Electrical ” Susan: “Doctor, why is it that the cavity in one of my teeth feels so large when 1 press my tongue to it ?” Dentist: “I suppose it is just the natural tendency of the tongue to exaggerate, Miss.” Lasater: How much did you say these ap- ples are?” Boy: “Fifteen cents a peck.” Lasater: “What do you think 1 am, a bird ?” THE GREEN QUILL SHOP Fraternity, College, and Class Jewelry Smart Stationery and Commencement Announcements Attractive Gifts and Invitations Junior Classes of Salem College ROBERT PARNELL, Mgr. L. G. Balfour Company Dial 5632 618 W. Fourth St. Attleboro, Mass. Pilot Insurance . GIFTS . Agency THAT ENDURE General Insurance SHEPHERD ' S Phone 6123 506 West Fourth Street W inston-Salem Is a City of Churches, Schools, and Substantial Business Institu- tions, Where the Ho me is Para- mount and Where the Church is the F oundation of the Community Life. Chamber of Commerce 1 Write for Illustrated Booklet Service! AND IT ' S DA RIGHT KIND AT ROBERT E. LEE HOTEL Rates 2.50- 5.00 CORNER OF FIFTH AND CHERRY STS. Miss Lily: “Can anyone in the class give me a more elegant rendering of the sen- tence, ‘The sap rises’?” Rachel C. : The boob gets out of bed.” Mr. Campbell: “Define a frog.” Rebecca H.: “A frog is a green bug with its mouth always open, and it’s always stand- ing up in front and sitting down behind.” BOCOCK-STROUD COHEN ' S Latest Athletic READY-TO-WEAR Goods Quality and Style 431 North Trade Street West Fourth Street No Old Fashioned Styles LLOYD ' S COME AND LOOK SPORTS WEAR FOR THE In Our Mirror of Present CAMPUS MISS” Fashions Fourth and Marshall Streets THE ANCHOR CO. Incorporated Worthy of Your Patronage FOR QUALITY ICE CREAM AND ICES RANKIN ICE CREAM CO. 445 WEST END BOULEVARD PHONE 2-2393 WHEN YOU WANT TO Remember HIM Remember US ) rRANK-A : STITH CQ Society JBrwad CJotiu BLUB BIRD CA Inc Jean R. : ‘‘Didn’t I tell you to notice when the coffee boiled?” Sunny: ‘T did. It was a quarter past ten.” Frances B.: “Did you vote for the honner system?” Jean B.: “You bet I did — four times!” IT WILL PAY YOU TO BUY WINTER UNDERWEAR and BOYS T R I P L WEAR UNION SUITS FOR MISSES AND BOYS Greatest Value for Money Invested” Made by WASHINGTON MILLS CO. STYLES FOR EVERY OCCASION” BELK-STEVENS COMPANY Leading Department Store You and Your Friends Are Always Welcotne At CAROLINA DRUG STORE Fourth at Spruce Dial 4131 (Opposite Carolina Theatre) Winston-Salem’s Newest and Most Modern Drug Store “DAT GOOD OLE CHOCLATE FLAVOR” De Healft Builders Ob De South Southern Dairies ' Ice Cream A National Dairy Product Mr. Higgins: “Why didn’t you filter this, Miss Dicks?” Billy: “How can you go to sleep sitting in a chair?” Jane: “I didn’t think it would stand the strain.” Nina Way: “You forget that I have spent practically four years in college.” J. D. MURPHY GRAY AND CREECH Incorporated COMPANY Winston-Salem, N. C. Fresh Meats and Poultry Mimeograph and School Supplies As Soon As You Taste It, a You Know That C. L. Sharpe Co. s Wholesale Fruit Is Dial 2-2278 City Market the Best! floats apparently suspended. Magi- cian passes a hoop around body to show there are no supports. EXPLANATION: There are many ex- planations for this old trick. One is that the girl wears a concealed harness, which ends in a socket be- tween her shoulder blades. This is attached to a piston pushed up from below, causing her to rise in air. The piston is invisible. Magi- cian can pass hoop over her body because it is cut in one place. It can be pulled apart as it passes the piston. SOURCE: ' ‘Modern Magic ’ by Professor Hoffmann, George Routledge Sons. KEPT FRESH IN THE WELDED Copyright. 1933, K. J. Keynolds Tobacco Company HUMIDOR PACK It’s fun to be fooled — ..it’s more fun to KNOW Another “magic show’’ is cigarette advertising. One of its greatest tricks is the illusion that ciga- rettes can be made miraculously “MILD’’ through manufacturing methods. THE EXPLANATION: All popular cigarettes today are made in modern, sanitary factories with up-to-date machinery. All are heat treated — some more intensively than others, because raw, inferior tobaccos require more intensive treatment than choice, r pe tobaccos. The real difference comes in the tobaccos that are used. The better the tobacco, the milder it is. It is a fact, well known by leaf tobacco experts, that Camels are made from finer, MORE EX PENSI I E tobaccos than any other popular brand. GAMIL THE REYNOLD’S GRILL FOR THE VERY BEST IN FOOD We Cater to Banquets and Dinner Parties MORRISETT CO. THE SMART SHOP The Live Wire Store ” Our Merchandise is DRY GOODS, NOTIONS SMART AND MILLINERY It Speaks For Itself 511 WEST FOURTH STREET 424 N. TRADE STREET Georgie: “Do you think a married woman Mr. Higgins (on Science Class) : “Miss ought to work for a living?’’ 1 ' horp, your book is a bit antiquated, is it Hadley: “Well, I don’t see why she should not?” go hungry just because she happens to have Katie: “I don’t know whether it is or not, a husband.” but it surely is out of date.” Bobbitt’s Pharmacy LADY ANNE COFFEE Bobbitt’s Drug Company The Favorite of the South Roasted and Packed By N is sen Drug Company Vaughn Coffee Mills Winston-Salem, North Carolina Winston-Salem, N. C. NORTH CAROLINA’S FAMOUS TEAGUE’S SANDWICH SHOPS Little Canary Castle Women s Smart Incorporated Apparel Winston-Salem, N. C. No. 1 No. 2 WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Dial 7631 Dial 6301 211 W. Fourth St. 230 N. Main St. LOOKING if for YOUTH • I -BRAHAM LINCOLN’S mother died at the age of 37 — an old woman, worn out from the hardships of the frontier. She was not an isolated case. There were thousands of others like her. Hard, physical labor robbed her of health and beauty — made her old before her time. Strange as it may seem, even in this electrical age, there are countless homes where, except for lighting, the work is being done just as it was in the frontier days. The women of the house are still wasting their health and : time doing tasks that electricity can do for them at a very small cost. Electricity will do your washing and ironing with a minimum of effort on your part; it can help with the ■ cooking and cleaning. There is hardly a household task that it cannot make easier, or do for you. Electricity is Now the Burden Bearer Put It to Work for You! YOU WILL NOT FIND YOUTH ! BY WASTING YOUR HEALTH Southern Public Utilities PHONE 7151 Dr. Willoughby (to only student who has come to class) : “Where are the other fools?” Mary C. : “I guess w T e are the only ones that are coming.” Froeber-Norfleet Incorporated WHOLESALE Fruits, Produce, Provisions The House of Friendliness ” Such a Pleasure, Salem Girls ! To have you come to the Cinderella dur- ing your school year, and we hope you have liked our services well enough to come to us next year, unless, of course, you are leaving as a Senior. We shall greatly miss the lovely Seniors we have had this year, and want to wish them worlds of success and happiness in this little space. Cinderella Beauty Shoppe 4tli and Spruce Phone 8234 Wanna: “Do you think I w r ill ever be able to do anything with my voice?” Lou: Well, it might come in handy in case of a fire.” O ' HANLON ' S DRUG STORE The Store You Know Morns Service Luncheonette and Fountain Special Exclusive But Not Expensive WE HAVE APPRECIATED YOUR PATRONAGE AND WISH YOU A PLEASANT VACATION © ROBERTS DRUG COMPLIMENTS OF THE COMPANY GREAT ATLANTIC AND PRESCRIPTIO N DRUGGIST PACIFIC TEA CO. Mr. Higgins (at Chemistry Class) : “Who made the first nitride?” Jane: What is the technical name for snoring?” Betty T. : Paul Revere.” Cokey: “Sheet music.” Penry Aitchison KEEP IN STEP WITH STYLE Printing Co. HINE’S BEAUTIFUL SHOES A COMPLETE HINE’S PRINTING SERVICE WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. N. P. Stone 6? Co. COMPLIMENTS OF WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. THE WHOLESALE GROCERS UNION REPUBLICAN We Have Served the Institution Trade SUCCESSFULLY PUBLISHING CO. For a Quarter of a Century WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. S’aU ' m (Eollpgp FOR ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTY SUCCESSIVE YEARS An Educational Center ACCREDITED COURSES ARTS MUSIC SCIENCES TEACHER TRAINING ❖ MEMBER SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGES AND SECONDARY SCHOOLS AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY WOMEN BOOKS FOUNTAIN PENS JEWELRY SALEM POST CARDS DIARIES PENNANTS GIFTS OF UNUSUAL DISTINCTION SALEM BOOK STORE Salem Square FOGLE BROTHERS COMPANY GENERAL CONTRACTORS Also Manufacturers and Dealers in MILL WORK AND BUILDING MATERIALS We Would Be Pleased to Serve You PHONE 5116 Can You Understand — Susie’s love for one-piece bathing suits? Charlie the Chatter’s radio playing jazz all day? Isabel 1 Pollock’s portrait-collecting craze? M ary C’s continued illness — Oh, Doctor! Babe’s weakness for “You’re An Old Smoothie”? Patsy’s locomotive difficulty, especially in Chapel? Why Matilda doesn’t give the under-classmen a break? Nina Way’s habit of sleeping with her mules on? Wanna’s admiration for derby hats? Why Mary B. wastes her energy telling hair-raising stories to Bob? Lou’s characteristic expression, “Go way, now”? Ghilan’s bill for Jergen’s Lotion and Italian Balm? Joe’s dilemma over something suitable for publication? THIS IS THE BY .. . „in i EN6RAVINC €. 2i) i ns ton Jci lem, c I ' SE DONE 378.7 6 Ac. 12874 S P 1933 [V 3in DasL This book must not be takei from the library. 30TT0N PICKANINNY BOOK i:|l ,s ■ • hr • n H : ■ - ' i I f i ml )i f, £{$;’; $} Jp t it 1 ! i’iijtfeJvi ; $• i ' V 1 I ' Mj )i ’f;i ■! : ‘ «. ! ' . j?w{ r : •■; ■■s.fjiSillhiifB: . M lrt iJjJ ■■ • ■- -dil •:: •Tel ' j ; : ; (.:■ r ,S ? ; ; • i , ■ - t : r T k .. £ i r 5 r ; 4 ; i v x g ; 1 ; r si U-U WAljijityRIfM Ni ? lifl u{ t ?i ! : ' VJC ifiiiiiiiiji ik|il t,i ?jjj? i. :• ; ’ jif s]i I ■ I ii ifSS !•! : f ?J i ;•; Siliijli •tj ' S? PPil ' iffli ies8 ' V1} ' i. v : : ti -jj liV; i .•?, S h ;r ni •iUnaj it . vi W yiiw’i i v vC JriJj ■ £ .vi ?• ' J 2 ■ ) : [ ■ v tf (- Ti :: - 7 ’ r i !’S ■ V ' n ! . ■ k i t; . v ; ’-i . J ' • - ■ • 1 • 1 flwir SiWf( ai j|pl fe:; a’isiliiteii t « «ii ifi I ji-v ' lit Ti 1 i 5 VI i s v ' -mtwtv : ' .t « LA V :, 5v ■ :■ .. liiSiiiiii m w l i } V.VH ' • ' lv 4 .H L! 5 v ' i m •- v i _ r y ssii wrM '
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