Newspapers / Salem College Student Newspaper / March 15, 1963, edition 1 / Page 1
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,Volume XLIII Salem College, Winston-Salem, N. C., Friday, March 15, 1963 jNumber 1 7 NSA Announces Seminar Scholarship, Symposium •V- 4;i Severar opportunities available to ?Bt«-lt'titS ‘trc; 'announGed by NSA.. •)"*'Mardb 30, there'will be a one day '‘symposium - o'ii International Stu- "dcnt Affairs held at the University -of' Ntirth Carolina. The program Artist Moore Exhibits Here YC'- : ■ ■■ ■• : " . ■ ^On -the. stairwell of Main. Hall , . . • . . _ ' ^ „are modern drawings .and prints .(lone- by . Miss Ann Gillam Moore, T,vhp studied graphic arts and illu- ..S.tration at Pratt Institute in igro.flklyn, New York. Miss Gillam, ^ who has ■ .gui.te, successfully used a ..modern approac:!! -tO: portraiture, , haji, depicjt.ed: various pectple. through ,,a unique utilization, .of bright .splashes qf -color .and lines. By ..placing more emphasis on facial .ex- ;._pression “ and forces of : the eyes ...than o,n reconstruction of the body, Miss Moore has;: contributed a '.jScries cjf unique and heartwarming vdcawings.;; Her- Bathing Prints rep- :■ resent, -scenes ’ on the ■ Hudsonv where •'^Jhe' Ti'ow lfoes‘''with ■'hierdiusband and ■■bfiildrefi. Here’,' she reprefontS . 6b-, i,j^ct^. .and. ..people. ..in , tire .form of ..-silhouettes,tlmsr .att.aiuing, an - effoc- r tive-'result." MiSs .Moore-’s -'paintlnhs ■'‘IK'ave ' been exhibited 'in 'many 'gal leries in New York City, including the Museum of Modern Art. ■ will begin at 9 ;00 a.m. and the topic is “Challenge and Response: Issues Facing Students Today.” . The annual NSA Southern Stu dent Relation Seminar will be held from .luly 29 until August 18 at Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana. There are twenty scholar- .ship.s offered, and they include travel, room and board, and all ex penses at the Seminar. The NSA .congress, is “interested in having students apply who , have a sincere interest in the field of inter-group, relations and who have a degree of commitment toward solving racial problems in the South.”, The dead line for applying-is April 9... . The. NSA also offers a full schqlarship for study in Poland during the academic year 1963-64. Candidates will .be judged on the basis of their knowledge of Polish or- Russian, and their acquaintance yyith both Polish and American jristQry and ways of life. The ap plication deadline is April 1. '' Qualified students who are ' in terested in serving on the national staff of the NSA are asked to a'ppfy.. ; '"T|toSe Requesting further infor- 'firatiori 'about any of these confer- ‘ence's arid scholarships are asked to 'see the NSA bulletin board or con tact 'Janet'W’alesi Room Drawing Committee Makes New Improvements :r: J1 requests 45 characters for March twenty-first Hodem Dance Studio at Soprano tlinor Ross WS Civic Music Will Present Elinor Ross Winston-Salem Civic Music As sociation will present Elinor Ross, American dramatic soprano, at 8:30 p.m. in Reynolds Auditorium March 20, 1963: ' ■ Mitss Ross, a native of Tampa, Florida, has won high praise dur ing her first season. She made her debut with the San Francisco ,0pera as '“Aida” and has appeared at Westchester’s Caramoor Festival as well as with the American -Opera Society, Clarion Concerbs in Town Flail, and at the- Flollywood Bowl. Appearing .: in.: London’s Festival HaU, . Miss , Ross sang the . “Verdi -R(:quiejn”; under. Carlo -Maria Giu- litii,: :In iPhiladelphia’s Robin Hood .Dell she appeared;with Alfred Wal lenstein. Her selections ..for the March, 20 concert include “La, Violette” by ,Alessa,ndro Scarlatti; “Se tu m’anii”: by ; Ciovapni; Pergolesi;, “Danza, dan?a, :.,Fanciulla”,. „ by., Francesco .Pnrante; “priuhlingstraum” ,;.,and ‘‘Auf ,,dem Wasser, zu , singen” , by Franz, "Schubert; “Wiegenlied”;: and ■‘Standehen’' by Strauss as well as selections by Heitbr Vill-Lob'os, Rachmaninoff, Ralph Vaughn, Wil- liarns, and Giuseppe Verdi. 'birr: m.); After m u c h confusion experi enced in previous room drawings, .1 committee headed by Betsy John son was set up to evaluate the old system and to make new sugges tions or to propose improvements. Betsy reported to the Legislative Board March 12.' The board de ified to keep the present system '.'!lh the follt^ing modifications. First the board voted that the drawings be held at a different time ()f (lay (one class per day), so that it will not conflict with classes. For instance, if set up after dinner, everyone could be available and the whole x>rocess would be speeded up, thus eliminat ing much of the tension which is associated with room drawing. A second proposal was that drawings be held at a place other than Cle- wcll Reception Room. The office in Clewell was suggested as it is much smaller and it would, be very easy to, permit only one set of roommate.s inside the room at a time. Regarding transfer students, it ■was decided that no space be saved 'for a girl who has not yet been .accepted, or, vvho has not paid her room reservation fee, [f a girl hero and a transfer who; has been ANNOUHCEMENTS Applications for the Oslo Scholar ships may be .obtained in the . Re corder’s Office. T h e completed forms'must be returned to 'the of fice by April 2. , Students may receive their mid semester grades April 1. .Prelimi nary registration will begin April 8. ., Tl;ir^ y e a, r stiud(tnts , may . keep 'cars , on cafnpus after April J, Sign-outs for spring holidays may ■Be made 'Monday and Tuesday, March 18 "'and 19 d u r i ng office hours an(i Wednesday, - March .20, until noOn." ■ Any girl- going any-:- whe.re, but-, home must.' havewper^ mission from home. f accepted and who has paid want.to room , together, both must submit their requests in writing to the of fice, in which case the girl here can draw as usual: Any girl de siring to room with a transfer stu dent will follow, the present pro cedure of drawing two numbers herself, thus enabling her to draw a room as if her roommate were h.ere. This process can continue as long as the numlicr of transfer students lasts. Duke Features Modern Woman In Symposium “Crosscurrents in Contemporary Life—A Commentary by Women” is the topic Of the Duke University Sjmiposium, to. be held March 13-17 on the woman’s campus of the Uni versity. The speakers, exclusively women, are persons who have made contri butions to contemporary life in fields as varied as art, education, religion, and space exploration. The purpose of the symposium is to promote an exchange of thought between these women with such varied backgrounds and , also to honor those people who have ad vanced the standards of women’s education and, participation in the world’s events. Twenty-five years ago a similar symposium was held at Duke; this one marks a quarter of a century of the continuing con tribution of the Duke University Woman's College to the progress of' women. The topics, the first of which will 'be discussed at 8:15 Wednesday morning, March 13, include, “The Cultured Crisis,” “The Expanding and Accelerating World,” “Women iU; the- World Today,” and “Con- .victiori,, Commitment, apd Cultural Crisis.” a-0-;, are For Senior Show Past v^lcoholic ’'" '.tHertrude Behanna was - brought •'up in' the' Waldorf-Astoria in New ' York City -and in Europe. After "’several years abroad, she entered. ' Smith) College in Northampton,. : Massachusetts,' whefb she married , before finishing school. After three niarriages, alcoholism a n d Barbit-? nates, she tried suicide. At this point, Mrs. 'Behanna came , ;to.,know Christ and His -teachings . which transformed .her life. Per- '/,iSprHil.ly: .:>,witnfi9S,ing the' . powe-r of .;':Ihrist,;in;;her ,life,;:"Mrs,'-.-.Behafina 'iSPCakS"-at various, colleges,- prisons, riswid .(3hur(fhes,..acro.ss the/country. •' St. '"Paul’s ■ EpisCopa'LChurch 'will ■''Pi'esent.h'er a.s':its' speaker Monday, '^Ajlfil' 8 'at 8:00 p.m. The church "■tCdbcated bn Summit Street. Ten months a year Mrs. Behanna is on '-■! j road Speaking and the title of ..-.lier talks . seldom varies.";; ■ It is -“To- Miracles.” ; , Mrs. Behanna, author of the. autobiographical story of her life, The Late, Liz, has said before groups of w.0 ni e n prisoners in ,Rale,igh, , “I was a social drinker who. .could take a drink or leave it, but a:fter my secop(i divorce I’d just take it.” .. . She describe(i her life as a round of benzedrine to wake up, alcohol to stay awake and sleeping pills, to go ..back. to. bed. After she had. “found God” through the help of some Christian friends of hers, drinking was no longer a problem. She located a minister and later joined the Episcopal Church. ■ Mrs. Behanna believes the ex tremes of her life are personified by her two'sons—one dn Episcopal clerigyman, another lost, for 10 years on ; “skid row.’' She is gratified that the second boy fought his way out: of that rut more than two yeaj-s -:ago, and is now on his way to a jeareer in writing. Salem art major® are preparing for an exhibit of their -work beginning May 1. Betty Black, Sheena Woods, Bonnie Bean, May Brawley, and Martha Jo Patten will be graded on their media, and the way it is presented. The exhibits will include oil paintings, pen and ink drawings, wood cuts, lithographs, mono types, parma and ceramics.
Salem College Student Newspaper
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March 15, 1963, edition 1
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