Newspapers / Salem College Student Newspaper / Oct. 18, 1963, edition 1 / Page 1
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Volume XLIV Salem College, Winston-Salem, N. C., Friday, October 18, 1963 Number 4 CommitteeEvaluatesSalem'sPhn Studies To Include Six StBndards Dr. Dale iesk in the H. Gramley walks around campus before returning to President’s Office. his Sramley Reports Business Administrative Office Thirteen members of the State Visitation Committee, which will evaluate Salem’s teacher education method, will arrive Sunday and will heg-in their intensive study of every aspect of Salem life which in any way affects teacher education. After securing the facts, the com mittee will report to the Evaluation Committee which will decide upon the accept a n c e, rejection, or changes needed in Salem’s plan. Every department at Salem which is involved in teacher education will have specialized representatives from the Visitation Committee check its particular functions to sec that they are effective. The special ized committee members are the following: Dr. Cameron West, Aca demic Dean, Pfeiffer College— chairman; Dr. J. P. PTeeman, Director, Division of Professional Service.s—consultant; Dr. Catherine Dennis, State Department of Pub lic Tnstruction-home economics and facilities; and Dr. John Ebbs, East Carolina College—English and per sonnel. Other members of the committee include Mrs. Clifton Edwards, Slate Department of Public In struction-elementary program; Dr. Jerry Hall, State Department of Public Instruction—secondary pro gram and laboratory experiences; James Hillman, formerly Director, Division of Professional Services— faculty and curricula; Dr. Arnold Hoffman, State Department of Public Instruction—music, art and personnel; Dr. Lloyd Lowder, Pfeiffer College—personnel and ele mentary education; Dr. Jack Par ker, Wake Forest College—langu ages and facilities; Dr. Percival Perry, Wake Forest College—fac ulty and social studies; Henry Shannon, North Carolina State standards are over-all policies, stu dent personnel programs and ser vices, faculty, curricula, professional laboratory experiences, facilities, equipment, and materials. Various members of Salem’s faculty will -meet with members of the Visita tion Committee to discuss the dif ferent standards so they may see how effectively they are carried out at Salem. 1 here will be a luncheon Tuesday in the Club Dining Room for the Visitation Committee representa tives of the Winston-Salem-For- syth County Schools, and the Salem Committee on Teacher Education. Heidemann Will Perform With Winston Symphony The Winston-Salem Symphony’s first concert of the 1963-64 season will be held Tuesday, October 22 and will feature Hans Heidemann, a member of the faculty of the Salem College School of Music. The concert wall begin at 8:15 p.m. Mr. Heidemann, who has studied at the Juilliard School of Music and the Prooklyn Conservatory, will be the soloist in Piano Con certo in G Major (Heethoven). The rest of the program will include Prelude” to Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg (Wagner) and Symphony No. 1 in C Minor (Brahms), in Reynolds Auditorium. Consecration of the House Over ture, (Beethoven) was chosen for this program by John luele, con ductor, because this will be the first concert in the newly renovated Reynolds Auditorium. New seats have been installed in the audi torium; the stage has been re finished; and the heating, lighting and acoustics have been improved. Mr. Heidemann, as assistant pro fessor of piano, is on Sabbatical leave this year and is engaged in graduate study at the University of North Carolina in Greensboro. Besides Mr. Heidemann, Salem College will be represented at this concert by Mrs. Betty Crossley on the viola, Jo Dunbar on the violin, Frances Speas on the flute, Anne Cleino on the cello, and Mr. Eugene Jacobow-sky, concert master. Tickets will be available at the door for one dollar. Humanities Club To Hold Panel On Foreign School News from the President’s Office this week came from a familiar face, seated behind a familiar desk. ^ es. Dr. Dale H. Gramley has switched headquarters from the .^econd floor of his home to the President’s Office. (According to Dr. Gramley, the _§overnor’s School this summer ^vent very, very well.” However, the school left Mr. Jack White little time to do repair work be fore the college opened in Sep tember. The Governor’s School will be in operation for two more surnmers.. Money for the school was donated hv the Carnegie Foundation in New Mprk and was matched by private, local businesses and industries. The school runs on a budget of $150,000 a wear. |Dr. Gramley said that the plans for the Fine Arts Building wdll be ^ipleted this week and will go into the hands of bidders. It -will >e another month before a con- ^cact is awarded. ^Iready $1,641 000 has been raised for the new^ Fine Arts Building, out as Dr. Gramley said, “The door Mopen for contributions.” co-chairman of the Com- nunity-wide Committee on Higher Education for the 200th Anniver- ifiy of the Salem Community, Dr. jPamley has appointed members of Salem’s faculty to investigate what )alem can do for this project. Be- ''des Dr. Gramley, the committee J>tisists of Dean Ivy Hixson, Dean ' ®niens Sandresky, Mr. Jack Mhite, Miss Barbara Battle, Mr. Jim Bray, and Dr. Inzer Byers. Also on the committee are Mrs. Anna Cooper, Miss Delia Marsh, Mrs. Vern Mock, Mr. John Mueller, Mr. Edwin Shewmake, and Dr. Elizabeth Welch. Salem’s committee will meet within the next week to discuss what Salem may do in the way of a Symposium, art exhibit, and musi cal performance. They will also discuss the possibility of profes sional meetings. As the familiar voice discussed the business and activities of the administrative office, Salem affairs were again back to normal. College—sciences and laboratory experiences; and Dr. James Val- same. State Department of Public Instruction—mathematics and over all policies. Upon arrival, the committee wall begin viewing every phase of cam pus life. Since all but two of the committee will be living on campus, they will have direct contact with the students—whether it be in the refectory, dormitories or class rooms. Committee Evaluates Self-Study Conferences will be the primary business Monday and Tuesday. To evaluate Salem’s self-study, which was compiled last year by all of Salem’s faculty and which is based on the six standards of the new ‘’Approved Programs Approach to Teacher Education,” will be the purpose of the conferences. The areas included in the six The Humanities Club is present ing a panel discussion on education abroad, the twenty-second of this month at 6:30 p.m., in the Day Stu dent Center. The panel members will be our two foreign exchange students, Els- Student Board Welcome Frosh Wolfersteig Will Direct 'Elijah’ By Mendelssohn At Presbyterian Church Elijah, an oratorio by Mendels- s.ohn, will be presented by the First Presbyterian Church choir, under the direction of Dr. Robert Wolfer steig on Sunday. The performance, which will begin at 7:30 p.m., and is open to the public, will be held in the sanctuary. The part of Elijah will be sung by Professor Richard Brewer, head of the music department at Pfeiffer College. Other soloists include Eloise Wolfersteig, Ethel Kalter, and William E. Honeycutt. The part of the angel will be sung by Clara Allen and that of the youth, bji Martha Siceloff. Part one of the two-part oratorio consists of the prophecy of the drought, the raising of the dead son of the widow by Elijah, Elijah’s conflict with the priests of Baal, and finally, the coming of the rain. The second part opens with the conflict of Elijah and Jezebel, con tinues with Elijah’s journey into the desert, and concludes with the ascent of Elijah into heaven in the fiery chariot. Tish Johnston opened the Octo ber 15 Legislative Board meeting by welcoming the new freshman class representatives, Roberta Frost and Jane Grimsly. New freshman representatives to IRS are: Bebe Anderson, Pat Tillery, Suzanne Worthington, and Ann Brownlee. “Y” representatives are: Mary Etta Hardison, Dabney Kelley, and Anna White. Jean Yager and Boodie Crowe are representatives to WRA. A note of appreciation from Dr. Dale Gramley was read. This was in return for the Student Govern ment gift of a book of art work. Salem College has been invited to send representatives to a plan ning meeting of the State Student Legislature. Legislative Board members who will attend the Octo ber 20 meeting at Wake Forest College are: Tish Johnston, Margy Harris, Wookie Workman, Dottic Davis, Jean King, Kay Kell, and Jane Grimsley. It was decided to post a letter of protest against the North Carolina speaker ban bill in Main Hall. The letter was drawn up as a group effort by the Legislative Board and accepted by the board. All students are urged to sign this letter, but only on condition that the indivi dual student does so after careful consideration. Each signer should be perfectly certain of her own reasons for signing. ken Rutgers from The Netherlands, and Maria Celia Pascoal de Gamma from Brazil, along with Susie Rob inson and Brandy Hughes who have studied in Austria and France re spectively. To begin the program, each of the four girls will present a short sketch of the educational system in the country thev represent. Afterwards, Betty Bullard will lead the discussion on the extent of academic freedom in the , various countries in areas including politics and leligion, the freedom of speech, the rules and regulations of the school, and faculty-student relation ships. The program will be concluded with comments on the question, ‘‘Are the educational systems of other countries more advanced than the American system?” Advisory Board Taps Members For Th is Year The Faculty Advisory Board for this year is composed of Miss Anne Woodward, appointed by the faculty; Mr. James Bray, appointed by the Student Government and Miss Barbara Battle, appointed by Dr. Dale Gramley. Dean Amy Ileidbreder and Dr. Gramley are permanent members of the board. The Faculty Advisory Board serves as an advisor in general mat ters pertaining to the Student Gov ernment Association. It is specifi cally concerned with the regula tions governing dormitory and so cial life. It also acts with the Judicial Board in those matters that involve major penalties or im peachment.
Salem College Student Newspaper
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Oct. 18, 1963, edition 1
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