Newspapers / Salem College Student Newspaper / Oct. 20, 1967, edition 1 / Page 3
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October 20, 1967 THE SALEMITE Page Three Choral Ensemble To Give ankouncements j-lakoshima Appears Here H'u ^ D I „r i _r c„i ■ i Series Of New Numbers The Salem College Choral En semble has a most varied and chal lenging repertoire of music to be performed during the first semester. The music is selected to fit each particular occasion and any assist ing choral group. More than thirty - different selections ranging from early church music to modern show tunes and from three part women’s [ choruses to eight part mixed choral ' arrangements are included in the {forks to be learned. *IOn Sunday evening, October 22, the 52 college singers will present a joint concert with the Moramus Choir in the Fellowship Hall at the Home Moravian Church at 7 :30 p.m. The Moramus Choir consists of 32 select singers from the various Mo ravian churches in the city. This particular program will be quite I unique since it will be the first i ‘jmusic in the round” concert ever i presented in Winston-Salem. ' Hymns, anthems, solos, a brass en- I gemble, and several other features [ arc included on the program. ’ (On November 6 the North Caro- !| lina State University Men’s Glee ! Club will present a joint concert in ■ Janes Auditorium with the Choral Ensemble. Tickets will be sold in advance by the girls and at the door. Proceeds will be used for the Ensemble’s trip to Buccaramanga, Colombia, South America, next Jan uary. A repeat co,ncert will be given at the North Carolina State cam pus on Wednesday, November 8. |Following these concerts, rehear sals will begin immediately with an entirely new repertoire of music for the Christmas assembly program for December IS. Part of the re hearsal time will be devoted to the , - Letter - 4 (Continued from Page 2) qhanges, students have enough in- ^ tellectual maturity and open mind edness to know that many old Southern attitudes, as (1) all Neg roes are to be shunned as inferior and (2) all Whites are superior, are being overthrown. The fact that Negroes and Whites are groups of individual humans is growing in acceptance in the college environ ment where Negroes and Whites are being exposed to the other’s culture. It is here at the college level that Negroes and Whites have a'common interest and goal. There fore it should not be difficult to establish rapport with a member of another race. Thus the attention given to whether or not a rooming house is integrated should be diverted, and niore attention should be given to cleanliness and comfort of the room- i^ig house. Laura Eutsler NOTICE .^*The Salemite congratulates Wil- mi H. Baskin on receiving his 'ctorate degree. KEEP KNITTING! The VILLAGE YARN SHOP ACROSS THE SQUARE AT 626 SOUTH MAIN We're Always Glad To Help You learning of music to be performed with the University of Buccara manga Men’s Glee Club which has won top honors in South American choral competition. Six concerts have been scheduled for the com bined choral groups during the 'Choral Ensemble’s five day visit to Winston-Salem’s sister city. In the meantime the ITome Mo ravian Church welcomes the Salem College faculty and students to an evening of music Sunday, October 22, at 7:30 p.m. in the Fellowship Hall. Seminar Sets Study Abroad The Scandinavian Seminar is now accepting applications for its study abroad program in Denmark, F.n- land, Norway or Sweden for the academic year 1968-69. This unique living-and-learning experience will particularly appeal to college stu dents, graduates and other adults who want to become part of an other culture while acquiring a second language. The focus of the Seminar’s program is the student’s Independent Study Project in his field of interest. The student in the Seminar pro gram stays two to eight weeks with a family in the Scandinavian coun try of his choice, using the langu age daily and sharing in the act- tivities of the community. For the major part of the year he lives and studies among Scandinavians at a Folk High School - - a residential school for young adults. He is com pletely separated from his fellow American students throughout the Seminar year except during the periods of intensive language in struction and during the three gen eral courses conducted under the supervision of the Seminar’s Ameri can director. Dr. Adolph G. Ander son, Dean of New College of Hof- stra University. Over one-hundred American col leges and universities have given either partial or full credit for the Seminar year. For complete information write to SCANDINAVIAN SEMINAR, 140 West S7th Street, New York, N.Y. 10019. - Couple - (Continued from page I) first non-racial political party in Kenya and speech-writer to African nationalist leader Ronald Ngala. His wife has contributed to Mc Call’s, Cosmopolitan, Harper’s, Ba zaar - and has even been written up in the New Yorker’s “Talk of the Town.” In addition, she was assoc iate producer of a documentary film on Ethiopia, shown on National Ed ucational Television, and was assoc iated with the production of “The Mark of Man,” an award-winning documentary on leprosy in Africa, getting to act as cameraman on the latter film. The Board of Trustees of Salem College will meet Thursday, Oct ober 26, at 3:30 p.m. Dinner will be served in the Club Dining Room at 6 p.m. Faculty will attend the meetings throughout the year on a rotating basis. The Board will con sider an IRS petition to take dances off campus. It will also discuss the request by Legislative Board to consider amendment or elimination of the regulation pertaining to Salem students visiting in the homes and apartments of men in Winston-Salem. The budget for the year will be adopted and a pro jection of future needs will be made. Chairman of the Board of Trus tees of Salem College, Dr. R, Gor don Spaugh, is ill in Germany and will not be able to preside at the meeting. Dr. Gramley will represent Salem at the inauguration of Dr. Edwin Smylie as President of Queens Col lege on October 25. ♦ ♦ * The Board of Governors of the Governor’s School met on October 17 on campus in the Trustee’s Room. Dr. Garringes, former Superintendent of the Charlotte school system was reelected Chair man of the Board. - Bouncing - (Continued from Page 2) reality has succumbed to the pro found and dreamlike quality of being all ashew? Well, you know these boots were made for walking, so walk aready. After, all way not ? This is all a vicious rumor. In Exceptional Program By Sandy Kelley A performance of studied control and perception characterized the presentation of Yass Plakosh ma. Mime, in assembly, Monday, Octo ber 16. Using no scenery and only mini mum costumes, lights, and music, Mr. Hakoshima revealed his'talent through controlled body movement and facial expressions. He first por trayed a fisherman trying vainly to catch fish. His humorous portrayal of emotion and all too human act ions brought laughter from the aud ience. In contrast to the portrayal of the fisherman, Mr. Hakoshima gave a more serious performance of Il lusion using lighting to aid in the effect of the number. His presentation of Dream show ed the youth wish of an old man fulfilled through a dream after hav ing drunk from an imaginary bottle. The hetic pace of Labyrinth re vealed quick movements and tens ing emotion which seemed to grip even the audience while graceful ness was one of the most noticeable characteristics of Mr. Hakosh'ma’s interpretation of an Eagle flying and being shot down. The final portrayal of Ecdysis from that which inhibits his mind revealed the gradual freeing of man and life. This was seen in the mask which Mr. Hakoshima wore with a shapeless face on one side while shedding the confining exoskeleton NCATE Accredits Salem Council Praises School Salem College has been notified that it has been accredited for ten years by the National Council for Accreditation for Teacher Educa tion. The notification came from Dr. Rolf Larson, Executive Director of NC.A-TE, whose office is located in Washington, D.C. This accreditation provides Salem graduates in Teacher Education the opportunity to teach in states that accept graduates of NCATE schools without having to take certain re quired courses or meet specific stan dards. The letter from Dr. Larson praised Salem for the excellence of its pro gram, the quality of its students, and the cooperation of its entire faculty in the program of teacher education. The committee sent by NCATE to review Salem’s Teacher Education standards spent several days in March, 1967 observing classes and talking (vith faculty, administration and students. Salem was first accredited by NCATE in 1957 for ten years and was at that time the first private college or university in North Car olina to receive such recognition. GIFTS - ANTIQUES ACCESSORIES Be Sure To Visit Our Christmas Shop Salem Gift Shop 531 S. Mom St. For Nice Things To Wear . . . VISIT THRUWAY SHOPPING CENTER ( Home of LANZ and McMUL- LEN Dresses and Sportswear. Open ’til 9 every nite—Monday thru Friday. to the face of a man on the other side which he revealed to the aud ience when he had finished the lab orious process. Thunderous applause and three curtain calls followed the perfor mance in spite of the late start of the assembly due to lighting difficulties Mr. Hakoshima was scheduled to appear at other area colleges and appeared at Salem as part of the Salem College Lecture Series under the auspices of the Arts Program of the Association of American Col leges. CEEB To Meet Salem Attends Miss Edith Kirkland, Director of Admissions, will be attending the annual meeting of the College En trance Examination Board in Chi cago, Illinois, October 24-25. On October 23, she will participate in a meeting of the Association of the Women’s Independent Colleges, also in Chicago. October 26, she will take part in a conference in St. Louis, Missouri, which has been arranged by Mary Institute, in St. Louis, Missouri, to introduce the Directors of Admissions of eight Southern Women’s Colleges to high School counselors, students, and their parents in the St. Louis area. These colleges are Salem, Agnes Scott, Hollins, Randolph-Macon, Sweet Briar, Queens, Converse, and Mary Baldwin. HEW- FIND SCHOLARSHIPS BY COMPUTER Last year $30 million in college schol arships went unclaimed — because no qualified persons applied . . . because no qualified persons knew of them. • Now ECS engineers and educators have programmed a high-speed com puter with 700,000 items of scholastic aid, worth over $500 million, to permit students to easily and quickly locate scholarships for which they qualify. • The student fills out a detailed, con fidential questionnaire and returns it to ECS, with a one-time computer-proces sing fee of $15. In seconds the compu ter compares his qualifications against requirements of grants set up by foun dations, business, civic, fraternal, re ligious, and government organizations, and prints a personalized report to the student telling him where and when to apply for grants for which he qual ifies. Thousands of these do not depend on scholastic standing or financial need. rFREE n t INFORMATION AND SAMPLE QUESTIONNAIRE | igonTH AMERICAN eoUCATIONAL. COMPUTER BERVICE8, INC. las NASSAU STREET PRINCETON. NEWV JERSSV I TH ' I ECS • Send. qty .Questionnaires (print) address. -Zip . STEVE'S ITALIA RISTORANTE Italian Food Spaghetti—Pizza, etc. Also Complete American Menu Open Daily 1 1 :00 A.M.-10:00 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAYS 112 OAKWOOD DRIVE BUY YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFTS BEFORE YOU GO HOME. NOW OWNED AND OPERATED B YSALEM COLLEGE. SALEM BOOKSTORE
Salem College Student Newspaper
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Oct. 20, 1967, edition 1
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