Volume 1 Salem College, Winston-Salem, N. C., Thursday, May 10, 1973 Number 1 Indoor Pool Slated for Main Basement Last Monday, April 30, Dr. Chandler announced to the members of Leg Board that the Board of Trustees has allocated $250,000 for the construction of a new swimming pool in the basement of Main Hall. This pro posal has been under considera tion for several years, and was finally approved at the meeting of the Board of Trustees in March. A committee has been formed to decide upon the final plans for the pool. It is to be an Olym pic sized pool which will be avail able for year round use. Adjoin ing the pool, there are to be men’s and women’s locker rooms. (It is not yet certain, though, whether or not men will be permitted to use the pool. This all depends upon the out come of the intervisitation issue.) The Ladies’ Locker Room is to have seventy-five sunlamps, so that students can maintain their tropical suntans even when there is snow on Gramley sundeck. The admissions Committee was encouraged by the large in crease in the number of Fresh man applicants this year. They are convinced that Janie Bark- man’s Gold medal placed Salem on the map. They are encoura ging the Physical Education De partment to offer a course in Olympic Swimming, in order that Salem can contribute at least one swimmer in the 1976 Olympics, so that Salem can re main a well known, highly sought after school. The pool should be com pleted by September, 1973. It is probable that the library con struction will cease during the summer, in order that the con struction of the pool not be de layed. Several students ques tioned this decision, but were re minded that their demands for the completion of the library took into consideration only aca demic matters, while the pur poses of the pool include con cern for physical fitness, beauty, and the prestige of Salem Col lege. Salem Gets New Dean The office of the president has announced that a new ad ministrative office has been created at Salem College. The office of Dean of Student - Fa culty Affairs will go into effect in September. The new dean will act as a link between administra tion, students and faculty. She will work closely with Dean Johnson and with Faculty-Ad visory Board to ensure the maintainance of a proper rela tionship between students and faculty members. Dr. Chandler has announced that Dr. Sarah M. Paramount is the first Dean of Student- Faculty Affairs. Dr. Paramount received a bachelor of arts de gree in English and History from Grinnell College. She received an M.A. and a Ph.D in education administration from Princeton. Dr. Paramount worked as a Head Start administrator in Washington, D.C. At the time of her appointment as Salem Dean, Dr. Paramount was work ing with the Pinkerton Detective Agency in Chicago. Dr. Chandler has expressed enthusiasm for the new dean IRS Sponsors McLean Show This Saturday Don McLean, singer and song writer who received four Gram my nominations for his song and performance of “American Pie,” will perform at 8:15 p.m. Satur day in Hanes Auditorium.. The concert is sponsored by IRS. Tickets are available through the Salem Bookstore. McLean, who presented a con cert in Carnegie Hall last Thurs day, won nominations for the 1972 record of the year, album (cont’d on p. 7) and for the newly-created ad ministrative department at Sa lem. He said that the department of Student-Faculty Affairs should create a warmer air of un derstanding between faculty and administration. “Faculty members must remember the fine line that exists between teacher and pupil. We want our faculty to continue the wonderful close relationship with students in class, at the Lilly Pond and in the Refectory” he said. “But we need to encourage them to maintain discreet extra curricular activities. Dr. Para mount will be marvelous at aiding us in this line of action. Dr. Paramount will begin her official Salem duties August 1. Nine Students Jailed Not shown in pictures: Mar garet Dorrier, Lucille Draper, & Mary Denton Roberts. Nine Salem students were arrested Thursday, May 3 in the Square on charges of public dis- orderliness, drunkenness and causing a riot without a permit. Eight of the students were re leased on $500 bond each; the other student is being held until the city can arrange bail with her father. A spokeswoman for the Sa lem 9 released a statement say ing that the students were enact ing a social deviance experiment for Prof. Robert Wendt at Salem. They were staging a riot to test the effectiveness of violence on the college administration. The spokeswoman said the students drank eleven bottles of Taylor’s red wine in order to act their roles for the experi ment. The police arrived after two of the students climbed to the Moravian Church Bell tower and threatened to kill themselves if Bud Place, Salem College Busi ness Manager, refused to increase the refectory limch menu to three meats and four salads daily The police team gassed the students out of the bell tower and arraigned the other 7, who were shooting Roman candles in the Square. The Salem Nine trial will be at 10:30 a.m. on Monday, June J. They will appear before Honor Council next week. Prof Wendt has announced that he will not determine the students’ grades until after the June 1st trial. Place is nOt avail able for comment concerning the cafeteria increase asked for by the students. Profs To Sponsor Program The Peek Travel Agency Ltd. would greatly appreciate your kind attention to the timely correction of an error set in the Entertainment Section of last week’s edition. While it is known to all that Professors Meehan and Kampen will be conducting a joint January session, the de tails of the expedition were in correctly stated in print. The title should read as follows: Quest and Jest: Persuit in the Urban Landscape. In the event that this title is not perfectly clear to all readers, I will ex pand upon all previous descrip tions of this program. The two leaders of the expedition as named above will board an un marked jet wherein they will speed to an unmentioned air terminal in the vicinity of San Francisco. Visitor Policy Revised “It is the revised policy of Salem College that male visitors be permitted in. dormitory rooms during all hours in which the dorms are open. This is in accor dance with standing rules and procedures of dorm openings and closings as determined by the college administration.” Dr. Chandler released this statement Tuesday, May 8 as a formal announcement of Salem policy change concerning visita tion. This policy is a revision ot the procedure approved by the Board of Trustees at their spring meeting April 9 and announced by Chandler in SGA assembly April 14. . This open dorm policy is the direct result of the mass student .disapproval expressed >n front o Chandler’s office on Thursday, April 19. Chandler’s original policy an nouncement included 6 campus wide open weekends plus one weekend per semester per house. The original policy included spe cified weekend hours on Friday (8-12 p.m.); Saturday (2-5:30 & 8-12 p.m.); Sunday (2-5:30 p.m.). After Chandler’s announce ment on April 17, students formed a coalition to express dis gust for the visitation policy and walked to his office on April 19. There, some 300 students and faculty members stood while a student statement of disapproval for the policy was read. Chandler thanked the stu dents and met April 30 - May 4 with a joint committee of stu dents, faculty and administration to revise the policy. The new procedures of open- dorm visitation will be instituted in the fall term of 1973-74 and will be subject to review at the March, 1974 meeting of the Board of Trustees. Chandler emphasized that the administration will follow a hard line in enforcement of regula tions concerning visitation in or der to preserve collective securi ty. Male visitors will be required to sign into the dorms as guests and girls’ doors can be closed only if the visitors’ shoes are left outside the doors. The policy is a concrete exam ple of the progress achieved through the cooperative efforts of student, faculty, administra tion and trustees. Dick Drost’s (Rose Lawn, Indiana), wishes to announce that it will pay travel expenses (at .05^ per mile), on a round trip basis, plus a full week’s complimentary stay at Naked City, for each and every ANNOUNCEMENT Naked City girl it accepts as a contestant for either the: (A) Miss Nude World Contest (Sat. June 30th, 1973) and/or (B) The Miss Nude America Contest (Sat. August 4th, (cont’d on p. 8) All students in the program will be required to remain in the confines of the Greensboro air port during the time of this flight and for three hours after its scheduled landing. Students will be allowed to fly to San Francisco only after this desig nated period so the two leaders will have sufficient time to hide out and make temporary arrange ments for underground transpor tation. Of course, as we have said so often, it will be the problem of the students to locate Mee han and Kampen by following the cryptic clues and treacherous paths leading to their haunts. All members of the class have until Jan. 15 to accomplish this half of the program. On that day the first class meeting will be held in the park of St. Jude, during which time mid-term grades will be given to those with no holding quest deficien cies. Then, upon dismissal, the class will go into hiding and it will be the very difficult task of the two leaders to rummage through the urban landscape and to locate their students. In the event that Meehan and Kampen are unable to find one or more class members, those unlocated persons should report to Aspen Colorado. As an added special attraction, students will be al lowed to pursue their leaders in New Orleans, Mexico City and Paris. Honors will be given only to persons not locating Meehan and Kampen in cities other than those listed above.