THE CHOWANIAN, FEBRUARY 1960 Construction of Men's Dorm May Begin Soon Monroe Builder Gets Contract; 118-Bed Unit i Architect's Sketch Of New Dormitory For Men-Chowan College I SECOSiD 4 TWIFSD rtOOf^ R.AN V Vi PLiMTiNC LOUNJce TYPIC^U &ED P.NI UVI MG T3ILrT5 &O1L.ER, I I h : 1 IfOANTINO rL?^PN PL^N Vte," m I'-o" Floor Plan Of New Dormitory For Men Construction on the new 118- bed men’s dormitory may begin as early as March 1, according to Dr. Bruce E. Whitaker, Cho wan’s progressive and hard working president. Completion is hoped for by the beginning of the new term in September. A modem steel and concrete three-story structure has been designed by Architect W. D. Boone, Jr., of Charlotte, who is a son of Judge W. D. Boone of Winton. It will cost, with furn ishing, well over $300,000. The college has secured a long term, low interest loan of $265,000 but must raise some $65,000 from contributions between now and the time the building is com pleted. Award Contiact The Executive Committee of the Chowan College Board of Trustees, in session on Tuesday night, February 9, awarded to Dickerson, Inc. of Monroe, the building contract for the con struction of the new men’s dorm itory. Committee Chairman George Gibbs of Murfreesboro, who made the announcement, stated that Dickerson’s base bid was $246,575. Other bids were: J. T. Hard ison & Son of Washington, $247,- 800; Piedmont Housing & Con struction Co. of Durham, $248,- 700; George W. Kane of Hender son, $249,600; DuBose Construc tion Co. of Kinston, $253,000; East Carolina Construction Co. of Dunn, $253,175; Kellogg-Cu- threll, Inc. of Manteo, $255,800; L. P. Cox Co. of Sanford, $257, 400; and Dunn Building Supply Co., $258,400. Third Addition The new residence hall will be the third building addition to the Chowan campus under the enlargement-development p r o- gram initiated by the college trustees in 1957. The first—a $310,000 residence hall for women—was erected in 1958; the second—a $165,000 cafeteria —was completed in 1959. Other buildings proposed un der the current Chowan expan sion program are a new class- r o o m-administration building, library, business administration building, and an addition to the present graphic arts building. Annual Visitation Day March 7 By BUDDY OWENS The annual Campus Visitation Day at Chowan College will be held on Monday, March 7. This event is held once a year to give the residents of Roanoke- Chowan and surrounding areas an opportunity to visit the col lege campus and become better acquainted with the work Cho wan is doing for higher Chris tian Education. They also will tell of the building and endow ment fund of the college, and a program to meet these needs, will be outlined to the campus visitors. Presidents from seven col leges will attend this meeting. They are, Dr. Leslie H. Camp bell, Campbell College; Dr. Bruce E. Whitaker, Chowan Col lege; Dr. Philip L. Elliot, Gard- ner-Webb; Dr. Hoyt Blackwell, Mars Hill College; Dr. Caryle Campbell, Meredith; Dr. Harold W. 'Tribble, Wake Forest; and Dr. Budd E. Smith, Wingate Col lege. Claude E. Gaddy, Secre tary of the Council on Christian Education, will preside. There will be a report from the Convention Committee on Advance Program for the Col leges. Following the Convention Committees report there will be a report on Chowan College. L. L. Bishop, Jr., professor of mathematics, will give a report on the Academic Life; William C. Young, college chaplain, will give a report on the Religious Life of the Students at Chowan; Gordon Rutland, Scottsville, Va., will give the students view point, and Dr. Bruce E. Whit aker will give a report on the Development Program of the College. other highlights of the day’s events will be several selections It Was An Error, Mabel! It was a mistake, incorrect, typographical error, the proofreader was asleep, it just isn't so, Mabel, that the new $300,000 men’s dormitory, now being planned for construc tion, will have only 11 beds. There will be 118 . . . that is one hundred and eighteen. Linotype operator . . . and it will be a jimdandy of a dorm when completed ... by next September, is the hope. Those nasty little errors are as slippery as your boy friend’s crew cut, Mabel. from the coUege choir under the direction of Professor James Chamblee. After the meeting the visi tors will be the guests of the col lege in the cafeteria for lunch. These annual meetings are sponsored by the Council on Christian Education in conjunc tion with the individual colleges. Faculty and Staff Pay Increase Voted By Board of Trustees By action of the Chowan Col lege Board of Trustees, begin ning the next fiscal year, July 1, 1960, an across-the-board salary increase of ten percent will be made over the base pay the faculty and staff are now getting. In addition to the pay hikes, fringe benefits of approximately five percent have been voted for term life insurance and hospita lization benefits. The recent pay increases have been made possible by an in crease in student tuitions, and by increased resources from the North Carolina Foundation of Church Related Colleges, and the Baptist State Convention of North Carolina. The increase in student en rollment of 150 percent in three years at Chowan College, and the fact that in 1956 Chowan be came accredited by the South ern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, are other factors in the pay increases, it was pointed out by college officials. Dr. Bruce E. Whitaker, presi dent of the college, said, “There is an effort to increase salary schedules in order to hold good faculty members, and to attract others, which is in line with the policy to up-grade and strengthen the college on every level so as to provide Chowan College students with as good as the best available in the field of higher education.” The pay increase for faculty has moved to 35 percent over a three year period.