Santa Claus will soon be here With lots of toys and Christ mas cheer. abmttf Come see seniors with candle light, Vespers will be Sunday night. Santa Claus Will Appear At Banquet The Senior Class will be the honor guests of the Junior Class at the Christmas Banquet which will be held at 6:00 p.m., Tuesday, Dec. 16 in Corrin Refectory. The guest list for the banquet, the only formal dinner of the year, will include nearly 500 people. All day and boarding students, faculty and administration and their fami- lies, along with other town persons who are especially connected with- Salem, are invited. Santa to be Present ' An anonymous Santa Claus will 'cause much spectulation as to his idenity. He will read a literary '^asterpiece which is the inspira tion of the junior poets. The poem will be dedicated to the seniors. Santa will also distribute presents to all of the faculty children. Dr. Howard Rondthaler will have " the invocation, and remarks will be made by Dr. Dale Gramley. Alice >McNeely and Faye Lee will bring greetings and responses from the Junior and Senior Classes respec tively. Miss Margaret Vardell will play the organ for special music and carol singing by all the guests. Mrs. Cummings and her kitchen staff will be in charge of the din ner and the dining hall decorations, .which will include a Christmas tree. The committees of the junior hostesses are headed by Betty Tyler, invitations; Sally Hackney, seating arrangements; Eleanor Johnson, programs; Frankie Stra der, music and Anne Merritt, gifts. W*" Boots Hudson is Santa Claus’s manager, and Jean Calhoun heads j the circle of poets. The marshalls will be on duty to help seat the guests. i Former Dean kCToGive Recital Dr. Charles G. Vardell, Jr., ■i' former dean of the Salem College || School of Music, will present a piano recital at 8:30 p.m. Jan. 5, 1953 in Memorial Hall. § • Dr. Vardell received his early ® -musical training under his mother’s |( tutorage and was graduated from ft, Princeton University in 1914. A His musical education was con- tinned at the Institute of Musical ,| Arts in New York City, now Jul- hard School of Music, where he ( graduated in 1915. He received the , post graduate Artist’s and Teach er’s diploma in 1916. From 1938 to 1940, he completed requirements ■| for his M. A. and Ph. D. degrees j at Eastman School of Music at the * University of Rochester. From 1919 to 1923 he was dean I of music at Flora MacDonald, re- I signing in 1928 to become dean of the School of Music at Salem Col lege. This post he held until 1951 when he returned to Flora Mac- I’ Donald. I Dr, Vardell is regarded by critics I as being North Carolina’s leading composer. For his compositions, a I sonata for violin and piano and a f; suite, he received the Shirley Cup, I offered annually for the best work |- done by a North Carolina com- I' poser. ■ Among his other compositions „ are a cantata for piano and or- i chestra, “The Inimitable Lovers”, f. and s. symphony in G minor, en- f titled, “Carolinian”, a work which makes use of the folk idiom of the 4v Southern Applachain Mountains. Seniors Plan Candlelight ers Norma Spikes, Sue Jones, Jackie Neilsen, Joy Dixon, Aiiison Long and Nellie Ann Barrow begin plans for the decoration of Clewell date room. Dorm Judging, Santa Claus, Open House To Be Monday Highlights At Salem this year because of the fire ordi- states that the costs should be By Betsy Liles Though the I. R. S. Christmas dormitory decoration contest isn’t until Monday night, groups of Salemites are already clustering around their house presidents whispering plans of how “our dorm can win the prize this year.” Words like “It’s gonna be harder Caroling Party Set For Dec. 18 The annual Senior Class caroling party will be held Thursday night, .Dec. 18. Wrapped up in warm clothes and carrying their candles from senior vespers, the seniors will start out at 7:30 p.m. to serenade the entire campus area with Christmas carols. They will finish the evening at Dr. and Mrs. Dale H. Gramley’s home for refreshments and visiting. Among the more specific places they plan to carol are the homes of Dr. Howard Rondthaler, Dr. Fred Leinbach, Dr. Samuel Pfohl, C. S. Starbuck, Bishop J. Kenneth Pfohl, Rev. Edwin A. Sawyer, Rev. R. Gordon Spaugh, Mrs. Ruby J. Pfohl and Dr. Dale H. Gramley. They will also sing in front of the Corner Apartments, the Belo Home, Main Hall, the academy, the infirmary and all the campus dorms. Faculty, Team Will Volley Something new has been added to the minor sports at Salem. Elimination volley ball tourna ments between the classes will be held on Monday, Jan. 5 and Tues day, Jan. 6. The play offs for the champion ship will be on Wednesday, Jan. 7. Afterwards the faculty has a treat in store for the students with a volley ball game against the stu dent champs. Betty McGlaughon and Joan Shope are the general managers of the tournament. nance rules” and “Will you help us—you’re such an artistic soul!” float through the halls as the dorms prepare for Open House and judging between eight and nine o’clock Monday night. Miss Frances Horne, Dr. Michael Lewis, Edwin Shewmake and Mrs. Vicky Hagaman will judge and grade the decorations on points of originality, appropriateness and at tractiveness. Elsie Macon, I. R. S. president, Kipe To Give Organ Recital The Salem College School of Music will present Betty Lou Kipe, organist, in her graduating recital at 8:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 17 in Memorial Hall. In keeping with the holiday sea son, Betty Lou will play a group of Christmas compositions. Betty Lou, a transfer from Ober- lin College, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Horace S. Kipe of Watchung, N. J. The selections to be presented are: Noel D’Aquin Von Himmel Hock ....Pachelbel Fantasia in G Minor Bach Musical Clock Haydn Fantasy on Old Christmas Carols Blair Pastoral Milhaud Finale Franck Lied Vierne Toccata from the 5th Sym phony Widor Students and faculty are invited to attend this recital. Sign-Out Rules Told Mrs. Heidbreder announces that all students must sign out on Mon day and Tuesday, Jan. 15 and 16, during office hours. All sign-outs should be completed by 4:30 Tues day afternoon. , Permissions must be filed if away-from-home visits are planned. College will resume on Jan. 5th. Any girls returning on Sunday must observe Sunday night curfew. kept low since this will also enter into the judging, and that in ac cordance with the Winston-Salem fire ordinance rules, no artificial snow, crepe paper, lighted Christ mas trees or other inflammables may be used. At nine, Santa Claus will visit the campus, ring the school bell, and summon Salemites into the court between the Day Students’ Center and South. There two prizes will be awarded to the win ning dormitories and afterwards an informal' open house with cokes and cookies will be held in the Day Students’ Center. Salem has invited friends of the college, faculty members and the Winston-Salem Alumnae Club to see the dorm decorations. Last year’s winners were Sisters with the story of the “Anna’s Christmas Angel”, and Bitting, carrying out the theme of an old- fashioned Moravian Christmas. Christmas Vespers at Salem Col lege, to be held this Sunday at '7:30 p.m. in Memorial Hall, resembles the Moravian Christmas Eve Love Feast. Beeswax candles made by the Moravian women are used in both ceremonies. This is a carry over from the church’s Feast of Lights, It is believed that Christmas Ves pers at Salem originated in the days when students were unable to go home for the holidays. This year Salemites and faculty will share in the Moravian Christmas spirit before leaving for home. The Rev. I. Howard Chadwick will be the speaker. Rev. Chad wick was formerly pastor of Fair- view Moravian Church and Greens boro Moravian Church. He is widely known in North Carolina as a soloist. He has been director of music for preaching missions in Winston- Salem and Charlotte. Next semes ter Rev. Chadwick will instruct at Salem in comparative religions. The scripture and invocation will be given by Dr. Dale H. Gramley, the college president. “A Star Was His Candle” will be sung by Marian Lewis, Student Government president. Marion is a member of the Senior Class. Miss Margaret Vardell will be the organist. Faye Lee, president of the Sen ior Class, will lead the procession into the auditorium. The proces sional will be “Angels from the Realms of Glory.” Seniors will sing “The First Noel” for the re cessional. According to tradition, seniors in caps and gowns and their sopho more pages, dressed in white, will distribute candles to every member of the congregation. Junior mar shals in white evening dresses and regalia will assist. The custom is further carried out by taking the lighted candles back to homes and dormitories, where they are placed in the windows. This lights the Christ Child’s way into the home. The candles are made in the original Old Salem molds. “Morning Star” will be sung by the seniors and pages antiphonally. There will not be a customary Christmas tree because of the Win ston-Salem fire ordinance. Old Salem Uses Decorations Of Moravian Star And Putz By Donald Caldwell Morning Star, O cheering sight; Ere thou cam’st how dark earth’s night. From the first Suhday in Advent until Christmas, visitors in Old Salem will hear strains of this hymn, “Morning Star”. It was written b)' a Moravian doctor in about 1670, and is a part of the traditional M o r a i a n Christmas celebration. . About Christmas time we see Christmas trees appearing in each Old Salem home. These trees are different from most Christmas trees in that each tree has its putz. The putz is a miniature world centering around the nativity scene. Brooks, mills, animals and people are added to create a realis tic scene. Each putz differs from year to year with the addition of new pieces, but some objects are handed down for many generations. The putz in America has no defi nite beginning, but there is a re cord of the North Carolina Mo ravians arranging a putz in 1760. Another outstanding Salem Christmas decoration is the many pointed star. The inventor of the Moravian Star is unknown, but it is thought to have originated in Nusky, Germany in 1850. The stars were made in Germany by the Verbuk family and sent to all the Moravian world. When the war closed the German factory, the industry was moved to Winston- Salem where the Moravians took the job of making the beloved Christmas emblem. The lighted star has a three-fold message to the spectators. First, it tells the greatness of God who laid the foundations of the world. Second, it is a reminder of the star that guided the Wise Men. Third, it points to Jesus who said of Himself: “I’m am . . . the bright and morning star,” (Rev. 23:16) On Christmas Eve we see child ren moving toward the church. It is time for the Children’s Love Feast. After eating buns and drinking coffee, the children listen to the Christmas Story. As the story ends, women bring in large trays of lighted candles (Continued on page eight)