Friday, December 12, 1958
THE SALEMITE
Page Three
1959-60 Changes Revealed
By Education Department
Grigg Pictures Immortalize Salemites
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A ne-w plan for student teaching
will go into effect in 1959-60, a
plan -which means that Education
224, Techniques of Teaching in the
Elementary Schools, and Education
226, Techniques of Teaching in the
Secondary Schools, will not be of
fered in the second semester of the
Money From
Concessions
To Be Divided
The newly established Conces
sions Committee met with Mrs.
Heidbreder on December 5 for the
purpose of discussing ways of using
income received from campus con
cessions. As previously decided by
Student Council, the Committee
■will give to each dormitory at the
beginning of each year a sum
amounting to $.25 per student, to
be used by the dorm at its own
discretion. The sum for the pre
sent school year will be given to
the house presidents before Christ
mas.
The remainder of the concession
income each year is to be turned
over to the Concessions Committee
to be used in such a way as to give
the greatest benefit to the whole
campus. Requests from any or
ganization on campus may be sub
mitted for consideration by this
committee. It will give special con
sideration to requests for conven
tions and regional meetings when
sponsoring groups have insufficient
funds for expenses. Requests should
be submitted to Caro Calhoun, com
mittee chairman.
current year. The 34 seniors who
will teach in 1959-60 will take the
Education 224 or 226 in accelerated
form for the first seven weeks
of the semester in which practice
teaching is studied. Student teach
ing will immediately follow with
students remaining in the schools
until noon for a period of three
weeks, then remaining the full
length of the school day for a
period of three weeks. The con
clusion of the student teaching pro
gram will require no more than six
hours of conference, evaluation, and
the like.
The new plan means that the
semester program of the student
teacher will include either Educa
tion 224 or 226, practice teaching,
and one additional subject in ad
dition to the senior seminar. Dur
ing the two weeks that the student
teacher is in the public school all
day it will be necessary for the
academic class to be scheduled in
the very late afternoon or early
evening. At other times the aca
demic classes which include student
teachers will be scheduled in the
afternoon hours beginning at 1:30.
Some of the 34 student teachers
of 1959-60 will have practice teach
ing scheduled in the first semester
and others in the second semester.
The new plan has many merits,
but since it will involve the re
registration of student teachers,
changes to be made should be
cleared with Miss Simpson before
the beginning of the Christmas holi
days so that the subject to be sub
stituted for the Education 224 or
226 may be indicated.
Mr. Grigg, photographer for The Salemite and The Sights and Insights,
sets his camera for another shot of Salem girls.
(Photo by Abby Suddath)
By Jane Leighton Bailey
“Mr. Grigg, can you come at
10:45 tonight and make a picture
of our May Queen—we’ve just got
to have it in the Salemite this
week!” Poor Mr. Grigg is fre
quently besieged with calls like
this. Who is Mr. Grigg? He is
the head of Grigg Studios on Wake
Forest Campus, and he does photo
graphic work for Salem’s editors,
Marcille and Jean.
Mr. Grigg is a man of unlimited
patience, which makes him dear to
the hearts of Marcille and Jean.
Theii^ problems would drive any
normal man crazy. Marcille gets
him over here for the longer, time.
(you can see his black and white
station wagon parked by the alum
nae house from 2:00 till 11:15) but
Jean’s problems are at strange
hours. And sometimes they are
strange problems.
After the election of May Queen
and Maid of Honor, Jean .asked
Mr. Grigg to take pictures of the
five top winners, with blank film
in all except the picture of the
Queen and her Maid. Thus the
winners would not know the re
sults until the paper came out.
Jean, for some reason, got confused
and thought the wrong person won.
So the pictures had been made of
the wrong girls. In desperation,
Jean called Mr. Grigg at dawn the
next day. Flis answer ? “Oh, they
were so pretty I went on and made
pictures of all of them anyway.”
Mr. Grigg’s problems with Mar
cille are usually even more harrow
ing. She has a habit of wanting
him to make a vertical picture out
of every shot. Mr. Grigg reached
the end of his rope when she asked
for a vertical of the May Day Com
mittee. “Oh, sure, I can make a
vertical about as easy as I could
make a horizontal of Wait Chapel!”
But he will do anything to help
Salemites. We see him stretched
out on the floor, or climbing on
pews in Little Chapel to get a
better shot. And he saves Mar
cille from the wrath of the en
gravers by getting out unbelievable
numbers of pictures on time.
You would think all this would
have made Mr. Grigg reluctant to
come to Salem, but he says he
“loves to cpme.” In the first place,
girls here have things well organ
ized, and are ready for him when
he comes. In the second place, the
girls are pretty, and he enjoys mak
ing their pictures.
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