■ '■''■■A'--, Volume XLI Salem College, Winston-Salem, N. C., Friday, May 12, 1961 Number 23 I » ■■ ■| "I ■'I Many Awards Presented At Salem Closing Assembly Program May 24 The agenda of closing chapel on May 23rd will be the annual pre sentation ^of awards to outstanding students. The Pierrettes will present four certificates of merit awarded to people on the production staff who have worked on two plays in the past two years, and the Pierrette award for an outstanding job in acting in one of the plays this year. Two foreign student certificates will be presented to Ricky Eikendal and Meggi Schultz for their year of study at Salem. The President’s Prizes awarded each year include a fifty-dollar award to one student in each of the fifteen departments. These de partments are art, biology, chemis try, classics, drama, economics- sociology, education-psychology, English, history, home economics, mathematics, music, modern langu ages, physical education, and reli gion. The other five awards are as follows: a prize to an outstand ing freshman in English, one for the best sophomore research paper, an award for the best work in Music Theory, and awards to the freshman and junior with the high est academic record. The fresh man and junior academic awards cannot be presented until all the averages are obtained. The Katherine B. Rondthaler Tanglewood Park Opens New 1961 Summer Drama Workshop Tanglewood Park will open as a new feature for the 1961 summer a Drama Workshop, designed to give a short intensive course in acting, scene design, history and philosophy of the theatre. Stu dents will observe a full-scale theatre in operation and work with professionals. The workshop will be held Au gust 17-27. It is being sponsored by the drama departments of Salem and Wake Forest and by the Win ston-Salem Little Theatre. The workshop staff will consist of persons highly skilled in various dramatic arts. Although the staff cannot be announced at this time, the Park has made contact with several prominent people in the educational field and several in pro fessional threatre. The minimum eligible age (no maximum) is 16 years or comple tion of sophomore year of high school. Applications are on a first- come, first-served basis as only 40 residents students can be accepted. Fees, which include housing (for esident students), food, and ad mission to two plays are $70 for residents, $50 for day students. Day students (9 a.m.-9 p.m.) will be given free transportation. PrevetteAnd Frick Will Present Piano Recitals Awards will be offered by the Alumnae Association to students for achievement in music, art and literature. Last year the Alumnae Association gave $100 for two silver trays awarded to the two senior winners. Two H. A. Pfohl Awards are presented each year. One is given to a senior who has shown out standing citizenship on campus, Christian character, loyalty, and service to Salem. The second Pfohl Award will be presented to a mem ber of the faculty who has demon strated service, loyalty, Christian influence, and effective teaching. Both the student and the teacher will receive $100. During Awards Assembly the senior class will present its Last Will and its class gift. The an nual staff also hopes to announce the dedication of Sights and In sights. Art Students Display Work By Monday, May 15, the senior art exhibits will be on display. Bar bara Edwards, Jette Seear, and Snzanne Taylor will have their works on exhibit in the Student Union, the Day Student Center and the stairwell of Main Hall. Oil paintings, woodcuts and etch ings of other students will be shown in the basement of Main Hall and in the Music Hall. These will include works by Betty Black, Florence Evens, Eloise Upchurch, Katherine Parrish, Julia O’Neal, Beverly Heward, Nancy Brawley, Catherine Eller, Sis Gillam, Sylvia Gooding, Brenda Hughes, Elizabeth Rev. Patrick Craig Will Deliver Bacc. Sermon Mary Prevette will give her graduating piano recital on Rriday, Dorothy Lovell, Virginia May 19, at 8:30 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Her program will include selections by four outstanding com posers: Bach, “Prelude and Fugue in F minor” and “Well-Tempered Clevier, Book I”; Beethoven, “Thirty-two Variations in C Minor”; three Chopin Preludes; and “Variations Symphonique” (concerto) by Franch. Mary, who is from Salisbury, N. C., began studying piano “later than most”, in seventh grade. At Salem she has studied under Cle mens Sandresky for four years. After graduation Mary plans to teach piano. Other than that, her plans are indefinite. Everyone is cordially invited to this recital and to the reception which will follow immediately in the Friendship Rooms of Strong Dormitory. * * * On Monday night. May 22, at 7:30 in Memorial Hall, Dotty Frick will give her senior recital. Dotty will receive her Bachelor of Music degree this June. She is a student of Hans Heidemann. The program includes: Sonata in D Minor, Op. 31, No. 2 by Beet hoven ; five Chopin Etudes; “A Flat Major, Op. 25 No. 1, “E Major, Op. 10 No. 3”, “G Flat Major, Op. 10 No. 5”, “C Sharp Minor, Op. 25 No. 7”, and “C Minor, Op. 10 No. 12”; and “Con certo in G Minor, Op. 25”, by Mendelssohn. Dotty and her mother, Mrs, C. H. Frick, live in Bassett, Vir ginia. After graduation. Dotty plans to be married in the late summer. Everyone is cordially invited to a reception in the Day Student Center after the recital. Padgett, Eleanor Quick, Carolyn Tyson, Sarah Wills, and Andra Wright. Sculpture and pottery, made by the ceramics class, will be exhibited also. Anne Jewell, Betsy Davis, Cindy Shearin, Mary Ann Porter, Sheena Warren and Deedee Head- ley will have works displayed in the basement of Main Hall. Soph. Car Wash Held May 13 A car wash will be held Satur day, May 13, by the sophomore class. The project, to be carried out in the laundry parking lot, is for the purpose of raising money for the Refugee Student Fund. Cars will be washed from 10:00- 4:00, and each “wash job” will cost $1.50. Notices advertising the car wash have been sent to Bowman Gray and to Wake Forest fraternities The Rev. Patrick Craig, Mora vian minister at Bethlehem Church in Jamaica, will deliver the bac- culaureate sermon at Salem on June 4. The Rev. Craig, whose daughter Felicity is a member of this year’s graduating class, will arrive in Winston-Salem on Satur day, June 3 for the graduation exercises. Born in England, the Rev. Craig attended the Moravian School at Fulneck, Yorkshire, from 1917 to 1925; from 1926 to 1927, he attended Bradford Grammar School, ancient ANNOUNCEMENTS All difficulties in exam schedules should be taken care of imme diately by seeing Miss Simpson. All required work for this se mester must be completed and handed in by 6:00 p.m. the day before Reading Day, May 23. After Reading Day, students who do not plan to return next year should fill out withdrawal blanks in order to get an honorable dis missal from Salem. Information will be put in student boxes concerning the closing of college including the amount and the way in which student property may be left on campus. ♦ ♦ Dr. Balkrishna Gokhale, visiting professor of Asian Studies at Salem, Wake Forest, and Winston- Salem Teacher’s College, will be the speaker at the Pi Alpha Theta meeting on Wednesday, May 12. The meeting will be held in the Strong Friendship Rooms at 5:30. ♦ ♦ * On May 23 the Alumnae Asso ciation will hold a picnic for this and WPEG will send a mobile unit I year’s senior class. Mrs. F. Eugene Vogler, Jr., will be host to the seniors. Special g;uests will be Mr. to Salem during the day. The Winston-Salem Chamber of Com merce has sent a letter to the so phomores congratulating them on the project designed to raise money for the Refugee Program. Car wash chairman Anne West commented, “The car wash will not Bray, the class advisor, and Mrs. Bray, and Dr. and Mrs. Gramley. school of England; from 1927 to 1932, he studied under Professor C. H. Dodd at Manchester Univer sity, earning his B. A. and B. D. degrees. From 1932 until 1951, the Rev. Craig, the son of Moravian mis sionaries, served as a minister in England at Wilshire, Lancashire, and Yorkshire. In 1951 he began his ministry in Jamaica at Bethle hem Training College, a training school for Jamaican teachers. In 1958, the Rev. Craig was elected as a member of P. E. C. for the Jamaica Province of the Moravian Church. Ezzell Gives Organ Recital Kay Ezzell will present her so phomore organ recital in Old Chapel at 7:30 p.m. on May 22. For her recital selections she has chosen Daquen, Fugue from “Pre lude and Fugue in F Major” by Bach, a German selection by David, and Franck: “First Movement,First Symphony.” Kay, who has studied organ for five years, is presently under the instruction of Mr. Calvin Hampton. This will be her first college re cital. After graduation Kay plans to work as minister of music in a church. Jr. - Sr. Party Held May 18 The senior class will be the guests of the junior class at the annual junior-senior party on Thursday, May 18. This year, in stead of the traditional formal ban quet, the party will be an informal get-together at Tanglewood Park. There will be a barbecue supper served, entertainment and recrea tion planned, and gifts for each senior. Special guests will include Dr. and Mrs. Gramley, Dean Today, May 12, the day students will hold their annual spring picnic. The day students along with their dates will meet at Miller Park at 6:00 p.m. for hot dogs, | Hixon, Dean Heidbreder, Miss be called off unless it is actually hamburgers, and all the trimmings.! Battle, and Mr. Bray, class ad- raining. We would appreciate the Beth Fordham is in charge of the visors. It is hoped that this change help of all students in making this, menu and Mr. Sanders, day stu-1 to a casual affair will prove to be project a success.” dent advisor, will chaperone. I more enjoyable.

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