Newspapers / Salem College Student Newspaper / Oct. 27, 1961, edition 1 / Page 3
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October 27, 1961 THE SALEMITE Page Three W. C. Plans "Annie Get Your Gun” “Annie Get Your Gun”, an Irving | Berlin musical, is to be presented in Greensboro on November 1, 2, 3, and 4 by the Theater of Women’s College. Herman Middleton, head of the department of drama and speech at Woman’s College, will direct the play; Carl Alexius of the W. C. School of Music, is musical direc-' tor; Virginia Moomaw of the de partment of physical education, is choreographer; Minor Rootes, of the drama department, is technical director. Leading roles will be played by Paxton Attends State Meeting On Thursday and Friday, No vember 2 and 3, Sallie Paxton will attend the North Carolina College Conference in Durham. Sallie will represent Salem in a program which will be in the form of a panel discussion on the goals and objectives of the modern col lege student. The purpose of the program is to present objectives covering both personal and public values to the faculty and admini stration of the college. Repre sentatives from Davidson, State College, Catawba, and Wingate will also be on the panel. make a note" to ask about the Piedmont Xcursion Plan. It’s the most economical way to fly home on weekends. saves you 75 % of your return fare on roimd trips you make between midnight Friday and midnight Sunday... or, fly one way Saturday and return any other Saturday within 30 days.. Shirley Bosta, Charles Lynara, Linda Wright, Audrey Berry, and Charles Austin. ' “Annie Get Your Gun” is the first in a series to be presented by the W. C. Theatre this season. Other plays in the series are “The Rivals”, by Sheridan, which will be presented on December 6-8; “The Crucible”, by Arthur Miller, on March 8-10; and “Pinochio”, by Dorothy Stone, on May 4-5. Tickets may be obtained from 2:00 to 5:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday at Aycock Auditorium where the plays will be presented. Admission is $2,00 for adults, $1.50 ETS Accepts Applications Of Salem Students The National Teacher Exami nations, prepared and administered annually by Educational Testing Service, will be given at more than 200 testing centers throughout the United States on Saturday, Febru ary 10, 1962. At the one-day testing session a candidate may take the Common Examinations, which include tests in Professional Information, Gen eral Culture, English Expression, and Non Verbal Reasoning; and one or two of thirteen Optional Examinations designed to demon strate mastery of subject matter to be taught. A Bulletin of Information (in which an application is inserted) describing procedures may be ob tained from the National Teacher Examinations, Educational Testing Service, Princeton, New Jersey. Completed applications, accom panied by proper examination fees, will be accepted by the ETS office during November and December, and early in January so long as they are received before January 12,'1962. for college students, $1.00 for high school students. For further in formation contact Jann Graham at Aycock Auditorium, Women’s Col lege, Greensboro. PlansOf Annual And Archway Are Announced The respective staffs for the Sights and Insights and the Arch way are now involved in making plans for the year and putting the first of these plans into effect. Last week the annual staff super vised the photographing of indi vidual pictures and they expect to begin group shots soon. Aside from these more formal photographs, Ann Sellers and members of her staff have been snapping pictures at every Salem function. Nan Berry was announced as this year’s Freshman Class Editor to the annual, and Lana McFee will serve as Freshman Ad Manager. The annual ad sales are accumulat ing, but more student help is needed. The publication aspects of the annual are on schedule, but all of those plans will remain a secret until June. The staff of the Archway held its first meeting to begin their plans for the literary magazine. First semester, the staff’s major job will be reading material sub mitted by the student body. Mem bers of the Archway staff would like to urge everybody to save their creative themes, poems, and paintings, and turn them in to any member of the Archway staff. A reading committee and the editorial staff will make their selection from the contributions. A great deal of work lies ahead for the staff se cond semester when layouts and details will be worked out. pieomonr munes creations FASHION OVERTbNES Shades of autumn, richly mixed by Joyce to blaze a colorful trail around town. Willotvy heelet in harmony with all your dashing fashion plans. Soft. Slim. Distinctively Joyce! 14.95 BLACK & BROWN DRAGON RED & BLACK “Pops” and ,Myrt relax during a free moment at the Dairy Bam Students Welcome "Pops And "Myrt” To D. B. ft By Louisa Freeman Students who only occasionally take advantage of an important campus activity might be surprised to walk into the Dairy Barn and see a demonstration of the Charles ton “the way we really did it when I was young,” or pietures of a pretty little white house in Wash ington. But to those girls who spend most of their spare time in the Barn, “Pops” and “Myrt” are the nicest new fixtures there, with the possible exception of the air- conditioning unit. Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Stanford came to Winston-Salem from Washington, D. C., where they had owned two restaurants for thirty years. When a redevelopment pro ject was begun, however, the open ing of a freeway forced them to close. Because of his long experience in restaurant work, Mr. Stanford was able to introduce several work saving ideas and improve the ser vice and the atmosphere at the Barn. The most noticeable im provement, of course, is the new air-conditioner, but there is also more refrigeration, more room for storage on shelves, and the idea of writing names on orders. Myrt has added a home-like touch with the flower pots in the windows, and has tried to improve the tunes on the juke-box, “by the request of girls, of course.” When asked how working in a short-order “snack bar” compared to working in a restaurant. Pops said “I guess this is more like playing. The work really isn’t nearly so hard, and my only head aches are the girls!” At this point Myrt added, “Now you know he is just teasing. Don’t write anything like that in the paper.” Myrt feels that this type of work is much less confining, and particularly enjoys the opportunity for breaks, when she can drink a cup of her own coffee or chat with the girls. Pop likes the fact that Salem is a girls’ school because “sometimes too many boys will get a little rough, and I’d hate to have to be strict with ■ them.” To this Myrt added, “No, and I don’t want to be strict with the girls either. This is about the only place on campus wherfe the girls can ‘let their hair down’, (no, don’t say that), and where the girls can relax. I like to see them come in here and talk and laugh and write letters and open packages, even if I do have to clean up all the paper.” Myrt says that working in the Barn fascinates her because of the friendliness of the girls. “And most of the girls are not impatient when they have to wait a little while for an order. I like to get them up in a hurry, but sometimes the rush gets pretty bad.” About this time, Myrt had to leave to wait on a customer, and Pops added, “The main thing I can say about Salem girls is that I was born forty years too soon.’ The only complaint that either Myrt or Pops have, if it can be called a complaint, is that the girls' apparently find the ashtrays too small, for there are cigarette butts on the floor all the time. But then Myrt laughed and said that she 1 really had no complaint about the I girls “I like to see them come over ' here and enjoy themselves.” SALEMITES EAT AT THE PETER PAN STEAKS — SEAFOOD — SALADS OPEN 7:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAYS
Salem College Student Newspaper
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Oct. 27, 1961, edition 1
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