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Volume XLII
Salem College, Winston-Salem, N. C., Friday, February 23, 1962
Number 14
Salem Chorus
Will Present
Spring Concert
The Choral Ensemble will pre
sent a Spring concert in Memorial
Hall on May 2- at 8:30 p.m. This
concert will be formal.
The group will present a program
including both religious and secular
music, Kay Ezzell, Sara Kirk, and
lerrine Fuller will provide piano
accompaniment. Accompaniment
will also feature Frances Speas on
the flute and June Beck and Jo
Dunbar on the violin.
A group of twelve girls will sing
a number of secular pieces, among
them “Coming Thru the Rye” and
“Tutu Maramba.” The soloists have
not been chosen.
A special feature of the concert
will be folk songs by Larry Vickers
of Winston-Salem. He will accom
pany his songs on the guitar.
Among the songs he will sing is
“Greensleeves.”
The following is the probable
program for the concert, but may
be subject to change: “Ave Maria”,
“My Lord What a Morning”, “I
Enjoy Being a Girl”, “Tonight”,
“Sound of Music”.
Day Conference
At St. Pauls
“What Difference Does Christ
Really. Make?” will be the theme
of the District Canterbury Confer
ence to be held Saturday, March 3,
at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church. The
Reverend Dick Ottaway, Chaplain
at East Carolina State College and
Curate at St. Paul’s Episcopal
Church, Greenville, North Carolina,
will be conference leader.
Registration begins at 1:30 p.m.,
and at 2:30 Holy Communion will
be celebrated. The first session of
the conference will start at 3 ;00
and the second at 4:45. Supper
will be served at St. Paul’s before
the final session at 7:00. Holy
Communion will be celebrated at
9:30. This service will be cele
brated in two parts; the main body
and work of the conference consti
tuting the offertory.
Other colleges participating are:
A and T, Bennett, Elon, Greens
boro, Guilford, High Point, Wake
Forest, and W i n s t o n-Salem
Teacher’s College.
The registration deadline is Wed
nesday, February 28; $1.25 registra
tion fee should be turned in with
the application. All students in
terested in attending this confer
ence see Margaret Duvall, 202 Bit
ting.
Stee Gee An nounces
'62 Slate Of Nominees
The Legislative Board has announced the slate for major
offices. Petitions to add other names to the slate must be in
to Sallie Paxton by 12:00 noon, Monday, March 5.
Next week the Salemite will continue its election coverage
by publishing the qualifications of the candidates and the ideas
they would like to see carried out by their organizations. The
kick-off banquet will be held March 5 and elections will be
held during assembly period, Tuesday, March 6.
Billy Butterfield
Senior Class Sponsors
Billy Butterfield Sextet
President of Student Government: Gay Austin, Carroll Roberts,
Judy Summerell
Secretary of Student Government: Marguerite Harris, Tish
Johnston, Mason Kent, Marty Richmond, Wookie Work
man
Chairman of Judicial Board: Gay Austin, Heather Peebles, Car-
roll Roberts, Judy Summerell
Secretary of Judicial Board: Tish Johnston, Marty Richmond,
Anne Simons, Wookie Workman
Vice-President of Student Government: Gay Austin,
Marsha Ray, Carroll Roberts, Judy Summerell
Treasurer of Student Government: Prances Bailey, Marguerite
Harris, Frances Holton, Tish Johnston, Wookie Workman
Editor of the Salemite: Becky Boswell, Kay Long
Editor of Sights and Insights: Gay Austin, Betty Black, Joan
Thrower
President of IRS: Mary Jane Crowell, Jane Kelly, Heather
Peebles, Joan Thrower
Chief Marshal: Annetta Jennette, Tish Johnston, Mason Kent,
Mary Lawrence Pond, Irene Rose, Pam Truette
President of YWCA: Mary Jane Crowell, Nancy Kizer, Martha
Still
NSA Coordinator: Vicky Auman, Sally Bacon, Ellen Heflin,
Sandra Morgan, Janet Wales
Chairman of May Day: Betty Black, Anita Hatcher, Jane Kelly,
Nancy Umberger
President of WRA: Nancy Joyner, Betty Gail Morrisey, Sue
Smith, Joan Thrower
President of Pierrettes: Virginia Anderson, Lousia Freeman,
Liz Wilson
President of the Day Students: June Beck, Kay Ezzell, Beth
Pordham, Pat Ward
Editor of Archway: Diana Wells, Liz Wilson, Nancy Umberger
Dr. Gokhale Teaches New
Asian Civilization Course
Announcement
On March 27, at 8 p.m., in Me
morial Hall, the senior class of
Salem College is sponsoring the
Billy Butterfield sextet. Tickets
were on sale for $3.00 per person
on Wednesday and Thursday in the
Student Center. Tickets may be
bought for people other than col
lege students by seeing any mem
ber of the senior class.
Billy Butterfield, the head of the
sextet, is one of the most promi
nent trumpeters in the music field
today. He first gained prominence
as a member of Bob Crosby’s Bob
cats. Mr. Butterfield joined this
group when he was in his early
twenties, and gained even further
notice as a songwriter when he and
Bobby Haggart collaborated on the
song “What’s New?” Later, he
joined one of Artie Shaw s or
Anyone who wishes to contribute
to the Lewis E. Harvie Memorial
Fund should do so by March 8.
Any student or faculty member
who would like to place a book on
the memorial shelf should give
notice to Sue Parham, 304 Bitting,
not later than March 8.
Movies
chestras, doubling with the Gra-
mercy Five from time to time.
Until going into the army, he
played with Benny Goodman.
Dotty Smith, a vocalist who of
fers renditions from the blues to
modern swing, is featured with Mr
Butterfield.
Helen Dunlop, a vocalist who ac
companies herself on the guitar,
will also be featured on the pro
gram. She has traveled more than
60,000 miles collecting and swapping
folk songs. Miss Dunlop came to
the world of folk music when she
broadcast programs of folk songs
to the people of France following
the Liberation. She began these
extensive folk singing and collect
ing pilgrimages while a member of
the Secretariat of the United Na
tions.
A new course entitled Asian
Thought and Civilization will be
offered next year. It will satisfy
group requirements in Social Stu
dies.
The course will be a “comma
course”, each semester providing
three hours of credit; no prerequi
sites for either semester are re
quired. The course is set up pri
marily for juniors and seniors, but
sophomores may take it with
special permission of the instructor.
It is anticipated that Dr. Balkrishna
Gokhale will teach the course.
Course materials will mainly be
drawn from the Hindu, Buddist,
Moslem, and Confucian-Taoist tra
ditions.
The following topics will be
covered during the first semester:
1) Authority and human freedom:
nature and functions of the state.
Stee Gee Sponsors New Contest
Carolina
“The Three Stooges Meet
Hercules”
Winston
“Tender is the Night”
“Does everybody wear write
socks and Veejuns? . . . Vat 1st der
‘Twist’? ... I don’t beh-e-e-e-ve
it! . . . Does me date alone?”
How would you respond to these
comments on American custonis?
How would you answer a foreign
student’s questions on Amencan
political thought in action? How
would you, as a foreign students
roommate, introduce her to a girls
school ?
This year there is a new plan
for choosing roommates for foreign
students. Those girls interested in
rooming with a foreign student
during the next school year will
be asked to submit a brief essay
dealing with the following ques
tions :
1) In what way can you help the
foreign student to adapt to our
standing of our customs, and
, campus living, achieve an under-
' achieve an appreciation of our cul
ture ?
! 2) What problems do you foresee
in rooming with a foreign student
and how would you solve them ?
This essay, followed by a discus
sion with the Selection Committee,
will determine the final choice. The
Selection Committee will be com
posed of House Counselors, stu
dents, and faculty. The students
who are chosen to room with a
foreign student will have a choice
of dorm and room during room
drawing in April.
Entry blanks may be obtained
from your house president and
should be turned in to Sallie Pax
ton, 204 Bitting, by March 28. Stu
dents from all classes may apply.
bases of loyalty, right to revolution,
nature of law and sources of law,
administrative details.
2) Economic Organization and
Welfare: ideas on taxation, trade,
commerce and the profit-motive;
concepts on village, town and city;
ideas on the community; ideas on
people and commodities as instru
ments of economic welfare.
3) War and Peace: ideas on war;
its necessity, justification, condem
nation; laws of war and non-vio
lence ; role of war in civilization.
4) The Sense of History: ideas on
the concept of time, change, caus
ality; motive forces in historical
changes; deterministic and divine
motivational theories; history and
civilization.
Second semester the course will
include:
1) God and man: theories on
creation, nature of the world, illu
sion and reality, divine will in the
world; problems of good and evil.
2) Beauty: aesthetic theories; ideas
on form, harmony, rhythm architec
ture, sculpture and painting, and
ideals of beauty in the art-forms,
human spirit as perfection.
3) Pleasure: sources of pleasure,
literature, music; the role of the
concept of pleasure in civilization;
attachment to pleasure, and ideas
of renunciation of pleasure.
4) Perfection: Ideas on individual,
social and ethical perfection; ethics
and ethical concepts; theories of
salvation and liberation of the