Newspapers / Salem College Student Newspaper / March 13, 1964, edition 1 / Page 1
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Volume XLV Room Fees Due April Seventh Room registration fee of $100 I must be in Ralph Hill’s office no I later than 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 17 Each girl’s parents will be sent I a bill. Those paying late will be I placed on the waiting list. To be I able to draw for a room, each girl I must present her receipt which will I have been obtained from Mr. Hill’s I office. 1 If a girl must have a certain room Jfor health reasons, her request, ac- Icompanied by a doctor’s explana- |tion, must be in the Dean of Stu- 1 dent’s Office by April 6. After that [date no change in room assignments Idue to health can be made. I Full details for room drawing I procedure will be put in each stu- I dent’s box after spring vacation. W-S Symphony I Features Wyly Tuesday, March 17, the Winston- I Salem Symphony will perform at the Reynolds High School Audi torium. The program consists of the following: Symphony :No. S in C Minor (Beethoven) ; Sally Wylie, a soloist in the Grass Roots Opera Company, (which is presently on tour in this area) will perform the aria “Ah! perfido” (Beethoven); the aria “Costa Diva” from the opera Norma, (Bellini) ; and “Song to the Moon” from the opera Ruialka, (Dvorak). The program I will be concluded vyith the “Rtis- 1 sian Easter Overture,” (Rimsky- |Korsakow). Several Salem College students I and faculty members are participat ing in the program. Among theh symphony members are Eugene Jacobowsky (violin), Mrs. Betty Crossley (viola), Charles Medlin (cello), and Patricia Early (violin) from our faculty. The students per forming are Frances Speas (flute) [and Josephine Dunbar (violin). i This performance begins at 8:15; I tickets are available at the Winston- [ Salem Symphony box Office and the I cost is $2.00 for adults, $1.00 for [college students. The concert will [be repeated at the Winston-Salem [ Teachers College on March 19. Troy Presents [Senior Recital Beth Troy, a senior from Wil- I mington will gpve her piano recital I On April 6, at 8:30 p.m. in Me-: I morial Hall. I In her recital Beth will play “Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue” (Bach); “Concerto in G Major” I (Mozart); and “Sonata in B Flat Minor” (Chopin). She will also play “Reflects dans I’Eau” (Debussy) I and “Faccata’’ (Pouline). Imme- I diately following this recital, there I will be a reception in the Day Stu- I dent Center. Beth has been taking piano les-' sons since she was four. During I high school she studied under Mrs. I Margaret Sandresky’s late father, I Dr. Vardell. At Salem, she has I been studying under Dean Clemens I Sandresky. I When she was fourteen, Beth played a solo in the North Carolina [Symphony. Also, during her sopho more year here, Beth played with the North Carolina Symphony. After graduation in June, Beth will be planning for her wedding 'on August 8 and then graduate I school at the University of North 1 Carolina in Greensboro next fall. After obtaining her master’s degree, I Beth hopes to teach piano on the college level Salem College, Winston-Salem, N. C., Friday, March 13, 1964 Number 7 : Giirls bathing around the pool, the juke box going full blast, classes being held outside . . . and a flower. High Point Students Show New Art Work At Salem This week Salem College is host to an art exhibit by the students of High Point College. The exhibit is of particular interest to Salem students because it is representative of the work prevalent in college art today. The sketches and colleges exhibited reflect the unrest in our times, as are shown by the variety of subjects and techniques used. The outstanding feature of the exhibit is the diversity of styles exhibited. Each student is working in the medium he desires and there appears to be no lirnit to the extent of media used. The works include styles ranging from a surrealistic . nature to the strict form of the purely academic charcoal drawiiigs, and there is a great deal of im- pressionism expressed by the High Point students. The life drawings in the Day Stu dent Center have strength and sen sitivity. There is a spontaneity and freedom expressed in each of them whiph is typical of college work. Each line drawing creates a mood distinct from the other line draiv- ings and thus shows each artist’s individuality with his medium. The techniques used vary from charcoal and pencil drawings to oil paint dis tributed on the canvas with brush or palette knife. Some of the line drawings are geometric studies reflecting cubism in the simplest form (by way of their intersecting lines and overlap ping planes) and others are realistic drawings. However, m both types of line drawings there is per sonal touch of the artist. Objecti vity as well as non-objectivity is represented in the exhibit, depend ing on the theme and mood ot the work created. One work of particular interest to one viewing the exhibit is a con struction involving furniture knobs arranged on a board in rectangular ANNOUNCEMENT This Tuesday in the Strong Friendship Rooms from 3:30-5 p.m., members of IRS are holding a tea for members of the student body. In charge of this project is Suz anne Worthington. Salemites Vote On Budget In Assembly On Tuesday The student budget fee for 1964-65 has now been studied, approved, and passed by the Executive Committee of the Finance Board, the Finance Board, and Legislative Board. To go into effect, it must be approved by the students. Oppor tunity to vote on the budget will take place Tuesday, March 17, in assembly. The Study Committee, composed of Bobbin Causey, Pam Truette, Julia Miley, Fran Hamer, and Mrs. Margaret Chatham, reviewed the petitions and questionnaires submitted by the organizations. Their recommendations were sent first to the Executive Committee of the Finance Board, which includes the Study Committee, Dr. William White, Marshall Booker, and Dean Amy Heidbreder and Dr. Dale H. Gramley, ex-officio; then to the Finance Board and to Legislative Board for ap proval. The proposed budget is itemized as follows: 1963-64 1964-65 Student Gov’t. Asso. YWCA WRA IRS Class Dues May Day Lecture Series Salemite Sights and Insights Pierrettes Archway TOTAL sections at various elevations. The construction almost takes on a re lief-sculpture form and suggests mechanism; it is a good example of design created from found ob jects. William Mangum of the Salem Art Department sums up the ex hibit when he says: “The range of styles reflects an awareness of hap penings in the contemporary world.” Frances Speas To Give Recital On Friday night, April 3, Frances Speas will give her senior organ recital at 7:30 in Old Chapel. She will play “Toccata in A Minor” and “Partita-Mein Younges Leben Hat Ein End” (Swulinch); Bach Cho rales and preludes “O Lamm Cot- tes Unschuldig” and “Jesu Christus Unser Heiland”; “B minor Prelude and Fugue” (Bach); “Sonata I” (Hindemith); and “Prelude and Fugue in G Minor” (Dupre). Frances also plays the piano and flute. She plays the flute in the Winston-Salem Symphony Orches tra, and she plays the organ at wed dings and occasionally at church. A reception will be held following the recital in the Day Student Cen ter. The public is invited to at tend. $ 1.80 $ 1.80 .85 .85 .30 .30 1.00 7.00 1.15 1.15 .60 .60 3.30 3.30 3.50 4.50 10.00 10.75 (seniors) 13.00 .75 .75 1.00 1.65 $24.25 $32.65 seniors $27.25 There are several significant changes in the budget. Since the student body, by voting on the budget, actually limits or expands the activities of the organizations, it is most important that the student body understand the reasons for these changes. The basic reasons for the four changes in the budget are given below. IRS. The cost of combos has gone up. A good combo like the Catalinas costs $600. The present budget allows only about $250 to put on dances since the regular functions of IRS cost about $200 per year. With the proposed increase, IRS would be able to give a Christmas party in Babcock terrace room and a spring weekend which would include a combo party, a con cert, and a formal dance. A concert with a big name artist who would appeal to the entire student body would need a large per cent of the budget. With such a large increase, there would be no charge for the dance weekend. The study committee endorsed this increase because the results from a student body poll last year showed that 95% would support a raise in the budget. Salemite. This year the amount of national ads has declined because of the curtailment of cigarette ads. The large carry over from previous years and under which the paper has been operating, has dwindled due to the budget cut in 1962. The Salemite has insufficient funds to complete the year’s opera tions. Sights and Insights. This change is merely to distribute equally the amount paid each year. There is no reason for the $3 increase for seniors. The total amount paid in four years would be the same ($43). Archway. One dollar per person is not sufficient for two issues per year. Therefore the study committee recommends an increase to $1.65. In addition to the above changes in the budget, the Study Committee made several recommendations for other budget and non-budget organizations which will be submitted to the or ganizations upon approval by Legislative Board. Legislative Board will also set up a committee for further investigation of several issues which have come up in the study. Freshmen Elect Dorm Presidents; Tillery, James Take Office In Fall Wednesday, March 11, the fresh man class elected the dorm presi dents of Babcock and Clewell for next year. The newly elected pre sidents are Pat Tillery from Macon, Georgia, and Nan James of Green ville, South Carolina. Pat has tentatively decided to be a French major, and she hopes to teach. Water skiing and bridge are some of her favorite activities. This summer she is planning to go to summer school. Nan is undecided about her major and may choose either French or art. She, too, is interested in water skiing as well as eating and sleep ing. Nan will have a job with a bank in Greenville this summer. ATTENTION The Fly in the Hollywood Oint ment: The Anti Formula Film is the topic of Miss Barbara Battle’s discussion during the Humanities Club meeting on Monday, March 16. The meeting will be held in the Day Student Center at 6:30 p.m.
Salem College Student Newspaper
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March 13, 1964, edition 1
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