October 29-November 2— Francois Truffaut Film Festival FARENHEIT 451 Friday THE BRIDE WORE BLACK Saturday STOLEN KISSES Sunday MISSISSIPPI MERMAID Monday THE WILD CHILD Tuesday ALL PERFORMANCES AT 8:00 Wake Forest University DeTamble Auditorium, Tribble Hall VIOLA RECITAL—Jerry Horner N.C.S.A. School Auditorium National Association of Teachers of Singing Fine Arts Center, Salem College CLARION QUINTET N.C.S.A. School Auditorium 8:15 p.m. Realtor Speaks The second speaker in Salem’s in formal luncheon meeting with career women was Mary Ann Parrish, director of Residential Housing at Ferrell Realty Company. A gradu ate of Salem Academy and College, she is outstanding as a real estate agent and has brought much success to the two real estate companies with which she has been associated. The discussion was very revealing and it was easy to see that she is not a member of the “blessed are they who marry” cult. She defi nitely believes in marriage and a family, but she stated that a woman should be something more than a stale housewife. Mrs. Parrish started her own real estate career when she was forty out of boredom. But when she be came a widow with two children to support, her training proved invalu able. She also cited the various rewards of her job. One encounters many interesting people and the financial rewards are great. In fact, just this week she closed her largest deal—a $100,000 house. She con cluded her talk by offering her time to help and advise any girls who might be interested in real estate. Outstanding women scheduled to speak in the future include May- ressa Schoonmaker, Attorney, on November 2, Judge Rhonda Billings on November 9, Florence May, City Planner, on November 16 and Louise Thomas, Merchandising Director at Thalhimer’s, on November 23. Reade^'i ^Uzate^: '^UuA^xiaif, if, 1:15 HAPPY HALLOWEEN Volume Llll Salem College, Winston-Salem, N. C., Friday, October 29, 1971 Number 12 Salem Hosts Conference On Problems In Education Children . Business Are Everybody’s What is Our Stake in Public Edu cation ? Dr. Charles Silberman, author of Crisis in the Classroom October 26— Panel Moderator — Dr. William Archie— Mary R. Babcock Foundation Palmer Friend— Associate Superintendent of Education Kenneth Keller— Community leader Elizabeth Welch— College representative Charlie Key—Student Clarice Carter—Teacher William Cope—Parent Schools should turn out students that can teach themselves . . . nur ture confidence to shape their en vironment. Schools should develop the sense of responsibility of the student. Schools should recognize and ac cept individual differences. Dr, Charles Silberman converses with Dr. Chandler. Dr. M. Carl Holman, President of the National Urban Coalition October 27— There is a growing awareness of a need for art educational and cul tural identity which in the past has excluded blacks from the main stream of American life. Parents are a stumbling block in the acceptance of integration. Ad ministrations need to take a unified stand. Who are our schools responsible to ? Dr. John I. Goodlad, Dean of the Graduate School of Education of UCLA October 28— ". . . we have much schooled men devoid of self-understanding and good will toward humanity.”

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view