Volume LIV
Salem College, Winston-Salem, N. C., Monday, October 2, 1972
Number 7
Artist GEORGES ROUAULT, French 1871-1958
Title "Amer Citron" from Cirque de I'Etoile Filante
Medium Colour aquatint, edition of 250
Date 1935 Size 12V2" x 18Vi"
Courtesy of LAKESIDE STUDIO
Davidson Hosts Exhibit
SPECIAL EXHIBITION
A special one-day presentation of
original lithograph, intaglio, seri-
graph and woodcut prints will be
held Friday 6 October from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. in the P’ront Lobby of Cun
ningham Fine Arts Building, David
son College. The public is invited
to view this unique collection of
Lakeside Studio from Lakeside,
Michigan and to meet studio direc
tor John Wilson and east-coast
representative David Berreth, who
will be happy to answer questions
both historical and technical. All
works to be displayed are available
for purchase.
The work to be exhibited here
(valued at over $100,000) contains
prints by old master and modern
master artists such as Albrecht Dur-
er, Jacques Callot, Georges Rouault
and Pablo Picasso. Also there will
be prints by contemporary artists
Leonard Baskin, Garo Antreasian,
Mark Tobey, Sid Chafetz, S. W.
Hayter and many others including
Laura Grosch, Herb Jackson, Marvin
Salz'man and Stephen White from
North Carolina.
The purpose of Lakeside Studio is
two-fold. First, to make available
high quality, original prints to es
tablished and beginning collectors
and, second, to fulfill a need for rap
port with the working printmaker.
Located on five wooded acres over
looking Lake Michigan, yet within
an hour’s drive of Chicago, the stu
dio offers a fully equipped lithograph
and intaglio workshop. These fa
cilities have been set up and oper
ated by master printers trained at
Tamarind Lithography Workshop in
Los Angeles.
Prints by Rudy Pozzatti, Sigmund
Abeles and Misch Kohn, to name
only a few artists, have been printed
and published by Lakeside; a total
of nearly fifteen editions have been
completed so far. The studio also
offers a summer course for profes-
al printmakers. This course is direct
ed each year by various noted artists
sional printmakers. This studio is
located in a 50-room hotel which
w’as once a popular resort and now
provides living quarters for visiting
artists, educators, curators and gal
lery directors.
The Lakeside Studio collection of
over 1000 original prints tours the
country each year, visiting major
museums and universities.
Administration Pick Members,
Announce Faculty Committees
by Mary Ann Campbell
Do you know^ who considers a
proposal for a new course at Salem?
Do you know where to submit a
petition for an overload or under
load of courses ? The newly revised
structure of the Student-Faculty
Committees should make answering
these and other such questions much
easier. Student representatives to
these committees have been selected,
and all of them are eager to make
the committees more influential and
effective than ever before.
The Academic Council is respons
ible for considering all proposed
changes in policy in academic regu
lations. A sub-committee. Academic
Appeals, will act on all petitions sub
mitted by individual students for
permission to take more than 4%
or less than 4 courses. Academic
Council prepares the agenda for the
monthly faculty meetings, and
meets at least monthly.
The Admissions Committee pro
poses all policies concerning ad
mission to Salem, and submits these
policies to the faculty for approval.
The members of this committee,
with the exception of student repre
sentatives, have the power to decide
on individual applications.
This year at Salem should be an
especially important one for the
Curriculum Committee. This com
mittee is responsible for considering
all proposals for new courses, the
deletion of existing courses, and
changes invoving credit for courses.
A proposal for a new course should
first be approved by the department
concerned, then forwarded to the
Academic Dean with the recommen
dation of the department, and sub
mitted to the Curriculum Committee
who must present the proposal to
the faculty for final action.
The January Program Committee
is responsible for compiling and
publicizing programs offered by
Salem faculty during the January
Term. This committee also assists
students with registration for pro
grams at other institutions, as well
as registration for Salem sponsored
courses and independent study.
The Lecture and Assembly Com
mittee meets to plan and schedule
all assembly programs, special lec
tures, and a biennial .symposium
This committee has the power to
determine attendance regulations for
the assemblies, and to administer
the funds provided for tlie commit
tee.
The Library Committee fill func
tions as a special committee this
year to determine policies for the
library, such as opening and closing
hours.
The students representing you on
these committees are anxious to
serve you this year. They will be re
porting to you in special articles in
The Salemite, and need you to re
port to them when you have any
suggestions, ideas, or complaints.
Please let them hear from you!
Academic Council
Jennie Snead 205 Bitting
Nancy Gilliam 203 Strong
Dade Singleton 310 Babcock
Admissions
Pam Langston '
203
Bitting
Debbie Warner
Academy
Barbara Perry
5
Sisters
Cynthia Warren
208
Babcock
Curriculum
Sarah Dorrier
201
South
Irene Kimel
303
Strong
Pam Poe
120
Babcock
Lucy Rose
1
Gramley
January Program
Beth Duncan
206
South
Betsy Hester
230
Clewell
Leigh McDonald
322
Clewell
Lucy Bratten
307
Gramley
Lecture-Assembly
Beth Ogden
105
South
Stuart Taylor
306
Strong
Cindy Lovin
108
Clewell
Debbie Knight
203
Babcock
Library
Marianne DeHart
309
Bitting
Beth Pollard
211
Gramley
Kathy Black
206
Gramley
Career Casing Luncheons
Offer Interesting Visitors
Much to everyone’s surprise, the
Career Casing Program is in full
swing again this year. Hopefully,
however, this year's program wil not
be greeted with the same disinterest
that was so evident last year.
For the information of newcomers,
the Career Casing Program involves
bringing outstanding career women
in Winston-Salem and surrounding
areas to Salem to speak. Last year
tables were set up in the alcove, giv
ing the girls a chance to meet the
speaker before hearing a short des
cription of her profession, future
responsibilities for women in the
profession, and the training that the
profession required. The six people
who regularly attended found these
women helpful and entertaining. .By
having these women on campus,
many girls were encouraged to con
sider unusual careers.
Last year, due to Dr. Karnes, Mrs.
Garrett, Mrs. Mock, Mrs. Stephens
and the faithful six, the program was
kept on its feet. A pamphlet des
cribing activities was sent to pros
pective students, and the pamphlet
received much praise from guidance
counselors, prospective students, and
principals. Many people said that
Salem was the only school known
to have such a program.
This year on Thursday, September
28, the Career Casing Program be
gan with Dianne High representing
the counseling field. She was the
first person from this profession to
speak at the luncheons.
Career Casing will meet every
Thursday at 12:15 in the wing of the
refectory. After lunch, everyone is
invited downstairs to the club dining
room for a 15 minute talk. The meet
ings will be over by 12:45. This
schedule does not interfere with
classes, and the committee hopes
that all students and faculty will
make an effort to attend. Many out
standing women with interesting and
rewarding careers are going to speak
this year; please try to show some
interest in the program, which is
designed for Salemites.
Mangum Exhibit Offers Style
by Barbie Pflieger
Student
Center
Coffee and doughnuts, sugarcake,
or somethin’ sweet will be available
It is not often that students are
given the opportunity to see a dif
ferent side of a man whom they
know primarily as a teacher. Until
October 6, the public and Salem
students are invited to view paint
ings and drawings of William Man-
gum, associate professor of art at
Salem College. The exhibition of Mr.
Mangum’s work, which has been
open to the public since September
24, is on display at the Arts Council
Gallery in Hanes Community Center.
ient of a research grant in 1969
which enabled him to spend time in
France and Italy studying Roman
esque architecture.
in the Student Center on Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday mornings,
9:30-11:00 a.m.
Coffee 10^
Doughnuts 10^
Refills 5«;
There will be a box in which to
place pennies, nickels and dimes for
the food. Thanks to the help of Mrs.
Duncan, if students and profs miss
breakfast they needn’t go hungry.
A native of Kingston, N. C., Mr.
Mangum received training at Cor-
coron School of Art, the Chicago
Academy of Fine Arts, the Art
Students League of New York,
UNC-Chapel Hill and Notre Dame.
One of his public commissions is the
“Lamp of Learning” monument in
Greensboro, N. C. He was a recip-
The exhibit is small but varied.
There are examples of pen and ink,
pencil, oil and mixed media. There
is some realism, but the majority of
the exhibit deals with a series of
expressionistic paintings. These
paintings show a bold style. There is
concern for mood; it is the kind of
style which is unimpressive close to
the painting, but from a distance can
produce some beautifully blended
moods from color. An example of
this is Mangum’s “Tuscon Village.”
Use of primary colors is frequent,
but there are some subtle uses of
colors as in “September Landscape.”
ness in a few of the paintings.
“Beef” is an example of rather un
inspiring painting in this style. As
always in this type of exhibit, it is
not that the artist cannot do realism,
rather, he prefers not to use realism.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Because of a conflict with the
symposium on “Women in Politics,”
Freshman registration for January
Program is postponed from October
11 to October 12. The hours for
registration are from 8:30-4:30 in
the lobby of Main Hail.
The bursts of color and irregular
nature forms are, at times, exciting
although there tends to be a same-
Notice - Recorder Players
The first meeting of the year of
the Salem Recorder Group was held
on September 26. There will he an
other meeting of this group, which
is under the direction of Pierce
Howard, on October 9 at 8:00 p.m.
in Room 191 of the Fine Arts Build
ing. All who are interested in playing
this instrument are welcome.
SALEM COLLEGE LIBRARY
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