Volume LXIV Number 6 December 4,1981 The Salemite serving the salem college community since 1920 Exams Begin Dec. 13 Who’s Who Standing, left to right: Sunny Nolde, Jessica Foy, Lisa Godwin, Allison Buice, Kent Watts. Sitting: Carol Ann Moorhead, Katie Davis, Minda Salapong, Mitzi Dooley, Kathy Glover, Lesley Fogleman, Spencer Brugh. Not pictured, Elizabeth Taylor. Who’s Who Thirteen Seniors Selected Thirteen Salem seniors were recently named to Who’s Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges. Students selected are: Spencer Brugh, Allison Buice, Katie Davis, Mitzi Dooley, Lesley Fogleman, Jessica Foy, Kathy Glover, Lisa Godwin, Carol Ann Moorhead, Sunny Nolde, Minda Salapong, Elizabeth Taylor and Kent Watts. Miss Brugh has been a member of the tennis team. Big Four, SNEA, Pi Gamma Mu Honor Society and Arete. Awards she has received include; Amherst County Women’s Doubles Cham pionship in August of 1981, No. 4 Women’s Singles Consolation Championship in the state tournament and Phi Gamma Mu certificate of merit. Miss Buice, a Minnie J. Smith Scholar, has served on the Student Affairs Com mittee ■ and Academic Council. She studied abroad during the spring semester of her junior year, is a member of Arete and editor of The Salemite. Miss Davis has been in volved in Student Govern ment for four years at Salem. She is president of SGA, a member of Arete, Lablings and SEEM. She was a research assistant at Ber muda Biological Station during the summer of 1981. Miss Dooley is a Nell companist for the Salem Academy Glee Club. Miss Fogleman has been involved in Student Govern ment at Salem. She served as treasurer for SGA last year and researched and established the Student Emergency Loan Fund. She serves on Academic Affairs Committee, is a member of the Winston-Salem Symphony Guild and Lablings. Miss Foy has been actively involved in Honor Council while at Salem and is chairman of Honor Council this year. She is a member of Phi Alpha Theta, Arete, Salem Symphony Guild and Elections Committee. Miss Glover is a Chatham Scholar and a member of Alpha Lambda Delta Honor Society. She was a recipient of the Harry S. Truman Scholarship in 1979-80. She is president of Arete and ac tively involved in The Salemite, Model United Nations and College Republicans. Miss Glover spent the spring semester of her junior year at the American College in Paris. Miss Godwin is president of Pi Gamma Mu Honor society, senior representative to ■January Term Committee and a member of Legislative Board. She served as president of Babcock dorm last year and spent the summer of 1981 abroad. In 1981 she was the recipient of Arete and a member of Lablings. She spent the spring semester of her junior year at the University of London and did an internship at the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew. Miss Nolde is a member of Admissions Committee, Dansalems, April Arts, Frem dendienerin and Intervarsity Christian Fellowship. She is a reporter for The Salemite, a member of the Symphony Guild and Intervarsity Christian Fellowship. She was chief marshal her junior year. Miss Salapong is a member of Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, Strong Dor mitory president, a member of Arete, Fremdendienerin and the volleyball team. She was Exam Committee co- chairman her junior year. Miss Taylor is a member of Archways, chairman of April Arts, and publicity chairman for the Symphony Guild. She studied in London during the fall semester of her junior year and did an internship at the Victoria and Albert Museum. see Thirteen, page 2 By Barbara Meskill Exams will be ad ministered beginning at 8:30 a.m. Sunday, Dec. 13, until 12:15 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 19. Exams are self-scheduled; a student may elect to take her exams during any of the specified testing periods of exam week. Each day there will be three exam periods (except for Saturday, Dec. 19, when there will be only the morning session): 8:30 a.m.- 12:15 p.m., 1:30-5:15 p.m., and 6:30-10:15 p.m. Exams sessions will be three hours in duration, though students may report a half-hour early for an exam and turn it in fifteen minutes after the three hours have passed, allowing a maximum of 3 hours and 45 minutes for each exam. The sophomore and senior classes will be distributing exams this year. Members of those classes are urged to volunteer to be distributors and to attend the mandatory meetings regarding exam procedures. If a sufficient number of distributors do not Area Colleges Plan Party sign up or fail to attend the meetings, exam periods which have no distributors will be closed. This diminishes the number of opportunities that students have to take exams.' Familiarity with the procedure will insure an orderly exam week. All exams will be taken in designated classrooms in Main Hall, unless otherwise specified. During exam week, students will enter and exit Main Hall by the front door only. No student should open any of the side doors. No books or papers may be brought into Main Hall, ex cept in the case of open-book exams. A student may not enter an empty classroom to take an exam. However, if all the other students leave the room after completing their exams, a student may continue to work on her exam in that room. In order to insure fairness, there is to be ab solutely no talking about examinations. Should a student need to see a professor while taking an exam, she should call to check if the professor is available. A distributor must then accompany her to the office of the professor. During exam week, twenty-four hour quiet hours will go into effect in all the dorms. All students A College Bash for area schools, to be held Feb. 6, 1982, is being sponsored by will be receiving a letter from the Arts Council Inc. The threxam fiyncHnn*wUh^th!f*ininin0°of "‘shing additional details ^nction with the opening of about the exam system. ^^is year students will sign facility in Winston-Salem. gj^ exam “out” when they Schools included in the event are Forsyth Tech, N.C. School of the Arts, Salem, Wake Forest and Winston- Salem State. Students from each par ticipating school have coordinated plans to make the evening a success. The purpose of the event is to introduce students to Winston Square and to bring area schools together. Enter tainment will be provided and refreshments will be sold. Tickets will be available.prior to the event and at the door. DJ Extends Invitation to Tea by Agneta Perman Folger Glenn Scholar. She is the President’s Prize in member of Arete, Modern Foreign Languages. Ambassadors, Intervarsity and College Republicans. She •s president of the Salem Symphony Guild and ac- Miss Moorhead is co representative to the Lecture- Assembly Student-Faculty Committee, vice-president of “1 hope that everybody will come and enjoy themselves before the onset of exams,” said Dean Virginia Johnson of the Dean’s Tea, which will be held in the Club Dining Room, Dec. 11, between 2 and 4 p.m. Students, faculty and staff are invited to share some relaxing moments and enjoy hot cider, coffee, tea and sugar cake. Large amounts of fresh fruit will be arranged on the tables. Students may take the fruit back to their rooms to eat while studying for exams. The Doan’s .Tea is Dean Johnson’s “Christmas present” to everyone on campus. She extends a special invitation to all new students. take it, indicating the time and the number of blue examination books that they take. They will then sign the exam “in” when they have finished, again indicating the time and the number of blue books which they have used. This procedure will replace the white slips used in previous years. The examination system is run completely by students with much faculty and ad ministrative support. It is designed to give students maximum flexibility in taking their exams. It is important for all students to know the regulations governing the exam procedure in order to maintain order and fairness. Jessica Foy, chairman of Honor Council, explained that “the honor code is the back bone of the exam system and it is crucial that all students adhere to it. It is at exam time that the honor code is at its best and when its ef fectiveness is most clearly evidenced.”

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