^wrth Carofrna " MERRY TUP TWir^ HAPPY CHRISTMAS 1 n c 1 vv 1 o NEW YEAR Newspaper o1 the Students of Meredith College Volume XLl MEREDITH COLLEGE, RALEIGH, N. C., DECEMBER 15, 1966 No. 6 Heilman Announces $5 Million Development; Shearon Harris Heads Board to Secure Funds New Buildings To Include Library, Student Center, Gym, Dorm Announcement of plans for a two-phase development progrHin aimed at raising $5 milliou in the next three years and the appointment of a chairman for a rccently>createl Board of Associates who will help secure the funds has been made hy Meredith College President Dr. £. Bruce Heilman. Chosen to head the Board of Associates is Shearon Harris, prominent North Carolina Baptist layman and president of Carolina Power and Light Company. Harris^ job will be to help the college administration and trustees raise money to round oiu present and pre* dictable future physical and program needs aud to place into iiupleinenlation an annual support program which, by 1970, will provide the college with pledged revenues of at least a million dollars for every fiscal year. Harris’ first step on the Board of Associates will be to begin conferring with some twenty*five men and women in the Raleigh*Wake County area who will join the Board in providing impetus for the annual support program. By February, when final plans for the Board^s activities arc to be presented before ihe full Meredith trustee board, the group will have expanded to all major population centers in the state, with committees working under area chairmen in Asheville, Charlotte, Durham, Greensboro, Wilmington, and Winston-Salem. This will not be Harris’ first ven- President Heilman, Mr. Harris, and Mr. Andrews discus development program. Christmas Banquet,Caroling Higlilight Season Festivities The Meredith community will wel come the Christmas season with fes tivities tomorrow night; the tradi tional banquet and caroling will be held before students go “home for the holidays” on Saturday. The 6:00 bullet dmner, always the highlight of pre-Christmas ac tivity here, is a product of long weeks of planning and work by Mrs. Holler and the Icitchen staff, the Student Government Association, the Meredith Christian Association, and the Meredith Recreation As sociation. The lavish and delicious menu, the decorations made by the art department, and the holiday dress of the guests have in the past made the annual banquet one of the most memorable events of the school year. Entertainment for this year’s ban quet includes President E. Bruce Heilman’s “One Man’s Family” singers, who will be making their first appearancc before the entire student body. Also on the program will be carol singing led by the kitchen staff and selections by the Meredith Ensemble, \inder the di rection of Miss Beatrice Donley. Following the banquet, the tradi tional Christmas caroling will begin at 9:00. The MRA has chartered approximately eight buses to carry students over a route including the homes of President E. Bruce Heil man and former President Carlyle Campbell, the Governor’s mansion, and various faculty homes. Upon returning to the campus, each hall will hold its own party, highlighted by “original” entertainment and the exchanging of “gag” gifts. An addition to the Christmas fes tivities this year will be a reception after the banquet given by President and Mrs. Heilman for the faculty, administrative staff, Board of Trus tees, and Board of Associates. This will be the first official college func tion to be held at the new presi dential home on Glen Eden Drive. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16 6:00—Christmos Banquet 9:00—Coroling 11:30—Hall Parties SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17 12:30—Beginning of Christmas Recess ture in support of Baptist higher' education in the state. He is the son of a Baptist minister and is now a deacon, trustee, and Sunday School teacher at Hayes Barton Baptist Church. He is a graduate of Wake Forest College where he also re ceived a law degree. He has served on the Wake Forest Board of Trus tees and is now on the Board of Visitors for the Wake Forest Law School. He is a director of the North Carolina Foundation of Church Re lated Colleges, a group which pro vides financial encouragement for some eighteen member schools in the state. He was named vice-presi dent of Carolina Power and Light I Company in 1960, promoted to gen-1 eral counsel in 1962, and elected president in 1963. The separate $5 million program (Continued on page 3) MEREDITH COLLEGE ADVANCEMENT PLAN FOR 1970 PHYSICAL NEEDS Library $1,000,000 Student Center 800,000 Physical Education 1,000,000 Dormitory 600,000 Campus Improvements to Existing Facilities 900,000 $4,300,000 $ 300,000 FACULTY AND STAFF BENEHTS Salary Upgrading and Fringe Benefits * 300,000 ACADEMIC PROGRAM Curriculum Revision, Faculty Additions, Research, Student Aid 400,000 $ 400,000 TOTAL $5,000,000 ■ W'ill be needed annually after 1970. New FQcilities to Include Resource, Duplication, Art Centers Groundbreaking DateSetfor Library The million dollar Carlyle Camp bell Library, which will be placed under construction at Meredith Col lege in April as the first of four buildings scheduled in a three-year $5 million campaign to round out needed physical and program fa cilities, will be a “learning resources center” and not merely a building to provide more space for stacking books. College officials say that library architect J. Russell Bailey of Orange, Virginia, has done his job to reflect the desire of the campas planning committee to help the collcgc keep pace with the times. In today’s complex and contin- oiini Conslruclloa of the Carlyle Campbell Library, pictured above by archlt«ct J. Russell Dallcy, will begin April IS, 1967 ually changing educational picture, the college library as an invaluable source of references is in an intimate relationship not only with the stu dent of Chaucer and Einstein but also with every student who expects to earn a living in a world where skills are quickly outdated and “con tinuing education” is routine termi nology. The library must contain many and varied references and be planned as a flexible facility that can provide early service on a myriad of developing references. Some features of the new library may have to be explained in detail to graduates of fairly recent vintage. For example, there will be a dupli cating center in the new building, a room of machines which will reflcct the age in which they were born. Roberta Rcsearcher has to plow through many more piles of infor mation than her mother did to do a good }ob on a term paper. Roberta can use a machine to help her copy her references and then go to her dorm to study, leaving her col league access to the library’s only coj>y of a new book on cybernetics.. Another feature not usually found in a college library on a small cam pus will be a ccnter for art. There will be space not only to hang the Picasso an alumna might donate but also room to file inexpensive copies (Continued on page 4)