Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC)

 - Class of 1963

Page 1 of 184

 

Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collection, 1963 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1963 Edition, Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collectionPage 7, 1963 Edition, Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1963 Edition, Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collectionPage 11, 1963 Edition, Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1963 Edition, Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collectionPage 15, 1963 Edition, Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1963 Edition, Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collectionPage 9, 1963 Edition, Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1963 Edition, Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collectionPage 13, 1963 Edition, Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1963 Edition, Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collectionPage 17, 1963 Edition, Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 184 of the 1963 volume:

T e suRe •0 -N ' W31VS-N0iSNIM nv3Mna sw3M SALEM COLLEGE NEWS BUREAU WINSTON-SALEM N r Granfley DBrary Salem Academy and Co ' lege Winston-Salem, N.C. 27lu8 il Siohts and Insights 963 Volume 61 Student Publication Salem College Winston-Salem, N. C. EDITOR: GAY AUSTIN BUSINESS MANAGER: BETTY BLACK ' • .ir • • iLfc •«= StSgpi Iggl x ■-S !: M. ' ' .- ' ' . ■ - n he light and V the truth Gay Austin, Betty Black, Ella Raymond, Donna Raper, Lucy Lane Riddle, Joan Thrower, Candy Chew, Diana Wells, Kay Kearns, Mary Lawrence Pond, Nan Berry, Anne Strain, Jacky Barker, Virginia Anderson, Julie Johns, Jean Snyder, Linda Hodges, Anne Benson, Zim Zimmerman, Fallie Anne Lohr, G. G. Saun- ders, Ginger Matthews, Carolyn Bridgers, Betty Benton. If ; ■ t ' r 1 4 .. wtf V il m m li H mas CONTENTSsn PROLOGUE . DEPICATIO FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATION 1 STUDENTS ! r ORGANIZATIONS  HONORS .1 123 EPILOGUE PROLOGUE Light is the symbol of trutli. Believing this we come to this place in this time. We looked about us and there was truth, but untruth was present . . . and fear . . . and doubt . . . and anxieties . . . and laughter . . . and friendship . . . and excitement . . . and success — in the shadow of the light. We moved into the shadow and wandered for four years. Often it seemed that our wandering went in a circle like the halo of the candle Ijut not so steady; often it was a labyrinth: it was dark. In the beginning, we found that truth was precious and obscure and new. Our old ways might help us but this new darkness was a foreign place. Seeking we turned to a roonnnate and a friend and found companionship in our darkness. There are other girls and they wonder ... in a lab. in a term paper, in a letter home. They wonder ... in the midst of a fraternity party, under a hair dryer, at an all night booking session, in a required assembly, in a Christmas card from Dr. Gramley. They wonder . . . watching a cigarette burn through a filter. A faculty member hands us truth and we ' re frightened by it. A young man hands it lo us and calls it the joy of love. A classmate hands it to us and it is understanding and warmth. We stare at this oblong blur and know it to be awesome, secure, and complete. Finally, we give the oJdong blur finite lines. We light anotiier candle. We lean back to appreciate the glow of our candle. A girl taps us on the shoulder. Startled — we had not known she was there — we turn. There are many candles — slender, stately, crooked, tallowed: It is no longer dark. DEDICATION . det sliudders from tlie impact of an open palm pound- ing repeatedly on its battered surface . . . the emphasis of a point he wants to make ... a chair groans under the continuous movement of its occupant ... up and down and up again . . . a piece of chalk breaks in his hand and receives vehement criticism, because he always gets bad chalk ... a blackboard bears strange white marks that represent his written conuiuinication with his students . . . the smallest brown loose leaf notebook contains his notes on material he wants to give his class . . . small pages with even smaller handwriting ... a meager outline of great knowledge of his subject . . . this is his classroom, his subject, his profession . . . constant move- ment symbolizing energy and enthusiasm that must express itself. A bit part in Senior Follies ... a muscle-sore athlete on FITS day . . . gruelling three-hour sessions with the Faculty Advisory Board . . . a sincere interest in our affairs and proiilems ... a deep confidence in our maturity and aliility ... an open disappointment when we fail him and fail ourselves ... a frankness and honesty we respect and appreciate ... a concern for Salem and its growth . . . for us and our growth . . . a continual urging for us to become aware . . . aware of ourselves . . . aware of our world . . . energy and enthusiasm that must express itself. A childlike grin and a polite shyness . . . a voice that speaks with warmth and echoes of Virginia . . . feet that shuffle down the hall at a slightly pigeon-toed angle . . . khaki pants a iiit too short and blaring ties ... a round tinnniy that persistently pokes over a well-worn bnlt . . . shaggy, sandy hair and tortoise shell glasses ... a complete dishevelnient that grows into an endearing uniqueness and charm . . . we, the Senior Class, acknowledge our grateful- ness and love, A. Hewson Michie, Jr. 10 :|| 11 li [ p n h i 1 I- . _ 1 1 1 . z ji 1 J -I Faculty and Administration They give iis light . . . il iii;i lie a sniilc. an A, or even an iiiMiit. With a strange coniliiiiatidii of uiulcistaiuling. inihiigenee, and im- patience, they give themselves to us . . . and more importantly, tiiey force us to give to ourselves. The gifts are tl-.e usual ones of an academic comuuuiity — knowledge and malnritv. Iiut there is even more in the gift. It is fun ... a shared cup of coffee, a mutual gripe over one more meeting, sleepy eyes at an 8:30 or a Saturday 11:15. It i. ' determination . . . that we can govern ourselves, that we liehave as ladies, that we know when to cut. It is faith . . . that we can create an intellectual atmosphere, that we want to work lor a lacultv which is unafraid In let its standards show, that liberal arts makes lis tridy dedicated women. These gills are nni(|uelv ours — for our faculty is Lnii(pielv ours. With oildilies. practical jokes, irri- tation — thev ha e given ns those ihinus we will take li ' om Salcni. 13 14 15 Dr. Dale H. Gramley Announcing man on tlie hall. he drops in on a Salemite meeting. Pour- ing apple cider, he discusses the year ' s program with student government members. Lighting a Camel, he asks you to sit awhile in his office. And he talks to you, — talks honestly to you. The conversation concerns plans after college, or that boy he saw with you last Saturday or the 20th Decade Fund. Call this cjuality experience with peo- ple, tact of a college president, and gentleness found in a fine person — call it all these things and you are cor- rect. But call it the specialness that makes Dr. Dale H. Gramley necessaiy to us and you have spoken truth. Clemens Sandresk ' t. Dean of the Schuul nl lii-.i ' li I . Hlxson. Acadewir Dean I Ann K. Hetilbreiler. Dean ol StuJinls Ralph Hill. Comptrollei Wktl ' . « H L ' : J i H 5 fc IP iM A Margaret Sinijtsin}. Riitinit ' Ja(l, n liilc. AsmUuil lu the I ' rcsidinl 18 I dCUlXy . . . ART: Lena A. Albright, B.A.; William G. Mangum, M.A.; David Wurtzel, M.A.; BIOLOGY: Roy Jones Campbell, M.P.H.; Matti Al-Aish, Ph.D.; CHEMISTRY AND PHYS- ICS: B. Carson French. Ph.D.; Bertram Oliver Cosby, M.S.; Thomas E. Austin, M.A.; CLASSICAL LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE: Ivy May Hixson, Ph.D.; Lucy E. Austin, Ph.D.; ECONOMICS AND SOCIOLOGY: Robert Lewis Wendt, M.A.; Henry Marshall Booker, M.A.; Stuart Deskins, Ph.D.; EDUCATION AND PSYCHOLOGY: Sadie Elizabeth Welch, Ph.D.; James Lee Bray, Ed.M.; Lucia R. Karnes, M.A.; Barbara Behrens Hills. Ph.D.; ENGLISH AND DRAMA: Jess Lucile Byrd, M.A.; Wil- liam Beckler White, Ph.D.; Stephen Curtiss Paine, Ph.D.; Barbara Helen Battle. M.A.; Florence Catherine Spencer. M.A.; HISTORY: Mildred Inzer Byers. Ph.D.; A. Hewson Michie. Jr.. M.A.; Balkrishna Govind Gokhle. Ph.D.; David Alan Harris, M.A.; Changboh Chee, Ph.D.; HOME ECO- NOMICS: Margaret Petrea Snow, M.Ed.; Fay Chandler Honeycutt, M.S.; MATHEMATICS: Arley Theodore Curlee, M.A.; Lloyd Benton Smith, M.S.; MODERN LANGUAGES: Lucile Vest Scott, M.A.; Mary L. Melvin. M.A.; Harold Michael Lewis, Docteur; Wilmer D. Sanders, M.A.; June Chandler Parker. B.A.; Juan Miranda, A.B.; Carol Demies Schmidt, A.B.; PHYSICAL EDUCATION: Anne Woodward, M.A.: Carolyn Cox, B.S.; RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY: Mary Stewart Hill, Ph.D.; Walser Haddon Allen, Jr., M.A.; SCHOOL OF MUSIC: Mary Frances Cash, B.M.; Louise Cox Bowen, Piano Diploma; Paul Willard Peterson, M.M.; Margaret Vardell Sandresky, M.M.; Ralph Robert Bell. B.M.E.: June Louise Samson, M.A.; Eugene M. Jacobowsky, M.A.; Joan E. Jacobowsky, M.A.; Hans Heideman, B.M.; Clemens Sandresky, M.A.; Frances Home Avera, M.M.; Charles R. Medlin; JohnS. Mueller, M.M.; Donald M.McCorkle, Ph.D.; Margaret Snodgrass Mueller, M.M.; Richard J. Bloesch. M.S.M.; Helen Smith, M.A.; Nancy Wurtele, M.S.; Emily Richardson Kellam, B.M.; Par- tricia Robinson Early, B.M. 19 MW : C jam «i- li II -r- ACADEMIC DEAN I RECORDER ' . , T t4X ,- 7?WBr- 5l I l l ... a senior is a twenty-two year old girl full of plans and tired of study. She has taken forty hours of work in her major and holds a teaching certificate. She had de- cided that . . . meals in the refectory could never be worse, every course she takes changes by magic from crip to cram, a cigarette and a cup of coffee are enough to start the day, the companionship of friends is more important than study, assemblies are a bore, meetings are nebulous, you can ' t change people, and faculty are fun. A senior enjoys . . . unlimited overni ghts, a Broadway-reflected senior follies, the funny smell of Moravian candles, the knowledge that blind dates are seldom successful, and a cocktail party. A senior marks off . . . orientation, the sight of white beanies, blue books, the last letter home for more money, summer jobs, spring vacations, ' ' how was your date from thirty other girls, and classes. A senior can be seen ... at a typewriter with a placement annual, usmg a free phone, ignoring her post ofSce box. and painting her nails in the study room. A senior is proud of . . . her unhemmed cap and gown, knowing she ' s a senior, a white fence that encloses an important square, Mr. Snavely ' s grin because she still owes him money, being able to tell underclassmen how thin-s were done, an annual she wrote, a tattered lab coat, and a private art lab on the fourth floor. A senior smiles because . . . she ' s on this side of four years of college, everyone else knows who her Bill is, her practice teaching is over, and Mr. Michie is proud of her. A senior gets a lump in her throat because . . . reading an alumnae bulletin is not being here, independence just turned the cor- ner, she can ' t say see you next year, and she packs her car for the last time. 22 Lett to right: Kay Kcarns. treasurer : Anne Benson, serreiar , Jat k I ' lirk ' -r. riif-j)restf}ent. Miirsha Hus, I ' re.snleni ul the Senior (.lass 23 24 V ' : 25 NoRMiE Black Abercrombie Greenwood. South Carolina Virginia Dowdell Anderson Charlotte. North CaroHna Sallie Gay Austin Ocala, Florida Jacquelyn Alice Barker Falls Church, Virginia 26 A E Bakksdale Leaksville. North Carolina BoNME Ann Bean Jallrey. New Hampshire June Kathleen Beck W inston-Salem. North CaroHna Anne Sti kt Benson Sta|p villc. North Carolina 27 Elizabeth McLean Black Wilmineton. Nmili Caioliiia Eugenia Turner Blackwood Greensboro. North Carolina Eva Elizabeth Bobbitt Glen Alpine. North Carolina Rebecca Lena Boswell Charlotte, North Carolina 28 May Wheat Bravvley Salisburx. Ncirtli Canilina Mahgahet Evelyn BRdvvN l)a i(lMiii. Ninth (iarcilina C T}iERi. E Byrnes Bu.ndy Mountain City. Tennessee Margaret Adams Chew Alexandria. Virginia 29 -«s, Dean Major Clifford Winston-Salem. North Carolina Linda Wall Combs Winston-Salem, North Carolina Si ' E Maclin Cook Huntington, West Virginia Betty Lou Creech Ahoskie. North Carolina 30 Mary J ne Crowki.l iiuolntiin. Niirth Carolina Jank Elaim: Dim, Wiiiston-Salem. North Carolina • ' « •v Patricia Angela Eskew Spartanburg. South Carolina Margaret Ann ' e Evans Greenville, North Carolina 31 Kav Olivia Ezzell Winston-Salem. North Carolina Margaret Carolyn Farrow Wilniineton. North Carolina Virginia Kay Fortson Jacksonville, Florida Constance Ann Fowler Jacksonville, Florida 32-. CoRNf:i.i Louisa Freeman Columliia. Si)iilh Carolina Elizabeth Carroll Gillam Windsor. North Carolina Bex Suzanne Harrell Newton. North Carolina Anita Louise Hatcher Fa ette ille. North Carolina 33 AiNNE Morgan Heath Charlotte. North Carolina Mary Douglas Heinrich Richmond, Virginia Mary Dabney Henderson Richmond, Virginia Fave Lajlne Herring Snow Hill. North Carolina 34 Margaret Loitse Higcins insttin-Saleni. North Cari;)lina Carolyn Virginia Himmkl Winston-Salem. North Carolina Mary Leslie Hlntley v adeshoro. North Carolina Anne Langdon Hutaff Favetteville. North Carolina 35 Si Julia Carol Johns Asheboro. North Carolina Clarissa Ann Joyce Raleigh. North Carolina Nancy Joyner Asheboro, North Carolina Katherine Whittier Kearns High Point. North Carolina 36 Jane Winston Kelly Durham. North Carolina Nancy Glass Kizer Asheboro, North Carolina i,. i I N -• Mary Nell Lee Smithfield. North Carolina Mattie Gay Lee Dillon. South Carolina 37 Barbara Kay Long Elkin. North Carolina Helen Anne McArver Gastonia. North Carolina Betty Gail Morisey Clinton, North Carolina Mary Elizabeth Norman Zanesville, Ohio 38 SiGRID OlINE OsTBORG Favelteville. North Carolina Jo Phifer Patton Wiiiston-Salem. North CaroHna He tiier Peebles Arlinojtnn, Virginia DdTT ' l MmUE PdOSKR Marion. Noith (!arohna 39 rt T Marsha Gill Ray Oxford. North Carolina Ja-ne Calhoun Hayinor Vancouver. B. C. Canada Robin French Rhodes Jacksonville, Florida Lucy Lane Riddle Winston-Salem, North Carolina 40 4k Carroll Speight Roberts Durham. North Carolina Georgiv Goodsom Saunders Winston-Salem. North Car jlina Elma Sue Smith Mount Airv. North Carolina LuciND.A Lewis Smith Alexandria, Virginia 41 Martha Anderson Still Raleieli. North Camlina JuLL Wainright Summerell Gastiinia. North Carolina Nancv Williams Sustare Nashville. North Carolina Janet Gayle Swelim Whiteville. North Carolina 42 Martha Jaine T.allman Augusta, Georgia Norma Joan Thrower Greensboro. North Caro lina Rhonda Eugenia Turner Winston-Salem. North CaroHna Nancy RosA H)Nl) I Muekger Kiiigsporl. Tennessee 43 l - ' V Elise Clair Vitale Rehoboth Beach. Delaware Helen Elizabeth Ward Seroe. Colorado Aruba. Netherlands Antilles Patricia Queen Ward Winston-Saleni. North Carolina Barbara Eugenia Watson Winston-Salem. North Carolina 44 I)i N Grw Wells New Canaan. Coiiiiccticut Frances Mewborne Whitty New Bern. Noilli Carolina Barbara Harrington Willlams Winston-Salem, North Carolina Sally Glenn Williams Winston-Salem. North Carolina 45 Alice Elizabeth Wilson Raleigh. North CaroUna Harriet Elizabeth Wilson Cascade. Virginia Sheena Warren Woods Charlotte. Norlh Carolina 46 47 m 48 Din ■■■ nin iiin ■IH r- J nifi Jl Kf K S k 1:1 1 HH %- .- :r- liili MaMM ' J u n i o rs .. „„.. „,,. .,„„ „.,.,. „. . . . „ „„ „„,. „, miiiiliei liut we lived in eonipletely junior ' dorms, e were taking math and German or English and history — we concentrated on our chosen fields. We learned that there were seven basic points in a good bulletin hoard and that education units could not be done over-night. We looked up to Seniors and knew we would never wear caps and gowns. But slowly we gained momentum and became an ac- tive class. We beat trashcans at 7 A.M. and announced that we wanted to he a part of FITS. We wel- comed little sisters and protected them one night — barring Sophomores from Strong and South. We smiled and knew that they would learn Salem and love Salem and wonder that time had passed so quickly. We enjoyed our sorority house atmosphere, knowing after two years that Johnny was a tall blond and Tom was just too short. ' The boyfriends of our junior sisters became individuals to us. We stood in the halls when the firemen invaded and became accustomed to a stairwell for a greet- ing place and to falling out of Sisters from door onto front campus. The noises of the refectory at 6:30 A.M. make Strong residents groan and if one more organ major practices at 8 A.M. on Satur- day in Old Chapel — and Sister ' s basement is cobblestone — can you believe it — but this is the small dorm and were glad. 50 ■ P 1 I ni P . . 1 1 B ' i m t - ' i 1 1 ! n | J ■ E V w£ V H ■ gri li rent- Rose. i ' rt ' suU ' iit vl thr jiimor i lus 51 1 First Row: Pat Ashby, Ann P. Austin. Frances Bailev. Ann Best. Seccin d R o« ; Katliy Chalk. Claudia Crawford, Anne Dudley, Jo Dunbar. Third Row: CHffie Elder. Susan Ellison. Anne Mason Field. Jenny Fields. Fourth Row : Suzanne Forbes. Diane Fuller. Becky Gaddy. Becky Gas- ton. Fifth Row: Barbara Gott- srhalk. Virginia Gray, Anne Griffis. Lynn Hall. f £ ritfNv V fj X 52 ■ fl f t • l ' ii l l!inv : laiic llanling. Mar jaiir llairi ' ll. Mar- gui ' iili ' Harris. liuDiiic llauch. Si-conil Kiivv: jaiif llcdg. |ii ' th. Frant-es Hiiltcin. Jan llnriier. Susan Hum- jjlireys. rhii l Kiiu : Nancy I.vtle lluUliins. Anne Ingram. Liz Irwin. Mary Jackson. Fourth Row: Annetia Jeanetl( . Barliara John- son. Betsy Johnson. .Susie Johnson. Fifth Row: Letilia Jolni- ston. Ma-son Kent. Sandi Kinihrell, Kit King. 53 Ei vei Fir t Row: Sarah Kirk. Nancv Knott. Jackie La- mond. Pat Lee. Second Row: Fallie Ann Lohr. Paula MacPherson. Frances McClain. Marilyn McGrath. Third Row: .Ann Marie Martin. Susan Martin. Virginia Matthews. Landis MiUer. Fourth Row: G. G. Monk. Lvnne Morrison. . lex Mount. Beckv Newsome. Fifth Row: Virginia Pad- gett, Barry Padrick, Marty Paisley. Peggy Parrish. f 54 First Row: IVgsy Pi ' rkiiis. Mar l.awrPMio Pdiul. Susan l uri!ii . Donna Haj)pr. Seidntl Row: Ella Ray- iunnd. Marllia Reed. Alice Reifl. Marlv Riehmimd. % 1 liird Row: Aurelia Rob- ertson. Anne Roniig. Irene Rose. Mary Stewart Rosenblatt. Fourtb Ro w: Connie Rucker. Bunnie Salsbur) . Trudi Schinidl. Ka e Shu- gart. Fiftb How: Anne Simons, . andra Smith. Shelia Smith. Olivia Cole Sowers. 55 First Row: Frances Speas. Ann Stafford. Zena Strub. Elizabelh Svkes. m Second Row: Ela ' ne Tay- loe. Mar Alice Teague. Marv TenEyck. Frances Trapnell. r p Third Row: Beth Troy. Pamela Truette. Carolyn T son. Jodv Vance. 14 Fourlh Row: Barbara White, Martha Ann Wil- liams. Sarah Wills. Judy Wilson. Fifth Row: L nda X ils.on. Eleanor Workman. Anna Zimmerman. Mary Ann Zimmermann. Jackie Zip- perer. 56 . ' ' ■■ ' m -: ' .. .. 5? . ' ::0- x Sin i«5:: : .tf i ■m r-S i .vi . A .-. ' ' 1  T. i ,r :m Sophomores , September brings summer ' s end, registration, and the return of friends ... we return and we are no longer on the bottom . . . from our safe, secure, and somewhat sophisticated position we scan the depths . . . we wonder how much smarter they are and how much better looking, if any . . . FITS arrives in all its glory and suddenly we know and like her better ... we are pleased when she asks our advice, concerned when she is depressed, in- sulted when she tries to get us a blind date . . . because we are sure of ourselves, secure in our status . . . but this is the year for the slump . . . we sit and wait for it to come ... in the meantime, we play bridge, change our majors, and check the post office . . . we become more involved . . . we build sets and attend lectures ... we even attend classes . . . except on weekends . . . we at- tend Davidson, we attend Carolina . . . excitement is our watchword and parties our addiction . . . we are pleased with our position, we think . . . we are not always pleased with our courses, we think . . . but we don t know . . . sometimes we stop to look at ourselves but we don t like to look too long or too deep . . . because we are too busy . . . but secretly we wonder where we are going . . . what is our direction ... we ask our professors, they ask us ... we cut classes . . . we move, we attend, we stop to look at ourselves ... we are pleased with oui; reflections, we think, we move . . . we stop, we look, but do we listen ... we are busy . . . with a banquet before Clnistmas . . . with a schedule to meet on and off campus ... we are secure, we think, but are we satisfied . . . will we transfer . . . will we stay . . . why . . . where is the slump . . . wheie are we . . . we are sophomores, we know. 58 k . m Sandni Morgan. i resuUnl t. f ihc sophomore t ass y-i r .f M If o right: Ethel I ' trry. scrietur) . .Susan Harn ori. licf-pi esiiU ' nt . Ffurtf.ic Lou Jtuncs, trciisurtr. 59 m First Row: Jane Allen. Kay Ascough. Vicky Au- man. Nan Berry. Second Row: Myrtie Moon Bilbro. Barbara Bleakly. Noel Boardman, Babs Bodine. Third Row: Susanne Boone. Carolyn Bridgers. Gaye Brown. Almira Bru- ton. Fourth Row: Pat Bryant. Betty Bullard. Beyerly Butler. Helen Butt. Fifth Row: Mary Can- non, Charlotte Carter, Robbin Causey. Donald Clark. 60 i p,0 First liiiu ; Doris Cooper. Mary ( ' ooprr. Judy Cor- belt, Sandra Corlictl. c It '  • Second Row : Maxine Crini. Carohii (Crouch, Cainnn Cmwi ' ll. Dotiip |)a is. Third Row: Page Day. Sally Day. Aline Dearing. Valerie Denning. F(jurth Rcnv: Debhy Douglas. Daphne DuKate. Sue Eagles. Margaret Ed- wards. Fifth Row: Carohn Eger- lon. Sue Elmore. Mar El- len Eiiior). Janie Fleenor. 61 9£M First Row: Marsha For- rester. Barbara Gardner. Bettv Gardner. Nancy Gardner. Second Row ; Joanne Gar- rard. Anne Gore. Mary Graves. Bettv Clark Gray. Third Row: Nancy Grif- fin. Rita Griffith. Linda Earle Gunn. Sue Har- rison. 1 6 Fourth Row: Sally Har- shaw. Betsy Hatton. Har- riet Havwood. Ellen Hef- lin. 1 fc. Fifth Rciw: Bonnie Hem- rick. Linda Hodges. Feme Houser. Cackv Hubbard. ' m 62 I ' iisl l!o : ari( Huf lics. Sue lluriiphnns. Frankie l.uu James. Barbara Jdhn- son. Sfiond Row: Jerry Julii ■ 1111. Kay Kell. Karen Kc U. Anne Keiulriek. V riiird K(uv: Betsy King. Joan Elizal elh King, Karen Kropjj, Panna Lane. Fourth Row: Zan La- Roque. Tinka Lee. Susan Leigh, Dehbie Linton. Fifth Row: Joan I ukens. Linda Lyon. Lana Mc- Afee. Lvnne McClement. 63 First Row: Jodi McDor- man. Wendy McGlinn. Marianna McLean. Babs McRae. Secoiul Ruw : Sue Maier. Becky Matthews. Julia Milev. Katie Minnick. Third Row: Beth Moore. Sandra Morgan. Mae Murchison, Patty Nash. Fourth Row: Dale Neese. Betsv Patterson. Brandon Patterson. Billie Peele. t Fifth Row: Ethel Perrv. Allison Pollard. Beth Pre- vost. Louise Price. V 64 I © 7 ?7 If- I ' irsl l!c « : Su ii- Uahlrri. Lisa Rankin. Millie Ka- venel, I ' al Kedfi ' in. Second Row : Bilsie Rii h- lieinier. Marti Ross. Nancy Rouzer. . ' arah Ru|)prcclil. riiird Row : C. G. Sapp, Uiane Sliuil, .Sally Smart!, Susan O. Smith. Fourth Row: Jean Snyder, Susan Steere. Roddy Stout. Rplh Sullivan. Fifth Row: Mary Talley. Hume Ta lor. Sara Thom- asson. Pat Thompson. First Row: Kim Thorn- hill. Kitty Trask. Frances Tvnes. Janet ales. Second Row: Dade Wall. Carol Weidner. Floride Williams. Jeanne il- liams. .-« V a V I Third Row: Marianne Wilson. Pat Wilson. -7 ' ' s 66 v !%•■ tiiim- • ■-! • ' r B nSfl! iSHHiiiiiittei Freshmen Salem . . . class of 66 . . . orientation . . . the lost expres- sion sometimes vanishes heneath a sudden wave of confidence . . . high school does it . . . were yon a cheerleader, too . . . our crowd . . . you wonder if the crowd feels as lonely as you do now . . . that girl over there . . . who is she . . . she looks like a friend from home, hut . . . what will the in- firmary do hesides check for athlete ' s foot . . . first placement tests and now dancing Baptists . . . rules . . . she expects me to learn them all hut she still looks them up . . . cluhs ... so they ' re our campus leaders . . . the organization women . . . well. I came here to learn . . . sophomores are the noisiest people . . . veiling, hugging, squealing . . . that girl over there . . . how do you hecome such close friends . . . out of the first hours, days, W ' eeks of confusion comes an ordered schedule of in- struction and obligation . . . and a place somewhere . . . hig sisters . . . FITS . . . air raids . . . we re a group now . . . study rooms . . . too many hlind dates . . . not enough overnights . . . fra- ternities . . . hull sessions . . . where s the intellectual atmosphere . . . why don t we . . . hut let ' s wait ' til after homecoming . . . out of the order arises chaos . . . midsemesters . . . light cuts, coffee, mayhe tears. Init suddenlv it ' s Thanksgiving . . . the crowd . . . home . . . somehow different . . . somehow the same . . . somehow vou ' re glad to get back ... to a Moravian Christmas ... to pres- sure . . . then 9 A.M. . . . Main Hall Porch . . . your first exam . . . are you prepared . . . are yon satisfving vourself. your professors . . . insecurity again . . . second semester . . . more over- nights, more confidence, more problems . . . w ill you go home spring vacation, of course hut . . . more term paper?, traditions, midsemesters . . . less restrictions . . . more freedom to move, to ex- press yourself . . . Imt do they care what you say . . .■ more dissatisfaction . . . heer parties in the spring . . . suddenlv it ' s summer . . . that girl over there . . . you know who she is . . . who are yon . . . some ideas have changed . . . some fears have gone . . . but more have come . . . who are you . . . you still have time to find out . . . plenty of time. 68 Ann U ilson. f ' nsident oi (he freshman clas: 7 - ' irfT ? V t- i ' . 4 «u IM1M1 S ' W-M i « a Freshman class ojfirers: Iar Dameron, i ire-jirrs.. Mur unt litmr- fieaiix. sfc: not pictured, Zelle Holderness, Ireus. 69 ■ a OttL  ,e aMW)Bar  - ■«ll First Ro« : Judy Atkinson. Judy Ayhvard. Lee Baile . Dorothy Barbee. Second Row: Marv Elizabeth Barker. Jean Barnes. Bretla Barrs. Svlvia Bell. i n Third Row: Betty Benton. Brenda Bethel. Frances Bloodworth. Cecile Boren. Fourth Row : Margaret Bourdeaux. Baird Brown. . nn Bull. Bradley Carpenter. Fifth Row: Cherr Causey. Car- olyn Christian. Ross Clark. Anne Cleino. Sixth Row : Carol Colbert. Lee Cothran. Jan Crawlev. Jane Crutch- field. f?| e ' 70 ? r 99 .A T ;.- . f-l f Kirsl Hdw: Jii(l ( uMu-rli-v. Mary l);i]iii-njM. Diiiali Daiiici. Jane Sccdrui Kiiu : Jariiic l)a . (!ari Anil l)iTllirif;i-r. (;iiii ,.r dc Sli-fam Ami Ddzier. ' riiiid l!nu : Jan Diilin. Suf Ei- iidtl. Aiini- I ' Vrguson. Junie Flee- ni i. Fdurlh Rdw: Betsy Fowler. Carol (ierrard, Jud (nlliaiii. Dotty Girl- Fifth Row: Janice Glenn. Marlene Goldkamp. Cliri Gray, Ann Grov- Sixtli Kch: Jane Hall. Fran Ha- uler. Marf, ' arel llainiiioek. Mary Kav Hand. 71 • r irn iw i ' tTl First Row: Pat Hankins. Zelle Holderness. Mary Lucy Hudgens. Nancv Hundley. Second Row: Craig Hunter. Gin- ger Ingram. Betty Jenkins. Jay Jones. Third Row: Claudia Kelly. Peggy Kilgore. Jud Kincheloe. Ann King. Fourth Row- Jean King. Jackie Lancaster. Kathie Lassiter. Carolyn Law. Fifth Row: Carol Bruce MacFay- den. Marian MacPherson. Lucy McCallum. Minor McCoy. Sixth Row : Scott McTyer. Ann Mc- Kinnon. Betty McMillan, Barbara Mallard. Seventh Row: Judy Markley. Sissy Masters. Suzie Malerne. Caroline Miller. Q ( C « ' r t w. JJj % ' yr l e f n l ' ir--l l{ii : I ' rMllcc- Ic.rk. HrLlv Morii nri. Di.iiii- Mciiiiri. I ' at luril. Second Row: Nancy Newton. Aniie Nicol. Fontaine Norconi. Jan Nor- man. riiiid Row: Catliv Odoni. Sara ()ii er. Ruthif I ' airott. Ellen Perr . Fourlli How : Margaret Persons, Penny Powell. llajipN Price. Georgenne Reid. liflli Row: (laxle Reniine . Jean- nie Renick. Jnne Richardson. Beckx Russell. i: .Sixth F?ow : .Sara Sams, Carolyn Sclnnulling. Betty Lou Schutt. Ta V Seawell. Sc rnth Row: Virginia Sha entler, Plnllis Sherman. Sandra Shuford. (Mnd Simmons. First Kuw: BhIsv Smith. Kitt Smith. Nancy .Smith. SalK .Spring- Second Row: Ann Strain. Melanie Tiffany. Elinor Trexlor. Linda Tunstall. Third Row: Donna Van Pelt, Dale Walker. Syhia Wall. Gretchen Wanipler. Fourth Row: Marilyn Ward. Mar- fia Weersing. Carol Weisz. Jean Anne Werner. Fifth Row: Joe Anne Whitehurst, Ann Whitney. Martha Willey. C nthia Williams. .Sixth Row: Ann Wilson. Louisa Wilson. Margaret Young. Susan oung. O ■S, i V V 74 I — - - ' T • Q 1 ' ' ' fm Foreign Students Sara di Stefano came lo Salem from xXaples. Italy, arriving in the rain and speaking hesitant English. Quietly. l.ut finely, this charming foreigner hecame a part of our life. Her fair lieaiity won her a place on the Mav Court, and her aliility to speak five languages added to her scholastic assets. Shortly after Sara came Judit Magos, energetic, uninhihited, and equally charming. Havi ng escaped from Hungary to Switzerland as a teenager, she had faced many chal- lenges. To her the challenge the South presented was to slow down. Her dark eyes missed few things on campus. Sara and Judit, often seen together, fitted easily into the pattern, eager til try the new — studying life as well a hooks. 76 I ) ■ ■ 1 tfe. JH 1 i i M In 1 b I L . I 1 7 V k 3 1 J [mr- V V 1 T I V == Ji Organiza V ' A ■J .::M Leadership Last spring we donned white dresses of lengths and styles and quietly swore to fulfill duties of our offices and uphold the ideals of Salem College at all times. We walked off stage, picked up brown notebooks and grabbed hold of leadership. Funny, we thought we knew so much about being alile leaders. But we discovered nnich we hadn ' t known — much that wasn ' t written in constitutions and by-laws and traditions. Many of us delved around in fuzzy minds and re-evaluated our own goals and values. We cemented them firmly, knowing that we wanted to be good at our new positions — wanted to make 1963 a strong year. Then we talked to our followers and saw that there were no followers. Each one here had her own ideas, each one was a leader. So again we went back to the oath to fulfill . . . And back to the lirown notebooks and back to the fuzzy minds. We re-mixed the chaos of 450 ideas and created another cement for 1963. This mixture lacked the solidarity and simplicity of the first. It was a blend — and looking back on it. we know that it lacked the egotism of the first. Instead it had unity and strength, — we had become one with our offices and one with our student body. Tiiey showed us when to lecture people and when to praise them. They showed us that good leaders work with people for the joy of the work and the beauty of the product. A noisy exhaust fan, knitting needles and smoke, oddly enough, make us think . . . and made us stop . . . and made us listen to the quiet ones — the important ones. They showed us we must keep FITS — improved but we must keep it. They showed us that they did participate. They showed us — and we became one. 80 LegUIiitiit Board rej}restn tallies, left to right: first row. Susie Mulerne. Aiirt ' lta Robertsun, Tran TrupncH; sciuiui rou, F u7. .4ii- man. Susannc Boone, Betty Jenkins; third rotv, Janet Wales, NSA Coordinator, Rabbin Causey. 82 Ju(h Siiriinwrell, I ' rt ' sidiiil ol Stiulerit Goifmnu-nt Heather I ' eehUs. (Chairman of Jinlitin Hoard StinJe it Goiefnnient uffirers: left In right: (Carroll Hobfrt. ' , 1 7tt ' - re.s c ' ( . Johnston, surftar}. Judicial Board; targ Harris, treasurer. (lohie U orkniiin. .sufttar) of 83 House presidents: left to right. Ellen Heflin, Peggy Parrish. Anne Evans, Susie Rablen, Anne McAr House presidents: left to right, BecJcy Gaston, Martha Reed, Marty Paisley 84 I. til la righl: Slude:it Goicnimfiil Cumiiiillcc Lhiiirmcii: Susan Purdie. (,iiifii ' i Miilllirus. Anne llinl ri. li,r TrnE (l.. lanue Dm. ' ' ■WllllJ _ , those who ;iie cliosen arc st ' h-i-lcd l ' o|- a ceitaiii |)iii])(isc . . . |o eivt ' as tht ' V lead . . . themselves brighter lights than others, also iji the s|iollight . . . so that aceom- |ilishinents and especially failures are more apparent to all . . . lhe ser c and «c sec and follow . . . ihey stand and we observe. Standing for ideals . . . (if Salem . . . id ' social life . . . (d ' an Honor Tradition ... of scholarship ... of purpose ... of service . . . of a class . . . of life. Standing to gnide . . . meetings . . . committees . . . classes . . . changes . . . i)rogi-ams. Standing to preside ... at Judicial Board ... at Legislative Board ... at discussions ... in dorms . . . always standing. c admiif and criticize . . . we lollow and rebel . . . we agree and disagree . . . we are pleased and di pleascd. And those who lead are aware of both . . . and kiiow that they nuist receive both . . . blending to- gether reaction.s. ly|)cs. failures, progress. i)raise and displeasure to fulfill the nccd id ' those who look to them for direction. The differences are obvious, too . . . good and bad . . . weak .nid strong . . . loud and slli-nt ipiick and slow . . . torcelul and passive. We choo-e to follow accoidiug to ourselves. Ihe leader knows to follow . . . those who know lietter . . . those who are more talenlc l . . . those who are more creative . . . those who have gone before . . . and especially those who feel and are concerned and are willing to advise as friends. Kiiowledge of the satisfaction of serving ... of rec- ognizing the .special talents of others ... of feeling purpose and direction in others outside oneself. Though surroimded by people, sometimes lonely . . . though having |)uri)ose. sometime lacking those uho share it . . . though comjietent. feeling iiuulequate at mauv limes . . . though leading, (dteii wish- ing to be led. [ts meaning inlangiljle . . . especiallv hcri where each individual can and actually does lead herself. S Day Student Association .e have a cismas ea messy mailboxes, because many of us forget to check them. Most of us have cars and excused absences from Chapel. Some of us have husbands and even babies. We have classes at all hours and meetings when we don ' t have classes. We don t have calldowns, restrictions, or closing hours. We have an identification all our own. on and off campus. I ' m If iinl. ]irisi:li-iil tit the Dm Slmlenl Assorlrilion Lejt to right: Maxine Crim, secrelur : I ' al .■Uhb . vire-presi- ilent: Mary Talley, treasurer. 86 IVIdrSndlS . . . ail li.inor tliat ' ai ' - rif uitli il ni.iiiN iil)lij;;iliciii,- and nuiiiN (l( ' inaiul for liiiu ... a position ihat ]iiu l iiiilieiul to correct had coiuliict and iiad iiiannei . . . while -ii|)s of paper to match white ilresses . . . the regalness of gokl ref alia;- and the not too wann- ness of white siinnner dresses in tiie niickUe ol January . . . graceful poise at concerts and h-c- tures . . . patient firnniess at asseinhlies . . . sentimentality and much hard work at gradua- tion . . . polite aiuj e en prettv . . . alteudaiii ' e lip thai iiiusl he recorded . . . aiiiioiiiicemeiUs and reiuiiHlers that tuusI l)e made — again . . . mistaives that must not lje made — ever . . . faculty recitals that invariably occur the night before a quiz or |iaper . . . responsibilities yon never realized . . . fire instructions that frighten vou . . . complaints that irritate von . . . oc- casionaliv coiuplimenls that jilease you . . . busy work that tires you . . . May Day marks the end or i)egimiing of service . . . that first feeling of im|iortance vou can ' t ignore soon re- laxes into an eflicieucv in your chores . . . chosen to uphold standards set maiiv vears ago ... a tradition personified . . . gold and white ... an honor sometimes grumbled about, al- wavs I ' emembeicd with pride . . . class nuirshals. 1 n.sr.,i Kinl. ( hiel ]hirsli,il Lfit tn riiiht: )(7m lohn iJltlu ' El l,r. Frnn,, ' s ll., l,„i. 1 ,;m l.iiiirr V„tul. Inn,- Sim,, Fr,in,, ' s ii„;n 87 ■■■-:rm Mind . a solitary liyht Imiiis in the study iimm alioiit 3 A.M. ... a hairied. perhaps even desperate, example of the lamp of knowledge ... a light switches on in a classroom in Main Hall, because at 8:.30 A.M. it ' s still a little dark and some members of the class are not aware that it is morning . . . the library lights blink off and on. again, again, . . .9:45 P.M., the lights in the laboratory go dark ... 5:00 P.M., the lamps of knowledge, the search for knowledge, the efforts to erase the emptiness, the ignorance of darkness ... a process that never ends . . . lights that continue to be burned so long as their power remains ... a process of which Salem is a part, perhaps a plateau and yet a preparation . . . because we cannot ever be sure, ever be satisfied . . . because we cannot hope to be prepared completely, because we must try . . . because we must con- tinue to search, to find, to know . . . because we must mature ... we cannot do this alone ... we need the benefits of experience greater than our own, of thoughts deeper than our own, of efforts more perfect than our own ... we desire their knowledge, listen to their words, seek their praise, some- times adhere to their advice . . . some times we fail their challenge, but the next week we may chal- lenge them. A striving for knowledge — for truth as it existed in the past and as it has derived or created its existence in the present ... we seek to know, to understand, and finally to relate . . . because we must relate the truth to our experience ... in order to mature, in order to find ourselves, to find a direction ... to find meaning ... to find light. 88 . ..m k i i The Lecture Series Comwitlte: leli to ri ht, Dia ic Fuller, jut k Barker. Daphne Dtikate I irgilin Peterwn Basil RalhOvne Dr. Maria Armadeo 90 Liz {f il.son. Editor ul Anhuuv The Literary Society A imlilicaliiiii llial (iiids il (illnc in h- li,i criiriil uilli luo ri ' hilril (iijiaiii alions. Iiut a iTt-alion thai lliiil its source in iii(li iduals lather than a staff of workers ... a neativitv thai is soMietinies hampered hv deadlines ol piddieation ... a pnh- liialioii tluil is sometimes hampered h the di ' adlines id cica- li ily . . . an opporlnnitv tor eomph ' ti ' sell-expic-sion . . . a rliallenpe lor the competition of execMence . . . ail iii ilalioii lor individiialily ... a demand for ipiality . . . an elloil lo liiid meliiiiiii; ... a search for direction and puipo-c . . . a pidilication with a luisiness iiiidfiel, harried proofreaders and a redheaded editor ... a satisfaction that comes from .seeinji; voiir most sincere efforts in |)iint . . . from seeing months of editing, revision, ty|)ing. criticism forge into a pattern of in- dividual thought . . . never to he duplicated. Li It III nuhl: llfls Hiitlon. Iliinin,- Fiilli ' r. (,uiii, l ' ,iil i ll. l in liniuU 91 m ■ ■jriMHHH - i¥i pi Ta J ¥ v H w n |R ' - ¥ ii Frances Bailey. President of Humanities Humanities asmokyroom littered with sticky spoons and empty coffee cups . . . informal meetings that abound with self- expression and deeply trenched theories of lit- erature, art, or music . . . the absence of for- mal organization leads to an open exchange of thoughts, ideas, hard and fast opinions. An em- phasis on the contemporary arts which presents a challenge to the gatherers to read, to obsei-ve, to listen, to understand . . . discussions led by students and facuhy ... a faculty we don ' t al- ways see in class . . . they too want to learn, to understand more deeply . . . the exchange of ideas leads to a formation of new ideas ... a relormation of old ideas . . . the knowledge of those around us makes us realize our own in- significance and shortcomings . . . makes us seek harder to broaden our scope, deepen our understanding, but also to relate, relate to our contemporary culture . . . relate to ourselves. L ' t! In n hl: Iiirshfi H(n. jiifh Summtrell. if end MrGlirin, Sara ti hir Dabnt ' HfndtTMitl. 92 IRC , llic polilicjl coniiiDriciil of con- l ' in|Miiai .i ,iiciic . . . .Ill allcinpl In iiridei- staiul. Ill liiiil nifaiiiiii; in llic chanlii- ii ili alinii c)t oui liiiic . . . an cllnil hi liiiiailc ' ii ic . . . to i-ifalc a cdiniili ' li ' |ii(liiri ' nul nl ' iiulix iciiia I tlioiij;lil ... 1(1 know tlif whys as well as llic wlials ... Ill iincierstanil man wlieiever he exists, whalcMM- hi- need . . . lo iinileistand his pnili- leiiis. his iews. hi- ideas . . . [o ndate them to ourseKcs. mir lliiuiiihls. niir ]iiii|iose . . . a ehallen ;e to stuilents and laeullx . . . involve- ment ot students and laeiillv . . . disriissions, arjiiiments. theories, narrow-mindedness, pa- tienee. impatienee. ajireement. disagreement, emotion, reason . . . prejudiee . . . enlighten- ment . . . eniTee. cigarettes . . . frustration, satisfaction . . . more coffee, more cigarettes . . . out ol the discussions, the arguments come opinions, knowledge . . . another step toward a direction, tinvaid a meaning. l r ri AIn, l.n iir. I.K.I.. Pnsnh Lett tu righl: Jan iueum. Lmi Run an. Anne Hfiilh, Dinah Daniel, Aide KeiiL Hllsie Hiiheinnr. 93 Body and Spirit we cannot find all our answers in the classroom. We must get outside our Looks and even ourselves and look deeply ... we must express ourselves, but we must do more ... we must create our own patterns in order to know who and what we really are ... we must express our entire being ... we must also have an identification with something higher than ourselves for we cannot do all these things by ourselves . . we nuist develop our spirit as well as our mind . . . our essence comes with our birth ... it must lie nurtured . . . it must be matured ... it screams for an outward existence and recognition . . . but we are not sure which direction we should choose ... we cannot always determine which direction it will take . . . what is our essence ... it is not always the same ... to all it is an expression of their deepest needs and desires ... to some it is service to their fellow man ... to some it is written expression ... to some it is the instruction of a child ... to all it is .1 sincere attempt to find themselves, to dedicate themselves completely. Completeness requires mind, body, soul . . . perhaps the mind and body woke tTie spirit . . . yet the spirit is born within ... we do not always understand, we only seek to attain . . . which comes first ... it is most important that all come ... we must de- velop our body ... it nuist express itself, recline itself just as our mind and soul . . . physical health is related to mental health . . . spiritual health ... a complete whole. For each of us there must be the existence of all three factors . . . each complements the other . . without the first two there cannot be the third . . . only with each of these do we become whole . . . can we hope to become complete. r .rSiJi: -:•«• m im ■-. i-: . ' itr i L -C L?i --:i ' 5tt ' - -is.-.: Martha Still. 1 I ' resirlent I VV • ■ ■ we. the students, are the Salem College YWCA. We place the responsibility of our leader- ship in a representative Cabinet, but we are the forces behind the actions of the organization. We can be found working with the Community Service program. We visit the Salem Moravian Home, the Red Shield Girls Club, Graylyn Cliildren ' s Center. We give parties for the veterans in Salisbury and the orphans at Memorial Indus- trial School. We work with the Blood- mobile and with the Girl Scouts. As we extend into the conmuniitv. not only do we receive great satisfaction, but also prejjaration for responsible citi- zenship. On the campus we discover exciting and challenging issues as we urgently discuss faith and values with our Religious Emphasis speaker, or intently listen as Dr. Lewis explains Existentialism. Few topics escape our 96 LeII III righl: Sandra Sniilh. l rlir l uon Hilliro, Jo Dunbar scriitiiiv. wliether tliev he religions, social, or political. Significantly we come together to wor- ship in Little Chapel or in the dornii- tories. Whether we are writing Y- watches. leading Vesper services, play- ing the organ for Evening Chapel, or worshipping i)rivately, we are striving to understand and to attain our ideals. In these worship, service, and program opportunities we seek as a YWCA. We seek to realize fuller, more creative lives, and to develop social responsi- bility. Our scope is not limited hv area or subject; we are concerned with the value of all human life, regardless of a person ' s religion or stage of commit- ment, yet we maintain emphasis on the Christian in our name. Believing that we as college students and Chris- tians have a special task and impor- tance in life, we endeavor to pass on our light with vitality and intensity. 97 i aiicy Jo HIT, U .R.A. Presidcnl WRA . . . Salem ' s answer to the physical fitness program . . . hockey games that ring with the knocking of sticks, sometimes the ball, oc- casionally a shin or two . . . basketball games that exercise, entertain, and exhanst faculty and students . . . the guardians of our swimming pool and reducers of our excess etcetera . . . Top to bottom: Ann P. Austin. Virkie Aainan, Susan Purdii Susan Ellison 98 Dansalems in .utin s parlianuMiliuy procedure gives wax hi llic lifjiii, deiiiantlinf; activities and struEigles ol interpre- tive dance. ( liiiin muscles and blistered feet be- come a small tlii iif;li iincomloitalile part of a continual strivin ; tor nioxement. form, mood, grace. A varietv of sizes and shapes is revealed bv uniformlv black leotards. Wlielher the aim be inches oi ' eninvrncnt the result is harmonv. Sfindi Kimbri ll, Unnsakm I ' r sident Tut) to bottom: Landis MUUt, Lnut Hull, f. nnc MiClctrn ' nt 99 Musically Speaking One (jf the oldest and most renown of Salem ' s school of liberal arts ... its importance recognized by its possessing its very own dean . . . long departed from the gentle tradition of teaching the ladylike art of afternoon enter- tainment upon the harpsichord, it perfects professionals and prepares teachers . . . but one tradi- tion remains still . . . though even the days of its home are now numliered . . . and the walls of Me- morial Hall shudder with the bustling of its students and faculty, the groaning of its overworked elevator, and the simultaneous singing of its many voices . . . human and instrumental . . . its noisily soundproofed and never-empty practice rooms evoke oaths from its faculty, exhaustion from its students, and terror or Ijoredoni from its sometimes unprepared or unwilling private pupils it extends its long arm of practice hours to embiace almost every available piano or organ on cam- pus and thrusts its short arm of faculty in the minimum of ten diflerent directions at once . . . The school of music has a spirit all its own ... it develops a talent IolmuI in no other department on the campus . . . and it creates a form of beauty that cannot be duplicated ... it is selfish because it demands nearly every waking hour of its followers ' time and concentration, generous because it shares with all who would listen the beauty of its demands and its accomplishments ... it displays shai)biness in the squeaking of its worn steps, the awkwardness of its old-fashioned doors and tlie cracked plaster of its walls and ceilings ... it displays grandeur in the traditional formal dress and superb performance at faculty recitals ... it displays glory and perhaps even pride at the suc- cess and achievement of its students ... at their development of a talent worthy of its tradition of ex- cellence. 100 • v.: ?it -■m-i: r ' jjg Choral Ensemble ... a variety of girls drawn together by their pleasure in singing . . . with some it is a talent, some a career, some a hobby, and even some a grade for that cumulative average . . . from thi patchwoik group conies a chorus of voices blend- ed into a unity which strives to meet the demands of an impish, unassuming figure who deftlv Farrow, Choral Ensemble President 102 niiiilfs their voices into every tlirection. coniliina- lion, and as[)iraliiiii lie ileeriis necessar lur llieir standard ol fine pt ' rldirnaiuc. ISIiic lohcs llnw rapidly in and out ol closcls as the Ensenilile sinj;s it way aronrui Iciwii to ahnost every men ' s (lull hiricheoii (ir liii infss ((iiiNrntioii . . Jinallv !lic do relmii liorn ' at (!lni triia . and ai ain in the piiiij; to liou what can come out ol two hoin practice per week and one icitiind. re- inarkalile diret ' tor. 103 Publications the clacking of their typewriters seems to pace the deadlines or i? it the other way around . . . lint for all the noise they cannot drown the still small voices of their editors . . . hut for their action they cannot seem to finish their tasks . . . because there is always more to do . . . doors open and close: tempers flare and subside, emotions surface and submerge ... a vacuum of pressure envelops these basement rooms and from out of the ap- parent chaos comes an organized whole . . . results of hours, days, weeks, months of frustration and success ... of creativeness and hard work ... of layouts and rewriting ... of individuals or a group . . . they run on a too-tight, impossibly demanding schedule . . . they manage a budget which consumes the majority of our 824.00 checks . . . Winston-Salem businessmen learn to recognize their representatives . . . some with pleasure, others with disdain . . . through the flashing of their flash- bulbs and the scratching of their pencils they record our action, our opinion, our intelligence, our stupidity, our beauty, our grotesqueness, our concjrn. our apathy, our goals, our weekends, our suc- cesses, our failures . . . through the expression of their opinions, through the eves of their camera they connnent upon our way of life, our manner of dress, our individuality, our lack of it. our differ- ences, our similarities, our campaigns, our hopes, our traditions, our rebellions, our history, our future . . . they picture places, events, days important to us. they record any opinion that wants to be heard . . . but they capture something else . . . the essence of our very being — as an institution, a a type, as an iiidi idijal . . . they capture a spirit momentarily and on their faces it is retained forever. 104 %f Published every Friday of the College yaar by the Student Body of Salem Colleoe Photography Editor __ Mary Alic T agu« Advertising Manager Sarah Wills Headline Writeri _Ti h Johnston, Irene Rose, Betiy Patterson Typijts — Money Grrffin, Susie Johnson, Jane Roynor, Trudi Schmidt, Jone Holl, Pot Hankins. Proof-rwdtri — Ann Gor«, Joan Luk ni, Jo Phlfor, Jenny Fields, Dotti Darli, Marty Richmond, Frances Bail«y, G. O. Sopp, Robbin Cauiey Asit. ' Advartliing Mgr. __ Sora Thomaiton Assl. Buiineit Mgr. Mary Jane Harr Q Circulation Manager Su Humphreyt Cartoonists In Phlfer, Betty Block Sewri eri Jerry Johnson, Betsy Honon Mnnn ing Jtrrff Ann. H nfM Writers— Anne Gore, Elizabeth Sykes, Beth Prevost, Marty Richmond, Susan Steers, Irene Rose, Carol Weidner, Jerry John- son, Diane Shull, Sarah Rupprecht, Linda -yon, Betty Bullord, Dottie Girling, Caro- lyn Schmulling, Betsy Fowler, Pat Han- kins, Brendo Bethel. Jone Hall, Ann Dozier, Kitty Smith, Nancy Smith, Betiy Fowler, Anne Heath, Louisa Wilson, Marty Richmond. Diane Fuller. Faculty Advisor Mill Jasi Byrd OFFICES: Basemant of Lehman Hall 414 Bonk St., S.W. Editor-in-chief Becky Boswell Buiiness Manager Alice R«id Aiiociat Editor Anne Romig Executive Editor Ginger Ward tSl w FMitni- PnHy Nnth F«nfijr« Editor Bonnia Hnurh Copy FHifor Ratty Inn Traarh Aniitont Copy Editor _._ Connie Rucker Printed by th« Sun Printing Company Subscription Pric $3 a y ar Lcit to right ■Mice Teague, Betty Lou Creech, Patty . ash 106 Hnh Hosurll. Eililur vl Tin- Siiltmilc II,, •■ H,-,,l. It„s,„,--.s l„,i,if;,r „l Tli,- Siil,;,iil, ' I lie 70iC?lll I L%? ... A iit-wspajier is a i-oiitcmpoiaiN lijsloiy of ( ' vi ' iil . It is a re- aulioii to tin ' miislanies ami situations. It is an indicator of opinion. And on one page it is a former of ideas. Not always right or just or popular or appreciated, it speaks. The words come l)e- cause they must — because an editor must comment — because actions nuist bring reactions. The news- paper prodmes each year 23 finished products, an able staff, one exiiausted editor — and records Salem for itself. icll la r, ' :hl: Anne Romig. Ginger ffiirrl 107 6V I Aiistii}. Editor Betty Black, Business Mnnager Sights and Insights ...w. e.,.y ,:,, . , ,, , ,, with twenty girls . . . picture schedules, yellow notices in doini boxes . . . rain . . . ads in dujilicate . . . check and recheck ... it arrives . . . 1963 Si-;hts and Insio-hts. copy Lejt to right: Fallie A„„ L„hr. Ginger Matthews. Carolyn Bridgers, Betty Benton. Zim Zimmerman. Anne Benson, G. G. Saunders 108 . f y Lelt to right: Atitu- Sttam. . „i, Berry. Cnnily Cheu Mnr L„wr,-nre I ' onfl. Kn 1 l ' ' fir Its Lett to right: Jeim Sn Her. Julir Johns, jnrki,- Horkrr. I), an,, IT, lis. Joan Tlnoiier -t Jl Le t to nght: Ella Kminon.l. I irguiu, .in.l.rson. lJ,„i,„c Fnlhr. Oonna li„i,cr. Undo Hodges 109 11 As the outsider sees us « them we are a type as well as individuals ... we are the 5 ' oung American woman for better or for worse ... we are well-dressed visitors in their church congregations ... we are the customers in their stores ... we are the patrons of their restaurants ... we are the noisy college kids that this world is coming to ... we are the sophisticated models in their fashion shows ... we are the smokers of their cigarettes ... as a group we are some of the biggest spenders around ... we are also the ones that hop out at the post office before the taxi meter changes ... we are not always polite . . . we do not always live up to their expectations, only to go beyond them the following week. We live in the oldest part of their community ... we represent new ideas and thoughts ... we are the rebels against tradition and yet we are ourselves one of their most established traditions ... we intrude upon their graveyards, we groan when their band appears — right before a big test ... we grow senti- mental about the Christmas customs, quiet at their Easter service. This is the way they see us . . . to them we represent beauty in our pageant of May, ability in our academic accomplishments . . . femininity in our idiosyncrasies and our youth . . . creativeness in our productions, opinions, ideas j . . . others have different impressions ... to some we seem snobs ... to some we seem party girls ... to some we seem fun ... to others boring ... to our parents we are pride, disappointment, affection, anger, expense ... to all we are individuals, indicative of a type ... we are young ... we have I much to learn ... we are a pari of a disappearing breed: a young woman educated in an institu- tion for young women ... we should be proud ... we should be challenged. 110 TELEPHONE IRS ... I represent a campaign to keep off the grass . . . a movement to abolish hair clips in class ... I rep- resent an effort to broaden campus social life . . . I represent a striving for grace, poise, charm ... I represent a concern for high standards of manner and appearance ... I Represent Salem. Mar} Jane Crowell, President of LRS I cit to ri ht: Pam Tniette. Diannc Sbtill. Charlotte Carter, . anc Roaztr. Sheila Smith, Cammy Crotv ll, Jane Kell 112 May Day III the autuiim tlie May Dell is brown and scraggly. It always rains on the day of May Court elections. The dresses have to look beautiful on tall and short, blond and brunette. The pageant needs dancers and costumes and sets. One corntnittee and one chairman combat the important and the miiuite problems. The tall brunette is in charge and they all relax slowly as the student body leaves the Dell in May with smiles and praises at beholding beauty in the spring. I ancy Umberger. chairman of May Day Ma Da) rnmnullef 11 to r) Chris Joue. Anilii Ihiltlur. Jan llonur. Joan ThrnucT 113 Pierette Players . . . Talent j.s only part of a production . . . deter- iiunation . . . sore muscles . . . exhaustion, broken fingernails, anger, jammed thumbs, oaths, split boards, tears. . . . spattered paint, exhilaration, greasy makeup . . . frustration, class cuts, hours, hot lights, . . . days . . . sewing machines, weeks . . . black coffee . . . months . . cigarette butts in old Chapel of all places . . . and then there ' s the issue of money, as if the schedule weren ' t enough ... too little time ... too little money . . . shortages compensated by an abun- dance of excitement, hard work, open emotion, and the experience of a dynamic, cagey, and talented dir- ector who runs on a delicate combination of nervous energy, female intuition, stubbornness, human under- standing, and a desire for perfection. This is a Pierette Top lo hotlom : Jackie Zip- crer, Bt rky Newsome, Margarel Eiluards. Dottie I ' uoser lU production in the making; . . . sweat anil creative talent side In side ... it takes a large amount of liotii . . . on the part of the actors, on the part of the crew. Then suddenl). too suddenly — it ' s opening night and there ' s nothing that can he done ... all yon can do is watch . . . the chairs fdl up and you hope fervently that the will . . . take up the tickets, dis- tribute the playbills . . . pace the day student center — worry about the set . . . costumes . . . makeup . . . the last scene of the second act . . . worry, smoke, sweat, smoke some more . . . and then, aifter three months waiting, it ' s 8:30 and the curtain ' s going up . . . and the last scene of the second act wasn ' t so bad after all . . . and the swing worked fine, just fine, and this is show business . . . the thrill of watching it come alive . . . the excitement of creative expression . . . the terror of reviews . . . the satisfaction of success. L;ins„ hi,:; J ' n-n-llf I ' ri-siilnil 115 11 In looking toward the future . . . when we disrobe alter eoiiimencement there will be more in us that is different, more that is frightened, more that is determined, more that is settled, more that is adult than we experienced at Salem. It will be a moment when the past seems too precious to desert — when the memories of this small, southern girls ' school tug poignantly at us — when the road that takes us away is too long and crooked and dark to be followed. But follow it we nnist — into the future. A future that changes from dr eams to reality and from hopes to action and from preparation to fulfillment. The fulfillment will come in different ways to all of us. It will come in 1095 dishwashings a year for a darling Pika who ciiuld ■■oiiljuke ainbodv. It will come wilh laundry and housekeeping and waiting for five o ' clock and a hi, honey, I ' m home . It will come when budgets demand casseroles three evenings and a new dress next month. It will come with 7 A.M. alarm clocks and thirty-five kids in class . . . when a fourth-grader masters long division and a first-grader learns to read and a tenth-grader says this guy Shakespeare had something to say ' . It will come with PTA ' s and NEA ' s and certificate renewals . . . and innnediately it will come with Good morning, class. My name is Miss White. It will come wearing a lab coat every day and knowing that men search always for new truth and new aids to man. It will come knowing that science is man ' s attempts to reproduce natural phenomena and knowing that it will matter if the eight hundreth experiment yields the expected result. It will come when Salemites merge themselves into a society of devoted men and women, working to fulfill their needs and those of society ... in a home ... in a classroom ... in a laboratory . . . the future will come. 116 DETECT I ME MYSTERY noac . — — . T: w ' -€ ' 1 ' Ail ■■Aii ' .Hi: M I •-! • I ■ IKTHMImMl Tut ™ Mmui - ! ■ IHmRMTlOMl Tllf«T«F llirail ' ' ivnr (im ' t Inmirtf imiwriwui thuhe amiuu - ■ , mnmiiriilwi ntixA i inTrnJiriftm, Tiitnii t- I Robin Rhodes, president oi the Home Economics Club itz a Smith, president at Lablin Home Economics 700 straight pins. 40 needles. 82 spools of tiiread: magically ability in styling and making clothes. 70 cups of flour. 16 chickens cut up: magically knowledge of culinary dexterity. Interior decor- ation and appliance knowledge and Home Man- agement house experience complete the process. The third floor of the Science Building — the home economics department — offers as result: magically home economists. ' 9 Cooking on another level and measuring for another reason, the girls in lab coats grab beakers, disecting instruments, and batteries. Determinedly, they study late hours. Doggedly, they haunt the science build- ing twenty-five hours a week. They get excited over a Christmas tree of chemicals and more so when they accept their Bachelor of Science de- SNEA From their side of the desk a classroom takes on new dimensions. Suddenly it contains 30 students who want to learn, but also to pass notes and whisper. A football game be- tween Southwest and Reynolds becomes as im- portant as Chaucer and the American Revolu- tion. Lesson plans in the future become the present, and STUDENT NEA members move forward to NEA. Dean Major Clifford, presidtnt oj SAEA 118 llilli Call MuriM-t n In totality . a profile ... a view of a face, a view of a person . . . the Salem girl. The ray highlights her being . . . Salem highlights her being. The uniqueness that is Salem has created a uniqueness in us. The myriad of forces present here have touched on each of us . . . have brushed us lightly . . . have embedded in us: a oneness ... a separateness. When we came here there was form and meaning in us, but often it was untested ... it was unchallenged . . . it was unexpressed. And there were mass meetings . . and there were assembly speakers . . . and there were lecture classes. But this only makes an amalgam. In addition, there was a speaker on existentialism ... on the value of a neutral India ... on the direction of modern literature . . . on integration ... on twentieth century philosophers ... on the worth of political parties . . . on religion in this world and the next. There were visitors — British wit, Malcolm Muggeridge . . . beatnik poet, Ferlingetti . . . Russian correspondent, Harrison Salisbury . . . actors, Vincent Price, Allan Mobray and Boris Karloff . . . authoress. May Sarton . . . woman of letters, Leslie Frost . . . and jazzman, Billy Butterfield. Our creativity was awakened and channeled . . . into a short story, a debate, a Y-watch, an assembly panel, an editorial, a student government study, an introduction to new ideas from other lands. And unaware — perhaps even oblivious — we were molded into new persons bearing more of Salem and its way than any of us knew. The impressions of our dis- coveries, of our investigation, made each of us an individual, a unity, a total being, a Salem Ijeing — complete. 120 Honor Society LeII 10 right: Dean Clifford, ]uil umni,-r,:ll, Liniiu Wall. Murllui Still: nut pictured: Jackie Baker, Louisa Freeman. SaU Glenn. 4)A0 Lefr to right: Kny Kearns, Dr. Byers, Marsha Ray. Judy Stimniertll : s-jated: Dean Clifford, Dr. Austin. I arn y Knott, May Brawley. 124 Oslo Scholars Kacli simiiiici a ii in ' . Junior and a rising Senior attend the six-week International Summer School at the University of Oslo, Norway, on schol- arships given l y ex-and)assador L. Coi- rin Strong. At the snnnner school the emphasis is on familiarization of the students with Norwegiati life as well as promoting an exchange of ideas and understanding among participants from around the world. I.: Il to right: liirlhii Still anil Tish Johnstm, Bowman-Gray Scholars Test tidies and hlood sanipl ' iig and white uniforms and apartments in town . . . these things are ] art of being Bowman-Gray girls. A separa- tion from their classmates is a penalty, but their open doors to friends is com- pensation. Three years of Salem study result in a year of medical technolog training. The reward is a degree from Salem and proficiency in a highly skilled field. Left to right: Judy Chi dress. Ann Hutafl. Jackie Baker and Beth . urman 125 Feature Girls Senior class feature girls: Carro l Roberts and Judy Suwmerell Sviihtiniurc Jass feature girls: Susie Rablen and Myrlic Moon Bilbti 126 Each oi tliejie eis;ht is an indiviilual . . . eacli has a style and poise that is hers alone . . . the i|iialities that elected her can he found in all Salem jiirls . . . yet the particular conihina- tion is hers. Jiiiiiur I ass Iciitiire firls: Tish Johnston iiml Inne Rose hisi.iiian class liutine girls: Ann If ilson irn:l Jan . ,irmiin 127 Top lo bottom: Heather Peebles. Irene Rose. Dean Clijjord. Judy Summerell. Linda Wall, Carroll Roberts. Frames Bailey. Gay Austin. Anne Romig. Lucy Rirldle. Julie Johns. Beck Boswell. Order of the Scorpion Twice a year Dean Ivy M. Hixsoii aii- iioimces new members of the Order of the Scorpion. Scattered applause and congratulations follow, and there ends Salem College ' s knowledge of the activi- ties of the Order. The Order of ihr Scorpion is a cpiiet moving force liehind important projects. The Order of the Scorpion is the instigator of small cor- rective actions. A secret society, the membership is limited to fourteen juniors and seniors. Known only by the small black and gold star pin worn on the collar, the Order works for Salem. The accomplishments of the Order are recog- nized and commended. The sole reward is the knowledge that the job was worth doing and was done well. 128 Top to hnttoni : l.tirv Riittlle. Dean Clifford. Heathrr V 7i .- . «, ' .7,i Hostirll. Judy Summerell. June Heik. I.onoll Hoherts. (iin -liislin. Who ' s Who An open liook is the svnibol of Who ' s Wlio Among Students in Anieiiciin Col- leges and Universities. The open book is a symbol of academic sincerity and ex- cellence. But this alone is not complete. The open book also reflects the nature of the membership. Openly must Who ' s Who membeis respond to their school. They possess the i(ualities of leadership and participation in extra-curricular activi- ties. They have achieved a pattern of in- terested citizenship and service to Salem. And fnially they have indicated future usefulness to business and society. Elect- ed by a faculty committee and approved by the national Who ' s Who lioard, these eight students were believed to possess the four qualities necessary to member- ship. 129 130 May Court And Beauty is recognized . . . and defies definition . . . and the eve need only l)e- hold it . . . and enjoy. Left: Martha Taltman, Queen oj the fny: right. Candy Chew. Maid of Honor. 131 fl Betty Jenkins Aruir hiiiJIcy Suzanne Harrell 132 Sara dl Stejano Jean Annf U enter Anne Criffis 133 11 Sal y Day Anita Hatcher Nancy Umberstr ' SSl M M 134 Pani Tniette Charlotte Carter Sissy Nicol 135 Epilogue ourselves. It is the end. For some of us this end is welcome. We think we know We aj-e ready. Others of us are wary — wanting not so much to leave this archway but to remain and grow. The growing process must end, however. It is no longer our choice. From a senior dorm, a student government meeting, a faculty conference, we move to the arch. Knowing that we must ])e here in this time and in this place — we pause. Quickly, we glance behind us. We remem- ber our four years and how much they were ours. But now there is another group in our place. They are adjusting gowns eight inches from the floor and looking for caps that will fit over French twists. Reluctantly, we again look forward. Before us is an iron gate, worn and bent bars, half-opened. And beyond that glorious, startling, frightening day. The arch is narrow. We have manipulated, molded, and matured in order to pass through. With handshakes from Dr. Gramley and Dean Hixson, best wishes and tears from friends, and love and advice from parents, we leave Salem. Outside it is differ- ent. We are in a world not made for us alone nor organized for our convenience. All the others seem to know their direction. We also knew — when we were freshmen, when we held office, when we selected majors. When we ignited our candles, we relaxed. The world could not defeat us — we knew ourselves. But it is now, and our candles seem pale, our knowledge unsure, our preparation lacking. We remem- ber the confident smile of a knowing Dean, the joy of a tall man at our excellent math paper, the pride we felt singing the last alma mater, the excitement of wanting to come home to Salem after vacation, and the assurance of a bachelor ' s degree earned. We know now Salem ' s walls stand with a purpose. Its people and its traditions have made us sure . . . have made us true . . . have made us Salem girls. 136 Our gratitude . . is expressed to the following merchants and Ijusinessmen of the cil ut in-.t )ii-Saleiii and the surrounding area for their support to the 1963 SlGHTS AND Insights. 138 Compliments of PETER W. BLUM SON SHEET METAL CONTRACTORS 805 North Trade Street Winston-Salem 1. N. C. THE IDEAL West Fourth Street ' The Best Place to SJwp After All Home Owned — Home Operated W, Fourth at Cherry St. DOWNTOWN and PARKWAY PLAZA 5 orma n StocktonH nc SHIRTS FOR THE GIRL and GIFTS FOR THE BOYS NORMAN STOCKTON MARVEL ' S, INC. Stratford at Westview PA 2-6143 M.urph i Dial 723-0739 CAMERA SHOP Photo FILM - CAMERAS MOVIE EQUIPMENT DARK ROOM SUPPLIES COLOR FILM DEVELOPING Supplies - J ' ' ' Developing Black 236 S. STRATFORD RD. Ifhile I ' alricia Robinson Early of SALEM COLLEGE PHOTOGRAPHY 118 West Third St. PA 2-8137 Phone PA 3-1813 City Market BuiMmK TWIN CITY PACKING COMPANY, INC. Native and Western Beej ■ Veal - Pork Wholesale Provisions Montijaclurers of HIGH GRADE SAUSAGES WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Coinplimenls of HOLSUM BAKERIES D. D. Bean Sons Co. Manufacturers of BOOK MATCHES Winston-Salem, North Carolina DIRECTORY SEMORS Abercrombie. Normie. 203 Melrose Ter.. Greenwdcid. S. C. Anderson. Virginia. 237 Cherokee Rd.. Charlof ' e. X. C. Austin. Gay. 1814 E. 5th St.. Ocala. Fla. Baker. Jackie. 202.S Matheson Ave.. Charlotte. . C. Barker. Jackv. 6716 Lake St.. Falls Church. Va. Barksdale. Anne. 618 Hiehland Dr.. Leaksville. . C. Bean. Bonnie. Box 343. Jaffrev. N. H. Beck. June. 1230 W. 1st St.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Benson. .Anne. 420 Sunnnit A e.. Statesville. N. C. Black. Betty. 1309 Hawthorne Rd.. Wilmington. N. C. Blackw ood. Jean I .Mrs. . A. Jr. I 13.5 Law ndale . e., inston-Salem. N. C. Bohbit. Beth. Glen Alpine. N. C. Boswell. Beckv. 5408 Brickstone Dr.. Charlotte. N. C. Brawley. May. 221 W. Fisher St.. Salisbury. X. C. Brown. Evelyn. Box 56. Davidson. X. C. Bundy. Kitty. Box 52. Mountain Citv. Tenn Chew. Candy. 408 Crownview Dr.. .Alexandria. Va. Childress. Judy. 3835 W. 1st St.. insIon-Salem. N. C. Clifford. Dean I Mrs. F. R. i 514 S. Main St.. Winston- Salem. X. c. Combs. Linda I Mrs. Roma i 20 Fenner Rd.. Winston- Salem. X. C. Cook. Sue. 160 Woodland Dr.. Huntington. W. Va. Creech. Betty Lou. 217 W. Church St.. Ahoskie. X. C. Crowell. Mary Jane. 805 .Aspen St.. Lincolnton. X. C. Dull. Jane. 3700 Robin Hood Rd.. Winston-Salem. X. C. Eskew. Patsy. 132 Eastwood Cr.. Spartanburg. S. C. Evans. Anne. 1501 E. 5th St.. Greenville. X. C. Ezzell. Kay. 802 Holland St.. Winston-Salem. X. C. Farrow. Peggy. Box 88. Masonboro Sound. Wilming- ton. X. c. ■ Fordham. Beth. 4801 Lansing Dr.. X inston-Salem. N. C. Fortson. Ginny Kay. 3535 Fitch St.. Jacksonville. Fla. Fowler. Ann. 7010 Madrid .Ave.. Jacksonville. Fla. Freeman. Louisa. 3910 Kenilworth. Columbia. S. C. Gillam. Sis. 306 King St.. Windsor. X. C. Harrell. . ' uzanne. RED 3. Xewton. X. C. Hatcher. .Anita. 1111 Clarendon St.. Favetteville. X. C. Heath. Anne. Sharon Rd.. Rt. 2. Charlotte. X. C. Heinrich. Dougie. 3203 . Grace St.. Richmond. Va. Henderson. Mary Dabney. 3617 e burn Rd.. Rich- mond. Va. Herring. Faye. Snow Hill. X. C. Higgins. .Margaret. 455 S. Church St.. inston-Salem. X. c. Hummel. Carolyn. 2.31 Tudor Rd.. inston-Salem. X. C. Huntley. Leslie. .515 Leak Ave.. Wadesboro. X. C. Hutaff. Anne. 215 Woodcrest Rd.. Fa etteyille. X. C. Johns. Julie. estmond Dr.. Asheboro. X. C. Jones. Julia. 2621 Stuart Dr.. Durham. X. C. Joyce. Chris. 3312 Coleridge Dr.. Raleigh. X. C. Jovner. Xancv. 375 Lexington Rd.. .Asheboro. X. C. Keams. Kay. ' 907 R.Kkford Rd.. High Point. X. C. Kelly. Jane. 1504 Oakland Ave.. Durham. X. C. Kizer. Xancy. Edgewood Rd.. Asheboro. X. C. Lanier. Cathy. 709 Michigan .Ave.. Lrbana. III. Lee. .Marx Xell. 1004 3rd St.. Smithfield. X. C. Lee. Mattie Ga . Box 207. Dillon. S. C. Long. Kav. State Road. X. C. McArver.Anne. 304 lOlh Ave.. Gastonia. X. C. Morisey. Betty Gail. 102 Chesnutt St.. Clinton. X. C. Xorman. Beth. 1915 Xormand Dr.. Zanesville. Ohio Ostborg. Sigrid. 210 Rush Rd.. Favetteville. X. C. Patton. Jo. (Mrs. Pete I 301 Hvlan Ave.. Hamlet. X. C. Peebles. Heather._4519 31st St. S. Arlington. Va. Pooser. Dott . 437 Garden St.. Marion. X. C. Ray. .Marsha. College St. Exten.. Oxford. X. C. Ra nor. Jane. 156:! Matthews .Ave.. Vancouver. B. C, Canada Rhodes. Robin. 2959 Riverside Ave.. Jacksonville. Fla. Riddle. Lucy. ( .Mrs. J. L. Jr. i F25 .Monticello Apts.. .Anson St.. Winston-Salem. .X. C. Roberts. Carroll. 39.50 Plymouth Rd.. Durham. X. C. Saunders. G. G.. 2518 Reynolds Dr.. Winston-Salem. X. c. Smith. Lucinda. 3800 Seminary Rd.. Alexandria. Va. Smith. Sue. Box 151. Mount .Airy. X. C. .Still. Martha. 2426 E. Lake Dr..Raleigh. X. C. Summerell. Judy. 19 Grier .Apts.. Gastonia. .X. C. Sustare. .Xancy. Box 87. Xashville. X. C. Sweum. Jan. Smyrna Rd.. hiteville. X. C. Tallman. Martha. 2723 ' alton Way. .Augusta. Ga. Thrower. Joan. 3219 Forsyth Dr.. Greensboro. X. C. Turner. Carol. 814 Roshn Rd.. Winston-Salem. X. C. L ' mberger. Xancy. 270 Hannnond Ct.. Kingsport. Tenn. Vitale. Elise. Benson St.. Rehobotli Beach. Del. Ward. Ginger. Box 375. Seroe Colorado. .Aruba. Netherlands .Antilles ' i ard. Pat. Stvers Ferry Rd.. Clemmons. X. C. Watson. Bobbie. 1800 Polo Rd.. ' inston-Saleni. X. C. ells. Diana. Old Xorwalk Rd.. Xew Canaan. Conn. bitty. Kittv. 1512 Rhem .A e.. Xew Bern. X. C. Williams. Barbara i .Mrs. J. T. Jr. I 1941 River Rd.. ashington. X. C. illiams. Sally G.. 2403 Reynolds Dr.. Winston- Salem. X. c. X ' ilson. Alice. 2317 Hathaway Rd.. Raleigh. X. C. Wilson. Liz. Windsor Farm. Cascade. Va. Woods. Sheena. 1800 Mecklenburg Ave.. Charlotte. X. c. JLXIORS Ashb . Pat. 2911 Glemi .Ave.. inston-Salem. X. C. .Austin. Ann P.. Hixon. Tenn. Bailev. Frances. Lower Xorwood . Midlothian. Va. Best. Boo. 302 Hilltop PI.. Columbia. S. C. Chalk. Cathv. 2406 Evans St.. .Morehead Citv. X. C. Crawford. Claudia. 207 S. Ellis St.. Salisbury. X. C. Dudley. .Anne. Robinwood . Lookout Mtn.. Tenn. Dunbar. Jo. 307 E. Farriss A e.. Hieh Point. X. C. Elder. Cliffie. 1007 «•. Davis St.. Burlington. X. C. Ellison. Susan. Box 361. Jaffrev. X. H. ET P. H. Planes Knitting Co. pays tribute to the schools and colleges of North Carolina and to the people who study there to prepare themselves for a fuller life and greater service to mankind HANES P. H. HANES KNITTING CO. WINSTON-SALEM. N. C. Field. Anne Mason. 4320 ' akefield Rd.. Richmond. Va. Fields. Jenn). 1617 Riviera Drive. Rocky Mount. N. C. Forbes. Suzanne. 601 Countrv Club Dr.. Reidsville. X. c. Fuller. Diane. 1302 Vi alker Dr.. Kinjton. N. C. Gaddv. Beckv. 3919 Arrow Dr.. Raleigh. N. C. Gaston. Becky. 1100 E.Broad St.. . ' talesville. N. C. Gottschalk. Barbara. -137 Columbus Dr.. Savannah. Ga. Gray. Gin. 110 W. Lew is St.. ■« hileville. N. C. Griffis. Anne. Denton. N. C. Hall. Lynn. Box .507. Behnont, N. C. Hanling. Jane. 211 Homewood Dr.. Greensboro. N. C. Harrell. Mar Jane. 2217 Laurel Rd.. Jacksonville. Fla. Harris. Margy. Westover Dr.. Ruxboro. X. C. Hauch. Bonnie. 2317 N.E. Jith St.. Ft. Lauderdale. Fla. Hedgpelb. Jane. Box 37. Chapel Hill. X. C. Holton. Frances. 20 i S. Granville St.. Edenton. N. C. Horner. Jan. 721 Arlington Ave.. Bristol. Va. Humphre s. Susan. 112 Lake Dr.. Cheravv. S. C. Hunevcutt. Alberta P. (Mrs. Jerome I 3 E. Devon- shire St.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Hutchins. Alary Lee I Mrs. Erie M. ) 4433 Timber Ln . Winston-Salem. N. C. Hutchins. Xancy I Mrs. W. T. Jr. I 642 E. Iredell Ave.. Mooresville. X. C. Ingram. Anne. 611 Spruce St.. Florence. S. C. Irwin. Liz. 400 Parkdale Dr.. Spartanburg. S. C. Jackson. Marv. 2214 Elizabeth Ave.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Jeannette. Annetta. i0.5 Short Dr.. Washington. X. C. Johnson. Barbara. 12.5 Hillside Dr.. Shelby. X. C. Johnson, Betsv. 800 N. Gen. Lee Ave.. Dunn. X. C. Johnson. Susie. 5102 Holston Dr.. Knoxville. Tenn. Johnston. Tish. Box 217. Davidson. X. C. Kent. Mason. 243 Min. View. Danville. Va. Kimbrell. Sandi. Breezemont Dr.. Waynesville, X. C. King. Kit. 2408 Fairview Rd.. Raleigh. X. C. Kirk. Sarah. 318 Brown St.. Martinsville. Va. Knott. Xancx. 113 Turner St.. Winston-Salem. X. C. Laniond. Jackie. 1280 Fort Hunt Rd.. Alexandria, Va. Lee. Pat. 701 Rountree Ave.. Kinston. X. C. Lohr. Fallie. Route 6. Lexington. X. C. MacPherson. Paula. 151 Government St.. Mobile. Ala. McClain. Frannie. 2018 Pinewood Cir.. Charlotte. X. C. McGrath. Marilvn. 212 E. 17th St.. Lumberton. X. C. Martin. Anne. Box 322. Liberty. X. C. Martin. Susan. 8606 E. Brainerd Rd.. Chattanooga. Tenn. Mathews. Ginger. 308 Boston Ave.. Lvncbburg. Va. Miller. Landis. 1111 Pee Dee Ave.. Albemarle. X. C. Monk. G. G.. P. CBox 627. Wendell. X. C. Morrison. Lvnn. 144 Wellsville St.. Bolivar. X. . Mount. Alex. 1318 Prospect Ave.. Bethlehem. Penn. Newsome. Becky. 624 X. Stratford Rd.. Winston- Salem. X. C. Padgett. Ginnv. 708 X. Garden St.. Marion. X. C. Padrick. Barrv. 1800 S. Indian River Dr.. Ft. Pierce. Fla. Paisley, Martv. Riverside Dr.. Morganton, X. C. Parrish. Peggy. 506 S. Church St.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Perkins. Peggy. Fern Ave.. Marion. X. C. Pond. Marv Lawrence. 721 Riverview Dr.. Suffolk. Va. Prusa. Penny. 3rd St. S.W.. Tavlorsville. X. C. Purdie. Susan. 603 W. Pearsall St.. Dunn. X. C. Quarrier. Ann. 13.58 Xational Rd.. Wheeling. W. Va. Raper. Donna. 606 W. Willowbrook Dr.. Burlington. X. C. Raxmond. Ella. 4718 Edwards Mill Rd.. Raleigh. X. C. Reed. Martha. 155 Xassau Ave.. Manhasset. LJ.. X. Y. Reid. Alice. 1303 Prestwood Dr.. Hartsville. S. C. Richmond. Mart). 1903 Edgewood Lane. Charlottes- ville. Va. Robertson. Aurelia. 231 Hawthorne Dr.. Danville. Va. Romig. Anne. 2910 Cameron Mills Rd.. Alexandria. Va. Rose. Irene. 215 Hillside Ave.. Favetteville. X. C. Rosenblatt. Marv Stewart. 3209 P ' inehurst PI.. Char- lotte. X. C. Rucker. Connie. 3114 Monument Ave.. Richmond. Va. Salsbury. Bunnie. 115 Powe St.. Morganton. N. C. Schmidt. Trudi. 417 Highland Rd.. Pottstown. Penn. Shugart. Kaye. Box 45. Yadkinville. X. C. Simons. . nne. 614 Raleigh Rd.. Wilson. X. C. Smith. Sandra. 177 E. Wine St.. Mullins. S. C. Smith. Sheila. 177 E. Wine St.. Mullins. S. C. Sowers. Olivia (Mrs. Philip E.I 403 Lockland Ave.. Winston-Salem. X. C. Speas. Frances. 2000 Faculty Dr.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Stafford. Ann. 1242 Townes Rd.. Charlotte. X. C. Strub. Zena. 816 Sylvan Rd.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Sykes. Elizabeth. .305 Marion St.. Mount Airy. X. C. Tayloe. Elaine. Aulander. X. C. Teague. Marv .Alice. 641 Parkway Blvd.. Reidsville. X. c. TenExck. Marv. 610 X. Belmont Dr.. Charleston. W. Va. Trapnell. Tran. 6205 Jocelvn Hollow Rd.. Xasbville. Tenn. Troy. Beth. 40_10_Westoyer Rd.. Wilmington. X. C. Truette. Pam. 737 E. Oakwood Ave.. Albemarle. X. C. Tyson. Carolyn. 1114 Ferndale Dr.. High Point. X. C. Vance. Jodv. 2417 Buena Vista Rd.. inston-Salem. X. c. White. Barbara. 411 Leander St.. Shelby. X. C. illiams. Martha Ann. Box 054. ' i ashinglon. X. C. Wills. Sarah. Box 645. Roanoke Rapids. X. C. Wilson. Jud . 46 Concord St.. Peterborough. N. H. Wilson. Linda. 72 Cyrus Ave.. Pitman. X. J. W orkman. Wookie. Box 636. Davidson. N. C. Zimmerman. Anna. 611 Hunter - e.. Winston-Salem. X. c. Zimmermann. Zini. 69119 Yorkshire Dr.. Pittsburgh. Pa. Zipjjerer. Jackie. Route 4. Green ille. Tenn. SOPHOMORES Allen. Jane. 1507 Sauer . ve.. Richmond. Va. Ascough. Kay. 1403 Mulberry Rd.. Martinsville. Va. Auman. Vicky. Route 3. Hillsboro. X. C. Berry. Xan. 1250 Broughton. Orangeburg. S. C. Bilbro. M rtie Moon. 1004 E. 3rd St.. Greenville. X. C. Blackburn. Xancy (Mrs. Jerry I 1129 Crestwood. Winston-Salem, N. C. CONGRATULATIONS SENIORS! Piedmont Federal Savings and Loan Association Winston-Salem, North Carolina THE DAIRY BARN Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Stanford Bleakly. Barbara. 148 Heritage Rd.. Haddonfield. N. J. Boardman. Noel. 239 Palmer Ct.. Ridgewood. N. J. Bodine. Babs. 267 Illinois Ave.. Southern Pines. N. C. Boone. Susanne. .504 Conipton PI.. Durham. N. C. Bridgers. Carolyn. 311 Amhurst Ave.. Chattanooga. Tenn. Brown. Gave. Rt. 2. Box 219. Boonville. N. C. Bruton. Al. Box 304. Wilson. N. C. Bryant. Pat. Box 834. Wilmington. N. C. Builard. Bettv. 106 Glenwav Ave.. Belmont. N. C. Butler. Beverlv. 404 Butler Dr.. Clinton. N. C. Butt. Helen. 703 W. Pope St.. Dunn. N. C. Cannon. Mary. 814 Cowper Dr.. Raleigh. N. C. Carter. Charlotte. Lazv Lane. Revnolda. Winston-Salem. N. C. Causey. Robbin. 2012 St. Andrews Rd.. Greensboro. N. C. Clark. Donald. 302 S. Church St.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Cooper. Doris. 1006 Dacian Ave.. Durham. N. C. Cooper. Marv. Rt. 3. Box 6.5. Kingstree. S. C. Corbett. Judy. Box 467. Tabor Citv. N. C. Corbett. Sandra. 2509 Market St.! Wilmington. N. C. Grim. Maxine. Rt. 1. Clemmons. N. C. Crouch. Carolyn. 1619 W. 51st St.. Norfolk. Va. Crowell. Cammv. 805 S. Aspen St.. Lincolnton. N. C. Davis. Dottie. 203 N. Main St.. Belmont. N. C. Day. Page. 1109 West Ave.. Richmond. Va. Day. Sally. 1010 North St.. McComb. Miss. Dearing. Aline. 1912 Greenwood Ave.. Jacksonville. Fla. Denning. Valerie. 1 Hillside Ave.. Port Washington. N. Y. Douglas. Debby. 342 W. Pine St.. Mt. Airy. N. C. DuKate. Daphne. Box 12116. Cove Station. Panama City, Fla. Eagles. Sue. 913 Pembroke Ave.. Ahoskie. N. C. Edwards. Margaret. 901 Rountree Ave., Kinston, N. C. Egerton. Carolvn. Pratt Montrose Aves.. Baltimore. Md. Elmore, Sue, Route 2. Winston-Salem. N. C . Emory, Mary Ellen, 1014 W. Markham Ave.. Durham, N. C. Fleenor. Janie. 1365 Reynolda Rd.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Forrester. Marsha. 356 Riverside Dr.. Greenville, S. C. Gardner. Barbara. 619 Irving St., Winston-Salem. N. C. Gardner. Betty. 3641 Valencia Rd.. Jacksonville. Fla. Gardner. Nancy, 619 Irving St.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Garrard. Joanne. 109 West Lake Ave.. Baltimore. Md. Gore. Anne. 513 Stanlev Ave.. Rockingham, N. C. Graves. Mary. 1213 Watson Dr.. Wilson, N. C. Grav. Bettv Clark. 2006 Monument Ave.. Richmond. Va. Griffin. Nancv. 3421 Glendon Dr.. Chattanooga. Tenn. Griffith. Rita. ' 405 E. 8th St.. Greenville. N. C. Gunn. Linda Earle. Box 87. Yanceyville. N. C. Harrison. Susan. 5 Wood Lane. Farmington, Char- lottesville. Va. Harshaw. Sally, 434 E. Washington Blvd., Grove City, Penn. Hatton. Betsy, 814 S. Edison, Tampa, Fla. Havwood, Harriet, 1118 Ann St.. Rockingham, N. C. Heilin. Ellen. 600 Henri Rd.. Richmond, Va. Hemrick, Bonnie, 4553 Shattalon Dr.. Winston-Salem N. C. Hodges, Linda, Box 98, Fairmont, N. C. Houser. Feme. 307 W. Salisbury St., Pittsboro, N. C. Hubbard, Cacky, 103 Finch St.. Clinton. N. C. Hughes, Nancy, 2814 Anderson Dr.. Raleigh. N. C. Humphreys. Sue, 1503 Parkview Ave., Whiting, Ind. James, Frankie Lou, 240 S. Main St., Mount Airv N. C, Johnson, Barbara, 3482 W. Ridge Rd. S.W., Roanoke, Va. Johnson. Jerry, Sunset Lake Rd.. Varina. N. C. Kell. Kay. 16 Long Crescent Dr.. Bristol. Va. Kelley. Karen. 1530 Geraldine Dr.. Jacksonville, Fla. Kendrick. Anne. 2030 Radcliffe Ave., Charlotte, N, C. King. Betsy. 2.380 Maryland Ave.. Spartanburg, S. C, King, Joan Elizabeth. 925 Long Dr.. Winston-Salem. Kropp, Karen, 425 Old Lancaster Rd.. Berwyn, Penn, Lane, Parma, Box 2284, Spartanburg. S. C. LaRoque. Zan. 447 Carolina Cir., Winston-Salem. N, C Lee, Tinka, 2327 Overhill Rd., Charlotte, N. C. Leigh. Susan. 924 S. York St.. Gastonia, N. C. Linton. Debbie. 1166 Sewell Lane. Rydal. Penn. Lukens. Joan. 1911 Main St.. Bethlehem. Penn. Lyon. Linda. 3616 Hathaway Rd.. Durham, N C McAfee, Lana, Box 387, Old Fort. N. C. McClement. Lvnne. 101 Lansdale Dr., Spartanburg S. C. McDorman, Jody, 5209 Springlake Way, Baltimore, Md, McGlinn, Wendy, 729 Millbrook Lane, Haverford, Penn. McLean. Marianna. 201 E. 20th St.. Lumberton. N, C. McRae. Babs, .5012 Yacht Club Rd.. Jacksonville, Fla. Maier, Sue. Box 16, Hope, N, J. Matthews. Becky, 4423 Firestone, Houston, Texas Miley. Julia. Smithville. Tenn. Minnick. Katie. 427 Arlington Ave.. Bristol, Va. Moore. Beth. 1306 Main St.. Tarboro, N. C. Morgan. Gretchen. 116 Cedar Street, Mooresville, N, C. Morgan, Sandra, 217 Hiilcrest Dr., Sanford, N. C, Murchison, Mae, 704 Rush Rd.. Favetteville, N, C. Nash. Patty. Box 205. Lowell. N. C. Neese. Dale, 3905 Friendly Rd.. Greensboro, N. C. Patterson. Betsy. Box 145. Halifax, Va. Patterson. Brandon. 4641 Iroquois Ave.. Jacksonville Fla. Peele. Billie. 107 Woodlawn Dr.. Williamston, N. C. Perry. Ethel. 209 Woodside Ave.. Favetteville, N. C. Pollard. Allison. 205 Country Club Lane. Galax. Va. Prevost. Beth. 1905 Princess St.. Wilmington, N. C. Price. Louise. 1801 Carlisle Rd.. Greensboro. N. C. Rablen. Susie. 3019 Ocean Blvd.. Vero Beach, Fla. Rankin. Lisa. 5324 Interbay Blvd.. Tampa. Fla. Ravenel. Millie. 1020 Mulberry Rd.. Martinsville, Va. Redfern. Pat. 405 Havne St.. Monroe. N. C. Richheimer. Bitsie. 3694 Hedrick St.. Jacksonville, Fla. Ross. Marti. 2015 Queens Rd. W.. Charlotte. N. C. Rouzer. Nancy. 610 Hermitage Ct.. Charlotte, N. C, Rupprecht, Sarah. 2908 Park Rd.. Charlotte, N, C. .Sapp, GeeGee, 314 W. Marsh St.. Salisbury, N, C. Shull. Diane, 1616 Fairidge Place, Kingsport, Tenn. Smartt. Sally, Elfin Rd., Lookout Mtn., Tenn, Martha Tnllman, class at l ' ' i}.i. in a sheath of rarnalion pink and uhitv rrepe brorade with a fringe nf tihite beads edging (he split-level top. MONTALDO ' S Uinston-Salem, Xiirlh Carolina Smith. Susan O.. 3110 Washington Rd.. W. Pahn Beach. Fla. Snyder. Jean. 402 Park St.. Lexington. N. C. Steere. Susan. 1014 S. Hawthorne Rd.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Stout. Roddv. 301 N. Ridgeway Dr.. Greensboro. N. C. Sullivan. Beth. 204 Warsaw Rd.. Clinton. N. C. Talley. Mary. 733 S. Green St.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Taylor. Hume. 3044 Carolina Ave.. Roanoke. Va. Thomasson. Sara. 616 Mulberry. Martinsville. Va. Thompson. Pat. 1321 Heathcliffe. High Point. N. C. Thornhill. Kim. 3614 Manton Dr.. Lynchburg. Va. Trask. Kitty. S. Hermitage Rd.. Beaufort. S. C. Tynes. Frances. 1009 Carolina St.. Greensboro. N. C. Wales. Janet. 3805 Harbor Dr.. Jacksonville. Fla. Wall. Dade. 1649 Pinecrest Rd.. Rocky Mount. N. C. Weidner. Carol. 5292 N.E. ISth Ter.. Ft. Lauderdale. Fla. Williams. Floride. 1201 Schuyler Bldg.. Spartanburg. Williams. Jeanne, 2723 Rosalind Ave.. Roanoke. Va. Wilson. Marianne. 2703 Anderson Dr.. Raleigh. N. C. Wilson, Pat, 1501 Washington St., Durham, N. C. FRESHMEN Atkinson. Judy. 1125 N. 46th Ave.. Hollywood. Fla. Aylward. Judy. 1207 E. Idleweir Ave.. Ocala. Fla. Bailey. Lee. Route 2. Box 205. Asheville. N. C. Barbee. Dee. Scottsville Rd.. Bowling Green. Ky. Barker. Mary Elizabeth. 4700 Water Oak Lane. Jack- sonville. Fla. Barnes, Jeannie, Crow Hill , Rt. 5. Charlottesville. Va. Barrs. Bretta. 3403 Morrison Ave.. Tampa. Fla. Bell. Sylvia, 829 Sycamore St.. Rocky Mount. N. C. Benton. Betty. Box 189, West Point. Ga. Bethel. Brenda. 379 N. Ayrshire In.. Inverness Coun- tryside, Palatine, 111. Bloodworth, Frances, 540 Oleander Dr.. Florence. S. C. Boren. Cecile. 3500 Starmount Dr.. Greensboro. N. C. Bourdeaux. Margaret. Box 127. Davidson. N. C. Brown. Baird. 910 S. Himes Ave.. Tampa. Fla. Bull. Ann. 4810 Gaines Dr.. Greensboro. N. C. Carpenter. Bradley. 307 W. Cambridge Ave.. Green- wood. S. C. Causey, Cherry. 210 Valley Stream Rd., Statesville, N. C. Christian, Carolyn. 910 Brompton St.. Fredericksburg. Va. Clark, Ross, 620 Maple St., Greenville, N, C . Cleino, Anne, 7 Hickory Hill, Tu.scaloosa, Ala. Colbert. Carol. 925 Elder Lane. Jacksonville. Fla. Cothran. Lee. 523 Juanita Drive. Florence. S. C. Crawley. Jan. Box 38. Boiling S])rings, N. C. Crutchfield, Jane, 518 McGill Dr.. Albemarle. N. C. Cubberley. Judy. 505 Lafayette Dr.. Wilson. N. C. Dameron, Mary, 356 Morgan St., Marion, N. C. Daniel. Dinah. 1008 West Kenan St.. Wilson. N. C. Davis, Jane, 2616 Augusta Dr.. Durham. N. C. Day. Janice. 1534 7th Ave. W.. Bradenton. Fla. Derflinger. Carol. 929 Sunset Dr.. Coral Gables. Fla. de Stefano, Ginger, 504 W, Beacon Rd.. Lakeland, Fla. Dozier. Ann, 1501 Sycamore, Durham, N. C. Dulin, Jan, 3031 Se ' lwyn Ave., Charlotte, N. C. Elliott, Sue, 543 N. Victoria Park Rd.. Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Ferguson. Anne. 816 Westover Ave.. Norfolk. Va. Fleenor, Junie, 1365 Reynolda Rd., Winston-Salem N. C. Fowler. Betsy. 612 Clark Dr.. Tarboro. N. C. Gerrard. Carol. 208 Mayfield Dr.. Anderson. S. C. Gilliam. Judy. 607 W. Lexington Ave.. High Point N. C. Girling. Dottie. 12 Rockland St.. Taunton. Mass. Glenn. Janice. 80 Smythe Ave.. Greenville. S. C. Goldkamp. Marlene. 261 S. Main St.. W. Hartford, Conn. Gray. Chri. Demer Rd.. St. Simons Lsland. Ga. Grovenstein. Ann. Box 355. Maxton. N. C. Hall. Jane. Box .507. Belmont. N. C. Hamer. Fran. 3831 Warrington Dr.. Charlotte. N. C. Hammock. Margaret. Route 3. Winston-Salem. N. C. Hand. Mary Kay. 528 E. Front St.. New Bern. N. C. Hankins. Pat. 200 Country Club Dr.. Lexington. N. C. Holderness. Zelle. 805 S. Howard Circle, Tarboro, N, C. Hudgens, Mary Lucy, 441 Forest Ave,. Spartanburg, Hundley. Nancy. 424 Lynn Ave.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Hunter. Craig. 617 W. Palmetto St.. Florence. S. C. Ingram. Ginger. 611 Spruce St., Florence, S, C, Jenkins, Betty, 1001 Monte Sano Ave.. Augusta. Ga. Jones. Jay. Academy St.. Batesburg. S. C. Kelly, Claudia, 4635 Ortega Forest Dr.. Jacksonville. Fla. Kilgore. Peggy, 2526 White Oak Rd.. Raleigh, N. C. Kincheloe. Judy. 5109 Shamrock Dr.. Raleigh. N. C. King. Ann. 4012 Overbrook Dr.. Nashville. Tenn. King. Jean. Forest Hills. Lincolnton. N. C. Lancaster. Jackie. 34 Woodbridge Ter.. S. Hadley, Mass. Lassiter. Kathie. 723 Sunset Dr.. Smithfield. N. C. Law, Carolyn, 437 High St., Bethlehem, Penn. MacFayden. Carol, 1710 Winterlochen Rd.. Fayette- ville. ' N. C. MacPherson, Marion, 151 Government St., Mobile, Ala. McCallum. Lucy. 2219 Wheeler Rd.. Raleigh. N. C. McCoy. Minor. 309 W. Vance St.. Laurinburg. N. C. Mclver, Scott. 510 Maplewood Dr.. Sanford. N. C. McKinnon. Ann. Box 128. Laurinburg. N. C. McMillan. Betty. 503 Weaver Drive. Lexington. N. C. Mallard. Barbara. 1220 N. Pasteur St.. New Bern, N, C. Markley. Judy, 6424 Brookside Dr.. Chevy Chase. Md. Masters. Sissy. 914 Ontario St.. Shreveport. La. Materne. Susie. 105 Pepper Ave.. Richmond. Va. Miller. Caroline. 728 Westmont Dr.. Asheboro. N. C. Mock. Frances. 603 Warren Ave.. Kinston. N. C. Morrison. Betty. 406 Edgemont Dr.. Kings Mln.. N. C. ■Morton. Diane. 5021 Loughboro Rd.. N.W., Washing- ton, D. C. Munt. Pat. 2606 Mayview Rd.. Raleigh, N, C. Newton. Nancy, Old Mill Road, Greenwood, Chapel Hill, N. C. Nicol. Sissy, 400 Miller Rd„ Peoria Heights, III. Norcom, Fontaine, Box 192 Dungadin, Front Royal, Va. EXQUISITE FOOTWEAR 422 West Fourth Street BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1963 Salem Paper Company (Incorporated) Quality Paper Wholesale P. 0. Box 5155 1025 Canal Drive Winston-Salem, North Carolina THE SUN PRINTING CO. Printing and Publishing Dial PA 50606 414 Bank Street, S.W. Winston-Salem, N. C. Coniplimenls of JOHN E. PFAFF AND SONS Plumbing Heating Contractors 819 S. Marshall Street Winston-Salem, North Carolina Alton F. Pfaff, Owner ( J DOWNTOWN NORTHSIDE Everylliin ic lo Outfit the Style Conscious Junior Miss PARKWAY CHALET MOTOR LODGE AND RESTAURANT 600 Peters Creek Parkway Winston-Salem, N, C. ) ' iiur Host 1(11 (ircatcr (Jii(ilil FEATURING THE ALPINE SUPPER CLUB For Dining and Dancing Cabana Clul) • ' 0 Luxurious AccoinnioHation? Swiuiiiiing Pool • Complete Hotel Services Putting (ireeii • Tap Room Meeting Rooms • Dircc-Dial Telephone Reservations — PA 5-0501 Restaurant— PA 2-1119 Norman. Jan. 1207 Dinwiddie Ave.. Richmond. Va. Odom. Cathy. 811 Arbutus Dr.. Columbia. S. C. Oliver. Sara. 2026 St. Andrews Rd.. Greensboro. N. C. Parrott. Ruthie. 904 Rountree Ave.. Kinston. N. C. Perry Ellen. 801 Baldwin Rd.. Richmond. Va. Persons, Margaret. 2323 Sunnvside Ave.. Winston- Salem. N. C. Powell. Penny. 324 Robin Rd.. Mt. Airy. N. C. Price. Happy. 1020 Arden Way. Spartanburg. S. C. Reid, Georgenne. 2912 Oak St.. Jacksonville. Fla. Remmey. Gayle. 80.S Dover Rd.. Greensboro. N. C. Renick. Jeannie. 224 Rives Rd.. Martinsville. Va. Richardson. June. 112 Vernon St.. Kernersville. N. C. Russell. Beckv. 311 S. Howard Cir.. Tarboro. N. C. Sams. Sara. 3419 Seward PI.. Charlotte. N. C. Schmulling. Carolvn. 320 8th St.. N.W.. Hickorv. N. C. Schutt. Betty Lou. 1319 Grace St.. Wilmington. N. C. Seawell. Tavy. 378 Ridgewood Ave.. Charlotte. N. C. Shavender. Virginia. 1412 Regent Place. Raleigh. N. C. Sherman. Phvllis. 913 Mulberrv Rd.. Martinsville. Va. Shuford. Sandy. 1007 14th Ave.. Hickory. N. C. Simmons. Cindy. .516 N. Stratford Rd.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Smith. Betsy. RFD 1. Box 98. Wiscasset. Me. Smith. Kitty. 308 North St.. Portsmouth. Va. Smith. Nancy. 100.5 Hiawatha Dr.. Anderson. S. C. Springer. Sally. 1601 Monroe St.. Hollywood. Fla. Strain. Ann. 1107 Ridgeleigh Cir.. Dalton. Ga. Tiffany. Mel. 2048 Camden Ave.. Jacksonville. Fla. Trexler. Elinor. 420 Carolina Cir.. Durham. N. C. Tunstall. Linda. 803 Westwood. High Point. N. C. Van Pelt. Donna. 4101 Oldfield Rd.. Charlotte. N. C. Walker. Dale. 417 Craven St.. New Bern. N. C. Wall. Sylvia. 960 N. 10th St.. Albemarle. N. C. Wampler, Gretchen, 1225 Hillcrest Dr.. Harrisonburg. Va. Ward, Marilyn. .541 Clifton Rd., Rocky Mount, N. C. Weersing, Marcia, 486 Connecticut Ave.. Spartanburg. S. C. Weisz. Carole. .503 Forest Ln.. Rock Hill. S. C. Werner. Jean Anne. 1008 N. Duke St.. Durham. N. C. Whitehurst, Joe Ann. Box 383. Bethel. N. C. Whitney, Ann, 2490 Lyndhurst Ave.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Willey. Martha. 200 Virginia Ave.. Nashville. N. C. Williams. Cvnthia. 304 Marine St.. Mobile. Ala. Wilson. Ann. 3870 Baltic St.. Jacksonville. Fla. Wilson. Louisa. 3 Holly Dr.. Newport News. Va. Young. Margaret. 5610 Durbin Rd.. Bethesda, Md. Young, Susan. P. O. Box 755. Burgaw. N. C. FOREIGN STUDENTS Di Stefano, Sara, Via Caracciolo 14, Naples, Italy Magos, Judit, Kriesbach 14, Dubendorf ZH Switzer- land. FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATION Al-Aish. Dr. Matti, 1206 W. 4th St., Apt. 3, Winston- Salem. N. C. Albright. Mrs. Lena A., 423 West Bank St.. Winston- Salem. N. C. Allen. Rev. Walser H. Jr.. 909 S. Church St.. Winston- Salem, N. C. Austin. Dr. Lucy E.. 717 Lockland Ave., Winston- Salem. N. C. Austin. Thomas E.. 110 Longfellow St.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Avera. Mrs. Frances H.. 514 Lester Lane. Winston- Salem. N. C. Battle. Miss Barbara. Home Management House. Win- ston-Salem. N. C. Bell. Ralph R.. 1028 Hawthorne Rd.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Bloesch. Richard. 512 Salt St.. S.W.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Booker. Marshall. 1641 Northwest Blvd.. Winston- Salem. N. C. Bowen. Mrs. Louise C. 207D Cloverdale Apts.. Win- ston-Salem. N. C. Bray. James L.. 2454 Lvndhurst Ave.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Bvers. Dr. Inzer. 252 Melrose St.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Byrd. Miss Jess. 803 S. Main St.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Campbell. Rov. 807 S. Church St.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Cash. Miss Marv. 1903 Sunnyside Ave.. Winston- Salem. N. C. Chee. Dr. Changboh. Box 6774. Revnolda Stat.. Win- ston-Salem. N. C. Cosbv. Bertram 0.. 11 E. Bank St.. Winston-Salem. N. ' C. Cox. Miss Carolvn. 708 S. Main St.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Curlee. A. T.. 121 Penns lvania Ave.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Deskins. Dr. Stuart. Rt. 8. Box 601. Greensboro. N. C. Earlv. Mrs. Patricia R.. 4031 Student Dr.. Winston- Salem. N. C. French. Dr. Carson. 270 Fairfax Dr.. Winston-Salem, N. C. Gokhale. Dr. B. G.. 3C Fac. Apts.. Wake Forest Col- lege. Winston-Salem. N. C. Harris. Allen. 613 Summit St.. Apt. 5, Winston-Salem, N. C. Heidemann. Hans. 1221 Watson Ave.. Winston-Salem, N. C. Hill. Dr. Mary S.. 900 S. Church St.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Hill. Ralph E.. 900 S. Church St.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Hills. Dr. Barbara. Faculty Apts.. Wake Forest College. Winston-Salem. N. C. Honeycutt. Mrs. Faye C. 3715 Wabash, O. T. Heights. Winston-Salem. N. C. Jacobowsky. Eugene. 921 S. Main St.. Winston-Salem, N. C. Jacobowsky. Mrs. Joan, 921 S. Main St.. Winston- . Salem. N. C. Karnes. Mrs. Lucia R.. 429 Westview Dr. N.W.. Win- ston-Salem. N. C. Kellam. Mrs. Emily R.. Raleigh, N. C. Lewis. Dr. Michael. 311 Biscayne. Winston-Salem. N. C. McCorkle. Dr. Donald. 2600 Loch Dr.. Winston-Salem, N. C. BOWLING at its best Major League Lanes 151 S. Stralfurd Rd. 30 MODERN LANES Salem College Sluilenls Welcomed At Special Rates of 3 Games $1.00 9-6 Daily 9-3 Saturday Compliments of acoc4S Ta««( ( 501 West Fourth St. Winston-Salem, N. C. TRIANGLE Restaurant Cr Drive-ln Strut juid Sln f}initn Center Straljord Rd. at Expressway full cuursi ' liiiner Pizza Spaghetti — Our Sptrialtv 723-7114 TAKE OtiT ORDERS Cstffii s Mens and boys ' clothing of distinction at reasonable prices Win Iiin-Saleni: Eourlli at Cherry High PoinI: College Village Shopping Center FRANK A.gT|TH COMPAN Y VOGLER SERVICE Funeral Directors Ambulance Service Dependable Service Since 1858 DIAL PA 2-6101 Mangum. William. 2211 Rosewood Ave.. Winston- Salem. N. C. Medlin. Charles. High Point. N. C. Melvin. Mrs. Mary. lloT Waughtown St.. Winston- Salem. N. C. Michie. A. Hewson. Jr.. Middlebrook Dr.. Clemmons. X. C. Miranda. Juan. 614 est First St.. ' inston-Salem. . C. Mueller. John S.. 11 E. Bank St.. Winston-Salem. . C. Mueller. Mrs. Margaret S.. 11 E. Bank St.. Winston- Salem. N. C. Paine. Dr. Stephen. 642 Hollv A e.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Parker. Mrs. June C. 725 Svlvan Rd.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Peterson. Paul. 345 Pennsylvania Ave.. Winston-Salem. N. C. Samson. Miss June. Bitting Dormitory. inston-Salem. N. C. Sanders. Wilmer. 3 14 X. Cherry Ext.. Winston-Salem. X. c. Sandreskv. Clemens. ,22 S. Church St.. Winston-Salem. X. c. Sandreskv. Mrs. Margaret V.. 722 S. Church St.. in- ston-Salem. X. C. Scott. Mrs. Lucille V.. Union Dr.. Rt. 6. Winston-Salem. X. c. Simpson. Miss Margaret. 1.509 Cloverdale Ave.. in- ston-Salem. X. C. Smith. Mrs. E. Leonidas. 2891 Monticello Dr.. X in- ston-Salem. X. C. Smith. Lloyd. 893 Madison Ave.. Winston-Salem. X. C. Snow. Mrs. Margaret P.. 516 S. Main St.. Winston- Salem. X. C. Spencer. Miss Florence C. 1522 Doune St.. inston- Salem. X. C. Welch. Dr. Elizabeth. Lehman Hall. Winston-Salem. X. C. Wendt. Robert L.. 2831 Lomond St.. Winston-Salem. X. c. White. Jack M.. 3070 High Point Rd.. Winston-Salem. X. C. White. Dr. ' William B.. Rt. 4. Winston-Salem. X. C. Woodward. Miss Anne. 23o5-C Ardmore Terr.. Win- ston-Salem. X. C. urtele. Miss Xancy. Pfohl House. Winston-Salem. X. C. arbrough. Watts R.. Bethania (Old Town I . Winston- Salem. X. C. York. Mrs. Dorothy C. 2427 Stockton St.. inston- Salem- X. C. The Winston-Salem Chamber of Commerce Invites Mm to call on us when ue can he of help. ( ' liamluT IIfa li|uart(Ts: Marshall St. ami (loIiMUm Dr. I James Cordon Hanp- Comniunitv Criiti-r LiM; .) Tel. PArk 5-2361 Compliments of MORRIS SERVICE HOTEL ROBERT E. LEE DOUGLAS BOYLE General Manager 1772-1963 DEGREES OFFERED IN THE LIBERA L ARTS SCIENCES MUSIC SALEM COLLEGE WINSTON SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA COLORACTION in your JOURNAL and SENTINEL COLOR — the dynamic ingredient in the solid, depend- able newspaper medium that provides that something extra in newspaper readability. Today Journal and Sentinel COLORACTION in uniform quality is recog- nized as being among the nation ' s best. Editorially and in our advertising columns, you can de- pend on the finest newspaper color reproduction avail- able — another effort by the Journal and Sentinel to capitalize on the newspaper ' s great productive capacity to bring you the news in complete detail. WIMSTOM-SALEM JOURNAL AND TWIN CITY SENTINEL (morning) (Sunday) (evening) TELECAST AFFILIATE BROADCAST AFFILIATE WSJ ST V WSJS-AM:FM Channel 12 _ 600 kc — 104.1 mc ISBC for Win atones alem, Greensboro, High Point f ya cLpu ? .. zr r i toul ' -_ ' ' ' - ' wdl6in refreshes your taste —§ir-§oftens every puff • menthol fresh • rich tobacco ' Taste • modern filter, too CrtoKd by R. J. R.ynotdt Tobacco Co ' j.twmj JWj Jjj amwAiiM  Compliments of SEALTEST FOODS Division of National Dairies Product, Inc. Milk Ice Cream PA 3-0311 WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. da you kna§v • • • that you are graduating into one of the most promising areas of the nation? A recent urban research study forecast? a linear city for the 300 miles stretch- ing through the industrial Carolinas. Here, in the 20,000 square miles served by Dul e Power, scores of thriving towns connect busy cities. Research centers, col- leges and universities, and hundreds of industries thrive. Here in the Carolinas Crescent, there is real challenge and oppnrtunitv There is a place for you tu fill, a job for you to do, in an e.xciting future that begins — nght now. DUKE POWER ENGINE E R S AND (MziA ndjCfTx f ffl Company M ANUFACTU R ERS T7- WiNSTON -Salem. N. C. COMPLETE INDUSTRIAL AIR-CONDITIONING Complimpnls of I lie • Downtown • Rpynolfla Manor • Parkway Plaza Winston-Salem, North Carolina STALEY ' S STEAK HOUSE 2000 REYNOLDA ROAD Phone PA 3-8631 mm TEAK hOu e Winston-Salem Leading Restaurants WHERE QUALITY PREVAILS Now Serving You in Two Convenient Locations 107 LOCKLAND AVENUE and 300 SOUTH STRATFORD ROAD (Thru-way Shopping Center) Winston-Salem, N. C. 38 YEARS EXPERIENCE Scuitut DRY CLEANING b LAUNDRY CO. DAILY PICK UP DELIVERY Cleaning At Its Finest With . . . SANITONE DIAL 722-7101 939 BURKE COMPLETE LAUNDRY SERVICE RUG CLEANING SPECIALIZING IN WALL-TO-WALL CARPETING Either in Our Plant — Or at Y ' our Home GARMENT DYEING BY THE LATEST PROCESSES FURNITIIRE AND UPHOLSTERY CLEANING FUR WOOLEN STORAGE LEATHER SUEDE CLEANING DRAPERY CLEANING Compliments of S. H. KRESS K W CAFETERIAS 2 LOCATIONS PARKWAY PLAZA PA 4-8703 422 N. CHERRY STREET PA 2-6022 REGISTERED ANGUS CATTLE HILLSIDE FARM GUILFORD COLLEGE, N. C. Now any woman can be financially independent Securitj ' s new omen ' s Optional Income Plan, available only to women, guarantees life income to supplement Social Security benefits. Its cost is specially in line with the working girl ' s paycheck, the housewife ' s pin money. Security — something for EJ ERY WOMAN to think about GORRELL SIEWERS AGENCY 420 North Spruce Street WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Phone: PArk 2-2578 Charles N. Siewers, C.L.U. Spencer C. Waggoner Wade H. Moser Conrad M. West Robert W. Gorrell R. Ray Holder Vernie R. Snider Randal Shelton SECURITY LIFE AND TRUST COMPANY Margaret Chew models evening near jor jWkfTii m Winston-Sttlem, North Carolina 1865 1963 Compliments of GALLINS VENDING CO. Lenwood Ammons A. C. MoTsiNCER. Jr. AMMONS ESSO SERVICENTER ROAD SERVICE Tires - Accessories - Batteries 1200 Reynolda Rd. N.W. Corner Robin Hood Rd. Phone PA 5-2681 Compliments of PFAFF ' S, INC. PAINTS, GLASS, WALLPAPER As Old As Winston-Salem Phone PA 3-7365 219 N. Main St. Winston-Salem, N. C. Earth Moving Asphalt Paving Garden Stores Landscaping L. A. Reynolds Company Telephone PA 5-3523 - 1100 W. First Winston-Salem, N. C. Headquarters for Fine Diamonds Jewelry Sih ' envare or Novelties Repairing a Specialty VOGLER ' S JEWELERS West Fourth Street Dial PA 2-0347 Complefe Auto Service and Parking U. S. TIRES DOWNTOWN GARAGE Next to Reynolds Building PILOT FREIGHT CARRIERS, INC. Service is our frame of mind Executive Offices Winston-Salem, N. C. Phones: PA 2-1196 - PA 2-1197 - PA 5-1209 Hanes Produce Co., Inc. 637 N. Cherry Street Winston-Salem, N. C. The Portraits in this Yearbook Were Made By SMITH STUDIO PHOTOGRAPHERS Official Portrait Photographers for the 1963 SIGHTS AND INSIGHTS PORTRAITS AND APPLICATION PICTURES MAY BE ORDERED FROM US FROM YOUR SCHOOL ANNUAL NEGATIVES 14 East Hargett Street RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA SALEMITES MEET AT THE PETER PAN STEAKS SALADS SEAFOOD 825 S. Marshall Phone PA 5-3181 Conpratulalions and Best Wishes for Success and Happiness during the years to come MOTHER AND DAUGHTER FASHIONS Comer Liberty and Third Streets in Winston-Salem THE VILLAGE YARN SHOP i!= now open in the olH Bak- n building over Dan ' s Antique Shop. Come by and see our yarns, sweater kits, crewel em- broider -. needlepoint and other needle craft projects and supplies. E ARE OPEN MONDAY THROl GH FRIDAY SUZANNE La ROI.H E MARY LOl MORRIS CAROLINA Marble and Tile Company SINCE 1921 CONTRACTORS FOR TILE. MARBLE. TERRAZZO FLOORS Phone PArk 4-3641 1001 Norihwest Blvd. P. 0. Box 1153 Modern Chevrolet Co. if inslon-Salem ' s Only Authorized Chevrolet Dealer SALES • SERVICE - PARTS 800 West Fourth St. School Needs Gifts Greeting Cards Fountain Pens HINKLE S BOOK STORE 425 . Trade Street PHONE PA 5-0213 and Parkway Plaza Shopping Center PA .5-0217 0 TENNY ' S SPORTS and CASUAL CLOTHES 319 W. 4th St. c - jy , U,- MKA -m it ' oAAcm LwrdiM ' foxJuvi lIFf. NOVfMBfR 9 196?. PPINTFO IN USA (EoblyitU COLLEGE PHARMACY COR. HAWTHORNE LOCKLAND Phone PA 3-1867 Win ' ston-Salem, N. C. PRESCRIPTIONS COSMETICS Bobbins Doivnstairs Store INVITATIONS CENTER PIECES FAVORS PARTY NAPKINS COMPLETE ENSEMBLES GIFTS AND TOYS BRIDGE ACCESSORIES MONOGRAMMING ! - Fallie Ann Lohr Says beautiful shoes can be comfortable when fitted by ?7e Wl M STON • SALEM Wi.nston-Salem, N. C. Wi}t talent J oofe tore Salem College . M J3i FRANK L. BLUM CONSTRUCTION CO. 860 WEST 4 ' 2 STREET WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. TELEPHONE PA 2-1544 THRUWAY SHOE SHOP The Best in Shoe Repairing Dyeing Compliments of Colonial Jfurniturc Ijops;, 3nc. 2840 Waughtown Street One Day Service THRUWAY SHOPPING CENTER Also 848 West Fourth Street Winston-Salem, North Carolina The Home of Quality Furniture TAXI BLUE BIRD CAB, INC. DIAL 7121 5 Passengers for the Price of 1 225 N. Trade Street Winston-Salem, N. C. BAGGAGE TRANSFER FOR NICE THINGS TO WEAR AND RELAXED SUBURBAN SHOPPING VISIT HOME OF LAyZ DRESSES AND SMART SPORTSWEAR COORDINATES LOCATED IN THE THRU KAY SHOPPING CENTER. PHONE PA 5-8519 OPEN EVERY NITE TIL 9 - Mon. Thru Fri. SAT. TIL 5:30 SUMMIT STREET PHARMACY, INC. Foot of Summit Street Overlooking Hanes Park Your Prescription Our First Consideration DIAL PA 21144 REGISTERED PHARMACISTS TO SERVE YOU TUTTLE LUMBER COMPANY Dependable Building Materials 1721 Stadium Drive Phone PArk 3-4318 - P. 0. Box 4595 Winston-Salem 6. N. C. 0 .r m Optical Co. Prescription Opticians Opera and Sport Glasses CONTACT LENSES 207 West Fourth Street WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. For a tea thirst- quencher,,. Wothing does it likft fi ven-Up! Shop with Confidence at BELK-STEVENS CO. COMPLETE DEPARTMENT STORE WINSTON-SALEM. N. C. WINSTON POULTRY CO. DRESSED POULTRY and COUNTRY HAM AND EGGS DELIVERY SERVICE PHONE PA 2-7089 or PA 2-6827 Jred Kour i PLANTATION SUPPER CLUB FLAME ROOM RESTAURANT Qreeniboro, Jy. C. Phone CYpress 2-5010 Sales Representative ROYAL TYPEWRITERS Sales - Service - Rentals ■ Supplies KELLY TYPEWRITER COMPANY 618 West Fourth Street Phone: PA 3-7373 Coiiipliinen s oj VENETIAN BLIND g. AWNING CO MANUFACTURERS Venetian Blinds - Awnings - Window Shades - Drapery - Hardware Window Screens - Fo lding Doors 510 South Marshall Street DIAL PA 2-5205 EFFICIENCY APTS. AIR CONDITIONED HALL TO WALL CARPETS PHONE IN EVERY ROOM TELEVISION ELECTRIC HEAT ON U.S. 158 and U.S. 4Z1 Just Ea il of City Hospital, Wln.ston Salem, N. C. (MLEft manor gracious southern hospitality PHONE: PA 5-97JI tLijL fil tuL ON THE CAMPUS WAKE FOREST COLLEGE she came — she saw — she conquered, in her new clothes from — Wmu Congratulations to the Seniors McPhail ' s China Silver, Crystal and Fine Jewelry 410 Spruce Street Thruway Shopping Center E. G. FOREST CO. INSTITUTIONAL FOODS PArk 2-1129 1030 N. Chestnut Street Winston-Salem, N. C. PINE HALL BRICK AND PIPE CO., INC. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. SINCERE BEST WISHES TO SALEM COLLEGE . . . OVER THE YEARS — A GREAT INSTITUTION FROM UNDERWEAR • SPORTSWEAR • S I. E E P W E A R Products of WASHINGTON MILLS CO., Winston-Salem, N. C. PEPSI-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY of Winston-Salem, Inc. 1664 Stadium Drive Phone PA 3-1892 WINSTON-SALEM ' S FINEST SUPER MARKETS CoinpUnients of L.l ber WINSTON-SALEM ROBERT ROLLINS BLAZERS Inc. 242 Park Avenue Suulh New York 3. N. Y. SPECIALIZED BLAZER SERVICE To Schools Sororities Classes Bands Colleges Fraternities Athletic Teams Glee Clubs Golf Clubs Honor Societies Awards Committees Choral Groups SUPERIOR OIL CO. WINSTON-SALEM. N C. CHJKLOTTE Ellimmii CO. Iharlotie, niorlh (Carolina ' ' The South ' s Finest Annual Engravers Since 1915 ' ' Boar and (Tattle Greensboro ' ' s Most Popular Sandivich Shop CURB SERVICE : GREENSBORO, N. C. When you need a little lift — depend on Coke Compliments of SANITARY CONTAINER SERVICE CORP. 3301 GLENN AVE. FOWLER-JONES CONSTRUCTION COMPANY Telephone PA 3-0336 Winston-Salem, N. C. Q ' A u HC. WOMEN ' S APPAREL THRUWAY SHOPPING CENTER PHONE 725-4563 . . . are produced at Edwards . Hroiifjhton. Since 1902 we liave liad r|iiality as our fust coTicern ' in tlic |iroducliciu of letterpress and litliopraplied animals. . Our new large plant and our recently aci|uircd ccpiiprnent enables us to do an even better job without losing. our personal toueb. You ean be truly proud of your aiuuial ... if it was produced by Edwards Brougbton. We iniite your inquiries EDWARDS BROUGHTON COMPANY Prinlrr.s, lilhogrnphen, enjiravers 1821 N. Boulevard, Raleigb, Norlb Carolina n AUTD G RAPH S GrstYiley DSrary Salem Academy and College Winston-Salem. N.C. 27108


Suggestions in the Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) collection:

Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

1960

Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 1

1961

Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collection, 1962 Edition, Page 1

1962

Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

1964

Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

Salem College - Sights and Insights Yearbook (Winston-Salem, NC) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966


Searching for more yearbooks in North Carolina?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online North Carolina yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.