Eleven of the new faculty and staff members at North
Carolina College are shown here receiving welcome to the
institution from, lower left to right, Dean G. T. Kyle, Busi
ness Manager William Jones, Assistant Dean Richard K.
Barksdale, and President Alfonso Elder. New appointees
left to right on rostrum are Miss Edith Willoughby, home
economics; Miss Mildred Wilson, house director; Mrs. Arona
McDougald Parker, mathematics; Le Marquis De Jarmon,
law; Miss Delphyne Webber, assistant house director; Miss
; Aletha Bease, secretary; Miss Hazel Borden, secretary; Miss
Roxie Holloway, secretary; Norwood E. Pearson, manager,
canteen; Miss Ernestine Johnson, secretary; and Miss Mary
Frances Suggs, professor of conunerce. Other appointees
who are not shown are Mrs. Annie King Corley, home eco
nomics; Brajamin F. Gray, music; Paul McGirt, French;
Mrs. Annie Pate Taylor, house director; Miss Mabel Ames
Dupree, circulatiHi librarian, Mrs. Mattie Canty, Mrs. Omega
Smith, and William Bland, maintenance.
Must Make Application Before
Oclober To Get M Benefits
A considerable'' number of
widows, young children, and
aged parents of working peo
ple who died between June
1940 and September 1950 have
failed to claim the monthly
benefits payable to them un
der a 1954 cluinge in the social
security law, gnnounced Mrs.
Nina Matthews, manager of
the Durham social security of
fice. Those who do not apply
for their benefits before Oct.,
she pointed out, will not be
able to receive benefits for all
the months back to September
1954, the effective date of the
new provision In the law.
Under tills provision, it is
now possible to pay monthly
social security benefits to the
qualified survivors of workers
who died between June 1940
and September 1950 if the de
ceased wage earners had cre
dit for as little as a year and
a half of work under social se
curity. The families of many
of these workers applied foi
benefits at the time of the
family breadwinner's death,
Mrs. Matthews said, but were
told that they could not re
ceive payments because under
the law, as it then stood, the
worker had not earned enough
social security credit to pro
vide survivors benefits for his
family.
Where a claim for social
security benefits is filed with
in 12 months 'bf the time a
beneficiary is first eligible,
hiS’ payments can be made to
him retroactively for the
whole period, Mrs. Matthews
pointed out. But if a' claim is
delayed for more than 12
months, benefits for some
months will be lost. She there
fore urged the survivors of
workers who dfed between
June 1940 and September 1950
to get in touch with their
nearest social security offices
before October 1, 1955. Quali
fied claimants who apply be
fore that date can be paid
benefits back to September
1954.
Monthly benefits under this
provision may be paid to the
aged widows of such workers
who at the time of death had
worked on jobs under social
security for at least a year and
ja half-to surviving children
under 18 years of age, and to
their mothers. Where no wi
dow or children survived the
worker, payments can be made
to his aged parents if he was
providing their support.
recently visited the country.
Dr. Reed, a member of a 12-
man American farm group,
spent nearly 30-days in the
USSR, visiting every section
covering a total of over 27,000
miles in the tour. He returned
to the states three weeks ago
and since that time has been
ibusy answering requests for
speaking engagements.
He has already made two
television appearances, spoke
at a public mass meeting in
Greensboro, sponsored by the
Greensboro Citizen’s Commit
tee, the city’s leading civic or
ganization and has appeared
before the faculty of AAT Col*
lege.
His address before the stu
dents at A&T this month if
to be transcribed for um on
the Voice of America.
In Demand As
Speaker On
Soviet Affairs
GRKENSBORO
The extreme interest of the
American public in Russian
affairs has been demonstrated
in the demands of speaking en
gagements of Dr. W. E. Reed,
dMn of the School of Agricul-
ture at A4T College, here, who
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Add Thirteen
To Facutly At
Hampton Inst.
HAMPTON, Va.
Dr. William H. Martin, dean
of faculty at Hampton Insti
tute, annotmced this week the
addition of 13 new members
to the college faculty.
’These new faculty members
were oriented to the college
during the Ninth Annual Edu-
catioaal Staff Institute held
Expanded Staff,
Record Entering
Class At Tenn.
NASHVILLE, Tenn.
An expanded faculty and
staff, a record 1,043 freshmen
and transfer students wire en
gaged in orientation activities
last week at Tennessee State
University began its 43rd year.
The faculty's first meeting
of the year was held Monday
Morning ' (September 12).
General activities for 1955-
56 were outlined. Benson L.
Dutton, Dr. H. A. Bowen, and
Dr. C. M. Hill, school chair
man, presened new faculty
members in engineering, edu
cation, and arts and sciences
respectively. Dr. W. S. Davis,
university president, presided.
The orientation program
planned primarily to help
freshmen and transferees ad
just to campus life, opened
with a convocation session
Tuesday (September 13) and
will close Sunday, September
25 when the praddent holds
his annual fireside chat and a
reception In his home. Movies,
lectures, mixers, square dan
ces, religious services, a picnic
and a banquet are the major
orientation activities which
the newcomers are enjoying.
Dr. William Simmons, dean
of men, was principal convoca
tion speaker. “How Much Am
I Bid for My Life?” was his
subject. Other speakers dur
ing the week have included
for the Hampton Institute fa
culty last week.
SAIUBDAT, Si^PT. 24, 1»S5 THE CABOUNA TIMES
FACm
Dr. A. V. Boswell, university
vice president; Dr. Virginia S.
Nyabongo, student personnel
director; and Dr. Elsie M.
Lewis of the history staff.
Physical examinations and
tests in English, speech, ty
ping, and mathematics were
held September 14. Registra
tion wtiich began Wednesday
closed Saturday, September
17. Classes began Monday,
Sept. 19.
Negro Professor
To Teadi At
Washington State
GRAMBLING, La,
J. Edward Blackwell, ’ a
member of the social science
faculty at Grambling college,
has been granted a year’s
leave of absence to accept a
$1,400 plus tuition free teach
ing fellowship in the sociology
department at Washington
State college, Pullman, Wash
ington.
Blackwell will instruct two
classes in sociology and an
thropology per semester and
and take 20-hours toward the
Ph.D., degree in sociology.
A member of the Grambling
faculty for the past three
years, he has been active in
community and collegiate Ufe,
serving on the Curriculum
Committee, Student Activities
Committee, and the presi
dent’s Committee on Drop-
Outs and withdrawals.
DR.F.D.BiUFORDKEYIIOmS(r
STAFF ORIENTAIKHI CONHI
GREENSBORO
The teacher who might be
well initated by his students
was described at A4T College
recently as a noble example of
the profession. The speaker
was Dr. F. D. Bluford, presi
dent of the college, who de
livered the keynote address at
the opening session of a three-
day Facuity-Staff Orientation
Conference. »
“The Example you set, the
inspiration which you might
give, are challenges which
mount in importance because
of the needs of our youth to
day," he said.
“We have a righteous cause
as classroom teachers." He
concluded, “We have a divine
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mission for in our hands are
placed the fortune* of youth”
The conference neld at the
college was conducted along
the theme, “Rethinking the
Aims and Objective* of A4T
College.”
COOHTRY
CiNTIEMAI
SfUMIT MIIBM
WIISUT
6 mis
•It
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2
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J.iLMM6HEirTrSS0NS.Iw.
Piiiladelptiis, Pa.
bs
''I go for luckies
... they taste
better to me!
Baseball’s greatest catcher is a Lucky
smoker. “I go for Luckies” says Roy Cam-
paneUa, “because Luckies taste better to me.
That’s the way I fed—and thafs why I
smoke Luckies"
It’s easy to understand why Luckies taste
better. First of aH, Lticky Strike means
fine tobacco. Then that tobacco is toasted.
“Ilfs Toasted'*—the famous Lucky Strike
process—tones up Luckies^ light, mild,
good-tasting tobacco to make it taste even
better ... cleaner, firesher, smoother. Next
time it’s light-up time, enjoy better tast*
yourself. Light up a Lucky!
"IT’S TOASTED"
to taste better!
'
ROY CAMPANULA, twice named Moat Valuable Player in the Na
tional League, iKis mide more home runs (41), batted in mMte runs
(142), and made more putouts (786) in a season than any other catch-
r er. His lieavy liitting lias sparked the Dodgers again this year.
WKIES nSIE BEHER —Cleaner, Fresher, Smoother I
CA. T. Co. FsooucT or
AltlStCA*8 LBADINQ MANUrACTUUm OF ClOABBTTBt