1THE CXROLIHK TIMES ’*
l*AY », mi "THI TRUTH UNilllOLiir
former College Presidents
Deliver Bennett Finals Talks
VISITING PROFESSOR AT N.
X.-Dr. Butler A. Jones, chaii-
IJMpi the department of seciol-
iil/f at Ohio Wesleyan Univer-
■%, will serve as a visiting pro-
Ut»or In the 1961 North Caro-
Hm Cellcse at Durham Summer
beginning on June 8.
-yY =
S^ISBURY HIGH
SCHOOLS WINS
A&T PLAY DAY
GREENSBORO—A team of girls
fron PriK High School, Salisbury,
took-first places to cop top honors
U(t Saturday at the annual North
Canto’s High School Play Day at
A. a«d T. College.
Tbe group took easy wins in
•oftball and table tennis to best
tke^U-team field.
Other winners in the day’s acti-
^srlOjat Included: Greensboro, Dud-
leyl^gb School, vollpyball; West
CUiAotte Hi"h School, Charlotte,
tenilli. edging Dudley in the first ci x
itmifd and whipping Booker Wash- Tcnn. StstC PlayBrS
initoa High School of Rocky Mt. r|of«»itao
ia tfe? finals, and the Pleasant
Grave Union High School of Bur- Department Citation
liBCton, took first place honors
GREaSNSBORO — Addreiaes by
two former college president! will
feature the 88th* commencement
program at Bennett College.
Dr. F. D. Patterson, former
prrsid-nt of Tuskegee Institute,
Tuskesee, Ala., and now president
of the Phelps Stokes Foundation of
New York City will deliver the
bacoalaurrale address on Sunday,
•hine 4. The following day, Dr. K.
r Brown, retired executive direct
or of the Danforth Foundation of
St. Louis, Mo., will give the com-
rnencemcnt address.
Polh events will be held in
Pfeiffer Chapel, the baccalaureate
oro'^ram at 4 p.m. on Sunday and
th» commencement exercises at
10:30 a.m. on Monday.
In addition to being chairman of
the Bennett College board of trus
tees, Dr. Patterson is also trus>
tee of Tuskegee Institute, Hamp
ton Institute and the Phelps-
Stokes Fund. He is a former trus
tee of Fisk University.
Commencement activities will
begin here on Friday, June 2,
when Class Day exercises are held
at 3 p.m. That night, at 8 o’clock
"Anligone” will be presented on
the terace of Pf»iffer Chapel.
On Saturday, following the meet
ing of the Bennett College Grad-
(lat-'; Association, the annual All-
Bennett Luncheon will be held.
At 8 p.m. the annual choir con-
cort will be heard to be followed
by campus illumination. Preceding
the barralaureate program, meet-
inijs will be held by the National
Council of Bennett Parents and
Alpha Kappa Mu Honoary Society.
Sundav nieht «t 8 o’cloc^t, th«
President’s Recption will be held
at the President's Home.
• '■WHe
^ McCartli|(ini in Conricfloriiif
two Who Refased io Anm House Probm
PLAY DAY — Nwly 300 High
school girls last we«k attended
the annual High School Play Day
held at A. and T. College.
Mrs. l-rnes'rie Compton, left,
one of the directors of the pro
gram), explains operations to
E'.-> I Dixon, iJurling on; Mary
Carlos, Greensboro and Hunter
Marie Bradahaw, Reidsville.
in a aeries of relay races.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. —A United
..Schcnieii
1 RESERVE!
95
nrtM
^chenlei| ^
scNw«.n,t«sM),aKw
Exclunve Discovery
IN cxw* soooTHwu^
i
Mi.ea. •.! - UMH mto > m ma. lat Mtu cnui; mm
HONORS BRIGHT SENIORS —
Mrs. Alberta Stuart, left, presi
dent of the Greensboro Alumnae
Chepter of the Delta Sigma Theta
Sorority, chats wiili guat« attend
ing last wewk, the annual May
Weel. ocholarship Recognirlon
Lunchoon at A. and T. College.
In the group from l«ft te
right are; Mrs. Jimmie B. Mid
dleton, Raleigh, one of I h •
founders and principal tt^aket-,*
fhelma Fryar, Brown Summitl.
and Leanna Blackwell,. Reids
ville, fwD of the honorees and
Blouise Gore, president of the
I A. and T. undergraduate chapter.
States Department of Defense
“Certificate of Esteem” was
awarded Tennessee State Univer
sity’s Players Guild last week it>
recognition of the Guild’s enter
tainment of Armed Forces per
sonnel overseas.
%mpton
Continued from page 3-B
50 miles of the campus and who
are currently teaching science and
mathematics and who could profit-^
by attending the institute.
Personnel for the Institute will
be Dr. Fields, Severin R. Beyma,
associate professor of mathematics,
and Dr. Frederick. D. Inge, profes
sor of biology and chairman of
department of natural sciences.
(Interested applicants should
wri.e to Dr. Victor H. Fields,
Hampton Institute, Hampton, Va.
v/m/mmmm. by Sherey w
X>r«M ^ RdtK
It seems to me that gloves are
the spice of a costume. Shall tliey
be short or long with summer’s
nearly sleeveless styles? Shalt
they match or contrast? Here’s
a suKgestaon: with the low^
bloused, easjr-akirted straight*
from-Paris silhouette* wear the
8-button length color-matched to
^oordxeaie
HONORS CLEMENT—This scene
was taken from a banquet in
Charleston, S. C., recently when
officials oft he Charleston, S. C.
district of North Carolina Mu
tual Life Insurance Company
honored .4ie firm's agency direc
tor William A. Clement. Clement
Is seen accepting gift from
Charleston manager L. A. Dun-
n(»re. Mrs. Clement is pictured
seated in the foreground.
Final Rites Held For Veteran
Math Instructor 0t Spelman College
ATLANTA, Ga.— Funeral serv-,
ices for Mrs. Georgia Olildwell j
Smith, head of the department of
Mathematics of Spelman College
were held at 11:00 a.m. on Tues
day, May 9, 1961 at Friendship
Bapist Church in Atlanta.
Mrs. Smith, a native of 'Ktdtsas
City, had been a member at the
Spelman faculty from 192S tiHfu
1938 and from 1945 to the pres
ent. She received the A.B. degree
in mathematics from the Univer
sity of Kansas with election to
Phi Beta Kappa and Pi Mu Epsi
lon. She also received the Master
df Arts degree ijn mathematics
from the University of Kansas be;
fore coming to Spelmaq C^lle!
tter fir^ tcacbing position. Sul
quently, she studied toward the
degree of'Doctor of Philosophy at
the University of Minnesota and
at the University of Chicago on a
grant from The Gieneral Education
Board, and participated in the In-
situte for Teachers of College
Mathematics sponsored by the Na
tional Science Foundation at the
University of Kansas during the
summer of 1957. In 1959, Mrs.
Smith was designated as a National
Science Foundation Faculty Fel
low, This enabled her to work to=
Ward the Ph.D. degree at the Uni
versity of Pittsburgh. This degree
was awarded to her at the end of
th« first semester of th^ 1960-61
s«||^I year.
ATLANTA, Ga.-The jallln( of
Carl Braden and Frank Wilkinson
for contempt of the House Un-
American Activitiei Committee li
a sign "that McCarthyIsm is on
th« rise again,” Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr., declared in an Inter
view here.
He said Braden l« '^ing
punished for hls'lntetretion acti
vities" and asMrted MiaF the
House Committee "should net
be used to thw#r*'. integration."
He also said he favorod abolish
ing the Committe«.
Dr. Kins, who is president of
the Southern Christiain Leadership
Conference, gave his views in an
int'irview with the Atlanta Journ-
nal after. Braden and Wilkinson
surrendered here to begin serving
their one-year sentences.
Both men were questioned about
their beliefs and associations at
hearings of the Un-American Acti
vities Committee in Atlanta in
1958, and Braden w^s jisked about
his activities in the iiitegration
movement. ‘
They refufjMl to anmer, talc
hi the poshl^ that the ques-.
’‘.'one violated .freedom of
speech «nd -esserlftlon guara^^
teed by the First Amendment to
the U. S. Cortstltilti^. '
iTie ,U. S. SuPWTte Court ,ui>-
heM their convictions for '.con
tempt in 5-4' rlpcisionaij
Thi* minority lusHres. wrote i
ditsents In whbeh they said it
seemed that Brndrn was - called '
b?f»re »h^ Comrtilfiri* beraw** j
of hi* InMgration worfc ’imd Wil
kinson bMauM »f hts ar'ivlty- |h ■
srganlTtng opposition to the ^
ComnrlHM, I
Brp't*>»i is finld secretary for
'h-> Southern Conf^renoe Edw*)*'
'innsl Fnnd. »nd Wilkinson, a civil
liberties leader, is field secristary
of the National Committee W
Abolish thff Un-American Activl^
ties Committee. |
In the Atlanta Journal intev-'
view. Dr. Khig discussed the > peti
tion which he and le Other South-^
ern leaders hare intitiat^ asking:
President Kennedy to Bi|aden |
by executlv clemency. said;
"We are ni^ upheWIng com-
munfsm in any way .. . . But we
tilonlste have felled."
IM tho riee of McCarthyIsm In
Mie South again bocaui* all
ether weapons of the segrega-
Dr. King seld he endorsed the
minority opinion of the Supreme
Court in the two contempt cases
aad added:
“We agree with Mr. Justice
Hugo Black te his dissenting opin
ion which said that if the Com
mittee has unlimited power*
will misuse them. ■
Braden was called hefflre Ihrf
Committee 'simply fw hh lnt#|
gration activiHss. We thiilk
If the Un-Americen Astivltle*
Con-i-nl'-toe is to have the l>ew*n
to swbpoona everyone they will
misuse the power to stand
the way o#- Integration."
^ .in base stealing, you have to get the jump on the pitcher.
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