Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Jan. 19, 1963, edition 1 / Page 10
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fnt CAROLIIfA TIMES R. t SATOHDAY, JANUARY 19. 1W3-.-3JI t>iwM|g You Should Knw bzom t . .BORN IN 1816/In lexington^ky. | (ALLED6E0 GRANDSON OF DANIEL BOONE ).0F SLAVE PARENTAGE,HE WAS ONEOFTHE FIRST NEGRO HISTORiANS.^^E BEGAN AS AN AGENT OF THE UNDERGROUNDRAILROAD/FROM1843 TO l«49 HE LECTURED PORTHEAME^ICAN ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY, a 11SHJRED1>4E UBy ENGLAND 8 FRANCE/hIS FIRST NOVEL PUBLISH* Ibti BSSJ^HE WROTE FOR ALMOST THIRTY YEARS TO FCLLOw/ 's Teacher Training Program Appoved by S. C. - The Teacher program of Allen Univer- been approved liy the 3t« Itoard of Education through 198S^ academic year, Dr. JBMrd E. Wright, president Mid lU means simply that the Ourch-operated institution ■t^approved tq train Khool litra the next two years and, _^diiis aa all out try by Allen ^ }*in accreditation by the South- file’ Aasociation of Schools and kfes, a regional rating agency. State Board of Eklucation recommcndatibn of a Iclal committee which had stud- ' qiperation of Allen last No- 'wfafafc. Dr., W. Hopkins, Dlr^qr of the Division of Teach er Education and Certification, headed the study committee. In a letter to Dr. Wright. Dr. Hopkins quoted the follc.ving from minutes of the State Board at its December meeting: “After a study of the curricu lum and organization of the insti tution and in light of a consider ably improved financial situation and an improvement in the physi cal feawries of the campus. th( Committee recommends to ttfc State Board of Education thai Allen University be approved for the training of teachers, both ele mcntary and secondary, for the school years 1962-63 and 1963-64, subject to re-evaluation of the in stitution in the sprin? of 1.964.” This action constitutes the sec end successive moye by the pres ent university administration to resolve status problems at Allen since Dr. Wright bRcame presi dent in 19C1. The other was the Hfting of censure by the Associa tion of American University Pro- fe.ssors, imposed when Allen dis missed three professors in 1950 under pressure of then Governor George Beil Timmerman, Jr. A third action is underway aimed at winnin.^i re,gional accredi tation possibly by the end of 1963 Dr. Wright said committee groups ^re nsarly complete for the pur pose of making a self-study. Per mission to make self-examination was given Allen last November by Scuthern Association of Schools and Colleges. Two DuKe Power Officials Reach Refirement Stage CHARljOTre—Duke Power Co. has anhounced tn« retirement o of two mipmberi of it* Legal De partment «nd I member of its Claims Dept. Their combined ser vice totals 133 yeirs. i They are Robert S. Hutchison, assistant general counsel since 1915; John C. MeGowan. assistant 'eneral counsel since 1914; and 5. M. Smith. Sr., former chief ,‘laims agent who has been serv- ng as SvPervifor of Workmen’s 'ompensation. A native oit Charlotte, Mr. Hut- hison is a graduate of the Uni- v'erslty ol North Carolina and a ormer.trustee ,UNC. He served IS a House member of Mecklen- >)ury’s‘delegation in 1915, after /hich he joined the Duke inter -'StS. ,( He had served ^ao as attorney or the’Piedmont and Northern .lailway atid, Ml- director of Mill Power Supply pp.- and P and N ftealty Co. ■ ■ •. He H f metMber of Covenant I’resbyterian >'C?»urch, where he has served IS dt|i«oh and elder, a \las(>n. • member rtf the North .'arollnt «nd Jttdicial District iar AssdciatiMi^, inember of Des- .•endants ft£ thie Mayflower, and 1 veteran of .Wot'ld War I. Mr. liicGo«ait • Mtive of Lau rehs, S. C.,^ atteiMed the Univer- iity of South .j«|t>llna and was admitted tti the bar in 1913, after tudying law liiider his father, ilso an attorney. • He Joined ^he pUke interests in 1914 ahd haa ‘ served as a vice |ii-csidcnt and director of the P and N -^h«i3r tnd "«* gccretary of Mill tower Go. Mr. McGowan is a member , of Myers Park Prts- byteriah Church tnd of the Oasis rcmiile Shrine, Mr, Smith, born in Spotsylva nia County, Va., joined Duke Pow er ..Co. ih 1927-wd w^[s named chief cUiQ) agent In 1934. In I960 he was naiiicd supervisor of Work men's Compensation. AKA CONVENTION ACTIVITY—Harvey C. Russell, (left) vice president Ptpsi-Cola Company was the recipient of tha annual Alpha Kappa Alpha intercollegiate sorority special achievement award at the recent AKA convention he'd in De troit. Shown here in photo marking the presentation rcremony are Mr. Bus.sell, Dr, Marjorie H. Parker, national president of the AKa’s; Mrs. Beulah T. Whitney, past president oC th^ organization antt Judge James B. Parsons, of Chicago, who was the meeting’s main speaker. |v: r*' I V:- J:' 5 >■ ’■■'I M- OLD STAGG KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WMISKy 8 years old KENTUCKY^ STRAIGHT BOURBON f/ WHISKEY Vhj,;-;.. ■if!#* 6TA&a DISTIUINS liO., FRANKFOftr, KY. • K PRCCP. Livingstone Founder's Day Features Dedication of Newly Built Edifice SALISBURY — The annual' Founder’s Day observance at Livingstone College wil be held on Wednesday, February 13, ac cording* to announcement made j by Dr. S. E. Duncan, president of the Cliurch-reliited institu tion, here ihis week. An im-1 portant feature of the annual' pilgrimage of trustees, church ^ leaders, alumni and friends to the college this year will be the dedicaaon of the Auditorium-) Chapel, Music Department build ing completed on the campus during 1^962. BWmd^s Bay Is usually ob served on ti\e .birthday anniver sary of the founder and first | president of the college. Dr. Joseph Charles Price, whose I birthday is February 10. How ever, because it falls on Sunday | this year and due to the large j number of ministers and church | people expected to attend, the j observance has been movecl b^ck three days. Bishop W. J. Walls, ^'onkers, N. Y , chairman of the ^Board of Trustees'of Ae college, has been chosen to deliver the ad dress paying tribute to the foui^ er. Members of the trustee board and the board of bishops of the AME Zion Church will take part in the act of dedication ft* the new building. Livingstone is expected to re ceive approximately $80,000 from the AME Zion Church dur ing the annual celebration of Founder’s Day. The Board of Bishops of the church is expect ing the first report of the Cen tennial of Freedom Campaign to raise $400,000 to construct a new building on the campus to house the Hood Theological Seminary and to build a new Publishing House for the denomination -in. Charlotte. The Centennial of Freedom Campaign, set to run as part of the church’s commenoration of the one hundred anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation, is divided into four reporting periods and this will be the first. Others have been set for June of this year, and February and June of 1964. The auditorium Chapel Music Department building which will be dedicated next month is the third building completed on the campus in 1962 with a total cost of more than $1,000,000. 1st Supermarket hi Monrovia, Liberia Opens WASHINGTON — The first supermarket in Liberia, West Africa, was opened recently in Monrovia by the Abi Jaoudi- Azar Trading- Corporation, re ports “Foreign Agriculture,” a U. S. Department of Agriculture publicauon. U. S. Ambassador Charles E Rhett participated in the open ing ceremony- About 70 percent of the products on the shelves of the store were imported from America. Liberia is becoming a good m.^ket for U. S. cigarettes also Imports are expected to hit the $2 million mark this year Already the country is second only to Morocco among the African countries in U. S. cigar ette imports. Purchases of cigarettes and foods from the supermarket by the Liberians are made possible by the economic boom created in much of the country by large - capital- expenditures there., by foreign investors for mining the country’s rich iron ore de posits. y Chamberlin Honor Roll HONOR ROLL NO. 1 Elaine Artis,. Thomasine Bass, Joyce Clement, Patrice DuniT, Goldie Evans, Ednetta Ellis, James Hubbard, Denise LittlS! Hortense Merritt, Lana McClary, Gayle McLaughlin, Beverly Mc Laughlin, Reatha Page, Patricia Peddy, Cheryl Strayhorne, De borah Sowell, Kittle Weston, Kaye Webb. HOWOR ROLL NO. 2 Shelia Gunn, Lena Goode, Diane Hart, Linda Hubbard, Carlotta Jeminson, Jennifer Love. Gayle Mack, Harrietts Van Hook, Anita Wilson. CS '"heSAYS HE'S ATAfLOR FOR ALAW FIgM, —— HE MAKES'LOOPHOLESV RAYLAS Scores A^inl Values to 59c Pr. FULL FASHION NYLON M Shades All Sizes^ Slight Irregulars PAIR . Sold only by the box of 3 Pairs for 54c THIS WEEKI only! Open Fri. Nite Hil 9 P. M. RAYLASS DEPARTMENT STORE 315 W. MAIN ST. DURHAM, N. C.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Jan. 19, 1963, edition 1
10
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