FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1955
THE CAMPUS ECHO
PAGE FIVE
244 Students On Winter Quarter Honor Roll
A record breaking two hund
red and forty-four NCC stu
dents received “A” and “B”
honors for their second quar
ter’s work.
Six students made all “A’s.”
They are Clarine Armstrong,
Norfolk, Va., special student;
Florence - A. Dupree, senior,
Sumter, S. C.; William F. Fletch
er, junior, Durham, N. C.; Wade
Kornegay, junior, Mount Olive,
N. C.; Delaine Lee, senior, Mon-
cure, N. C.; and Edward T. Shel
ton, freshman, Edentftn.
Second Quarter’s dean’s list
students were: Doris L. Arm
strong, Oreta Barnes, Carolyn
•E. Black, Donald A. Bonner
Emma Bullock, James H. Car
ter, Geralene Daniels, Walter
N. Davis, Doris J. Edwards, Au
drey C. Flamer, Clementine
Franks, Herman P. Gatling
Pheriby C. Gibson, Charles ,L
Gittens, Eloise F. Gould, Jeanne
D. Herndon, William E. Isler^
Vilma M. Jerman, Ernestine A
Johnson, Marjorie E. LennoU;
Josephine W. Long, Edna B
Lyons, James T. McLean, Isaac
J. Martin, Joyce Ann Morgan
Joseph Ray, Virginia Rush,
Catherine Saunders, Yvonne
Scruggs, Catherine E. Sneed
Hattie J. Taylor, Herman
Thombs, Lillie B. Tyson, Clara
L, Wertz, Fronnie Whitehurst,
■Queen Evelyn Wilder, Inez M.
Wilkens, Eleanor Mae Williams.
Students receiving “B” hon
ors were: Charles Alston, Lon
nie L. Adams, Charles S. An
derson, Margaret L. Anderson
Toussaint L. Avent, Julius Bar
bee, Cleo Turner Beckett, Thel
ma Lee Becton, Carolyn E.
Black, Morris Blount, Hope C.
Blue, Barbara L. Broadnax,
Otis Brooks, Annie Mae Brown,
Calvin Lee Brown, Ida L.
Brown, Walter E. Brown, Jr.,
Mary J. Byrant, Herbert C.
Bullard. i-jHJ
Claudrette Bullock, Jean
O’Dea Bunch, Joseph D. Bunt
ing, Irma Coble Burke, Portia
Jean Burt, Shirley E, Cannon
Dorthy M. Carraway, Cherry
C. Carter, John Cason, Julius
Chambers, Gladys D. Chavis
Eva B. Cheatham, Sammie
Chess, Lela C. Clarke, Mary A.
Cobb, Johnnie Mae Correll,
James Courtney, William Crud
up, Patricia Ann Davidson,
Ivory A. Davis, Leonard Davis,
Marion Collins Davis, Statis
Davis.
Nathaniel Dedmond, Aren
thia T. Dickens, Zander Dock
ery, Lessie Dorsett, Pauline
Dunkins, Emily P. Dunston,
William H. Eaton, Bettye Lou
Enoch, Marlene M. Enoch,
James Epps, Eunice D. Ethe
ridge, Carrie Lou Faire, Annice
Faison, Louis S. Fields, Alfred
F. Fisher, Joseph E. Fleming,
Ada Elaine Foster, Virginia
Lee Fowler, Gwendella Gil
more, Andrew Graham, Robbie
Graham, Dorothy Graham,
Alice Gray, Zelphia A. Gray,
Cicero Green Jr.
George H. Green, George W.
Griffin, Yvonne J. Griswell,
Dorothy Hall, Lawrence Hamp
ton, Joseph Hannon, Floyd C.
Hardy, Blanche L. Harrell, Ro
bert Harrell, Marie Hawkins,
Ruby Hayes, Clarissa E. High
tower, Peggie Hinton, Shirley
M. Hobbs, Ralph Hodge,
Charles V. Holland, Gilbert
Holland, Pocahontas Hollings
worth, Eunice C. Holloman,
Zelma Holloway, Rudolph Hor-
ried, Noah C. Horton, Roosevelt
Howard, Gossie H. Hudson,
Retha L. Hughes, Sallie M.
Hughes, Jesse Ingram, Marcus
V. Ingram.
William E. Jackson, Earnes-
tyne James, Robert James,
Shirley T. James, Wilbert T.
Jenkins, Edmond P. Johnson,
Burned C. Jones, Mae Gardner
Jones, Napoleon Jones, Roberta
Jones, Mabel Jordan, Robert L.
Joyner Norvella E. Keys, Er
nest King, Eunice E. Kirton,
Carrie Lane, Reva M. Leach,
Shirley Long, Archie Love, Ar
tie Lucas Barbara Lumpkin.
Virginia C. Lyons, Gwendo
lyn McCollum, Wallace Mc-
Dougald, Francis McGee, Se
lena McIntyre, William Mclver,
Florence McLean, Bettye H.
McMillian, Cora McNeill, Annie
R. Mack, Mollie Majette, Ralph
P. Malone, John H. Martin,
Phyllis Martin, Bobbie J. Mick-
less, Lorraine Monk, Bertha
Moore, Leary Moore, Mary
Moore, David Mortan, Susie B
Morgan, Etta Newell, Anna
Newkirk, Betsy Page, Elliot B.
Palmer, James Potts, Sherman
Perry, Joseph Person, Bettye
Portee, Mable Poston, Valeria
M. Powe.
Jean C. Ramsey, Mattie J
Rease, Betty M. Redding, Lu
cille Reynolds, Sigredda Rich
ardson, Spurgeon Roberts, Jo
seph Henry Robertson, Annie
R. Robinson, Doris P. Robinson
Genevieve M. Robinson, Bessie
K. Shivers, Delores L. Simmons,
Gracie B, Smith, Omega Smith
Rudolph V. Smith, Kitty W.
Sneed, Frank U. Sowell, Sherry
G. Spencer, Charles H. Stray
horn, Susie Anne Strong, Vi
vian J. Swain, Janie A. Sykes
Hazel Marie Tate, Marjorie F.
Taylor, Margaret Thomas, Elias
J. Thompson, Harvey Thomp
son.
Vermella Thompson, Juanita
G. Thorpe, Shirley S. Thorpe,
Geraldine Tillery, Oscar G
Turner, Glenola Vance, Napo
leon Vance, Helen Ann Wall
Horace Ward Jr., Helen Marie
Watson, Mary Jane Young
Bernice Whitehead, Laverne
Whitehead, Birnie Williams,
Ira Lee Williams, James Ed
Williams II, Vera E. Williams,
Ethel Williamson, Weldon
Willoughby, Ann Wilson, Doro
thy L. Wilson, Allen J. Wright
N. C. College Scientists Speak And Read Papers
At Science Conference In Baltimore, Maryland
Five North Carolina College
scitentists participated in the
Beta Kappa Chi Scientific Honor
Society, National Institute of
Science and the Maryland Sec
tion, American Chemical Society
joint meeting held at Morgan
State College April 14-16.
Representing North Carolina
College at the meeting were Dr.
Thomas E. Malone, Dr. James
S. Lee, and Mr. William D.
Morehead, biology; Dr. William
H. Robinson, physics; and Dean
J. L. Stewart, science educa
tion. The primary purpose of
the meeting was to listen to re
search papers by leading science
professors throughout the na
tion in biology, physics, chem
istry, mathematics and science
education.
veloping Follicle and the For
mation of Lutein Tissue on the
Albino Rat using Neotelrazalium
Chloride. Mr. Morehead spoke
on the Histochemical Distribu
tion of Alkaline Phosphate on
the Ovary and Uterus of the Ma
ture Albino Rat During the
Estrous Cycle.
Dr. Robinson read a paper on
the Effect of an Electric Field
of Strength on the Polarizability
Constant of the Normal Hydro
gen Atom. Mr. Stewart, who
read two papers, spoke on the
Improvement of Science Teach
ing: An Experimental Approach
To The Teaching of Science,
and on Some Considerations for
Liberal Arts Colleges on the Role
of Science Education.
The three-day meeting, re-
Dr Malone spoke on a His- ported Dr. Malone, mcluded
tochemical Study of the De-j joint general sessions, science
education sessions. Beta Kappa
Chi Meetings, all of which were
held each day, and the annual
banquet. The various research
papers were read at these ses
sions.
Among the speakers at the
sessions were Dr. Alan T. Wa
terman, Chairman, National Sci
ence Foundation, who spoke on
Research and Education in the
Sciences, and Dr. Percy Julian,
who spoke on Has Science Come
of Age?
Other speakers were Lynn
Poole, Director of John Hopkins
Science Review; Dr. Fletcher
Watson, Harvard University;
Prof. Eric Rogers, Palmer Phy
sical Laboratories, Princeton
University; and Dr. S. P. Har
well, President of the Universi
ty of Pennsylvania.
N. C. College Gets New Honor Society Chapter
Twenty-eight North Carolina
College students and faculty
members have been approved
as charter members of the new
chapter of Pi Gamma Mu Na
tional Social Science Honor So
ciety being established on the
campus. The approval of the
chapter and the charter mem
bers was granted by the Board
of Trustees of the society last
week.
One of three national honor
•societies now existing at NCC,
Pi' Gamma Mu members are re
quired to be either juniors or
seniors, and must have had at
least twenty semester hours of
social science with a grade
average of not less than “B.”
The organization now has over
one hundred chapters through
out the United States and more
than fifty thousand members.
Students who will be initia-
Social Season In Full Spring Bloom
By ROTIDE
After the Easter holidays,
NCC’s campus is the scene of
more social activities than any
one person could ever hope to
attend. The most brilliant of
these affairs are the formal
dances.
The women in Annie Day
Shepard Dormitory were the
first to get their bid in for the
round of dances. Giving a for
mal only two days after the
Easter holidays were over, the
MDG Maps Plans
Thg Men’s Dormitory Go
vernment meeting was held
shortly after the spring vacation
period. The main topic discuss
ed was the election to be held
on May 4, 1955.
Each resident of the Men’s
Dormitory is eligible to be
placed in nomination for Presi
dent of the Men’s Dormitory
Government by obtaining the
signatures of at least twenty-
five other residents of the dor
mitory. These nominations
must be submitted to the Dean
of Men by May 1, 1955.
The voting will take place
on May 4, between 6 a.m. and
6 p.m. There are three members
of the dormitory who have
given their names to the Dean
of Men. They are Henry Fair,
Theodore Cherry, and William
Nelson.
co-eds entertained approxima
tely 120 guests.
The following night, April 16,
the Junior Class hosted the
Senior Class at the annual
Junior Senior Prom.- Buddy
Klein’s orchestra played for the
affair which had as it’s theme
Beneath the Sheltering Palms.
Sherman Perry, president of the
Junior Class, extended the wel
come to the seniors and Ru
dolph Dudley, vice president of
the Senior Class, responded.
Gamma Beta Chapter of Al
pha Phi Alpha was the first
Greek letter organization to
give a spring formal. “Moulin
Rouge” was the theme of this
annual affair and the Sepians
provided the music. Albert Ci
pher, president of the fraternity,
acted as master of ceremonies.
Wade Kornegay introduced the
Alpha Sweetheart, Miss Audrey
Flamer, a Philadelphia senior.
A banquet at the Donut Shoppe
preceded the Alpha Dance for
the fraternity men and their
guests.
The following is a tentative
agenda of future dances thus
far listed on the Student
Government’s Social Calendar.
The Veterans dance. May 6;
Off Campus Women's Dance,
May 7; Kappa Alpha Psi Fra
ternity’s Black and White Ball,
May 14, and Omega Psi Phi’s
Sweetheart Ball, May 25.
ted into the chapter are Floyd
Hardy, Ernestyne James, Jose
phine Long, Edna B. Lyons, Lu
cille Reynolds, Mary J. Young,
Louis Fields, Robert Harrell,
Jesse T. Moore, Elliott Palmer,
Yvonne Scruggs, Ernest Ward,
Christyne Williams, Clifford
Wooten, Chester Gregory, Ethel
E. Lineberger, and Allayne C.
Turner.
The members of the faculty
who are to be charter members
are Dr. Joseph H. Taylor, John
T. Blue, Dr. J. Neal Hughley,
Dr. Evelyn L. Johnson, Mr.
insurance Grants
Are Available
Several graduate study
grants for persons interested in
teaching insurance on the col
lege level are being made avail
able through the S. S. Huebner
Foundation for Insurance Edu
cation, it was announced this
week by Dean G. T. Kyle.
Dean Kyle was informed of
the availability of the grants
by Mr. W. J. Kennedy, Jr.,
president of the North Carolina
Mutual Life Insurance Com
pany. In his announcement, Mr.
Kennedy called attention to the
S. S. Huebner grants which
were recently announced by
Dan M. McGill, executive di
rector. Persons winning grants
will receive training at a special
school at the University of
Pennsylvania.
According to Mr. McGill, the
Huebner Foundation was es
tablished to provide fellowships
and scholarships to qualified
persons who wish to prepare for
an insurance teaching career at
the collegiate level. To the pre
sent, thirty-five persons have
completed the program and are
now actively engaged in insur
ance educational work.
Special attention will be
given to the applications of per
sons who have had previous
teaching experience at a college
or university and who expect to
return there. However, college
graduates will also be consider
ed, Dean Kyle said.
Interested students and teach
ers are urged to contact Deari
G. T. Kyle in the Administra
tion Building.
Caulbert A. Jones, Dr. Charles
E. King, Mr. Isham G. Newton,
Dr. Alvin W. Rose, Dr. Theo
dore R. Speigner, Mr. Rubin
Weston, and Rev. Preston
Williams.
Pi Gamma Mu was founded
in 1924 and lists the world-wide
encouragement of study in the
area of the social sciences as
its objective.
Dean Stewart
Attends Meet
John L. Steward, Dean of
Men, attended the meeting of
the American Personnel and
Guidance Association and the
American Personnel Associa
tion in Chicago, Illinois on
April 3-7.
The main purpose for attend
ing the meeting was to gain in
formation about how other per
sonnel workers are solving their
problems and carrying out their
particular programs.
There was a series of topics
and discussion groups which in
cluded the following: Student
Participation in the College Ad
ministration; Interpersonal Com
munication in Administration;
and Off-campus housing for Col
lege Students.
Education Prof.
Receives Award
Mrs. Mildred W. Turner, in
structor in the Department of
Education at NCC, has been
granted a Southern Fellowship
Fund award for doctoral study
in education at Indiana Univer
sity for the academic year 1955-
56.
A native of Philadelphia,
Mississippi, Mrs. Turner re
ceived the bachelor’s degree
from Jackson College, Jackson,
Mississippi and the master of
science degree from the Univer
sity of Indiana.
She is a member of Pi Lamb
da Theta National Education
Honorary Society, American
College Personnel Association,
and several other professional
organizations.