Page Four THE SUMMER ECHO Monday, July 24, 196T Interesting People Excuse Sister Kenneth For Tardiness...LBJ DUKE INTERNS—Paris Greene, seated right, and Warren Leggett, standing left, are summer interns at Duke University under a new “on- the-job” training program at Duke. Shown with the two interns are, standing, Richard A. Bindewald, director of personnel at Duke, and seated, Walton Lipscomb, assistant controller. Two From Campus Are Duke Interns When President Johnson dis covered that the sister was late for class, he sent aides and Secret Service men scurrying for a piece of White House sta tionery. That piece of paper, now embedded in plastic on a table in the home of the sister’s fam ily, is now a valuable memento. Sister Kenneth has been told there is also a monetary value, with which she is not greatly concerned. There are other interesting stories among the NSF Insti tute. One which has surely been told a few times is from George Lynn Moore, who teaches 8th grade life science and 9th grade physical science at East Side High School, Bennettsville, S. C. Among Moore’s duties are those of junior varsity basket ball coach. During his two years as coach, the team has compiled a record of 28 wins, two losses and one tie. Although she didn’t tell the story, Mrs. Wilma L. Holmes, who teaches consumer math at Hillside High School here in Durham, must have one, or may be dozens. After all, she spent eight years in the Municipal Reference Library of the New York Public Library. She must have fielded some pretty wild questions over that period. Back to sports, Mrs. Vilma Jeanne Gatling, of Norlina, N. C., should have some good stories in that line. Back in 1964-65, she was named Woman Coach of the Year in North Carolina’s Fall Line Conference. In the NDEA Institute for Educational Media Specialists, C. Vincent Adams, who also will attend as an NDEA Ex perienced Teacher Fellowship Program member next year, is a native of the British West Indies who became a citizen of this country last year. He is also the father of two year old twins. James L. Bryant, audio visual coordinator for the Hay wood County, N. C. school sys tem, was a recipient of a cita tion from the North Carolina Prison Department for teaching prisoners. The NCC graduate is also in the Media Institute. Jonathan Vance, in the Media Institute, teaches shorthand, typing, general business, and business law in Carver High School, Forest City, N. C. Seven of his business students took and passed the federal Civil Service exam for positions in Washington, D. C., last year. A handbook for science teach ers put out by the North Caro lina Department of Public In struction in 1954 features the class then taught by James G. Thompson, now a Gary, Indiana, teacher. In the Institute for Teachers of Disadvantaged Youth, Mrs. Rebecca Bingham Carnes is one of North Carolina’s most dis tinguished singers. The music supervisor for the Durham County School system has sung leading roles with the Carolina Opera Theatre and the Durham Savoyards and has been guest soloist with the State College Glee Club, the University of North Carolina Orchestra, the Carolina Wesleyan Artist Series, and the University of North Carolina’s Petite Musicale. Waved Ruffin, principal of W. E. Etheridge Elementary School (the largest in Bertie County, N. C.), was a paratroop er in the United States Army before he became a jet pilot for the Air Force. A recent North Carolina Col lege graduate and a senior at the college, both accounting majors, were granted summer intern ships at Duke University June 1. Warren D. Leggett, of Dur ham, who received the B.S.C. degree from NCC in May, was selected for a personnel intern ship. Paris W. Greene, a senior from Raleigh, was chosen for a controller internship. Administered by the Duke University Personnel Office, the program is designed to supple ment the intern’s formal educa tion “with on-the-job experience as well as to continue his per sonal growth.” Leggett, the personnel intern, is assigned to the office of per sonnel and will attend meetings and conferences with the direc tor, observe and participate in office and other activities of the department, and undertake spe cial projects designed to provide additional experiences. Greene, the controller intern, is assigned to the university’s Business and Finance Division and will rotate through a total of two or three departments dur ing the three-month period. NCC’s Special Institute Students From North, South, East, West Summer schools always at tract interesting people, with interesting stories. Perhaps the beat this summer was the one told by Sister Mary Kenneth, attending the National Science Foundation Institute for Teach ers of Science. You may have seen the sister, who teaches at the Towson (M a r yl a n d) Catholic High School, on television. This isn’t the first time the story has been told, but then the story of how the President of the United States gave a nun an excuse for tardiness is worth retelling. Sister Mary Kenneth, attend ing summer classes at Washing ton’s Catholic University, went with a group of other nuns to a reception to shake hands with the President, Mrs. Johnson, Luci, and Lynda. That experi ence in itself was “my greatest thrill,” Sister Mary Kenneth said. Kithcart Geography Major In Clark Project Phillip Eugene Kithcart, a native of Gastonia, N.C., and a rising senior in the Depart ment of Geography at NCC, is a participant in the Southern Colleges Project at Clark Uni versity, Worcester, Mass. The six week summer project is designed to broaden the scope of superior students of geography. Kithcart will study under a fellowship offered for the American Association of Geographers’ program. A graduate of Highland Junior and Senior High School in Gastonia, Kithcart is vice- president of the Geography Club at NCC and has been elected Basileus of the Tau Psi Chapter of the Omega Psi Phi social fraternity. Davis Accountant With Chemical Co. Lee 0. Davis, NCC junior of Raleigh, has accepted a post as Summer Accountant in the Di vision Controller Department of Dow Chemical Company, Mid land, Mich. Davis, an all-conference bas ketball center, will begin work during the first week in June. A graduate of Raleigh’s Ligon High School, he is the son of Mrs. Elizabeth Davis. In addition to his athletic activities, Davis is a member of the student congress at NCC. Participants in North Caro lina College’s special programs this summer represent 24 states, from New England, the Middle Atlantic States, the Middle West, and the South. The sole representative of the Far West is Edsel Lee Cur- nutt, in the NDEA Disad vantaged Youth institute, from New Mexico. Other States North Carolina probably has a majority in the programs. There are 24 North Carolinians in the National Science Founda tion Institute for Teachers of Science and Mathematics, 20 in the Disadvantaged Youth Pro gram, 16 in the Special Educa tion group, and 33 in the Media Institute, according to informa tion submitted by the partici pants. The Science Institute includes South Carolinans, Georgians, Floridians, Alabamans, Mary landers, Missourians, Tennes seeans, Pennsylvanians, Vir ginians, West Virginians, and persons from Illinois and Mas sachusetts. In the Disadvantaged Youth institute are residents of Pen nsylvania, Connecticut, Mary land, New York, Delaware, Missouri, Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, Florida, Louisiana, Georgia, Tennessee, West Vir ginia, New Mexico, and Michi gan. Floridians, Virginians, and South Carolinians are in the Special Education Program. Colleges According to the information submitted, at least 65 colleges and universities are represent ed by their graduates. Colleges represented include the following: Catherine Spald ing, Concord College, St. John College, Winston-Salem State College, Fayetteville State, Fort Valley State, North Carolina College, Elizabeth City State, A & T College, Livingstone Col lege. St. Pauls College, Bennett College, Shaw University, Mor ris College, Savannah State College, Rockhurst College, Stillman, Benedict College, Tennessee State University, Morgan State, Paine College, South Carolina State College. Villanova University, Allen University, West Virginia State, Florida A & M, Alabama State, Marquette University, Webster College, Barber-Scotia College, Appalachian. East Carolina College, Ashe ville Teachers, Southern Uni versity, Bluefield State, Wilber- force, Knoxville College, John son C. Smith, Grambling Col lege, Western Kentucky Univer sity, Tampa University, Uni versity of Connecticut, Con necticut College, West Chester, Marshall University, Asbury College, UNC—G, Loyola Uni versity of the South, University of North Carolina, Oklahoma University, Seton Hall Univer sity, Bowie State College, St. Augustine’s College, University of Tampa. Towson State, State College of Iowa, Tougaloo College, Hampton Institute, Tuskegee, Lincoln University (Missouri), Salem College, and Le Moyne College. Occupations Occupations represented in clude teaching, librarian. Dean of Girls, band director, library supervisor, audio-visual special ist, director of materials center, music supervisor, coordinator of target schools for disad vantage youth, and supervisor of parochial schools. Family Ties, Etc. Only in the special education group do the unmarried stu dents outnumber the married. Of the married participants, most apparently left their families at home. Several others have husbands or wives study ing for the summer at another school. Children’s ages in the group range from less than a month (the student here is the father, naturally) to adult. The parti cipants’ experience in teaching ranges from less than a year to 42 years—the veteran is Sister Melitina Mudd in the Disad vantaged Youth Institute. NSF Science Institute