Newspapers / Fayetteville State University Student … / June 1, 1953, edition 1 / Page 8
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PAGE EIGHT THE VOICE JUNE 1. 1953 GRADUATES 1952-53 Aiken, Anne Carleen Allen, Minnie Mary Avery, Frankie Shaw Baker, Rachel E. Baird, Dorothy Irene Baten, Cora E. Battle, Fannie G. Beatty, Alice Carol Bell, Edith Gaynell Bennett, Della Smith Biggs, Ervin Bland, Eva Mashon Bridgers, Dorothy Lee Brown, Wandra O. Brown, William D. Bullock, Geraldine A. Burton, Thomas E. Butler, Jesse James Campbell, Rosa Mayo Cannady, Bettie Van Cordon, Euverlene Cox, Geraldine V. Dargan, Katie Louise Drew, Allen Wesley Edgerton, L. Mae Eggleston, Salona E. Elliott, Brenda E. Ellis, Minnie Doris Evans, Verniece Faison, James M., Jr. Farmer, Levolyre Fennell, Nancy Lee Fleming, Annie Boykin Fitzpatrick, George T. Ford, Geneva Galloway, Lattie S. Garris, Helen M. Gore, Araminta Granger, Georgianna Green, Katie Zepora Haire, Ilia Butler Hill, Clarence E. Hinson, William M. Hogan, Florence A. Hooker, Tessie Lee Horton, Jessie Mae Bostler, Claude Howell, Rosa V. Hudgins, Winfred P. Hunter, Amelia M. Jackson, Lawrence Jacobs, Velma S. Jeffries, Florence Johnson, Lillian D. Jones, Frances G. Jones, Pollie Allen Kimber, Geneva King, Wilbertt D. Leapheart, Arbrey Lee, Freddie Leroy Moore, Aquilla E. Moore, Mary Christeen Morgan, Frances M. Murrain, Della W. McClelland, Pansy L. McDonald, Bessie J. McGrier, Cornelia W. McIntyre, Sylvester McKinnon, Emm McLaughlin, William McLaurin, James Frank McMillan, Rosa A. McNair, Hattie N. McNair, William E. Newton, Willie Bell Perry, Idell Beatrice Peterson, George F. Pitt, Queen Esther Pollard, Raymond Powe, Idelle Y. Randolph, Jean Raylord, Edward F. Rice, Doris S. Rickette, Beretta Robinson, Hiawatha W. Rogers, Donnell—Army Rountree, Fannie Rufin, Pearl Moore Russell, Josephine Saunders, Sarah Mae Sawyer, Gladys G. Sellers, Mary Sharpe, Malachi Smith, Edward J. Smith, Evelyn E. Sparrow, Bessie I. Sparrow, Joseph—Army Stevens, Gardine C. Stewart, Elizabeth B. Stokes, Annie Belle Summersett, Bessie L. Swann, Tommie Bell Thompson, Helen R. Trott, Gladys Bellamy Truitt, Fred Limmie Tucker, Mary Elizabeth Warren, Ruth Taylor Washington, Mary H. Williams, Vera K. Yancey, Lois Davis Yelverton, Wilhelmina DR. DUNCAN (Continued from Page 3) ural and social resources.” At the conclusion of the pro gram, Dr. Duncan presented certi ficates to nine students whose splendid scholarship and citizen ship records qualified them for the inclusion of their names in the current issue of “Who’s Who Among Students in American Col leges and Universities. Those so honored were: Joyce Delany, junior, of Wilson; Cleo patra Griswold, junior, of Ral eigh; Wilbert King, senior, from Overhills; Dorothy Little, junior, from Ruby, South Carolina; Clara Helen Mills, junior, of Nashville; Naomi Pitt, junior, of Bethel; Queen Pitt, senior, from Pinetops; Doris Pridgen, from Whiteville; and Aileen Watson, junior, of Shelby. ALPHA ACTIVITIES (Continued from Page 1) tion for First-Rate Citizenship,” Mr. Groves pointed up the revo lutionary emphasis of our times, particularly the sociological revo lution that is woven so deeply in the pattern of our present living. To prepare ourselves for the on coming inevitable changes, Mr. Groves said that we must increase our technical efficiency, recognize the responsibilities which we are accepting as teachers of young, easily-molded minds, and form a state of mind which will not let us rest until we succeed at our chosen tasks. Although a young man. Attorn ey Groves has the rich experiences which the earning of an A. B. de gree from the University of Colo rado, the being elected to the co veted Phi Beta Kappa Society, and the receiving of the J. D. degree from the University of Chicago, have given him. Married to the former Miss Eve lyn Apperson of Chicago, after having served in the United States Army as a first lieutenant with an artillery outfit in the European theatre and teaching in the Law School at North Carolina College at Durham from 1949-1950, Mr. Groves now resides at 275 Gilles pie Street, Fayetteville, N. C. On Friday, May 8, at 8:15 p. m., Margaret Tynes of the New York Opera Company appeared in con cert at the Fayetteville State Teachers College new auditorium. Although she is comparatively new in the concert field. Miss Tynes is a talented and graceful artist. From her very first ap pearance on the concert stage, the critics have been profuse in be stowing upon her their praise and commendation. Her artristry was such that she had the distinction of being the first Negro woman to become a permanent member of the New York Opera Company. During the opera season, which lasts from March 19 through May 3, she is one of the leading artists, singing leading roles in “Carmen,” (in French), “Regina,” and “The Love for Three Oranges.” “Porgy and Bess,” in which she played the leading female role, “Lysistrata,” in which she was Et ta Moten’s understudy, “Finian’s Rainbow,”—in which she did over 200 performances, three motion pictures, and the lead in “H. M. S. Pinafore” are only a few of her many accomplishments. Selections which appeared on her program included “Per Pieta” — (from the opera “II Floridoro”), “Wer Sich der Eisamekeit Ergiebt” —(from “Gesange des harfners”), “Blue Are Her Eyes,” and Hall Johnson’s reknowned “City Called Heaven.” Dr. Harold L. Trigg, president of St. Augustine’s College in Ral eigh, North Carolina, was the ves per speaker at Fayetteville State Teachers College on Sunday, May 10, at the second annual vesper program sponsored by the local chapter of the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Incorporated. Speak ing from “The Life We Live,” he insisted that “we must prepare now for life in a dull-fledged de mocracy.” Steaming hot - dogs, smokes, cokes, and plenty of wholesome fun were in evidence at a typical Alpha smoker held in the Robert R. Taylor Science Building on Monday, May 18. Alpha men, both from the local community and from surrounding communi ties, were on hand to greet a rather impressive group of young men who joined in the festivities. The highlights of the occasion were the many interesting experi ences related by the members of the chapter and the clarification of ideas preparatory to the estab lishing of an undergraduate chap ter as soon as circumstances will permit. BOX , NEWBOLD STATION, FAYETTEVILLE STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE FAYETTEVILLE, N. C. PLACE STAMP HERE I “SEND THE VOICE HOME TO THE FOLKS’’
Fayetteville State University Student Newspaper
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June 1, 1953, edition 1
8
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