I
I
^AGE EIGHT
THE CAROLINA TIME8 SATtJRDAY. JULY 21. 1>8
-President
(Continued from One)
Urtihip tUnding. he was admit
ted to membership in Pi (iamma
Mu, the National Social Science
Honor Society.
Before comiag to Fayetteville
as Chairman of the Area of So
cial Sciences, Acting Dean and
later Dean of the College, Dr.
Jones has served as instructor
in mathematics in the Dunbar
High School, Washington, D. C.;
principal of the Currituck Coun
ty Training School, Snowden;
Senior Interviewer, North Caro
lina State Employment Service,
Rocky Mount; N.Y.A. Student
Work Supervisor in North
Carolina; Finance Officer, NYA
Master Project in Washington,
D. C. and in 1951 as Price Eco
nomist, Office of Price Stabili
zation, Washington, D. C. Dur
ing World War II, he served for
twenty-two months in the Uni
ted States Navy, thirteen of
which were spent aboard an
ammunition ship in t^e South
Pacific.
Among the professional or
ganizations in which Fayette
ville’s new’pr^y holds mem
bership are the American Eco
nomic Association, the National
Council for the Social Studies,
the American Association of
University Professors, the Na
tional Education Association
(Life member), and the North
Carolina Teachers Association.
He is also a Ruling Elder in the
College Heights Presbyterian
Church and a member of the
Advisory Committee of the lo
cal USO and of the Board o£ Di
rectors of the Fuller School for
Exceptional Children. Activc in
fraternal organizations he is a
member of the Alpha Phi Alpha
fraternity, a 32nd Degree Mason
and a Shriner.
Dr, Jones is a family man. He
was born at Winton, and is
married to the former Miss Mil
dred Parker of Suffolk, Vir
ginia. Their son “Rudy” is 12.
Mrs. Jones holds the A.B. de
gree from Virginia State Col
lege, the B.S. in Library Science
from North Carolina College at
Durham, and the M.S. in Li
brary Science from the Catholic
University of America. The
Joneses reside at 530 Spaulding
Street. They enjoy flower gar
dening and seeing their son
grow up.
base in T^xaa.
There were 21 furylvon of
thrmMtted flight. One survi
ving airman said the plane hit
an air pocket shortly after take
off and plunged into a wild,
swampy forest 30 miles south of
Trenton.
The plane carried a crew of
10, and its 56 passengers Includ
ed 41 airmen, nine officers and
six civilians.
Adams was a 1955 graduate
of Halifax County training
school. He had gone to Newport
News, Va., to live with a dster,
Mrs. Amette Dobbins, shortly
after graduation.
His immediate survivors in
clude his parents, two brothers,
James of Weldon and Gus, Jr.,
of Washington, D. C., and Mrs.
Dobbins of Newport News, Va.
dent Health Review, Quarterly
Review of Higher Education
Among Negroes and recently
collaborated in a Study of De-
segregatlon-Integration in Dela-
Clinic Open
House Held
-Double-
(Continued from Page One)
for several years and were ac
tive in a number of church and
crvic groups. Mrs. King was
treasurer of the St. Andrews
Usher Board, ^retary of the
Uoral club and a member of
/he Sunday school.
Her mother was also affili
ated with a number,of organiza
tions at St. Andrews.
Mrs. King’s survivors include
her husband, Willie King; six
daughters, Mrs. Doris Aldridge,
Mrs. Cornell Horton, Mrs. An
nie Miller, Mrs. Hattie Scales,
Mrs. Ltouise Wilson and Miss
Bernice King; five sons. Willie,
Jr., Robert, Ralph, Harold, and
James. |
Surviving her mother are one
daughter, Mrs. Marie Brown,
and two sons. Nelson and John
Nash, Jr.
-Miss Miller-
(Continued from Page One)
Insurance Company.
Surviving are four sisters;
Mrs. Clyde Whitney, Goldsboro;
Mrs. Essie Hall, Baltimore, Md.;
Miss Rebecca Miller, New York
City, and Miss Catherine Miller,
Durham. Three nieces, one ne
phew, two grandnieces and one
grand-nephew also survive.
Interment "was at Beechwood
Cemetary.
-Weldon-
(Continued from Page One)
to England for further assign
ment to an Air Force base there
His last duty station was in Wy-
►omifig >where he had been as
signed upon completing basic
—at Lackland Air Force
Southern
Furniture Co.
nirStM' Ml High Qiumy
and Friendly Senrice
Invite* Tow Acco«nt
IMl N. LIBEKTY ST.
raoNE S-lUl
Colts Snare
Jackson Ace
JACKSON, MISS.
Robert “Big Bob” HiU, for
mer Jackson State College star
back has been ordered by Don
ald S. Kellett, President of the
Baltimore Colts, to report for
training at 12:00 a.m. July 19.
The Colts will train at Western
Maryland College, Wesminister,
Maryland approximately 30
miles northwest of Baltimore.
The Colts open a twelve
game conference schedule on
September 30 against the Chica
go Bears. Hill, in the meantime,
is working out daily in accor
dance with a schedule mailed to
him by the Colt official and is
apparently confident that he
will stick with the “play for
pay'' team.
Libyan Job
For Clift
BALTIMORE, Md.
Dr. Virgil A. Clift, professor
and head of the department of
education at Morgan State Col
lege, has been invited by the
Libya Ministry of Education
and the United States Depart
ment of State to serve in Tripoli
as a top-ranking administrator
and consultant in teacher train
ing.
Dr. Clift will serve for a two-
year period from September
1956 to August 1958 as an ad
visor and consultant in the new
teacher training colleges, assis
ting in the planning of new ru
ral schools, and guide in the de
velopment of in-service training
of teachers in the Mediterranean
11 -
iieptiDiic.
“Good Home Cooking’’
ST.^IJJINE
■OMS-COOKED POODS
Boveragea of All Klads
PHONE t-UM
ttt Bwt Fouih Steeet
Jackson New
Phy.Ed.Head
At Tuskegee
TUSKEGEE, Ala.
Dr. Edward L. Jackson ar
rived at Tuskegee Institute this
week to take over the duties as
Director of the Department of
Physical Education. He comes to
Tuskegee directly from Dela-
ware State College, Dover,
Delaware, where he served as
Director of Physical Elducation
and head coach of football and
basketball.
Ross C. Owen has served as
acting director following the
late Mr. Cleve L. Abbott who
headed this area from 1923 un
til his death in 1955. Mr. Owen
will continue as assistant in the
department and as basketball
coach.
Dr. Jackson will give full
time to his duties as director
and will not be actively engaged
in coaching. The football team
is coached by Mr. Whitney Van
Cleve. formerly with Gramb-
ling College.
Dr. Jackson compiled an en
viable record at Delaware State
having a seven won and one
lost record in football and a. 1.6-
4 record in basketball. His
teams were runner-ups to the
highly touted Maryland State
College in the CIAA. ■
Dr. Jackson is a native of
Springfield, Mass. and received
his eTrly education there, later
“nming both his Bachelor’s and
Master’s degrees at Springfield
Co? leg**.
From Pennsylvania State Uni
versity. where he served as a
^aduate assistant, he earned
the D.Ed. degree in 1955.
Dr. Jackson has had consider
able experience in teaching,
''oarhing and administrative
work, having serv^ as Direc
tor of the Physical Education
Dpnartments and Athletic Coach
at Johnson C. Smith University,
Howard University and Dela
ware State College.
He haf contributed to the Stu-
The Reading, Resource-Use,
Social Studies, and Special Edu
cation Work Shop of North
Carolina College will hold their
annual Open-House Tuesday,
July 17, 1956 from 8:00 a.m. to
5:00 p.m. in the Education
BuUding.
This program is designed to
acquaint the general public
with the activities taught in
each department.
The Reading Workshop, now
in its 12th year, has an abun
dance of teacher developed
materials on the Primary, Ele
mentary and Secondary levels to
share through display.
The Demonstration School, In
operation fuU time for partici
pants in the reading clinic, will
give its culminating program in
the auditorium at 2:00 P.M.
NCC Research
Fellows Are
Revealed Here
Tha North Carolina College
Committee on Research award
ed research funds to 21 faculty
members during 1954-56. Dr.
Richard K. Barksdale, chair
man of the Faculty Committee
on Research, tald the following
NCC teachers received fiuds:
John T. Blue, sociology, (2);
Dr. W. H. Brown, education; Dr.
Marjorie L. Browne, mathe
matics; Dr. Sing-nan Fen, edu
cation and philosophy, (2); Dr.
James C. Finney, education; Dr.
Adolphe Furth, chemistry, (2);,
Dr. Paul (jelrud, music; Miss
Ruth H. Gillum, music; Dr. L.
J. Harrison, commerce; Dr.
Charles E. King and Dr. R. K.
Barksdale, English and " soci
ology; Mrs. O. R. Livingston,
commerce; Dr. T. E. Malone, bi
ology; Dr. Raleigh Morgan,
French; Dr. Joseph A. Pittman,
education; Daniel G. Sampson
and Paul A. Simmons, law; Dr.
Ezra L. Totton, chemistry; Mrs.
Maxy M. Townes, biology; and
Preston N. Williams, college
minister.
Mrs. Dollie R. Johnson Eulogized
In Durham At St. Nark Chur^
Funeral services were held InT. Coleman, Foster Air Force
Durham recently at the St.
Mark A.M.E. Zion church for
Mrs. Dollie Rigsbee Johnson.
Mrs. Johnson died July 1.
Mrs. Johnson joined St. Mark’s
shortly after' coming to Durham
and. remained an active member
imtil her death. She was the
daughter of the late Mr. and
Mrs. John Rigsbee.
Mrs. Johnson received her
education in the public schools
of Durham county and worked
for 27 years at the Venable to
bacco company.
Active in many church and
civic organizations, she was a
member of the United Order of
Tents, 598, Uving Lillie, S98,
Eastern Star, 266, Guardian Mo
ther of the DolUe’s . Rosebud
Class, 542, the St. Mark Gospel
Chorus, the Friendly Circle
Bible club of St. Mark, the
Community Club, the Goodwill
Club, the Friendly Workers
Sick Club.
Those who attended the fune
ral from out of town were Mr.
and Mrs. David Bass, Baltimore,
Md., Mr. and Mrs. Paul Rigsbee,
Bridgeport, Conn., Sgt. Robert
Base, Victoria, Tex., Mrs. Lucy
Bullock, Mrs. Lonnie White
head and Mrs. Tempsee Saun
ders, Rocky Mount, Mr. and
Mrs. James White, Greenville
and Mrs. Ida Hinton, Baltimore,
Md.
Mrs. Johnson’s survivors in
clude her husband, Willie John
son; two daughters, Miss Mary
Francis Johnson of Durham and
Mrs. Mary H. Smith, Water-
bury, Conn.; two sisters, Mrs.
Mildred Jones and Edna
Harris, Durham; two brothers,
Robert Rigsbee and Weldon
Rigsbee, Durham; two aunts,
Mrs. Hattie Lewis, New York,
and Mrs. Willie P. Brown, Lou
isa, Va., and several neices and
nephews.
-Feature^
(Continued from Page One)
gia Negro.” Dr. Gordon has also
written numerous articles for
professional journals, and in
1939, Allen University awarded
him the degree of Doctor of
Letters for hit literary work.
He has taught at South Caro
lina State, Georgia State, South
ern, Delaware State, Alcorn,
WUey and Texas College. A na
tive of Goergia, he received his
undergraduate training at At
lanta University and his post
graduate work has been done at
New York University. He also
earned a bachelor of Laws de
gree from Hamilton College.
Miss MiUs, a colonel in the
U.S. Army nurses corps, has
lived in the Near East largely
for the past ten years, assigned
to American missions there. She
is currently stationed at Leba
non.
A native North Carolinian,
she is a graduate of the Lincoln
school of nursing. Last Spring,
she was awarded an honorary
doctor’s degree from Tuskegee
Institute.
-MAACP-
(Continued from Page One)
proposed measures. Regardless
of what the state does to delay
compliance, it would appear to
us that the Federal courts are
authorized agencies to deter
mine whether school officials
are proceeding in good faith.
“Politicians in North Caro
lina have been confiising the
mdeavoring by every means
issue since May 1954, and aro
possible to belittle the effective
ness of the Court decision.
"We don't phm now or never
will compromise our basic Con
stitutional tights. We shall con
tinue to push with repewed
vigor our legal program until
desegregation of public schools
is a reality in North Carolina.”
No "Booze"
With Bible
NEW YORK
The Appellate Division of the
Supreme Court ruled in effect
last week that it “would not
serve the public advantage” to
open up a liquor store “in the
midst of a nest of churches,” it
was revealed by the Rev. John
H. Johnson, pastor of St. Mar
tin's Episcopal Church and the
Rev. O. Clay Maxwell, pastor of
Mount Olivet Baptist Church.
The ruling was considered a
victory for St. Martin’s and
Mount Olivet Churches and for
four other churches located in
the vicinity of 121st Street and
Lenox Avenue where owners of
a liquor license have been seek
ing to remove their liquor store.
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