The Panther. (Atlanta, Georgia) 19??-1989, May 30, 1951, Image 4

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PAGE FOUR CLARK PANTHER CLARK’S LARGEST GRADUATING CLASS TO RECEIVE DEGREES BACHELOR OF ARTS: Yvonne Abel, Verender Abercrombia, Ishmel Albert, Sarah Allen, Andrew Allison, Jr., James Ash, Jean Baker, Annie Barton, Bland Batey, Genette Bell, Hilda Bell, Marva- linia Bell, Kathryn Black, Jessie Bonam, William Breeding, Ross Browder, Mar ian Brown, Al,ma Bryant, Elsie Buford, Annie Burt, Edward Cleveland, Yvonne Crawford, June Crittenden, James Daniel, Bernyce Davis, Doris Davis, Reuben Daw kins, Joseph Eberhardt, Ezra Everett, Moses Cornelius Faison, Theria Mae Fel der, Mildred Flournoy, Clyde Foster, E- manual Fryar, Alfonza Goggins, Flossie Mae Goodson, Mattie Grant, Lillian Graves, Theresia Hall, Lillie Hart, Robert Hawk, Alethea Hawkins, Edward Hinton, Haroldine Hooper, Walter H. Shirley Hunt, William Jacobs, Jethro James, Ger ald Johnson, Horace Johnson, Eula Jones, Johnny Jones, James Lang, Frankie Law- ton, Leonard Long, Charles Longino, Eva Martin, Mable Mathews, Magalene Ma this, Pearl McAlpin, Earie McClure, Ed ward McCray, Iris McDonald, Hazel Mc- Kathryn Shannell, Turner Sibley, Gladys Sidwell, Rosemary Slaughter, John Smith, William Stanley, Joseph Stevens, Sallie Stokes, Stella Tarver, Barbara Taylor, Clyde Terry, Charles Thomas, Helen Thomas, June Tiller, Juanita Traylor, Ru fus Tucker, Wille Vance, Ethel Watkins, Sadye Westbrooks, John White, Clarence Williams, Myrtha Williams, Charles Wil loughby, Dorothy Willoughby, Rcy Wolfe, Ebenezer Woods, Clyde Wright, Dorothy Wright, Marie Young. BACHELOR OF SCIENCE: Luther Anderson, James Bush, Simon McNorton, William Pleasant, Fred Ross, Horace Scott, Louise Taylor, Erskine Tucker, Al fred Turk, William Walker, Dorsey Will iams. BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN HOME ECONOMICS: Patsy Chandler, Carrie Clayton, Marlene Dobbs, Gecrgie Gibbs,- Willa Rose Henderson, Jerodene Hodges Clara Howell, Mary Huff, Emma Johnson, Carolyn Keller, Bessie Marchrnan, Ma- linda McDonald, Julia Thompson, Geral dine Walker. SPRING By MARY BURKE Spring is here with all its splendor. One can see it budding out everywhere. Nature has put forth her best effort to bring us all the beauty that one looks for in spring. The birds are here singing their merry tunes along with the budding of the trees and the blossoming of the flow ers. Yet, there are other indications here on the campus that tell us in the truer sense of the wprd that spring is here. We see couples strolling along on the campus or sitting under the shade trees enjoying the oeauties around them, carefree and hap py. In an atmosphere of this kind the thought of school and drowsy lectures, on both the part of the student and the in structor, are more or less uninviting. Evening classes! Who wants evening classes in the spring 17 Big league baseball games over'the radio, soft ball on the ac tivity field, city parks are open, and most of all the young ladies are sitting out a- round the flag pole yearning for compan ionship. Be patient, fellow students; it .vill soon be over. And now I ask you is spring really here? Gill, Mary Millines, William Neely, Ileane Nesbit, Joe Palmore, Naomi Parker, Evelyn Penn, James Perkins, Walter Per ry, Robert Phillips, John Pugh, Harold Ramsey, Alonza Ransom, Rodney Reed, Lois Richardson, Avery Robinson, Edna Rollins, Samuel Sanderson, Doris Seals, Former Student Visits Campus Alfred D. Wyatt, a former student of Clark College, now serving with the U. \S. Armed Forces at Fort Lewis, Washing ton, visited the campus recently on leave from his station where he is a member of the company band. Pfc. Wyatt, who serv ed as Drum Major for the Clark College Band, is quite an artist when it comes to French horns. So much an artist that his services are very much in demand by his uncle (Sam, that is). Here’s an orchid for his music teacher: so good was he in the sight of the army music instructors that he was exempted from the army band school. Homecoming Queen, Miss Juanita Marshall