Newspaper Page Text
September, 1967
THE SPELMAN SPOTLIGHT
Page 5
Dr. Player, president of Bennett
College, was guest speaker at
the Faculty Dinner on Monday,
September 11.
New Acting Assistant to Dean
of Women, Miss Alease Strick
land.
Classified Ads
Wanted—All A’s and B’s for
mid-term grades.
Wanted■—A B.A. degree on
June 3, 1968.
Wanted—Reporters and typ
ists for the Spotlight.
Found—Emerging democracy
on Spelman’s campus.
Wanted—Articles from other
college newspaper staffs.
Missing—That old get-up-and-
go which has gotten up and
gone.
Now-
one more thing
not to
worry about
Neat discreet bags
for pad disposal
come FREE in each
pretty new box of
(Continued from Page 3)
Philosophy.
Mr. Norman Lillegard — A.A., Bethany College; B.A.,
M.A., University of Minnesota
STAFF
Mrs. Caroline W. Graham — Placement Director—B.S., South
Carolina State A. & M.; M.Ed., University of North Carolina
Mr. Aaron J. Johnson, Jr. — Assistant in the Treasurer’s Of
fice— B.A., Morehouse College; M.S., Atlanta University
Miss Alease Strickland — Acting Assistant Dean of Women
— B.S., New York University
Mr. Eoin W. Trevelyan—Assistant to the President, Woodrow
Wilson Administrative Intern A.C.A., Institute of
Chartered Accountants in England and Wales; M.B.A.,
Harvard University
Secretaries:
Miss Maggie Davis — Placement Office
Miss A. Eloise Joyner
Mrs. Juanita Nason
Miss Evelyn Ross
Mrs. Joan Salters
Miss Ethel M. Sligh — Registrar’s Office
Directors of Housing:
Mrs. Gwendolyn Bass
Mrs. Anne Callaway
Mrs. Lillian Geer
Mrs. Augusta Palmer
Mrs. Gertrude Brinson
Mrs. Betty Gordon
Miss Sheila Kubwalo
Miss Mildred Walker
Food Service:
Mr. Walls — Food Service Manager
Mrs. Annette Watkins — Dining Hall
Mr. Allen Strattland — Dining Hall
Mrs. Lake — Snack Shop
Mrs. Mary Arron — Snack Shop
Returning from Leaves of A bsence:
Mrs. Joyce Finch Johnson — Department of Music
Mrs. Bernice S. Andrews — Department of Reading
Mr. Melvin Drimmer — Department of History
On Leaves of Absence This Year:
Mrs. Sadie S. Allen — Assistant Dean of Women
Mrs. Etta Z. Falconer — Department of Mathematics
Mrs. Gladys Glass — Department of Mathematics — First
semester
Mrs. Rhoda Martin — Department of English
Miss Zelma Payne — Department of Home Economics
Change In Assignment:
Mr. Houston Stansbury —* Publicity Officer and Admissions
Officer
*NTF — National Teaching Fellow
(Continued from Page 1)
changing society, the challenge
of a career may be even great
er. Some of you have special
aptitudes in math, chemistry,
physics, biology and languages.
There are not enough women
majoring in these fields to fill
the openings for medical tech
nicians, radiologists, doctors
and interpreters. In the United
States there are many com
munities where there are too
few doctors and dentists. The
need for medical personnel is
great here and abroad.
Many of the newer jobs that
are opening -—• for example,
electronics engineers, criminol
ogists, nuclear scientists, com
puter operators, statisticians,
industrial research workers,
and government works — re
quire backgrounds in math and
the natural sciences.
Some of you have aptitudes
for languages. You should be
come proficient in one or more
of them because of the great
need for people who can com
municate with others from
other countries.
All of your college life
should not be spent in aca
demics alone. I would urge you
to make special efforts to de
velop interest in and apprecia
tion for some of the cultural
activities which you may not
have been able to attend pre
viously. The College provides
an extra-curricular program
consisting of plays, lectures,
musical programs, art exhibits
and the like. In addition, the
other colleges in the Center
and the Atlanta community
provide varied programs for
individual enrichment.
The knowledge and under
standing you should obtain
here in four years should give
you a solid basis of a liberal
education; that is, should en
able you to express yourself
with clarity and precision, to
think independently, and con
sequently, to develop a better
understanding of yourself and
of mankind. The challenge is
yours. The world is yours. Are
YOU prepared to follow the
road of challenge to the gate
of success?
A Ibert E. Manley
POETRY
CORNER
% Jk
nSwerS
Rhodesia
Zambia
Africa
Why—why is there
war?
Tel Aviv
Jerusalem
Israel
Is your savior a one-
eyed man?
Saigon
Hanoi
Vietnam
Did you bury my
man ... or was he
sold to Charlie
for $10.00?
Kosygin
Johnson
O World
The bomb is in men’s
hearts
and isn’t
it
dropping
?
By Marilyn Hunt
Spelman to Form
NAACP Chapter
The National Association
for the Advancement of
Colored People is an inter
racial, interfaith, nonpartisan,
social action organization. It
was organized in 1909 for the
purpose of eliminating racial
discrimination and segregation
against Negroes and other
minority groups, and to secure
first class citizenship status for
Negroes. It is one of the oldest
and most effective civil rights
organizations in the United
States.
Spelman is to begin a college
chapter this year and member
ship recruiting has begun.
Take interest in the advance of
your race and society and join
the NAACP NOW!
Contact Joyce Dyanne
Green, 2615 Burton Road,
N.W., or fill out the blank be
low and address it to her
through campus mail. Do it
today. Race pride knows no
apathy, no negligence . . . but
action.