Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / June 29, 1957, edition 1 / Page 20
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PAGE TWENTY ! #v ( PROUD DAY Ex-Sorgaont John Moaney, a vo>i end friertd of Px&sideni Eisenhower rnco World -’•-'ar il gc/;:. <«••!,'. a >.•< oud |sJcy recently when he showed oil the ‘boss' < . ' bower to hi# family and neighbors of C ‘Eisenhowers receiver a group Iroin i".? Coppc-.-, " I including Mooney's moth.er (U.t) end 'jrcn'.dncrun'msL -.v >v * intrigued Ike. (Nev ipreas Photo), Cec| ; ~pr: r ':,::t Ghana Is fir c- "y Tin !! 0 : , ■WASH-': to -v"' : ■United S'. . nicai coop ; Ghana, the .v. uy. r.. can territory r: which, bee i Pii March. The agreement provitf-'* a framework L.: iO:i;c<l ■ technical a' . t field of agri; niton- ' 'in:. I education and t'lmmmiih •" vetopment. The agreement 1 tienr-d last week at Accra. < - d of Ghana, by Prune .' ,i»ter kwame Nkrumah ami -.he United States Charge d‘ af faires Peter Rutter. The liaison officer for me Irt tef national Coop; Ap: tration will leave Mr on,,v im Ac #-ft t LOV £ p t,\ E with abandon k iSi PA CT ; X HAV/£M'TSEEN Him S'NCS/ 4 ££ Art'S c $ Va. State Again Chosen As Testing Center For Teachers PETERSBURG Vs. Vwginia .Stale College has vn brr, de signated as a testing center 1 • the 3957 nation-wide admin.: tuition . the National Teacher E> mina tions. il was announced recently by Dr. P. C Johnson, doe tor of testing at Tie Colic-ic The exam inations will he administered on Saturday, July 27 . t s;C>O an College :•( in preparing to ♦each and tr.-rhpir, tpo lying for positions in •••■ h< < ! ry.;t<i : which encourage or require applicants lo submit their sem e., on th Na; on i Teacher Exam matin' ' alone with their other e-odenu r- ai.gible to take .he U si.- The examina tions pivor.'-ed find adminis tered annually by Educational Testing d rvice. lvtn» cion.. New Jersey. The dc.-iv, tier: ->f Vi'vmin State College ■ (<i, these examine tioM- s ill <jvc pros pective ' neb In ‘, ■ an opportunity to rein pis re their per- j ( formant- o ' -> m; • i with apne:.Mndo) v id. '.a cardi- I. elates t.hi .... 1 ;••• "..wry. D; ' \ .Johnson .d.At t - one-day test- | j i'ng £ .sc ion a :i; :-me v t. ■ he j the ( ; ■ ii includes ter in t 1 in- I i formation. General Culture. Eng- j. lisb Dau.-;.i„!£ 1 ’ .j , ■ : era to provide a local prim of ■ ’ contact for discussions of the type ; : of technical coopsralSqjv projects which the Gevernuuni us Ghana I may request One of the first technical cq* 'operation projects under the new : agreement will provide a 200-vol ; ume technical library previously ; announced by Vice President | Richard M. Nixon at. Ghana's in ! dependence day ceremonies as an • independence gift from the Unit ied States. The library is expected to be . attached to the Kumasi Technical j Institute at Kumasi, but will be ; maintained as a separate collee ; tion. The books wilt be selected ' principally in the fields of agri | culture and vocational education, including technical engineering. Reasoning. In addition, each can didate may take one or two of the eleven Optional Examinations which are designed to demonstrate mastery of subject matter in the. fields in which he may bo assigned to teach, Applications for the examina tions and a Bulletin of Information describing registration procedures and containing wunpie }. -t ques tions may be obtained from Dr. P. C. Johnson, Virginia State College, Petersburg. Va., or directly from the National Teacher KvniJna tiers Educational Testing Service. 20 Nassau Street, Princeton. N. .1 Prospective teachers piremny to take the test should secure an Application Blank and a Bulletin j of Information promptly. Dr. .John son advised. All applications must be made- j by July 8. 1957. Moore received awards from j the above publishers in the fields of Negotiable Instruments. Sales,! and Corpora. Monti. He was the! highest ranking student tr. these fields, Weirn’inst is important at this i time of year and may mean the ! ,Iff ro:ir:V v . . n savinand iox uig that valuable shrubbery. < Georgia Gubernatorial Prospect Vows He Will Retain Segregation SAVANNAH, Ga. (ANPi -Loud and vehement exhortations came from the mouth of the lieutenant Go\ ernor of this state last week as he addressed a convention of the County Officers Association of Georgia here and vowed all-out war against integration anywhere in the state. The speaker was i t. Gov. S. 1 Ernest Vandiver, who is ex pect'd (o toss his hat In the next gubernatorial race in Georgia. j Vandiver sputtered. "so long as [ I remain in public life, 1 intend to j work fur the preservation of toh | “ - ;Boston Pastor Succeeds With Church Program BOSTON, Mass, When the I Rev E. O. Wootibour-e was assign led to Mother Wall A.ME. Zion Church, here, in 1954, there were very few who thought that he would raise the membership to | 450 in two and one-half years, as i reported, by him at the recent i meeting of the New England Con ! fert nee, held recently. The Rev. Woodhouse reports wonderful progress and feels assured that the people of tins city are one hundred per rent behind him. lie, even though having a busy pastoral schedule, has found time to take on extra duties and was the first Negro to he named to the Department of Correc tions. in the state. He also Ims built a congrega < t ion at Taunton and boasts a ! membership of 125 there. He has : become known as "God’s Ambas . sartor of Sot;?." He is considered one of the best gospel singers in this reef ion of the country. j rpci Touring! &BissrrsMß By Cote! lone maesaaJi j V/omcm'i Travel Author?/ Travel Survey If you took a trip last year, you j ! j are a statistic - part of a survey ■ | taken by the. AAA on vacation irav- j 1 . el. Here are some of the facts and j ' | figures javt probably figured hr: ’ j One half of ail America vaca- | l lions at. least once a year - spend ing some sl2 billion in the process. ; Private automhbile trips in the 1 United Stat< account for: 85 per* j cent of all travel within the country each year; 11.5 billion vehicle-miles driven on vacations; ami a $10.4 billion expenditure. . * .in half the states, travel is ranked among the three most im portant industries It. ranks first •rt Florida. New Jersey, Nevada and Washington, D.C. Here is how the traveler spends his dollar: food, 28 cents: lodging, 22 cents; retail purchases, 20 cents; gasoline and oil, 19 cents; enter tainment and recreation, 8 cents; tires, parts, repairs, 3 cents. Os every 100 motorists en route, <l3 stay in motels; 10 stay at hotels } or resorts; 16 with friends or rela- I fives; 4 camp out; and 1 lives in a ; house trailer. The great upswing in travel is ; due to: population rise; increased | earning power; more leisure time; retirement plans, insurance and social security benefiting older eiti zons; and increased passenger car j registration. A&T College Hosts: Two Meets-Farmers And Homemakers Conference And Town-Rural Institute For Ministers Held GREENSBORO Two impor tant meetings, the 35th annual | State Conference of Negro Farm : ers and Homemakers and the 4th iannual Town and Emal Institute I for Ministers, both aimed at im proving rural living in North Car olina, were held at A&T College, June 11-31, Sponsored by A&T College nnd I its Extension Service, the two 'conferences drew more than 1,200 |pi rsons The ministers’ group had I an additional sponsor in the North | Carolina Council of Churches. The farmer homemaker group nt its final session on Frida} morning endorsed the I Scott Hill, now before Con gress, as one of the “posilile approaches” in solving the. current tobacco situation. The action, one of a series of in.olutions adopted by the group, went further to note that, the bill could not be considered as a per manent solution to the problem, but a, slop in the right direction, The resolution called for morti fications In pi ice supports by j grades end qualities as a means i of discouraging production of low j I quality leaf, along with comblna-] ■ Lion acreage and poundage con- ; 1 trola. J segregation of whites and Negroes and the county unit system of vot ing." The pro-segregationists poli tician attacked the U. S. Su preme Court’s public school desegregatoin decree as a •’political" decision, assailed civil rights legislation as an Brutal Test For Outboards f. H®? A?, When a boat, slams over a rocky reef at 35 miles per hour, this photograph taken at 1/1000th of a second shows what happens. The prop keep: churning, and bits of rock fly everywhere. Strangely enough, this brutal treatment is part, of a routine test, conducted by engineers to double check the ruggedness and safety of Mercury outboard motors. It means owners shouldn’t have to worry about motor damage if they accidentally hit submerged or Heating objects. Inset photos at top show the lower unit of the 40 horsepower model before-and-after three hours of this test. The skeg is; worn down but the motor is still in perfect running erder. Lower inset before-ar.d-after photos show how 60 percent of the. propeller from a 6 horsepower Mercury has been worn off in the same three hour test. More than meets the eye is the progress in modern outboard engineering brought about through tests such as this, I Mammoth Dam In Ghana May Interest America ACCRA iANP > —The Volta Riv er project a mammoth dam which would open up the v.-ay to pro ducing electric powci tor the dev elopment of aluminum is one of the great, hopes of Ghana to in crease its income and strengthen its financial position. The country must do something to coat away from its one crop economy depend ent on cocoa. Back in 1952 it looked as though British and then Canadian inter ests might try to back the effort. Its cost is prohibitive to most, more than half a billion being the latest estimates. AMERICANS OPEN NEGOTIA TIONS Last month, however, three A inerica n business ruer opened Business Woman Organizes The National Career Guild NEW YORK CITY Mrs. Gla dys Joyner, well known Harlem business woman and Cosmetologist with her own shop, called a group of women together recently at the j Hotel Theresa and organized the National Guild of Career Women. ; The aims and purposes of <he Guild are four-fold: Ist. to foster | as well of create higher ideals a ; mong carter women all over the i world, secondly- to assimilate and I exchange ideas for and among those in and interested in careers, third - to establish career work j shops whereever possible: and ; last to help those less fortunate than themselves so as to give them a brighter outlook on life * spiritually, socially, rivicully and 1 j The group, also voted to pro-, . | mote voting in the farmers refer-! | endum on August, 23, fayoring the !five cent per ton contribution on; ! feed and fertilizer for the “Nick-1 | els Foi Know How" Program and i I the ten cenl, per bale contribu-i ; tion for the Cotton Promotion i ! Program A petition was filed with Ihe A&T College administration asking that the officials re quest an annual outlay of SfiOO from the Council of State and the State Budget Bureau u. cover minimum opera ling ex pense of the conference and allocated funds for the begin xinning of a Poultry Chain. A special commit ice was ap pointed to selert the county in which it is to begin (his year and to map plans for its ex pansion. New Hanover County, with the largest delegation, was awarded < ■ | the attendance cup for the second i . ! straight year. j. Earlier in the week, the women j had attended classes in home ■ i nursing, millinery making and ' | renovating, home building and j i ; furnishing and foods and nutrit- ’ - j ion. The men received short course i j i training in tobacco production, i i THE CAROLINIAN “ugly sore that can’t b<> cured by the use of force," and spit anti integration venom at Just about every thing opposed tc I segregation. He declared, "you can’t change I the way of life ingrained into the | hearts of people for 300 years by 1 passing a law." negotiations with the Ghana Gov j ernment on the project They were | Edgar White of the Utak Construc ; ton Company, San Francisco: G. j Van B. Slagle of Foreign Cons j traction Associates, Houston, Tex j as and H. Frazier Leith of Wins j low, Cohn and Stetson, New York. No one is certain what will 1 come of the talks but government i officials seem hopeful. Meanwhile the opposition MM party has j warned the CPP group which now i controls the government, they had j better take the opposition party in ! to consideration when a question i of this type which concerns the | who!' nation is at stake because l if the political fortunes were I changed the opposition might, not : choose to cooperate. in the field of careers. The group selected Lou LaTour at; President who consented to serve oi;iy for six months until i the group became fairly well or- ] ganized. this being because of Miss ! LaTour's already full schedule, i Mrs, Joyner—Vice President, Miss ; Ophelia Jordon secretary. High j School teacher as Mrs Iris Hayes— | Beauty Shop owner of Yonkers, j Business Manager, Mrs. Carolyn j of Public Relations, and Mrs. Su- | sip Hans, Real Estate personality— ; Treasurer. Others in the National I Guild of Career are Mrs. Rhea j Gallovray and Mrs. Heien Skinner i The Guild will organize local I , units as soon as it receives its | 1 Charter of Incorporation. fertilizers, home gardening and hevstock enterprises. Flank .Kli is, Washington, D. C’., a top official in the United States Department of Agriculture, deliv ered one of the principal ad dresses during the meet Other spnkers included: John K. Har ris and Dr. E. R. Collins, both of the State Extension Service Ra leigh and R. L Wynn and W, H. Kimrey, both of Greensboro. Newly elected officers includ ed: Mrs. Vera M. Slade, Ahcs iue, president; Mrs. Estella A. Smith. Palmyra, first vice president; David Richardson, Smithficld, second vice presi dent; It. E. Jones, State Agent, In charge of the \.vT College Extension Service, Greensboro, secretary and J, A. Spaulding, Greensboro, treasurer. The Town and Rural Institute for Ministers, meeting with the farmer-homemaker group, but m separate sessions, voted to for mally organize during the current .year. It appointed a special com mittee. composed of Rev, Cleo M. McKoy, director of religious ac tivities at A&T; and who has di rected the group since it began it 1954;'Rev. J. A. Forbes. Raleigh, to work out details. Rev, McCoy In Baltimore: j Lawyers jAdmitted To Bar BALTIMORE, IWd. (ANP) , An age old traditional unwritten I 1 law that had kept Negro men and! i women lawyers out of the Balti-1 more Bar Association war, dene | away wUh last week and mem- 1 bership in the association \va - of ficially opened to Negroes. The move was made by a vote of 614-408 for acceptance of women . lawyers and 606-417 for men law yers. The vote Was by special sec-' ret, ballot Even though the vote was favor i able for the acceptance of Negro: lawyers into the bar association. j they will have to be sponsoied in . order to gam admittance. Nomi nators of four attorneys are now ' pending. Technically. Negroes were not barred from fc he- associatirai throughout, the year-, but tradi-; tionaily they were not accepted. ! 1 i Coney island Rider Critically Injured NEW YORK i ANP)—A 30-yeat- ' old woman v. as critically injured j Sunday when thrown from a car on the Cyclone roller-coaster ride at Coney Island. She was identified by a niece, Fanny Arms, of 366 Macon St., Brook!;, n. An eye witness said that Miss Arms got from behind the safety bar on the car in which she was riding and stood up in the rear seat. The three car train was trav eling at 21 miles per hour and was 28 feet above the ground. She was thrown from the car and landed on a cat C y to I, she was found to have a its- | i tainert multiple frac- u es. This year is the golden anniver- ! r.fity of the nation’s professions! j agricultural engineering organiz'd-> tion known as the American Soci- | ety of Agricultural Engineers. i DRIVE SAFELY Steal the Scene I'* v . p _ ' , r * , W * JmC - * . -4c Ti f M f t * - W §wm M A' . ' , * 5 Polka dots are top Summer drama, rivet ail eyes, as in- Junior So phisticates' silk sheath. With such highneci.cd, plain hodic.es only a light mv-iair-lady figure will do, ; l-rom coast to coast, women are finding that perfect, proud bosom line with new Cotton Pretty Bra. Beautiful as well as dutiful, this , cool, pretty uplifter by Playiex keeps j its shape (and sours) despite months « j of trtadiice v, ashing. [! was also named as the ork<*nizn • j tion’s official representative on the executive committee oi the j 11 farmer-homemaker croup. Rev. i ;; Forbes was named Its temporary i I secretary. During the week the ministers. ■ i professoi of Rural Sociology at | hud heard John C. McLaughlin, i A«teT, .'-.perk on, "The Characteris tics of a Good Lcotier” and aj . | symposium conducted by Dr. Ver | non C. Johnson, professor of As - j rlcultural Economics- mid Dr, L. I H. Robinson, professor of Sociol ogy, both of the college faculty, on "The Problems and Needs of Town and Rural Communities”. They participated m a round ta ble d.acussinn with delev ales to tire farmer-homemaker group on “What Town and Rural Citizens and Ministers Should Expect of Each Other in Solving Community Problems" The participants in cluded. Mrs Emma Johnson. Garysbuvg; J. W. Mi tenner, of Srniihfieldi Rev. A G, Cheston, Trenton: Rev. J. IT Lljjfftfeey, | ritisboro and Dr F A, Williams. | dean of the Graduate School at I A&T. served as moderator | The groups were welcomed fey > I Dr. Warmoth T. Gibbs. President i jof the colleeg, at an open Joint! ■ session on Tuesday. WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, JUNE 29, 1957 Madisonville District In Zion Training Meets LOUISVILLE. Ky. - The Chris- • tinn Education Depai unent, Madi-; < sonvilie District, A.M.E. Zion Church, headed by Rev. D. J.i Huglett, held three meetings in j, the Kentucky Conference. The meetings were held to re- j ceive reports on the work and to : outline a more extensive program.; The Rc-v. HughleU was accompa- 1 nted by the two presiding elders,. I Revs. B. N. Hr-nningham and J. C. McCain. The first meeting was hold at Wesley Chapel Church, Greenville. Ky„ Kev. J. H. Dunlap, pastor. Mrs. Hazel j Laves, the superintendent, not only rallied the officers and members of the local church, for the meeting, but had the support of Kev. Myrtle Vihs herry and William Lovin, of Barnes Chapel, White Plains, Ky. The second meeting was held ' at Zion Temple Church. Madison- j villa, Ky., and the Rev. R E. Lee’ HowardC. Barnhill To Head A&T Natl Alumni GREENSBORO A Chaviolte. j N. C. public health educe'or was : named, last Saturday, as the new i president of the A&T Co!i< ge Na- j tional Alumni Association. Howard C. Barnhill, with the | Charlotte City Health Department.! woo out in the gene-rat election of i the Association The announce- I meut was marie at the annual I meeting of the group he’d at A&T i Colli-go all day Saturday, May IS. j The votes were east by mail bai- j lot by the membership throughout ! much of the eastern Seaboard, j Ho beat out O. A, Dupree, priri- j (opal 'd the Summon (nmy >■ liven ing School at ( Union, N C, Barnhill, a (838 graduate of the College, is now serving his thiul year as president of the Chnr- Alurem . .the cial'un. A n.ilive ~f Gsrcniville. N. ■ Hampton Summer School Registers 300 Students HAMPTON, Va. Abm;‘ three hundred persons have registered for the Summer Session at Harnp* ton Institute for clashes which be gan last Wednesday, according to Dr. Hugh M. Cluster, Director of the Summer Stv.skm. “Final registration figures aie not avai in bit',’’ (he director said. ■ , - to tho far! tii-it a nun'bet 1 i students will i- arriving for late registration throughout the week." Th- i<• are liii-iu di'« isioni in cuUego's summer prog.-ur-. Tlse Ga ouate program offers courser lead ing to (he Master's Degree in vari ous areas of education, including teaching of specific .subject areas -u.u ir.inupi -it iua.)-h tion and supervision. About a third of the summer's enrollment is in tiiis cates-'i v. most of the students being in-service teachers. A phase of the summer program which has been attracting an in creasing number of students each year is the six week pre-college course. Then-’ coins, -- are dcicurd School Os Missions At Bennett July 1-5 GREENSBORO The annual, School of Missions, sponsored by j the Woman's Society of Christian t Service of the North Carolina i Methodist Conference, -a ill be j held at Bennett College. .July 1-5. j Miss Fannie McCallum is dean, | succeeding Miss Isabelle R. Jones, j of Asheville, In addition to credit I courses, there will he workshops j and departmental clinics.. Faculty members include Mrs. j David D. Jones and the Rev. John j L. Bryan of Bennett. Miss Harriet j Seibert of New York, field culti- j ration secretary of the Woman's Division; Mrs. Mary N. Morrison, of Statesville, who is also chair man of the school: Mrs. Dorothy •Tones of ReidsviUe, and Mrs. 1... ''USIf O**® jT" 1-isiif'l mcl® IsMiSitil'i ykpMl' fl lH ".f STRAIGHT I BOURBON was th,? host J Van Shelton, sup erintendent. of the Church School, and all of the Christian educat ional workers out and was well fortified with the aid of Mes dames Beatrice King and Rupert Hughes, The final meeting was held at Bank's Street Church Rus sellville, Ky., Rev, C. \V. Wal ker, pastor. The program was arranged by W. B. Yarbrough, with the assistance of Mrs, Carrie Hughes, of the Arch dale Circuit. Aii of the meetings were held in cooperation with the Christian Education Department, located in Chicago, Dj . J W. Elchelberger iri charge. The three directors of the Kentucky Conference. Mrs. May Sue Wynn, Children’s De : partmem; Mrs. Blanch Elliott. Young People, and Mrs Ola. VV Crawley directed that work of their respective departments. The Kentucky Conference ie " ■ - ■: - - by' Bishop V C : Brown Brooklyn. N. Y. ; C. he has lived in Charlotte since i9;>o. He succeeds E. E. Waddell. Albemarle. N. C., who had served in the posi’ion i< the last 13- years. O’er officers elected by the ■ 'roup ini laded: Dr. F. A, Wil liams, Greensboro, first vice-presi i dent; Mrs. Mildred Payton, Pitts boro, third vic'i • president; Miss Dorothy Boone. Enfield, recording | secretary; B. H. Thornton, Dur ham, Treasurer and J. Kenneth I.Greensboro, parliamentarian. The group voted $2,U00 to be r. >ent in scholarships to the col i lege this fail in its anticipated campaign to place- S 10.000 yearly to the project within the next three-years. The keyr.ole address war deliv ered by Dr. Warmoth T. Gibbs, pr<-sident of the coilf-ai". ■ | to provide a more effective rrans i j ition from high school to college j and the studem earns more ad j vanes college, credit In basic sub | icets such as English and ®®fhma >; tics. Tliers is « tren ' ovc r the c i ' I fry for offering such transitional j programs 1o alleviate the dlffieui | i. : .0 ■. xpc-rl’ ru i’-d by ire.- : ov,-:n due ! to highly varied high schonj back grounds and records. About half of the atudeTs nt - tending Hair-pton Institute’s sum mer sei-sinn wiii be ••nroiied in 'bo regular undergraduate courses - winch, in the main, ar> offered by • regular members of fh.e college's i r, orient faculty. I like to return lo Hampton in the sunimti,’ said one in-service * teacher aitending a workshop in i is-adinsr. “because of the opportu nii’cs in the college and the com munity to combine study with « .-tirnmer s vacation. Some work and a good meirure of pi ay clears the cobwebs of ♦he mind and enable us ■ teachers 10 face next Fall's classes i refreshed.'' M. Mayfield, of High Point.. Also meeting here at the same time wiil be the Youth Assembly of the North Carolina Conference, headed by the Rev. Douglas E. Moore, of Durham, executive sec retary of the conference. One of the worst things a poul tryman oar. do Is to pack eggs in the case while they are still warm. Let them cool in baskets before packing, advise Extension poultry specialists at North Carolina State than n 39-55. Cash receipts from farm marketings were up about the same percentage as marketing. With additional income received from soli bank and wool incentive programs, farm operators realized not income for the year rose for
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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June 29, 1957, edition 1
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