"Week ending Saturday, January n, 1958 nmmm.ua. K'J'i""iitTrumij—'mjjnto n ;i>w>»fciaww~ainwi i i>w iwimnui Miss Edith Walena O’Neal, Sgt. May Married Here Miss Edith Walena O’Neal of 1017 East Davie Street and Sergeant Theodore May of St. Louis. Mo., were united in marriage in a dou ble-ring ceremony Monday even ing, December 23, in the Martin Siren Baptist Church parsonage with Rev. P. H. Johnson officiat ing. The bride is the daughter of Mis. Martha O’Neal of Raleigh. F QM r t jpgjf i JaraSSS* % '-4 R;:: mm i MRS. THEODORE MAY Gammon Seminary Prexy Leaves For Church Study ATLANTA, Ga (ANP> Dr. j Harry V. Richardson, president of ; Gammon Theological Seminary j here. Is in Liberia, Africa, the first j stop in sn eight-week tour of sev- i era! countries of the Continent. ! The tour is being sponsored by j (he Methodist Board of World Mis- j sionr, the Phelps-Stokes Fund of j New York City, and the Stewart j Missionary Foundation at Gammon, i In Liberia, Dr. Richardson is sharing in a study of native churches, which is being con ducted by the World Council of Churches through the Phel r»s Siokes Fund. We will then ll® OLD ji jltolL ©ja - STRAIGHT ’ 13011RBON HISK6 V #„ m % #2li JAM»B WAtSW A «0 . INC. tAWfIENCFBURO. INO. « * WHEN THE IEPPERATUR* DROt-i St,. j-By-MaiH FIRST-CITIZENS BANK AND TRUST COMPANY i , The bridegroom is the son o| t 1 Mr. and Mrs. Warren May, Sr., of St. Louis, Missouri. Tlip - bride is employed with the North Carolina Mutual Life In i suraocc Co., while the groom, Sgt. May, is stationed at Fort McPherson, Ga. The bride wore a whit" jetsr street-length dress trimmed wii satin and appliqued iridescent si quins. Her hat was a small sati I creation with a bridal length vc I and satin shoes, She carried I orchid on a prayer book | Matron of honor was Mrs. Mat I C. Ferguson of Norfolk, Va. an | she wore a tc-eel blue tafotta dre: I with matching shoes, while glove I and a white iridescent hat. Her co I sage was pink blue roses. M I Henry Holden of Raleigh was be I man. I The bride’s mother wore ate | blue two-piece dress ensoinb I trimmed with navv blue. Her shoi I and hat matched the ensemble wit I white g’oves and a corsage of whi I roses. The couple was entertained at a reception given by the § bride’s mother following the I ceremony at the Martin Street Baptist Church. f Out-of-town guests includes 1 Miss Geneva Chase, Durham; Mr | Mary C, Ferguson, Norfolk. V? I R. Holly Bryant, Durham; G. V I White, Durham, Mr. and Mrs. Phi { lip Alston, Method; Mrs E.. A. Ha: I ris. Mrs, Nell Wilson, Misses Doll f Adams and Dorothy Waller, M | and Mrs. Winfred Harvey. Mr. ar Mrs. Spencer Crews, and Mrs. M; I ble Butler of Durham, N. C. go io Ghana to attend (he meeting of the International Missionary Conference. From there he will go to sev eral countries for the purpose of observing Methodist and \ other Christian mission work, i with special Interest in minis terial training. | The over-all purpose of Preside! i Eisenhower s tour is to reeru more African students for Gan mon Seminary. While the Stcwai Missionary Foundation has existe at the seminary for the purpose r stimulating interest in Afrit a missions. SB* i i Tfiißcis Ye'll Sf?e*i!d Know a— a- ■—■■■!.—e.l s ■ - mmmmumrnm MM, Hi. ■ -tg rr T-,nH>—Win Him '! i| IKING * W'^M i kr .. King of nubia, <Ethiopia)/ he RULED FOR TWENTY-FIVE YEARS/fINAUtY, HE CONQUERED ALL EGYPT AT THAT TIME, ALMOST THE WHOLE CIVILIZED WORLD./ y f HE BECAME FABULOUSLY WEALTHY AND HIS //j j/ /ffa lit , SUCCESSOR, HIS BROTHER SABACON f ENLARG- ///]j EBr£UX : # / j ///j I J EO THEIR XINC.POM TO INCLUDE ASSYRIA // m il- tCir- r , -.'/.A' I )1 " Hwrniw*.-—— -.1 i ■■■M. li im »■ i wui. a-> tun- cm mju - •*"" ..... »—-- lie - - Ir. ; 1 mm l 111111 ■ ia- Open To Negroes, I CAREER ' | BY STAFF WRITER CAREER CENTERS if 1 Tlie following are nine carer. . M | centers where you may write tor I free information about thorn: ADVERTISING: Advertising Fed eration o Vrnct iea. 250 W. 57th St., Nm Fork 10, N. Y.: Boston University. School of College Re lations, 705 Commonweal i h Ave i nue, Boston, 15, Mass. 1 j AGRICULTURL: American So- I 1 | ciety of Agricultural Engineers. 420 j j Main St.. St. Joseph, Mich. | CHEMISTRY: American Ciiemi- | : *if ! cal Society 1155 Sixteenth St., N. j ■»it ! W.. Washington 6. D. C. ■«- i FORESTRY: College of Forestry. ,r< ; State University of Now York. Sy- O" racuse 10. N. Y of LIBRARY SCIENCE: American an Library Assort:; Hon. 50 F Huron j | Street. Chicago 11, Illinois. ! MATHEMATICS: Rutm rs Uni j vcrsit.v. Dept, of Mathematics, New ! Brunswick, N. J.: Case Institute of Technology. 10000 Euclid Ave., Olrvolgncl fi, Ohio PHARMACY: New York Life In surance Company. 51 Madison Ave nue. New York 10. N. Y SEI.LING: National Association |of Manufacturers. 2 F.. 40th St.. “Democratic j Digest” In j Risks Search | The January issue of the Demo- j cratie Dige t, being mailed to' sub scribers this veek, asks whether i the most dangerous security risks ; j in the rim on have not been the j men who created the climate of i • opinion which helped demoralize our scientific community. ’ The Digest feels that the answer | is vcs. and in support of it. con- ; elusion cite? ihe Administration’s i handling ol Dr. Robert Oppers heimer. and Dr. Edward Condon, former chief of the U. S. Bureau of Standards, as well as the assault j cn Fort Monmouth by the late : Senator Joseph R. McCarthy, as j examples of how the security mn- j nia. ot Vice President Nixon, Sen- , fitor McCarthy and others destroy- j od th.' morale in the nation’s scien- i ! lifir community. <i The Digest, ill an article. "Nixon and l’a*s vs, the Sri ertssts," rccaiils. for instance, how \ ice President Nixon in Hie campaign of 1951. boasted j of having caused thr denial nf cruritv clearance to Dr. Ed- i ward Condon, the man w ho or ■ .• ni/ed work at the Bureau of tandards which, according to 1 : Award Teller, hastened the j development of the H-bomb by at least. ;* year. j The Digest, quoting from a study ; | of the Fort Monmouth investiga- ! ! lion made by the Providence. Jour- j nal, also points out the great price j i the American people paid Pu Me- ) 1 Carthy's Fort Monmouth jnvesii- j ' gal ion, and sums up the results: j I "Eight men were discharged as se- j | flinty risks. None ot them was j ; charged with disloyalty or c.-pion- j I age. All had previously been in- i i vestigated on the same informa- j i tion and cleared." j | Tl-.<- notion is pa- ing today, the |! ; Digest conclude.-. Joi "the terrify- I me, unreasoning, anti-intellectual . I climate of fear and suspicion which i v.as created and perfected by the late Sen. Joseph R McCarthy, c*' ■ | r ined by Richard Nixon and ex- J pertly inri.■>*.>produced by the He- j public ii Party in the years 19f>2- i 1954 to g; in political victories ” Iti another article, “Sputnik i | Crisis Spotlights OOP Anti- School Record,” the Digest re view*. tiie Eisenhower Atlaiin- I istraticin’s record on aid to edu cation from its first “study" of Ihe situation in early 1951! <o Hie recent failure of Ihe Risen- i hover school program because | of ll.e’s refusal to fi-ht for it. | ■■For fiv» years." Pie Digest j I eisn-'udes. “the Elsenhower Ad- 1 mintstraHon has deliberately ; postponed any major Federal action in the iicid nf eduea- j _ lion.” I THE CAJROLINIAK * ♦ t OPPORTUNITIES I New York 17. N. Y. j Missoula, Mont., Associatoin for TEACHING: School of Educa- I Childhood Education, 1200 Fifteenth lion, Montana Stale University, j Street, N. W., Washington 6. D. C.. c .wu n'IMWMWLiojUf u,«» i , *-vsw- mi ■■■ .mi —x ..... ann page Hershey <1 <$ Chocolate ®*rßalad r= l)imt#45 c 39 Illfit —i ITWriniri irnwrii nri'TlTiM ff I ittiwtt 1 rr—lUlfWi WMl'iWiin f|Tfii nif—jit .mum. Him m— ll SPECIAL LOW PRICE! PACKERS LABEL OR FANCY A&P ORANGE JUICE 2 45 FRESHLY BAKEI) SPECIAL PRICED! JANE PARKER SPANISH BARS - 29 ANN PAGE PREPARED P A&P’s OWN AIX PURPOSE Pork & Beans 3”£ 43c dexolo Oil si 97 « PRICES THIS AD EFFECTIVE THROUGH SATURDAY, .JANUARY 11 • Dr. M. Johnson To Speak For Remembrance Program GREENSBORO Dr. Moide-| cal W, Johnson, president of! Howard University, Washington. D. C., will deliver the address i when the miaid annuai remem- 1 brance service for Dr. David D i Jones will be heid at Bennett Col- j lege. Sunday, January 12 in Pfei ffer Chapel. Dr. Jones, served as president j /. Shampoo hoi> Sor- £. Apply Ood«fioy‘» .t- Aft«r color har do- i m ougMy. At H drit)« mix Irjmu*# with hontfy sloped, thompew >**»«■ Godcfrcy'* lacicvto opplienPsr Mwlod tn ufloin ami t*i in your ***' 01 directed. ~ : podeege. fovorit* «tyla. j. 1/2S ftSS 3510 OUMt | ST. lOtftS I, HO. I |of the college from ii)26 to i 905 and as president-emeritus from 1955 until his death in 1956. Speaker al (lie first service I oi remembrance was Dr. Hen- I r.v Hitt Crane, pastor of the Central Methodist Church of I Detroit, Michigan, a long- i time Bennett trustee and a i schoolmate and friend of (he ' PAGE SEVEN lit i- vriniainr. Di Johnson, who holds d«gr®« from Morehouse College, the Uni versity of Chicago and Harvard University, has been president est Howard since 1926. He Is widely 1 j traveled. w ~~rm—arni—MnnMiimiai him iiiiig--—TT^TTWMgratS^ - I NOW OTTER rOU TAILOE MADE R CLOTHES || Eivis Rand 1 of a famous National Concern Bs !) Granville Ter. TE 2-8784 &

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