Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Feb. 22, 1958, edition 1 / Page 5
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Rev. M. L. King To Address j NAA CP Jobs Pro test Rally 1 DLE 0 ■ (AND • Ths ! Rev, Martin Luther King of Mont gomery, Ala. will keynote a job PTOteat rally that will also open the local NAACP's 1958 member ship drive here Sunday, Feb. 23, The rally is being sponsored Jointly by the local branch of the WAACP and the Rev, Maurice A. Dawkins, Log Angeles minister. Rev. Dawkins heads a group i Saßown as the “Budweiser Protest 1 gp* l " ■ ■ - ■ pyw 1 —— — WOMEN IN NORTH CAROLINA DAIRY INDUSTRY When the dairy farmer?, of North Caro- ! lima attended the Mth annual Production Short Com* held at A—T Cohere last week, there were at , lefcai two-ladles in the group. Among them were; Mrt. J. O. Blank, left, Clark ton, and Mrs. Louise Simmons, Rowan County, They get additional In formation from Dr. W. L. Kennedy, chairman, De- > pertinent of Animal Industrie.* at the Collage. Suspend Little Rock’s Minnie Brown; Her Mother Says She’ll Fight Ouster LITTLE ROCK. Ark. - (ANP) Much-troubled Minnie Jean Brown, target of racial barbs since she entered formerly a'l-white Central High school along with eight other Negro student* last fall, was suspended from the school for the second time last week, She was suspended for two weeks following an alleged name-calling incident With a white girl who has since withdrawn from the school. However, Supt. Virgil Blossom said he recommended that Miss Brown be expelled for the remainder of the year. Meanwhile, it was point ed out that if Blossom's ’•ecom mendation is accepted, the girl might enter the all-Negro Horace Marm High school. But Mrs. W. B, Brown. Monnie Jean’s mother, said she would re sist any order to expel! her daugh ter. All Funerals Cost Less -•si the- RALEIGH FUNERAL HOME i Compare and be tfiprjnd Convinced! Bapf DS| emu (IKklilUII TE 2-2835 i Funeral Heme ™ 32$ E. CABARRUS ST. | MAKE EXTRA MONEY " ! SELL —The— Carolinian Your own state newspaper, with news of your community while it is still news. Liberal Commission ' Fill out and mail the coupon below at once. * The CAROLINIAN 1 • 518 E, Martin St. 1 « Raleigh, N. C. i 9 I Please send details of how I can earn money selling J The CAROLINIAN in my community, I think I can sell 5 j copies weekly. i name ... ; I , ADD RESS j ; CITY OR TOWN _ _ Mtweuieiii.” which is lighting to break down discrimination in em ployment, Currently, the group is campaigning against the employ ment policy of the Anheuser- Busch Brewery and other comp anies. Rev. King, who successfully ied the Montgomery, Ala., boycott that led to the breakdown of segrega -1 tion on buses in that city, will re McLean -Jones Vows Are Spoken In Fayetteville FAYETTEVILLE—In a oandle- ; light ceremony before an altar j banked with palms and fern* in terspersed with white gladioli and pompon chrysanthemums, Miss Margaret Grace McLean of Fay etteville became the bride of Lynn Harrington Jones of Newport News, Virginia, recently at the First Baptist Church of Fayette ville. The bride’s pastor, Rev, C. R. Edwards officiated at the dou wmmwtoM | iterate me Uicme of ms drive for Negro voting right* throughout Dixie that a Voteless People is a Hopeless People.” He will also urge Los Angeles Negroes to press | for 50.000 new registered voters. Scheduled for the last Sunday of Brotherhood Month, the protest rally will also open the local branch’s merrtbership drive for 25, 000 new members. | ble-ring ceremony. I The brid* is the daughter ofl . Mr. and Mrs. Samuel M. McLean ' of Fayetteville. She is a graduate ’ of Shaw University and Atlanta 1 University. Presently she is em ployed in Raleigh es assistant li brarian at Shaw University. The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Jones, Sr. of Newport News. ; ; He is also a graduate of Shaw, 1 University and is employed in the 1 public sclrool system of Leonard- ; ■ town, Maryland. He is a member of the Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity. Entering upon the arm of her| father who gave her in marriage, the bride wore a formal wedding. i gown of antique satin and hand , clipped Chantilly lace. The mould |ed basque bodice was designed | with sabrina neckline accented by flower motifs re-embroidered in; seed pearls and irredescent se quins. Long sleeves tapered to pet-1 al points over the hands. The bouffant satin skirt feat-1 ured insets of scalloped lace de signed in horizontal front andj vertical back panels that extend- j ed Into a chapel train. Her two- • tiered finger-tip veil of imported ! I silk illusion edged with Chantilly | lace was attached to a plateau o! ! tulle and Iscc highlighted by ; pearls and irredescents. Her only ornament was a single strand of pearls, a gift of the groom.! She carried a white prayer book, decorated with a cascade arrange-1 ment of white orchids, brides’j roses, and white- Roman hyr - j cinths. Her bouquet was tied with i white satin ribbons. The bride had her sister. Miss Mettarene V. McLean of Fayette- i vijle as maid of honor and a! friend, Mrs. Margaret Paige Pur-' vis, of Durham, as matron oi hon-1 or. The bridegroom had Samuel! Spencer of Raleigh, and Chester town, Md., as his best man Immediately following the cere mony the bride's parents enter tained at a. reception which was given at the parsonage. Miss Ma mie Wlikeraon received guesi;- Mrs. Palhe Covington and Mrs,' C. R, Edwards presided at the; punch bowl. Guests were regis tered by Mrs. Bertha Brinkly. Air:;. Eldria K. Hughes. Mrs Alley Wil son, Mrs. Elsie Malloy, and Mrs. Marie Williams were in charge of the gift*. Livingstone I College Lists New Grads SALISBURY Five students were graduated from Livingstone College at the close of the first semester which ended on January 27. Graduates at this time were: Alfred Adjahoe. Biology. West bury, N Y.; Laura Caldwell, Ele mentary Education, Florida City, Fla.; Frances D. Greene, Biology, Pinnacle, N. C.l Clarice Jones, El ementary Education, Mebane; and Harold Thomas. Sociology, Trout man. Changing statistics at the col lege also include 25 new students of which 16 are women and 9 men. Twelve of this number ar ■ freshmen while the remaining 131 'iPr -'■' ' 9Mi ' jjjjjjM v•' .^nOTtillo . tgfffi 1 JF jrh jnEajp 1 HEADS TOGETHER The National Association of Market Developers established an Ethical Prac tices Commission last weekend during its annual winter hoard sweeting In Washi-gton, D. C. Above are seen members of the important I>-person commission set op by this professional organisation of men and women engaged in marketing directions to Negro consumers. Seated, l to r. are Joseph Albright, NAMD President, Nashville, Tennessee; Moss H. Hendrix, NAMD board chairman and commission head, Washington, D. C.; J. K E. Lee, Vice President of Florida A&M University, Tallahassee, and standing, 1 to r, Howard B. Woods, executive editor, St. Louis Argus, and Wendell P. Alston, Esso Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, New York City. Ethical Pra&cUcee Commission will draft code on ethics to iv presented to the Market Developers Annual Convention at Nashville, March 20-22, Dr. 5. E. Duncan Takes Over Livingstone College July 1 SALISBURY, N. C. Bishop W. j ,1 Walls, chairman of the board of j trustees. I ivingslone Colic g,e speaking for the Board, at the an nual Founder’s Day celebration, held at the college last week, an nounced that Dr. S. E Duncan, su pervisor of Negro high schools' fur the state of North Carolina, had j been named president of the A. M. i E. Zion school, and would take of | fiee July 1. * * * ® He also announced that 1 iv- I im;stonc would put into action an extensive expansion prog -1 rain which would call for the spending of over a million dol lars. The progratT calls for two new buildings the bolstering of the Hood Theological Semin- Says Negro Know-How I ielped ! Launch U. S. Space Satellite PHILADELPHIA (ANPi The Philadelphia Tribune carried a two-column story last week cred iting Negroes with playing vital tolcs in every pham of the build ing r.ncf launching oi' the Army “Ex t.'.orer,' - the first U. S. “baby moon.” Launching of the satellite, the pap tv* saic!. "lifted the United State? scientific prestige out of the mud.” Calling the launching an all-Am erican achievement, the paper noted that four Negro soldier were in the 52-man Army launching detach ment, and that there were and still are several N.w, working at the iy, >:jC •!’• '■ : . ....-Vi -* -si*:-., uw.fxnmnwm MRS. LYNN H. JONES Say Communists Seek To Stir i tip Racial Strife In The South TALLAHASSEE A committee ' <>f the Florida legislature was told Monday that racial strife is the major aim of the Communist Par* ; ty In the south. J J. B. Matthf?iAS of New York h, City, an associate of the late Sen. r .fosoph McCarthy and a profession al researcher on communism, tes : tified that the Communist Party . has penetrated the “top leader . ship” of the Natoinal Association , for the Advancement of Colored , People. The Communist Party’s main rep l are returnees from former years. This brings tho tolui enrollment '{of the col’.e?" to 431. Miss Jean- JI nette Peely a graduate of Howard ' University, Washington, D. C. was , i added to the college faculty In ' the department of English. ary and increased salaries tor > 1 teachers. •• * * Bishop Walls called upon the j alumni friends of the college and members of the A. M. £, 2lor. Church to rally to the program and aid Livingstone m taking Its plac ed in the newly-geared education al program of the nation. Dr. Duncan brings to the college :i wealth of experience as an edu cator, having served as teacher, principal and supervisor for * number of years. He ie considered as one of the lop educators of the nation and is known to have refus ed many flattering offers as an educator. ** » e He is a- graduate of Living* Army's Redstone Arsenal at Hunts ville, Ala., where the roissiis was bom. In addition, Negroes worked on performance and control devices made at the Long Island City plant of the Ford Instrument Company, Sperry Rand Division, the Tribune mid. Among them was Marvin Stewart, electrical missile engineer, a native New Yorker and gradu ate of City college. He worked on the program device within the su per secret missile. Other Negroes at the plant made, shaped, illustrated, and produced resentative In the south Is James E. Jackson, a Negro, whose head quarters ho did not give, he said. Matthews, 63, was the only witness as the seven-member legislative committee, headed by State Ben. Charley E. Johns opened its Inves tigation into communism in Flor ida. Matthews, who has been associ ated with several congressional and state investlga*ons of communism and sedition, said the Communist Party’s sole interest in the race conflict is to promote its goal cf revolution and violent overthrow of the United States government. Tobacco plantbc-d soil should be loamy, well drained, and contain ample organic matter. A little extra attention at plant ing time will pay big dividends] ax alfalfa production, •tone College and made an en viable record as a student and athlete. He starred In baseball, football and is now considered a very good tennis player. He was boro and raised here. Ho is marlred to the former Miss Ida Duncan, also of Salis bury, bat currently a member cf the Reldsvllle city school system. She was formerly presi dent of the North Carolina Teacher* Association, They have one son. • * * * The Board of Trustees appointed a committee composed of Drs. J. W. Eichelberger, R. E. Clement and W. J, Trent, Jr., to make plans for the inauguration of Dr. Duncan. ih* top secret winner workings of •he satellite, the paper claimed. HAIR FROM GOING BACK H KAtt GOING BACK’ PROBLEMS! . raw PRMPIRATIOX...NOTHING AFFECTS A WONDERFUL ***** REPELLENT PEASULAN PRESSING OIL HAW. M>..,.YOUR HABI GLITTERS AHDSKBMES FOR *i.£K3 R&Ltii* so naturally soft and noi greasy. *mULM9 WATER REPELLENT PRESSING OIL CON TAINS R/JRS SILICONE. * 4 ASK TOUR BEAUTICIAN C r *h»b* w Et3SEEm f w T!H fm’smnz, # £js«« Shop Friday 9 A.M. Till 9 P.M. Hen’s Sanforized Work Shirts Jean cloth in khaki or Grey. Button down pockets. &% 1 dress shirt collar. Sizes 14 to 17, ;|§tp| WMIm 1 Men’s Sanforized Work Pants Cotton twill in Khaki or Grey. Double stitched emllixT is ■ at points of strain. Sizes 29 to 42, 30 to 34 lengths. Men’s Work Socks |f|T; 3 Pr. 100 Wfj Cotton with nylon reinforced at heel and toes. ~ 1 White. Khaki, and Grey. Short and long top styles. «o9R*-' Sizes 10 to 13, 49* r*p*wx»HW ,«*»**>»rv*wf»wMWfimiiwz»i*«*wnywi^>*murns—*wvu.wiw*anmwway -^T,»»wogww<*M«wvowiv»M,-mwf*i***iw*»<«M«*wwMrar(rw»»w*i imun'i -«*mimBOT«wwwww Ladies Cotton Bras Fancy Linens 1.59 100 Can be worn four ways! Halter, Off Table cloths, napkins. Doilies, Scarfs, Shoulder, criss-cross and strapless! Cir- Vanity sets, Guest towels, Luncheon . , , cloths ... so many lovely linens for c e stitched, foam rubber lined. Sizes 32 yourself, for ideal gifts. See th« large to 36, A, B, C Cups. selection today! BOY'S IRONING READY-MADE Dungarees Board Covers Drapes Keg. 1,93 Keg. 60a 3.98 to 8.98 values / 1.49 39c 399 Blue back denim, sanforized. Fits all standard 54” board. Only tiny flaw* that in no Saturday seams, reinforced at MadB of cotton, with elastic way affect the wear. Make points of strain.. Zipper fly. edge. Completely washable, this super saving possible! First quality. Sizes 8 to 18, makes Ironing easier! Plaids, solids and joquards. Hudson-Belk Basement Store THE CAROLINIAN WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1958 Sigma Frat’s Gen’S Beard Meets On 22 LOUISVILLE, K.y. The Gen eral Board of Phi Beta Sigma Fra ternity, Inc., national college Greek letter organization, will meet in Chicßgo, ill., February 22nd at Sig mn House-4941 South Parkway. Upsilon Sigma graduate chapter, host for the fraternity’s 44th Anni- j versary Conclave to be held in the 'windy city’ December 27-30th., in- { elusive, will be host to tha board i meeting. In addition the rnnny matters the i General Board will consider, it will I , also hear programs and plans ot all j i i T,r “ ■" ’ || SfiuKjß J MAKS IWNCH-TIMS A CHtERHit TIMS ... a high note in the day! Let the good taste of Coca-Cola add its own note of enjoy ment so welcome and so right with meals! Coca-Cola: th* heat-loved sparkling drink in all the world! biart brightening up your meals with Coke today! Sep/riqftt 195# tfc* Coca-Cot* CwnsHwy ”Cot«" a * rWittred tawJomlrte Soitled urnfar authority of The Coca-Cola Company by THE CAPITAL COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO., INC. national officers and regional di rectors pursuant to the operations of their departments for 1958. Upsilon Sigma graduate chapter will also sponsor a dinnerdance lot Founders' Day, honoring the three founders of the fraternity Sunday, February 23rd, at the Hamilton Hotel at 5 p. m. The General Board will be guests at this affair. “Men who win their wivm | by soft ssoap often e*nl A|> j washing th* dinhen. * 5
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 22, 1958, edition 1
5
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