Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / April 19, 1958, edition 1 / Page 11
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t M’.u ' TWftmnmti sB SKwH jh*c> « ' <• ~- ;^bj|b*i*p9Blß9jHßP! VOCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY PROGRAM PRINCIPALS These prisons were the principal* on fbo annual Vocational Opportunity Program sponsored last week at AAT College. They are from left to right: Dr. Arthur F. Jackson, director of Guidance at the College and chairman of the sponsoring committee; Mrs. Sarah Herbin. associate director of the Merit Employment Program. American Friends Service Committee; B. L. Jackson, Charlotte, Organiser of the VFL-010 and N. L. Gregg, manager of the Greensboro district office of N, C. Mutual Life Insurance Company of Durham Aubrey Williams Speaks: Proposal To Close Public Schools Is Called An Invitation To Chaos NEW ORLEANS Legislation j i te close the public schools, as a j measure toward meeting the prob- ; 1 Vim of integration, liar been sub- i {acted to critical analysis by alt {southern educational .agency | r "Such drastic action", said the 1 statement, "can amount to a ban-1 1 donment of the basic foundation of I < our democratic* institution? which ; •re grounded cn our having a lit- j i erate, educated end Informed pop- I; NCC PROFESSORS WITH VICE PRESIDENT NIXON ■— Two North Carolina College professors Dr. >lar.lorie Lee Browne and Dr. Helen G. Edmond.- are shown here with tl. S, Vice President Rich ard M. Nison at a recent reunion of foreign correspondent* in Washington. Guests wete newsmen who covered the Vice Preside!'* African safari in 5957, At Mr. Nixon's left 1# Dr. Browne, professor and Chairm vn of NCC i mathematics department, and on the Vice President’* right is Dr. Edmonds, pro fessor of history. Mrs Nixon is shown back to camera .‘bailing with Phaon Goldman, director of Af rica House. Party given al home oj Miss Ethel Payne of the Chicago Defender newspapers. Ii CO SHUT TEE FOR LANGUAGE TEACKER,S Pictured here are the 17 members of Texas Fou'fwn l« Host Committee for the ISth annual session ©f the College Language Assoeia f-on's mu >: 7 »f TML April 24-28. Dr. Blyden Jackson of Southern Uni versify, Baton Rouge, La., is *- I A Fre;- d.»M. Ch:;.. .nan of tbs Host CotntnKl r k- Professor J. Marie MrClctry, second from right, first row. Sessions will be held April 24 and 25 »f TNC with a concluding session moving to Prarlc View Cv Set';edit-, April '?«>. “Significant Steps in Successful Language. Teaching*’ will be the subject fur she Prairie View session. llpspits! Patient Misses Hubby’s Nightiy Visit; Police FiritS Him Dead At Home Os Heart Attack TOLEDO. O. - - U ■ Ella Singer, a pa hen t in Toledo i Hospital, waited for her husband to j make hi* regular nightly visit, j Hours, passed, end he didn't show j Mrs. Singer asked another pa ♦lent to tali Constable Ray Mitch- j ell, of nearby Spencer Township. j and tell him to go to the Singer ' home to investigate.. When Mitchell entered the house, j he found Mr. Singer, i>i, dead of 0 ' heart attack. *3ir,.~»r, a graduate of WiSberforce ; 4 uWiverr.itv and a member of Kappa i A Alpha Psi Fraternity, had Fuftered I ul-ace.”' “Close the school* legislation” has been proposed for next, month’s meeting of the Louisiana legisla ture by the joint legislative com mittee on segregation, Senator Wil liam M, Rainacb, Chairman. Such legislation has been approved by other Southern states. •‘Destruction of the public schools ia An invitation to chaos", wrote Aubrey W. William*. President of • a previous heart seizure us De i comber. Also surviving are a brother, ] Charles, Columbus, Ohio; sister*. ! Mrs. Irene Cook and Mr* Mary j Elizabeth Brown, also of Columbus, and Mrs. Hazel Alton. Warm weather means lots of lush | clover. Keep salt boxes full and j have a rack of hay or shucks in the ; pasture for eetti.e to help prevent I bloating. * * * * How ready is your lawn mower ! to go to work when spring corner" i the Southern Conference Educe ' ! tional Fund. Inc., in an open letter s to state officials and to all mem - | bers of the Louisiana legislature. - j "Evidence of this”, Williams - | stated, "lies next door in Mississip i | pi where much less sweeping leg r i islation. the repeal of the compul ■ sory school attendance law, • re - suited in a 44 per. cent increase in - ; juvenile delinquency in 1956, the f i year after the law was repealed. “NotmacfctfliM in 0 «ull fov n fyut what you hear avakta up for iti” I “Not Easy To Receive Justice,” ! Dr. Brown Tells Smith Audience i | CHARLOTTE - In delivering i the Founders’ Day address at John : son C. Smith University, Dr. Ken ! noth I. Brown Executive Director | of Tbe Danforth Foundation. hod i the over-flow crowd Recently that it may be easier to seok just see than to receive it. The Danforth executive deliver ed hi* address in recognition of the i ninety-first anniversary of th“ founding of the Charlotte college. His address preceded the inaugur al ceremonies of Dr. Rufus Fat terson Perry. “There are certain universal truths written in the very stars ’, said Dr. Brown, “and one such truth is the specific truth that here in the United CITY’S BARBERS ELECT NEW OFFICERS New officer* of the Barbers Kaffir Club of Raleigh, Inc. are pictured here. Tbe photo was taken Monday night during a meeting at High’s Barber Shop, E. Martin Street. Pictured on front row, from left to right, are Fred J. Mitchell, president; F.ddie High. Jr., vice president: J. Lenwood Hooter, secretary: Herman F. Smith, treasurer. Back row, left to right, are Thomas Wilder, chaplain: Lovelace Burw-'tl, sgt.-at-arms, and Sidney J. Macon. ‘lntegration Versus Desegregation’ Theme Os Sigma Frat Regionals LOUISVILLE. K.y. Spring is j here— and this is the time of the I year when Phi Beta Sigma Fra- j j ternity, Inc,, holds its spring reg- j j ionals. The General Board of the fraternity announced that the ! theme of the regionals is "Integra- : i tion versus Desegregation”, a i | theme which will also be that of , i the fraternity's 44th., Anniversary Conclave to be held in Chicago, ! HI., December 27th through doth. ; The Lone Star regional, George , D. Sutton 11, of Fort Worth, Tex ! director, convenes at Paul Quinn i College. Waco, Tex.. April 3rd , j with William E. Doar. Jr-, of Brooklyn. N. Y., and national bxec- : utive secretary of the fraternity, a* speaker for the public meeting. During tbe same week-end, the Southwestern regional. O wiar Robinson of Memphis, Tenru, director, meets In Okla homa City, Ok la., with head quarter* at Douglas High School with Esekiel Bell, see end national vice president of i Chicago, HI. in attendance, The Southeastern regional J. C ! Duncan of Yanceyville, N. C, «M --'j rector, con vanes at Claftm Col - 1; lege, Orangeburg South Carolina ; April 18th through the 20th with j national president A By. Hutson L. 7th Session Os Livingstone Assembly I Held t j SALISBURY the Hodent Council of Livingstone College held its seventh session of tn* Student legislature Assembly in the school gymnasium. This as sembly is sponsored annually to give the students an opportunity to learn and practice some of the parliamentary procedures t-hat | are used in the passing of bills, j This year the Mock Assembly ! was patterned after the House of | Representatives, and each campus j organisation was granted repre sentation or. 207 f basis of its membership. The plenary se.vsion which wa? held Saturday morning consisted of welcome by Robert. Guest, president of the student Councu, Roll call; adoption of calendar, and nomination and election o*' officer* of the House of Repr*- i tentative? The following person* were j honored by fellow represent»- s live* by being elected to the designated positions: Speaker, h Bernard Anderson: I’allamen* tar San, Leon Watts; Recor d - e log Clerk, Miss Mary Jordan; t Reading Clerk, Miss Shirley Johnson; Corresponding Sec retary, Mis* Marshall J. Lof ton; Sergeants -at-Arms, Jo seph Lavie, Fred Smith, and Fred Young; Tellers, Cicero Bynum and W illiam McClain, Time Keeper. William Durant, The €o Chairmen of the. In terim Council, Bernard Ander son and Henry Moses, presi dent of the plenary session. The seoenri legislative (session began after lunch with Speaker Anderson presiding. The first event of tbe evening was a speech ! by the governor of the assembly, Charles Price. Mr. Price Is an in structor of Political Science at the college. In his speech he stressed the fact that we should spend our tim« thinking a* well as ’ doing and that our thoughts and actions j should, in some way. be concerned with everything - that went on in I the world, A *» Slate* we love, the day lies a bead—pray God not too far a hc;td—when jnstin- shall be given to ali American* hy all Americans. "it «s not always easy to gh c Justice, when the giving means a change of thinking and s change of patterned living. But. remember it is not always easy to receive Justice- and good will arid love— - when they have been denied you. : For the resentment of years makes ; the act of receiving difficult. And j there may be bitterness in one's : heart against the one who comes | bringing the offering of Justice i and Good Will and Love. “It is easier to ask for for giveness than to accept for- Loveil of New York City and Brooklyn. N. Y., as special guest. The Southern regional, Dr, W. S. M. Banks of Fort Valley, Ga„ director, meets at Florida A & M l | University, April. 25th arid 26th., j with first national “veep” R. O. i Sutton of Atlanta, Ga., n.vional di- 1 ; rector of social action —Atty. Rob- S ert L. William* of Tallahassee, Fla., ; i and national director of education iDr Charles E. Trout of Tuskegee. ( i Institue, Alabama. . . as official ob- i I servers, On the same week-end, i the Great Lakes regional, Maurice ; • A.M oore of Chicago, HJL, director, j convenes in Detroit, Mich., with Dr, William H Pines, editor of The Crescent. Michigan State Univrv " ? j Cream of Kentucky I I | fljMlj mm 1 w * 3 - 55 j I j 3 dem jj| HH S«KEMity p|*,’f'iU.e«d. lHt> KENTUCKY WHISKEY*A BLEND 1 ’ j % PROOF. 70s. GRAIN NEUTRAL SPISMIS. SCHENLEY BIST., INC.. FRANKFORT, KY. (fSvcmssw —that is to accept M genuinely, graciously and in I love. “President Perry, we hear much I tout educating our young people for today. And there is truth in the idea. But President Perry. .1. urge that you and your faculty give I thought t<> educaitng your young : people for tomorrow, for the hfighter tomorrow. So that on that day which the sars above and the Cod we serve have declared, when Justice shall be offered you and your people by thos4 who are now withholding Justice, that yovir stu i dents will be prepared to receive i it, genuinely, graciously, and in I love.” sity. East Lansing, Mich., and J. ' Benjamin Horton, Jr,, national di rector of publicity, Louisville, Ky., in attendance. The Eastern .region, Edgar B. Felton, East Elmhurst, N. Y., direc tor, meets at Coppin State Teach* 1 •rs College, Baltimore, Md., May I 2nd through 4th., with national di ! rector of Bigger & Better Business, Or. Robert ,T, Hill of the host city, ; in attendance as an observer. The Western region, Dr. Charles Spann of Los Angeles, Calif., di ; rector, winds up the cotiferneces in grand old "1,. A.", June 37th thru •!Hh . v. ith B. A. Hester national ! . surer, a;; the fraternity's spe* mt esmmmisLx ' WEFK ENDING SATURDAY, ABRIL |ft, IfSB FUTURE DOCTORS CONFER «■■■— j Future Doctors Confer j Lott Carey Baptist Official j Over Slate Os Native Lands WASHINGTON, D C. The j Reverend Wendell C. Somerville. 1 Executive Secretary of the Lott Ca- I rey Baptist Foreign Mission Con- ! vention. is seen discussing the fu- i tore program of Titus Apoeso of j Nigeria and Mr. and Mrs. Edgar j Nelson of India. Both Messrs. Apoe so and Nelson have been the reci- j pients of scholarship assistance from the Lott Carey Convention j during their undergraduate and professional studies. ' ! They are members of the senior ; ; Medical class at Howard Universi ty, After their internship in the ' : United States, they will return to | their respective countries as Medi cal missionaries. According to Rev. Somerville, the Lott Carey Convention has provided various scholarships i to nationals. These Foreign stii dent? have assisted it> following fields of study, edit- Johnson 0. Smith University Dramatic Guild Plans Workshop ’ CHARLOTTE The Ira Ald ridge Dramatic Guild of Johnson C. Smith University is sponsoring a Dramatic Workshop on the cam r>n« rtitrino 1 i+ « CO!!'!‘^ , ! r iit v Hradts 1 Week May 12 through I*l. i Plays will be presented by eol i lege groups. children':- theatre, ' i young people's theatre and local ' : high schools, i Community organizations are m ' i>»>rw~^»nmin'PwiWMWW«wmiiM» | iM«iiWM«mwinwßi»wnni¥iraf»niiin«nnirniiin inrwnr • <r—«. THIS WEEK AT CARTER’S j ROLL-AWAY *| Come Early One To A Customer 1 SPEC I A L ! 9 x 12 LINOLEUM RUGS $3,98 CASH h CARRY . i 19 E. Martin St Open Friday 112 E Martin St Phone TE 2-4163 'Til 9 P.M. Phone TE 2-7792: ration, nursing, agriculture, the Christian Ministry. political science, law and education. ! • Recipients have come from AfH | ca, China. India, Haiti and. JamaiM. ! Presently the Convention is provid | irig scholarships for seven foreign i students. In aridtion to the scholarship pro ject. the Lnl.t Carey Convention ! has ninety-two ‘92> foreign tmas- I ionaries on its staff in Africa. Ln i dia and Haiti. Each year the Lott Carey Con* j vention conducts a Christian Youth ] Seminar for youth between the : ages of 12-25. The Fifth Annual Youth Seminar will bp held at Vir ! ginia Union University, June 30— J July 6, 1950. The Lott Carey Headquarters t* 1501—11th Street, N. W., Washing ton, D C., and the Lott Carey New Home ii located at 44OB—1fith St,, j N. W . Washington, D. C. vited to sell tickets for the bereft! of their organizations. Details <o’- earning the Workshop may be o tamed by writing to Mr. Eng Wt, i Terry. .T,Vm,-:on C. Smith lie, : S t.v. or by telephone, ED icon 3-7'L? ! Extension 25 The Workshop is under the r, ership of Mr? E M Bi\ tnv 1 structor in Speech and Direct s' a: ! the Dramatic Guild. 11
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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April 19, 1958, edition 1
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