Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / June 7, 1958, edition 1 / Page 9
Part of The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
“Rid Yourselves Os Worries An-1 Us® What You Have," Miss Brown Tells 138 Lig :t Grads B> STAFF WRITER "Pad yourselves of your won its p.nd us? what, you have" was a high point in the commencement address Miss A Odessa Broun, president of th« Student Council, when she spoke to 139 graduates or .! W. Li gnn Junior-Senior High School Sat urday in Raleigh Memorial Audi torium at R p m. The --peaknr, a graduate, keynot ed her message with a challenge, asking the graduating seniors to be m° uncommon men "\* ho will defv convention when they believe it to be harmful, who do what Ihey sincerely believe j-, right, and who rotitritai.it** to th* progress of tfie world ’ "For every negative view point, 'y|g > should acconl a positive one," urged Miss Brown. Ti'e president of the Senior Class, Charles Haywood, introduced Miss Brown snd called attention to her varied leadership dualities. THE' PROGRAM INCLUDED. a processional and recessional; "Lift Every Voice and Sing" -Johnson Frojine Reese, solo -- "Alleiujab" firm "Jubilate' Rev, T, R Penn, in*, oration; !l K. Brown, principal, Br.nouncpment of scholarships and swards. Rev. H W Cunningham, benediction, Diplomas were av ardod hv Kup erintemirnt Jesse O, Saunderson Figures show that dairymen us ing frozen semen can expert a conception of rate from 3 to 5 per cent higher than with iiovid se ts men POSNER'S BERAMOT CONDITIONER SEVEN jpnfEARS OLD lOlk $ 5 4/ ‘ 5 r>JT f^p Old Quaker STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY » mmoi • old Mites? sirmuss to, u*»«tsw»», '*» HBAKSFUJB GET SIGMA SCHOLARSHIPS When the Greensboro Phi Bela Sigma Fraternity observed its an nual Bigger and Better Business Program at AA T t allege last week Faye Dalton and Walter Harrison alright, were presented scholarships to attend Howard University and AAT respectively, f. R. Merrick, Durham, principal speaker at the affair, makes the presentations as E. A. Blair ann R, l. Hannon, chapter officers, look on from cenW.—l El, PHOTO Cotton gives employment to more people than any other industry in North Carolina. There aie 112 rollon warehous" firms operating in North Carolina. E. Frederic Morrow Heard At Fayetteville’s “Finals” FAYETTEVILLE The Eighty First Annual Commencement Ex ereises were held a' the Fa.vette v »l!e State Teachers College on Sunday June 1 in lhe Seabrook I auditorium. The guest, speaker tor the occasion was the Honorable F Prednir Morrow Adminirtrs- : live Assistant to the President, of' the United States, the, title of whose address to the Class of JR was. "The Price of Success." President Rudolph Jones con ferred the Bachelor's degree upon - the 129 successful candidates and the diplomas were issued by the Honorable John H. Cook, Chair- i man of the Board of Trustees. The ; candidates were presented, for de grees by Dean Lafayette Parker. Graduating Magna Cum Laud? at the head of the c lass was John nie Pearl Murpiij of Godwin, North Carolina and second honor, went to Evelyn tyne Humphrey of Roxborn. North Carolina who wu - graduated cujk laude. Both am iisird :u Who's Mho Among Sin drop- in American Colleges and IJtUA rr*,*f Music foi the commencement caci ci.se; vus furnished by ihe College Choir under the direction of Mary T Eid.dd.ae, Chairman or the Are i, of Music and Pine Arts, and Dr. Henry M Eldridge and Edward W. Hargrove were 1 college marshal:, r ANDIDAIES FOR U S DEGREE The iiht ol persons io he awarded t!:- Bachelor'. degree include; Belt;, R Alien. LUlinginn: Eli Anderson. Fv - i rUevilte Annie M Avon Fayette-' villc: Curtis W Battle, Tarboro; Lo renzo L Batts. Rooky Mount. Irene O. Bellamy. Fayetteville: Edna R Be". ; Goldsboro; .Berner-e Biyr.v);, FayrUe- : villa; Gloria i. Bridget-.-. Tarboio. Mat - . thew M. Brinson, Ro-< Hid Afexanon Brown. Plymo.nls, Cleveland Beovtv Wilmington. Harr' H Brown. Jr.. Wil mington. Virginia F Brown. PikesviU* Gracif J Brunson Wilmington: Ma - tha B Bullock, Tarboro: Thomas S Buvcesr Fa voiievdie. ReOv L Bum..j Fayeltr.vilit . fatal ha B. Butler Fa.' • e.HeviXlP Charles E Carter. Mount Airy Maty h. Chappell, tioinh Boston. ; Virginia. Connie <. laibnrnc South B*>« inn, Virginia; Winfield Coachman. Fv - ; i. tteville: Jacob f'iinen. Fayetteville Emma K O.llin • Pear-bland; Ruth Co!- j viii. Fayetteville Mary C. Cosdvt. Piosnect Hill: Helen E. Curry, Aiken. I South Carolina; Hattie H Davis. Teaches . Joseph P. • Bcinnscv. N shville; C.iiarlo R J>t- Vaugiin. Durham; Marian L Diggs. Fayetteville William F Diggs, Fay etteville T.'■(' 13. Dorter,. Rci-kv Gallup Pol! Says Dents Still Hold The Bulk Os Megro Vote Power PRINCETON. N J. <ANP> ; A perennial survey of the Gallup j i poll disclosed that the Democrats j have lost little of their hold on the j ! Negroes vote? As a matter of fact. | j the poll finds that GOP rffoits to ! j win Negroes to the party on the j j civil rights issue has been a fail- i j ure. I This "failure" is attributed to a | ! belief that Negroes both of the ; i north and couth, feel the Demo : : rrals have their economic interests | a< heart—or a case of Detroit's un- i ! employment lines have more politi* j ! cal significance than Little Rock's J , picket cordons. Asked "which party would you like in see win in this stale". Northern Negroes are • j *a<d In hair voted 21 percent ! GOP against 73 percent Demo cratic. rigatnsi a 1954 percentage of 13 and 17, respectively. In : ih» south ih* 1 present figures were onoted as being 3*5, GOP. j 84 Dm> . against IPM\ ** and 73 respectively. In other aspects r.f th? poll sam j piinjjs of Negro opinions were: 1 More people would be out j of work n the months ahead. ; appear in l’.mo and the government I | will hare to help cure it ] .3. 3-1 Democrats can Ho a better I job of keeping the country pros- I porous \W§S! “Some rei:ide o’ - ® ’.ike con. cret«—all mixed up and per i manemiy sell” , Mount; run I Dougla.... Fayetteville: Mary R Dunham, White Oak, Jam F Elliot*■ Dunn; Inez F Evans. Bur ! lingt.on; Margaret A Evans. Fayetfe ! ville; Agues L t'ln'-d. F;.u> moot; ,>- ; flora S Ford, Clarkton: Rn.;a M. Fore man, Farmvillc. Hard M. Fous.iee. i Chapel Hill; Grace H Fm- ic; Dm - i ham; Isabella Fowler. KavptlevUie; i Jack Freeman, Cat tabs; Donald E. Russell. Rose HU); Elizabeth Gel aid. Fayetteville: Annie L. Gilchrist Umrinburs; Naomi Gra ham, Lauringburg; Selena F. Green, Lynchburg. Virginia; Dorothy L, Greene, Wilmington: Accrdean E. Hag an. New York Ncv. York; Donald L Harris. Pinehurst; Charles R. Han :son, Nashville; Edith V. Harrison, Nash* ‘ vlße; Ethel B Harvey. FayetieviUc: ' Katie L Hill, Warsaw; LeGray Him:- Fayetteville; Nancy E. Holloman. Wil mington: Harold W Hubbard, Fayette ville; Evelyntene Humphrey, Roxboio; Rodney W. Ireland F’eyett.evitle: 530 - lie L. Jackson, Fayeiteidlle: Miami G. Jacobs. Halisborn, Harvey L .larmin. Kinston: Vera M. Jenkins. Tarb ■: John C Johnson, Tabor City. Norma I. Johnson, Colerain: Portia J;?rtr~. FayetieviUc; Julia ft. Kci!>. Rennert Rosie I. Kemp, Favellevillc; Cimv.e King. Fair Biuff; Velma I Lavendc Jacksonville. JosMo. T.racii. Wi:iirv , 1 m. Lucille Leake. Adder: Keys : M Ms ■ till. Ciiadboum: Caine O ?>l,-:ii]i,-'n,. W timing top: Ruth H 'Te 1 1 m, Fa e'te vilic; I,oiii e Mom e. Clinton; Clarice Mores. Newark, New Jersey. Jnirnme P Murpi-.y God" in: Ru'h M M,:AI - lister. Rseforrl; Robert Mcßr.vde. Fay etteville: Maime F McDuffie. Lain n burg, Willie F. McGee. Rocky Mount. Mary F. McLatirm. Fayetteville; Eleanor McNeill. Wilmington; Ha f tir M Oliver. Fayetteville: Shade J. Pal mer. Hcilsboro: Joyce L Parker, i Charleston. South Carolina; Freeman Pearsall, Magnolia: Margaret J Pee bles. Jack-on: Macic 1.. Peterson. Rmc Hill; William P. Pitt, Goldsboro; Aie:. . Purceli. Fayette villc: Mattie B Rob;n --: son, Wilmmcton, Moses Rountree J'' . Wilson; Roger J. Scales. Moun< Aiv.r; Baibara G Sharp,-, Macclc.-fioiri; Jes sie L. Shaw, Tomahawk: Hancie M. : Shipman, Maxlon; Aggie N. Simpson, Maxton Olivia H S mtii. Wilmington; Pcrnetna Smith, Rocky Mono! Shirley I, Smith. Goidsbo'. o, Mae C. Sneed. Rockingham; Donald R. Spicer. Jack sonville; Flormc S "adman, Wade. Ida F Steward. Warreruon: Anna I- Stewart. Fayetteville. Mdton r Tav !nr. Tarboro: Arthur F Tom nKnv:. Fayetteville; 'Mavis J. Terrain, Ced;- Grove; Manila A Tnci Kfiand. Albeit J Walker. Mamwrontck. New York Merle A Wind, Gi'cen'dlr. B'-rtim P Washington, Cameron: Donald L West., Newark. New Jcirev, Mildred Whit", Richlands: Frankie Wilkins. Batlle boro; Hardy B Williams. HaiTOlls: Robert E Williams, Clinton: Voola A Wiilisms Wallace: F.'fUir P Wilson. Oxford, Robert Wilson. Fayetteville; Ora M. Wright. Arapahoe: Roosevelt Wright, Burlington; and Carrie M Young, Jacksonville. Miss Crockett: Local Coed Wins Grant At Durham DURHAM Barbara T.a Verne Crockett, 20 year old North Carol ina College senior fiom Raleizh, lias been awarded a one thousand dollar Atlanta! University Fellow ship. M's* Crockett, daugbtei of Mr. and Mrs Manuel H. Crockett Sr. Raleigh, will continue her Undies in French at Atlanta University, Af lonts Ga.. during the 1958 1859 ■school .year. i transfer student from Fisk where she spent three years on j Ford Foundation scholarship. Itftes Crockett is scheduled to enter Atlanta University In September. 1958. She left Raleigh s Lignin High School after two years to •■titer •he special program at Fisk. Wihlo at tjigon she maintained •ughee.t average of any student In the freshman and sopohomore Hasses. Ahn, she yvas riled an the tudeot who had re.,d the largest number of bok? during her fital two years in high school At NCC. Miss - Crockett studied with Dr John Ti Morrow, chair man of the department of French, v. bo u s? b®r major advisor Miyty Crockett's brother ivt*nuel, Jr., if. a]=o a student at NCC PATRONIZE OUR y es , We All Talk By Marcus H. Boulware OPEN THROAT VOWEL QUESTION: What is meant by the ‘open throat vowel”; Mrs. L. P. ANSWER: Thp 'open threat vow el'' 13 often referred to as long It alia!) "A", or the neutral vowel, ft is iur •i.uceri in such away that the .speech musculatures are at rest for ming little or no obstruction to th» passage of air through the throat and oral ca’ ity. The tongue rests re la set’ nnd flat at Ihe floor of the mouth The "open throat vowel” has the sound of "AM" as in <RAH> when yelling ala football game. The sound occurs in such words as FA-TH-KH. APT. UAR-ROR As a neutral vowel, the sne*-eh m itculators (longue. lips. rteA inner iplo position lo form the lone nnd short 'A" (as in a*i. the long “I?" as in (me). QUESTION: Tim motions in a club are rai nrd by a majority vote. Tn this case, do you mean the majority of Ihe members" Miss F 13. M ANSWER: By majority vote t* Weeding Bells Editor’s Note—Marriage hcenw* have been issued to the following persons from May Ifi to JO. ae couling in Ihe Wake County Pee istcr of Herds office: Manaom J. Fori., fins Najsareth Street., and Eula M Vv’ood.s, 11? Smithfield. Percy Lee Perry. 1519} E. Mar gett Street , and Georgeana. Moore, 858 Alston Sl i er!. Alexander Jones, 114 Maple Street, and Annie Lee. O'Neal, 118 Maple Strop! Ernest Lockhart. Method, and Mattie Jane Morgan, Method, Alfred J. Grimes, 91? North Carver Street, and Tver Fowler, 318 North Carver Street. Joseph Morgan, Jr.. lOU> Nas sau Street, and Mary Pattie L. Leonard. 714 South Dawson Street, Joseph B. West, 535 East Lenoir and Shirley Mae Burwell, 757 South Blount Street Joseph Curtis Jones, 373 Sock man -Street. Broklyn, New York, •and Mary Louise Everett, 4i3 Penny Street, Raleigh, ® SUPER-EIGHT* HEAVY GRAIN FED BEEF BONELESS, LEAN STEW "15 SPECIAL LOW PRICE! AN A&P EXCLUSIVE BRAND MARGARINE 2 35' JUNE IS DAIRY MONTH AN A&P EXCLUSIVE BRAND ft If VW W SUNNYFSELD ILI , JJ*fg D¥l Imm creamery «, p 4 ■ Prices This Ad Are Effective Through Saturday, June 7- Come Save iinwi jTnrrnr wiir ■nmw«:iniiiT»i»winuirwi—wp—minima r-mMnwtfucumiJjwiiJUiiiwi'iiuiiiwwaiinniirauLWiu.' ■iwuiijwumtirw.mwniiii■ni«riniinwhTTMi~r , rnuiia-Twm»mimr-:Lr~LrrjT mxtmrvJ tag—jiww \ gsynwng vtrwtma&xi* SPECIAL! JANE PARKER ORANGE Sr OFT vABEL—HEARTY AND VIGOROUS CHI FFOPf CAKES « 47c OUR OWN TEA : -49 c SPECIAL! JANE PARKER LARGE rnMU* LOW’! ANN PAGE DRINK MIX APPLE PIES -r 43c CHERRBAiO 6 pfe*». 13c SFEOAIJ JAKE PARKER DCLICfOC* ANN PAGE EESTT BOLDEN LOAF CAKE -19 c SALAD MUSTARD 2 17c JUNE IS DAIRY MONTH! WEDGES OF SPECIAI,LY PRICED A&P t#itfeiltii# «* «3I s -° uw PURE GOLD BRAND —FROZEN CONCENTRATED * 1 #! 6 ‘ oz - < il ’ Jfe A. Lemonade 3ss 29 c EXCELSIOR FROZEN CHOPPED BEEF PATTIES 69c JHRfc BLACK PANTHER BRAND ■■ 1 K CHARCOAL 10 69« Atfir meant at leas* one more than half of the total number of votes cat! This does not mean, however, that every member must be counted in the voting Only those members who actually vote are counted. Wr must hasten to add that no member can be compelled to vntp, but he has thp responsibility to do so. READERS fiend your questions in speech to Marru» H. Boulware, St. Augus tine's College, Raleigh N C For my free pamphlet, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope Properly atom your farm «- qutpment and engines during the o f season. Chemicals are one. of the farmer** best friends, but use them cautious ly They’re usually dangerous. Nematodes are. liny soil-born*, eel-like creatures that ran be con trolled by fumigating Use Imid SCREEN DOORS SCREEN WINDOWS aluminum & GALV Screen Wire HINGES SPRINGS, Etc, ELECTRIC FANS —See - A F,YOUNG Hardware 130 E. Martin St. Dial TEmple 2-7121 THE CAROLINIAN WEEK ENDING hAIURIMJ JUNE 7 !»SS PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS , * % Betty had news too exciting to wait ,,, So she telephoned home that they're setting the date! , ' 'i 1 ||#p|/ v J Around the »tate across the nation -- & cjvc? money -- save time call station-to-stotion Yrji.i irj •« even mot* on Long Outemce calls B»f 6 p M end oil day Sunday. And remember—lP* '-''ire as Foif fa Cni! by Number, Southern EIcGI 9
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 7, 1958, edition 1
9
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75