Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Nov. 15, 1958, edition 1 / Page 8
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A JK\TURE OF Tin; RECENT MEMORIAL SERVICE held in Joliet, 111., for Or. V* illhun H Jerna-j -In, late president of the National Sunday School and BTU Congress, was the unveiling: of an oil paint- j Ing of the Baptist leader, the work of Artist Edward Tousa-na. Standing beside the painting- is R t r, : 1. Townsend Tucker who was i t charge of arrangements for the Memorial. fANP>. DRIVE SAFELY!! # SI 90 PROOF tmum PT. NATIONAL .. • . . : vRAIiON. N.f. ■9O PROOf r * —: -“lyrar - WHAT A SAVING Aft MIX-’EM IV KUii ONE HOUR CLEANING %&%0 U 3 OKESSES m SUITS »I QO C A „ A TOP COATS *1 * $ SAVE /Gtf ALL FOR TUST wiii—W— a—— ■ mm —iww««» ■■ ■ ■*—«——w mwi 3 PANTS BLOUSES ypijC ALL FOR JUST ASK FOR OUR TWO-DAY SERVICE AND SAVE—NO WAITING! 1H Perko Cleaners A 9 E. HARGETT ST. r r - I NCKW Sponsors | | Howard Players jin A Drama WASHINGTON The National | Council of Negro Women will spon- ! | sor the Howard layers in a stage j | production of “Tomorrow is a j I Day" on Nov, 15, the last day of j j NCNW’s three-day-national con- I vention at the Statler-Htlton Hotel j j in Washington, D, C. Directed by Owen Dodson young i I playwright and acting head of the j | Howard University School of Dra- I j ina, the production is an American ! (Theater Wing play based on ex- j periences that help to develop | _ self-confidence in youth, j NCNW officials undertook spon- i j sorship of the play after the Pre- | sideni’s Committee on Government j | Contracts in a recent conference i pointed out that Negro youth lacks j the self-confidence needed for j meeting the opportunities and | challenges of our integrating socie- ty. The play has its setting in family life and will be used by NCNW as a teaching device in aiding youth to participate in family life, in community affairs, in the employ ment market, ihe school and in all aspects of life and personality growth. Immediately folio , ing the play s panel composed of youth and j | adults will lead a discussion of I the important factors presented in ! the play. After the play and the panes discussion representatives from youth agencies, schools and churches will join other con i vention members at a lunch eon symposium on “Youth In i an Integrating Society” field in the Congressional Room of the Stailer-Hilton i Hotel, the symposium will fea | iure three noted speakers who | will present the major chal lenges facing Negro youth. The family challenge will be discussed by Dr. Jean Grambs, au thor of “A Guide to School Inte gration” which was published as a Public Affairs pamphlet The employment challenge will be presented by George L. P. Weaver, assistant to the president j of the International Union of Elec j meal. Radio and Machine Work- J ers. Dr. Jenne l* Noble, guidance i counselor at the City College of j New York, will pose the cduca j tional challenge. f j > Security i ; Payments j To 41,935 ! I i Social security payment* am go-- j tng to 41,935 more people in North | Carolina today than a year ago, ! This increase of 23 per cent in the ! short space of twelve months is j due chiefly to the 1954 and 1936 j changes in the law which brought farmers into the program. John Ingle, manager of the Raleigh social security office, reported that this increase | Brought the number receiving I payments to a record total of ! 227,000. Their payments a ! mount to more than $123,009,- i ftO in a year. These payments I are going to persons who have reached retirement age, to the ; survivors of deceased worko-s and to persons who are dls> a bled. ingle pointed out that the 1953 ; amendments to the law make ad-* j rfjtional persons eligible for bene* i fits who could not previously qua- j lify. These would include some j ' children who became disabled be* j | fore reaching age 13, certain do- { i pendente of workers receiving dis- j I ability benefits and dependent ! parents of deceased workers. O- I tiler improvements provide that; re-marriage will not terminate a benefit in every case. Ingle said that anyone who had. a question about his own eligibi lity should get in touch with the nearest social security district of | fice. The Raleigh office is at 114 I West Morgan Street. | For a growing income, market I ! eggs cut of state. i Dr. Mays Sees Need For “More Mora! Courage” In Religion-In-Life Address BALTIMORE. Md - What the | world needs us not more know- j ledge, nor more money, nor more \ science, but 'more moral courage.” j Dr. Benjamin E. Mays, president j of Morehouse College, said recent- j ly at Morgan State College. The famous preacher-educator j addressed an assembly highlight- j ing the college's annual observance o( Religion-In-Life Week "What Can We Believe and Why?" was ihe theme of this year's observance which featured eight nationally known speakers | and the celebrated eighty-voice Howard University Choii with Dean Warner Lawson directing. JESUS AS REALITY Dr. Maya declared that the | “tragedy of our times is that we \ know bin we cannot act on whet j we know. There have never been ! more brilliant nuncio, but hesaid "we are as confused and baffled | as at any time m the history of mar.. - " He said "we know it is wrong to ; use dope, yet thousands do. if is I wrong to segregate because of col- i or and yet we segregate, it is ; wrong to cheat and yet we cheat; j we know that war is wrong and j yet we create conflict He digested that m..n's wav out i of this confusion lies in accepting ! | the fact that Jesus is reality, for j j he said, Jesus tenches that “love ; lis beter than bate, brotherhood ; s i | beter than caste, and peace is bet- j I ter than war.” OTHER SPEAKERS j Also appealing during the week ! to address assemblies, classes and I seminars and to hold personal con ferences with students were; Rabbi Israel ?*1 Goldman, of the j Chuuk Amuno Congregation in j Baltimore; Dr. Frederick W. 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Morgan SL-Northside Shopping Cent:r—Cameron Village < r for, pastor of Christian Temple here, John ingersoll, a graduate ol Yale College and a worker for peace through non •violence; Rev. Lawrence N. Jones, a staff mem ber of the Student Christian Move ment of the Middle Atlantic Re gion: Dr Flemmie P, KiKrell, head of the home economics department at Howard University, and organi zer of the College of Home Eco nomies at Baroda University in In dia; Rev. Douglass Moore, pastor of Asbtiry Temple Methodist BAKERY PRODUCTS at Wholesale Prises BEST AIGEI FOOD CAKE j IN /'OWN' LARGE 10-INCH SIZE pw» gQc ; Delicious Almond Frosting SI.OO 1 FAMOUS BAKERY! 107 S. WILMINGTON ST, PHONES TEmale 2-8333 - 2-8334 Church, Durham. N. C and E-;ecu tivo Secretary of the Board of Ed ucation of the North Carolina Con ference; Father Elmer S. Poweli, Editor of the St. Augustine Catho lic Messenger, official organ of St. Augustine’s Seminary. Religion-In-Life Week is the work of a student-faculty commit tee of 100, the student leaders of which were Miss Arlene Pierce of Chicago, Illinois, and Maurice Griffith of B'itish, Guiana, S, A. President -Martin D. Jenkins was g THE CAROUMAM WEEK ENDING SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 15, 1958 Four Parents Seek Million In Damages Over Jim Crow NEW YORK <AN Pi - iLm Negro women last week tiled .-,uit ; against the city for $1,000,000 in j damages on the ground their chit- ; dren suffered by attending infen-i ! or and segregated schools the honorary chairman of the ob I servance, and the Rev. Howard I jL. Cornish, Director Morgan j | Christian Center, served as the j I executive director. POSNER'S BERGAMOT Filed at the city comptroller« i yffit- last fbumtuy, the smt i .‘hartfed that the rights of the ch:i dren under the 14th Amendmcn' j and the . tale civil rights laws ;.io being violated through the "perpet uation of a public school system which provides segregated end un equal facilities for Negro erd | Puerto Rican children.” The suit claims this alleged r~jv j a rati on "tends to generate « f - •I - i ; ng of in/c: ifii ily ns to then stat -yk.
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 15, 1958, edition 1
8
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