Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Jan. 31, 1959, edition 1 / Page 6
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6 im CAHOLIOTAK WEEK ENDING S-VI L’KOAT. .1 AN lAU s .11, 1559 AME Church Plans A New Training School for Clerics CHICAGO (ANPi To pro vide standard .'•••.nhiiiiy trainiic* for clergymen vho teivo not hud toe opportunit > fi" * 'I m.I!. sn in-service training ii :~lUution Was op TH d tili. vn t ALL WELCOME Thr institute The Chimjio Min isters institute -spoils.llT'l by annual conference of i,h< AME Ciiurci; in cooperation with Payne Theological Seminary, Wilber fore , Ohio, is open to all minister' re gardtess of religious affiliation. The Rev. S. S. Morris, dean of the institute which is quartered in Coppin AME Community Center, said the institution is designed mainly for clergymen who serve smaller ehurccs “We have nuite a few young men in our denomination who have imt had the opportunity for formal college seminary work.’’ he said. “Mademoiselle” Mag Chooses Three Students GREENSBORO - Announce ment that three Bennett College students have been named to the college board of Mademoiselle ma gazine, New York fashion publica tion. has just been received here. They arm Miasm Anver Fair-on. senior, home economics major, of Dudley, N r„: Gladys Heningway junior, clothing major, of George town. S. C; and Linda Brown, -ophomore, French major, Akron, Ohio. Selection of the ino was based upon the i r having success .fully per formed the first of three editorial assignments made by the magazine Successful completion of the re maining two v.-itl make them eh gibie for ccnnderat'On for one of the ?o guest editorships which the publication will assign in the Guest editor? will spend thr -iinn n of itune in New Y ork City helping with the preparation of the annua! fall coi'egc edition, to ad dition to housing and meals, thev will be paid a salary for the period and will be guests at a number of social and cultural affairs to be arranged in their honor. vt Service Is What We Give! Runt* invites all of his friends '<-> SERVICE STATION * Blount & Lenoir Streets RIFTS All Funerals Cost Less --at the— RALEIGH FUNERAL HOME Compare -nici and be Convinced! Sfisff RALEIGH “"ISIS'™ t imara! Home ““js; r™™ 322 E. CABARRUS ST. YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD AT QUINN’S •! «* ’;; pjfamcfc i tftr '' '■ 3 H i ill •*- -4,L» - Wt, '*• ■ IRwm 1 Freshen Up Your Home For Spring From Distinctive Furniture R. E. QuiflO Furniture Co. 108 E. Martin Si Your Capita) City Tel. TE 2 44/1 I adding; ' ! Tv-- institute will fill that | •:•*>(-> hy helping these moo to force i tin ir congirgßlion* more effective j 1.y." < to”,}!! FA< I I.TV Member* of the (acuity til hair ill least ,i bachelor's dr erne and II have do-toratr*. Thr administrative officers In chide: the Right Rev. Joseph Gome/., presiding bishop of thr fourth district; the Rev Charles S. Spivey, Jr., ronsull at from Payne: the Rev. John I Hunter, assistant dean; the Rev. Clarence. E. Carr, regis trar: and (lie Rry. flyman B. Mills, coordinator. Other faculty members are Rev erends: A. 1 .-on Bailey. H H. Black, Russell S Brown, Archi bald ,1. Carey, Jr., Jonathan A. j Dane's Granville V.’ Reed, Jr.. Hor ! ace Galloway, M. Higginbotham, ,1. | Julian Jenkins, Benjamin H Lucas, j R. L Miller; i ABo Reverends Robert Thom*' ; A Wav-man Ward. James S. Webb i W. Mrdesi! Williams and W. H ' Jenkins ROOM TOR I 0« The Institute can accommodate ; ion student* Although the curri j *’ulum is planned b- the seminary, ! students cannot earn credit for the ; wmnvy in the institute. i Courses v- itt be offered m she | fields of hi hie study, theology, | preaching, chrch history, church | odoration administration, evange j tiun, counseling, community and | missionary work. Library At Hampton Gets Money Grant j HAMPTON. Vs ... Hampton Tn i r-t.itue’s Huntington Memorial Li i br.iry has been awarded a grant front the rissocigifort of oyl.-rgo „.id research libraries io establish a collection of music, drama and announcement, by Miles Jackson, acting librarian. The grant will be used to pur chase approximately 100 recordings including a representation of clas sical composers of the 19th and J.Oth centuries; » selection of mod- The Sweater Line For ’59 h Revealed Sweaters today are so versatile so well-styled, they can be worn on any occasion from n picnic to .i party, and all stops in betvvei n totorert.lnjr nnv sweater ma t(-rials include fur blends ami textured nylons. Looped mo h(it and deep, rich piush in both pull - over and jacket styles are popular for sports wear, while for dressier occas ions Ihcre are angoradike or lons, printed in colorful flora! patterns on white background*. Many sweaters feature such h gh-fashion details as big brass buttons, tic collars, ribbed insets and dickeys,appliqued trims. White s weal er-and-dress ensembles fin which the print in Hie dress is re peated in the orlop cardigan) rate high again for soimg and summer, the BIG silhouette NEWS is the short, loose sweater that teams perfectly with the high-rising j skirts With such variety to choose j from, it's no wonder that n-»v e i all ''sweater torts". A* sweater* I Show up more md more frequent ly in our clothes budgets, it will I nay us to heed the advice of the j makers of Mum. who say, “Care for . your sweater —better. FIRST AID FOR SWEATERS FROG RAM KEEP SWEATERS SOFT Rinse j them well after washing. Add » 1 softener to “hard wafer A sped- ! a! soap which mav be used in cold water will help prevent shrinkage -keep fibers soft and pliable. PRESERVE SHAPELINESS. Af ter washing, lay sweater flat on a towel and re-shape to size. When dry. fold can*fully and slip into a plastic bag Store .flat in box 01 bureau drawer. PREVENT STRETCHED NECK ■ LINES. Sew two rows of round clastic inside necks of pullovers MAINTAIN "SWEETNESS’’ Air sweaters well after each wearing the Mum people advise, and lire a good cream deodorant - furh Is designed to stop perspiration ODOR Thr is of particular im portance, Not only do sweaters tepd io make you perspire MORE, but they, seem to absorb and re tain odors longer than most, other types of clothing HX SNAGS caused bv neck laces. bobbin pins, bracelets Stretch sweater gently If the pull ed thread fails so slip back in place, draw it to wrong side and knot. REPAIR BROKEN BEAD TRIM MING on decorated sweaters. Catch thread on wrong side. R.e sew last brad for extra security. SAFEGUARD FIBERS. Do not ! allow sweater.- to become heavily I soiled, but ‘.cash them frequently so that only centle handling is necessary. Do not twist or nth Wearing dres 1 melds in sweaters win help prop-.•! them from pers piration damage. errt poets reading their own work;, and some of the better play record ings. A daily music hour is scheduled in the library from 12:30 to 1:30 P m. Held in the Herron Browsing I Room, a comfortable lounging j room on the seen 1 floor, the I listening sessions ha* •* with | * favorable response fr n students and faculty Because the library does not have a record collection. “ grant will enable the library to • JJ h a core collection of record, and thu\ expand the services oft, • d by the library. The AC RE, a division of the A merican Library Association, at n I recent meeting in Atlanta, award* I cd sub-grants to 75 colleges f •ora j funds received by the United 1 States Steel Foundation, Ire.. The j C. B. S. Foundation, Inc . and Ns* . tionwide Insurance. Application ■ for the grants vas received from • nearly Rr»o institutions with re j quests totaling more than *150.000 : U. S farm people are less than | ! per cent of the world's popula i tion. But. they produce one-fifth of I toe world's output of red meat and I nearly one-third of the world f j miik g I »" ympllH Hj| I 1 ; 1 ' a,. *■ ’J&SrfcSL* «*|oggj! ••? * * ' ¥'■’ ■. / J iff s,. . ™ 1 * ,i .<>• JGft A !: A .<• t S'-Pfc I / f .v / :\ s |v- .;:- ./»■>• >*3 , | f -1 ' i i. ■ 1 ' ffflWjßE6cp^^KaaMaßL«m S 1 s C >■ jjL >. •> * aFtft&n' 'yTi, * '“j -TV p ’w|J < ■ jfjjWfcHHjWmWwj , ■ .^s* i i' “JUST LIKE HOME” —Minn Barbara Burts. New Rochelle, N. V.. ;t senior in RoeVdoiry at A&T Colletsc. suns folio wine a “quiett" snow storm which hit Greensboro last. Friday morning. The brief flurry left just as quickly as U rnme and a brillianl sun shiny day followed. She commented that the weather in Greensboro this winter has been like that of her hometown—plenty of show and low temperatures. FETED AT c MtV Sf'HOOL in the above photo a group of second graders of the farcy Ele mentary School arc shown mill their guest. Master Dougins (Tinkeyl Fulford, .fr„ right forefront. I'll** class shared tn a birthday party given at the school for 3-vear-old Douglas January 31. The party was given hy his niolhn. Mrs. Anne, Goode Fulford, a. teacher at. the school. A delicious repast was served and favor* given (he children Members of the class arc Rrenda Moore. Brenda Morgan. Dads Crcn shaw. Mar* Battle. Deborah Arrington, Sheryl Coslneton, Undo lone* Jewel Blue. Mary Barbee, R-ina Holloway. Gloria Evaiw Willie Waldon, Brenda Miles, Herbert Fitts, Donnie BaUectlne, Be*rr Saadere, Lelawd tones. Notnnrl Erwin Preston Webb., tames McAllister. Henry Isaacs and Christopher Plerc.*?, Wheeler Resigns Presidency An 4-H Club Foundation Os NC Stages Its Annual Meeting .GREENSBORO - A Durham ■ btisinessman who had led the 4-H j Club Foundation of North Caro- j , ’ina, Inc., since its organization in j 1980, stepped down last week. .1. H. WTceler. president of thr Merhaiites unet farmers Rank of Durham, announced he* decision to retire from the irten<*y of the i !! Glob ::*<iutn at the annual meeting j held on Wednesday *’ AJfcJ < 'ofh-gc Me stated that press' me bw-.to»sf» m.uters pins a dc- i 't - .I,;* ~(!,.. -c . fiPpprte oil.y tn serve “*o this Itnhie es fort** ''.err hie ;r -.'ln for his j withdrawing from tb*> offhe. in bis fin,j! report. Wheeler ste- | ted that the Foundation had raised I j $114,845.86 during the eight years j i of its operation. Most of the funds ! i . | School Principal | Quits Under Fire PHILADELPHIA (ANPI Thr j j principal of an elementary school 1 ! which has been the center of » con- ; • troversy for three weeks following j an alleged attack on a seven-year- j I old Negro girl, has announced her ! j retiretnent, effective Jan. 31. Thp principal. Miss A Rraga Muiten, has hern pressed by two comniunlty parent groups ; charging her with ‘ indifference and alleged incompetence.” The attack on toe child by ■ an utudeniifled man test Octo ber .'v. <s Cm cause of con | siderabte public indignation. Concerning this Incident P" I cuts of the child accused the J principal of “a genera! lack of Harry Golden To i i ”th Annual Alunwi Conference NEW V'DRK - Harry Golden, author of the current best-seller, “Only in America," and editor of The Carolina Israelite, will be the Saturday evening banquet speaker at the 13th annual United Negro College Fund Alumni Conference The two-day meeting will be held Feb 7 and 8, at Bennett. College, Greensboro Mr. Golden’» humor »u s. satirical comments nn the A merican scene have been xride- have been spent ir, the construct- | ion of the modem John W Mit j chcll 4-H Club Camp, located at Swannsboro in Onslow County. The board of directors elected immediately J W. Jeffries, district agent for the A&T College Exten sion Service, to fill the vacancy. He will assume the office following his retirement on February 38. Other new officers elected »t the meeting included: W J Ken nedy. Jr recently retired presi dent of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance, Durham, who ! rtov-'.ted io first vice-president: i end Mrs. Emma Johnson, Garys i burg, second vice-president. i Alonzo C Edwards, Hookerton. | executive vice-president of the i North Carolina Farm Bureau Fed ! oration and Wayne Corpening, vice ; toterest and disheiief. The NAACP. through its ex ecu | live com on tee, presented to Dr. Al i ten H. Wet-cr. superintendent of schools, « nine-point toll of aprti j culars. j in the bill there were listed j nine alleged incompetences rtearg !ed to fbe principal, The last article j on the list, tire cause of most of | the public indignation, was her j handling of the alleged lavatory I’ attack by an unidentified man Parents of the child accused the principal of indifference. On the other hsnd the Board of Educa tion praised Miss Mullen highly tor her work in the public school system, and said that, her profess i tonal record is excellent. Address UNCF ly read. IDs unique publication, printed to Churlotte. lists snmc of the nation’s most dtstin rulsbcd men as subscribers. IIVCF graduates from many section* of the country will at tend the meetings. The stets . gates are volunteer workers, !i>d atumn! directors and «tn dpLils from UNCF colleges, all of whom will partleipste tn the annual College Fund appeal. Workshop meetings will be held to discuss methods and means of increasing alumni support for the 33 member colleges Harold R Harding, assistant director of the American Alumni Council, w ill sene ss workshop moderator dur ing tor Greensboro sessions. Dr, Will.-i B. player, president of the host college, Bennett, will de liver the welcoming speech. More house College President Benjamin E. Mays newly rteet.ed president of the Fund, and W f. Trent, Jr. Its exocutivß director, ar» also listed as npeakem Don’t kill hogs and process W<® meat on the farm if average temp eratures are. above 40 degrees. MADAM FARREL THE LADY YOU HEAR OVER THE RADIO (sifted Palmist and Psychic Medium Tolls you everything you wish bo know without asking any' question*, gives you names of ene mies, nod friends. Given true and never failing advice on al! affairs of life. If worried, troubled, or in doubt, consult this psychic, reader at. once. Madam Farrel will help you on business, love, marriage, wills, deeds, mortgages, last and to l en articles, and speculations of all kinds. d VOI R LUCK V DAYS AND YOUR LUCKY NUMBERS lYon’t be discouraged !f others have failed to help you Ma dam Far re < does what others claim to do. One visit will convince you this Medium and Divine healer is superior to any reader you have consulted. Private and Confidential Reading* Daily and Sunday for While and Colored. Hours 0:00 AM. fiOO PM You mwt <w satisfied or no charge. Closed all day Wednesday. Madam Farrel is located one mile North of Goldsboro on the Wilson Highway, just, one block from Hobbs Stockyard, Goldsboro, N. C. Look for thr Brick llomc and the Neon Sijfn with thr nnwe “MADAM FARRKL", And you can be sure you are at the right place. president of the Wachovia Bank end Trust Company, Winston- Salem. were elected, an new mem bers of the board of director*. In a second campaign, now in progress, the croup received sl3- 323,56 yesterday towards a new arts and crafts building proposed for construction at the camp this j spring. A& T Tests | Planned At 27 Centers GREEN BORO - Test* to deter- ; mine winners of several scholar- j ships to he given entering fresh- i men at A and 'l' College this fall < is to be administered at 21 centers j ir Isle February. Leading the list of grants to be | awarded high school seniors who ! turn in highest scores on the j standardized college entrance ex amination are four SI,OOO scholar- i ships to tie given by (he A and T j | College Alumni Association. Other scholarships to hr of fered on the hoiiis of high S scores or the test itirlllde; j three Scholar ships of SSOO each. for study in Agriculture. riven by a | fr>l h, Va. plant food manu facturer. svatlatile to high school ’seniors, members of the stew Farmers of America. f>r cawiwMon: eight Sears Roe buck Scholarships o( ■'t n <s each j I study tn Agriculture: two Rro ( ; gcr Emendation Scholarships of *IOO each for study in Agri- j culture or Home Economies and several other smaller ! gr;mt« ! Tlie lest, sponsored jointly. by j the college and its alumni group, j will be administered by members j otUhe faculty of the college’s Grad ual e School. It is being supervised | by Dr. P A. Williams, deep, of the | Graduate School. Dr. Williams stated this wee's i that any prospective high school I graduate ranking fourth of his i class, upon recommendation of his principal, is wecome to tek* the test. There is no charge. All of the testing confer# «** to rated in North Carolina with the exception of one .v Norfolk. Va Man “Goofs” In Attempted ! Bank Holdup | TOLEDO, Ohio (ANR > Rob ert Mood, 31, who pleaded guilty io the attempted robbery ,>r a bank when he presented an official » note demanding $5,000 was sentenc ed t o eight years in federal prison last week. U. S- District Judge Frank t* H<orh described the crime »s Inept, Hr said that sHhough Hood said he planned the crime the night before, he “Trenton Six-er” Nabbed in Robbery NEWARK, N T lANPi - John MacK.en7.le, one of the defendants in t.he famed "Trenton Six” murd er ease of 1(143, was arrested last week for robbery According to the police MacKen zie and an accomplice ate alleged to have taken a half-gallon of wine and an undetermined amount of money from Anthony Rapp, Jr 44, bungled It In such fashion that. It was hard to believe that he bad planned H. Hood threatened to blow up the bank unless the official handed him over the money. The official told him to wait, and then turned in an alarm. After he was arrested Wood told police that he was unemployed and hurdoprd with debts and hoped to get the money to wipe out his fi rumria! worries. UMSTEAD’S TRAN 3FER COM PA NY »G RQCERY STORE LIGHT AND HEAVY FULL LINE OF HAULING | GROCERIES i-OCAL AND LOrVs Your Pafcricwwg* DISTANCE , . Courteous Frcmipi Appweiat** Effieitnt *» ED. UMSTEAD, Maa«#«r 5, Dawson Street • Tar boro & Me rtf a JM.r®s®* DIAL TE 2-947&-—TE 2-9212 OR YOui MONtl BACK! :. 4'i 4 I 1111 Ui I "Lichen Icq •>"0 1 1 *•*>> Pint 8 fears Old Straight Bourbon Whiskey i tms om waishi wimou wwKiffr «« ftoor msrium t«, * t t The "Trenton Six” ease bccruv" famous throughout New Jersey and the nation when MacKenise sir five other Negroes ware secured of killing a white second-hma furniture dealer during a bold": attempt. Convicted with the otheia an sentenced to dip in the elm i chair, he subsequently wois an ;< ■ peal foi a new trial, and v m be cleared of the murder char-p. b the jury that convicted two of th six By his own confession, wh>c' was denied by the other five d f-*ndants at each trial, MacKi r/ placed himsHf about 125 fret (ro ■.ho murdered man’s store as a look out while the crime took place. The man who never (oafs is tin' ah' ays the man who doe* t.he most work.
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 31, 1959, edition 1
6
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