Yes, We All Talk VOICE QUESTION: Are there any qua lities of the voice which may be •objected to scientific measure mer>U - Mrs. PL. ANSWER: We are able by audi ometers. otometers, and so on, to measure tone and intensity. H6w tvpr ' the matter of quality is not measurable by scientific instru Dr. Lillian Lewis Seeks New Term On Forsythe C’nty Education Bd. Winston -salem Dr. Lillian Lewis, Chairman of the Science Department of Winston-Salem Tea ehers College, announced Sunday that abe would seek re-election as a member of the Forsythe County A Education. A native of Mississippi and hold- Ihg degrees from Howard Univer sity and the University of Chicago, OLD CHARTER Kentucky straight bourbon . sAso (IKin /5 quart n *3“ 8111 I iFaf/mrrVPnkiXb *tSD> <S?fcrEj distillery company, louisviile. hentuck f Ecwm* r |pfp|Zl CHARLES SPELLMAN greyhound ANNOUNCESANEV^^^ Charier & Tour Agent In Raleigh MR. CHARLES SPELLMAN (A Student At Shaw University) L. Mr Spellman is the person to see or call for accurate ' and complete information regarding GREYHOUND Chart ered Buses and Individual or Group Tours. Your Grey hound Agent, a member of your own community, ha* full details oa Greyhound's low rates. Call him today and say. hello? fob charters os information call . . VA 8-2293 —If No Answer TE 3-2011 ments as yet Evaluation of quality of voice is still a subjective thing. A good book on Voice is written by Charles Van Riper and John Ir win, Voice and Articulation, pub lished by Prentice-Hall, Inc., En glewood Cliffs, New Jersey. For my free public speaking pamphlet, send a self-addressed envelope. Mrs. Lewis, whose husband also teraches at the College, said in the announcement: I have found that one cannot please everybody, but I have at tempted in my decisions to favor no particular section, but with the limited means at hand to put first things first.” wit m { Wk IVa , l > ,/ * fa awSt*"** ': ■ ;:V •'5 : rn k Bslfc -VCWlsfiffe .... Wii ■■ r ■ i pi' VISITED WASHINGTON Pictured above are part ot the 275 scouts and leaders aboard ing tbs six buses for Washington, D. C., last Friday. D. N. Howard, hit, shakes hands with Charles Spellman , representative a! the Greyhound Bus Company before having. Looking on are R. H. Toole director ot the trip, Mrs. J. W. Jones, Thomas Chavis and other scouts. While in Washing ton the scouts visited all ot the outstanding monumental spots. Thh was the Mb annual trip tor the Wake Soouts. Brenda Kee, Ligon Hi Honor Student, Presented In Recital Brenda Kee, an honor student at the J. W. Ligon High School, was presented in an organ-piano recital Wednesday afternoon before a ca pacity crowd of parents, teachers and students. The senior student displaying a masterful technique, held the audi ence in rapture as she played the intricate works of Debussy, Dett Boellman, Brahms and Chopin. Her sensitive touch in Debussy’s Suite Pour le Piano was perhaps the highliht of her performance. Her rendition of Suite Bothique by Bo rlman and Rhapsody in B minor by Brahms were given in tremendous fashion and was certainly a tribute to her talent. Brenda, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Kee, began her musical studies at the age of five under the Sisters of Saint Monica’s School. While there, she was accompanist for the Glee Club. After entering Ligon High School, under the di rection of Mrs. E. M. M. Kelly she became organist for the String En semble and is presently student ac companist for the Glee Club, or ganist for the Senior High School, and organist for the Martin Street Baptist Church. She also teaches music. She was presented in a piano-or gan recital in rranklinton. N. C. in 1960. In 1961, she won the finals in the Talent Hunt Program spon sored by the Onega Pst Phi Fa Raleigh Nursery School To Hold Annual Meeting Sun. The Annual meeting of the Ra leigh Nursery School will be held, Sunday. April 8 at 4 p. m. at the school. The main feature of the pro gram will be a forum cm Parent Child Relationships. Music will be furnished by the nursery school children. Election of new board members will also be held which will be fol lowed by open house, from 4 to 6 p m. at the Chavis Heights Com munity Building. For approximately ten years tie United Fund has contributed sub stantially to the operation of the Raleigh Nursery School. All child ren are from the homes of working mothers and a Urge number of the mothers are in the lower income bracket. ■Ni, k i CIVIL RIGHTS TALK AT SHAW Left to right, are Dr. Moses DeLaney, Department of Religion and Philosophy at Shaw University ; Dr. Jamas M. Dabbs, President, Southern Re gional Council, Inc., Atlanta, Ga., who spoke at Shaw University last Monday on the subject: “What Will You Have," with refer ence to civil and political rights; Arnold L. Ambers, a sophomore of Leesburg, Virginia and Hasel Baldwin, 'a sophomore of Wan enieh. Z£TA Beta Sorority EST Inc., Raleigh The Omicorn Chapter of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority held its March meet ing at the home of Mrs. Millie Vea sey with Sorors Clara Jenkins. Ad die Lo<an. and Merca Yarborough serving as host eases Sorors present were Meedames Ellen Alston. Mary Carnage, Mild red Chavis, Mildred James. Clara Jenkins. Mary Barbour, Moselle Love. May Ligon, Addle Logan. Ru by McKenny. Evelyn Pope. Blanch Rivers. Hazel Sorrell. Kathlene Thomas, Augusta Turner. Ida Washington. Millie Veaeey Merca Yarborough. Elsie Howard. Annie Hawkins and Louise Flagg Guest speaker at the meeting was jf” k JL _mK < It . d| .gflp :| if WBM BRENDA KEE ternity. and in August of the same year, she was presented in their National Talent Demonstration pro gram at Howard University. Her organ instructors have been Mrs. Catherine Miller of Peace College, Dr. Harry Cooper of Me ridith College, and presently she t* studying piano and organ with Pro. feasor Harry Gil-Smythe of Shaw Mrs. Rosia Butler is Director of the school. Man’s Body Drawn From Pond LOUISBUBG The body of Early Davis, a 34-year-old farm la borer, wag recovered from a pond near North Carolina Highway 36 five miles south of here Friday. V. A. Peoples, rescue squad chief, identified the victim as DavU whose family said he had wander ed from home on several occasions and said the body had been in the pond for several days. His fishing equipment was found on the banks of the pond Miss Emma Cobbs Bivens, execu tive secretary of the Cancer Asso ciation, who spoke on cancer and her travels and work in Asia This chapter worked with the Cancer Drive last year and have made plans to continue the work this year. The committee on prevention and control of Juvenile delinquency sponsors a program each year with emphasis on aervice to children and youth This year it has chosen as Its prelect. “Oxford Orphanage Scholarship Fund Day-. A motorcade will leave Raleigh , and ctuer areas April S with Ze tas who will carry a very interest ing program to the Orphanage % University. The recital was sponsored by the 10th grade homeroom of Miss M. C. Bullock. MINGIN’ with Convenient Phones in Colorful Tones! Brightening up your home for spring? Mixing paints? Choosing draperies? Now’s the time to add handy phonee in color to complement your decorating ideas! Extension Phones like the lovely Princess put spring time calls at your elbow in bedroom, dpn or basement playroom. Or select a Handy wall phone for the kit chen. Choose the phones you need in flower-freah colors that will help you decorate. The choice is wide, the cost ia low. For more informa tionTeaTTlttie Business Office or ask your telephone serviceman. Wm #*'■ •" \ y** H ‘ i". * • I^RRf B-tU. H. HEViR-D-UOST g e frj<| Cra fa f j u-yi* hi vy rlf tr/M «« tviu —— jj X — m L A— '■JO**'"** **m ~~ *QQQ«« fcOO r WITH TRADE TIRE SALES & SERVICE 401 Hillsboro St, TE 2-7545 Twin City Man In Hospital After Beating WINSTON-SALEM William Whitaker, 34. was ‘‘in a poor con dition” in a Winston-Salem hoapital Monday as the result of a beat ing which Winston-Salem police at tributed to a Saturday night teen age street gang. Since several teenagers were seen running from the area, police believe that Whitaker was attacked by the teenage street gang and left unconscious along a street in East Winston-Salem where he was spot ted by a passer-by who called po lice. Ecomonical High Grade For Every Purpose Briquets - Ole* Stoker Red A^ CORRELL COAL COMPANY 307 N. Weet St. T* 1-5507 WITH SEPARATE GIANT 111 LB. ZERO-DECREE FREEZER THE CABOUNUUf RALEIGH. N. C.. SATURDAY, APRIL 7, I—3 Rev. B. Cox Freed BATON ROUGE. La. Rev. & Elton Cox CORE field secretary was released last week from the East Baton Rouge Pariah Prison upon the order of the Louisiana Su preme Court Bond of 17,135 was posted by CORE. Cox has been convicted on three FOR FLOWERS Community Florist CORSAGES—FUNERAL DESIGNS—POTTED PLANTS FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS, ETC. Day TE 2-830&-Night TE 2-2936 TEMPORARY LOCATION 763 S. Blount St, in the Fountainette Bldg. ONLY *10.99 It W M H jj •■/ I I High A Medium / AAA A I BUek ”*“ nt M I Black Calf * u tob Medium Her I / \ / JMf t 8 food WMOM why you’ll want 808 flm oat pair o i these glegmdy styled Life Stride puny, Cut to look so much mare expemlve dun they mOf ten, with <be tfcm Iflrr fit of life StafcVc "t*-**** H 0.99 ROSCOE-GRIFFJN SHOE COMPANY TWO LOCATIONS 120 Fayetteville St—TE 2-0239 Cameron Village—TE 4-4112 misdemeanor counts Browing out of CORE demonstrations In Baton Rouge this past December. He has been sentenced to 31 months in jail and has bean fined $5,700. Rev. Cox pastors the First Con gregational Christian Church, High Point 3

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