Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / June 16, 1962, edition 1 / Page 9
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I A&T Alumni Urge Action On Discrimination in Employment ^ THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, JUNE 16, 1962 DURHAM, N. C^AOI DINNER SPEAKERS — Th*M w«r« the m*n who highlighted tl{« annual dinner of the A. and T. College General Alumni At- toclation held last week at the OrMntboro Carlotta Supper Clut>. - The group includes, from left to right: Howard C. Barnhill, Charlotte, president of the Alumni group; Stedman Hines, Greensboro attorney and winner in the recent Democratic pri mary for a seat in the N. C. Legislature;. Dean Lewis C. Dow dy, acting president of A. and T. College, and E. E. Waddell, Aiberntiftrle, vice chairman of the A. and T. Trustee Board. GREENSBORO — A. and T. College officials and friends were last week called upon, to assist in pointing out “the need foj providing employment, op portunities to all qualified col lege graduates without dis- QriTnination” to State employ ment agencies. The proposal was a part of several resoultions adopted ^y the A. and T. College General Alumni Association at its an nual meeting held on Saturday, June 2, at the College. Commending Gov. Terry Sanford for the stand he has taken in stressing the im portance of improving job op portunities for Negroes i n North Carolina, the resolution stated that many Negro college graduates, “prepared to work in many of our State industries, and establishments” are work-i ing out of their fields in sub-' modern day college;” commend ed officials of the State, Guil ford County and Greensboro, the press, radio and television, all for the cooperation rendered A. and T. and gave praise to L. C. Dowdy, acting president, and his staff for the "high degree of proficiency” shown during the absence of President S. D. Proctor. ■■ The Alumni Service Plaque for 1961 was presented to Dr. F. A. Williams, former dean of the A. and T. College Gradu ate School, now professor ol economics at the University of Khartoum in the Republic of Sudan, Africa. The group also voted to change its fiscal year to the re gular calendar year, and adopt ed a' proposal to invest $10,000 in a stock fund, as a first in stallment on a five year plan, to implement its scholarship ' pro- Successful Candidate to Stress Need Uncle Sam's Food Of Political Action at NAACP Meet Gifts Up Sharply Over Year 1961 NEW YORK—Following a ses sion on political action^ delegates to the 53rd annual NAACP con vcntion in Atlanta, July 2-8. will hear talks by two new office hold ers who exemplify what can be , achieved through the ballot. Mrs. Charles E. White, elected . to the Houston, Texas, Board of ; Education in 1959. and Merle Mc- i Curdy of Cleveland appointed I United States Attorney for North i ern Ohio in 1961, will address the convention’s evening mass meet ing on July 3. Mrs. White was the first Negro elected to the ^ Houston Board. McCurdy is thn ^ second of two Negroes appointed ; U. S. Attorney by President Ken- ' nedy. I Political action will ->c b major ,• topic at the convention. During the workshop session, reports will be received on the progress of the Association’s voter registration campaign. There will also be lec- Uncle .Sam gave away a bil lion and a. haU pouncfs of food in the' nine months since last standard jobs, or are to leave the State. required. gram. Howard C. Barnhill, Charlotte The resolutions also urged thci health educator, is president of Governor, the j Advisory Bud get Commis.sipn, the N. C. General Assembly, the State i Board of Higher Education, and i the A. and T. Trustee Board ^ the group. On the evening before, the alumni were guests at the an nual Alumni Dinner at the Greensboro Carlotta Supper seek “all ways and means” of ', Club. Dean L. C. Dowdy, A. and supplying the needs “to cause the' T. acting president, delivered College to be better prepat^d j the ma.in address, to meet the requirements of the tqres on how to organize effective Campaigns to get people register ed.. John Brooks, NAACP voter registration director, will conduct (Jevioostrations on how to register iuid vote. "fhe week-long convention will also be addressed by such pre jJune 8i per cent more fhan the viousiy announced speakers as U same period of fiscal 1861. tif. Under Secretary Ralph Bunche | The increase resulted from Dr. James M. Nabrit, president. I the Department of Agriculture's Howanl University; the Rev. Dr I ettorts to use more of the na-1 GREENSBORO — The sit-in . pies founded by Thomas Jeffer- Maritli Luther King, Jr.; Bishop, tion's agricultural abundance to movement was not born in son, Abraham Lincoln, and Stephen G. Spottswood, NAACP | help school children and the Moscow; it was born in the De-1 Woodrolw Wilson, three great Board chairman: Roy Wilkin* needy. In March of this year, i ciaration of Independence and * southerners. The youth, he said, NAACP executive secretary; and ■ 7.4 jiiillion needy folks received the doctrine of Jesus Christ. I are seeking to establish “non- HHFA Administrator Robert C j food from USDA, compared to Dr. Frank P. Graham, world-1 violently the rights of men ! temple features milk containers Wcavtr to whom the Spingarn, 5.6 million in March of 1961, famous United Nations mediator i stated by the U. S. Supreme | and strainers. Dr. Graham Tells A&T's 71st Class Sit-In Movement Came From Christ, AT ALUMNI DINNER — Among the guesti attending the annual dinner of the A. and T. College General Alumni Asiociation were, from left to right: Dr. and Mr». A. V. Blount and Dr. and Mrs. F. E. Davii, Greansboro medic couples. Dr. Blount and Mrs. Davis, the lartter racently as one of the nation'i dressed women, are aluaiQl oC the College. Milk--A Basic Food Thousand Of Years Since time beyond the writ ing of man, milk has been an essential food. The word "milk' comes from a Sanskrit term de.scribing the aetion of milking an animal. In the Bible, the promised land was one of “milk and honey.” But much farther back, milk was a prime food. Prehistoric drawings found in^ the Sahara Do.sert and reaching bdck 8,000 years or more show cattle. A mo.>iaic frieze .'5,000 years old that came from a Babylonian June is National Dairy Month, But Anytime is Ice Cream Tlm^ Distinguished ROTC lAnd Hampton Grad Beceives Commission Clitus E. Moore, son of Mrs. ‘Lenite Moore, Hampton^ Va., was ’^affiliated with ROTC for the past four years, of which led to his* Commission June 4, 1962 as Sec' ond Lieutenant at Hampton Insi- tute. He was an honor roll stu aenrfor Tire' pasr timfr'semesters, a member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, The Fidi Amid social club. Immediately after receiving his| commission, Liei'tenant Moore left for New Hampshire for 3 months and shall report for active duty •with the Transportation Corps, at Fort Eustis, Va._ October 17, 1962. Those atending exercises along with parents, relatives and friends were Pvt. and Mrs. Willie Moore and daughter. Ft. Meade, Pa. (Bro.) of graduate, Vornon Capps, Sr. of Durham, (Grandfather)^ Fannie E. Stansbury, Wilmington, Del., and Harvey Woods, Durham. Medal will be presented. A feature of the contention will .be the appearance of Dick Gregory; popular night club entertainer, at the apnual Freedom Fund Report dlijntr,. 'Thursday night, July 5. Or; King will be the banque' speaker. Sjate Meet of Meth. Church Opens June 13 when the effects of the step-1 in the Middle East, expressed up in the family . donation pro- this thesis Saturday, June 2, at gram were first realized. i the 71st commencement program of the Agricultural and Techni- Besides the rise in this na- CQjjgge tion, the goverriment gave away more food abroad. The total of He praised A. and T. as the the domestic and foreign pro- citadel of freedom for all man- grams was 3.6 billion pounds kind for its students’ roles in 42 per cent more than the same the starting of the lunch count- period a year eiarlier. er sit-in movement 2 and a half More than 130 million pounds years ago The 104th went ^ to chariteblje ii^itutiona about'if'per cent above t-Fi^ iii millions pounds of a year ago. Cost of donated comnlodlties to all outlets in the July-March period was $461.9 million, about A class of 397 students receiv ed certificates and degrees at the beautiful War Memorial Coliseum. A crowd of 4,000 per song attended. Dean Lewis C. Dowdy, acting 56 per cent more than the, president of A. and T., presided same period of the year before, and conferred degrees. Robert Where did the food come|H. Frazier, chairman of the A. GREENSBORO session Annual Conference of the' USDA got it through its price Dr. Graham the honorary de- Mefhddisi Church will be held support and surplus-removal of dQCtor oi hunwne letters al Bennelt GoU^ge, June 13-17,' operations. , I Dr. Graham sjibkfl ftOnni the with Bishop Edgar A. Love, of i (topic, “The Mes(nlng of the Baltimore, Md., presiding. In North Carolina this March , united Nations in' this World”. Following registration at 11 there were 162,337 needy per-1 Hg called the sif-iii m'ovefnent p. iTi'. June 13, there will be sons in the fanuiics which got j an expression of Negro and rrioefings of boards and com-;food from Uncle Sain, white youth in favor of demo- mjttees,. with the opening serv ice sfet for 7:30 p. m. in Pfeiff er Chapel. ' Court.” Young people everywhere, he said, are struggling for the high- And milk playll a key role in the settling of Arherlca. In 1611 at Jamestown, dairy cows help er freedom, seeking "democracy I ^ period of starvation, without vulgarity, excellence | Nearly every covered wagon without arrogance, progress rnoving west had a dairy cow without intimidation, discrimina i tion and subversion, respect, for the past without reaction, noble revolution without violence.” | The A. and T. commencement, | Pr. Grah>,m said, marked two ireWtnoveihents of today, the In those days and until well into the Twentieth Century Bossie usually was a "one-gallon cow' or ‘‘a two-gallon cow,’ ac cording to how much tnllk she gave a day. Even two gallotu a Gin S3.60 4/5 QT. '5*« DlSffLLED IondonDrt Gin mt mrm mm ixrttiu fiM gt(v. HriM. NN«inNT|i(t,UI,U«ill.U Mr. and Mrs. Moss Entertain Friends First business session will be held 6t 10 a. m. on June 14 and a memorial service is scheduled ; After NCC Finals for 11 a. m. The anniversary of the Board of Missions will be Mr. and Mrs. Peter Moss, 1103 Observed at 4 p. m. and at 7:30; SimmdnS Street, entertained rela- p. m., the anniversary Service tives and friends last Sunday^ who of the Board of Education will | were her house guests for the 37th be held. annual Commencement at North Dr. Charles P. Bowles, minis- Carolina College, ter of the West Market Street , , i Methodist Church, will deliver They were here for the gradu- the noonday message on June ‘^eir niece Eleanor G. 15 and anniversaries of the Scott, who received her bachelor Board of Lay Activities and of,®^ *6^6 at NCC. the Board of Christian Social Those in attendance were Mrs. Concerns will be held. | A. B. Dyson, and Mrs. C. Raybord I oart of the world revolution for The Ministers Wives will make of Birmingham, Alabama; Mr. and better days for mankind.” their report on June 16 at 11 a.^Mrs. L. H. White, Atlantic City, m. and at 7:15 p. m., there will! New Jersey; Miss Beatrice Jones, be a reception for Bishop and ■ Smithfield; Miss Cornelia Nw- Mrs. Edgar A. Love in the'wood, Durham; Kaymond Free- David D. Jones Student Union, j man, Goldsboro; Eleanor Scott Bishop Love will conduct an | and her .son, Darryl, Atlantic City, ordination service on June 171 New Jersey. at 10 a. m. and will preach at| Those in attendance were freat- the worship service to follow.led to many hours of fellowship and After final items of conference a menu that consisted of baked business have been disposed, of Virginia ham, chicken, string Bishop Love will read the con- beans, tossed salad, iced tea, cake ference ap|)()intments. ! and ice crcam. cracy. He said: “When the white and colored youth of this nation held that stores that provide .services for all people must provide them on an equal basis for the same price, they did not borrow this idea from Moscow.” "The movement started at A. and T. College. Thij move ment did not originate there; it was born historically in Phila delphia in 1776, and back in the Judean hills with Jesus Christ.” “These youth were trying to fill the promise of the American Republic, a continuing part of the American Revolution, a Articles For Rent Trucks - Trailers - Dump Trucks - Lawn Mowers - Rotary Tillers - Tow Bars MOVING? Do it Yourself and SAVE! McBroom Rentals Dial 286-2247 HILLSBORO ROAD DURHAM. N. C He called the youth move ment a continuation of princi- Lott Carey Youth Seminar to be Held In Richmond June 25 WASHINGTON, D. C. — Ac cording to Dr. Wendell C. Sonaerville, Executive Secretary of the Lott Carey Baptist Foreign Mission Convention, the Ninth Annual Youth Seminar of the convention will meet at Virginia Union University, Rich mond, Virginia, June 25 - July 1. This annual event brings to gether Christian youth from rise of the land grant college, 3^5 (jgyg g year, is only idea and the rise of colored kbout 7,300 pounds a year. To- peoples in the world. j jgy a cow has to give 10,000 Calling the Uniited Nations j pounds n year to pay her way, the hope for world peace, he: and she’s only milked 305 asked the graduates to suport, days. the UN dream. Goals of the UN, I ^ The 1962 dairy cow hjBt'dly ho giiiri, Br» pijiialitv. freedom rpKftmhlpi II 'dignity and opportunity for all grirndffl^her kev^l, in produc^i June ii Dairy Month, but any time is ice creajn time. It’s like a good basic costumc - use it plain for everyday meals or snacks or dress it up for com pany or party fare. There ure ■0 many different flavors that one can be found to suit each taste. Ice cream is such a nutritious food it should no* be considered as an ‘extra’. It's a good source of bone building calcium and health protecting vitamdns A and riboflavin. The amount of these food values you get de ponds upon how much milk so lids arc Included in the recipe. Mils S. Virginia Wilson, nu- tritioniit for the N. C. Agricu ltural Extension Service, says the creamy smoothness of ice cream you buy today makes It acceptable to the most discriml- natinf tastes. Most commercial ice cream is made from a basic mi*. It contains crcam, milk, milk solids, sugar, and a stab iliser such a^ gelatin or eggs. “Two-thlrdk cup of vanilla ice cream made ^om this basic mix fuppjtes” onlj^ 200 calorns,” says Miss Wlllbn. “Comtjare that with some oil popular des serts such as'cOtU! large baked apple sweeteij|ed' 200 calories'; a 4 1/2-inch «(^dge of a 9 inch apple pic 300 telo,rles; tlw uimfi size piece of meringue pie 450 calories; and a 2-itich sector Of chocolate layer cake 400 calories.” Miss Wilson says caloH^i not the only thing to ba^'cott- sidered. In this weight nfMch- ing era, few can affordeat any food that sup(tUi|^only calories. Milk solldi u3K in making ice cream supply good amounts of the much n«Med minerals, calcium, mu^te lAiUd- ing protein and heal^ protect ing vitantiSns A and. tiboflavin. It contains sfnaller •iBounb of other minerals aodlvitmint which we need dailVptbtect and promote good tifklth.' It’s the milk in ice -that furnishes these heattht] protect ing nutrlunts. . “Ice cream can bei |lyved la such a variety of w4)/|ltl^t IV need never become linnbton- ous." adds Miss Wils(jj|^“8erve it plain or top it with’i^mc^te, butterscotch, a fruit pm aome other sw«et sauce.; it In place of whipped OttMif^^|o, top pies, puddings, cak^ Other (^csserts; For surlier’ d»'s.sort, try vanj^ ic^ In a mCf\ngitv.^||ic)U topp crushed plneappU^ mlM mcltfd -f Misa WlUton pmpha>i«i^. that you should driok son]!? 0ae|i day to insure body 01 the hard fo' calcium and, B- vitnmin riboflavin. Eat ice creum to supply part of your day’s ncoda and for Just plain good" Miing. 'itli peoples of the world. Clark Family Members To Study Abroad ATLANTA. Ga, — ’Three faculty members and five sludonts ol Clark College’s Deparlmpnt of Modern Foreign Languages will study in foreign universities thin summer as part of developments in languages at the 93-year-old Atlanta college. The faculty members are Dr, George A. Reynolds, Mrs. Sara Harris Cureton and Paul B. Me Girt, all of whom have studied abroad previously. Dr. Reynolds, chairman of the department, will study this sum mer dt the University of Grenoble; Mrs. Cureton_ whose previou.s for eign university study includes France, Spain and Mexico, will again go to France wiiere she will be studying at the Sorbonne, ■in Paris; McGirt will b«* at L'Alli- ance Francaisc, also in Paris. Five majors in the Department are also scheduled for summer study in foreign universities. They are Anastatia Phillips of S>nM|%J^w Ytcrk- who will he erfrlnOTTl the fjniversity of Gre noble; Shirle Oden, of East Point, Georgia; Bussell Willingham, of Atlanta; Charles7.etta Parland. of Brunswick, Georgia; and Bobbie Kennedy, of Greenville, South Ca rolina, all of whom will be en rolled at the Universite I>ava at sixteen states and the District Quebec, Canada. Miss Parland has of Columbia. The purpose of thel^®®" Siven a scholarship by that Seminar is according to ai fof her studies. Miss Kennedy will be studying there as the first Clark student participat Ing In a foreign study program sponsored by Clark College. Under the new program a student studies abroad In the summer and returns to repay funds alloted by serving as an asaiatant in the Department the following year. This program is one of several efforts Clark hag made for several spokeaman, “to give youth a world-wide view of current problems; to offer a Christian missionary approach and techni que in meeting these problems; and, to crcate and awaken in youth a sense of responsibility as Christians.” Several outstanding social and religious experts will be in at- tendaiKe to give guidance and direction to these youth as they seek to fa^e prorleirt ion or looks. She’ii t thii* mflk factory, the result of many de- cade.s of fine breeding and feed* ing. ! Nor doos tiidny’.s "milking parf lor" look much like the born ■stnnchion where great-grandpa milked amid flies and dirt and nnnure that miglit contaminate the milk Milking today is auto mated sanitation at its best even If Bossie eats onion.s for lunch, a machine at the dairy plant removes the noxious odor and ta.ste. For tho 26th year, America is .‘iahiling the dairy industry In June. For that is cow's peak milk production time; the child ren won’t ge! milk at school for three months: it’s hot and ice cream and milk refresh you. They sanitized milk so even an infant can drink it safely: they homogenized it so you don’t even have fo shake the carton; they took out the butterfat so von can drink it and stay slim; t.hey even added vitamins to it. No wonder the President likes it. yean to eocourag« leienB :iuayi faculty hv il« •♦iirtffntr NCC Faculty To (iet Voice In Collegre Affairs Beginning in September, 1063, the teaching faculty of North Carolina College at Durham will be represented on the col lege’s Executive Committee, the highest policy-making board at NCC. Mainly responsible ftir ad- miinistrative functions, includ ing the formulation of policies affecting teachers, the Elxecu* tive Committee now consists of the president as chairman, three academic deans, the director of the surAmer school, and the business manager. The decision to extend ni'c^- ber.shlp to the faculty wai reached recently following a ftaculfy petition and meetings (jetween sub-com/nlttees from the faculty apd the Executive Committee. Two representatives will t>c chosen by the teactiiiig for meir w^rsnilp in KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON $4.80 / ^/}
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 16, 1962, edition 1
9
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