Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / July 3, 1965, edition 1 / Page 8
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2B —THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, JULY 3, 1965 f Mjy* 4 K1 ' HI PB "i "* ■ n gu «*]| y t Ikj^^hh ARMY OF OPPORTUNITY —First Lieutenants Thomas H. Fiaher, left, end Peal E. Thurston conduct ■ tolid propuUion experiment in the laboratory of the Army Missile Commend, Red •tone Araenal, Alabama. Their roJleagues, Firat Lieutenenta Alan C Eachus, left, and Michael A. Tobiaa, observe from the rear. All four hold doctorates in orgenk chemUtrr; all are ROTC graduate*; all entered active service aa firat lieutenenta. The Army la offering young with college backgrounds a chance lo explore the poseibility of remaining in service aa when of the Army/Industry team. By JACK SAUNDERS PHILADELPHIA—Judge Hob son R. Reynolds. Grand Exalted Ruler of the IBPOEW, has ex tended an invitation to Presi dent Lyndon Baines Johnson to be Elkdom's distinguished guest at the Grand Lodee Con vention, here August 14-20. Meanwhile. Clarence A. Dock ens. convention Chairman, has released the 1965 Grand Lodge Convention's tentative program. The tentative program ear marks the following locations as key points of convention acti vity: Sheraton Hotel, 1725 J. F. Kennedy Boulevard; the Elks Center, S. E. corner 16th and Fitrvater streets; Leonard C Irvin Lodge, 5701 Vine St With Our Men In the Service MONTEREY. Calif. (FHTNO June 4—Navy Lt. Emanuel E Witherspoon, son of Mr and Mrs. Johnnie L. Witherspoon of 547 Homeland Ave.,' Durham was a member of the May 28 graduating, class at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monte rey, Calif. A total of 466 officers from all American armed service? and 13 foreien navies were pre sented their diplomas or de grees after completing the course, the only military post graduate school of its kind in existance. After on year in an Engineer ing Science Course, graduates are eligible for two years of ad vanced technical training. This technical training may be in aeronautics, communications, electronics, environmental sci ences. naval, electrieal and mechanical engineering, nu clear effects, data processing, operations and systems analy sis or 'weapons systems. know what the score is... 4 ' f... Pay ... By ... Check! | Where does the money go? J How was it spent? Where J do yon stand financially? j Every cancelled check is j • receipt Your monthly j statement from the bank J give* you an accurate rec- j — ord of checking account ex- J penditures. You really can't j M afford to do without a j checking account Open one J now with thia bank. « Mechanics & Farmers j BANK flAr 1 J It 4 WSST~ FAMISH ST. DURHAM, N. C. [ mmmom»%MKSKX%%M%%3ausaaatss%ssxx3as%%3aaus3sx3as9 Paging All Elks and Edward W. Henery Lodge,. 210 Haines Street. Programmed are: Friday, August 13, Registra tion for Brothers at the Elks Center, 12 noon; Registration 'or Daughters at Sheraton, 12 noon: Grand Temple Degrees it Sheraton 5:00 p. m.; Open House at Elks Center, Irvin and Henry Lodges, 9:00 p. m. Saturday, August 14, Registra •ion for Brothers and Daughters it Sheraton, 9:00 a.m.; Con >rence, State Di-ectors of Vet erans Affairs, Sheraton, 10:00 ■> m.; Registration for Antlered "uard, Elks Center 10: a. m.; G. E. R. Council Meeting, 'heraton. 10:30 a. m.; Confer ence, State Directors of Jun 't Activities. Sheraton, 11:00 x m.; Executive Board meet'ne, "•rand TemDle. Sheraton, 2:00 ■». m.; Official opening of ""•rand Temple. Sheraton, 2:30 ■>. m.; Antlered Guard meeting, v lks Center, 5:00 p. m. Sunday, August 15, Reeistra ''on of Brothers and Daughters, Sheraton, 9:00 a. m.; Joint Memorial service, Sheraton. 11 i. m.; Shrine Meeting Elks "enter. 2:00 p. m.; De partment and Purple Cross -neeting, Sheraton, 3:00 p. m.; \nnual Baccalaureate Service, "heraton. 7:30 p. m.; Open house, Elks Center and Elk "'omes, 10:00 p. m. Monday, August 18, Registra 4!nn of Brothers and Daughters, Sheraton. 8:00 a. m.; Grand 'odge and Grand Temple meet 'ng, Sheraton Ballroom. 2:00 t. m.; Antlered Guard meeting, Center. 5:00 p. m.; Na tional Oratorical Contest. Shera •on Ballroom. 8:00 p. m.: Ooen House. Elks Center and all Elk homes. 11:00 o. m. Tuesday, August 71 Reeistra. 'ion of Brothers and Daughters Sheraton. 8:00 a. m.: Opening session of Grand Lodge and Grand TemDle. Sheraton. 9:00 a. m.; Parage Assembly. Broad Street north of Diamond, 12 noon: International Parade, 1:00 p. m.; Bathing Beauty and Tal- ent Contest, Sheraton, 8:45 p m.; Antlrred Guard Militar" Ball. Elks Center, 10:00 p .m Wednesday, August 18 Regis tration of Brothers and Daugh' er s, Sheraton. 8:00 a. m. Opening session Grand Lod°e ard Grand Te~tple, Sheraton, 9:00 a. m.; Joint session, Bro tb c rs and Daughters, Sheraton, Ballroom, 12:30 p. m.: Freedom F"nd Dinner Honoring Hob s'n R. Reynolds Grand Exalted Ruler, Sheraton Ballroim, 7:00 p. m.; Open House, Elks Cen ter and all Elk homes, 11:00 p. m. Thursday, August 19, Regis trion of Brothers and Daught er Elks, Sheraton. 8:00 a.m. Opening session Grand Lodge and Grand Temple, Sheraton. 9:00 a. m.; Grand Lodge Ball session Grand Lodge and Grand Convention Hall, 9:00 p. m. Friday, August 20, Opening Temple, Sheraton. 9:00 a. m.; Installation of officers, Shera ton. NAACP BLASTS N. C. BUS "BIAS" IN COLUMBUS CO. WASHINGTON—'The NAACP has stropglv Drntested the transDprert ?tt«"nnt by school officials in Columbus County. N C., to evade th c ir responsi bility for (*es°*regat'ng the oublic schools in the county. I n a letter to Dr. Francis XeDoel. U. S. Commissioner of Education, NAACP Washington Bureau Counsel J. Francis Pohl haus referred to a newspaper cliDping in which the county •-chool superintendent stated that a Neero child could re -luest transfer to a white school "but he must provide his own •ransportation." Pohlhaus pointed out that the bus lines had been set up on \ racially execlusive basis and will continue that '»ay. "We consider this to be a deliberate violation of the rights of colored students under Title VI of the Cifil Rights Act of 1964 and request that Feder al funds for schools of this county be held up pending a reversal of this policy," be stated. Safety Plus Satisfaction AflHB That Is What You Get With ({■H HERCULES TIRES ■ Exclusive new "Dura-Lyn" tread rubber compounding gives up to 50% more SAFE Miles. Super-Strong, Super-Safe nylon cord body. Both white and black sidewall designs. UmM • EASY TERMS • PLENTY PARKING Stewart RigtbM - J. D. Brottors RIGSBEE TIRE SALES Q—4 Wifcufcy •» 1 *M. Open All Doy Saturday 2 1 tfVATIOkIC* 2720 HIUSBORO ROAD LUtA I IVnj: lot LAKIWOOD AVE. Kornegay fo Address Ag Teachers Meet GREENSBORO Horace E. Kornessy, congressman from the 6th District of N. Carolina will keynote the annual con ference of N. C. Teachers of Vocational Agriculture at A. and T. College. July 5-9. He will deliver the main ad dress at the ooening general wslon on Tuesday. July 6, be winning at fl:30 A. M. The conference, to be con rtnrfod from the theme, "Ex nandin? Oooortunities and Re «non>b'lities for Vocational truncation in Agriculture." will foatttr* several speakers dnr in« the five-dav meet. Hie llat includes: A. G. Billiard. Ral el Ph. State Suoervisor of Vo cational Agriculture: Dr. E. M. Nnrris, agricultural teacher trainer, Pru'ri* View A. and M. College, Prairie View, Texaa; Elmore Moore. TI. S. Depart ment of Agriculture economic research soecialist, Washing ton. D. C.: H. G. Heard, acting director of Vocational Educa tion. Raleigh: and D. Richard Winner. coordinator, Rural Task Force Community Action Program. Office of Economic Onnortunity. Washington, D. C. Dr. W. Archie Blount, rice oresident of Winston - Salem State College. Winston-Salem, will deliver the main address at the annual Recognition Ban quet. to be held on Thursday evening. M. S. Sanders. Henderson is president (f the organiza tion. A NEW SOUND OF MUSIC: INDUSTRIAL CALYPSO f The tiny Caribbean nation of Trinidad-Tobago, just off the coast of Venezuela, has initiated three of the world's most original music and dance motifs: the limbo, the calypso and the steel band. To these traditionally vi brant rhythms of the tropics a new beat is being added: the roar of the assembly line, wail of the factory whistle and pocketa-pocketa of millions of dollars worth of heavy ma chinery. Trinidad-Tobago, known locally as the "little giant of the Caribbean," is rapidly pro viding a world model of what a so-called "under-developed country" can do to pull itself upward by its bootstraps. According to a recent United Nations report, Trinidad-To bago is among the top three in economic growth during the past decade, along with Japan and Israel. Trinidadians today make more money and buy more U. S. made goods than the citi zens of any other country in the independent Caribbean. The newest nation in the West em Hemisphere, it's one of the few "emerging countries" in I the world that has never had a ■ * m ■.? ;l%r. ..• -^^■l P*: .v ' 1 ,'ffi i£ \K.. ' - ■ | J»- '■' .^* L _&A «jtyj^^^Bffy^B^B||^Hpß^WPWßHMH^^^^^Bt9t^^Ha%"M'Mr^^fly*LTrtilif^ y "^raj^L i ■ HftW MTHCL CORNKRSTONK i_AYING —The cornerstone lay lm of the recently rebuilt New Bethel Baptist Church was held Sixteen Negro Teachers Join Westchester School Faculty WHITE PLAINS, N. Y—Six •?en Negro teachers will join the faculties of nine Westches- revolution, a military coup or Communist Party. In such a place you might expect U. S. industry and you'd be quite right. Texaco operates the biggest oil re finery in the British Common wealth here. Last year W. R. Grace chose it for the site of the largest ammonia plant in the world. Conrad Hilton selected Port of Spain for his most architecturally daring crea tion: an "upside down" hotel which guests enter from the roof and elevate down to their luxury accommodations. In all, the U. S. stake in calypso land is up to a half billion dollars. "Ours is a private enterprise economy pure and simple," says Clyde Namsoo, North American Director of the island's Industrial Develop ment Corporation (IDC). "We welcome U. S. money, brains and know-how, and we're offer ing attractive incentives to win it." And the lures are pleasant: no income taxes, no duties on imported materials and well developed industrial estates. Trinidad-Tobago is produc ing a "sound of music" worth listening to. Saturday, June 2*. Shown are the pastor and members of Doric Masonic Lodge wM participat ed. From left: th® Row. L. W. ter school districts for the 1965-66 school year, it **as an -ounced today by the Urban League of Westchester. All found their jobs through the League's Teacher Registry. The subjects they will teach include english. mathematics, ""oial studies, physical educa tion and elementary trades. The Leaeue placement list which al so includes a Librarian, a guid ance counselor and a nurse teacher "is just one indication of the favirablp climate for Ne «rro teachers in Westchester "!«untv." declared Mrs. Herbert Mark. Director of Teacher Re cruitment. She pointed out that teach ers with thirty points beyond a Master's Degree can earn up V> *l3 000 in three school dis tricts and between SII,OOO and 12.000 in 29 others. The me dian salary for Westchester teachers during the 1964-65 school year was approximately SB,OOO. Currently, the Westchester public schools have a substan tial number of openings for librarians and teachers of Gen eral Science mathematics, r»- Tiod'al reading and all the ele mentary grades for the 1965-flfi -«h"ol vear. Men to teach the •inner elementary grades are in -•articular demand. There also ! s a great need for vocational *°aohTs in th« fields of rodes. painting, automatic heating and cosmoto'ogv. Al' teachers must be certified by 'he state of New York. Teachers who ar e interested 'n working in Westchester should contact Mrs. Herbert Mark. Director of Teacher Re cruitment, Urban League of Westchester, 6 Depot Plaza, White Plains. New York. The telephone number is 914 WH 9-1174. ALL PURPOSE 3-IN-ONEOIL Oils Everything Prevents Rust ICSUUt-01l SPRAY-ELECTRIC MOTOR Reed. Pastor; Oliver Bullock; J as. Douglas, sr. warden; Bon nie Hawkins, marshal; Otis Thorpe, Jr., worshipful master; COTTON EXPERT URGES NITROGEN REPLACEMENT AFTER RAIN Cotton growers are urged to act before to replace the nitrogen lost as a result of recent rains. Glenn Toomey, extension cot ton specialist at North Carolina State University at Raleigh, said the rains have caused "con siderable leaching of nitrogen which must be replaced if farmers expect to make maxi mum yields." Reports indicate that from four to 16 inches of rain fell on the cotton producing areas of the state during early and mid-June. The rainfall pattern was of the type to cause a maxi mum amount of leaching. " We estimate that where four to six inches of -water fell that from one-fourth to one third to the nitrogen that was in the soil was leached out," Toomey said. "Where 16 inches of rain fell, we believe at least half of the nitrogen was leach ed," he added. Toomey recommends that Seagram's Extra Org Gtn t§ jE/W HMUK-MTumoiMPMr. n.e.nmv.\ and jamta NMlkr. TM dMMb wii org«nii*d in IS7S. v —Phot* by rttntof farmers replace this nitrogen before July 15. This is about the time that cotton begins fruiting heavily and begins to take up large amounts of nitro gen. If the nitrogen is replaced before heavy fruiting takes place, Toomey believes that permanent damage to the crop crop can be avoided. Otherwise, yields will suffer. Also, the cotton specialist said that the rains had caused the crop to suffer from "sore shin" and seedling disease. He urged farmers to plow the crop only when necessary in order not to aggravate this disease. If farmers must culti vate, they should be especially careful about throwing too much dirt around the plants. USUALLY our good qualities are ignored, but our faults are reported instantly and re peated over and over.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 3, 1965, edition 1
8
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