I—TOE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, JUNE 3, 1967 6B Al • iu TRY FOR SlZE—These nurs ing students at A. and T. College received top awards for outstanding performance at the annual capping exer cises held last week at the ~+ fjL fcßTOwr Ifit/fltl l\Hßl V FOREIGN STUDENT DAY observance at Durham Busi ness College brought.. these Foreign Students together to participate in a formal stu dent assembly in observance NCM Retirement Club Holds Monthly Meeting The regular monthly meeting of the North Carolina Mutual Retirement Club was held Thursday afternoon. May 25 in 1 the dining room of the Har- | riett Tubman YWCA. C. M Palmer. President of the Club presided over the j meeting and tire following j mepibers were present: Mesdames Nola Cox. Bessie Doby. Consuelo Foreman, So phronia Green, Eula Harris, ' Fannie McLean and Charity I Rivera. Messrs. R. C. Foreman, C. C. ' Smith, Jr.. James Strickland. | and Wendell White. President Palmer extended ! greetings to everyone and f words of welcome to Mrs. Ora \ S Lee. a visitor as the guest ( of Mrs. Fannie McLean. The usual enjoyment of the Dinner Hour was very much in evidence while Mr. Palmer . brought a number of important items to the attention of the I Club; some for information; ; others for consideration and action as may be agreed upon at a later date. Palmer who is NOTICE To Parents Of Somilterißand School Students. Rent Your Band Instruments Now. Classes Start June 12th Special Rental Plan For the entire 8 w«ek I M M Summer School re- I ■ ■ gordless of Band In ■ strument. Rent will IV W apply to purchase I \ f % price buy. Rent Can Be Paid $5.00 Per Month Come In Now For Best Selection OBRIENTS MUSIC STORE 121 E. P.rriih St. 682-2626 College. All sophomore students, who had completed basic re quirements to begin clinical experiences in hospitals, they of this special day. During the program detailed informa tion on the Cultural and So cial customs of their native countries were given. Shown discussing the format of the still 1 actively engaged in the in still 1 actively engaged in the in surance business keeps the group informed about N. C. Mutual Insurance Co events and activities of a general in terest to {he retired employ ees. Mr and Mrs. Foreman heard friendly jests and received kind felicitations regarding the birth of a grandson. Everett Ronald Foreman, btb m omt Gordon Foreman, botn to Mr and Mrs. Ronald Foreman, Jr., May 23 at Urbana. Illinois. Mrs. Eula Harris made brief remarks with reference to her recent visit to New York where she attended the national meet ing of the YWCA. Included in Mrs. Harris' remarks were cer tain highlights of the YW meet ing and comments on the or deal experienced by the na tional organization in its search for a concensus on vital social and religious questions and at titudes of the day. Mrs Harris also commented on numerous places of interest she visited while in New York These included some of the are from left to right: Mag , nolia Lilly, Hertford; Con - stance Caldwell, Durham; 1 Frostenia Maye, Dover; and f Eula L. Foust, Burlington. program is Frances Dean, Li- I beria, Jacob O. Omotoso, Ni | geria, Stephen Jones and j Benjamin Howard, both of ; Liberia. (Photo by Purefoy) art museums where she found a new job and deep satisfac tion in viewing the many «rt treasures on exhibit at fhe time As one thing leads to another, the conversation shift ed to art in North Carolina. Mr Foreman made some in teresting comments about the North Carolina Museum of Art. and promised that at some time in the near future he would take several members of the Retirement Club to visit our state museum in Raleigh. Club members were re quested to think about our an nual picnic, usually held during the month of July, and to come to the June meeting with ideas or suggestions about the event The June meeting will be held on the 22nd of the month at 1 P.M., Tubman YWCA. igjlf I wiscj By Mary Whitman A long trip often inspires ' good stories. The author of Pals, a book I for youngsters from Whitman Publishing Company of Racine, \ Wisconsin, is Melissa Dow Funk. She travels with her i mineral-collecting husband. | Melissa published a poem 1 at age 8 in Cleveland. A j Californian now, she writes I and tests stories on grand | children. She also teaches j school. A pupil who once heard her husband say, "Everything j she knows I taught her." ex claimed, "Boy, he sure has ! taught you a lot!" But, she j adds, children have taught her ' too. 1 Asia is the new inspiration j of another California author. Alice Means Reeve and her husband just visited their chil dren in Burma. Story ideas galore came on the trip. "An | elephant working in the teak, ! big black water buffaloes cool ing oft in streams all were things I hope to put into | books," Alice says. One of her ! recent animal stories, domestic variety, appears in a Tween- Age book from Whitman Pub lishing Company called That'i Our Cleo. I Jean Fiedler, who lives on the East Coast, found story induration in Mexico last year. Jean wrote at age 11 and had a kitten story printed In a Pitts burgh paper. Later she did social work, wrote for a store, taught English. Today she tries out current writing on her artist-husband and young daughters. The author of fifteen books, her latest for Whitman is My Special House. When your child buys a book, he's buying the work of wide-ranging authors. It often happens that children who want to write grow up to be writers of children's books. And they call it * loot and re warding trip. _ Ya. State Col. Awards 293 Degrees Mon. PETERSBURG, V. Presi dent Robert P. Daniel awarded degrees to 293 graduates of Virginia State College at the school's 82nd Commencement, Monday (May 29.) Thirty-six persons received master's degrees, 46 two-year terminal certificates were awarded, and 211 were granted baccalaureate degrees. Dr. T. Marshall Hahn, Presi dent of Virginia Polytechnic Institute, Blacksburg, addressed the audience of nearly 1700 graduates, parents and friends. Honorary degrees were given to Dr. Thomas H. Henderson, President of Virginia Union University; Dr. Herman R. Branson, Professor and Head of the Department of Physics at Howard University; and Dr. William Stuart Nelson, Vice President of Special Activities at Howard University. Maceo C. Martin, President of First State Bank, Danville, received the Certificate of Merit. Local Births The following births were reported to the Durham County Health Department during the week of May 22 through 27: John and Margaret Cates, girl; James and Brenda Bum pass, girl. Does Coca-Cola have the taste you never get tired of? " jl Is it always refreshing? Do things go better with Coke after Coke after Coke? Ask schoolteacher Shirley Hasley. Let her tell you. Write: Mrs. Shirley Hasley, P.O Box 2867, San Francisco, Calif. 94126 jv Hp M ■ jpi Hm m H ' ijmK " x/W^m M sßk , w \ WKKKUmm %\ Hg§ ■ vJPM Hi % j vMifl\ : ji Hk jaai ■■■MM M"'' 'W' * A ; M1 HBk V EA M$oBA WW ■■■pip ■■■■ • C9r"« (Ott' lM"(0("**I M6IIIIMOTMOI Mt*M amtCM lOIHfIMOKK »"t *«OOUCf Of TKC COC« COi* tO*»»«t, You know it. It's your best & refreshment buy. c *. c 9 ~ i". ',-■ i./; fa* . •-. ."'\ ••/ -..v." J-i-'.V ,;" ■ . ... •• •.-' Bottled under the authority of The Coca-Cola Company by: i DURHAM COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. Wnfti $ J9 X K ' jSK- \ JH Ifl ■ fyj&i l^j^py'>V"' '"'■^^M ABEL 0H HAPPY MOTORING DEALER FOR 30 YEARS Arthur J. Smith, right a Humble Oil and Refining Company dealer whose Esso station in Newark, N. J., is celebrating its 30th an niversary, chats about the many changes the three decades have brought with the top Esso mar keter in his city, William J. Johnston 111, Humble's Newark district manager. Smith, who is active in the fund-raising campaigns of the Newark Boys Clubs, is also a 32nd Degree Mason and one of the founding members of the local chapter of Frontiers International. His present community activities include additional service as an advisor to Newark's Mont gomery St. Industrial School. He shares an enthusiasm for travel with his wife, with the result that they have been to all but two countries in South America and recently returned from a month's vacation in Mexico. Golf is another hobby. Mr. and Mrs. Smith have one son, Arthur, Jr., and three grandchildren. They live on Ninth Avenue in East Orange, N.J. t Mrs. Smith's home town. Her husband is native of near by Harrison, N. J. The son helps his father run the busi ness. To commemorate Mr. Smith's 30 years as an Esso dealer, Humble presented him a plaque, which now hangs on a wall in the office of his sta tion.