Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / June 10, 1967, edition 1 / Page 5
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Mt * yt'lft^Wk **Mt^icwr?'^ I wB fIS^L^ES^ ADJOURNS FOR SUMMER Members of the Interdenomi national Ministers Alliance of Durham and vicinity who held j their last meeting at the White ; Rock Baptist Chruch, Monday, May 28, before adjourning for • the summer. From left to right j are officers of the Alliance: Rev. L. C. Hill. Chairman of the Sick Committee; Rev. F. D. j Terry. Pastor of the West Dur- i ham Baptist Church and Chair j main of the Finance Commit- j tee; Rev S. G McCoy, Pastor,! Mt Zion Holiness Church of I Pipe Welding to Be Taught at Randolph Inst. ASHEBORO As demands ( for skilled workers reach an j all time high, the welding de- j partment at Randolph Techni- , cal Institute has an unusual | program designed to prepare j students for structural and I pipe welding. Through the use of the "coupon" method, stu- j dents are eligible to receive j certification for three positions i in structural welding. Pipe I welding allows a students to' gaii? welding experience on steam piping up to six inches and to qualify on all diam eters. While the institute does not offer certification on pipe I BIBLE QUOTE: Blessed are the peacemakers; , for they shall be called the I children of God. St. Matthews 5:9 I ' Centennial Celebration 1967 fi White Rock Baptist Church j WHITE ROCK SQUARE 600-606 FAYETTEVILLE STREET DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA J LORENZO A. LYNCH, P««tor J Sunday, June 11, 1967 ANNUAL TEACHERS APPRECIATION DAY 8:30 A.M. CALL TO WORSHIP Electronics J 9:30 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON Dr. Charles A. Ray, Superintendent 10:30 A.M. Review of Sunday School Lesson Children's Day, All Departments I Greeting Mr. L, W. Hannen, Supt. Durham f County Schools { 11:00 A.M. SERMON The Pastor E "Religion in the Public Schools" S Roman 12: 1-2 R. S. V. Senior Choir, Mr. J. H. Gattis, Director Jr. Choir, Mrs. R W. Southerland, Directress Z 6:30 P.M. B. T. U. , Miss A. Thorpe B 7:30 P.M. Sarah T. Edwards, District Program Rev. S. P. Biggers, Speaker J ' Emmanuel A.M.E. Church 706 KENT STREET DURHAM. N. C. L. O. SAUNDERS, Th* Minister Sunday, June 11, 1967 9:30 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL SUBJECT: "Salvation For All Men" 11:00 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP SERMON .... The Minister MUSIC . Young Adult Thoir Mrs M. L. Lewis, Directing i * ° 3:00 P M Special Chridren's Day Program Oxford, Chaplain; Dr. W. H. Fuller, Minister, Mt. Zion Bap tist Church, Chairman of the Program Committee; Dr. .V. E. | Brown, Minister Gethsaniene | Baptist Church and President •of the Alliance; Rev. E. H j Whitley, Minister of the Mt. Olive AM E Zion Church and I Secretary; and Rev. L. H. Mc- I Donald, Minister of Northside I Baptist Church and. Assistant I Secretary. Other officers are | Dr. A. W. Lawson, Vice Pres.; Pr. E. T. Browne, Treasurer; Dr. -,P R Cousin, 2nd Vice ( welding, it does give the test. | According to Paul Newby, I welding instructor, if a stu ' dent can pass the piping test I at the institute, he can certain j ly pass company tests for em | ployment and receive certifica tion. Well paying jobs stand ready | for qualified welders in the | piedmont area of North Caro [ Una. In a recent visit to Caro lina Industrial Piping Company, Inc., Kearnersville, Newby was advised by John W. Lotory, plant manager, that his com pany is interested in graduates who qualify by passing the ' pipe test. The pay scale for j this job is $4.50 per hour for \ a forty-hour week. I A new employee will be test ed on a five-inch schedule 80 I pipe using a backing ring for Pres. and Rev. L. A. Miller, Parliamentarian. The meeting was also high lighted by an address delivered by N. C. Senator Jack Euliss. Following the address a period of questioning and answers was given Refreshments were served to the ministers after the meet ing. President Brown received high praise's from his fellow ministers for the excellent leadership he has given the Al liance during his administra tion. the betl-hole and horizontal welds. The test will also con sist of the root pass with an E-6010 electrode, filler* and cover pass with an E-7018 elec trode. Test coupons will be given the radiograph and free bend test. Courses to be taught in this twelve-month program are: ox yacetylene welding and cutting, blueprint reading, arc welding, pipe welding, inert gas weld ing, mechanical testing and in spection, pattern development and sketching, commercial and industrial practices, certifica tion practices, and machine shop processes. To Assist With Business Study In Race Schools NEW YORK The Ford Foundation this week an nounced the appointment of J. W. Bryant, executive vice president of the United Negro College Fund, as a project spe cialist to help develop plans for the improvement of Negfo college business practices, par ticularly budgeting. Mr. Bryant will join the Foundation on August 1, and be on leave of absence from the United Negro College Fund for two years. He will assist the Foundation's Special Pro jects in Education staff, which Continued on page 7A IM I A TRIBUTE TO THE CLERGY Because our contacts with the clergymen of our com munity are frequent and varied, we must admit that we have sometimes been guilty of taking their self less devotion for granted. May we then at this time express our appreciation for the many gracious services they render without com plaint and often with lit tle wr Tto rewai-d Scarborough & Hargetf DIAL MB-3517 SZ2 E. Pettifrew Street Dttrfcam, North Carolina Dr. Samuel D. Proctor Finals Speaker at Talladega College TALLADEGA, Ala. Dr. Samuel D. Proctor, president of the Institute for Services to Education, Washington, D. C., delivered the address for 54 graduates in the 91st com mencement exercises at Talla dega College Monday, June 5. The services began at 9:30 in DeForest Chapel. The Rev. Robert Ross John sqn, pastor of the St. Albans, N. Y. Congregational Church delivered th e baccalaureate message in services at 11 a.m. Sunday, June 4. Dr. Richard M. Carey of New York City, Class of 1927, addressed alum ni at the annual dinner Satur day evening, June 3. Among other events were the annual Commencement recital of the Talladega Choir Sunday evening, the annual alumni dance Saturday night, meetings of the National Alumni Asso ciation Saturday and Sunday afternoons, and the annual re ception at the home of the President of the College Sun- | U. KING Durham Man Gets Grant for Study in France Leonard King, a North Car olina College graduate and Dur ham native, has been named recipient of a Fulbright-Hays grant for one year of study at the University of Montpellier, France. Currently teaching at Camp bell County High School, Rust burg, Virginia, King will leave for France to study French lite rature on September 15. The son of the Rev. and Mrs. Henry C. King, Sr. of Durham, he was vice-president of Pi Delta Phi French Honor Soci ety at NCC, was named to Who's Who in Colleges and Uni versities, was treasurer of the English Club, president of the Pentecostal Fellowship for three years, a dean's list stu dent and a member of the French club. He did summer work at Yale University. King is a graduate of Hillsile High School, Durham, and com pleted his studies at NCC dur ing the fall semester, 1966-67. -Personals Continued from page 4A nie Brown and Wesley Brown and his wife, Mrs. Rosa Brown. Visitors were Mrs. Pattie Daniel, Mrs. Mary Newby, re tired teacher, one granddaugh ter, 6 great-grandchildren. Mr. and Mrs. Connie Holloway and family, Mrs. Vera Justice, and Mrs. Plassie Jones. The Best-Groomed M«.u.e MURRAY'S Superior Hair Pomade w Kinky, Stubborn Hair Responds "As If By Magic" Now. you can have all Jay confidence your hair is neatly amoved H Vtro »p --ply a dab of MURRAY'S Superior HAIR DRESSING POMADE in the morning. No matter if you wear it long and alick or short for cool comfort MURRAY'S docs it best. Contains no alkalies or harsh irritmts. and—it's never greasy. You'll find MUR RAY'S Superior i3tu HAIR DRESS- INO POMADE IVX.—"- on aale at your muddat* .>4 favorite cosmetic counter. If your (1 MURRAY'S J dealer docs not have Murray's MtTtuJwy c ," LA*« "'W m you or only SI. artd we will mail you 2 giant size Hair Pomade post-paid. MUt RAY'S I UP! *lOl PRODUCTS COMPANY 4M Cfearlctta An.. Bit nit. Mick. 4I»1 day afternoon. "X Va., Dr. Proctor is of Vir ginia Union University, Crozer Seminary and has the Ph.D. degree from Boston University. He has served as professor and dean at The Virginia Union University, and as President of A. and T College, Greensboro, from 1960 to 1964. interrupted by a leave of absence to serve as Director of the Peace Corps in Nigeria in 1962, and as As sociate Director of thai agency from Washington, in 1963. Grown Your Own Vitamin C Says Home Ec Agent TARBORO Many Edge combe County homemakers are growing their own ascorbic acid (vitamin C) rather than buying il in bottles, observes Mrs. H. S. Parker, home economics ex tension agent This ascorbic acid is needed, Mrs. Parker adds. A recent survey ivyealod that members of only 10 out of 50 families were getting a serving of food rich in ascorbic acid daily. This important vitamin, need ed each day by everyone, can be provided from the fanv'y garden by such foods as toma toes, cantaloupes, strawberries, gieen and red peppers, col laids, broccoli and raw cab bage, the agent notes. -Mrs. Moore Continued from page 4A presently employed as a teach er in the Philadelphia public schools. Mr Moore is a gradu ate of Kenyon College, Gam bier, Ohio. He is an advanced candidate for the Doctor of Philosophy degree and holds a teaching fellowship at the Uni versity of Pensylvania. After the wedding trip, Mr. and Mrs Moore will live in Philadelphia until late summer when they will move to Mas sachusetts at which time Mr. Moore will join the faculty at Boston College. iiliiiiiiiii_iaiiaiiiißgiii-_-iii a _ |[ .i " lJ> ■ THURSDAY-FRIDAY & SATURDAY! It 95c CREST j ™ McGrow |, o „i„ 9 " ; 39 c ST. 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I SI.OO GILLETTE SUPER W; j! 8 88c HANGING POCKET jjj STATIONERY || | BAND RAZORS jjj j | SPEED RAZOR gHKgnanaiinKMME| [glMWaiimi'ij-i.'iBBE I NEW PORTABLE . F.r.., Hill. 1 $7.14 FOLOAWAY 24 INCH 1 I TAPE PLAYER f , , WAim• ■— sl I CHARCOAL GRILL $| 84 Convenient S Sr 99 I I Locilkms L £9/ TUG STOJI£S 1 • ft, ll / -y / 1 »-■»-- • ■y/awmIMRM QUEEN OF "SPOTLIGHT PA RADE"— Little Miss La Fleur Steele is shown being crowned as Queen of the "Spotlight Pa rade" by the Pastor of St. Mark AMK /.ion Church, Reverend 1 A Miller Little Miss Blis sotte Royal was runner-up. Looking on are the proud par cuts. Mrs Dorothy Steele, third from left and Mrs. Norma Roy al. extreme right. This is the third consecutive year that La I'lcur Steele has won the con test, sponsored annually by the Childten's Church of St. Mark (Photo by Purefoy) TEETHING PAIN Mil - ! of mothers rely on Baby ORA-JU liq uid r.! on-pain'i gone. Recommended by ' "t, ii man l f pediatricians. - | JfZ'&A Easy Brin * s JSwEfcx V nfyj proionsed relief. Ask ftTaTwi t I. * your pharmacist for p* BtKT s 7 baby Y rtrr.Y | ora-jel* DOUBLEACTION COLORS GRAY HAIh BIACIC SATURDAY. JUNE 10, 1967 THE CAROLINA TIMES- St. Joseph's A. M. E. Church "SERVING A WORLD PARISH WITH CHRIST SINCE 186?" FAYETTEVILLE STREET DURHAM, N. C. PHILIP R. COUSIN, The Minister Sunday, June 11, 1967 7:00 A.M. Early Morning Worship—Holy Communion SERMON . . The Minister MUSIC The Gospel Choir Fred Mason at the Console 9:00 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL SUBJECT: "Salvation For All Men" Miss Marie Faulk, Superintendent 11:00 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP SERMON The Minister SUBJECT: "Bone To Pick- Music by the Senior Choir Mrs. Minnie Gilmer at the Console Joseph T. Mitchell, Directing 5A
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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June 10, 1967, edition 1
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