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VOL. XXXI NO. 60 KENANSVILLE, N. C. THURSDAY DECEMBER 10,1964 , PRICE 10# PLUS TAX
(To Women la Business c-o
...
Introducing Mrs. R. W. Lanier, the former Hazel Jenkins.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Jenkins of Route 1, Richlands,
who is clerk-stenographer in the office of Duplin Production
Credit Association at Kenansvilie. Mrs. Lanier has been with the
firm about one year. Her husband of three months is enlisted in
the Navy and is stationed at Norfolk. They are members of
Lanier's Chapel Free Will Baptist Church.
JR. RED
CROSS NEWS
The following 8 Schools have j
re-enrolled this fall with the
Jr. Red Cross Educational 'j
Program.
Calypso Elementary .. $12 54
E. Duplin High School $90.00
Chinquapin, Ele. (white) $25.00
B. F. Grady Ele. (white) $21.91 |
C. W. Dobbins $15.22
Chinquapin Negro School $12.00
Douglass at Warsaw $91.20
E. E. Smith, Kenansville $33.27
Other Schools wishing to en
roll should send their reports
in to Mrs. N. B. Boney, Execu- ;
tive Secretary of the Duplin
County Chapter of the Ameri
can Red Cross with headquar
ters in Kenansville, N. C. It is
hoped that all reports will be
in by December the 15th. 1964.
Two of the Elementary
Schools have filled gift boxes.
They are Kenansville and B.
F. Grady.
EAST DUPUN HIGH SCHOOL
Bealavtne, N. C.
MENU
Monday, December 14 -
Vegetable Soup, Bologna Sand
wich, and Crackers.
Tuesday, December 15 ?
Turkey and Chicken stew, with
macaroni. Field peas, salad,
and Rolls.
Wednesday, December 16 -
Hamburger, gravy. Rice Can
died yams, Garden peas, and
Rolls.
Thursday December 17, ?
Fish sticks. Mashed potatoes,
Slaw, Bread Cookie.
Friday, December 18 ? Tur
key, Dressing and gravy, Can
died yams, Green beans. Rolls,
and Christmas Cookie.
Monday December 21 ?
Vegetable soup, Sandwich, and
Crackers.
????
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The Duplin County Farm Bu
reau Board of Directors met at
the Country Squire on Tues
? mwm v
day, December 1. After the
dinner meeting, Mr. Paul
Shackleford, district supervisor
of the N. C. Farm Bureau in
stalled new officers for the
coming year.
TOP PICTURE - L. to R. - Carl Powell. Vice president; Mrs. Doris Outlaw, Secretary;
David John Kilpatrick, president.
BOTTOM PICTURE ? BOARD OF DIRECTORS - Seated L. to R. - Remus Outlaw, Dan
Grady, Ruby Grady and Amos Kirby.
Standing L. to R. - John Marks, Orlan James Donald Outlaw, O. R. Blizzard, Holmes
Murphy, Charles Hawes and Faywin Shaw.
Ml. Olive Community Chorus
To Present Part of 44Messiah"
MOUNT OLIVE - The Mount
Olive Community Chorus will
present the Christmas part of
Handel's "Messiah" in the
First Baptist Church on Sun
day, December 13, at 8 o'clock
in the evening.
Directed by Eugene Mauny,
of Goldsboro, who serves also
as organist, the Chorus has
been rehearsing for several
weeks. The group includes, in
addition to residents of Mount
Olive and the surrounding area,
a number of singers from Fai
son, Goldsboro and Kinston.
The four guest soloists who,
as announced by Mr. Mauney,
will participate in the presen
tation. are Dr. Edgar vom
_l<enn, or me music department
of Western Carolina College,
Cullowee, bass; Gene Strass
ler, of East Carolina College,
Greenville, tenor; Deloras Bar
ron Pikutis, of Mount Olive,
soprano; and Elizabeth Royal
Sutton, of Goldsboro, contral
to. These four professonalsin
gers will join the chorus of
more than forty voices for
what promises to be a brilliant
performance.
Dr. von Lehn and Gene
Strassler have been soloists in
previous renditions of the
"Messiah" in Mount Olive and
will be heard again with plea
sure.
Mrs. Pikutis, a new-comer
to local musical circles, is
serving also as president of the
community Chorus. During
her professional career she has
been soloist with the Chicago
Philharmonic Orchestra and
with the Columbus ( Ohio )
Symphony, and was for ten
years the leading soprano with
the Miami Bayfront Orchestra
At the conclusion of her time
with the last named organiza
tion she received recognition
from the City of Miami at an
affair attended by 15,000 peo
ple. Her musical education in
cluded studying under the late
Guiseppe DeLuca, leading Met
ropolitan tenor, and Rodolpho
Riccl in Rome. Mrs. Pikutis
is now living in Mount Olive
where she is teaching voice
and directing the Junior choir
of the First Methodist Church.
Mrs. Sutton while a student
at Saint Mary's Junior College
was precentor for the college
choir and at the University of
North Carolina she was a
member of the glee club and
chorus. She has been soloist
for the Messiah several times
and also for Mozart's "Re
quiem" and has sung in ora
torios in Washington, D. C.
and Pensacola, Florida. She is
a member of the choir of Saint
Stephen's Episcopal Church in
Goldsboro.
Mrs. Kaplan Is Director
Fundamental Learning
Mr*. Samuel Kaplan ha* as
Mimed the duties of Director
of The Fundamental Learn
ing Laboratory for James
Spnint Institute. Mrs. Kaplan
is originally from West Virgin
ia and attended Marshall Uni
versity in Huntington, West
Virginia.
The Programed Learning
Laboratory of Curriculum Stu
dy and Research, North Caro
lina State Board of Education.
Commonly referred to as
teaching machines, programed
learning is a new way of both
organizing and presenting ma
terials. It differs from standard
textbooks and lecture techni
ques, and in fact all customary
teaching methods, in that it
programs . or controls ? the
learning process through which
an individual must pass to ac
quire specific knowledge or
drill. It does this by present
ing a body of knowledge in a
sequence of small steps called
frames; each of these adds a
bit to what the student already
knows and requires that the
student respond to show that
he has acquired the new know
ledge. Immediately, the cor
rectness of the response is
verified and the student pro
ceeds to the next frame. Upon
completion of a set of frame*
(usually several hundred! that
teach a full concept a test is
provided to check on compre
hension of that part of the pro
gram. It should be noted that
these are not tests in the sense
that they are used to grade the
students; they are exercises
which convince the student the
the coordinator that a high
level of achievement is taking
place. No grades as such are
given; the coordinator main
tains a record of the rate of
achievement as indicated by
these exercises. This permits
self-pacing and also produces
a low error rate. Upon com
pletion of a total subject, a
standardized examination for
that subject provides the final
record of achievement, which
can be provided on a tran
script.
With programed materials
and individual kits, students
learn almost any skill or sub
ject that can be mentioned
that it taught from elementary
school level to advanced col
lege level.
Programed materials are a
vailable in English grammar
and composition, histoy, geo
graphy, government, general
science, biology, chemistry,
and physics, psychology, ac
couuting filing, Spanish, Ger
man, French and all arithme
tic and mathematics through
calculus. Also available are
three types of reading kits: one
type provides skill and prac
tice in comprehension; anoth
er type teaches the instruction
al skills of reading such as v?
caouiary ana using context:
the third type helps correct
eye muscle habits. All of these
courses are self-instructional.
Because the student sets his
own time schedule, the length
of study periods vary greatly,
therefore, hours of study can
be scheduled individually. In
terested persons can contact
Mrs. Kaplan by telephone at
Kenansville 296-4331 or meet
with her at the "Lab" which is
presently located in the C. E.
Quinn General Merchandise
Building across from the IGA
store in Kenansville.
MRS. SAMUEL KAPLAN
HARRY?'
TRUMAN
on cooperatives:
"We support the right of
free enterprise and the right
of all persons to work to
gether in cooperatives for
the purpose of carrying out
any proper business op
erations free from any
arbitrary discriminatory
restrictions."
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