Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / June 8, 1954, edition 1 / Page 10
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4Fun, Thrills, Adventure in the Comics SMITH Th? Tumbler THAT V*Af QUICK TMlNKJNtf, fuPPyi I PiPN T THINK .rOU P M AKM IT I WHgWl WOU lPM'T WANT TO 0O THAT ?r A0AIN... ?r-* W0Wi ALMOST mtmo ...wr% m rr*eH0Trt . H0LP* OUT J. ry?JU OKAX fMlTHf MAN, > *0U SAVE Mt 4 fKlttff! i TKirrep amq while PALLING I PUfHfP you ove* i 60**, I'm fotmy. I frtOULP HAVE BEEN J <mo*e c awful l THAT* POWNK0HT 1 I ^A(ULE55W*f^, \ HcCLOUPl YOU'LL BE MFEMOEP . Lfo* thi* i \Xi Au. *I#HT( fAcClCVP, \ / THAWKf fmiTH, A?C\P%Hf* WILL HA MNj J l YOU'KB A ttAL * ? v *vv?ll auy i think rr wa* J xu *ee that ^T\T72a hc AH A^lPf NT.1 ) YOU WONT SET IfcV^ TIM ^i*^+^-yfufp*Nc>epitvsity?^\? w< Ik7 f *** ?* N9?PtP TO <n^Pr Ml I HASTEN THE COHPlS " V\ ? VI TK7N Of THtf f*Oj?CTS .\\| Jr THANK < AMtfMMQf HUM, I 9U**f I WA* LUtfKy J jr? ? "S ^^m^^TIAH, ?ltt V HOW PIP ;T OAKY DOAKS And HOW! - DICKIE DARE Jolt for Dick 'me CAN / DICKIE, I'VE OCT TO PULL SOMETHING " 1 SPECTACULAR "ID IVlPKESS WY^PAD..^ {^%JrH*CRAP ^ LXyl A IRON t\ Jtf2*fc\RAes DON'T GET SORE, DICKIE -THATS GOT TO BE MY SECRET... J** ...SO HE'LL LET ME STAY IN THIS NAM. SCHOOL / A HONK OF JUNK WILL GET MY STUNT v-=3*? 5! OOING ! By using MS HEAD HOCK STOPPED A FIRE m A VALUABLE. JUNK YARO... -SO I'M GOING AHEAD, DICKIE / TO IMPRESS PAD, I'VE GOT TO r-J DO THIS THING AUONE... I ? nSTPH jJno in the school. dor*, HOCK HAS REASONS POR LEAVING ME oar OF H6_f big r->^->FC^v PLAN -' ^r^lTZSk State Symphony Chalks Up Successful Season By TUB NEU Jr <A(ter four months of musk mak ing throughout its Namesake State, the North Carolina Symphony hat? chalked up another successful sea ton - perhaps the most successful of its nine reasons on a profession al touring basis, according to direc tor Benjamin Swalin. From early February through tbe last of May, the orchestra has set another record in its musical services to adults and children of tbe Tar Heel State. During this period, the orchestra played 64 free concerts to some 142.000 school children (compared to 140, 000 for the previous season) in ad dition to its regular 43 programs to | more than 50,000 adults. A total of 107 concerts were I played during the current ninth an EAST DRIVE-IN THEATRE One-Half Mile East of Beaafert On Highway 7> Children Under 12 Admitted Free TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY Tuesday - Wednesday ?8SK - Thursday ? Friday ALSO THE WORLD'S MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRLS Show Starta at Dusk nual tour. The Little Symphony played 38 children's programs ana 25 for adults, whereas the full or chestra played 26 conoerts for chil dren and 18 for adults. Children's concert not under lo cal symphony chapter auspices or under sponserahip of civic Music or other contract management, were sponsored by two individuals ? one by Mrs. Willis J. Cunningham for Ramseur school youngsters, and two by Mr. J. Harold Line berger at Belmont schools. The musicians also gave public service concerts at the State Negro Hospital at Goldsboro, and at the Casewell Training Schodl, Kinston. Of the 142,000 children who heard free symphonic music, ap proximately one-fourth of them were Negro youngsters: 2,400 at A&T College in Greensboro; more than 5,000 at the N. C. State Col lege in Durham, and in other com munities such as Greensboro, Dur ham, Laurinburg, High Point, Bur lington, Chapel Hill, Raleigh, Shel by. Spindale, Mt. Airy and Camp Lejeune as well. During the season, two special workshops were held under joint sponsorship of the symphony So ciety and the Extension Division of the University of North Carolina. These workshop programs, held at Chapel Hill by Mrs. Fred B. Me Call, director of the Symphony Children's Concert division, attract ed teachers from all parts of the State. Aim of the programs was to help teachers better prepare their ! pupils for the North Carolina Sym phony concerts. This past year, conductor Swa lin points out, several choruses were used with the orchestra. The Raleigh Oratorio Society, directed by Geraldine Cate, combined with the Durham Civic Oratorio Society, trained by Allen Bone in excerpts from Bach's "Magnificat." Chorus es from Albemarle High School di rected by Paul Fry and Mars Hill College, directed by Mrs. David Roberts, were also featured with the orchestra. All told, the orchestra played some 55 different works including symphonies, suites and ballets, ov ertures, concertos and arias, tone poems and selected choruses. Six special soloists, in addi tion to the four' choral groups, were featured with the symphony during its four-month season. These artists were Helen Masloff, soprano of the Grass Roots Opera, "CARTERET'S FINEST THEATRE" ? WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY ? The great love story oi our time ! j BEAUFORT ALWAYS GOOD ENTERTAINMENT Air Conditioned for Your Comfort ? Phone 2-4836 TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY HERBERT J. YATES Make Haste lo live ? A IHNILIC PICTURE THURSDAY - FRIDAY AN Amlanchb of AcrrOMVj I DANGEROUS MISSION! VICTOR MATUii^lPH UURIE WILLIAM IENDIXTINCENT PRICE, ?wiiiM ST. JOHNi sy? g Ma)M?r<ty Brld? Lovely and charming Fl?*nar Parker jMrtrtys Ike rde of a maU order bride and Charlton HMon ia the grown in brand new action-loaded Technicolor nupeaae drama, "The Naked J uncle." Set deep in the hear* of the South American jungle, the George Pal produced film tella a strange tale of a destructive force that threat en to devour everything In its path. Raleigh: Walter Noona, pianist from East Carolina College, Green ville (NC); Caroline Taylor, pia nist, from Wadesboro and N. Y ; Jayne Winfield, pianist of Washing ton (NC) and Greensboro, Frank Eckart, New York tenor; and Thomas Brockman, Philadelphia pianist. Dr. Swalin speaks of the soloists this season in laudatory terms. "We were particularly pleased with their performances: they were all outstanding <young artists. Caro line Taylor, the young pianist who was soloist with the Symphony in Raleigh, Durham and Charlotte made her New York debut at Town Hall on April 27 in a perforraaace whicb the New York Times her alded as one of the best debuts of the season. " (Annual auditions for young ar tists to appear as soloists with the orchestra next season, will be held in Chapel Hill tiext September. Ad ditional information can be obtain ed by writing the Symphony Audi tions Committee, Box 1211, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.) Drama Features THre? Start Reading from right to loft, Dorothy McGuire, i tarring with co star Stephen McNaiiy, and Mary Murphy, top featured. Their out standing performances in Republic's smashing drama, "Make Haste to Live," will delight audiences. ? California Drivers Gixft. Walkers Right of Way ? Los Angeles (AP) ? In cattle country the motorist pays the own er of the cow that wrecked his car for the value of the animal. In Los Angeles, a pedestrian hit a car. The pedestrian went to the hospital for six scalp stitches. The motorist went to traffic court for failure to allow a pedestrian to clear the intersection before en tering it in hit car, green light or no. That's how the Big Book reads. OCEAN PARK DRIVE-IN TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY "SAN ANTON?" Rod Cameron THURSDAY - FRIBAY "BACK TO GOD'S COUNTRY" Rock Hudson-Marcia Henderson Woodmen Have TB Sanitorium Wood rp en who become victims of tuberculosis can be confident they will receive health-restoring care at Woodmen of the World War Memorial Hospital, San An tonio, Texas, at no cost. But the Woodmen Society, through its local camps, makes many valuable contributions to ill and unfortunate fellow Americans who are not Woodmen. Scores of services and gifts to hospitals were performed last year, reports C. C. Faglie, Morehead City, local Wood men field representative. These included completely fur nishing seven hospital rooms, and other gifts such as hospital beds, wheel chairs, operating lamps, laryngoscopes, oxygen tents, radios for bedfast patients, workshops for handicapped persons, reading glasses and other equipment. The local Woodmen Camps also contributed generously to the fund drives for such national health and welfare organizations as the infan tile paralysis and cancer founda tions, and tuberculosis and recrea tion associations, and to tornado and flood disasters. ...Nature's deadliest force, and his fiery New Orleans bride! r!
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
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June 8, 1954, edition 1
10
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