Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Jan. 10, 1953, edition 1 / Page 9
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ll Reporter’s Report On ll m Si ; ||| m g» $ Inside Raleigh A I * it iMp |f I b(f L/f}f{o//oWi 111 illy „__ Siir NOTE FROM THE WRITER: 1 lie revelations included here are (he results of personal oh se-rvafion and ai> not. intended to net's-.jrily polTijy the ron < In--ions of this publication, 'll! material is adopted from our personal "confidential" tile mil is intended merely as a. repor ler » report to his readers f'oi eiarU.v. the aspects considered ace put into categories as "tie parturient*.' Following is our Report to the people as we look ’‘INSIDE It A U.If.H "—Liu Hollow av,) LEFT. 1. "K" IS FOR RAI EK.H "R” !■ for lOiei: I, • jula’ (. ;t.’> of Ihe So yen .ii Sr.ib ot in, in Carolina To Mane Kill' . ■! Ideal! the talc. L«;•! i ;> : . 'i :■ ‘ i ; ' da I -< c tioii of land :•>■.■ -t- -i . n Wilt- on it'COi pul .. *‘(i the - it . f that count-. ;T nrt.i i thr cm Known .. . the t.ai t .*• I Vail duHii btitici; . eiitei on t ■'Highway I bet cell Ki> », 11 :. i..i and Jack, nr.. .lb . k !.■ n; It may hi- :ic tb> lie. .me;, uiiim,' • ale- d ..Kill »ldiil..’U : e.u!v hi many it'i •'home’ .mil in otlw-i: 'atiutln-r •Hop aioo.; tie .s l- i Kaloipl; : 11 ■.i i .a i neo' Ol trait .1 land <■ tie n .’rt.toiO !'■.»• ■ live r, - . - v< II defim.l ■< ■ <•.; ■■ •> • ••••» <boui 100 ( 111. . . 11. il ■ 1.e.1 ll it’i-- ri.e in urn ini pda! buried in 11. n i ciii«-li (if ai ■ t a (id :ii: S vi: ,i cif ...1 1 * <*i i" i . a>jil * per yeat Kali is;- - 1 is ti. i tij, ■ v\ ell id.tiOO .'•.'•••tin p'-oplt if. • 1 : i : unPhc and one parochial - load: .T «.•<• trade and prole sional ■ iot»l.« a college and a :-:uv« isit.v for edu cation and 200 pteuivier. to: li: : .niiri.d inn. To us Raleigh is the sum total id haves' - and 'need- of every Alan of CoiO! in its i-onlim s More important Raleigh i. the ■ Met! Ilf FI 2: fill: REALM til A Kt s in thi category w-v .it edu cation, not alcoholic,-, and educa tion i : . a realm in v. i:• . few in iIdHU: of note can be expected to i .dir until tile rum million Uoliai Jonior-Senioi High School now under construction is ready to be stalled It's a certainty that a complete teachei complement will be needed lor the school and that juicy Job . s principal of the E Lenoir St. school can be considered the best opening that will be had in the school ystPin eiere for sometime to runn- barring D< :Uh, epide mic-. and Acts of God, pile upper ectiehm in the rol iaftl portion of the p u>he school system should l >main the same Ihe delation of tin and many an (.tin i school-yea; imL-Ss olle or mot-' at tin loin -head of ihe local facilities' use; the retirement route in getting away from it all, for in an overall sense, Raleigh's iaee urincipahs have been dolin' top tlight jobs considering what they have had to work with . . which i plenty, Raleigh, too. lias been tx; ei'ten cing what ciiites throughout the South have as pertains to Negro school teachers The public system hum .-'.Upei tmendeut down has made no t-crel of the fact that It 1-; a• am that with the colleges oi the stale gr.ialitu, out an uvvr* increasing number of teachers and administrators per annum no one is mdiapensible %<>. ■ v —r rTTirtaumßii i"iiiintiiiii|ii CIVIL RIGHTS ATTORNEY tot Kil l)—The late Richard K Westbrooks, famed civil rights at torney , was buried Saturday, De cember “(I in Chicago. West, brook*, fought (as.-, to end jim* tvinv on railroad trains, vtinninv one of the historic cas- s in the t S Supreme court. He won the cave for former Congress man 1 rthur W. Mitchell of Chi c„go in connection with railroad s« gregst-on. Lite Ret ' rchib.tld J. Carey, Jr„ local alderman and a top Re publican leader, gave the eulogy at the n.neial. Active and hon o ar\ paNli. arers included <lB judges ami numerous attorneys ai d civic leaders of all faces. l’robahh the most nohle tri bute made to Westbrooks was bv Noble tv. I t-f, dean of John Marshall law School, the dead inan’s alma mater. He said West brooks ye as "winning civil rights cases before many of today’t ci vil tiglits groups were ever heard el” lie also said Westbrook* tli .ic < is his contribution* helped -Hlin Mu i shai! Law- School to sur vive tlie depressive while other ncv s hoots were failing. West brntiVs mr many years served as secretary of the school’s board of iruween.—TANPJ School s’.ipecnientlent Sanderson is ;n a unique position A shrewd unci eapabl. administrator, he uas co political axes to prind, no po litical "debts'’ to pay through -his depcirtnu ;:t Being an 'iniieuen deni ‘ ho assumed office after the aibrent oi the Manager-Cot. ncii • fonm ut government, Supt San .ler'ou . oes about his job us heart e.g ». iic.ol.- with a zeal unencum .' red by obligations to clique-. J Thus m administerin'-. Negro - l boob, ’-he •• uptown office" de ■... il<.' .'tit! ex..eft- favi’ilc- to ! ,e i. oint h •rullm.- of e:u b facility . , tii *' It iV j» Mo! K .It' <i !*'■(.'! i ;-!y' i ith tt-acbcrs receiv ! ;ng highest wages in history) is ;.e iti’. ;)i Riiiei;;'i ..-ciiooii inst'-art : ! the '■>•( ( ptlctt Tti<u li< i< litc oca sciioo! is completed ,U v. i SS he -tailed with persons having ability In stead of "pnii A wary nr • hfiifld l». kept to sec itiat the equipment going into Hie sf tiooi I- a> top fligitt as it staff, lioivrvir, While tin public i li.im .y .t-tn t .lit' le x ! in retain t!.. -tats; j into ( yen to the untm •• d j,m - ; i in-- ul -;• j.. J department , 'i,'.; ./ (1 [J- i. as ; Meadow a (el j . )U.jbbliiig ov< I u nbine tor the I ;.(-«■ junin: .‘-eniof 10-t. - j few I ft: (-v.-o; 1 ■ n. i ■ he heat’d fnun the i ..’inpnf.'” of the city - ’ t o m-d --! tr’.u/i; of in .’it i h-arnitiK tto j Baptist: Shaw, and the ljii'to; al j Mil:, St. AiigUf.tine's ' iuiiil.;’ toe .il-52 - i-astiii, at - r..-1 t’.v . nice’ scandal: of the , l.tir'N-hush variety—wcic based .<t S' A--. . anti only herculean ct of Pii.xv Dr Harold 'Trig;, ' kept the d* tails ftom t>cing wafted to the four winds. D; Tiigg ab hor. scandal and will unbend cv ,my effort to see that St. Ar # '.’ good leoiitatmn is not besmirched by .- u-h. A.; tin* sole Negro mem i-r of the slate board of educa ’ tiim. he might possibly be< com -' nitUiii! political in ide by having accusing lit. pi . trained upon his ! baii wick. ; tn his effort to keep the glor ! ious. name oi St. Aug’s unsmeared, j Dr. Ttigg has unknowingly tor ! | othei'wi; e) incurred the wratii ui ! certain tradesmen in the city by ‘! Instituting rules which prevent St. Aug's co-eds from patronizing t?s --1 abiislunent., oil certain streets and from doing inure than pop-call : patronizing in at lea-l one busi : it ss center. This policy may have some etfecl upon the patronage the school re ceives when it if. obliged to so licit lo: year-books and hie like A I 11A VV Hr. W K. MUo iter, short ul stature and broad ul jiiitli, is administering his realm in a manner reminiscent to that employed t>> another i short, bro.ul person once —a fellow ' named Napoiean. Dr. Stair.net has almost suc ceeded m so humbling the alumni assneiaiton that powerful cliques j therein fail to exist By matching facts with figures, the soft-spoken ex-Dean showed why Shaw would : have to forego football eompeti -1 i lion ill 1952. and then cave a go ahead signal to the athletic do ’ pertinent which is now surprising sports lans throughout the circuit ‘ ant putting on tie court an ap i id; ud-draw inj: basketball suu a d : despite pre-season cries of "it can'! 1 on done.” Without tanlaie. Sliaw has add ed two ! hi) to its faculty giving I able Dr. Nelson Harris others on | campus his intellectual equal. Right now, Shaw is winning an uphill fight for further accredita tion. Dr. Stiassner has gained | much support from influential per | sons (including Dean" Gordon Hancock) in Eli: effort and as I fat as can be determined now — I has done as much for Shaw as v 1 .-i-cent championship football team ! did Prophetically we say here j i that Shaw will have a iuotbu.ll team In ’53 and another I Ph.D. on stall ior good mea sure. All ot which makes a pretty rosy outlook. | But die-hards are not t ini shed ,vith their wrangle with Shaw’s (regent administration, and for pubUc-rtelations reason- at least one head would have long ago ■it the chopping block if n iti - fiuential alumnus of Durham -had j •v’ceivt'd cooperation he sought in | -n action planned against one of : ih< administration's "higher-ups.’' Ihe thiee f ade and professional i .chords, Paynes - Business College. ! Harris Barber College and the I Home Kckes Trade School, con • iinne consistently upward path. larris Barber College, oldest roardrng sriiooi of its kind in the ' tate. has again been approved for i Tl training under the original arid I ihe Korean hill* of Rights. Payne's | Business College is ably supply ■ ng the |x-rsonri('l needed to han j lie the shorthand in the city’s in j reusing number of offices manned | 0-; Sons of Ham. and Home Ecker ; students come from all parts of the j -,late with almost certain place : ment marking the termination of ! studies. i And while Raleigh boasts no cultural'’ requisite as does neigh boring: Durham where one is an outcast" unless he has studied >iumc with either the late Prof. Buchanan or Mis. Margaret Spaul ding Shearin, Parttridge Studios erve the stead well. Arid with the institution of bands in elementary | schools, the house-to-houae in i struct or of the pa«t has become a | nonentity i DEPTs 3: IS FOB HOPE AND DRINK ! "!>■ is for dupe, and Raleigh is j > one place where it has riot be ■ come u menace. With the excep i »| turns of the arrest of a traveling • - ! musician or a preaciiotion forgery! • charge, and a nitt-ry owner on ;■ i i ((-fei'e rap little ha-> occurred to • make the city feel that dope has i come to town to stay. file !a r ’k of a dope ’rcMi; in' . Ihe Negro sectors tn Raieigh •> i itao s K t< tne fact that there. !.• no "Joce-deeding 'las:, in the I city The few inu-ucian.-’ who play -. ’ tor pay locally ur< of the schco! ■ ■: v ’.'ion.t boy vi: iety and have f , nevet been expu-t p to the "(iit.-;in- . tl’if." Kfiteit.wi;: ;■ . have been ; -xpi■ ed >re almost exli:.-.-' 'ihe word “goof hail" h mi’sin - i from tin local vncaholatiy and all' ti.’it Raieighite. know about co niinv .hertiin, morpliiiie, opium, vii i ’.-. hat they -ill Hi the r,cv, -. , 1 papers But Kah-igh lias a very dry moiltli, with of whiskey, beers and lues increasing in (oluiue yeaily. Die late of ul (ohoitr intake rau ie easily rec koned l»y tin number ot iliiiik rrs hail'd Into court weekly, i'hr "outcast" <<! the city drink• S 1 I Ilf.- SC'CU ty the 'wine bendei -I hi iii.i'nerale run -nisei of cheap.: loz-peict nt.e t wine Ne:-t (>ii the! li.'t !• the "spike drinker, '-'-‘bn i • combine?, iiis W) cent with that ; 'of tw o otciei persons ana buys' i a pint of cheap boui born lo or phi four way to include a "run ! net*" who gin , to the .’tate-con- j 1 ; trolled stme for a share in the; I bottle With no across-the-bar sales ie- i ■! gal, upper cryst Raleighites take ! 1 their high-priced bourborn, rurn and top blend.- home to consume. ; Scotch drinkers are few and far || between and vintage wine eonsum -1 i ers non-existent. ! Raleigh drinkers, too, 'have | learned that "sealed" brands are | ' more to be trusted than "good i ; I white stuff and have almost sue-j ’! eroded in running peddlers of the j illicit stuff out of business A pros- j pective buyer of eoi'ii is given a | ’ security pcobe neatly as strenuous , a: that given by the State Depart , j ment before he is able to purchase ! the stuff On the other hand it is j sometimes possible to pick up an j |! after-hour bottle of "sealed" orj ', 2h per cent wine on street-corners j and (maybe) in some dwelling pin-j ices Business establishments, fear- j , j ing suspension or loss of value j permit keep a cautious "hands oil ' attitude on illicit .stuff and will I nearly crack heads ol these found j inoibtng ori tin premise? covered, ty then permit Foi the most ipt rt. they an- equally a.-- strict a- | Lon! erving minors. A drink is. a drink In ftalci; h.; v-t tht city has nevei had oeco-| sion for shame caus-n by its cite- , zin- "getting M-Bi" on poisonous, ! mixtures such as those- wreaking. I i havoc in Dunham some years ago . and in Atlanta last year. What ’ | kick they can't get from "Sneaky", j j beer, bourbon or an occasional ; Scotch they do without There is no r< eson to attempt • saying who drinks, because inbib ers can be found ranging from ; teen-age kids who drink Sneaky ! at half games through aging dow ' • a s ers who "take a little" for their , | "colds” during weekly game.and-; ! gossip session- Nope, dope and d r tnk aren’t menaces !u or to colored Ka leigh. DEPT'. I: l TTIRTAIN.MINT— II MISSING Even though the lone nite-dub. I the Colonadc. draws a great deal j "! of out-of-town clientele and holds j I I r. priority on "flesh" presenattions ; An Negro Raleigh, the city could; "; never be reo immended as a place in which to seek "entertainment'*! 1 ! of the after lark variety. I Outlying pots like the Tea 1 Room, Scales. Kozy Kat .s and oth : ers have also gained popularity with in-and out-of-towners. but l not so m. i yet as did the now- ; Hazed Pin< Acres on the Durham; | highway Tub Flamingo did thi iv -1 |{ s’tig business during the summer, j ’! while the Wake County Supper; 1 ! Club, an? ther out-of-the-way spot. I 1 ! folded An effort to turn the old \ J ; Stark's Beauty College site into « ' | ritzy clv.h also tailed. | Raleighite: are -content to dance 1 | «nd welch shows at the Colon*de j 1 ;or to dr their entertaining at home : ,i raving nowhere else to do it Os i i course s'age presenttations occa ■ i -lonaliy play the local theatres.! land that aspect wc'.l discuss some- j ’ ‘ where own in "T\ ( ; Dcs- the fact t’hat it has httlc 1 else i .Her in the line of enter ! t3inm( Raleigh has the most. celebra d dance floor in tire state - iat its Memorial Auditorium, ana j | with Winters Promotions pulling | ‘ I the strings can enjoy presentation”! of the top road shows and bands j J Tan cif'zens also take in doing?' ai ihe Coliseum, especially annual ! appear ces of the Harlem Globe , ‘! trotter end the popular Dixie; ' i Basketball Classic. Then too, there’s always Wood -; ’ row to entertain. DEI*T 5: FAIRIES, AND FUNERALS ') Like any other city, Raleigh has! 1 ; its supply of fairies those boys } ■ j who aint girls and aiut boys eith- j ; j er. 'T’hp local supply diminished j ; | considerably when one of the \ ' ; pretty boys was found, dressed; ) litee a girl, waiting oa a "boy -; ■ | friend" Uptown. ’ j Chilly weather lias had a ten-! 1 dency to keep the delicate on as lout of eyesight also, and when a. ‘Freedom’ Is Now 90 THE CAROLINIAN WEEK ENDIN'; SATt I! DAY JAN'fARY 10, 19.’;; - , , ,~, N OI.’OIJM SOLDIER GAINS PROMOTION WITH THE «;T!I IN I’ANTRV i DJV, IN KCREA —■ James A. Am- Lrcse, s'" of Cleavie Ambrose (fa ther deceived). Route 2. Aulander. j J N. C'.. has f-ecn promoted to cor j pora! while serving in Korea with ■ the 40th Infantrv Division Th< outfit arrived in Korea ear ■ ly Ia; ; year after mt( hpiv* tpld ! '.. m '.:. in Japan , Wot id W(i II veterans v. ill r»’ . nivrnb'” tin - «amr thvi.-iun joined in Die i-iault landing at Lingayen lr./'in o< the Philippine Islands in early 194a and drove toward Me ; mi., running into heavy fighting I ; ns Die Fort St'd.-vnt-vi - area and j the Bam bam Hill | Corporal Ambro’-n a mend'er of ] . he "Aii d Hf“imrrif ; ! ie;idu.iar!’M', i ( urnpaii.v an ii ed in Korea lust | ’■<" He "nieied the Army in Or j tuber 1951 snd received basu ; u .lining at I~: t i .t-onarJ Wood. ! Mu Ambrose attended NoH'i Caro i iina College in eiviiian life. C AHOI IN A GROWTH | KEEPS CP & l BUSY j RALElGH—Greater use of ehc j tricity and industrial growth in i the urea served by Carolina Power i & Light Company are requiring an I outlay for new facilities of abe d. $170,000,000 during the decade fol lowing World War II That figure, quoted recently by Louis V. Sutton, president of C P. & L. will include the addition of 500,000 horsepower oi new steam ; gt derating capacity during the four j .vials 1952-55, inclusive j Sutton said the expansion is re Iquired by ’the growth of industry ; and the use of electric service by' j all businesses and other consumers j in tvie Carolina?,, in the area served ; be- the Carolina power and Light Company The company now serves 345,000 i customers, he said, a? compared i with 273,000 a year ago. The gain I includes 52,000 customers served |by former Tide Water Power Co. I WM HOST BISHOP —Bishop Her tert B. shau of Wilmington, pre siding over the Ninth Episcopal District, which also comprises the West Alabama Conference, will be host-bishop at (lie first meet ing this quatireuniuin when the Board of Bishops meet January 14-18, at Big Zion AME7, church in Mobile, Ala. This is a signifi i cant meeting since it is being j held in the second most popu lous s tate ol' the Union in point ol Zion membership at Big Zion church which seats 17(H) and which was organized in 1842. "top gal" found Greener Pictures elsewhere a lew ot (lie others went ; along for the ride and decided to ;M..y, As compared with other lo i cates the lajries iri HaU-igh ar ‘ largely "unorganized” for whicn all can be thankful. Outs story out of "Fair-land* i which was squashed before it got | started here concerned tvse big j shot (airy who tried to "make" one of his co-workers only to causa the other to attempt suicide. Luck lily the .ness was covered up before I Die stink could get out too far. Also the city ha? yet to stage ' a modern-day funeral fabulou* ! enough to have a band, etc., in ! the procession, but what final rites ; h.'-k in pomp, they make up in emotion and rolling stock The latest model vehicles of ail descriptions from open-backed 1 flower cars and limousine ambu j lances and hearses to paneled i trucks to can y chairs for use by j mourners at the “wake” are boast* led by the city’s three mortuaries: I Lighterner's, Capital and Raleigh Though citizens can die a»y --1 where they please in the city, they jean find resting places for thetr! i mortal remains in only two segre ! gated bur ial tracts as per Ihe ac-. i cepted Southern code, An interesting question that of-’ ! ten arises is just who wR| have! j tne "biggest funeral when the; Mime rolls around. No one seems: j anxious to have » "big one" per-! jsonally any time soon, however. NOTE: Looking further ’ In side Raleigh” next week, we shad diseuss foods, girls (govnl and otherwise) housing and how H got the way it is. and oilier matters as they stack up tn i unfideivtUi files.) j " .-.v*)jre,rry - -<m. ■ . .j, fl I '■■■ I I 1 j VIfMBFK OF DELTAS NV | TIONAL STAFF —Mrs. LetHia I .lotiiiMin Kirtiry ot Bluefield. VV Vj was recently announced as i tile first employee on the ita- I tion.il employee on the national | staff of Delta Sigma Theei so- I r'uity. Mrs Ktrtley is working I in < iii' iniMti in the office or 1 •Mi? Relief S. (anil, grand see- I iMary, prepared tor the nation- j U convention to !»• held D<cm- I her 2li-:;0 in t.leveland. Mrs. 1 Kirtley spent the tia.st two months | in Kansas ( Stv. Kan working in I the office of Miss Beatrice K. I I’enman, grand treasurer. After I the national convention she was I to work in tin- Delta national 1 headquarters in Washington, D. " C. (ANT) 1- ...... 90th Year of Freedom Finds the Negro Making Big Advances By JAMES J. FOREK CHICAGO (ANP) Celebra tions heralding ihe advent of Ua new year now are history, but 1 wonder how many people paused amidst the hilarity to reflect th..t . the beginning of HIM marked the ; 90th anniversary of the Kmancipa-j lion Proclamation. It was on Jare I. 1900 that Presi-! dent Abraham Lincoln issued trie : now famous docu.'uent whieh freed | Iron) chattel slavers those Ne; ioi-s m ' later then in iebelhon agam-d the United States. This war a vvat measui *•. ami it took an amend* j merit the lath to free per-| manently the slaves .Sima- that time, Negroes have Ccme a long way along the road toward full citizenship in this', country. But it must be remem-. be rod that it was t-'.ie Kinam-ipa-t non Proclamation which started them on this road Foi plmi to! that tune, Negroes had, as stated in the Deed Scot decision rendered j by the W. S Supreme court, 'no lights which the white man Lad: to respect. “ What were the words ot Hus document which gave colored per sons hope for a better life? The: proclamation of Lincoln aid m part: SOLICITATION PERMITS GIVEN 8 MORE GROUPS i RALEIGH During the month of December licenses were grant ed by the State Board of Public ; Welfare to eight organizations to! conduct fund - raising campaigns through public solicitations for the j support of their programs, and the • | licenses to two organizations were extended, it was announced this ■ week bv Dr Ellen Winston. Com missioner. All of the eight organiza tions Mere re-licensed In ac cordance With pros isiotis of the state solicitation law. They i arc the A merle mi Bible Society znd the United Board tor Christian Colleges in China with headquarters in New York City, the Disabled Ame rican Veterans, National Of •fiec at Cincinnati. Ohio; the National Jewish Hospital at Denver. Colorado; the Ameri can Friends Service Commit tee, Southeastern Region at Greensboro, North Carolina; the Bethel Colons of Mercy Jt Lenoir. the Daniel Boone Council, Boy Scouts of Ameri ca with headquarters in Ashe ville; and Elon College at Elon College. North Carolina. I Licenses to the North Carolina j Federation of Women's Clubs at; Raleigh and the Christian Rural j Overseas Program at Elkhart, lnd„ I issued for only a portion of their fiscal-program years, were extend ed at their requests to permit long-j er fund-raising campaigns. , 'lhe total amount which the; eight organizations will seek from j the public at large in North Oa-i rolina is $798,480. It was also anonur.ced that dux-! NOW THE TROUBLES BEGIN!!- President elect Dwight D. Eisenhower adn family enjoyed an old-fashioned Christmas together in his columbia University (N.Y.) home, even as you and I. But Ike can look forward to few such relexing moments as this following his inauguration in January, at which some of the top Negro republican leaders in the U.S.will appear. (Newspress Photo) “i do order and declare that ail persons held as slaves with in said designated states and parts of stat.- are and hence forward shall be free; and that tin- I Hited .slates, including the executive government ol ; ihe military and naval author! lies thereof, shall recogniz. and maintain the freedom •>1 said persons. I "And ! hereby enjoin upon tin i people SO declared l<> be !i iv !> ! ; abstain from all violence utile in in ce -.'11".’ -if ti let., t . and 1 re j ooiTivnenil to tiiem t'hai. in all ea e: ! wiit-re allowed, they labor, faitn fully for reasonable w.< .-cs "And I Jurthei declare and make known that such persons of .suitable condition will be received .Tito the armed situ vices of the Uni i tec States fu garnsor forts po,-i --t.ons. stations, and other places land to man ve.-soi.s of all sorts in ) said service Do pi to many discriminatory t: I'.'ivi ices Ncs.i'oes have come a ; tong way toward realizin; tl'.e 'ideas set down ns tile Emancipa tion Proclamation Am! in same respects, they -have uorte further - than Lincoln visualized. As soldiers, .scientists, educators, DILLARD DEAN AND FISK DEAN ARE MARRIED I ’ WIN TON N. C i ANP i Dr j Ruth Brett and Dr Benjamin A i ! Quai les wei <• united in matrimony; in; a beautiful informal ceremony I •at tin home dun eh of the bwde ! , here. ! Dr Brett is the dean of students ot Fisk university aid Dr Charles is dean of Diliard university Dr \V ( Somerville, exe cutive secretary of the Lott farcy Convention, Washing ton, D F., officiated. 11«- bride Was given in marriage in her fattier, Arthur 11. Brett. Dr. )(into!pit .Junes, dean of Fay etteville state College, was best j man. Mrs. Esther B Oliphant. j a sister of the bride, was ma tron of honor. I The bride is a graduate of Shaw j (University and earned her doctor-] •ate degree from Columbia univer jsity. She has served as assistant] jdean at Spdman, dean of women, jat Dillard, dean of students a! ] ! Bennett, associate director of a| • student center at the University! ;of Munich, Germany and since ! September. 1951 has been dean of j j students at 'Fisk. I I I mg the month of Dec. the Arne-j ! rican Association for the United, | Nations in New York City, the; j Cerebral Palsy Foundation at Cm-] i cinnati. Ohio and the Holy Land; j Christian Approach Mission at j 1 Kansas City, Missouri solicited' ] citizens of this state The State] ] Board of Public Welfare is point-] ling ou it hat such solicits itons .He |in violation of the North Caro-] ] lina solicitation law. since none of i | these organizations ts licensed in] ! accordance with- the state statute. I w riU rs ;u,,! in.;-’.' :.u |)r- :■ >1 color L:.ve u' uie ;u ’a nl on Atr.erican life rim names ot D; Georgi W.'i-hinri, -i Carve. Di Chut ii", I)ic ’. Dr 1.'., i jih Bunclu Look”, p Washington, hoi,Hid H.u.c: and Marian An'i.-i la.,.'Jon Hujui ltu-h.iid Wright, l .iu! Lav. i i-ticc Dnnbai. and !■ i aid, V.-ehy ..mi Mai , Me- j 1 a '>vt Bi U.nrii are dnl > a J; a of those ot wiioiu any nation '.’/oitld !« pi”od Vet do ■p d o Hi, , ?.a-i unco -,i ' many iv r: no , tn, mad to a ; cl;iv' oini-nl h... Loon hard, and it has taken adid! mnal lecisiat mil In help the No’ m lu- i «J tut full The 14th amendment made him a citizen, the l.ubh paw him the light to vote, but additional legis lation has been necessary to pu - vi nt ■ ircmnvvnt ion of tin ;a ni'-iidmcnts The Negro lias jusl about won his light to vote and serve tils count'w in (lie Armed l ot ii s llis greatest victories a tong tins line have come with in the past decade since tile advent of World War It. Hi? greatest fight today is that of gaiii i n g economic equalit> With emphasis being placed on this issue, it appears that in Shis ana too the person of color soon will he employed on the basis of merit as is his fel low American. It is with hope that Ni-gvoi i, 1053 look forward tn tut* realiza tion nf victory over employment bias this ye 4 :) and at lust exp<*r ii nee the einnpletc freedom which K . .(%s£_, tf'lA jiK y-' ,v sboEHspbl Osll 'T'fKß’j •SHEER ARTISTRY* The performance of Ethel Waters tn the Just-released movie, “The Member of the Wedding” has been hailed m* “sheer artistry” by film critics from coast to coast. Assuming th* j*sme role which brought her fame In the stage play, Mints Waters turn* Jr. spell a dr&inaito pi-rformance (itwt she'd no ijiiui.it be casuM* ex#4 (Mr *n Academy Award; (Newspreas Photo.) * f will tie- Lrnancipatiqn I’rOi■kuiun.ion i.e Non Year's Day AFHit’.A V STUDENT FORGES AHEAD AT LIU-Ebenezcr luu agwu caiiK ill the way from Ni geria to New York to get him self ati education that he want ed. Today, he is one of the out* standing students at Long Is land University. Recently his classmates elected him president of the Student Christian associa tmn \ senior majoring in eco nomies. Iwuagwu is a graduate of A-grey Memorial college in Owerri, A igeria.— i ANP)
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 10, 1953, edition 1
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