Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Feb. 8, 1958, edition 1 / Page 11
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Sam Cooke, Rhythm & Blues Show To Raleigh Feb. 21 Ernie Freeman’s Orchestra To [ Accompany Singer in N. C. Debut After many weeks of dickering, promotf r Joe Winters, at last was .• 'ole to get a signed contract on the now famous SAM COOKE. The deal calls for the appearance of TftE SAM COOKE ALL STAR IN PERSON SHOW at the Raleigh Memorial Auditorium on Ft iday <■'pnipg February 21st. Due to the limited number of open dates on this Show-Package the date in Ra- Mgh will bp the only date to he played anywhere in North Carol ina. Promoter - Winters full of snule*. stated that it. was .? very hard job 1 talking the bookers nto this date. ! 1* seems *« though every promoter j in the state wanted a date, many ; I«ng distance calls had to be made j with much talk required 1 don’t I remember any date that I bad to j work so hard to close out. Tn just VI years the amazing j SAM COOKE has become world famous in two fields of music. First MB. COOKE was considered the world’s greatest Spiritual sing er. . and now SAM COOKE has won top honors in the popular mu fir Held on the wings of his own brother’s song. . . "YOU SEND ME " This- Is the talented artist who’ll appear fit the Raleigh Memorial Auditorium on Friday evening Feb ruary 21st foe one performance at S: 15, And with him SAM bring? five of the nation’s outstanding popular music artists. Among them will be the fame ERNIE FREEMAN bir orchestra. FREEMAN and his hand erf* currently burning the TT.T’* turntables with their rhythm ic orchestration of 'RAUNCHY”. "rttE SILHOUETTES, one of A erlra's foremost vocal groups will St. Augustine s Seniors Soto j Cadet Teaching Posts In N. 0. Thirty-two seniors at Si. Angus- Hue's College began cadet teach ing throughout eastern North Car olina on February 3rd. Students Tried below have been assigned to the following schools: Hawley High School, Creed moor: James Covington, Social Studies; Willie Lee Kelly, Busi ness; Edward Rayford. Music; Paul j Russel, rttysical Education: Vir- ! ginia McLean, Biology; David Bet- 1 hei, Sixth Grade. Franklin County Training! School, Lotiisburg: Hartwell Glov- | •r. Biology; Sheryl Adkins. Phys!- j ra! Education; Almarie Jones, Bus- | loess. Cooper High School. Clayton: Vtolene Jerkins. Biology: Norvelle Lee .Physical Education: Geraldine Pridgen, Business, Carvia Earl Dun stop. Primary. Johnston County Training ••School. Smith field; Will is Peppers. Physical Education; Mildred Smith, Bmlogy, Mable Brown. Business. Richard R Harrison High School, Melvin Moorp. Physical Ed- $13,252.28 Given St. Aug. By United Negro Coll. Fund Aa ellorsttnn nt $13,252.28 ha* !'«i -eceived by St, Augustine’* College, from th# United Negro Col lea* Fund. President James A. Boyer, announced today, January ?P 1858- "This t* the third and final allo ration to St. Augustine's College from the 1957 proceeds of the UNCF nation-wide campaign.” President Boyer said. “This amount brings the total received by SI. Augustinu s College from the 1957 national appeal to $35,28458." « * * * St. Augustine's College Is one of the 33 private, accredited member institution* of th«» United Negro College Fund Th» first of America * educ* tion cheats, the College Fund ha* conducted annual cam faigns to help meet the yearly operating cost® of its member •chord# since 1914. * » * • “The financial aid received each year from the UNCF by St. An rustine's- College represents ap proximately 10 per cent of its bud get, or that amount not met by in come from endowment, tuition and recurring grants." President, Boyer said j s| V• ; WMC Jjj ■ ■ | —— ^— • „ ._ . . w&Mm* | £htkVMSMm£bk&mcfa/ ORCHI i Raleigh Memorial Auditorium , ONE SHOW ONLY FRIDAY |g ADM. 2.00 - 2.80 - 2,75 A 3.00 8:15 JPFJS- !; Tickets February || || - _ j. f- -.■■•■••• ... . Ml " „... x » SAM COOKE also be starred on SAM COOKE'S ALL STAR IN PERSON SHOW. Their latest recording hit being "GET A JOB”. The talented show man and singer THURSTON HAR RIS will be on hand singing his great hit "LITTLE BITTY PRET TY ONE" and other of his many hit?.. Another new and fast rising group who’ll be seen in this show ! is THE DUBS who have just come j lo the limelight with their hit of \ "COULD T.T BE MAGIC". And j round out the show will be one of j the nation s long-time favorites. . . I THE DRIFTERS. THE ONLY DATE OF THE SHOW I IN ALL NORTH CAROLINA ucation; Sylvellie Cloud. Science; Landis High, English and French. Ligon Junior - Senior High School. Raleigh: Mrs. Doris Clem ente, Social Studies; Carl Robin son. English. Washington High School. Ra leigh, Eloise Walker, Physical Ed ucation j Lucille Hunter School, Raleigh. ! Mary Bnylan. Fourth Grade; Dud- j I ley Burris, Business. | Spaulding High School. Spring ! j Estate: Paul Haywood, Physical j Education; Albert Wallace, Sci j cnee. j Recreational Center. Raleigh: I lames Cameron. Physical Educa tion; Charles Cameron. Physical Education; Albert Eldridge, Phy sical Education; Janies Jones. Phy- ! steal Education Henderson Institute, Henderson: Joseph Nicholas, Physical Educa tion, Person High School. Franklin ton: Dorsey Williams. Boilogy; Charlie Brovin. Physical Educa tion. During the current year, UNCF allocations have been used princi pally io provide scholarship and work aid for exceptional students who otherwise would not be able to continue their education; to pur chase laboratory and classroom equipment. JUi «*,4Mi* %3 * p==s^«w Ami we know that al! things work together for good to them that love God .. mans 8,23.) It i* wonderful to meet, on memorable rtcc:, von- thnf ar‘ all too infrequent, a person who truly k>vea God and obey* His commandmcnto every hour of every day. Such a ona radiates k>ve and joy, peace and harmony, strength and goodness, and. is really blessed and fulfilled. We can al! be like that—wbv aren'* we ? j ERNIE a FREEMAN i THE DRIFTERS Reception For Foreign Pupils Held At FSTC j FAYETTEVILLE Freshman I j Violet E. Lewis who hails from ! Freetown, Sierra Leonne, British i West Africa, was recently the reci pient of a reception given in her honor by the Student Council at the Fayetteville State Teachers Col lege. Set in the warmth of the Stu dent Union room, it was a lovely affair heightened by music, laugh ter, and good cheer. In remarks to the eroun Miss Lewis said. "I know that 5 will enjoy my stay in the j United States and especially here at the FoUrrp, because everyone is friendly and help ful to me." • « * * A teacher of ten years of experi- j cnee in thp primary schools of Freetown, Miss Lewis came to America to begin the four-year course in teacher-training. She is attending college on a scholarship j made possible by the lota Phi j Lambda Sorority, a national society j of business and professional worn- j en. She completed before com ing, college preparatory work at Hie Annie Walsh Memorial High School and the two years of teach er-training course at the Fourah Boy College. Miss Lewis comes with an educa tional and a cultural background. Her parents. Mr. and Mrs. S. A. T.rwi. are scholcd folk and mem bers of one of Freetown's distin guished families. She is making the adjustment to the American wav of life beautifully. Miss Lewis met Dean Hohn.es in Freetown last year when the Fay. ettevij.le instructor was on a leave of absence made possible by a Full • bright Fellowship to leach a year in Freetown. Sierra Leonne, Bri• • tish West Africa. Edmond Austin Publishes His First Hove! j NEW YORK—Using the "Brick i io Aluca" movement which swept j the Negro people of the United States and the West Indies during the post World War I era as the theme of his book, Edmund O. Austin has published, via Vantage Press, New York, his first, novel, "The Black Challenge ” * * * * Air. Austin describes the ef fects of the "Back to Africa" movement, on a sophisticated West Indian lawyer, Jeremiah King—a man who first entered the movement to get rich quirk but later came to identify him self with the. poverty-stricken Negroes who lived in the Har lem ghetto. * * * * Tim outlier, on attorney, is i widely known as a specialist on inheritance tax law. He has 'ap peared oefore all the New York | court? and, by brief, bcioie the IJ. S. Supreme Court. He is a mem- ! her of the Academy of Political | Science and is on the executive I committee of the Yonkers iN.Y.) Chapter of the NAACP Tobacco plantbcci soil should be | loamy, well drained, and contain ] ample organic matter. On March 15, Tar Hoc! cattle men will vote whether or not tr» assess themselves 10 cents per head t of slaughter cattle to support a | r j promotional program for their i(> ! beef. f Careful food preparation help:, j ii i assure good eating > ft Shaw Players Score A Hit In Heilman s Little Foxes ’ BY MARCUS it BOL'LWARF j Last Friday nj S:3O p.rti. T saw the final performance of Lillian! Heilman’s "The Little Foxes" by j The Shaw University Players in j the Green leaf auditorium. “The Little Foxes" is a 3-act j drama depicting the innovation I of industry in the South and the i struggle of caste and class. It j portrays the greed of the family i of Hubbards and one Regina j Oiddens, who has an insatiablej desire foi wealth and social no-! sltion. I agree with one literary | critic when he says that "the play is a story of sin and expiation.” * * v When the curtain rang down at the end, the audience hurst forth in thunderous ap plause. The "handolappiiiK" j grew in intensity as the play- j ers came forth so make their j hows in the “curtain calls.'" Finally, Venise Erkin, who i played the part of “Regina Oiddens”, appeared, and when she did the ovation became the outburst of an electrifying climax. * * * * WITHOUT DOUBT, Venise Ev-1 win was the star of the evening, j Sire made the spectators hate “Regina” for her cold and ruth- 1 Speaks At Y MCA Dinner Meets **"—*■ ■ ■n-r--ll|'|-I|Mini n lim»H'W JIJIMIH lUWJIIUJI jui.li -y■. m n ..I— ! ‘Our Greatest F ears Never Happen/ j Dr. Mays Tells Greensboro Group GREENSBORO Addressing 100 persons at the 191 h Annual Hayes Taylor YMC'A Banquet, Di Ben jamin Mays, brilliant educator and President of Morehouse College, Atlanta, Georgia said that we live in an age in which we fear living, lhe Christian religion, arid imple mentation of democracy, yet. his tory has proven that our greatest fears are of things that never hap pen. Historically, lip continued, men feared the teachings of Jesus, the questioning of Socrates, the experi mental science of Roger Bacon, and the daring of Susan B. Anthony. Yet, tiic filings feared niosi about these persons never actually hap pened. Referring to the present. Dr Hays ■'fated that many Americans fear the Supreme Court ruling outlaw ing segregation. Fifty years from today, though, time will prove nur fears have no foundation in fact, and happenings at Nashville, f.ittle WOODvJI FIX-IT CLINIC Ii keQ tE [Kg Door rattlS can often be cured by removing the strike plate and re-positioning it ?o that there will he a snugger fit. between it and the flat side of the latch. Use a chisel to widen the mortise, if necessary. The screws won't go back in the original holes, Fill these with Plastic Wood and let harden, Replace the strike plate, using the Plastic Wood again to fail any exposed area of the mor tise. Sand smooth when hard and touch up with paint to match woodwo) k. * . . When loosening or tighten ing a nut. always try to place j yourself so that you can pul! the wrench toward you. Don't push, for : f you do and the nut loosens suddenly, mr if the wrench slips, you are likely to bark your knuckles. ■' ■*, y i*J ' * '' ‘' TW *'^ t '**‘ ■■ v - c ww**w'S«®-J>WB of^Su^SiISK'^KHMBIOiBv WmBkSiHh ' ■mu mi -tomb* as ONE HAMPTON INSTITUTE CO-ED discovered in her college’s swimming pool, a wav to overcome two January hazards: the tension of mid-year examination and the rigor* of a chilling 2 i-2 in snow fall on the Tidewater Virginia campus. Miss Lottie Gersl. junior from Durham, N. C., prove* her point here. Exams evidently proved but a temporary barrier to her being able to get hack In the, swim: *s for being chilled—that never was a problem, not to Lottie’ in addition to » number of eampuff aetivltie*. meimfing singing and sports, she is a serious student of the modern dance. Imttie is lh« daughter of Mr* Madrid Gr-.n.t, who recently moved from Sooth Boston, Va„ to Durham. I ! less desire for wealth, power, and j social position but the listeners ioveu ut j for those tender nio ; merits when she became rupeu ] tantly human Close contenders for the top I spot were Melton Anderson as j “Ben Hubbard” and Jean Kim | brought ns “Alexander Oiddens.” J Melvin Anderson made the greedy i “Ben Hubbard” a symbol of the I ruthless southern gentleman, i while "Alexander Oiddens", play* 1 ed by Jean Kimbrough, was the ! essence of a “sweet young Miss’* I and her love for her father. She was the only one who loved him. since her mother, Regina, and the male Hubbards used him for their gain. Joseph Jones, as the “Mr. Mar • shall”, struck mo impressively in ! Act I as a sauve, polished Indus j trial magnate whose manners in j deed were U) be admired. Not j knowing the plot of this drama at ! the time,. 1 had hoped to see ! much more of him than the play j permitted. It was indeed gratifying to wlt ; ness the consternation of the ; male Hubbards when they learned I that their theft of Oscar Gid ! dens' bonds was discovered, j GLORIA CEPHAS. ''Addle”, j and Fred Bullock's "Cal” wore the soothing symbols in the play w , Rock and Montgomery will appear j stupid to our grandchildren. * * • * Certain lessons can he drawn from history, be continued, but we, like others before us, will j not herd them. One of these lessons is that if our civilization is destroyed, if vvill he done not bv drug addicts and alcoholics, but by those who pose as our leaders, It was the leader who jailed Roger Bacon. Galilee and Susan B. Anthony and murder - ed fi,000,000 Jews in Germany. • * * » | For having brognhc in S2OO or | more in memberships during the I year, ten men were awv.dcd Sor j vice Awards for Membership Onnfi- I pajgn. They wen* Dr F A. Willi SCENE FROM “TUB ROOY BEAUTIFUL” Charming Bar-. • bars McNair embraces T/omiic Sattin In scene from "The Body Beau- ! lifiil.” new musical comedy dealing with prize fighting which had Ms j world premiere at Philadelphia’s Erlanger Theatre. The play moved I to New York January 23, where tt opened at the Broadway Theatre. In the ploy, in which the tan players arc co-featured. Sattin plays I | the part of a prize fighter who throws a fight then regains prestige by winning in a return match leading up to the championship. Miss j : McNair, a native Racine, Wir.., plays the part of Sattin '9 wife i (ANT PHOTO). they were a sort of "Balm in 1 Gilead” as maid and butler re- i .spectivety. Ami we must not for- | get that “Birdie Hubbard”, play ed by Esther Sneed, was best in Act 111 when under the influence of an intoxicant, she bared her soul also the symbol of the souls r »f many southern women of that day. * • « * Every person who drove a nail, painted a flat, moved * Piece of scenery, handled eoa lume*. did am important, job. j We, therefore salute the fol lowing member* of the pro duction staff] » * m * Melton Anderson, Laolllo Ed ward* Letka Hardy, Roman Wal-! ton, Donald Counts, Lawrence Kelly, Mary Mayfield. Myrtle l Streeter, Doris Taylor, Same j Hawkins, Annie Hillard, Ernest Davis. Gladys Johnson, and Fred j Bullock, Jr, DIRECTOR GIT BERT DALEY j should bo congratulated for his boldnes*. Ho took a play of 1.9091 setting and made It move our every human emotion, even in this atomic ogre. This reviewer would aomider it no srnali favor if he wore to re CGive a reviewer"# pas# for the next performance. „ j } ®ms, Mr. Perry -T. Brown, Mr, Me- ] \ Kin ley Smith, Mr. J. W. Snipes. Mr. i | fouls Foster, Dr. W L, Kennedy, j, i Dr. J, A Tarpley, Mr, Owen Me- I j ‘ Adoo Mr. J. F. Johnson and Dr. j j | B W Baron*. Special recognition j { 1 was given Dr F. A. Williams for I j j varied services to the YMCA. j < ( Plaques were awarded Mr. John < j Macable for his work as Chairman ( j of the 1957 Membership Drive, to Mr. Roy Phillips as Outstanding j I Layman of the year and to Dr W. ! y T- T Miller as Chairman of the I I Building Expansion Committee. | s David W. Morehead, Txecutive Sec- j 1 I retary, gave the report, of the year j r ; 1957 and Dr. F. E Davis, Chairman j f I of the Annual Meeting Commitiee ; t I presided. Music was furnished by j c * the Greensboro Men s Glee Club, j W the CAfIOUNIAN WEEK EMHNG, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1, !BISB *-OMYBITt ALOVEIY BEST ONE X EVER TASTED // " ittfe CtmffW&AtrJc : \ Hampton’s Debating Team Meets King’s College Sat, HAMPTON, Va. The Hamp ton Institute Debating Team .di rected by Dr. Charles H Nichols : Professor of English, will take i part in the Eighth Annual Or- j thodox Invitational Debate Tour- J nament at Kings College, Wilkes- ! Barre, Pa., February S. Thirty colleges Rre expected to ! participate in the contest. Last : year Hampton debaters won three ‘ out of eight debates. The topic for j this year's debate is "Resolved— that the requirements of member ship in a labor organization as a condition of employment should be illegal.” Members of the team are: Jesse Blackmon, freshman, Portsmouth, Va.; Albert Hinton, freshman, Norfolk, Va.. Victor Schneider, sophomore, St. Thomas. Virgin Islands, Lonnie Williams, sopho more, Houston, Texas. Hinton was first prize winner in the Hamp ton annual Freshman .Sophomore debate last month. The grants supplement $33,000 in scholarships the service origin- j ally helped the students to obtain 1 from iheir colleges. PARKMiFORD KENTUCKY BRED STRAIGHT KENTUCKY BOURBON ,;v \ \ jpa/ws* 6; #P* ; *OBS i/% QT eark&tilforb] j M,s ' I PARK&TI LFORI) KENTUCKY BRED STRAIGHT KENTUCKY BOURBON STRAIGHT BOURBOH PRbyFTpARK sjTLroRD DisfrCOßPTfix | | ~ - ...JO, ivta^N*. Honor Society Stages Dinner At St. Aug. The Alpha Kappa Mu Heew- So cioty at St. Augustine's Colleg* h“ld an Initiation dmu»r ip ,Vh« Cheshire T.ounge on January 38th at. 7:30 p.m. Tht principle apeaker was Dr. W. L. Greene, Executive Secretary of ih» North Carolina Teachers Asosciation. Introductory remark* were giv. en by Miss Zenobia Browning, president of Alpha Kappa Mu, I>r James Boyer, President of th# col lege gave remark*. Members are; Miss Janet Sebum pert. Miss Bessie Smith, Mi*# Ze nobia Browning. New member* m-f Miss Delore# Roger*, Mis* Thelma Beet.on, Joseph Grey end Theodore Barnes. Dr. p. K Robin* son is the advisor. 11
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Feb. 8, 1958, edition 1
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