Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Dec. 28, 1963, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 THE CASOUNIAX RALEIGH. N. CX, BATOEMT, PECBMBKB Ml MM i * r y,. r‘ •s**;??*£> i L“ ’. Wi fl| - M. . .Jfc^BE *■ > x \ s 'Jp n^TTi ii j>Tl ~"i | iTiiriM ~a . y miflrrafyr • n?2r?%S£r .«•£- J^ r ■* J -' jH/ * fljj gjfftM v .V'j pSp"-.. 1 - W/S FIRST CHRISTMAS Little Samuel Tate, eeven months old, knows nothng of the problems which his parents, Dr. Samuel D. Proctor, president of AOtT College, end Mrs Proctor had in the preparation for Chrismaa in Africa last year. This is his first. CHURCH NEWS SMITH TEMPLE FREEWILL BAPTIST—Sunday School began at 10 am. Sunday with the superin tendent, Mr. Elbert Sanders, prs •iding. At 11 o'clock, tlhe Rev. J. D. Ray, pastor, made the call to worship with both the junior and senior choirs rendering music for the oc casion. The scripture lesson was taken from St Luke, 2nd chapter, verses 1-7. The morning prayer was also glven'by Rev. Ray, who brought us a wonderful message, from the Book of St Luke. His subject was; "No Room for the Master.” The Sunday School and YPCL will hold their Christmas program on Sunday, December 29. The pub lic is invited. Mrs. Cornelia San- : dera Moore is church reporter. MORNING STAR BAPTIST Church School opened at 11 a.m. The subject discussed was, “Bom to Make Men Free.” Regular morning service started with the singing of "Silent Night.” The scripture from the Book of John, 3rd chapter and 18'*h verse was repeated by all present “O Come All Ya Faithful" was sung next. Scripture was read from Isai ah 9:1-7. The Missionary offering was lifted and announcements ware made. Our pastor, the Rev. Samuel R. Spencer, Sr., brought us a soul-stlr ring message from the Book of Isaiah. His subject was, "A Child Is Bom.” We closed by singing. "Bless Be The Tie." ___ FUQUAY NATIVE VICE-CHAIRMAN OF RED CROSS (CONTINUED FROM FAOt 1> Field Director assigned to the Schwetnfurt Sub-poat, Mrs. Askew co-ordinates the actlvl ties of the local Gray Ladles. Staff Aides, Nurse’s Aides, and other Bed Cross volunteers from the Installation. She continuously reviews local needs, os expressed by community leaders, and through the Red Cross volunteer program provides appro priate Red Cross servioes to assist in meeting these needs. One of some 3.000 American Red Cross volunteer workers In the European Area, Mrs. Askew joins the more than two million Red Cross volunteers throughout America and at U. 8. military bas es overseas in furthering the hu manitarian efforts of the world wide Red Cross movement, which this year begins its second cen tury of service to mankind. Cops Baffled By Strangulation of Ex-NCC Student (CONTINUED raOM PAGE 1) of Callis W. Brown of Dur ham, whose lifeless body was discovered by a fellow tenant In the Mt. Royal Terrace a partmrnt where she lived with a pink scarf knotted tightly about her neck. Polioe theorized that she had been strangled several hours be fore her body was discovered, but were unable to find any evidence or clue to the murder. They ques- THE CAROLINIAN •Covering the Carolina*" 1 Published by the CarollnUa PublUhlns Company SIS E. Martin Street Baltixlt. N. C. t Entered *• Second Clsie Matter April e IMO. at the Poet Office lit Raleigh North Carolina under the Act of M,fCh SUBSCRIPTION RATES Six Month* 9* W Sal** Tax V*. & TOTAL On* Ye*r 9**o tale* T»x I* TOTAL 9*M Payable lit Advance Addrew all r>>mimin!c*tlon* end make all check* rid money orders payable to Tn* Amtujga'oaied Publisher*. Inc SiO f (dtaen Avenue New York 17 N Y. r ittontl Adverustn* Representative i -d m*Tiber of the Asa *cl*ted Nesro P ea* end the United Press Interns i nal Photo farvtce Tie Pub tahm IS not responsible foi t r rctur.i *f unaultcitad new* pic t 'res or aoverttsm* copy unless nec < :<-ry portage ccro-vwiies the, tom O jlnjon- e.\or*sred b» coluinm«tc in > ti.;s uc ..s.jsnei cio 00l mcrv-ariy re a sae.V flic Doilcy of this pane; BTU opened at 5:30 pm. with the president, Mr. John A. Marks, In charge. "Why Christinas?” was discussed by the group. We also enjoyed a wonderful Christmas program with Miss Hat tie Weldon In charge, later In the evening. Mrs. Jessie M. DeLoatch is church reported. tinned severed persona tn connec tion with Mrs. Browns’ death. Mrs. Brown’s body was (Recov ered by Carter L Bryant as he was on his way to empty a basket of trash. He had become concern ed when he aaw her apartment door slightly ajar, and went to investigate. He said he knocked on the door after calling Mrs. Brown’s name and falling to get a response. The door swung open as he knocked and he was stunned as he suddenly came upon the body of the actress lying on the floor below her sofa-bed. Bryant said he thought she had fainted and tried to revive her but couldn’t, ao he called the po lice and then notified the victim’s mother, Mra. Tommie Louise Win frey. Police found a claw ham mer, a table knife, and a towel and sheet stained with blood In the apartment, all of which were taken to tho crime labor atory for toeto but have failed to yield any evidence. They ■aid there was also Indications of a struggle, but testa later showed Mrs. Brown was not criminally assaulted. Employed as a credit clerk by a downtown mall order house, Mra Brown recently appeared In lead ing roleo In two plays proudoed here by the Arena Flayers, a Bal timore theatrical group. The plays wore the Arena Players’ produc tion of “Come Back Little Sheba” and “The Little Hut.” Mrs. Brown attended elementary school In Lynch. Ky„ and was valedictorian of her graduation class at Union High School In Statesville, N. C., before going to North Carolina College She also attended Hampton Institute in Virginia, before coming here. While a student at NOC Mra. Brown was one of the first persona to be arrested In sit ins In Durham. Sbe and her husband were separated In May, 1962. MAID ADMITS POISONING (CONTINUED FROM PAOR 1) Local authorities sent samples of the strychnine to the Medical Col lege Hospital in Charleston for fur ther analysis. YULE STRIKE* OF PORTERS IS AVERTED (CONTDfURn FROM PAOR I) James J. Reynolds aald three principal banes were at stake —the porters’ monthly work schedule. Job protection and wages. About 2.000 porters employed by Pullman, the New York Central, the Chicago. Rock Island and Pacif ic and the Soo Line were involved. JURYFREES FIVE WHITE COPS IN MISS. (CONTINUE FROM FA OR « gross of their civil rights, were set free here by a Federal Jury last week. The five were accused of beating five civil rights workers arrested tn Winona. Mississippi after they entered a white rest room at a bus station there. State highway patrolman John L Rasln-er, Montgomery County Sheriff Barb Wayne Fatridge, and Winona Pol tee Chief Thoms* J. Herod. Jr., i all claimed they were Innocent of 'he seyen charges bmu-ht t> -alnri th-m by the Jastlee r*e«ar*ment. Th* Jt’stic* Droartm-n* called "*r wltr-na-a including four of the N"-to c'mplalninte, and two F : Pi p-cn‘a .’it-" J-vi-i—n. 'Env-ster Slnt" 1 - MI'S For-marv Freeman, and I»wh*k» Oar*. all testified that th tty bad been beaten In the Win ona JalL Mr*. Fannie Loa Hamer told the court that ehe arae kicked tar Sheriff Patridge after he yanked her odt a bue In front of the bus station In Winona. She testified that she remained on the bus while her four companions enter ed a wgwgniwl lunch room. All fly* wan arrested on charges of disorderly conduct. - • Mies Aimed Fonder, a Held sec retary for the Bouthem Christian Leadership Conference, testified that three of the defendants beat her tat the Winona city jail on June 8. She said. "And I’m not completely over It yet." TWO ELDERLY PERSONS DIE IN HOME FIRES (continued non pack o Sarah Newsom, went back after dinner late In the day. She is the one who also found the home In flames later. Cause of the blaze was not Im mediately determined. In Winston-Salem, fire partially destroyed a small frame house on the city's northeast side late Thurs day night, killing. Mrs. L. Gwynn, about 80 years old. Mrs. Gwynn’a body was drag ged from t’er biasing parlor by a neigh 1 .It was discovered on the poren by authorities after Eugene Adams pulled her out, but she was already dead. The cause of this fire could not be determined, nor whether Mrs. Gwynn burned or suffocated -to death. ’ “REVERSE FREEDOM RIDERS” VISIT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) Included In the visit was a trip to the resort island of Mar tha's Vineyard, off Cape Cod and a memorial service at the birthplace of the late President John F. Kennedy in nearby Brookline. Rallies were held on Monday and Tuesday in Concord, Mass., and Rutland, Vt., on Wednesday ; (Christmas Day> before the group loaves for home in North Carolina, j NIGHT RIDERS BOMB HOME, SHOOT WORKER (CONTINUED FROM PAGE i) tern be r 3, Sasser deputy sheriff D E. Short ran three SNCC workers —Ralph Allen, Prathia Hall and Willie Paul Berrien—out of town at gunpoint. Short was later sued by the U. S. Justice Department but was acquitted. On Ocotber 29, 1902 three SNCC worker! were Jail ed in Bronwood, near Dawson, on "trespass” charges after they enur ed a white-owned grocery store to canvass for voter registration. In Atlanta, the Student Non violent Coordinating Committee aaked President Lyndon B. Johnson to "act Immediately to halt bombings and shootings aimed at Intimidating voter reg istration worker* In Southwest Georgia.” The SNCC protect from Chairman John Lewis quoted President John F. Ken nedy’s remarks after Mrs. Dan iels’ bom* was fired upon a year ago, and two girls were shot In Mississippi. The lata President then said: "To shoot . . . two young people who were involved in an effort to register people, to burn churches as a reprisal, I consider both cow ardly as well as outrageous.” In Albany, Slater King, president of the Albany Movement also protest ed th* bombing and shooting to President- Johnson. King said “the shooting and bombing will be re peated unless strong presidential action is taken.” RACIAL PEACE, GOODWILL PLE * ISSUED IN CITY (rONTINUEO n»OM I) complacency and peace of white people.” i ■He concluded by saying, “we ! CARNATION j COOKING HINTS form I ,IE SERVICg DtMCTOR AND Me* STAM V Treat both youngsters and oldsters to hot, steaming Mocha Mug. It’s perfect to serve after skiing skating. Carnation Evaporated Milk blends with other ingredients for extra body and smoothness. Do try it soon! MOCHA MUO * k (Makes 8-ounce cup) 1 HMt-fttri |m*ont cefT?e Vs cup undiluted CARNATION llobleapeem Instant EVAPORATED MILK cotea mix % teojpeon vcnilla I Isaupssn sugar Boiling water, to moke one cup I ' Scald mug. Measure Ll 'Jit coffee, cocos mix and sugar into mug. Add Carnation and vanilla. Fill mug with boiling watri SUr and serve. C 789 Printed i* L’-S A. <l2?' II 11l iO A>ic..Vj r«si' CHitiAiM„S CoNfr-Ul NC*,S Eight students from Livingstone College will speed part of their Christmas vacation attending meetings. Six will attend the 18th annual Ecumenical Student Christian Conference Dec. 27 thru Jan. 2nd, at ‘Ohio University, Athens, and two will go to Mi ami Beach, Fla., for the Mid-winter Beach Conference sponsored by the Southern Ares Connell, YMCA. Shown above, left to right, first row are Saundra Ann Smith, Washington, D. C.; Francis Inman. Wash ington, D. C.; and Clement Ugorji, Lagos Nigeria, West Africa. Back row, left to right are James Gavin, 111, Mobile, Ala; James McCoy, Lumberton; and Barbara Wright, Matthews. Not shown are Marie French, Salisbury; and Frank Davis, Rockingham. “Ahamal And The Night Visitors:” Va. State Music Prof To Appear On Television Show Christmas Nile PETERSBURG, Va—A Virginia 1 State College music professor will appear in the new NBC-TV version of Gian Carlo-Menotti’s Opera, "Ahmal and the Night Visitors,” to be telecast in color Christmas night (9 p.m. EST). Willis C. Patterson, bass, assist ant professor of music and director of the Opera Workshop at the Col lege, is cast as King Bolthi-ar in ] the Opera’s 14th presentation on the NBC-TV network. Heading the cast in the title role I is a 12-year-old boy-soprano Kurt Yaghjlan. Martha King will sing the role of his mother. The other two new kins are Richard Crosa, bass-baritone as K> n g Melchoir. and • John McCollum, tenor, as King sings the Page’s role. Choreogra- Caspar. Baritone Julian Patrick who bring tills message are fel low North Carolinians and earn estly desire to bring peace with justice to our communities. We as you to lota us at this Christ mastime in being renewed by the spirit of Christ that we be not con formed to the customs and prac tices of our communities, but that we be transformed and thus show In our lives and in the lfe of our communities what is the accept able will of God.” CHAPEL FILL ARRESTS NOW TOTAL 14* (CONTINUED from p»gf n retired white Episcopal minis ter, who waa among those ar rested last week. Trials of those arrested wiU be gin early In January, 1964. Education makes a people easy to lead, but difficult to drive: easy |to govern, but impossible to en slave. pber and principal dancer Don ald McKayle, assisted by Sylvia Waters and Louanna Gardner. Her bert Grossman is conductor. , Washington School News The Washington School Music ; Deportment presented a program of Christmas music at th* PTA meet j tag Monday night, December MS. Th j program consisted of toe staging of Cameron McGraw’s “Three French Noels” done by the Ensem ble. Two numbers, ”Lo, How ■ Rose E*re Bloom,” and "Sheep Safe ly Graze" were rendered fay a spe cial group from the eighth grade. Soloists for the evening were John Leak, Bernard Lassiter and Jo Ann* Cannady. MAKE A DATE NOW FOR NEXT YEAR! I JOIN I UUIf ■ ■ CHRISTMAS % Money For Fun! i I SAVINGS % M “ W F “ Gi “ \ club Jr r JOIN I*o W T^** I** 1 ** !save receive - MON., NOV. 18, 1963 2.00 100.00 I 1 “ ——————— What a wonderful feeling! Chri’mas without money wor> 3.00 150.00 ties! And it’s ao easy with one of our Christmas Club mem» __________ berahipa. Select the membership that beat fits your budget. n _ A Then save the small amount (an amount you will hardly 5.00 ZuU.UU miss) each week. This time next year, you’ll be all act for I. i———— your Greatest Christmas ever. 10.00 500.00 * LARGE ENOUGH TO SERVE YOU ... jgjWfggl SMALL ENOUGH TO KNOW YOU . . 4TODAY I Mechanics & Fanners Bank ft mwTWMm FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION jj RALEIGH - DURHAM - CHARLOTTE | “Ahmal and the Night Visitors” was commissioned by the National Broadcasting Company and was I first performed on Christmas, 1991. Mrs. Jewel Lassiter, chairman of the membership committee present ed cash awards to the following teachers whose classes were depart ment winners during this year’s membership drive: W. A. Rainbow, Mrs. Hazel N. Logan, Mrs Ruth Smith, Mrs. O. H. Hill, and Mrs, Verm R. Morgan. Ob Thursday/' December 19th, Mrs. H. H. Coburn’s 7-4 class pre sented “An Empty Gesture." The play told of a teen-age girl and her derision net to give any Christ- PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS mas gits. Thk was head way of re volting against the eqmmerdall*- lag of Christmas. Her English pro fessor convtnoos her that thtotsa somewhat desperate move and dm finally deride* to send gift*. The comedy was thoroughly enjoyed fay the Junior high students. Main charatcers were: Mrs. Stan ton. Claudia Reid; Mr. Stanton. Jay D, Ashbury; Dorothea. Chie Handy, Lou Grime*. Marvin Bailey; Gwen Jones, Pauline Goza; Grandma Stanton, Barbara McNeil; Profes sor Neale, Harvey McCullers; Jim my Lane, John Cannady; Joan Lane, Captolas Johnson. The narra tor waa Michele Palmer. j CARNATION j COOKING HINTS FiftM HOME SERVICE DIRECTOR AND HER STAFF \ * C#TT Hataoff to the New Year! Make New Year’s parties memorable ones by serving Turkey-Olive Curry. Double-rich Carnation Evaporated Milk insures lump. I free curry sauce every time. Keep a few of the familiar red and white cans on your kitchen shelf. You’ll use them often. TURKEY-OUVI CURRY • (Malces 6 to 8 servings) , 1 tablespoon butter 1 teblsspsans chopped parsley 1 tablespoon flour V« cup minted onion 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon lemon |ulee 1 tablespoon curry powdor % cup (2% ounce can) i 2 cups undUutod CARNATION slieod rtpo oOvoo EVAPORATED MILK 1 «upo dlcod sookod hrrfcoy Melt butter in saucepan. Stir in flottr, salt, and carry powder. Gradually add Carnation. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly. Add parsley, onion, lemon Juice, olives and turkey. ’ BOat to serving temperature. Serve over cooked rice. Garnish . with curry accompaniments such as: chopped salted peanuts, pineapple chunks, flaked coconut, chutney, crisp baoon bits or raisins. MB. JAMES MANLY Funeral servicea for Mr. James Manly, who died to Lumberton las. Wednesday, were held at the Ra leigh Funeral Homo Chapel Satur day at 11:00 am. Th* Rev. T. C. w. m .r.« officiated. Burial followed to Mount Hope cemetery. Ha la survived by on* brother. Mr. Robert Manly, Greensboro; four nephew* and two nieces.
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 28, 1963, edition 1
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