Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Feb. 1, 1964, edition 1 / Page 11
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CONGRATULATIONS Walter Means, left, co-captain of the A\T College tank team, is congratulated by Woodrow Willis, captain for the Morgan State team, following Meares' vic tory in the 500-yard free style event in a dual swim meet held last week in Greensboro. The Aggies defeated Morgan, 61-33. Pick the Right Pup Be sure your new puppy is in good condition. Accept no underfed pup or one whose eyes or nose are running. Check his teeth and gums. Teeth should be clean and white. His gums should be pink. Look in his ears and see if they are free from any eigne of infec tion or inflammation. Feel his body—see if he seems firm and solid. Stand him up where you check his stance and see if his limbs are straight and not twisted or deformed in any way. See if he tend* to favor any limb. Os equal importance with the physical condition of the pup is his personality, say experts at the Purina Dog Care Center. Don’t buy that cute little fellow over in the corner who seems to be shy of his litter mates. A normal, healthy dog is aggressive and wants to make friends with you and the whole World. TWO-POINT LAYUP Robert Sounders (52). guard for the AtsT College Aggies, buckets a layup under the guard of Clar ence Stewart (34), forward with the N. Carolina College Eaglet, in ah important Cl A A basketball game played last week at the Greensboro Coliseum. Awaiting the rebound at left are: William Jones (4). of the Eagles, and George Mack (10), of the Aggies AtsT won the ball game, 90-81. __ PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS They Appreciate Your Business CIAA STANDINGS BASKETBAUTSTANDINGS JANUARY 26, 1964 LEAGUE GAMES W L Rat. AU Games W l MARYLAND STATE COLLEGE 6 1 25.00 ‘ ? i N. C. A. <fe T. COLLEGE 8 1 23 88 a I DELAWARE STATE COLLEGE 4 2 21.97 6 J NORFOLK STATE COLLEGE 7 3 21.50 10 5 J. C. SMITH UNIVERSITY . 9 3 19.16 9 < WINSTON-SALEM STATE * 8 2 1900 12 3 MORGAN STATE COLLEGE 5 2 18.55 5 2 SHAW UNIVERSITY 8 3 18.18 8 4 SECOND DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA COLLEGE 6 6 15.00 8 7 VIRGINIA UNION UNIVERSITY 3 5 15.00 4 7 SAINT PAUL'S COLLEGE 4 5 14 44 . 4 t HAMPTON INSTITUTE 4 5 14.44 5 ( LTVINOSTONEE COLLEGE 2 5 14.18 2 t ST. AUGUSTINE’S COLLEGE 3 7 14.00 3 7 HOWARD UNIVERSITY 2 4 13.13 5 t ELIZABETH CITY STATE 4 10 12.85 4 1C FAYETTEVILLE STATE COLLEGE 1 8 11.11 11 VIRGINIA STATE COLLEGE 1 11 10.83 l 13 P. R. Leaser. CIAA Statistician. I Combines Entertainment With Information ■ Children’s television can be Informative as ■n oil as entertaining. Current proor of this is "The Funny Company,” a new show now being seen on local television throughout the country. Each five minute segment includes at least a minute-and-a-half sequence pro viding background information about an interesting subject that has been logically developed during the animated comedy portion of the show. Shown viewing the Wisenhelmer. an imaginative fsuper computer” which is one of the many ways of introducing educational sequences, are (from left) Super Chier, Busier Bell, Shrlnkln’ Violette, Jasper N. (for National) Park. Terry Dactyl, and Belli Laguna, one of the Company’s resident villains. s -*» ■ Head-On Collision Nemesis Head-on collision fatalities are a thing of the past on Detroit's John C. Lodge and Edsel Ford expressways. Since 1958, when median steel beam guard rail was installed on both highways to separate traffic moving in opposite directions. 4here have been no head-on collision deaths due to vechicles crossing over the median. Previously six persons were killed in head-on collisions when cars crossed over the median strip. Head-on collisions cause 5,800 automobile fatalities annually. Steel median guard rail's success in stopping such accidents is spurring its use throughout ths country. TENDER LOVING CARE is as inrhspen ihh a part of treatment at the i >arch of Dimes Arthritis Center at La Rabida Sanitarium, Chicago, av Are tried erne. or physical therapy. Above, Lucille Pitts, physical therapist, comfort' Patricia A. Courtney, 3 1 2 (hit) and Bernice Cul berson, iy t , before the children perform special exercise* for arthritics. March of Dimes programs assist 11 million Americans afflicted by arthntn dt%tases. A PLEASANT 'CRAM' SESSION North Carolina Col lege biology major R. Vance Smith, m sophomore from Hacken sack. N. J., probably finds assisting pretty freshman biology ma jor Rosetta Lee, from Tomahawk, N. C., a pleasant chore. The two ere studying in one of the study-seminar rooms In ths col lege’s Biology Building in preparation lor the oollege’e weak-long first semester exams. designs for the medals to be awarded to winners hf the various events at the forthcoming Tokyo Olympic Oamea next Fall designs were executed in plaster at the Osaka Mint Bureau, In accordance with the design officially determined since the Ninth Amsterdam Olympiad in 1928. The face of the medal features the words "THE 18TH OLYMPIAD, TOKYO, 1964," together With the female figure wearing an olive coronet. The reverse side (an the right) shows a young victor with • palm leaf in his hud and hnrnn on the shoulders of nine youths. Admitted Into Honor Group 1 Bk l:>-&... ■ •SBB ' ■ N«w Olympia Modal Ptilfirt TENDER LOVING CAM ' Tender loving cue Is as indispensable a part of treatment at the March of Dime* Arthritis Center at La Rabida Sanitarium, Chicago, as an medicine, surgery or phyrical therapy. Above, Ladle Fitts, physical therapist, comforts Patricia A. Courtney, 3Vi (left) end Bernice Culber son, 2Vi, before the children perform special exerdeee for arthrttlca March of Dimes program* aesirt II milUoa American! adMded bp arthritis diseases. DURHAM. Un Lavonia In* scram Alllaon, assistant professor of physical education at North Carolina College at Durham, wm admitted to memberahlp In PI Lambda Theta. Rho chapter, a national honor society for women in education at New York Uni versity, on January It. Women atndyinf In the field of education are selected far membership In PI Lambda Theta on the baela of faulty recommendation and ovtdeneo of superior scholastic achieve ment, profeaeional leadership ability, creativity, and aca demic excellence, Mrs. Alllaon la ourrantly on leave from North Carolina Co! lears and la studying on a doctoral pro gram at the New York University School of Education. She la the wife of Mr. P. V. Al llaon. Jr., secretary-treasurer of Durham's Mutual Savings and Loan Association- They are the parents of two children, a daugh ter. K Michele, and a son, P. Vin cent, m. Omegas Plan 50th Grand Conclave DENVER, Colorado—Plana for the Fiftieth Or and Conclave of the Omega Pal Phi Fraternity scheduled to be held here August 16-20, 1964. are being carried for ward rapidly according to infor mation given Alexander Bamea. Director of Public Relations for the Fraternity on a recent visit here * Chi Phi Chapter, headed by Dr. John Metz, is hoet to the meeting. William H. Ptnlcett la Or and Mar shal and Harvey McDaniel la the District Representative. Headquarters for the meeting Is the Cosmopolitan Hotel. The hotel will also fe the headquarters for all of the sessions. The "Mile High" City U leaving no stone* unturned and has so licited the cooperation of the Governor, the Mayor and other outstanding persons of the state and city. The social activities bid fair to surprising any ever staged for visiting brothers. Visitation cards will soon be h> the mall to Delegates and visiting brothers. The committee Is anxio us that these cards be returned as soon as possible due to the fact that Denver U a conventional i city and housing arrangements I must be made soon. RALEIGH. N. C. SATURDAY, FRBRUABY I, Iff Agriculture will contribute $22 .billion to-thq grass national product total value of sU goods and. ntrvioen produced In 3884. lint will aqual all the GNP money generated by ths auto motive industry which Is also estimated at $22 bflHon In 1964, as shown by ths shove chart. National defense will account tor SSB billion GNP dollars In 1964. according to an early ana lysis at the construction market by Johns-Manvllle Corporation, world-wide manufacturer and distributor of building produote. Construction, now America's largest industry, will put a whuuphig SB6 billion Into dr enlancn an amount equal to one seventh of the 6615 billion gross nation product forecast fOr ths same period and very dose to equalling to GNP- dol lar value the combined output ~ of an three next largest Indus tries national defense, the automotive industry and agri eoltuxjt the J-M market analy “Souls Os Black Folk” Published As Paperback The March on Washington, the Negro boycott of buses, the lunch counter si tins, end the freedom rid ers had many roots—Gandhi's movement of passive resistance, the 1904 Supreme Court school deseg regation decision, etc. But none of these has been more important, says Negro educator J. Saunders Redding, then a little book of es says published more than a half century age, THE SOULS OF BLACK FOLK by W. E B. Dußols. Mr. Redding, who teaches at Vir ginia’s Hampton Institute, has con tributed an Introduction to the book which Fawcett has published as s paperback this month. THE SOULS OF BLACK FOLK was find peMtshsd to 1903. It heralded s new sp |li Wes swvmm tvstisu* VU M*K part es ths American Negro— an approach es nen-vMeot aa ttvtam which achieved Its find success lees than a decade iia The beak still speaks eat strongly and dearly far the right of too Negro to America and everywhere to tail and complete eqaslHy with Me white brethren. Bay Wllktaa, executive secretary es too NAe A CP, has ceiled M. "One St toe great baa he es ear century. H should be read by every Ameri can who cherishes freedom” The late Dr. W. K B. Dußols Now Flowers-Scott Brings You o Washer With a Lifetime Transmission Warranty [ffifgal ONLY 199*° with •"* • NO MONEY DOWN WITH YOUR TRADE! • • Exclusive tlcfime wemmty on Velw powsr* tMSJmissioe purfc - T a Exclusive SpwsUtw* Y,gw«B" •**»► I' MHRHRR toectloa RRRBHRp '■“l • sic M-pomd capacity f SPEEDS * Warranty 8 • rwmHwMNlNltoWmW ***. . _ CYCLES « Automatic IUI even despite tow wetar Traaamiaahm preworet —l MMmHmm • Pint resistant, tom coat baked mmnl mm bn.* EASY 14 POUND CAPACITY AUTOMATIC WASHER Plenty of “We Serv- FREE Ice What Chartes Ream, Mg*. 16 Yean Experience in the Raleigh Area! FLOWERS-SCOTT Appliance 1412 New Bern Ave Phonw 828-4998 sis shown- Farmers will spend some $1,225 billion on farm construc tion of all kinds, ths J-M mar ket analysts estimates, with another $6.7 billion going for new highways, many of which will Improve road nets over which farmers get their pro duce to market. The J-M market analysts' ex pects total new construction In the United Btates to . hit $67 billion in 1984 —a new all-time high record with more than s2l billion additional going for alterations, modernisation, re pairs and maintenance, for a .total construction year of 288 billion. •"* graduated from Fisk University In 1888. Moving on to Harvard, ha spent four years of graduate study in psychology, philosophy and his tory, following thU with two years at the University at Berlin. He re ceived hie doctorate at Harvard. He later taught at Wllberforce, the - University of Pennsylvania, and Ah-' lanta University, Dr. Dußols serv ed as an early leader In the NAA CP and Is the author of many booka on Negro affairs. Every January since 1988 he’s been March of Dimes month. The 1994 March es Dimes fights birth defects, which afflict 250,000 children bprn ' each year In this country. g$ T* • A <r • PORCHES • ROOFING • SIDING • STORM WINDOWS • DOORS Far Information Call Wm. PRETTY. JR TE 3-6512 LEONARD ALUMINUM SPECIALTY * CONSTRUCTION COMPANY SB2 Soxth Bread Si WINSTON - SALEM, N. C. TOM MILLER, Sales Manager 11 i
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Feb. 1, 1964, edition 1
11
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