Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Dec. 19, 1964, edition 1 / Page 9
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The Messiah Presentedßy Allen Choir COLUMBIA, S. C.—The Allen U niver»ity Department of Music pre sented the university choir in its annual Christmas program, last Sunday in the university auditori um, under the direction of John Wesley Hunter, with Frederick Montgomery as accompanist In addition to the “Messiah”, the choir sang. “Coral of the Bells”; “Silent Night"; “Holy Night"; “Feast of the Holy Kings’; “Hacia Belan Va'un Borneo"; "Ya Viene la Vieja”; “Hail Maty” and the “Hallelujah Chorus." Guest soloist Peter Felder, who possesses a tenor voice of rare qual ity has been privileged to sing the tenor solo in Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony at Columbia University, and at Town Halt Student soloists included: so pranos, Phyllis Gibson, Detroit; Cynthia Massengale, Sumter; Grade Robinson, Pamplico; Caro lyn Wharton, Due West. Nellie Miller, Manning, contral ton Tenor, William Nelson, Charles ton. Basses James Dukes, New York City and John Singleton, Brunswick, Gs. The choir has presented con certs at the six annual conferences of the AME Seventh Episcopal Dis trict which were held this Fall. Vets Corner EDITORS NOTE: Below are authoritative answers by the Veterans Administration to some of the many current questions from former service men and their families. Fur ther Information on veterans benefits may be obtained at any VA office. Q —My father, who was to tally disabled in Korea, died in a ear accident In IPM. Am I eligible for training assist ance from the VA? A— The new law providing training for children of veterans permanently and totally disabled due to military service includes those families where the veteren so qualified has since died. You should make official application to the VA to determine your rights. Q —Am I entitled to care in a VA hospital if all my service was In peacetime? A—-A peacetime veteran may be admitted to a VA hospital If lie received service-connected disabil ity compensation, was discharged or retired for disability incurred in line of duty, or has been a warded the Congressional Medal es Honor. Q—l have heard (hat the so Kentucky Straight Bourbon •2,50 *3§s AA run *A</i QT. I • i H I ■III a • I I HU •! uHfll I HU a . I Mill * B k I BELLOWS 1 I (CBOimBON J I ■ KENTUCKY —1 B 'Lsirajght aouauaowwhiskhv/ |j 1 , dfotUolSfadk dfotofyfy 9 I jCTHuuoWQMuwnr 9 'r- -f* i. XXMtMM r * ' t PEACE COR PS MEN AT NCC — it three-man group of Peace Corps repreeentmtiree visited North Caroline College last week, giving information on life in the organisation and euperrieirig feats lor inteteeted students. Here the trio shows pamphlets to three' unidentified students. The Peace Corps officials are Sterling King, second from left, Joe Howerton, and Morgan Little. The group spent three days on the college’s Durham'campus. BEHIND THE HEADLINES BY CHATWOOD BALL Rhodesia, formerly known as Southern Rhodesia, held an “elec tion” on Nov. 3 to determine wheth er that Bristish colony should be come fully independent. There are four million black Rhodesians and 210,000 European settlers. About 13,000 Africans were permitted to vote in the "election.” All Os Rhodesia's African Chiefs voted along with toe whites for full Independence from the British connection. These chiefs have long re ceived monthly salaries from the white Rhodesian govern ment. So it was a clear case of whs pays the piper calling the The lesson of history appears to have no meaning for these bought called paraplegic housing. Is also available to blinded veter ans. Is this correct? A—Assistance, up to SIO,OOO, in acquiring aepcially adapted hous ing is provided for veterans wlch service-connected total disabilities Including the loss of permanent loss of use of both legs requiring use of wheel chair, crutches, eons or braces. For veterans with serv ice-connected blindness, the loss of use of one leg is sufficient to qualify. and paid tor African chiefs so long as their monthly monetary al lotments continue rolling in. Independence for Rhodesia would victimize that country’s four mil lion Africans and place them even more tightly under the boots of apartheidist Prime Minister lan Smith and his like-minded fellow racist rulers. Rhodesia* inept African Chiefs are outside the mainstream of Afri can thought apd are ignorant of the facts of the history of Rhode sia's next-door neighbor. South Africa. As long as the British connection was maintained in South Africa, the Africans did enjoy certain rights, restricted though they were. But as seen as Ike Bristish connection wao severe* sntf South Africa became fully in dependent and under control of the Boer-Dnteh racists, the dark night at apartheid de scended, Matting eat all these few rights that Africans pee "S’ wa, rule of snsrthcld awaits Rhe desia’s few milllen Africans if the British cennectlen skonld be broken and If Rhedesls be while settler rale. Os Course, independent or not, Rhodesia’s African chiefs would continue to pocket their monthly salaries in payment for continuing to play the role at brought Uprle Toma American voters on Novembw I soundly rejected the presidential candidate whose platform covertly contained a stale’s right plank. Despite this, die-hard southern ers will continue to contend that the question of equal civil rights ought to be left to “voluntary stata action.” tThis being a country of freedom of opinion and freedom of speech. Southerners are entitled to their narrow viewpoint, which is Strand ed putside the American main fir earn and has been soundly re jected by the American people. The proposition of “voluntary state action” raises a tow pertinent questions that need to be answered: L Why have Be few white Sea the men volunteered to sappert equal civil rights dm tog the past IN years? 1 What have the Sea there Mates been doing to promote rights thraogh “val- MMartppr* heeet* kU<tl,<f Nsgraas vats In toe recant “Voluntary state action” in the South has not produced and can not be expected to produce satis factory answers in the field of a qual civil rights for All American citizens. Hits being so, the answers will Yes, We All Talk BT MAICDI H BOULWAU DTSLALIAS QUESTION: I was reading re cently s hook on the education of exceptional children, and I name upon the term “dyslalte”. What does It meant—H. L. P. ANSWER: Br “dyriaha” Its toot* I traceable to congenital ’ and organic defects of the apoeeh ar ticulators, obstruction in tho phanynx (throat) like tomlle and growttaa. ohetnwUon la the nasal pswri Ilka enlarged poor bearing. mwkO as obotrur ttono the anterior portion of the hypenuund; RuVtMnßd) si tone. H the miaarttoulatlons are due to damage to the brain or nervoua system, then wo bare a meet) dta arder T^e par allied, or partlaHy paralysed, preventing fwodoiaofinoM Should the brain *•—r occur in the language areaa of the brain. wia^hare^yiwtitles^n to hie speech prehte.toe*paUerU exhibits a personality modtflea vMegotoDrriM.i?BoSmre! n£ now have to be sought In the Fed eral Civil Rights Act A white columnist recently men tioned in a daily newspaper that many members of the Poll-h ethnic minority often complain sarcastical ly about the “Negro problem.” Many of these shallow-rooted over having to live “eyeball-to-aye ball” with Negroes. But Negroes ware in this country long before moat of the Poles or their immediate ancestors took pas . sage in the steerage for America. Such uneasy Poles ore fully free to take return passage back to their ancestral Poland. There are no Negroes in Poised. Hence such Poles could easily es cape from the “Negro problem” and from hnrlnn to lire ‘cyctiT! to. eyeball" with such old-line Ameri cans as Negroes are. ... jBMMMM li K CAGE STAR, FAMILY VISIT RELATIVES HERE John Bacon, scoring star of the Southern California Troians, poses with his mother, Mrs. Jeannette Baoon, and sister, Deborah, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Bacon’s ware weekend guests of their relatives, Mr. end Mrs. Herman Hasty and son, Georgs, of Pfeiffer Drive, Raleigh. It Costs Yob Nothing • To find out bow you on step up late pour own home on poor own land ia ’64 • To see how the new tax cut can help you atop waizting money on mat • • To find out If you can be OK’d for a OI or rHA borne loam to beautiful... Biltnore Hills Estates o Caiiour Building Agents Now Company John W. Winters • J & Company 6766 High Court Ends Fla Interracial Sex Ban WASHINGTON—The U. & Su- I prime Court said this weak that | Florida ednnot make It a crime tor Negroes and whites who are net married to occupy the same room at "*«ie This ruling came six waste after attorney of tho NAACP Legal De fense Fuad argued before the high court In behalf of a Miami Beads couple Mias Connie Hoffman, white and Dewey Mcl<aughlin, Ne gro. qiradeias eeavtcted under a Florida Law that made tt a crime tor a “Ne wha are net married to each ether (to| ... habitually Hr* In sad eeoapy tenths sight tone ‘We find nothing,” wrote Justice Byron R. White in rise Court's un animous decision. “Which makes tt essential to punirit promiscuity by one racial group and not that of an other. “There is no suggestion that a white person and a Negro are any the same room together titan the more likely habitually to occupy white or tho Negro couple or to engage in illicit intercourse if they do.’’ he said.- eeaaael oTtoo'NAACPLagal the Supreme Ceurt “did toe •brie as In Striking dawn this ceoriefteu. Teacher Dies In ' Class; Pupils Are Calm NEW ORLEANS (NPI) - Mrs. Gladys Pitcher Roes, teacher In the McDonogh 36 public school of New Orleans, seemingly in good health according to reports from her fam ily, dropped dead before her class last week. The children did not panic, but sat quietly until another teacher an the principal arrived and a sub stitute teacher was provided. Mrs. Ross was a former resident of Baton Rouge, but had bean doing long-term substitute teacher work In »«.* Oi ieiin* .she left t hus band and two children, one boy and one girl. Mi a legal scatter, tola wSial*Storenees ITtaw^are The Supreme Court did not deal with the Legal Defense Fund's argument against Florida's law prohibiting interracial marriage. OBITUARY MR. FLETCHER R. PUGH Funeral aerrioe for Mr. Fletcher Richard Pugh, as 6041 K Hargett Street, won conducted from the Kuril Metropolitan AMEZ Church Wedneaday afternoon at 8 o'clock Ha died Thursday night. Burial followed In Carolina Bi blical Gardena. Surviving are his wlto, Mrs. Basie Puri), of the home; two daughters, Mrs. Vir ginia Griffin. Norfolk. Va.. Mrs. Olivia Bailey, Baltimore, Ml; one aon. Watcher Purl), Jr., Suffolk. Va; one step-eon, Herbert Crav en. Brooklyn. N: Y.; two alstets Mrs. Mary Gordon, British W. L: Mrs. Emma Holland. Suffolk, Va.: one brother, Clarence Pugh, New York; and sixteen grandchildren LET ME HELP YOGI V TOC HAVE PROBLEMS OP ANY KINDS I Perhaps it Is financial, love, or family troubles I feel sure that I can help you with your par ticular problem, if you will have faith and trust tn me. Write me today, strictly con fidential. ANNETTE'S PERSONAL SERVICE P. to Bos )-F Witt* borne, C. P.. South Africa BMIM w-0M #sst ; Ireflßl jg'Ssy A&P STORES WILL BE CLOSED r«!l open dec. i9TH All Day Saturday, Dec. 26th JANE PARKER OVER 2/3 FRUITS AND NUTS FRUITCAKE c lb. 009 q lb. 989 ii/ ia *49 °RINgJ °RINGfI ,/2 BAR Ij. GLACED FRUITS YOUR JAA YOUR AAA CHERRIES choice A JL choice IIKL PINEAPPLE pkg. pkg . WV GLACED FRUITS, , ijd. »-o- CQ PEELS OR CITRONS "* MC "* DOC «--- MILK OB BARK CHOCOLATE COATED WARWICK CHERRIES -■ 49c BALSAM CHRISTMAS TREES • V j rl QQni QQ i.ov S,ZE 1a99 tbs caaoiataa RALEIGH, N. C, SATURDAY, DECEMBERS ,16. iWI DRIVE SAFELf II 1 Olonn. 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The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Dec. 19, 1964, edition 1
9
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