Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / May 9, 1953, edition 1 / Page 6
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PAGE SIX TBB CABOLINA TIMES SATURDAY, MAT »th, ItSS DR. RALPH BUNCHE SHOWS HIS ITNION LABEL. ... The ■cene is the annual convention of the United Automobile Workeri, on the day more than 3000 delegates and guests heard a major address by Dr. Ralph Bunche. Here he shows his Amalgamated union label to an Amalgamated representative as Mrs. Bunche looks on. ^^.42* A. AND T. COLLEGE ROMANCE ENDS IN TV WEDDING IN N. Y. NEW YORK Miss Ruby Eleanor Troxler and Leslie James -Davis, both, former students at A. and T. College and whose romance be gan on the college campus, were married on the popular CBS-TV program, “Bride and Groom”, here last Wednesday, April 22, at high noon. The couple was selected for the television wedding on the basis of a letter written by the bride to the program producer which related interesting inci. dents In the romance of the pair which dated back to the fall of 1345, The love story revealed frequent separations of the two. The groom had to leave the col lege for work to assist his im mediate family and again by a call to the United States Army for his two-year stint. He was discharged from the service just a month prior to the wedding, the culmination of their dreams since college days. Following the ceremony which was solemnized by the pastor of the Salem Methodist Church of New York, the couple left immediately lor a week’s all expense honeymoon at the White Horse Lodge in upper New York state and were heaped with gifts given by a national milling firm (General Mills), sponsors of the program. Gifts included, among other things, pot>ular make refrigerator, electric range, silver service for 12, blankets, $100 wardrobe for bride and weddings rings for both. Also participating in the wed ding were: Mrs. Juanita T. Totten,, sister of the bride, Greensboro, maid of honor; Little Toni Totten, flower girl and nelce of the bride and J. W. R. Grandy, Greensboro, best man. Mrs. Davis, a graduate of A. and T. College in the class of 1948 with highest honors, is a native of Greensboro and is the daughter of Mr. T. Albert Trox ler. She is employed now at the College. Mr. Davis is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Davis of Oxford, N. C. Portia Burt Of Hillsboro Wins 2 Scholarships Miss Portia Burt, a senior at Central High School, Hillsboro, has won two scholarships offer ed by the North Carolina Col-' lege at Durham. Miss Burt earlier this month was awarded one of 16 James E. Shepard Memorial grants on the basis of a competitive exami nation. Last week she was among contestants vying for the annual Home Economics Scho larship. She won that one, too,i and plans to enter NCC next fall. Miss Burt is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. C.* Burt, Sr., and the sister of Moses C. Burt, Jr., retiring editor of the Campus Echo, student newspaper at North Carolina College. Other students placing second; and third in the Home Econo mics test were Margaret Spen-t cer, Randolph Training School, Ashboro, and Delores Taylor, Dillard High School, PAINTING...PAPERING DECORATING it Free Estimates Given "it CAROLINA DECORATORS PHONE 4-3913 211 BROADWAY DURHAM, N. C. I'g FULL PINT SOUR MASH BOURBON nuKii umu iwuH. nu t lofm iitiaiut if luiicir, ik.. iiiiniut, n. PROOF A & T CoUege Choir To Sing At First Calvary The A and T College Choir will be heard on “Mother’s Day”, May 10th, at First Cal-t vary Baptist Church, Moreliead: and Kent Streets. Coming from the second lar gest Negro college in the coun-i try, the choir is currently on its annual 300 mile tour, with con^ certs scheduled for New York* Philadelphia, Washington, D C., Cleveland and Pittsburgh. A and T’s Choirs reachedi their peak during the 30’s and 40’s under the able direction of Professors Warner Lawson andi Coleridge Bralthwaite, noted conductors. Concert tours coveri ed half of the continental Uni- ted States, along with CBS and NBC radio broadcasts. Professor Howard T. Pearsall, is now serving his third year as conductor of the singers. Pear sall, a product of Pittsburgh^ Penn.,* is a graduate of Fisk University. Since then, he has taught in the public schools of Cleveland, Ohio, and headed the music departments of A. and M. College, Normal Alabama) Storer College, Harpers’ Ferry, West Virginia and Tougalo Col lege, Taugolo, Mississippi. He is on the executive board of the M.M.N.C. and a member of the M.E.N.C. and A. A. U. P. NCC OBSERVES MUSIC WEEK Four nights of musical con certs have been planned at North Carolina on May 4,5,6, and 7 as part of the National Music Week observance this year. Concert time is 8 p.m. in Duke Auditorium. The programs start on Mon day night. May 4, with the NCC 75 voice mixed chorus under the direction of Samuel W. Hill, presenting their first concert after their triumphal Northern tour. Band Director W. I. Howard and the NCC Band will play orj Tuesday evening. Piano students of Prof. Ruth H. Gillum and voice students of Prof. C. Ruth Edwards will be among the participants in a full nights’ program on Wednesday. The Most Rev. Joseph Ol Bowers, First U. S. Negro Catholic Bishop, To Make First Radio Network Broadcast NEW YORK Arrangement for the first radio network broadcast in the United States by the Most Rev. Joseph Oliver Bowers, S.V.D., who last week became the first Negro to be made a Catholic Bishop in ^e United States, have been completed by Dr. George Crothers, CBS Director of Religious Broadcasts. Bishop Bowers’ talk wiU be transcribed on the campus of St. Augustine Seminary, Bay St. Louis, Miss., where he studied for the priesthood, and,where! he was consecrated as a bishop at a ceremony last week, presid ed over by Francis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York. His talk will be present^ ed at a future date on CBS Ra-> dlo’s “Church of the Air” pro gram. Bishop Bowers, 48, was bom in the British West Indies. He is now the Roman Catholic Bish-i op of Accra, Brittish West Africa. Nearly 700 Parents Expected For Mothers Day Program At A. & T. GREENSBORO Nearly 700 parents of stu dents at A. and T. College are expected to attend the annual Mother’s Day Program , a day’s event to be held here on Sunday, May 10. Mrs. Robert L. Vann, presi dent and publisher of a Pitts burgh (PITTSBURGH COURI ER) weekly newspaper will be| the principal speaker at the Sun-t day morning service at 11:00 o'clock. I Negroes Seen Too Quick To Blame Others For Own Shortcomings stacles are put in the Negro’s NEW YORK Negroes were urged to quit blaming all of their troubles on others when much of their difficulty is due to their own mishandling of affairs. It was suggested that they demand of their own leadership a clear er and more direct program of action that will eliminate discrimination and segregation and map a positive approach to the achievement of first- class citizenship. The appeal was made by Julius J. Adams, Member of the Executive Committee of the New York Republican State Committee, in a speech at the monthly Fellowship Breakfast of the Harlem Y. M. C. A. Residents, Sunday, in the the Little Theatre at the Branch. “No one would deny that there is heavy pressure from the majority, or that many ob- Rozena Jackson, graduating senior from Pascagoula, Miss., will be presented in the featured senior recital on Thursday even ing, May, 7. M&J FINANCX COW AUTO LOAN8 PHONE 3-5>71 NOBTH MANOVM STRAIGHTEN YOUR HAIR 10 MINUTES . . . You get « waterproof job and your hait will itay uraight for 20 days or more. KONGOLKNE Is the original hair (cftighceocr USE ONLY [IbrKnigliMaiafl •hontrnnuMli fuf *d4 iochM)] STILL LEADING AFTER 40 COAMCutiv* yMT* Atk fbc l^oagolcn* at anjr dn^Kon. Um only M labd dlrKS. // fttir mmM ■ KOM«OCWMICAlXO.ilC lO* WmCISWi ilM«l ... AND BABY MAKES THREE IMA HAPPY FAMILY BECAUSE OFSAVINGS WTTH A FUTURE AT Durham*B Headquarters For Thrift And Home Loatu. • We Welcome Your Account • CURRENT DniDEND RATE 3% Mutual Savings And Loan Ass'n. All Accounts Ingured Up To $10^000.00 112 W« Parrish Street Durham, N. C. path,” Adams |gW, “yet, I doubt seriously if the United States will fight another fra tricidal war to keep the Negro from gaining his full rights under the Constitution.” A. & T. COLLEGE FINALS SET; BEACH, PATTERSON SPEAKERS GREENSBORO 1 The fifty-fifth annual com mencement exercises of A. and T. College will be held in a four day celebration beginning on May 29. Featured speakers for finals include Dr. P. D. Pat terson, president of Tuakegeei Institute in Alabama, who will deliver the commencement ad dress and Dr. Waldo Beach, ol the Duke University School of Divinity, Durham, as the bac calaureate speaker. Dr. Patterson, wlio has served as head of the Alabama institUi tion since 1935, succeeding Dr. R. R. Moton, has worked at Tuskegee since 1928 as head oil the school’s Veterinary Division and a» Director of its School of Agriculture. He founded and ifl president of the United Negro College Fund, Inc., an agency* which raises fimds annually for the mainteiumce of the princi-' pal private colleges for Negroes in the nation. He is a member of the board of directors of many national organizations and com mittees. The noted educator and author has written one book, “What the Negro Wants” and has contributed to numerouH publications. His recent resigna tion from Tuskeegee to become director of the Phelps-Stoked Fimd comes immediately fol- lowing his appearance at A. and T. Dr. Beach, professor of Chris tian Ethics at Duke was pro-- fessor of Religion and college) pastor of Antioch College in, Ohio prior to coming to North Carolina. He is a graduate of Wesleyan University and of the Yale University Divinity School and holds the Ph.D. Degree from( the latter University. RCA VICTOR RECORD TO ADD IMPETUS TO NAACP DRIVE PHILADELPHIA The stirring RCA Victor ar- rangement of “Lift Every Voice and Sing," the hymn which has been adopted by the national office of the NAACP as the organization’s official campaign song, will be used in connection with, the association’s current mem bership drive in Philadelphia. Often called the “Negro Na tional Anthem,” this joint DILLARD’S SELF-SERVICE • Market And Grocery • % , “WE SELL THE BIST FOB LESS” 1212 FATETTEVILUE STREET TELEPHONE S-2885 PINT ll creation of James Weldon Johnson and his brother, i. Rosamond Johnson, is sung by RCA Victor’s youthfnl, pop ular 'baritone Johnny Hart man. He is assisted by an in terracial chorus and orchestra under the capable direction of the well-known composer-con- ductor, Howard Biggs. OVERTONS ityr MOWN MeffSSS? t/neChoice oui/v 4/5 QUART Write for nUK SuapI* OVEBTON HTOBNIO MTQ. OOMPANT IMS SMitt State StoMt OMcag* I. ni. Name AddrtM eity CARSTAIR8 BROS. DISTiaiNG CO., INC., NEW YORK, N. Y. BLENDED VmiSKEY, S6 PROOF, T1% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS For Real Estate, Bwitiagi Insurance, Repairs, And BaikHng Supplies See U^aON INSUBANGE AND REALTY GO. Tdephone: 3^521 814 Fayetterille St. Dnrfaant, N. C ACCESSIBILITY!! Customers who prefer to use Cash and Carry Dry Clean ing aervlce will find our plant eaay to get to and aanmd of parking apace. We are located near the major food atorsa wUch makea it easy for you to bring, and call for yout elotbea when you atop or drive to and from work. DURHAM LAUNDRY COMPANY OBT CLEANING Corner Oregaon and Peakody .Streeti' PkaM 4-Hl BAMERS’ FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY Durham, North Carolina Conservative - Solid ^ Dependable IT’S AN EASY MATTER TO CALL YOUR DOC3TOR, BUT WILL YOU BE AMJ: TO CX>VE» THE C50STT If You Are Not Secure, Write Or See Oxm Of Our AmUs Immediately About Ow fioe- pitalizatifon Flan, And HsaMh And Accident IiisuiyBoe. SOUTHERN FIDELITY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY Agrats: Thomas Nichoki and H. C. Dcvto S27 Ebn Street DUSMl Painting, Pi^ring And Repairs Experienced Workers THOMAS GREENE Day Phone 5*7751 — Night Phone 4-1045 508 MASSEY AVENUE DURHAM, N. C A Complete Electric And Transportation Service DUKE POWER COMPANY Dial 2-151 Comer Mangiim and Parrish Sts.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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May 9, 1953, edition 1
6
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