Nraiti Series Mirklit9l4tli Year For St. Aug. College Starts Feb. 1 RALEIGH — The 94th Anni versary of Saint Augustine’s Col lege will be observed at the ottl- Iftge during the first week of February. Dr. PrezelL ItolithBon, Chi^lfr man of the Fouoder’ Dav Coriv^ niittee, announced a piogram which will begin on February 1 and end on Sunday, Febru- ry 5. Speakers are Attorney William S. Thompson of Washington, D. '■ C. ana the Rev. Gustave Caution of Savannah, Georgia. On Wednesday*^ight, February 1, the Saint Aupi.istine’s Players will present a play in T&>.or Hall at 8:00 p. m. The title .of the play is “Look Back in Anger”, by John Guten. On Thursday, February 2 the Saint Augustine’^ Choir will pre sent a concert in Taylor Hall at 8.D0 p. m. On Friday night, February 3, “Falcons” will meet the Shaw University “Bears” in a CIAA Conference game at Shaw gym nasium. Hundreds of Alumni and friends will gather on the campus Satur day morning for the Annual Al umni Workshop in the Science Amphitheater. The theme for the workshop is “Greater Alumni Support for the Private Colleges”. Consultants are Dr. John Til ley, Director of Public Relations at Shaw .University, and Purdie Anders, Director of Public Re lations at Saint Augustine’s Col lege. 0 Nat Cole on Ed Sullivan Siiow Jan 29 NEW YORK — Nat King Cole will appear on “The Ed Sullivan Show” Sunday, January , 29th, (CBS-TV, 8;00-9;00 p.m.) for the first time in almost three years. The singing star, who has just cancelled plans to make his Broad way musical debut this year, ex pects to undertake a more active role in TV exposure for thi.s sea son, with the Sullivan show among the first of specially sche duled appearances. His TV stints, for the last, fe\v ' years, have been confined to oc- I casional “spicials” and his own series. OFF TO EGYPT—Junlut Byron Ruftell, Jr.j • sophomore In agricultural •nglne«ring at A&T Collcg*, has b«*n s«lect«d as ont of four outstanding 4-H boys to r«pr«s«nt Amtrican farm youth at the International Agri cultural Exhibition to be htid in Cairo, Egypt, March 21-Aprll 21. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. RwsmII, Sr., who live on a farm near Warrenton. Musical Work Shop Planned For Girl Scout Leaders A Workshop on Folk-Dance and Song will be held for Ditsrlct IV Adult Troop Leaders and Troop Committee Members at 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, January 24, at Stanford L. Warren Public Library. The Workshop will be conduct ed by Miss Violet Perry, Mrs. Ze- nobia Jefferson and Mrs. Jessie Pearson, District Director. The Bright Leaf Girl Scout Council is conducting similar Worshops throughout the area. Leaders are asked to bring their Pocket Song Books, and to wear comfortable clothes. Do not place infra-red bulbs in farrowing houses- closer than 30 inches' to inflammable material. The 19611 North Carolina cotton allotment is 508,810 acres 7.2 per cent more than I960. Overton’s Pressed Face Po#der ... is a new and STiiootlier com pact powder that will give complexion a soft natural look . . . it's the powder you’ve been searching for. It is blended with a creamy foundation that will not streak . . . stays on longer than most loose powder . . . and the no-spill compact keeps your purse neat! Only 59c (plus tax) Mirror-Compact—$1.10 . (plus tax) Overton Hysrienic Manufacturing Co. CmCAGQ 9^j|LU —. J-i.it ' I' — Founder's Daf Events Slated For St. Paul's LAWRENCEVILLE. Va.—“Every alumni club president and all General Alumni Association offi cials have been invited to return to the Saint Paul's College cam pus on the weekend of March 17- 19, for the annual observance of Founder’s Day and the firpt win ter Alumni Weekend. President Earl II. McClenney says that - during the upcoming inaugural of the Winter Alumni Weekend, consideration will be given to a celebration of the Dia mond Jubilee of the college, when the 75th anniversary of the insti tution will be elaborately observ ed It was established in 1888 by the late Archdeacon James Solo mon Russell. Dr. McClenney, the third presi dent of Saint Paul’s, is entering his Jlth year as chief administra tor of the LaVvrenceville college. A distinguished clergyman of the Protestant Episcopal Church, the Rev. Joseph Nicholson of Kan sas City, Mo., will be the princi pal speaker on Founder’s Day. He will be heard at the eleven Q’clock observance set for Memorial Chap el here on Sunday, March 19th. At nine o’clock a.m. on Friday. March 17, activities will be launched with a program to be addressed by James H. Harris of Danville, Va., current president of the General Alumni Associa tion. That evening in Kirby Audito rium at eight o’clock a dramatic offering will be presented by the Randolph Edmonds Players, the student dramatic organization. On Saturday, March 18, activi ties will resume with a 10:00 a.m. symposium by the representatives of alumni clubs artd the General Alumni Association. In this dis cussion the stress will be upon the aims and objectives of the col lege and the role and responsi bilities in that connection of the alumni. An outstanding speaker to be named later will deliver an address. ' O NON-VIOLENCE, VOTING METHODS TO BE EXPLAINED LYNCHBURG, Va., — The Southern Christian Leadership Conference in cooperation with the Lynchburg Improvement As sociation will sponsor a two-day institute on nonviolence and voter-registration. ' Th^ institute w^l begin Friday evening, January 20, 1961, with a state-wide mass meeting featur ing Jim Lawson, newly appointed Staff Consultant on Nonviolence and Wyatt Tee Walker, Director of SCLC. AWARDED DIMES DRIVE SCHOLARSHIP—Among the 20 Negro students who have re ceived scholarships and fellow- hips, awarded by The National Foundatjon during this school year for study in the field of helath, is Mrs. Charoltte Brant ley Holmes of Winston-Salem. Mrs. Holmes is studying physi cal therapy at the College of Medical Evangelists, Loma Lin da, Calif. The awards to the -20 students total $29,717.50 and were made pessioie oy March of Dimes funds. You can help train many more sorely needed medical profesionals by contri buting to the New March of Dimes, Jan. 2-31. This canipaign for funds is the sole support of the National 'Foundation which has broadf^n^ its program to tjndude not only polio but birth defects and arthritis — three major cripiplers. Please Say YES to the New March of Dimes. Organizations Helping Evicted Tenn. Voters Meet to Coordinate NEW YORK — Xhe NAACP, work toward coordinating their met with representatives of four relief activities and to look for other national groups here this week in an attempt to coordinate relief activities for Haywood and Fayette County, Tenn., share croppers. Representai'ives of the Ameri can Friends Service Committee, the National Sharecroppers's Fudd, the Congress of Racial Equality and the National Com- mitt.Te for Rural Schools met at the call of Roy Wilkins, NAACP executive secretary. The organizations agreed to a pillar of c^s twoliiles^^p! I The more , checks writtq form a pill Constantly^' a greater numb of peopk are enjoying the convenience and safety of the check y^y of paying obliM- dons./Don’t be without this itiodwn convenience. We in* vite Jyour account. million would Mechanics Sf Farmers Bank II6 W. Parrish St. I Durham, N. C. Frederick Douglass Bust Tq Be Unveileid At Morgan Feb. 11 BALTIMORE, Md.—In ^thmem- oration of the 144t^^^niversary of the birth of FvPnick Doug lass, a portaryv^iead, done bronze, will }ve unveiled in the Fredick- Dosi^ass High School on FebruarjfT4th. Jayies E. Lewis, associfiie pro- ,fe^r art and head of the depart- yfent at Morgan State College, Is "the sculptor and is piretently work ing On a clay model. O The U. S. expects to about 6.5 million bales of cotton during the 1960-61 season, as com pared with 7.2 milLon in 19i9-60. a solution to the Tennessee crisis on other than a relief basis. Negro farmers there, who re gistered to vote Nov. 8 have un dergone endless economic repri sals. Many have been driven from land they have farmed for years. At present, 13 femilies are living in a temporary commu nity known as "Tent City" where they are housed !n surplus army ten^. The NAACP national office has sent more than $3,000 to the dis tressed area since July. Jesse, H. Turner, president of A&T Receives Science Grant For Project GREENSBORO—A professor at A&T College has been awarded a grant of $12,200 by the National Science Foundation t > conduct scientific research. Dr. Burleigh C. Webh. professor of agronomy, was notified this week that his project had been approved and funds had been al located. The announcement was made by Dr. Samuel D. Proctor, president of the College. The project, scheduled to be conducted for a period of two years U entitled, “Interaction of Growth Regulators and Radiant Energy on GeoUopic Response of Burmudagrass Rhizomes.” *■ Dr.' Webb expla^s that the study aims to find how certain hormones in plants may be af fected by light rays and gravita tion to influehce their growth habits. He said that Burmudagress had been selected for the experi ments because it is one of several plants which grows vertically, along the ground surface and be low the soil. He added that success in the project could, conceivably, lead to changes in agricultural prac tices which could improve pasture crops and simplify harvesting of certain other crops. URHAM GIRL RADUATES FROM BENNETT GREENSBORO — Five Bennett College seniors were scheduled to complete requirements for grad uation as the first semester of the 1960-61 academic year comes to a close here Saturday. They are Misses Icelean Davis, of Durham, and Millicent Allen of Philadelphia, both flementary education majors; Geraldine Beth- une, of Fayetteville, sdcial science major; Catherine Lawson, of Lex ington, Va., history major, and Mrs. Amelia L. Muldrow, of Win ston-Salem, English major J THf SAT., jmt tl. "till .Tl ktfTH ■a^i TSi>g I..,' A&T Sud0s to Represent M- At 4^ in Giiro, 10 GREENSBORO/— A student at A and T Cettege has been select ed as one of a four member "All American” 4-H Club groMn to rei^- resent the Unite» States at the International Agricoltunil Ex hibition in Cairo, EflrTt- -Junins Byron Rnasell, jr., 18, of Warrenton, N. C., a so^omore in agricultural eneineering. at A and T, received notice this week that he had been selected t» represent American farm youth jit the big international meet set for March 21-April 21. The annwncement was made by J. K. ilcClarren, program and content 1 director for the U S. efhibit Washington, D. C. The other youths to compose the party include: Pbrker Ray Blevins, Monticello, Ky., a sopho more at Berea College. Berea, Ky.; Larry Lee Pressler, Humboldt, S. D., a freshman at State Uni versity of South D^k^ta, Vermil- hion, S. D., and Ttorton South- hard, Ryan, Okla., a afli—swt al Oklahoma State' Uiu««nitT, SUB- water, Okla. Presbyterian Cleric Heads Ky. C>R Unit WASHINGTOPJ—The Bev OUi Anderson. Jr., of Lmdrrflle been named to the KeotKky visory Committee of the U. & Commission on Civil Riehts. Bed I. Bernhard, Acting S^aM Direetw of the Commission, Imw aaaoooe- ed. The Rev. Anderson, who iivM at 2116 Edgehill Road, is eaiecutive secretary of tl»e Presbytery ot Louisville, Presbyteriaa Cbarefa in the United States. He was educated at the Univer sity of Virginia, the Loul'rviUe Presbyterian Seminary, the Uni versity of Edinburgh, Scotland, and Oxford University, England FUEL OIL-KEROSENE Metered Delivery Telephone 2M-1215 KENAN OIL COMPANY HILLSBORO ROAD DURHAM, N. C the Memphis NAACP, and Allen Yancy, president of the newly- founded Somerville NAACP branch (county seat of Fayette), attended the meeting at the NAA CP national office. . They served as resource per sons and gave first-hand reports. FINE FOOD ... is our stock in trade. From Fresh, tasty sandwiches to full course meals, you'll find our food the best. BILTMORE GRILL & HOTEL We cater to parties, club i^eetings, BANQUETS GB.tS RESEARCH GRANT—Dr. Bu;;lalth C. Webb, professor of •trdnomy at A&T College, has bMn award^ a $12,200 research grant by the National Science FoUndatiitn. The study Is to deal with the effects of gravity and light rays on plant hormones and their influence on plant grawth habits and will be con ducted for two years. MAKES^SKININLEACNtS OLD FASHIONED Skfi • iijimenl • perfect base «i Ram«r' itr with th« Star' oOBoys Wanted To Join Our Newsboys Club Earn Your Own MONEY And * n . , Free PRIZES Selling The j^FTRurw MUST BE 10 YEARS OR OLDER APPLY IN PERSON AT THE CAROLINA TIMES 436 E. PETTIGREW ST. I I.,

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