Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / May 20, 1961, edition 1 / Page 7
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I K>LICI ASSOCIATION OFFI- ClkS—S«t««d, ItH to right Sgt. O. T. NMh, CharloH*, W. R. ChfM, Rocky M«unl, R. B. Ptt- Whitloii'S»l*in, S. A. PffliV. drwn^ro, Lt. J. B. S«m- ufl,'Di^«m, OMirg* R«dd, Wln- (ton-Salwn. Standing, toft to riyh^ W. H. Howvll, High Point, J. A. Lyitc, Charlohto, Dat. O. H. Laak, High Paint, Sgt. H. W. Cogdall, Kiititon, P. M. Boona,' Fayottaviiia, E. L. Bast, Shalby and O. E. Wllliamton, Charlotta. CARRYING CASH is»unnecessanf risk ^ Cttrjr a check bod? In stead of ^sh. it places tfundt promjptly at youc dispotal when needed. Bat it helps you to avoid die hazards of theft or accidental loss. Fot safety and convenience, main* tain youc Chedcing Ac* count at tfais Jwok. ^ lM#^I*arri8hSt barKam, N. C. .**1 >j;- ■; ■■ REACH DONt RUN ,*Mco8ts8olittUtoaMaphom It’s AO fun to get caught Hrajr out ia left field when the phone rings indoors. > An extoa phone can save psa thousands of steps. ■ « at little eactra expense^' Choose ^ar new extension phone from new decoratoc ^ok>n de»l|pied to match yoar aumnier furniturvb PboiM «ur Buaioesf QBka and order Mwa todi^^ A&T Professor Receives Grant , To Complete Negro History Work GREENSBORO A professor at A. and T. College has just been awarded a grant to further histori cal research and to complete a history book he is writing. Dr, Franlsa A. Logan, chair man of tha A. and T. Collaga Social Scianca Oaparfm'int, ha« baan granlMI fcha award by tha Amarican Association For Stata and Local History, Madison, WiscoMina. Dr. Logan is on« of 12-historiang receiving the grants, the first to be given by the Association. The program was launched to encour age the study, writing and publi cation of sound, interpretative lo cal history. The title of Dr. Logan’s new boolt is, “The Negro in North Ca rolina From 1876 to 1894. He ex plains that there is little recorded information on the Negr(f during that crucial period. Thia is tha sacond writing prisa won by tha A. and T. pro- fossor. Ho wa« honorad with Hia Connor Award ht 1959 for tha bast articlo app^ing in tha North Carolina Historical Ra- viaw. Dr. Logan his travelled exten- Tle visited thdia'^allfl Pakistati'ffitiil lively in India and the Far East. in 1044-1945. with the U. S. Air Force, again in lO-SiS-ig^ under a Ford Fellowship for study and research and a third time, 1960- 61, under a Fulbrii:ht Fellowship, lecturing at the Univo>rsity of Ma dras and the University df Cal cutta. African Agriculture Leaders To Spend 2 Weeks Studf in iSrange “HIttSBORO—Four Alrtcarr Agi=" cultural Leaders from Nigeria and Ghana, part of a group of 18, will spend two weeks in Orange Coun ty from May 22 to June 2, study ing the Agricultural Extension Service. The following visitors are ex pected; Umaru Grate, Agricultural Su perintendent, Katagora, Nigeria; Vonjen Gambo Sanda, Agricutural Superintendent, Abuja, Nigeria; Onuoha Acha Mba, Agricultural Officer, Umuahia-Ibeku, ^igeria and Charles K. B. Tachie-Menson, Senior Agricultural Survey Officer, Koforindua, Ghana. All of the participants have been trained in a local school of Agriculture and have experience in advisory work. However, their training in Extension methods has been linnited, and their knowledge of how to work with people to get widespread application if im proved farm practice needs streng thening. A. and T. College and the Agri cultural Extension Service are working in cooperation with the International Cooperation Admin istration (I. C. A.) and the Foreign Extension Training Ohlce in pro viding training for Agricultural Leaders from Nigeria and Ghana ECTC Alumni To Fete Grads At Dinner Dance ELIZABETH CITY—The General Alumni Association of Elizabeth City State Teacher* College will act as host to the graduating class of 1961 with a Dinner-Dance to be held on Saturday, May 27. On this occasion the members of all previous graduating classes which end with the number one will also be honored. The dinner will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the' dining room of Lane Hall and will be followed at 8:10 by an informal dance in the gym of Williams Hall, for April to 4W1. John W. Jeffries, Mebana, is Technical Leader for the group. The group visiting Orange Coun ty will reside at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Willie Mayo of Hillsboro. Shaw's Best Students Cited On Awards Day RALEIGH—Annual Awards Day was held at Shaw University on Monday, May 8, and students were recognized for outstanding parti cipation in extra-curricular acti vities and excellence in the pre- sention of assembly programs dur ing the 1960-61 school year. Dean Foster P. Payne presented dramatics certificates and tokens to the following students, certifi cates for two years of outstanding service: Mattie Leggett, Alice Mit chell, Yvonne Edwards, Fred Mar shall, and Judah Person. Keys were awarded to Patricia Joan Kimbrough, Esther Sneed and Crawford W. Smith. : Dr. Moses N. Delaney, chairman the Committee on Chapel and tlcligious Life presented awafds to the following organizations: the Student Christian Association, the Pyramid Club, the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, and the Student Na tional Education Association. Junior Counselor Award reci pients were as follows: Lucy M. Bunch, Verlene Copeland, Marjo rie Greene, Carrie Lowery, Tyron Reece (for three years service). Lucille Batts, Reginald Mercer, Syl via Sifford, (for two years service), and Etta Davis (one year). Students receiving ^certificates for "Who’s Who in American Col leges and Universities for the current year are Lucy M. Bunch, Marjorie E. Greene, Glenfield W. See SHAW, Page 4-B Shaw Finals Schedule is Announced R A L E IG H — Dr. William R. Strassner, President of Shaw Uni versity has announced the sched ule of cdhimencement' events as follows; The Annual Music Concert, feat turing the University Chorale So ciety, under the direction of Harry Gil-Smythe, will formally open the Ninety-Sixth Commencement season at the University. The con cert will be held on Sunday, May 21, at 6:00 p.m. in Greenleaf Audi torium. Baccalaureate services are set for Sunday afternoon. May 28, at 3:00 o'clock in University Church The annual sermon will b? de livered by the Reverend A. Doug las Aldrich, Minister, Forest Hill Batist Church, Raleigh. Commencement exercises will take place at Raleigh Memorial Auditorium on Monday, May 29, at 3:00 p.m. The address will be made by His Execllency, George A. Padmore, Ambassador of the Republic of Liiseria, Washington, p. c . ■ Other events are Class Night activities, which will be held in Greenleaf Auditorium on Friday, May 26, at 8:00 p.m., the annual Hofual Official Complefes Sales Promotkm Study According to notica and etrti- ficate received by J. W. Goodloe, Senior Vice President and Secre tary of North Carolina Mutual Life Life Iniurance Company, Mrs. Alma H. Wade has recently com pleted a Woitahop on Sales Pro motion conducted by Life Adver- tisen Association at the Bellevue- (Stratford Hotel in Philadelphia. A week of specilized training was provided for 32 life Insurance home office sUff members, under the guidance of the Chairman of the Educational Committee, Hugh Rickenbaker, Jr., of Life Insurance of Georgia, and the Workshop Director, Donald L. Hokins of Life Insurance Company of North America. Guest speakers and the comple- ion of a specific sales promotion project highlighted the curricu lum. The workshop was aimed at giv ing the students a well-rounded view of the. major functions and activities of a Sales Promotion De partment of a life insurance com pany. In addition, the intent was to impart a working knowledge of the techniques of sales promo tion. Mrs. Wade has previously at tended an editorial workshop con ducted by Life Advertisers Asso ciation, in connection with her duties as editor of The Whetstone, North Carolina Mutual’s official publication. cnnvtmn Ttwn MAY mi "rm tmitn umnetRr-FA* v« MRS. SPEARS IS DELEGATE TO YWCA CONFAB CHARLOTTE — Mrs. A. E Spears, of Charlotte, chairman of committee on management at the Phyllis Wheatley Branch, and also a member of the executive com mittee of the central branch has just returned from a full week’s meeting of the National YWCA at Denver, Colo., where she went as delegate from the Charlotte group. She stopped at St. Louis, Mo., in route and attended a three day session of the Inter-National Read ing Association. She returned to C|iarlotte Sunday, May meeting Of the Shaw University Alumni Association on Saturday, May 27, at 2:00 p.m. in the West Campus Auditorium. MRS. HANNIIAL Mrs. fiannibal To Speak In Oxford Sunday OXFORD—Mrs. J. J. Hannibal, long a member of the Kinston Board of Aldermen, Kinston, will be th ugeespaekste mm t aM tmt be the guest speaker at the Wom en’s Day services of the First Bap- Tenn. State Studenti Elect Top Student Bod/Officeri NASHVnXE, TeaiL—TIm larg est student tarpeirt in TeaaaaM* State Untvefrtty*s hislory mnpt a pair of “canvas sweetkesvts” in- to the top goivismnMnt tttbce» last WTedncMlsy. Breaking a fov-yMr rtvsl seror* tty hold. Alpha Sivpa Alpha mem- ber Louise Dlekson firom Orsena ville. Tennteats swamped Inkslsr, Michigan’s Bart>ara Mathis VTO to 609 to become the IMk "Misa Tennessee State.” Miss Dicksaa ia the first home econoaiies major to win this honor since Velma Waller eight years ago. tist Chnrcli, Oxford, Sunday, Hay il, at 11:00 a.m. Mrs. Hannibal, a widely-known speaker, is the first Negro woman in the Sooth to be elected to a governing board. She was recently named on President Kennedy's list of women eligible for appointive peat. ’The Women’s Day Committee is composed of Mrs. J. R. Bedding and Mrs. B. L. McGhee, general chairmen, Mrs. M. T. Cureton, Mrs. Willia B. Gibson, Miss Grace Hail, Mrs. Mamie Holman, Mrs. Lucille McCoy, Mrs. Mary G. Owens, and Mrs. Bettie E. Parker. Her mother or her sister? BOTH ENJOY YOUTHFUt, NATURALrUXNCMQ NMM COUM Whether yon want tite ezdtamsBt of a tilirmmmii hair shade, oc want to give new life ta doll or gray hair ... iiieiBt on thelong-laatiag heiteolar Jm the fMngua, ted pThms—Godefeoy’a lieiimiae. It1i-a^M ap^, swd aaeaplsta fc ana parlrMn iherw’nnothnig aiaa fc> boy. iftomt GOLM» •odafroy Mfs. Camxiny « 3010 0>W » St. Lewf. M«. ' Today’s (’ai'iiation gives you checsi' sauce in 3 minutes The secret: today’s Carnation, the milk you can use like cream-with V2 the fat calories, and at V2 the cost of cream! Ordinary milk won’t do! No flour, no shortening needed when you use this wonderful milk that has the consistency of golden country cream. Today’s Car nation is evaporated a special way that makes it look like cream, pour like cream, whip like cream. Even when you mix it with an equal amount of water, Carnation is rich, whole milk-> for better cooking and baking results at far less cost than ordinary milk. For cooking, coffee, cereals-try today’s Gnraation, world’s favorite by farl RECIK! CARNATION 3-MINUTE CHEESE SAUCE. Smni«r 1^^ cups Oarga can) undMuted Carnation and Vi teaspoon utt over hMr haat to {ust balow boiling (1-2 minutes). Add 2 cups (about 8 oz.) grated procass-type Amarican chaesa. Stir until chaete malts (about 1 minute longer). Delicious owar popped- open bakad potato**, grean vegetablas, hamburgers, mast loaf-and for golden-good macaroni and cheese (below). MARCARONI4 OlEESEMith Carnation 3'MinuteChaese Sauce, Mix 4 cupa cooked macaroni, Vi cup chopped plmienta % cup chopped green pepper and 2 teaspoons dry mustard to gether In buttered 2-quart casserol*. Pour cheese sauce over mktura. Bake in moderate oven (3S0*F.) 25-30 imnutes. See Other radpe* on the rad and white labels at today's Carnation. I
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 20, 1961, edition 1
7
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