—THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, OCT. 16, 1965
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MISS TUCKER
CLUB MEETS WITH MRS. F. BROWN.
Sunday. October 10 the
Floral Club met at the home
of Mrs Fleeta Brown. 706 Ba
t con Street The meeting was
opened with devotion a'fter
ward., a short business session
in which the president Mrs
Ruth Seate outlined the Christ
mas Program Then the hos-1
tess served a delicious repast'
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Pearly Mae And Dino Sing Up A Storm
Pearl Bailey Is shown helping Dean Martin sing up a storm when she Joined him
as a guest star on NBC-TV'i "The Dean Martin Show," Thursday, Oct. 14 (10-11 p.m.
ET) in color
What Price Perfection?
FLORSHEIMS start at
Premium materials, flawless workmanship,
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with every pair. Yet they start at only $19.95.
Florsheim—America's standard of fine shoe value, ,
||| v t^oicoe
114 W. MAIN ST.
to the following Mrs Estelle
Shaw Mrs. Discie Morgan. Mrs.
Fleta. Brown. Mrs Mary Mor
ris. Mrs Leoni Seate. Mrs
Lyda McCiain. Mrs Minnie
Rainey Mrs'' Annie Mayo. Mrs
Helen Lash. Mrs Beulah Mor- j
gar. Mrs Frances Watkins.
Mrs Flora Prey. Esther Bar- i
cliff, and Mrs Ruth Seate
Coronation Set
For 'Miss NCC'
North Carolina College's
homecoming season will begin
Friday, Oct. 22, at 8 p.m. with
the coronation of Miss Veroni
ca Elizabeth Tucker as "Miss
North Carolina College" in Mc-
Dougald Gymnasium.
Dr Samuel P. Massie, presi
dent of the college, will per
form the crowning ceremony,
which will be preceded by a
formal procession of Miss
NCC's attendants the four
class queens and coeds repre
senting various fraternities.
Charles E. Daye, of Durham,
president of the Student Gov
ernment Association, will pre
sent a bouquet to Miss Tucker
and speak on behalf of the
SGA.
A senior English major and
library science minor from
Columbia, S. C, Miss Tucker is
the daughter of Mrs. Lelia
Jordan and James W. Jordan.
A member o( Delta Sigma The
ta Sorority, she is also a
member of the college choir,
the NAACP, and the English
Club.
At Columbia's Booker T.
Washington High School, from
which she graduated, she was
among the top 10 students in
her class and was cited for 12
years of perfect attendance in
grade school. She was secre
tary of the National Honor So
cietv and was presented a
Delta Scholarship Award.
Members of Miss NCC's court
will be Marlene White. "Miss
Senior:" Queen McLean. "Miss
Jur. i or:" Yvonne Flowers,
"Miss Sophomore;" and Vera
Sha'-v. Miss Freshman."
After the coronation, a re
ct?:iori will be held in the
gy r.fiasium and will be follow- j
er. by a coronation ball. Tfie I
da - activities will usher in j
NCC's four-day homecoming
season.
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Miss Va. State, Attendant
Judith Sugg (left), senior business administration
major from South Boston, Va., is "Miss Virginia State Col
lege.' 1965-66' UPictured with Miss Sugg is her attendant,
Charlotte Hodge Martin, senior physical education major
from Martinsville. The queen and her attendant will b«
presented, at Virginia State College Homecoming activi
ties, Oct. 30.
Federal Registrars Sent to
Montgomery to List Voters
MONTGOMERY, Ala ln
| response to the request of the i
Attorney General of the Unit
ed States, the U. S Civil Serv
ice Commission will open a
Federal office in Montgomery
County, Ala., to list eligible |
I voters under the Voting Rights j
Act of 1965. beginning Octo- !
ber fi. CSC Chairman John W. j
; Macy, Jr.. announced this
| • veek. The county embraces
; the city of Montgomery, the j
I first metropolitan area desig-
I nated for a Federal voter list
ing office.
The new office will be lo
I rated in the Post Office and
Courthouse Building at the i
j corner of Church. I.ee, and'
j Moulton Streets, in the city
j of Montgomery. It will be open '
from 8:30 a m to 4:30 p.m.,
! Mondays through Saturdays. It
1 will be manned by at least six
I voter examiners. Macy said.
The new action brought to
20 the number of locations in
* which the Commission has
established Federal voter list
, ing offices since President
Johnson signed the law on
August 6. Under the Voting
GRANDMA SAID....
"A penny saved is
a penny earned."
1 9° along with Grandma
100%. Put your pennies in a
Mv ' n 9* account an * th ®y
go to work EARNING
[in] Regular deposits DO
T t_ / J L . JV matter how small build
up into a tidy nest egg faster than
you can imagine.
Start your savings account here today.
j
DURHAM, N. C.
Rights Act, the Commission is
I charged with the listing of
eligible voters without regard
to race or color in counties de
signated by the Attorney Gen
eral in which tests or devices
have been maintained and in
•vhich less than 50 percent of
those eligible to vote were
registered or had cast ballots
in November 1964
Through October 1, the 19
offices previously established
had received 49,226 applica
tions and listed 47,475 persons
as eligible to vote. Of the total
listed, 45,959 were nonwhite.
The five that opened October
I—in Bertton, Bolivar, Clay,
Coahoma, and Humphrey's
Counties in Mississippi—listed
84 eligible voters on the first
day of operation.
-Trip Tips
Continued from page 5A
Being well-dressed is "half
the fun" of travel—and it is in
the ILGWU tradition of com
munity service to want you to
enjoy your trip.
' '/
MRS. DURIN
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MISS HARGROVE
Winston-Salem College Alumni Contestants
One of these charming ladies will be crowned "Miss 'Alumni" of Winston-Salem
State College Alumni Association during Homecoming festivities at the collefe, Oct. 29
and 30. The annual "Miss Alumni" Ball will be held in the Atkins High School gym
naaium on Friday night, Oct. 29 from 11: 30 p.m. to 3:30 am.
They are, left to right, top row: Mrs. Emma Thompson Durcn who represents the
Kimberley Park Chapter and Forsyth County District, lives in Winston-Salem, N. C.
where »he is a teacher.
Miss Linda Joyce Miley represents the Class of 1965. She is a native of Greens
boro, N. C. and is presently employed in the District of Columbia Public School System
for the 1965-66 school year.
Mrs. Iris Lane Mangum represents the Wake-Raleigh Chapter of the Northeastern
District. A native of Wake county, who completed her graduate studies at Columbia
University and is employed as a sixth grade teacher in Garner, N. C.
Bottom row: Mrs. Theresa Dawson Hargrove represents the Richmond - Scotland
County Chapter. She is a member of the CI ass of 1945 and is presently employed in
Hamlet, N. C. where she has taught for three years.
Miss Louvenia E. Daye, a native of Lex ington, Va. Chapter and Outside of N. C.
District. She is presently employed as a tearher in Lynchburg.
Mrs. Dorothy Holman Armstead represents the Eastern Atlantic District and lives
in Washington, D. C. where she has taught for five years. Mrs. Armstead serves as
corresponding secretary of the Eastern Atlantic District.
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mm hMI " - A
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turned on they drop down into driving posi
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MISS MILIY
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MISS DAYE
tion. Parking lamps and turn signals located in
the fenders emphasize the width of the new
grille. Power plant for this car is Buick's 425
cubic inch V-8 with a new quadrajet carburetor
for better performance.
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MRS. MANGUM
MRS. ARMSTEAD