THE ZEBULON RECORD VOLUME 36. NUMBER 47. ZEBULON. N. C.. JANUARY 4. 1962 FIRST BUILDING for Louisburg College was Old Main. This building was a classical example of Greek Revival architecture. Louisburg College Celebrates 175th Anniversary This Week Residents of Zebulon and the five-county area the Zebulon community serves have been is sued a special invitation to the 175th Anniversary Observance of Louisburg College January 4-7. There are a large number of alumni of the Methodist College from this area. All Anniversary events open to the public are free and features an outstanding Baptist Layman and Presidential Assistant, a Metho dist Bishop. and world-famed balladeer and guitarist, William Clauson. The Hon. Brooks Hays, former Arkansas congressman and now special assistant to President Ken nedy, will speak Thursday night (tonight) at 8 o’clock in the col lege auditorium. Hays w'ill be in troduced by Sen. B. Everett Jor dan. North Carolina’s senior sena tor. Bishop Paul N. Garber of Rich mond, Va will officially open the Auditorii - Classroom Building on Saturday morning, January 6, at 10 o’clock. Bishop Garber will also preside over the cornerstone laying of the new dormitory for men, now under construction. The new $325,000 dorm is the first to be built at Louisburg since 1926. William Clauson, world-renown ed guitarist-balladeer and called by Carl Sandburg as “The Viking of Song,” will be presented in con cert on Friday evening at 8 o’clock. The concert, open to the public, WRIGHT DORMITORY. The Pattie Julia Wright Dormitory for women was built in 1926. FRANKLIN ACADEMY BUILDING. Built in 1806, this building still stands, and is a his torical landmark of Louisburg College. will be a cultural highlight of the year. Other featured speakers during the week will be Dr. Clarence Bass of St. Paul, Minn., and Dr. Daniel McFarland, head of the history de partment of Atlantic Christian Col lege. Both are graduates of Louis burg and are natives of Franklin County. Saturday, January 6, will be Founders’ Day and will also honor the college’s benefactors and j alumni. Alumni will gather for a lunch eon at 1 p.m. on Saturday and Dr. D. E. Earnhardt, a former presi j dent, will speak. i-fOuisburg college, chartered in 1787 by the N. C. Legislature as Franklin Academy, is the oldest school in America operating as a Junior College. Related to the Methodist Church, it has an enroll, ment of 552 from 13 states. The college property is valued at $2,500,000. The Rev. William K. Quick, Zeb ulon minister, is a member of the 175th Anniversary Celebration Committee. During the four-day celebration, the college art department will of fer three exhibitions. Twenty-five large oils of North Carolina artists, a comprehensive exhibit of South ern artists, and an exhibit of Cur rier and Ives prints will be on dis play daily from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. in the Fine Arts Building. Second Twin Birth Is Recorded At Local Hospital Wendell-Zebulon Hospital has recorded its second set of twins. Meri Jean and Teri Dean, twin daughters of SKC and Mrs. Oliver Leo Paradis of Wendell, were born December 28. Mrs. Paradis is the former Peggy Dean of Wendell. Mr. Paradis is a naval recruiting officer in Raleigh. Dr. Thomas was the attending physician. No additions Wendell-Zebulon Hospital offic ials reported no births have oc curred at the hospital during the new year. The last birth was a girl born December 31. Hospital Has New Practical Nurse Mrs. Zilphia Brantley Lassiter has been employed as a practical nurse at Wendell-Zebulon Hospital. She is a graduate of Lee Memorial Hospital. Norfolk, Va. Mrs. Lassiter is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dolphus H. Brantley of Wendell. She resides with her parents. Surgeon Takes Further Courses At Illinois Hospital Dr. Lee Sedwitz, Wendell-Zebu lon Hospital surgeon, has com pleted a two-week seminar for surgeons at Cook County Hospital, Chicago, Illinois. The seminar was titled “Recent Advances in Sur gery.” On the faculty were some of the most noted men of medicine in the United States, and Dr. Sedwitz re ports he found the course very in teresting. HOSPITAL NOTES The following were patients at Wendell-Zebulon Hospital Tuesday morning. White Missouri Cone, Becky Phillips, C. V. Whitley, Clawson Barham, Lonnie Poole, B. C. Hodge, Mil dred Ferrell, Boxie Howell, Wan da Narron, Rella Privette, E. H. Moser, Billy Privette, Isaac Kan non, Hilda Privette, Edgar Wayne Bobbitt, Edward Hill Finch and John Curtis Todd. White Birth Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Phil lips, Jr., of Zebulon announce the birth of a son December 31. Mrs. Phillips is the former Betty Car roll. FIRST SNOW The Zebulon area experienced its first snow of the winter New Year’s Day. The snow, mixed with sleet and rain, 'began late in the afternoon. During the early part of the night the snow stopped, but Tuesday morning there was a thin covering of ice on the ground and remains of snow in shaded places. Paul Dew To Talk To Farm Bureau Assistant County Agent Paul Dew wil be the guest speaker be fore the Zebulon Farm Bureau at the January 8 meeting, according to Raymond Pippin, Bureau presi dent. Other county officials also will speak at the meeting to be held at the Wakelon Ag Building. All members of the Farm Bureau are urged to attend and guests are invited. Holidays in Zebulon Quiet, Chief Reports Legion District Commander To Speak Tuesday Night American Legion District Commander Frank Wood of Raleigh will he the guest speaker Tuesday night, Janu ary 9, at 7 o’clock before the Zebulon Legionnaires. The meeting will he held at Dan iel's Restaurant. Oldest Resident Of Rosenburg Buried Christmas Mrs. Ellen Byrd Morris, life long resident of Rosenburg, died Sunday morning, December 24. at 8 a.m. in Rex Hospital. Death was attributed to double pneumonia. She had a lingering illness for some time. • Mrs. Morris was the former El len Byrd. She was born January 30, 1877, in Wilson County. She came to Rosenburg after her mar riage to. Walter William Morris December 20, 1900. She was the daughter of the late Gensie Vick and William Redding Byrd. Her late husband was the son of Polly Grice and William (Bill) Walter Morris, Sr. He pre ceded her in death January 8, 1945. She was the mother of 16 chil dren, eight boys and eight girls. Eight of these children now sur vive her. They are five daughters, Mrs. Velma M. (R. B.) Moore and Miss Aileen Morris, both of Ra leigh and Clarence Bruce Morris Keefe of Miami, Miss Iva Dean Morris of Goldsboro, and Mrs. Earnestine M. Marshall of the home; three sons, Carlie Morris of Neuse, Willard Morris of Ra leigh and Clarance Bruce Morris of the home; one grandson, Billy Gene Marshall and one great granddaughter. Debra Lynn Mar shall, both of Route 1, Wake For (Continued on Page 8) Christmas and New Year’s holi days were very quiet. Police Chief W. B. Hopkins re ported that there were “only a few public drunks.” No breakins, shootings, or other accidents were reported. Hopkins did report a minor au to accident just outside the city limits. He said this was just a slight bump up with no damages incurred. “We didn’t even have to make any calls to help settle any mari tal differences,” Hopkins said. There were two fire calls during the holidays. One was a grass fire and the other to an auto that was thought burning. Neither was of any consequence, the chief said. Hopkins said there were fire works being shot in and about town, but no accidents were re ported and no arrests made. Hopkins said he is “very happy” to have had such a pleasant holi day season. “Everything was very nice, just the way we wanted it, and just the way it should be.” Pvt. Robert H. Jenkins Complete MPT raining Army Pvt. Robert H. Jenkins, whose parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry S. Buffaloe, and wife, Patricia, live in Zebulon, completed eight weeks of military police training at The Provost Marshal General Center, Fort Gordon, Ga., Dec. 21. Jenkins received instruction in self defense, traffic control and the basic procedures of civil and military law. He entered the Army last August and completed basic training at Fort Jackson. S. C. The 22-year-old soldier is a 1957 graduate of Wakelon High School and a 1961 graduate of At lantic Christian College in Wilson. Emergent Communication Zebulon Lodge No. 609 will hold an emergent communication Tuesday night, January 9, at 7:30 for the purpose of installing the officers for 1962. This will be an open installation and the public is invited. W. M. Sutton, W. M. R. Vance Brown. Sec. Zebukm Soldier Takes Part in Army Cold Weather Training Maneuvers Army Pfc. James E. Honeycutt, son of Mrs. Lois L. Honeycutt, Route 1, Zebulon, recently partici pated in Exercise Trailbreak, a 12-day winter training maneuver at Camp Drum, N. Y. During the first ten days, Honeycutt and ap proximately 1,400 other paratroop ers of the 82d Airborne Division’s 325th Infantry from Fort Bragg, N. C., took part in acclimatization and cold weather training. Dur ing a simulated combat situation the paratroopers repelled “aggres sor” forces and seized road and communications networks. The exercise exemplified the Strategic Army Corps’ ability to go any where, anytime, and land ready to fight. Honeycutt, a mortar gun ner in Company D of the infantry, entered the Army in September, 1960, and completed basic train ing at Fort Jackson, S. C. The 19-year-old soldier attended Wakelon High School.