Page 4-B
Rose Society Will
Meet On Tuesday
j The Chapel Hill Rose Society
wffi hold its last meeting of the
year at 6 p.m. Tuesday in the
lounge of the Home Savings and
Loan on North Columbia Street.
President Gertrude Willis
says this final meeting of 1963
will be interesting and informa
tive to Rosarians and urges all
members to attend and bring a
guest.
Mrs. Addie Totten promises
a fine program. She is bringing
Mrs. Gilbert Rogers, president
of the Durham Rose Society
who will review Peter Coats’
book "Rose Treasures and
Pleasures.’*
Also op the program will be
Personalised Service
MONUMENTS
MARKERS
MAUSOLEUMS
DURHAM
MARBLE
Wff RKS
1501 Sorehead Ave.
Ddrfaam, N. €.
W. -E. RALEY, Manager
PRONE
Day 4894134
Night 4884968
ANNOUNCING
ANNUAL
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Once a year we sell all FLOOR SAMPLES on floor
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Phone 942-5125
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Pre-Holiday
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StoreeMe Putlog
Mrs. R. B. Cooke, another Dur
ham Rosarian, who will talk on
how to "Pot Pourri” which is a
method of preserving rose pe
tals for fragrance.
Mrs. Mia Blackwood, secre
tary and treasurer, extends a
cordial invitation for prospec
tive new members to attend
this meeting and Join the society
now which is the beginning of
a new year. They will receive
full benefit of the National So
ciety’s monthly Rare magazine,
and The American Rose So
ciety’s Annual, a valuable book
for all rose lovers as wall as the
buyers guide of the American
Rose Society.
Coltrane Joins
Faculty Friday
Dr. George Allen Coltrane join
ed the University faculty Fri
day as assistant director and as
sistant professor at the Institute
of Government, it was announced
by President of the Con
solidated University, William C.
Friday, the Board of Trustees,
ami UNC Chancellor William B.
Ay cock.
Dr. Coltrane received his A.B.
and LL.B. degrees from Duke
University. He is a member of
the Georgia Bar and the Nation
al Association of Accountants,
With considerable experience in
tax accounting. He is a native
of High Point. •
Personals
MRS. MARY HOLLINGSWORTH
Phone 842-6270
Mrs. John WBliford received
word Nov. Bth that her brother,
Same Nee. of lowa had passed
away. His desMi leaves Mrs.
Williford the only remaining
member of her immediate fam
ily.
* * *
Mrs. Matt Crabtree, mother
of Mr. William Crabtree, is se
riously 01.
• - • •
Mr. and Mr*. W. C. Beasley
and sons, Rod and Cliff of Fay
etteville. visited Mrs. Beasley’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. S.
Arnold, Sunday.
* • •
Mrs. W. F. Poythress return
ed recently from a two weeks
visit with Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy
Neville of Fairfax, Va.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. John Henry
Smith announce the birth of a
daughter, Anita Kathleen, No
vember Bth. Mrs. Smith is the
former Sandra Head of Carr
boro.
* * *
Buddy Blackwood is a pa
tient at Memorial Hospital. His
condition is termed very ser
ious.
• * •
Rev. and Mrs. Rudy Hardee,
and T. R. Register treated, the
intermediate Boys and Girls
Sunday School Class to a skating
[ party Saturday night at Wel
j lons Village in Durham. Around
seventeen members attended.
* • *
Jim Tripp, who has been ser
iously 111 for many weeks, has
improved enough to walk about
in the house.
* * «.
Mrs. Deward Pepper and Mrs.
Jerry Pilarski honored their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. M.
Bradshaw, with an epen-house
Sunday in celebration of their
50<h wedding anniversary. For
the occasion Mrs. Bradshaw
wore a brown satin dress flecked
with gold and a corsage of yel
low carnations. All the attend
ants wore corsages of yellow
mums. The golden color scheme
was carried out throughout the
home in beautiful arrangements
of flowers and autumn leaves.
At the register, presided over
by Mrs. Donnie Ward, was an
arrangement of golden giant
mums interspersed with small
er mums and autumn leaves.
In the receiving line were Mr.
and Mrs. Bradshaw, Mrs. De
ward Pepper, Mrs. Jerry Pilar
ski, and Mrs. Mallie Ray. Mrs.
Ray was an attendant at the
wedding of Mr. and Mrs. Brad
shaw. At the dining room door
was an arrangement of autumn
leaves in an old-fashioned straw
hat.
The dining table was laid
with a white cloth decorated
with huge bows of gold ribbon
and net. An arrangement of
glad iotas, roses and carnations
in a gold container flanked by
gold candelabra centered the
table while a wedding cake
topped with tbe traditional
miniature bride and groom was
displayed at one end. At the
other punch, cake squares iced
in yellow, and nuts were served.
Mrs. Laura Bradshaw and Mrs.
Emma Parker presided at the
punch bowl. In another room
Mrs. Jane Bradshaw opened and
displayed gilts.
During the afternoon approxi
mately a hundred relatives and
friends called to honor Mr. and
Mrs. Bradshaw. Among those
from out of town were Mr. and
Hadassah Members
To Hold Institute
Chapel Hill and Durham mem
bers of the Hadassah wiU attend
an education institute on Tuesday
at Schrafft’s Country Inn. The
institute will begin at 10 a.m. and
continue through luncheon, with
adjournment at 3.
Mrs. Henry Goldman, national
education chairman of the Na
tional Board of Hadassah in New
York, will be the guest speaker
edn leader of the institute. She
is chairman of the adult institute
of Adult Jewish Studies of the
Jersey City Jewish Community
Center and has served as educa
tion chairman of Hadassah’s
Northern New Jersey Region.
Mrs. Goldman was United States
chairman of Child’s Day for
Youth Aliyah Committee. She is
a member of Hadassah’s Commit
tee on Public Relations and Zion
ist Affairs.
Co-chairmen of the planning
committee are Mrs. Albert Hey
man and Mrs. Melvin RaShkis.
JPafehall Avfam
LARGE SILVER CHAFING DEMI; Silver
JSf" GIFTS
Also several spacious rooms of ICtfi and 19th #
century furniture, china, old silver, and ob-
Jscts of art at Chapel HUl's original antique
and gift shop. an
tsu B, FnnMta, Ckepei MB • tiM ts *:N Dal* vul 0
THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY '
Mrs. Willard Barker, and Mrs.
Domitila Friddle of Raleigh;
Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Gibbs Os
Franklin; Mr. and Mrs. Len
ord Gibbs of Durham; and Mrs.
Josephine Aguerre of Raleigh.
Mrs. Winslow Williams was in
charge of the floral arrange
ments.
* * *
Rev. H. Grady Head of Nor
folk. Va., and Mr. Julian Head
of Greensboro visited relatives
here Sunday.
* • w
I wouldn’t exactly say I am
an indifferent housekeeper, but
when the phone rings it is dif
ficult to uncover it from a pile
of papers, books, and unan
swered mail. Seems like things
have away of piling up around
my house, dust, cobwebs and
the like. Seems like everytime
I turn around I run into a new
cobweb, and every time I sit
down to type a cobweb tickles
the back of my neck. But then
I’m still working on my novel;
only a few more chapters and
I can write FINIS. But then
there are so many more books
I want to write—guess I’ll just
have to learn to live with
spiders. Since I’ve already
had considerable experience, R
shouldn’t be hard.
* * •
Report just received on a
Halle ween party given Mike
Mann by his mother, Mrs. Kay
Mann, was that five of Mike’s
friends gathered at his house on
Halle wee i night to celebrate the
occasion before trick or treating.
The Cront porch was ablaze
with scowling jack-o-lanierns and
the Halloween theme was car
ried out throughout the house.
The first to arrive was Don
Sparrow, a dead-ringer for a
pig. next to arrive were Ray and
Sara Ruth Dunn, completely dis
guised in bright, gay costumes.
Kathy Vance was dressed as a
colorfully plumed bir<T Randy
Register came as a clown. All
the guests were greeted by a
spooky skeleton who was Mike
Mam.
Activities were centered around
Mike'6 room where various
games were played, prizes distri
buted, and chilling ghost stories
were told, and songs were sung.
Each guest was given a trick
or treat bag which were dis
played on a table in Mike’s
room. The dicing table was laden
with cookies, orange and black
cupcakes and soft drinks. Favors
were Halloween noisetnakers.
Then the guests and host went
out to trick or treat.
Others attending were Mrs.
Bertha Lou Dunn, Mrs. Zinda
Vance: Mike’s aunt, Mrs. Pam
Talbert, and his mother, Mrs.
Kay Mann.
• * *
Mrs. S. C. Wilson fell at her
home Tuesday and broke one
arm and cracked the bone in the
other. She is in Memorial Hospi
tal, but expects to return home
in three or four days. It will be
a month or more before she can
use her arms.
♦ • *
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Glosson
have moved to New Bern where
Mr. Glosson is manager of the
Colonial Store. Mr. Glosson is a
son of Mr. Mrs. Dan Glosson,
and Mrs. Glosson is daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Troy' Hackney.
They have three children.
/ ;
u t i
'••i- •: •• .v. L
i ■ <
PAHZICER
Presents
For Gracious Living
RAKE ROOK
by
DAIiSK
A collection made of the world’s
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A Damdger exclusive in Chapel
HilL
AND REMEMBER*- Yonr gift
University Study Shows ‘Going Steady’.
Is Contributor To Illegitimate Births j
By DEACDMT RMEMAN JR.
Most women whore babies are
born out of wedlock either have
made wedding plans or have
been going steady with the “al
leged fattier" even before be
coming pregnant.
This indicates, contrary to pop
ular belief, that Illegitimate
births usually do not result from
fly-by-night sex affairs.
A study at the University shows
that only about one in 10 unwed
mothers had been going with the
unwed fathers on a now-and-then,
infrequent basis at the time preg
nancy occurred.
Dr. Hallowell Pope of the UNC
Department of Sociology and
Anthropology said in a prelimin
ary report of a study of unwed
mothers in North Carolina that
nearly nine of every 10 out-of
wedlock pregnancies resulted
from “a stable relationship be
tween the boy and the girl.”
He said about half of the 900
unwed mothers interviewed said
they were in love with the man
involved before they became
pregnant. An even higher per
centage said they were either in
love, "thought they were in love”
or “liked him a lot.”
Dr. Pope said analyses of the
data collected in field interviews
for the North Carolina study are
still in process and will continue
for another year. The study be
gan in 1961.
He emphasized, as a prelude to
his report, that “middle-class,
nice girls” get into trouble as
well as “poor, uneducated girls.”
The reasons in both cases, he
said, are complex and involve
much more than just psychiatric
or social disorders.
He cited other studies which
show that over one-third of wom
en have sexual relations prior to
marriage. This occurs, he point
ed out, in a society in which
many peoole condemn the resu’ts
of premarital sex play mere than
they condemn the intercourse it
self.
Interviews for the North Caro
lina study, conducted in the sum
mer of 1962, involved white un
wed mothers in 26 Piedmont and
mountain counties and Negro un
wed mothers in 20 counties from
three regions—the Piedmont, the
Eastern tobacco area and the
Northeastern peanut section. On
ly women who had children out
•of wedlock in 1960 and 1961 were
contacted.
The median age of the women
interviewed was 20. No one was
under 16 years of age. Dr. Pope
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pointed out that Worth Carolina
had almost 10,008 • Illegitimate
births in 1860, about four of every
five of than from the non-white
population.
The problem of obtaining ac
curate figures on illegitimacy—
particularly among the tipper
class groups which condemn it
the most—was referred to. High
er class families, he said, are
most likely to have an oot-of-wed
lodk birth recorded os officially
legitimate.
Interviewers for the North Ca
rolina study wore not able to con
tact all of the mothers they
sought, so Dr. Pope said the re
sults should be interpreted with
caution.
Other preliminary findings of
the study were as follows:
—The Negro unwed mother is
more likely to remain unmarried
than the white mother. And if
she does marry after her baby
is bom, the Negro woman is
more likely than tie white wom
an to marry the alleged fattier.
(Dr. Pope said R isn’t unusual
for the white woman to marry
the alleged fattier during her
pregnancy—after the baby is con
ceived but before It is bom.)
—Broken homes are not the
only reason why girts “get into
trouble.” Sixty-three per cent
Os white unwed mothers and 45
per cent of Negro unwed moth
ers lived with both parents at
least up to the time they were
18.
—Most unwed mothers Inter
viewed remained unmarried and
kept their children (interviews
were conducted about 18 months
after the illegitimate children
were bom). More than 25 per
cent of the whit; mothers placed
their children for adoption, but
onlv one per cent of the Negro
mothers gave up their children.
—The unwed mother and fath
er usually are of the same age
and educational background. In
many cases, the girl’s parents
knew the boy before the preg
nancy took place.
—Two of every five unwed
mothers had gone with the allefc
ed fathers for over six months
before they became pregnant.
One in five white mothers and
more than one-third of the Negro
mothers bad been dating the
alleged fathers exclusively for
two years or more before preg
nancy occurred.
(Dr. Pope said that many
partners who go together a long
time apparently develop a strong
affection for one another and, as
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—Two of every five white un
married mothers said they and
the alleged fathers had planned
marriage before their pregnan
cies. The same was true for
about one of every three Negro
women.
—Three-fourths of the unwed
while mothers who were still un
married at the time they were
interviewed had stepped seeing
their sex partners after their
babies arrived. This was true
among half the still unmarried
Negro mothers.
—Among the women who re
mained unmarried and kept their
children, the Negro alleged fath
er was twice as likely as the
white alleged father to provide
support for the family. Thirty
three per cent of the white and
88 per cent of the Negro unwed
mothers said that alleged fathers
Were providing at least some of
their financial support.
The preliminary report of toe
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Sunday. November 17, 1963
study was presented hy Dr. PbS>e ~
at a meeting of the Maternal ahd t
Child Health Department of the
UNC School of Public Health. Z
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