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ri^" Y, JUNl S, 19S8 YHE CHAPEL HILL NEWS LEADER PAGE THREE Vomen's News RET PADGETTE, WOMEN S EDITOR PHONE 8-444 Porter And Mr. Jurkat ed in Quaker Ceremonies lal wedding took place May 31, at the Durham jeting House when Miss •ter, a junior in the Uni- d Peter Jurkat, Grad ’d in Mathematical Sta- e married. :1 the traditional Quaker in which no minister of- t the contracting parties vows to each other in :;e of the meeting and s. lam Society of Friends meeting House to the I Friends Meeting, of Porter is a member. ’Meeting 'sponsored the j II those present signed ! : Club I :shop Set ubs of the Capital Dis- North Carolina Feder- Music Clubs will hold al Workshop for Club this Saturday at; the Walter, Raleigh. The 11 begin at 10:15 in the loom with Mts. Pavid of .Raleigh, District Di- iiding.' ' ■ uise Jefferson, State Chapet Hill, and other id State officers and h the district will at- issist in the Club-Year ission. liose expected to attend lhapel Hill Music Club ssident, program chair- ther officers and chair- the wedding register. The bride’s wedding gown was simple, with a long full skirt of heavy silk. She wore an embroider ed bolero and matching mantilla which she ramoved after the vows were said. The two attendants were Marie Miller, who wore a bouffant lavender gown, and Michael Mer- baum. A reception was held in the lawn of the Meeting House after the ceremony. The young couple will spend the summer in Philadelphia, but will return to Chapel Hill at the beginning of the fall semester. ALTRUSANS INSTALL—At their fjnal meeting of the current year on Tuesday evening the Altru- sans of Chapel Hill installed their officers for the new year. They are (left to right, — seated) Mrs. Ray Joliy, Treasurer; Miss Rebecca Randolph, Corresponding Secretary; Miss Ruth Gilpin, President; Miss Aiberta Beat, Vice-President; (standing) Mrs. J. L. Sutton, Director; Miss Mildred Mooneyhan, Past President; and Miss Lucy Boyland, Recording Secretary. News Leader Photo MT. VERNON VALEDICTORI AN—Miss Susie Harwood Cord on, (daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Cordon, was valedictori an of her graduating class at Mt. Vernon Seminary this week. She also received the school's Dramatic Award at commence ment exercises held this past Monday in Washington, D. C. Samuei J. Blackwoods Are Back From Germany j Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Joyner ! Blackwood and their son, Joe, re- I turned last week from Germany, I where they spent three years while Mr. Blackwood was in the U. -S. Mr. Blackwood, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel C. Blackwood of Route Two, was stationed at Sen- bach Air Force Base, which is near Kaiserslautern. He and his family returned to this country by plane. Their son, who is two years old, was born in Germany, and this is the first time his grandparents have seen him. Mr. Blackwood will attend sum mer school at the University here and this fall he will transfer to State College, where he will study electrical engineering. Pullen-Kelly Ceremonies Set Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Pullen of Winston-Salem announce the en gagement of their daughter, 'Sarah Brooks, to David Lee Kelly Jr., son of Mr. and. Mrs. David Lee Kelly of Chapel Hill. The wedding will take place on August 23 at the Winston-Salem First Presbyterian Church. Miss Pullen attended the Winston- Salem schools and graduated this month from Woman’s College in Greensboro. Mr. Kelly also attended the Wins ton-Salem .schools. He is now a sen ior at the University School of Medicine here 2^ highland fling 9.95 Have a fling and buy two! A pure Scotch value — for rarely is so much "know how" packed into one suit at such a price. Jantzen designing, shape making, plus fine gingham cotton that has been Controlled to dry quickly and practically wrinkle-free. It's straight out of Life Magazine, and comes in rich red-yellow miniature Clooney tartan. More news — matching waterproof, strapless cap, 3.98. Persona! Mention (Phone 8444 For Contributions To This Column) Mr. and Mrs. Nicholson B. Adams have gone to Sebago Lake, Me., to spend the summer. Bibb Latane, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Latane, will receive the B. A. degree from Yale University at commencement exercises next Monday. Miss Janet McAllister will be a counselor at Camp Townshend, Morris, Conn., this summer. She plans to go to Montreal and Myrtle Beach, S. C., before leaving for Connecticut. Mr. and Mrs. 'William Cooper of New York City were here the first of this week for the University commencement activities. Miss Susie Cordon will leave tomorrow for a houseparty at Jackson- . ville, Fla. / William F. Hutchinson Jr. has returned after a visit of several days with friends in Elizabeth City. Miss Helen Majette will return this weekend from a two-weeks’ va cation with her family at Franklin, Va. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Winborne return today from a vacation at White Lake. , Miss Sara Rose will arrive home this weekend from New York City to be with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Rose. John C. Parker; son of Mr. and Mrs.; John A. Parker, received honor able mention for the Ferris Prize; in Anatomy at the Yale Universi ty School of Medicine recently. . Mr. and-Mrs. Earl Settlemir^ Sr. will take their son. Buddy, to Camp Ridgecrest this weekend. Buddy .will be there for five weeks. Mrs. Isaac Taylor and her children, Alexander, James, Kate, Livingston and Hugh, sail tomorrow for Europe. They will return home the end of August. Mrs. E. S. Williams’ mother, Mrs. Sutton, has been here visiting her this week from her home in Wilmington. Mr. and Mrs. John Hazzard were here last weekend from Wedgefieid Plantation, S. C., for the graduation of Mr. Hazzard’s son, John, from the University. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald McCarthy are leaving for a summer vacation in Medomak, Maine. Mr. and Mrs. Rodman Townsend of Knoxville, Tenn., and their four children, Roddy, Sally, Bowman and Audrey, will arrive this Sat urday for a visit with Mrs. Townsend’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. O. Bowman. Mr. Townsend will return to Knoxville early next week, but Mrs. Townsend and the children will be here about three weeks. Elizabeth Seawell - Has 'Certain Something Children Respond To-They Remember Her!' By MARGARET PADGETTE Most of the younger folks in Chapel Hill have, at one time or another, been taught by Miss Eliz abeth Seawell, who completed her 30th year in the local schools last week. Miss Seawell has long been known for giving her students a thorough foundation in English grammar, and the discipline in her classroom can well be envied! Many of her old students have returned to tdll her how much they can appreciate what she had taught them. And more than one Chapel Hillian away at college has written her for a copy of her En glish grammar Notebook. The local school administratiofi regards Miss Seawell as one of its most valuable teachers. Schools Superintendent C. W. Davis says, “The subject matter she teaches and the way she presents it to her students is so excellent anything Mrs. Evelyn Hinnant New Flair Stylist Flere Mrs. Evelyn Hinnant, beauty operator from Kenly, has joined the staff of the Carolina Beauty Shop here as hair stylist. Recently selected to serve on the North Carolina Hair Fashion Council, Mrs. Hinnant is an award winning member of the North | Carolina Cosmetologist Guild and i has served as Guild advisor, pnes- j ident, secretary - treasurer and board member. Mrs. Hinnant has studied under well-known stylists in New York City, Paris and Vienna, and has at tended the Carolina Beauty Col lege, the Academy of Hair Design in Deluth, Minn., and the Merle Norman Studio in Santa Monica, Cal. She has also had specialized training in make-up, skin care and corrections, hair coloring, fantasies and -character designing. I could say about Miss Seawell would be good.” Had All Except '57 With the exception of the Chapel Hill High School Class of 1957, Miss Seawell has had as a pupil every child who has gone through Chapel Hill Elementary School since she joined the faculty in 1928. “I’m getting quite a few children of former students now,” she said. Miss Mildred Mooneyhan, prin cipal of the Chapel Hill Elemen tary School, said she has never ceased to be amazed at the num ber of former students who have come back to visit Miss Seawell. "If they don't remember another teacher they had here," she said, "they always remember Miss Seawell!" Summer Chorus Here To Start Rehearsals The first rehearsal of the Sum mer Session Chorus will be held in Hill Hall this Friday, June 6, at 4:30 p.m. All students and townspeople are invited to sing with the chorus, which will be un der the direction of William Sasser. Rehearsals will be held regularly during both summer sessions on Tuesday and Friday afternoons at 4:30. Anyone may join either or both sessions for the rehearsals. The first concert is planned for the end of the first summer sess ion, on July 8, with another sched uled at the end of the second sess ion, on August 19. Roy Armstrong To Take Morehead Post Flore Roy Armstrong has been named Executive Secretary to guide the Morehead Foundation , scholarship program expansion, succeeding Robert A. Fetzer. j Mr. Armstrong has resigned as ff 133 East Franklin St. Cradle Call I Michael Lawrence Cheek ■ A son, Michael Lawrence, was born to*. Mr. arid Mrs. Lawrence M. Cheek of 54 Hayes Rd. on June 2 at Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Cheek j is the former Jean ; Caldwell of Chapel Hill. Mr. Cheek is the local | representative of Remington Rand | Co. They have two other children:! Carol, five, and Johnny, two. i Director of University Admissions effective July 1 to accept the post. Fetzer will remain with the founda tion as resident secretary. The Morehead scholarships, val ued at $5,000 each for four years of study here, have gone to 179 young students in the past seven years. The total Morehead endow ment will be substantially increas ed to expand the funds for scholar ships. John L. Morehead, a member of the foundation’s board of trustees, said the expansion will be carried out by “slowly and carefully add ing out-of-state preparatory schools to our list of eligible institutions and enlargement of the full-time staff.” COSMOPOLITAN CLUB Newly-elected officers of the Cos mopolitan Club are Nola Hatten, President; John Casparis, Vice- president; Sue Gregory, Secretary; and Y: K. Murthy, Treasurer. The Club is interested in continuing its activities through this summer. .Anyone wishing to participate is urged to contact Miss Gregory. MR. LLOYD DIES Funeral .services were held this afternoon for Durie Clarence Lloyd, 81, who died yesterday at his ho,ine on Route One. . Mr. Lloyd is survived by his wife, Mrs. Nora Merritt Lloyd; four daughters, Mrs. Leo R. Shaw of Durham, Mrs. Thomas .Strowd and Mrs. Tom Shetley of Chapel Hill, and Mrs. McCree Davis of Ashe ville; two inns, Lewis Lloyd of the home and 'vVilliam Arthur Lloyd of Route One; two sisters, Mrs. Effie Dodson and Mrs. Rhett Andrews of Hillsboro, and eight grandchildren. Services were conducted by the Revs. Leon Cheek, J. R. Green and H. G. Dorsett at Bethel Baptist Church and interment followed in the church cemetery. Pallbearers were Edward Doug las, Bill Blake, Lemuel Cheek, John Cates, Bill Abernathy, and Will Neville. “She has a certain something that children respond to,” Miss Moneyhan went on, “and it’s some thing too few teachers have. You might say it is a combination of her love for children, her kind na ture, the extensive knowledge she has of her subject, and her con sistent discipline. “■When she tells her pupils some thing, they know Miss Seawell means it! Her sense of fair play has a profound influence on her children, too.” Miss Seawell is originally from Sanford and she graduated from , Woman’s College and attended Co lumbia University. She and her mother are now living at The Glen. TAKE HOME A CARTON! PEPSI-eOLA BOTTLING CO. OF DURHAM PHONE 6117 Roomy 14"xl1"x7 Plaid it PLASTIC THERMO-PAK ALL purpose: TILITY B A 0 FIBERGLAS INSULATED 00 $2.50 Value Doubb - , Handles it Full Length Zipper Keeps bquidshot or cold for hours. Ideaiinfantbag. for Picnics. RiGGSBEE-HINEiON FURNITURE CO. Main St. "Open Friday Nites" Carrboro ■mmi MORSES VISIT UNC—Among the many proud parents in Chapel Hill last weekend to see their daughter graduate from the University were Sen. and Mrs. Wayne Morse of Washington, D. C., seen with their youngest daughter, Amy, who received her B, S. degree in nursing. uNC Photo MRS. EVELYN HINNANT AWARD-WINING HAIR STYLIST Joins Staff Of Carolina Beauty Shop .1 I. Mrs. Hinnant has served as president, sec retary-treasurer and Guild advisor of the North Carolina Cosmetologist Guild. In 1957 she won an "all states’' and a "state" trophy for hair styling. Mrs. Hinnant was recently selected to serve on the North Carolina Hair Fashion Coun cil. Members of this council must be high ly recommended for originality, adaptibility and technical ability in cosmetology. She has studied under renowned hair sty list of Philadelphia, New York, Paris and Vienna. She has had specialized training in hair coloring, fantasies, character designing, make-up tor stage and television, skin care and skin corrections. MRS. EVELYN HINNANT Carolina Beauty Shop 131 East Franklin For Appointments Dial 8-7741
Chapel Hill News Leader (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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June 5, 1958, edition 1
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