Newspapers / The Future Outlook (Greensboro, … / Nov. 20, 1943, edition 1 / Page 1
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1?~ .; 1 Keep Up With the Tim ;V" ' B BBjB B HB mm HH n| Hal flH HH9 - w*a - < MmB ^Ba pi w 9 | VOLUME III, .NO. 3. I El H ^EkJH ?Br v..w ${. fciyf::. .^P - '/I' '*' .' ? A recent survey conducted by tl of A. and X. College showed thai the institution have invested over daring the various drives. Above j senior, Wilson, N. O., purchasing senior, Martinsville, Va., during i close at the college. Argument Over 15c Costs Roddy $10 Professor George Roddy was charged with $10.00 and the cost of court for an assault on Adolphus Waugh, 16 year old \boy, Wednesday morning, No\ v ember 17 , at the Municipal -court, 'me trouble took place Sunday evening at a local news stand on Bast Market street, between George Roddy, Jr., age 14, .the son of Prof. Roddy over a^l5-cent shoe shine tip from a soldier. George Jr., became angry and went home and brought his daddy back to the news stand, and through some argument Prof. Roddy lost his temper and struck Adolphus Waugh three Qr four times, causing bruises in the face and on the head. . Mrs. Sadie M. Evans is back home after a seven week trip to northern points. Mrs. Evans visited her neice,^Mrs. W. E. Henry of Bowie, Maryland. Mrs. Claude Douglas of Washington, D. C? and her brother, Mr. C. P. Holly of White Plains, N. Y., and many other relatives and friends in New York and New .Jersey. In a Pennsylvania town laundry fire girl workers saved . a-fireman. And they didn't pull i.y?' any buttons off his shirt. &&& ' es! - | ' fURE GREKNSBOl EHHwISh I ilg?% f v I ? -tf IF m*> i.- i m. iaBSnflHraiS " 'i&t lEaS9 I lie r. M. C. A. and Y. AV. C.A.'s I the students and personnel of 94,000 In war bonds and stamps ilioto shows Miss Wllla'B. Jones, a bond from Miss Ixtuiso Penn, 1 rally which recently came to a Interdenominational Church Ushers Hold Meeting Tne uullford County Interdenominational Church Ushers will hold their regular monthly meeting, Sunday, November 21, at the St. Stephen Christian church, corner of Gorrell and High streets, at 3 p. m., announces Mr. Arthur Crump, president. / All the ushers of the various denominations will be tbere to make their reports. A special program has been planned for the occasion. The program will be as follows: Special music ' including hymns, classic and Negro spirituals, by the fine Usher Board choir under the direction of Mlss'Rhucell Alexander and Mr. Adolph Leach. Short talks from representatives of the Junior Ushers on how to serve the guest visitors. Visitors are invited. Mrs. Benny Curry, the former Miss Alice Burnett of this city has returned to Greensboro, after living in Burlington for the past five years. Mrs. Curry is making her home again with her mother while her husband is in the U. S. Army. ' ' ?" ' A ?THE? 01 lO, N. C., SATURDAY, NOVEMBE Democracy i Depends Upon Individuals "Democracy can abound on a :ampus or in a nation only when .lie- individuals of that group are willing to carry through the responsibility resting on them," declared Dr. Wilford M. Akin, speaking to the students of Ben' nett College last week. Dr. Akin told his audience that he knew of no other place in the country where the opportunity is more real than 011 the Bennett campus. He told them that the faculty and administration held confidence in their ability to carry out a plan which will create the finest possible kind of life. "We must win this struggle, asserted Dr. Akin, in order to go on and create a life here where every individual will have the opportunity to become his best self in spite of obstacles." Democracy, Dr. Akin 'suggested, means, respect for the worth and dignity of others, the opportunity to share to the fullest extent in the common concern of all, and the reliance on the intelligence to- create the solution to our problems. The speaker reminded the students that they have an inescapable responsibility in all phases of the college life which must be borne. To do so, he warned, will require courag'e and determination to see that the kind' of life we dream of for the nation is lived here by you. Mrs. Martha Sebastian Gorleigb, librarian of the Carnegie library, here was heard at Bennett College at the regular contemporary affairs assembly, last week. Mrs. Gorlelgh spoke on the wnmAn nf RiiooIq anH i*oon/i history ot the part women have played through the centuries in the life of the soviet union. She asserted that there is nothing mystical about 'the .Russian doggednees but. that they had an ideal and were willing to live and die for it. SILVER TRUMPET CHOIR APPEAR AT TEMPLE The Sliver Trumpet Gospel Choir will appear at Russell Templp church on Friday night, November 19, at 8 o'clock. Miss Hallle Barnes, Is able to be out again after being ill for 3 weeks. Mr. C. S. Beams has returned to Great Lakes, 111., after visiting his family for a few days before enlisting in the U. S. Navy. Mr. Beam was vice-president of the choir. A ten-pound colony of bees needs 60 pounds of honey and 4 or 5 combs of pollen stored in the hive to carry It through the winter. A soldier eats b1x times his weight ef food during the winter, also. Read R 20, 1943 If You Love Jesus Will Obey Hi; BROOKLYN *Y" EXECUTIVE TO ADDRESS YMCA CLUB h ^ | mm BhB: > "-' ' : : < ^ ^ :V.: ^ ^ ^S:!0: MISBI HERBERT T. MILLER Herbert T. -Miller', executive secretary of Brooklyn and Queens YMCA Brooklyn, New York, will be the featured speaker at a dinner meeting of the Weatherby Emblem club at Hayes-Taylor Memorial YMCA, Friday, November 26, at 8 o'clock. Mr. Miller will visit Greensboro for two days prior to the tri-city Layman's Institute in Winston-Salem on Sunday, November 28, at which time he will bring the principal address of that day on "The Responsibilities of Laymen in the YMCA'\ The announcement of the Emblem club dinner meeting was made this week by Perry J. Brown, president of the organization. Members of the program committee planning for the dinner are Robert Withers, chairman, and David Morehead, J. |W. Poole, R. S. Poole, M. H. Peek, and Waldo C. Palkener. Special music (or the dinner will be rendered by the R. Nathaniel Dett quartet of which Samuel A. Penn Is manager. Reservations may he made by contacting members of the planning committee. JONESBORO PIONEER CLUB The Jonesboro Pioneer "Y" club has organized for the fall and is meeting regularly each Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the school* Advisor of the club is J. S. Leary, principal. Officers are as follows: Willie Lowery, Chief Ranger: Thomas Qllchriat, Deputy Ranger; Lofton Llggins, Recorder: Fred Thomas, treasurer; and Q?orge Wharton, Sargeant-atarms. There is an enrollment of twenty-five boys between the ages of eleven to fifteen. A The Future Outlook! | PRICE: Be ; Enough You s Commandments If people would love iJesus sufficiently they would only do the "Christian thing, deterred Mr. Maynard Calchings guest speaker of the YWCA Recognition 'Service held Sunday in Annie Merner Pfeiffer Chapel at Bennett College. Mr. Catchings is a graduate of the Prairie View State Teachers College, Texas, and received his Bachelor of Divinity and Master Degree from Howard University Washington. At present he is the National Student Secretary of the YMCA. "If you love Jesus enough, you will obey his commandments," said Mr. Catchings. That would abolish the strife and turmoil in the world today, because men would be Christian uiuuicia anu wuuiu usk ueiore doing anything doubtful, is this ' the Christian thing, he declared. Even those forces which you would normally expect to practice Christianity neglect to do so, stated Mr. Catchings. The church has discriminating and exclusive policies, oppressed people help to oppress, all of which is frustrating and disappointing, he pointed out. " Mr. Catchings continued to say that if people loved Jesus enough to carry out his commandments, liberal and converted groups would not mind taking the risk of initiating social change, even at the risk of losing supporters. He declared that as long as we feel we must appease someone or some group, a change is doubtful. Mr. Catchings made a fervent plea to the "Y" members saying,, that as they give themselves to the "Y", give in criticism and support as it launches out against the essential teachings of our society and its relationship to Jesus. The speaker was introduced by Miss Nancy McDowell, adviser to the Bennett unit of the YWCA. The purpose of the "Y" was outlined by Miss Vera Wooden. Others on the program included: Miss Lois Howard, president of the "Y" at A. and T. college; Miss Barbara Ann Smith, president of the "Y" at Woman's college and Miss Marion Payton, president of the Bennett "Y". Music was furnished by the Junior Choir under the direction of Miss Oeraldine Patterson, instructor in voice at Bennett college and Mrs. Gwendolyn McMillan at the organ. Mrs. Johanna Johnson of Chicago, 111., is here visiting her husband. Corporal Richard Johnson. Corporal Johnson is now stationed at A. and T. college and he is taking an Electrical course. Mrs. Johnson is making her home here with Mrs. Avqry, 409 North Dudley street.
The Future Outlook (Greensboro, N.C.)
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Nov. 20, 1943, edition 1
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