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"flit III' 90 t 0-^990 9 'pa ftoquea Ajsnjqji ?T Wnd ojoqsusejQ ? Keep Up With The Times - Read The Future Outlook! VOL. 26, NO. 29 GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 PRICE 10 CENTS Final Rites Held For Mr. Lawson J. Carter Lawson J. Carter, age 72, of 505 Granite Street died May 6, 1967 after a very brief illness at L. Richardson Memorial Hospital. Funeral services was held Wednesday, May 10 at 4:00 P.M. at Shiloh Baptist Church where he was chairman of the Deacon Board. Rev. O. L. Hairston, pastor officiate. Burial was in the Veterans plot at Maplewood Cemetery. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Nolia E. Carter of the home; one daughter, Mrs. Murnell Cooper, Baltimore, Md.; one son, Mr. Lawrence Carter, Baltimore, Md.; two sisters, Mrs. Idell Gal loway of Leaksville, N. C. and Mrs. Effie Martin, Madison, N. C.; three grandchildren, two great grandchildren and a host of relatives and friends. The family met their friends at Community Funeral ' Home Tuesday, May 9 from 7:00 to 9:00 P.M. Community Funeral Home In charge of all arrangements. MISS JUDITH SULLIVAN RECIPIENT OF $3,000 GRANT Miss Judith Sullivan, of New Shrewsbury, N. J., a senior Eng lish ma] or at Bennett College, is the recipient of a $3,000 grant to pursue graduate work In the speech pathology and audflogy program at Oregon College of Education at Monmouth, Ore gon, beginning June 30. Funeral Held ME. ROBERT LEE DILLAHJD Funeral service for Mr. Robert Lee Dillard were conducted Tuesday, May 9, 1967 at 3:00 P.M. at Bethel A.M.E. Zion Church. Rev. L. S. Penn, Pastor, offi ciated. Mr. Dillard was a native of North Carolina. He left Greens boro in 1941. Philadelphia, Pa. had been his home since that time. He was a member of Phila delphia Lodge No. 74. After returning to Greensboro three months ago, he died at the home of his sister, Mrs. Lois Thompson, 1605 Willow Road, on May 6. BENNETT PRINCIPALS ? Isaac H. Hiller, Jr., (center) of Bennett College, Is flanked by Bishop Charles F. Golden, of Nashville, Tenn., who will deliver the baccalaureate address aiy} by Dr. Edward W. Brlce, of Washington, D. C., who will give the commencement address at the Grensboro, N. C. institution's 94th commencement exercises, June 4-5. Bishop Charles F. Golden Baccalaureate Speaker At Bennett College A Methodist bishop and a high-ranking U. S. government official have accepted invita tions to speak during Bennett College's 94th commencement program, June 4-5, President Isaac H. Miller, Jr., announced this week. Bishop Charles F. Golden, of Nashville, Tenn., resident bishop of the Nashville-Carolina Area, will deliver the baccalaureate sermon at 4 p.m. - on Sunday, June 4, in Pfeiffer Chapel and at 10:30 a.m. on Monday, June 5, the commencement address will be given by Dr. Edward W. 1 Brice, assistant to the Assistant Secretary of Education of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Washing ton, D. C. Dr. Brice, who earned his doc torate at the University of Penn- ? sylvania and who has served as i a college president and dean, was for a number of years direc tor of the Adult Education Branch of the U. S. Office of Education. Prior to this, he : was on foreign assignments for the U. S. Department and the In ternational Cooperation for eight years. He is the author of eight books, three of which are being used as textbooks. One of the most-decorated U. S. civil serv ants, he has received fourteen awards, citations from foreign government, college and univer sities. He has travelled in 72 different countries and repre sented thei United States at 18 in ternational conferneces. He is the permanent U. S. representa tive on the UNESCO World Committee on Literacy Experts and chief architct of UNESCO's World Experimental Literacy Program. Bishop Golden, a graduate of Clark College and Gammon Theological Seminary, both of Atlanta, Ga., holds the S.T.M. degree from Boston University and an honorary LLD from West Virginia Wesleyan College, Buckhannan, W. Va. Before being elected bishop in 1960, he had served as a minis ter and college professor and with the Division of National Missions of the Methodist Church I as associate secretary and later, director. He is presently chair man of the Joint Committee of Missionary Personnel of the i Board of Missions and vice chair an of the American Committee for the Christian Peace Confer ence. Commencement activities at Bennett open on Friday June 2 with Class Day exercises and a dramatic production, "Ladies in Waiting." The annual meeting of the Graduate Assocation is set for Saturday at 10 a.m., to be followed at 1 p.m. by the All Bennett Luncheon. Classes in re union include 1937, 1942 (honor class), 1947, 1952, 1957 and 1962. The annual choir concert will be held at 8 p.m. followed im mediately by the campus illumi nation program. The annual meeting of the National Council of Bennett Parents is set for Sunday at 9:30 a.m. The Presi dent's Reception will be held at 8 p.m. at the President's Home. Negro Republican Indoe In Baltimore Harry A. Cole, a 45-year-old Negro Republican, has been ap polnte d to be a judge on the Baltimore Municipal Court. The appointment was announced last Saturday by Maryland Governor Splro P. Agnew. Mr. Cole will become the first Republican to sit on the sixteen judge Municipal Court, which was created in 1961. Being a first is nothing new to the magna cum laude graduate | of Morgan State College. In 1954, Mr. Cole became the first Negro in Maryland history to be elected to the State Senate. He won his first term in Baltimore's Fourth legislative district, the only ma jor voting subdivision of the State which is predominantlv Negro. He was narrowly defeated by a Negro Democrat four years later when he ran for re-election. Pour years after being award ed a degree in law at the Uni versity of Maryland in 1949, Mr. Cole began his personal strings of "firsts" by becoming the first Negro to be appointed an assist ant Slate attorney general. His last try for an elective office was In 1959, when he was a GOP nominee for a Fourth District in the City Council. He lost by about 2,000 votes. That same year. Mr. Cole be came the first chairman of the Maryland Advisory Comit^ee to the United States Civil Rights Commission, a position he held for two years. Mr. Cole will fill the Municipal Court vacancv created last week when Judge Robert T. H. Ham merman resigned to become a Judge of the Supreme Bench of Baltimore. In recent years, Mr. Cole has been devoting himself to the private practice of his profession. The new judge was married to the former Doris Freeland of Baltimore in 1957. They have three daughters and live at 4801 Forest Park Avenue, Baltimore. Shiloh Morning Service Morning Services will be con ducted at Shiloh Baptist Church Sunday at 8:30 and 11:00. The Rev. O. L. Hairston, pastor, will preach from the topic: "Good Homes . . . Good Society" at both services. The Union Service will be conducted Sunday evening at 8:00 in the Bethel A.M.E. Educational Building with the Rev Cecil Bishop, pastor of Trinity A.M.E. Zion, as preacher. G. D. Tillman Retires From Principalship The final meeting of the John son C. Smith University Alumni Association was held Thursday, May 11, 1969 at the Mayfair Cafeteria with a dutch dinner honoring Mr. Tillman. Highlight of the meeting was the installa tion of officers for the year commencing in Sept. 1967. There were quite a number of friends and fellow workers of the hon oree who joined the Alumni Assn. in honoring Mr. Tillman for his many yeas of service to the schools of North Carolina and the Greensboro schools where he has worked for more than G. D. TILLMAN 25 years. Mr. Tillman is retiring as Principal of the Jonesboro school as of the close of the school year. A beautiful plaque was pre sented the honoree by Mr. V. H. Chavis, principal of the Lincoln Junior High School. Mrs. John Morrison also presented a bou quet of flowers to Mrs. Tillman. Mrs. Rosa T. Yours is the re tiring president who led the chapter to one of it's better years. Mr. Thomas Jeffries was install ed as the new president for the coming year. Baby Contest Missionary Circle No. 2, of United Institutional Baptist Church sponsored a Baby Con test. The participating babies were Franklin M. Orrell, fifth place winner, Melomie C. Wilkins, fourth place winner, Patricia Ziggler, third place winner, Shawn Hightower, second place winner and Bobby Midgett, who came up with $108.20 was first place winner. United Institutional Baptist Church is very grateful to all participants of the contest. Total sum raised was $280.30. Mrs. Ethel Cooke, President Mrs. Juanita Hazell, Reporter Dr. Charles W. Anderson, Pas tor Don't Forget?Honor Your Mother Sunday , May 14
The Future Outlook (Greensboro, N.C.)
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May 12, 1967, edition 1
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