kKfcfc*SbOhO PUBLIC UtiHAti. ?WiJ 1 1369 fh t future Outlook Keep Up With The Times e Outlook! VOL. 28, NO. 20 GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA, . .?lARCH 14, 1968 PRICE 10 CENTS Janie Johnson, of Frogmore, S. C. and Mary Thompson of Greenville, S. C. assist Or. Isaac H. Miller, Jr., president of Bennett College in making a count of some of the canned goods sent by students at the college to aid the poor of Beau fort and Jasper Counties in South Carolina. DEATHS AND FUNERALS wmmmi, mmu SEANN B. BENNEKMAN Seann B. Bennerman, age 2, died at Moses Cone Memorial Hospital Saturday, March 8, following a brief illness. He lived at 1300 Alamance Road. Funeral service was held Wednesday, March 12, 2:00 p. m., Brown's Funeral Home Chapel. Rev. Cecil Bishop, pas tor of Trinity A. M. E. Zion Church officiated. Burial fol lowed in Piedmont Memorial Park. The body remained at Brown's Funeral Home until the hour of service. Survivors include his parents, Sgt. and Mrs. Rueall Benner man of the home; four brothers and two sisters. , Brown's Funeral Directors in charge of arrangements. X F. Johnson Birthday . . . March 12 MRS. GLADYS W. TROXLER Mrs. Gladys Waynick Trox ler, age 53, of Route 2, Sum merfield, N. C., died Saturday, March 8, 1969 at her home fol lowing a brief illness. Funeral service was held Tuesday, March 11, at 2:00 p. m. from Fair Grove Baptist Church. Rev. J. Settle, pastor of Fair Grove Baptist Church, officiated. Interment was in the church cemetery. She is survived by her hus band, Mr. Cornelius Troxler of the home; two step-daughters, Mrs. Lofine .Tones and Mrs. Clarice Pride; one step-son, Mr. Freddie Troxler, all of Muchrain, Va.; her mother, Mrs. Lula Neal Waynick of Summerfield, N. C.; seven sis ters, Mrs. Vernie Palmer, Mrs. Ethel Roseboro, Wfrs. Lois Morehead, all of Greensboro, (Continued on Page 5) . mm***. - Theodore Carter, director of development at Bennett College, and Doris Scott of Rich mond, Va., president of the Student Senate at j the Greensboro, N. C. college, pack rne iiSSPi? of the more than 20 cases of foodstuff sent to aid the needy in Beaufort and Jasper counties in South Carolina by Bennett stu dents. I Bennett College Students Collect Food For Hungry In S. C. Counties On Monday morning, March 3. despite the snow and uncer j tainty of pending weather with j its forecast for more snow, a station wagon pulled out of i Bennett College bound for I Beaufort, S. C., more than sev- ' ( en hours away. It carried a cargo of four students, includ ing the student body president, the college's development offi cer, and more than 20 cases of | foodstuff. The food, collected by the student body of the all-girls school, was earmarked to be distributed by the Beaufort branch of the NAACP to help relieve the hunger in Beaufort and Jasper counties brought to light recently by a Senate com- ! mittee investigating hunger in America. Doris Scott, president of 'the student body of the 680 student school is hoping that other colleges in the area will follow suit and has called on them to lend their support to similar projects at their schools. k In addition, sne has written letters of thanks to Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota, chairman of the Senate com mittee on nutrition and human needs, and Ernest HollingB of South Carolina, a committee member "for the concern you have shown for people suffering ; from malnutrition and hunger." Bennett students, traditionally | active in community affairs, (Conttauad on Pate S) Hayes-Taylor Host To Tri-State Sport Festival On Saturday, March 15, 1969 j at 7:00 a. m., the Hayes-Taylor YMCA will serve as host to j seven Y. M. C. A. associations ' throughout the Tri-State of North Carolina, Virginia and : South Carolina. Events to be , carried on are as follows: bas- I ketbal), jr. and senior; billiards, jr. and senior; table tennis (Ping Pong), volleyball, jr. and seniors and checkers. Participating YMCAs are as follows: Winston-Salem, Roa noke, Va., Portsmouth, Va., Lynchburg, Va., Norfolk. High Point, N. C., Asheville, N. C., and the Greensboro Hayes Taylor YMCA. All vonng members of the Y who plan to participate in j there dvent."; ore asked to con tact Mr. Frank Breeden of the Hayes-Taylor YMCA. Hayes-Taylor YMCA Church League News The Hayes - Taylor YMCA Church Basketball League is slowing coming to an end. The final two games of the regular season will be March 12 at the Hayes-Taylor YMCA gym Aft er the conclusion of this season the tournament games is set to start March 18, 1969. Boys competing on teams from seven community churches will parti cipate in these tournament games. Awards will be presented to the winning team, outstanding players and all participating teams in this coming Annual Sports Award Banquet on Mar. 28, 1969. Speaker of the evening, Elijah Pitts of the Green Bay Packers. The first game of the eve ning, March 12, consisted of a battle between Shiloh Baptist vs. St. James; second game, at 7:00 p. m., Warren Mt. Carmel vs. league leading Providence. All pastors and members of respective churches and their friends are asked to come out and cheer your church team forward. Silver worth more than half a million dollars has been re claimed by the Veterans Ad ministration this past year from films, negatives and photo graphic developing solutions. '

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