THE CAIOUNtAM Raleigh, n, c, Saturday, april. io, ms 16 /CF To Benefit Prom “Miss Tan America Pageant Gilb eys Gin i ' 1 A ■ i ; : \\ginZ' 2.10 PINT ? 3.354/5 QUART CISTILIED LONDON DRV 6!N • 90 PROOF • 100% 6RAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS • W. 4 A. GILBEY, i.lO, • OiSTRIBUTEC BY NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY Bit Looks So Expensive - Yet Costs So Little! ' ' r— —— ~— 1 1 Welcome I T h j f P ...y f*x . $ f ‘weather-proof white enamel w ' on cast iron for a Lifetime of beauty! Ifes® h $»-e®Sl*ewfie @mpv Imst R«|mMloetfoß Slwst ' ®* «*pestste& Old SwA nan* *F settee & CHAIR &m> & deimaiertt favorites, Indoors or out. life* W-00*$0: l ®s»® ®o®fr feao wS*l» two eaesfs of feok@d«on enamat 11111 wjjffl jj|| ||| ||| |||| 11 Ah® Available: Aria Onatr, 17.38; Cocktail Table, 10.88; ||J|p Jp OMIT $S DOWN DELIVERS LJHmmJ 'rip* *«VWy ■•■ J Thirty Three Colleges Will Shai e k Proceeds I DALLAS, Tex. The United : Negro College Fund is to receive ! all proceeds from the ‘‘Miss Tan America Coronation Pageant" to be held at the Memorial Auditorium in Dallas, Texas, on Saturday, April 10th. The UNCF provides financial assistance to .13 Negro Colleges in the United States. The Stu dent Senate of Bishop College, Balias, will receive the pro ceeds and make tthe presenta tion to the UNCF. The “Miss Tan America Pageant” is the first nationally coordinated Negro beauty pageant. The Coro- NCTA Summer Projects May 15: (tentative) Pilgrimage to Hammock Beach. June 18-22: Student NEA Con ference, Washington, D. C. spon sored by College Students of NEA. June 22-25: TEPS, NEA Confer ence, New York City. June 26: NEA DAY, World's Fair. June 27 - July 3: NEA Annual Convention. 103rd Annual 'Meet ing, New York City. July 29 - August: ATA Annual Convention. Hot Springs. Arkansas. August 12-15: NCTA-NEA Twelf th Annual Leadership Conference, Swansboro. The NCTA Credit Union is plan ning a $50,000 5,000 member ex pansion. nation Pageant will feature the regional and state winners from local competitions held in 66 cities across the nation. The young ladies are com peting for the title “Miss Tan America 1965” and for col lege scholarships, a screen test, recording contracts, and model ing assignments. The competi tion categories are evening gown, swimsuit, and talent. The famed Bishop College Choir will be featured, along with other professional acts. Chorus Os Hillside High Heard Here The Hillside High School Chorus, of Durham, under the direction of Raleigh native, Ernest Massenburg, presented a concert at the First Congregational Church, Sunday, April 4, at 5:00 p. m. Music on the program included such numbers as: The Lord's Pray er, Halleujah, Plenty Good Room, and Brother James Air. Accompanists were Miss Lana McClary, Miss Phyllis Jeffries, and Mrs. Dorcas C. Reeves. The final number, Trie Battle Hymn of Re public, was accompanied by the Hillside Band Ensemble. The au dience indicated, in an impressive manner, its appreciation of the elo quent music. Tho concert was one of many annual programs sponsored by the Young Women’s Club of the church. Blue field's Prexy Speaks On “Mixing” BLUEFIELD, W. Va, Bluefield State’s president recently partici pated in an Institute on Integration in Higher Education. Dr. L. B. Allen was a featured panelist in the Institute on Integra tion in Higher Education which was held April 1-2 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He was one of sev eral presidents programmed for ad dresses and discussions. Specifically, Ur. Allen was assigned to the topic “Purposes, Problems and Possibilities of Integration in the Negro Col lege.” Other topics included: “Negro Colleges and Southern Higher Education”; “The Role of Negro Colleges in American Higher Education”; “Policy Making in Negro Colleges”; “Changing Aims”;* “Changing Patterns”; ’‘Possible Coopera tive Denominational Pr o gr a m s”; •possibilities and Problems of Exchange Pro grams"; and “Purposes, Possi bilities and Problems of the Colleges Founded for Negroes.” The Institute was sponsored by the National Council of Churches. Approximately 200 educational and denominational church leaders were in attendance. la!. Bus. College The Raleigh Business College held its regular assembly on Fri day, April 3. Mr. D. H. Keck, asso ciate director, gave the students some words of admonition, about their personal growth, responsibil ity, decency, and the proper citi zens the school would have them be. Recent additions to the Raleigh Business College “family” are: Jimmie McNeil, Angier; Misses Mary Merkerson, Rocky Mount; Barbara Morris, Garner; Janice Pierce, Hallsboro;; and Etta Pear son, Smithfield. “Your purchase must satisfy when you shop at Brittain s' ’ The height of fashion is the low heel! * Selby Fifth Avenues gives it to you at the smartest walking level, Adds its rich, polished walnut beauty to luxury-soft leathers for NECKLACE in black patent only 19.00 HIGH RISE, navy, bone or white 15.00 Plenty of styles available to size 11 High Rise bone included. Ik 'BritldiiiS C/Qk °OC> UPTOWN and CAMERON VILLAGE ® LIKE LOTS? Try the convenient Budweiser quart. Not one ... not two, but four glassfuls. Next time take home quart bottles Where there’s Life... there’s Bud® KING Os BEERS . ANHEIISER - BUSCH. THC. . ST. LOUIS . NEWARK • IPS ANGELES • MIAMI • TAMPA