Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Nov. 5, 1966, edition 1 / Page 16
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All cards ond tickets for fabulous sweepstakes prizes l-WI-P-O-R-T-A-N-T N-O-T-l-C-E 3-OF-A-KIND GAME (I) USING RED & BLACK CARDS CLOSED SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29th PLEASE TURN IN ALL WINNING GAME (I) CARDS BEFORE MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14th. A&P LOCATED TO SERVE YOU AT: S 201 EAST HARGETT STREET 505 NEWCOMBE ROAD 800 NORTH PERSON STREET 3934 WESTERN BLVD. 2712 HILLSBORO STREET 1905 POOLE ROAD THE FIRST ‘MEDICARE FORUM* - Reaching Into an audience o t elders, an engineer from radio station WWRL, New York, records the question: “Will Medicare pay for oxygen for a heart patient?” (Answer: Yes.) Question was one of many answered by Social Security officials at a pioneer “Medicare Forum,” arranged as a public service by Ex-Lax, Inc., and held at the Mt. Carmel Baptist Church In the Bedsore-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn, N. Y. The one-hour question-answer session was recorded for airing on 58 Negro-audience stations throughout the country. LEAD NAACP YOUTH COUNCIL - Three members of the A&T College Chapter of the NAaCP were last week elected top officials of the Youth Councils and College Chapters of the North Carolina State Conference of NAACP Chapters at its annual convention at Raleigh. The officers are from left to right; Hayward S. Statum, Greensboro, president; Miss Delossie F. Bryan, Wilmington, secretary; and Willie A. Drake, New Bern, vice president. At right is Dr. Jesse E. Marshall, dean of students at A&T. Statewide Reseme-Use WrnkslmJUlKClke.lt DURHAM - North Carolina College at Durham will be the scene of the 20th Annual meet ing of The North Carolina Re source-Use Education Confer ence on Nov. 10, with nationally known educators and public ser vants participating. Dr. Theodore R. Spelgner, NCC Director of the Division of Resource-Use Education and State Chairman of the Confer ence, said the one-day Con ference will feature three main speakers, a resource-use edu cation symposium, and four teen resource - use empha sis clinics in subject-matter areas which will point out modern theories of teaching and learn ing. The Honorable Ofield Dukes, Administrative Assistant to the Vice President of the United States, will deliver the keynote address at 1:45 p. m. in B. N. Duke Auditorium. The principal address for the Peace Corp Tests Here Nov. 12 Raleigh area residents inter ested in putting their skills to use in developing nations a round the world are invited to take the Peace Corps place ment test at 9 a. m. on Satur day November 12, at 9 a. m. at the Main Post Office, on Fayetteville St. The Peace Corps uses the placement test to determine how an applicant can best be utilized overseas. The test measures general aptitude and the ability to learn a language, not education or achievement. (If test scores indicate a limit ed language - learning ability, for example, the Peace Corps tries to place the applicant in an non-competitive an appli cant can neither pass nor fail. The application form, not the placement test, is the most important factor in the selec tion of Volunteers. Persons interested in serving in the Peace Corps must fill out an application, if they have not al ready done so, and present it to the tester before taking the test. Applications may be ob tained from local post offices or from the Peace Corps, Wash ington, D. C. 20525. The placement test takes a bout an hour and a half. morning lesson will be deliv ered by Mrs. Ruth Lawrence Woodson, State Supervisor of Elementary Education, Raleigh, at 11 a. m. in B. N. Duke Audi torium. lady Sara Lou Carter, wife of Sir John Carter, the Am bassador to the United States from the Republic of Gyiana, and a former third grade teacher In Wilkesboro, will deliver the major address for the banquet convocation session at 6:30 p. m. at The Blair House, Nov. 10. Livingstone’s Homecoming Set Nov. 11-13 SALISBURY - Homecoming will be observed at Livingstone College Nov. 11-13, with a big weekend crammed full of thrills and gala events which promise to make this the most memor able Homecoming in the 86-year history of the college. Highlight of the festive oc casion will be the dedication of the Alumni Stadium on the campus constructed at a cost approximately $75,000 with funds contributed by the General Alumni Association. Dedica tion ceremonies are scheduled for 1 p. m. Immediately pre ceding the game on Saturday. Other activities planned for the tole grads will include an All-College Assembly at 10 a. m. on Friday, an “Old Timers Football Game” at 4:30 p. m. featuring stars of by- gone years, social affairs and an Athletes' Dinner in the Aggrey Union, Homecoming Parade at II a. m. Saturday and a big half-time show during the foot ball game. Livingstone, currently one of the leaders In the powerful CIAA, will host the Pirates of Elizabeth City State College for the game. Alumni and Bear rooters will have the opportuni ty of watching Alfred Tyler, leading passer in the CIAA and Livingstone's greatest ever, perform on the gridiron. The half-time show will fea ture mass band demonstrations, including the Livingstone Col lege band in its premiere per formance, the crowning of Miss Livingstone and Miss Alumni and the Introduction of alumni dignitaries. FAMU Prof Writes Book On Oratory TALAHASSEE, Florida - Dr. Marcus H. Boulware, authori ty on Negro oratory, has com pleted the manuscript of a book entitled VOICES OF AN OP PRESSED PEOPLE - History of Negro Oratory, 1910 to 1965 and now seeks a publisher. Professor Boulware states that the book covers the periods of several great Presidents: Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Delano Roose velt, Harry Truman, John F. Kennedy, and Lyndon R. John son. Covering the oratory from Booker T. Washington to Mar tin Luther King, Jr., the manu script includes these periods: The Rooseveltian Era, New Freedom Period, New Deal, Square Deal, New Frontier, and the Great Society. The book treats leaders with oratorical ability, and those who advanced various civil rights movements by speaking not only effectively but with some measure of artistry. Homecoming At KC Set Nov. 4-6 KNOXVILLE, Tenn. - A va riety of events have been sche duled for the Knoxville College Homecoming Nov. 4-6, Dr. He rman B. Smith, Jr., chairman of the Homecoming Committee has announced. The Homecoming theme is ‘‘Don’t Fence Me In,” which alludes to the constant overall growth taking place at Knoxville College and a desire for the continuation of this trend. The annual Alumni Dinner and Dance will be at 7:30 p. m. November 4 in the College Center Dining Room and Ball- cookinn A..... hints' BY OylWy CARNATION HOME SERVICE DIRECTOR Dress up leftover turkey for special family meals. Combine rice, soup, seasonings, turkey and Carna tion Evaporated Milk for Rice and Turkey Bake. Carnation will keep the casserole moist and delicious right through baking. Keep several of the snappy red and white cans handy and use them often! RICE AND TURKEY BAKE (Makes 6 servings) l l / 2 cups packaged precooked cup (3-ounce can) drained rice sliced mushrooms 1y 2 cups water 2/ 3 cup (small can) undiluted V* teaspoon salt Carnation Evaporated 1 tablespoon butter Milk 2 cups diced cooked turkey 6 sliced pimiento stuffed Y« cup minced onion olives 1 teaspoon curry powder cups grated process 1% cups (lOVi-ounce can) American Cheese cream of mushroom soup Prepare rice with wafer, salt and butter according to label directions. Spoon cooked rice in bottom of 12 x 7 1 ,2 x 2-inch baking dish. Cover rice with turkey. Combine onion, curry powder, soup, mushrooms and Carnation. Pour over turkey in baking dish. Sprinkle with olives. Sprinkle cheese around edge of dish. Bake in moderate oven (350 F.) 25 to 30 minutes. C-130A Printed In C.S.A. (116) Negroes,Cops Cooperating In California How Negro residents and po lice have cooperated to ease racial tensions and improve community relations in San Die go Is reported by Helen Ells berg in a November Reader’s Digest article. “Things Are Looking Up in Logan Heights.” When there were threats of violence in the area last year, Ted Patrick, 35-year-old Ne gro president of the Logan Heights Businessmen's Asso ciation gave up his public re lations business to concentrate on improving conditions. He went from door to door among the poorest families of the area to organize the mothers and fathers into what became known as the Volunteer Parents. Eager to prevent an outbreak, these parents went about a mong the militant juveniles, talking, even threatening. They dispersed groups of potential troublemakers and sent loiter ers home. Lt. William Kolender began a series of discussion meetings between police and Logan Heights youths at police head quarters at which the boys pour ed out a torrent of troubles. The Volunteer Parents and Lo gan Heights business groups sponsored a potluck dinner which drew 100 young adults whose evenings were usually spent on street corners. Hosi ored guests were police of ficers and the district’s coun cilman. When a survey by the Volun teer Parents revealed that nearly 1500 families in Logan Heights were without proper food and clothing San Diego pitched in to see that every family had a Christmas. The police helped pick up and dis tribute the gifts. For the first time since anyone could re member, no one in Logan Heights went hungry or without a gift. In return, the Negro community declared a “Police Appreciation Week.” Volunteer Parents patrol the school grounds after hours and watched the meeting places of troublemakers. In the first year of the organization, there have been no major disturbances In Logan Heights. While San Diego’s racial problems are by no means over, Mrs. Ellsberg, who lives in Alpine, Calif., writes “even the most confirmed racial cynic cannot ignore the clear evidence of improved community rela tions and the success of the juvenile program.” room. J. A. Matthews, class of 1931 and principal of Alcoa (Tenn.) Hall School, will be toastmaster. Dr. James Foster Reese, pastor of First United Presby terian Church on campus and member of the 1946 class, will preach for the annual Home coming Worship Service in Mc- Millan Chapel at 11 a. m. Nov, 6.. * * + Andrei A. Gromyko, Soviet Foreign Minister: “The ag gressor has come to Vietnam, the aggressor should leave.”
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Nov. 5, 1966, edition 1
16
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