Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Dec. 3, 1966, edition 1 / Page 5
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BARENTS DAY ACTIVITIES AT DURHAM BUSINESS COL i - With the current theme of “Loosening of the F’amily T: ” ’trouts became involved In discussion and instructions, ’ I nl l instructor in Data Processing is shown as A. oust rates the IBM -102 Accounting machine to a group :< ’..siting parents am. students. Persons shown are Mrs Wil ■: pc.anks, Concord, Miss Janett Stnoot, a student; Mrs. ’ Rlie M, >;i l oot, of Concord; Mrs. Rebecca Dixon, Java, Va.; ••no’ Miss Pearl Dixon, a student. Peace Corps To Conduct Test On December 6 Raich h atca resident sinter =te i in jHittii’;., their skills to use ii! developing nations a round the world are invited to take the Peace Corps place ment to t at 3 p. m. on Mon day, Dec. 5, at Main Post Of fice. The Peace Corps uses the .nnanrinniiiima L'V , ; 'i !f v- ; ! MEAT' BUYS I | COLLEGE | j PARK ] GROCERY Lylvs.sti.r. WHITE, Merl 402 Ilill Street V- Itm inIiTIHHIHWMMMMMMWBr UUX ivumauw*-. ‘ f ih fl JKnw»TT'.-. J " u 1,1 ' av -'* m "" j John W. Winters j Company In. ’.ranee. Rentals, Property Management, Hornes and Investments CALL US NOW! »: m.KVN- > SAMUEL HEWITT —JOHN WINTERS, JR. JOSEPH WINTERS } JOUN W WINTERS & CO. 507 E. Martin Street Dial 828-5786 V , j.r< tnwiv» j'W.«up■ ’"• v~Tnalataum—.'TMT AiM REALTY COMPANY i ;' i A S \TP. Rentals— Building and Repairs ■ ~ liO 1 n i let. Property Management !v \’ot -li t win We Write Automobile, BLS S l KAIS Ch: Fire. Windstorm H YEARS OF SERVICE IN THIS AREA CALL US FOR INFORMATION AND SERVICE ! ACME REALTY £O. 129 E. H;,rgett Street Raleigh, N. C I Phone 832-0956 ■ RENTALS • SALES' TERRACE INSURANCE & REALTY COMPANY ; BOOKER OR. TB. IDLES, M*r. DIAL SS3-1102 Community Florist CORSAGES—FUNERAL DESIGNS—POTTED PLANTS—FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS, ETC. llsMazaipig 325 N. Tarboro Si. j Prescriptions FILLED R. E. WIMBERLEY, Ph. C. CENTRAL DRUG STORE BABY SUPPLIES COSMETICS Phone TE 2-8084 J>ol E. Davie St Raleigh, N. C | UMSTEAD’S j 1 mrtsfer Company • Grocery Store titlßT AND HEAVY FULL UNI Or * HAULING GROCERIES LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE • Courteous Prompt Your Patronage Efficient Appreciated MARY A. UMSTEAD. Manager 602 S.. Dawson Street • Tarboro As Martin Streets DIAL TE 2-9478 TE 2-9212 placement test to determine how an applicant can best be uti lized overseas. The test mea sures general aptitude and the ability to learn a language, not education or achievement. (If test scores indicate a lim ited language-learning ability, for example. Hie Peace Corps tries to place the applicant in an English-speaking country). The placement test requires no preparations and Is non-compe titive -- an applicant can neith er pass nor fail. The application form, not the placement test, Is the most Im portant factor in the selection of Volunteers. Person interested in serving in the Peace Corps must fill out an application, if they have not already done so, and present it to the tester be fore taking the test. Applica tions may be obtained from lo cal post offices or from the Peace Corps, Washington, D. C. 20325. The placement test takes about an hour and a half. Buy U.S. Savings Bonds NCTA To Hold Meet In Goldsboro The Division of Administra tors and Supervisors will hold its conference on Dec. 8-9 R the Goldsboro Motor Hotel, Goldsboro. A. C, Crowder, Sr., chairman of the division has outlined the program follows: Thursday, Dec, 8, at 12:00 noon, Registration will begin.. Elementary and Secondary Principals will hold their meet ings at 3:30 p. m, ■ ith J. D. McAllister and R, S. Cooper presiding, respectively. The Supervisors will also meet at 3;30 with Mrs. Dorothy Good son presiding. The banquet will be held at G;3O to 8:30 p. m. with J. H. Wooten presiding. The featur ed speaker for the banquet will bo Dr. 1,. C. Dowdy, presi dent, Agricultural and Techni cal College, Greensboro. A social will follow from 9 p. m. to 1 a. rn. Friday, Dec, 9, from 8 a. in. to 8;45 a. m. registration will take place. Workshop Clusters will begin from 9 a. m. to 11:45 yfwumn ■* w j TROPHY' ADMIRED - Dr. Joseph N. Pat’- •>•!. Vmessor of education at Winston-Salem State College, who delivered the annual fall honors convocation addre.-s at Bennett College last, week, admires trophy held In Mi-..-, 1<1» Pennix of Mar tinsville, Va., for high scholai ship as a 1965-66 freshman. Looking on are Misses Gloria Benson (left) of Columbia, S. C., and Mary Jacobs o: Mebane, president of Alpha Kappa Mu honor society which made tin award. Yes, We All Talk BY MARCUS H. BOUI.WARI. ANCIENT VOTING METHOI Those memi ers who study parliamentary law have discov ered that there are several ways of voting. One method, although it consumes considerable time, is casting the ballot. In the Greek Anthenianeccle sia, there were two ways of voting: one by show of hands, and second by ba..ot (dropping white and black pebbles into an urn). However, the assem bly employed mostly the show of hands method. If appears that the ecclesia used the method of balloting when the proposition to be vot ed upon was a law applying to an individual or a pecul ia r group, or a decree inflicting a severe punishment. At these meetings, any citi zen was privileged to address the assembly. Neither were artisans denied the privilege of discussion and debate. READERS: For my free pamphlet on public discussion, send two stamps and a long bus iness envelope which is selt addressed to Dr. M. H. Roul ware, Florida Y&M Universi ty, Box 310-A, Tallahassee, Fla, —32307. This Week In Negro History AN “NPI” FEATURE Dec. 1, 1869 - First Nation al Negro Labor convention, Washington, D. C. Dec. 2, 1492 - Columbus dis covered the Caribbean Island of Haiti. Dec. 2, 1809 - Famed aboli tionist John Brown and his Ne gro co-conspirators - Shields Green, Dangerfield Naw b y, Sherrard Lewis Leary and John A Copeland - martyred, Os born P. Anderson (A Voice from Harper’s Ferry) escaped to lat er serve with distinction in the Civil War. Brown and his fol lowers were hanged for raid at Harper’s Ferry. Dec. 2, 1891 - Dr. Charles H. Wesley, former president, Central State College, Wilber force, Ohio and now director, Association sot the Study of Negro Life and History, was born. Dec. 3, 1948 - The Rev. Silas A. Peeler, former president, Bennett College and Methodist minister, died. * * * Accidents of all kinds killed 10G-900 people in the United States last year, or 5.9 per cent of the total. Cardiovascular disease killed 989,139, o: 74.2 pei cent o' Hr l total, tt North :n. on th-- following topics; i 1. ! ■ ■ ginoration Guidelines, : Chairman, R. S. Cooper, Con , suit mi, or. y t \y. Brice, Os , flee of d . lth, Education and i Well no. 2. Evaluation and Im i'lei m i i a <■! Titles 1, 11, 111 of th. Elemenlarv and Secon dary School Act, Chairman, S. J. ■ 1 , l on suit ant, E. B, Palmer, • . cutive secretary of XG3 V. t. Public School Law, , Chairman, J. D. McAllister; Consultant, Dr. J. E. Miller, assistant .state Superintendent of Public Instruction, 4 Prob lems of School Desegregation, Chairman, J, w. Twitty. Con sultant, Marion Byrd, Superin , tendent, St. Paul City Schools. 1 p. m. - 2:30 p. m. Lunch [ with J. W. Maske, vice-chair man, Administrators & Super visors, presiding. The speaker will be Dr. E. W. Brice, De i uartment of Health Education tnd Welfare. Greetings will , be brought by Dr. Rudolph l Jones, president of NCT A a.idE. ; B. Palmer, executive secretary of NCTA. Giving Is The Joy ... O Choosing Is The Fun! Shop Every Night Til Christmas 9-30 to 9 P. M. O Enjoy Dinner in the Capitol Room 4:30 to 7:30 Hudson Belk NAMED TO COUNCIL - Mrs. Ruth M. Gore, director of Coun seling and Testing at A&T Col lege was last week named to a three-year term as a member of the Executive Council of the Southern College Personnel As socia lon at its annual conven tion at New Orleans, La. Mrs. Gore, who joined the A&T fa culty In 1956, was named to her present position in 1963. St Aug . Sets Workshop St. Augustine’s College will conduct an in-service BSCS- Special Materials in Biology Briefing Workshop for 30 High School Biology Teachers Jan. 25-March 15, 1967. The selected participants will meet 4 hours (4:30 p. m.-8;30 p. m.) each Wednesday that the Workshop is in session for eight weeks, beginning Wednesday, Jan. 25, and terminating Wed nesday, March 15, 1967, Each participant will register for 2- hours credit which can be used for renewal of certificates. The purpose of the S-M Work shop is to update Biology Teach ers In selected subject matter areas of Biological Science: Patterns and Processes, and to orient the teachers to the in vestigatory approach to biology teaching. Great emphasis will be placed on laboratory acti vities that can be done in the high school biology laboratory. Lectures will involve a discus sion of recent developments with particular attention to some voids in the biological sci ences. The W orkshop will be direct ed bv Dr. W, W. Johnson, Chair man of the Division of Natural Science and Mathematics at St. Augustine’s College. * * * High blood pressure and im paired heart function are the two most Important factors thus far identified in strokes caus ed by blood clots in brain vessels, the North Carolina Heart Association reports. Crosby - Garfield Goes The Other Mile In Spreading Family Cheer BY ODESSA W. HICKS “Why do we give thanks to God?” This question was the theme of a most inspiring me - - age delivered by Rev. W. p.. Lewis, as the CrosPy-Garfield School pupils and faculty pro pared for the Thanksgiving hol iday, Ronald Davis, a sixth grad er in Mrs. J. K, Davis’ class served as master of ceremonies for this special observance. The program opened with Mrs. M. A. Flagg’s third graders singing “We Gather Together.” Prayer was said by Valentine Malon“, Jr., a pupil in Mrs. G. G. Banks’ fifth grade class. Following this, Mrs. E. H. Hunt’s fourth graders recited, very impres sively, the 113th Psalm. The four second grade classes com bined and added their note of gaiety to the program by sing ing “King of the Barnyard.” No Thanksgiving prog ram would be complete without mention of the first Thanksgiving. A read ing by Miss C. E. Christmas, a third grade teacher, entitled “The First Thanksgiving of All”, very adequately filled this spot. • Liteta Lewis, a third grader in Mrs. P. W. Smith’s class then introduced her fath er, Rev. W, B. Lewis, pastor of Fayetteville Street Baptist Church, as speaker for the oc - casion. His very dynamic pre sentation held the complete at tention of the entire audience. “It is more blessed to give than to receive.” These words spoken by Mrs. G. G. Banks re flected the spirit of Thanks giving exemplified by theCros by-Garfield School family. Six beautifully decorated and over flowing cheer baskets lining the front of the stage contained the numerous items brought by the pupils to be given to Crosby’s very special family, Mrs. Banks presented the baskets to the Hinton family who resides on East CabarrusSt.This fami ly was recently blessed with triplet boys, bringing their total to twelve. Three of the other nine Hinton children attend Crosbv-Garfield School. COLOR TVS LARGEST PICTURE NOW AVAILABLE IN COMPACT TABLE TV ALL NEW 1987 COLOR TV H|j 25 * ov * ran d!a «* m***- 295 «j. In. rectangular picture area u— The COLFAX • 25X4511W Handsomely designed compact table model television. color controls. 6" Oval twin-cone CJAAllfi Ip ■ iqSp£ speaker. VHF/UHF Spotlite Panels. # m ML m handcrafted HANDCRAFTED Built Better to Last Longer! r 1 HANDCRAFTED COLOR CHASSIS No Printed Circuits! j Hr nrpatpr No Production Shortcuts! 100% Handwired for greater IUI UIuULOI dependability and fewer service problems. HpnPnHahilitv SUPER GOLD VIDEO GUARD TUNING SYSTEM with ÜbfJUl luuuill Lj,,, Exclusive Gold Contacts for longer TV life, greater »iii I • picture stability, and ultra-sensitive reception. Wily !IUI yCL SUNSHINE 1 COLOR PICTURE TUBE with europium ■ I nrOTI activated rare-earth phosphor for greater picture bright- L i!G ULu i ! ness witli redder reds ’ bri B luer kireens, and brighter bluet. hlaleigli’s Oldest Zfn.tli Dealer 120 S. Blount St. Dial 833 1686 THE CHROUNIA!# RALEIGH, N. C., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1968 The audience was then re vel i ntly solemnized with a very h< art-warming rendition of “Bless This House,” by Mrs, P. W. Smith, with Mrs. Mari na Bell at the piano. On this NC Art School In Concert WINS TON -SA I. E M—T h e stu dent orchestra at the North Carolina School of the Arts will present its first public concert of this season at 8:15 p.m, Fri day, December 2, In the audi torium of Ma.i Hall at the School of the Arts. The pub lic is invited without charge. Conductor of the orchestra is Dr. Saul Gaston, former conductor of the Denver Sym phony Orchestra and teacher ' of trumpet at the School of the Arts. On I riday, December 16, the student chorus, under the dlrec- I tion of Philip Buhler will pro ■ xit a program of Christmas music in the auditorium at the pick a plan No matter who you are, no matter what you’r# saving for— you name it we’ve got the plan for you. Check our list. Or add your own. Actually, sH our savings plans are based on one idea ... insured passbook savings. You probably know the advantages. Your money's there any time you need it. You earn a consistently high yield, compounded every quarter. You can deposit whatever you like. Whenever you like. And your savings make it possible for Soca! people to own their own homes. Stop by and pick your plan. ,-A FEDERAL \U SAVINGS V we*** •fwi.uitu op NAta.«M note of inspiration, the children filed quietly back to their rooms with an atmosphere of thankful! ness and giving prevailing throughout the entire building,- School of the Arts. The drama department will present performances of Tennessee Williams’ “Camino Real” in the theatre at the School of the Arts at 8:15 p.m. on the following dates: Nov. 30, Dec. 1,3, 7,8, 9, 14, and 15. All performances are eye n to the public without charge; however because of limited seats in the theatre, reserva tions should be made by telephoning 723-2717 or by writing to the rhool of the Arts. P.O. Box 4557, The production is under the direc tion of Dr. Osv lido Riofrancos, Dean of the school of Drama, 5
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Dec. 3, 1966, edition 1
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