Download - THE CAWOUWA TMM-5A Mf xMC&nanewspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn83045120/1972-05-27/ed-1/seq-5.pdf · Dinia Scurlock and the late Mr. Paul Scurlock, Hillsborough. Miss Brooks was graduated

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xMC&naDurham Social

Notes Of InterestMRS. SYMINER DAYE

,Telephone 477-8370

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Local AlumniChapter HoldsAwards Dinner

Mr. and Mrs. John N.Smith, formerly of 1008Brandon Road in Durham,have moved to Poughkeepsie,New York. Mr. Smith, who isemployed by InternationalBusiness Machines Corpora-tion, was recently promotedto Advisory Programmer. Thecouple has two daughters,Marchla and Marjorie.

Going-away activities forMr. and Mrs. Smith includeda dinner and party given byMr. and Mrs. Ronald A. Gre-gory of 916 Bluestone Roadand a luncheon given by Mrs.Gregory and Mrs. Mary Irvingof 912 Jerome Road.

band of Mrs. Celestira H.Sanders.

*++

The Lipscomb Grove Bap-tist Church of Hillsborough,

held its 3rd Annual MissionaryAnniversary Sunday May 21,1972 at 6 o'clock p.m. TheReverend T. E. Taylor minis-ter; Mistresses of ceremonywere Mrs. Nannitte Tinninand Mrs. Frances Harris.Music was rendered by the

senior choir of Red Moun-tain Baptist Church with theorganist Mrs. Violet P. Rogers.Scripture Mrs. Eunice Dunn;prayer Mrs. Henrietta Um-stead, Welcome address, Mrs.Lula Cooper, response ? Mrs.Clara Riley; The History, Mrs.Gladys Davis; Recognition ofvisiting presidents, Mrs. G.Cates; presentation of the

guest speaker, Mrs. Lucy Wil-son; Guest speaker was Mrs.Celeste H. Sanders; ResponseMrs. Mary W. Scarlett; Offer-ing, Mrs. Julia Harris and Mrs.Julia Riley ; Report of captains,Remarks by New Home and

Durham Missionary Auxilliarypresident, Mrs. Bernard L.Dunnegan; Remarks by the

pastor, Rev. T. E. Taylor,remarks by the president,Sister Lula Cooper.

The Durham Chapter ofA&T State University AlumniAssociation held its annualachievement dinner on Satur-day night, May 20th in thePalm Room of the ChickenBox preceded by a cocktailhour. Speaker for the occas-ion was Joseph D. Williams,Sr., Coordinator of AlumniAffairs at the university with

J. L. Moffitt acting as toast-master. The highlight of theevening was the presentationof awards and certificates todeserving chapter members.Annie M. Anderson and Mel-vin R. Speight received Alumni

of the Year awards whileRalph Hester merited an au-thenic bulldog plaque for hisfund-raising efforts. Those re-ceiving certificates for meritori-ous service included George A.Scott, Constance L. Caldwell,Louise Gooche, Colonial W.Leavell, and S. L. Dudley.

MISS BROOKS

Miss BrooksScuriock ToExchange Vows

The family of the lateDavid Morehead wish to thanktheir many friends for the kinddeeds shown during the illnessand the death of their loved

Mr. and Mrs. William Brooks

of Faucette Mill Road announcethe engagemgpt of their daugh-ter, Brenda to Mr. Leon M.Scurlock, the son of Mrs. Dinia

Scurlock and the late Mr. PaulScurlock, Hillsborough. MissBrooks was graduated fromNorth Carolina Central Uni-versty in May of this year.

Mr. Scurlock is a 1970 graduateof North Carolina CentralUniversity and now is associatedwith Home Security Life In-

surance Company. The weddingwill take place June 24 at thehome of the prospective bride.

The Red Mountain BaptistChurch of Rougemont held itsAnnual Women's Day SundayMay 21, 1972 at 11 o'clocka.m. The theme "WomenIn Action"; the presider wasMrs. Jessie Turentine. Medita-tion and prelude Mrs. VioletP. Rogers the organist. Thesewere 15 minutes of praise serv-ice. Scripture was read byMrs. Elizabeth Bullock, prayer

Mrs. Margaret J. Parker,announcements and Recogni-tion of visitors Miss GlennieLunsford, offertory prayerMrs. Willie Rhodes, Introduc-tion of speaker, Mrs. JessieTurentine - presider. The guestspeaker was Wilma Bryant ofNew St. James Baptist Church

1(1 May 1971, Spanish-sur-named Americans, AmericanIndians, and Oriental Indiansheld more than 503,000 Feder-al jobs, representing 19.5 per-cent of the civilian work force.This figure represents an in-crease from 19.4 percent inMay 1970 and 19.2 percent inNovember 1969.

Mrs. Celeste Sanders ad-

dress was very good and in-spirational; the subject was"Obstacles to Blessings." Thereare several obstacles to

blessings the ones Mrs.Sanders considered were ob-stacles of no. 1) rebellious tospirit, no. 2) a prayerlessspirit 3) unforgiving attitude4) a critical spirit 5) an indif-ferent spirit 6) a spirit of»lf glorification and 7) a dis-obedient attitude. Mrs. Sandersgave highlights on all of these

which was very good. Mrs.Sanders challenged that a true

leader don't tell us what wewant to hear but a true leader

tells us what we need to

know.

- Soloist - Mrs. Violet P.Rogers. Invitational hymn bythe pastor Rev. Nealie Har-vey - offertory for Women'sDay Mrs. Daisy P. Parker andMiss Marilyn Cozart. Variouscaptains made their reports toSyminer Daye. Prayer for theoffering, the sick, remarks andbenediction were given by the

pastor Rev. Nealie Harvey. Thesenior ladies ushers served.Music was rendered by the

senior choir (ladies) under thesupervision of Mrs. Violet P.Rogers. Mrs. Wilma Bryant thespeaker gave an interesting andinspirational address, verygood. The highlights of heraddress centered around Ruth.She stated that Ruth was gen-tle, faithful, lovely, fruitful,sincere, honest and had a

clean mind, and she challengedwomen to think something ofourselves, have self esteen, weshould think about somethinggood, clean and speak well of

people, must learn that otherpeople are not as bad as wethink, we must do some soul

searching ourselves above allkeep love in our hearts."Women In Action" need to

tell the story that God is onour side and is with us.

Officers - President, Mrs.Lula Cooper; vice president,Mrs. Annie Mcßroom; secre-tary, Mrs. Julia A. Riley;treasurer, Mrs. Henrietta Uin-stead; Ministers present wereRev. T. E. Taylor, pastor; Rev.McCoy Bullock, Rev. Eubanksand Rev. Cates.

***

Heartfelt sympathy to: the

late Mrs. Lena Richardsonfamily; Miss Winifred Richard-son, Miss Ethel Richardson,Mrs. Earnestine R. W. & fami-ly, Mrs. Geneva Richardson.

To the late Miss VirgieLatta family; Mr. CharlieLatta & family, Mr. JamesLatta, Mrs. Ivy L. Ferguson &

family, Miss Thelma Latta.The Grace of the Lord

Jesus Christ and the love ofGod be with you all Corin-thians 13:14.

Inspirational remarks weregiven by the pastor.

Flowers on pulpit weregiven by Lucious Glenn familyin memory of the deceasedthe late Mrs. Mary Glfcnn, andthe late Mrs. Annie G. Daye.

Captains were Flat River,Mrs. Lina Glenn and Mrs.Lillian Glenn; Rougemont,Mrs. Rosa Johnson, Mrs. Creo-la Parker; Quail Roast, Mrs.Vera Bullock, Miss VivianParker; Bahama, Mrs. Vercy

Harris, Mrs. Josephine Peaks;Bragtown, Mill Grove, Mrs.

Virginia Kenion, Mrs. Kate

Lowe; Durham, Mrs. Syminer

Daye, Mrs. Lessie Daye, Mrs.

Thelma Bullock; Out of town,

Mrs. Glennie Lunsford, Mrs.

Daisy Parker. Refreshmentswere served in fellowship Hall.

The Policy Advisory Com-mittee held its regular meet-ing on Tuesday evening May16, 1972 at 7:30 p.m. area"B" on East Main St., withchairman Mr. J. L. Moffittpresiding. Members present

were Arthur Harris, JosephineTurner, Geraldine Hanna, RosaMcCloud, Joseph Parker, OlgaBritt, Kate Grant, EstherJohnson, Dorothy Eubanks,Lessie Langley, Daisy Caine,Gladys Nesbitt, J. L. Moffitt,Victoria Caine, Syminer Daye,Skipper Scarborough, and Igus-ta McEachern.

Sick & shut ins are Mrs.Mary Glenn, Mrs. Mollie R.Mason, Mrs. Lona Parker, Mrs.Nannie Harris, Mrs. LucilleTurentine, Meardia Mangum,Mrs. Beatrice Laster, Mrs. No-vella O'Neal, Mrs. Mamie Wat-son, Mrs. Essey Amey, Mrs.

Bell Thomas, Sidney Colton,Mrs. Dorcus Reid, Mrs. A. L.Filmore, Mrs. Mattie Lyde,Mrs. Sofa Bumpass, Mrs. Ola

Cozart, Mrs. Ida Holman,Lucious Hayes, Mrs. LucyWhitted, Brodie Daye, Lincoln.

Continued On Page 8-A

Committee: Mrs. JessieTurentine, Chairman; Co-work-ers Mesdames Nola Folk*,Daisy P. Parker, Syminer Daye& Elizabeth Bullock.

Congratulations to Rev.Napoleon Sanders who grad-uated Sunday May 21, 1972from the Central Bible Insti-tute. Rev. Sanders is the hus-

PLANNINGMJ,li AND HEALTH

Mrs. Gloria Riggsbee

Dear Mrs. Riggsbee:Do you mind if I use your

shoulder to weep on? I havejust been told by my son that

he is going to marry his girlfriend because she is pregnant.He is a freshman in collegeand I am just sick about this

because all my hopes anddreams have been wrappedup in this boy and I havealways told him I would makeany possible sacrifice to seethat he got through college.

Now he says he will have

to quit school and go to workto provide for his family. I

am just heartsick about his.Johnny's father died when he

was very young, and he andI always been so very dose!I will feel lost without him.We have never been separated.I was almost glad I could not

afford to let him go to collegeaway from home because Iwould have missed him so.

I know I can't prevent his

marrying this girl, and in a

way I realize it is the decentthing for him to do. I thinkthey really love each other, too

I have told him I would bewilling to pay the expensesof the doctor, and hospital,if he and his wife would live

with me. Otherwise I couldn'tswing it. But this way he

could stay in school.He won't agree to this kind

of arrangement. He says itwould be too hard on me. I

think it will be harder on meto be left alone. lam only 38and have a long, lonely lifeahead of me.

One thing I can't under-

stand. I always answered allJohnny's questions about sex,since he was real little, andafter he grew up I even told

him about birth control

(rubbers), and I know he has

used them because se<veral times

I came across some in his

dresser drawer. Why didn'the use therh with this girl,if they had to have an affair?I would like to ask him butain afraid he would get mad.Besides it's too late now.

What I really want to askyou is this, don't you thinkthe best solution to this prob-lem is for Johnny and hiswife to live with me so he

can keep going to college?

Please answer soon and thankyou.

D.N.

Dear Mrs. NI'm afraid I can't agree with

you, Mrs. N. Sometimes sucha living arrangement works outwell, but often it does not.

Your son seems to be determin-ed to take care of his wifeand baby on his own and this

is admirable. So many youngpeople these days seem to

take it for granted that Mom

ar Dad will continue to support

them indefinitely, even aftermarriage.

Apparently, a college de-

gree is not as important inyour son's eyes as in yours.You do not mention his grades,or whether he was happy in

school. A college educationis not for every person. Andlack of a degree is not the

worst thing in the world.At least Johnny has his

high school diploma, whichwill open many doors to him

in his job hunting. And he

may well work his way up into

a responsible, well-paying po-

sition.If Johnny is determined to

live apart from you and work

to support his family, I can

only say let him go with your

blessing. If you antagonizehim either by arguing or weep-ing and sulking, you may losehim entirely. Rather, makeyour home a happy and wel-

coming one that he and his

little family will want to visitoften.

Whatever you do, don'tever ask him why he didn'tU9e birth control with his girl.As you said yourself -? that

is spilled milk and not to be

wept over at this point. Andplease, be proud of his de-termination to face up to his

responsibilities like a man, andlet him know you are proud.

Don't feel sorry for your-self. You are still a youngwoman arfd can look forward

to a very interesting life even

though you live alone. Takepart in your church's socialactivities ?? take some courses

at the Y --offer to do volun-teer work at the hospital.Keep busy, make an effortto meet lots of people. Youwon't have time to be lonely!

***

For a free booklet on birthcontrol, write: Mrs. GloriaRiggsbee, 214 Cameron Ave-nue, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514

STHHP \u25a0 «H

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Darin* the annual KOTC Awards Day presen-tation at Morgan State College, these very at-tractive coeds were presented awards for theirrole in representing the various ROTC or-ganizations.Pictured here, from left to right, are: LindaWhite, "Miss Ranger," a junior from SevernaPark, Md.; Audrey Davis, "Miss PershingRifles," a junior from Java, Va.; Valerie Nor-

n*. "Miss Brigade Troop," a senior trmm Baiu-more, Md.; Denlse Ogle, "Miss ROTC, 1971-71,"a Baltimore, Md. sophomore; Shirley Basfield.2nd attendant to Miss ROTC, a sophomore fromBronx, N. Y.; CynUiia Cartwright. "Miss IstBattalion," an -Oxon Hill, Md. junior; and

Enid Collison, the Ist attendant to Miss ROTC,a junior from Annapolis, Md.

Local LadyWins Honor AtNAACP Drive

Mrs. A. M. Bynum, Durhambusinesswoman and housewife,won top honors at the annual

Freedom Fund Drive of the

N.C. State Conference ofNAACP Branches, held in theMemorial Auditorium, Sundayafternoon, when she reported$1700.00

She was the winner in afield of seven in Durham.She was pushed by MesdamesAddie Barbee, Ann Atwater,Evelyn Bynum and JeanetteLong. It was agreed by the

Durham contestants that*thewinner would take all. Thismeant that she went to Ra-leigh as Durham's entry, whore

she competed with more than75 mothers from throughoutthe state. When the reportswere all in, it was found that

she had turned in the highestamount.

The feat was rewarded bythe State Conference by givingMrs. Bynum an all-expense

trip to the national convention,which will be held in Detroit,Michigan, July 3-7. The Dur-ham Branch is consideringhaving Mesdames Barbee andAtwater accompany her.

Kelly M. Alexander, Sr., who

heads the State Conference,said the $18,175.00 raisedwould be used to sponsor"Operation Integration," whichis being planned to guarantee"Quality Education" for allstudents, including busing.

Two Moon ExplorersPlanning To RetireSPACE CENTER, Houston

Astronauts Edgar D.Mitchell and James B. Irwin,both veteran moon explorers,announced plans Tuesday to re-tire from both the spacemen'scorps and the military, thespace agency said.

RamblingWith

Mrs. VirginiaAlston

COLLEGE VIEW NURSERYSCHOOL

College View Nursery Schoolwill present its annual SpringProgram on Sunday, May 28,at 6:00 p.m. at Durham College.The public is cordially invited

to attend.

MRS. JUANITA BARNES

TO FRIENDLY

CIRCLE CLUB

On Sunday, May 21, theFriendly Circle Club of St.Mark A.M.E. Zion Church met

with Mrs. Juanita Barnes at

213 Red Oak Avenue. De-votional was opened by thePresident, Mrs. Elizabeth Brown

Minutes of the last meetingwas read and adopted. Mem-

bers present were Mrs. SarahCameron, Mrs. Corene Brown,Mrs. Margaret Bumpass, Mrs.

Hattie Geer, Mrs. Mildred Jones,Mrs. Florence Littlejohn, Mrs.Ida Roberson, Mrs. JuanitaBarnes, Mrs. Dazel Stevens,Mrs. Lena Thompson, Mr. Ma-

for Geer, Mr. Leroy Roberson,Mr. Grover Burthey and Mr.W. L. Thompson. After thebusiness ' session the hostess

served a most delicious dinner

which was well enjoyed. Mr.Grover Burthey thanked the

hostess for an enjoyable even-

ing. The meeting adjourned

to meet with Mrs. Lottie Co-Chran at 1008 Carroll StreetSunday, June 18. Mrs. Eliza-

beth Brown, president; Mrs.

Sarah Cameron, treasurer, and

Mrs. Ida Roberson, secretary.

NEIGHBORHOOD CLUB

The Price Street Neighbor-hood Club met Friday nightat the home of Mrs. GeorgiaFellers on Moline Street. The

President, Miss Annie Dunepn,opened the meeting with prayerscripture and songs led by all.A discussion on means ofmoney-raising projects to in-crease our treasure so as tocarry on our theme, "Helpingthose in need." Everyonetook part in this disucssion.This program will be continuedat the next meeting at the

home of the Dunegan on MasseyAvenue. Mrs. Fellers and herdaughter, Mrs. Coleman, serveda delicious dinner to the follow-ing: Mrs. Lillie Alston, Mrs.Maria Brewington, Mrs. FrdeliaBrooks, Mrs. Hattie McClamb,Mrs. Trumilla Smith, Mrs. Sa-die Pough and Miss AnnieDunegan. Mrs. Brooks thankedthe hostess.

In the last half of 1971,training placements by Man-power Apprenticeship Informa-tion Centers numbered 4,542up 25 percent from 3,617 inthe last half of 1970. Minorityplacements accounted for 26percent of the total-or 1,187-an increase of four percentagepoints over the 22 percent inthe last half of 1970.

Pests are ExpensiveHow vital are pesticides to

U.S. food producers? Accordingto W. C. Shaw, United StatesDepartment of Agriculture, ifpesticide use was withdrawn"Farm exports would be elim-inated. The number of agricul-tural workers currently on farmswould have to be doubled. In-stead of spending 17 percent offamily income on food, we wouldbe forced to devote 30 to 40 per-cent of our income and per-haps even more to providecurrent food needs. Without in-creasing the amount of land infarm crops, we could not providefood for more than 40 percentof our current population."

AI

THE CAWOUWA TMM-

Uturimf, Mf 77, 1f73

Friendy LadesClub MetSunday May 6

The Friendly Ladies Clubmat Sunday May 6,at tha bom* of Mm Lina San-ders, 1606 South RozboroStreet. The meeting WMopen-

ed with a *>ng by Ma HaetyPrice; prayer by Mn. AiderHants. After a brief but wyimpressive demotion, the meet-

ing waa then presided over byMrs. Annie Masaenburg. Re-ports were called for from the

different commlttlee. After the

business was all tranaacted, wewere invited into the diningroom where we wen serveda very taaty and daUdoua tur-

key dinner with ail the trimm-ings. Everyone enjoyed them-selves. Members preeent wereLeora Dolaon, Mattie Tlbnan,

Annie Masaenburg, Drualk Ri-chmond, Agnes Htnton, LennieRose, Eva Lyons, ElizabethEdwards, Hasty Price, AiderHarris, Lina Sanders, AnnieCruse, Carrie Sanders, Evange-line Page, Beetrice Dunkp,Marge Bullock, Ella Oawford,Myrtle Taylor, and Lilhe New-kirk. The next meeting willbe at the home of Ma. Be-atrice Dunlap, 814 Corona St-reet, Mrs. Lina Sanders andMrs. Ella Crawford were hos-tess to the gala affair.

South AfricaThe averaf* Asian

family in Johannesburg earnsmore than 13,600 a year, whilethe average black family earnsless than >1.400, according tosurveys by the University ofSouth Africa.

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