Newspaper Page Text
SATURDAY, MARCH IS, lscO
COLLEGIATE NOTES
By Wilton C. Scott
i:' : :iA
SCOTT
SSC library to hold exhibition
Elonnie J. Josey, librarian, Sa¬
vannah State College, announces
the showing of an exhibits of
wenty etchings by the distinguish-
(1 American Artist, Isabella Banks
Markell. The paintings are on
display in the Colleg^YiFrary
Tom Sunday, March 13, through
Sunday, March 27. ^
A native of Wisconsin, Miss
Markell studied at the Maryland
institute, the Pennsylvania Acad-
mv of Fine Arts and the Ecole
es Beaux Arts in Paris. She has
been the recipient of the following
award awards: $18; Fontain Bleu Fine Arts,
the Southern States Award,
1938. Provident’s Ar{ Museum,
1954; National Association of
Women ArtUts, > 1956; and the
Vllilington Society of Fine Arts
i 1956.
Known primarily as a portrait
artist, Isabella Banks Markell pre¬
sents here a selection of her works
painted on her travel in many
corners of the world. Her works
may be found in the New York
Historical Society, the Museum of
the City of New York, the Metro¬
politan Museum of Art, the New
'ork Public Library and in the
permanent collections of such out¬
standing Americans as President j
and Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower, i
Ex-Governor and Mrs. Averell !
Harriman and Mr*. J. Nelson Van
Der Heart. - .
SSC alumni is glassbiower
Thei'glaaRblower’s trade is still
an unoowimon. one, requiring years
of experience before any degree
of facility, and competence is at-
tainedd<l#uch an individual is Eu¬
gene Washington, the only full¬
time glassbiower at Aerojet Gen¬
eral Corporation, Azusa, Califor¬
nia. 'fob q*>.
Jz'f’J ffDW -
Mr. Washington is a glass de¬
sign ^pgineer specializing , in the
building of vacuum systems, and
the designing and. repairing of j
special ; gla,ss apparatus, for the. i
Azusa Plant of , the Aerojet-Gen¬
eral Corporation in the Chemical
Division which is the largest in
the rocket industry.
A native of Savannah, Mr.
Washington attended Alfred E.
Beach High School and received
the bachelor’s degree in Business
Administration from Savannah
State College. He has done fur-
Top-Notch Snack For Teen-Agess
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Surprise your teen-agers with an after-school snack of freshly
baked cheese-dfte-bran bread sandwiches and milk. This whole¬
some snack help* to meet the daily food needs of active teen-agers,
by making a positive nutritional contribution instead of providing
empty calories — so typical of many snacks. This snack combines
foods from three of the four food groups (cereals, milk, and fruit)
recommended in the U. S. Department of Agriculture pamphlet
“Essentials of an Adequate Diet.”
Cereal Institute and the American . Dairy As¬
During April the Cereal
sociation join in the Seventh Annual Spring and milk. Milk Fes¬ The
tival to promote the nutritional value of cereal and
cereal and milk serving, or the ingredient use of t^iis valuable team,
can make maita a » worthwhile worthwhile contribution contribution towards towards making up some of
the inadequacies of teen-age diets.
Cheere-Date-Braa Bread Nfts
I 2Va cups flour , V? cup chopped milk dates
cup sugar 1 Vt cups
If. 3 l / 2 teaspoons baking powder » 1 egg. beaten
1 teaspoon salt A }A cup melted fat
§ 1 cup shredded cheese 1 cup whole hran cereal
American process
Sift flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt into bowl. Add cheese
and dates. Combine milk, egg, and slightly cooled fat. Add to dry-
ingredients and stir only until dry ingredients are moistened, r old
in cereal, being careful not to overmix. Poqr moderate info well-greased (350 loaf F)
pan (8V4 * 4V4 * 2‘A inches) and bake m oven
until done, about 50 minutes. Cool in pan 5 minutes and turn out
on Tack to finish cooling, yield; 1 loaf.
ther study at the University of
Southern California, and has done
consultant work with E. L. Wheel¬
er, an eminent authority in glass-
blowing. and president of the
fornia Scientific Glass Blowing
Association. He started out as a
! ab assistant at Aerojet eight
venrs ago. Through his work he
came interested in glassblowing,
and on his own he practiced four
or five hours daily.
Dr. Don L. Armstrong, diiector
of the Chemical Division, has -ail¬
ed Mr. Washington “an outstand¬
ing specialist in glassblowing, who,
through his own efforts, has be¬
come capable of handling the meat
difficult glassblowing tasks.”
Although Mr. Washington has
access to equipment worth thou¬
sands of dollars the art of the
glassbiower has remained essen¬
tially unchanged in this era of
growing automation. He still de¬
pends primarily on lung power
and a few simple tools, combined
with generous amounts of experi¬
ence and patience.
The Chemical Division recently
procured a new glass lathe and
a large annealing oven. His other
tools consist of a cutting and
grinding machine, hard glass burn¬
er, Bunsen burner, glass binder
and various shaping tools.
His unique skills have been used
by many of Aerojet’s divisions.
For the Chemical Division he has
fabricated such diverse items as
vacuum racks, fine micro-labora¬
tory ware, graded seals and metal-
to-glass seals. He has made tiny
glass infrared cells for the Vionics
Division, pressure-gage checkout
systems for the Ordnance Division,
high vacuum systems for the As¬
tronautics Laboratory, and diffu¬
sion pumps for dergassing metals
for the metallurgy department.
A smile lights up his face when
he recalls that in addition to the
many complicated pieces of scien¬
tific apparatus he has designed,
he occasionally takes oh such pro-
saic tasks as repairing the caf£-
teria’s coffee pots. Space Age-
size headaches make coffee pretty
important.
Phi Beta Sigma Assembly
Gamma Zeta Chapter of Phi Beta
Sigma fraternity sponsored the
college assembly program last
Thursday in Meldrim Auditorium.
The program was centered around
“The Outlook For Bigger and Bet-
ter Business for Negroes In The
60’s.”
The program included a hymn,
l ‘Lift Every Voice and Sing,” by
the audience; scripture and pray¬
er by Jesse Clarke; the Occasion
and Introduction by Cleo Love;
and, the Sigma Hymn.
The program was highlighted
by a Panel led by Dr. Ganiyu Jaw-
ando. Panel members were Jack
Stiles, John Lyons, T. J. Hopkiqs
J. A. Jefferson.
WASHINGTON (ANP>—Both
Texas Senators deplored the in-;
human mutilation of Felton Tur-
.
ner, 27 in Houston, Monday, i
And the Department of Justice!
has termine looked whether into the case Federal to de-j
any
law Senate has been violated. Lyn-j j
Majority Leader
don Johnson, when asked to ,
comment on the attack, said!
he didn’t know fenough about . ( |
the details to make a first hand j
”omment, “but,” he added “I
do deplore violence in any
form.”
Texas Senator Ralph Yarbor¬
ough gave a detailed protest
of such violence. Said the!
junior Senator from Texas: |
Disgrace To Texas I
‘'The mutilation gang in
Houston which carved letters;
and symbols into the living}
flesh of a' human being, and;
otherwise tortured and beat!
him, is a disgrace to Texas j
America, Christian ethics, and i
Western Civilization.”
He expressed hope that the
culprits would be caught and
felt confident that if they were
caught the Houston Grand
Jury would demonstrate its ob-
ligation to Indict. If indicted
others how to live.
He praised the youth of this
country in their efforts to secure
the rights that are guaranteed
them by the Constitution. “This
is thepgreatest thing that has ever
happened in this country,” he said.
people Jackie running said he to was foreign “fed up coun-! withj
tries talking about good will when!
they need to go down South and
talk about good will. And we will j
never get the things we want until;
the leadership from the White I
House speaks up.” I
Senator Humphrey Comments
Humphrey, the only presiden-1
tial hopeful to comment upon i
Eisenhower’s casual attitude to-!
sit ward down civil demonstrations rights and the had student the j
following to say:
“It must have been embrassing
for the President to go about Asia
and South America preaching de-
mocracy and brotherhood, when j
the crowds around him must have j
been whispering about the bigotry, I
discrimination and intolerance|
existing in this country,” said the
Minnesota Senator. |
Humphrey also praised the cou-j
rage of th4 young people of the j
THU SAVANNAH TRIBUNF. SAVANNAH, CFORGIA
Hoags Ton SbonMiKoo#
Pi
TILL df 1
... Native of wadesboro, *
N.C., ON AUGUST 13,1956, (AT AGE V J/
19), WAG ONE OF THE FIRST TWO |
NEGRO STUDENTS EVER ADMITTED {f 'tofat*
S * \w
TO THE WOMEN'S COLLEGE,UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAR¬
OLINA /the other was Elizabeth jo ann smarx i7, 1
OF RALEl^. N.C./
Texas Senators Incensed at
Torture of Felton Turner
he believed that the District
Attorney wuold prosecute, and,
that the trial jury would do its|
dutv.
“Texas is a civilized mid-
twentieth Century State, “con-
tinued Yarborough. “The iso¬
Kited criminal act of violence
at Houston doas not truly de-
Piet the character or ideals of
the people of Texas,
“Carving up living „ human j
'beines with knives to see them j
suffer is not a part of the Tex- !
as no way stone of unturned life. Texas to catch will leave the j
to.rturers, and to diligently en- i
force the laws to protect
man beings from human gangs.'
“No Federal Violation”
A spokesman for the Justice hai
Department said they 1
looked into the case but had
eral found stales. no violation The of «rimin<Rs the Fed-} I
could not be prosecuted under
t' e interstate kidnapping Jaiy
since the victim was not par- 1
the ried state. beyond As the (boundary far they, of j
as
could determine he was
carried about 14 blocks. No'
city officials were Involved that
would warrant federal prosecu-
tion.
South for their stand against dis¬
crimination. These young people
are asking for nothing new. They)
are only requesting that the Con-1
stitution of the United States
guaranteeing them certain rights,
be implemented, ,j he declared.
shou Xake Firm Stand
The President of the United
States has a duty and a respon-
sibility to take a firm stand on
the things that are right, continu-;
ed Humphrey.
The Senator was asked if he
thought a firm stand coming from
the White House would have any
effect on this discriminatory eat-
ing practiced at dime store lunch
counters in certain areas of this
country,
Humphrey said that the serving
of ail citizens on an equal basis
is morally light. And if there is
a statutory law which conflicts
with a moral law then the eonsti-
tution law should be changed. The
Constitution should coincide with
the moral law which is the right
law.
It is unbelievable, he said, that
people would argue about who sits
beside them to have a coke.
Four Ga.
Farmers Cited
< Continued from Page One*
,*“T~ by using 1,000 pounds of
lime, 000 pounds of 5-10-15 fertili¬
zer and 50 pounds of notrogen per
acre. He made, 11 applications of
insecticides to control cotton in¬
sects.
Beard averaged 785 pounds of
lint cotton per acre on his 10-
aore allotment. He used 500
pounds of 4-12-12 fertilizer per
acre at planting and 66 pounds of
nitrogen side dressing per acre,
He made 15 application* of insecti-
cides, the last four by plane be-
cause of the size of the crop,
Hall, who averaged 775 pound*
h nt cotton per acre on nearly
***'ven acres, followed soil test re-
commendation* for all crop* op hi*
flirm - f*rtili*eL..fcna He \jse<^ §00 pounds pounds of h* 4- 1
*>0 j
'“'Hriven per^re and made seven
applications J- fnsecticid«*. I
Z w . *L$ M "J*?* 48 us ;
u h | lecommcm a mus ° “T^i e
L^f'iiKiton $ per^r. on
acrM H e applied 1,000 pound*
f | ime per ae ,^ ; planting
ftn( j use( j 700 poun d* of 5-10-15
fertilizer and 66 pounds of nitro¬
gen per acre.
Three Local
Sit-Downers
Arrested
Oontinned from f *ze On*’
March 18, at 9 ». m.
The group had previously en¬
tered the following stores to be
served found the lunch coun-:
ter.s closed: Silver’s Variety
Store, Kress’, McCrory’s, Living¬
ston's Drug Store, Woolworth’s,
W. T. Grant’s and Walgreen's.
TRIPS
TOURS
CM* •
mMm * Artd-U §*~m
CM m tWr«w*
CHARTER BUSES
Savannah Trailways
SPECIAL ATTENTION TO CHUPXHES £ CLUBS
MOTORCADE
Co Mtd Ml wfcM fM treat ■>—im b«f
■ew literieu crceee *nd criaiea
TtAILWAYS iattreuy bum. Export.
caurtaatM drive*. FrieadIjr, pUaeaae
REASONABLE RATES
SAVANNAH TRAILWAYS
Dial A Dams 2-2451 or ADama 3-507*
740 WHEATON STREET
SHORT OR LONG TRIPS
OAT OR NIGHT SERVICES
Berkley, Calif,—West Coast sup¬
port for southern students protest
ing lunch counter discrimination
leveloped rapidly over the week-
*nd. James T. McCain, national
CORE field secretary, who hai-
heen working with the southern
student groups, is now on the West
'osst to help organise the boycott
if discriminatory national chaii
tores.
In Berkeley, California, steadily
muring rain did not stop 75 rle-
‘ermined CORE pickets hnfore
’oeal outlets of the F. W. Wool-
vorth and S. H. Kress Co. J'hc
lickets bundled in rain coats, but
many without hats marched from
9 a.m. until 5 p,m. The CORE
rroup plan* to picket on Thurs-
tay evenings as well as on Sat¬
urdays.
Managers of the stores involved
would not estimate the loss of
business sustained by the stores
during the CORE picket line.
l.os Angeles CORE picketed
four Woolworth stores from 1:80
until 3:30 p.m. on Saturday. Say-
Charge Ga.
School
GnnTiriieo from Page One*
segregation.
“What other position could they
be expected to take than that they
favor the present inequitable sys-
em in the presence of their super-
iors, who insist upon
segregation? he asked.
NA AGP OFFICIAL BARRED
FROM HEARINGS
The Rev. Amos Holmes, Georgia
field secretary for the NAACP,
charged he was barred from hear¬
ings of the Committee in Ameri-
CUR.
Sheriff Fred Chappell said it
was possible Home* was not al¬
lowed in because of overcrowding.
Otherwise, the sheriff said he knew
nothing of the accusation.
SEPARATE, BUT EQUAL
One Negro witness, Dr. R. W.
Greene, of Columbus, criticized the
U. S. Supreme Court’s 1954 de¬
segregation order as “prepost¬
erous” because it lean* so heavi¬
ly in theories of sociologists.
Greene, ( ; rperU!j pastor pastor of ot a kJethodist Metnociist
church at Montezuma, said he
per cent for
school*” provided they were equal
in all respects,
He said “integration of the
w (n no t solve economic and
Other Negroes favoring segre¬
gation included Joseph Baldwin,
Sr., yninister and contractor of
Americas and Clyde Cleburn who
said he represented the East View
PTA.
Some Negroes said they didn’t
favor closing the schools to pre¬
serve jim crow. They included
Mrs. Lilia B. Johnson, 72-year-old
of Sumter County; D. U. Pulliam,
Terrell County Negro, and Mrs.
Louise Hines, representing the
Amalgamated Clothing Union in
Americus.
SPRINGFIELD
Miss Lillie M. Bryant
Services were well attended on
Sunday at Union Baptist church
with the pastor, Rev. D. E. Rel- j
eford In charge.
Miss Jeanette Oglesby was the
recent guest of her mother,
RALEIGH, N. C. (ANP) Alex
npder Barnes, Raleigh Negro
newspaperman, thinks President
Eisenhower needs to do some good¬
will work in the South in defense
America. He didn’t say it. but
: America is threatened from with-
* in much tr,nr( ‘ than lt is from with ‘
I , ”’ t ' and tho greatest and most
dangerous enemy of America is
the South.
Barnes is not supposed to have
trdd Hu* to the President, but in
j hi* suggestion visit recently that Eisen- j
bower the South, he expressed
Mrs Kate Oglesby.
Robbie L. Thomas and Miss
Sarah Bell were recent guests
of Edward Jones.
,
j !
pjr-r
'
M. E. Morrell
Holy Zion church of the Liv-
ing God will hold communion
Bundav Elder C. P.
Townsend pastor j
8t. Mary's AME church will
sponsor a bulldffifc tilHfl pr«-j
gram Sunday at FAB church
ot 3 p. m. Rev. Gj)as. Fo«le
is. pastor, I
The Charles Moultrie Kinder-j
garten PTA invites you to a
chicken Saturday, Mar. 1
supper Ave.!
26 at. the school on Treet
Mrs. Thelma Robinson is presi- I
,j en t
Mr. and Mrs. Bobbby Carter
ltri Huai reports that “the response
was excellent. Everyone seemed
to want to support the students
who are doing so much.” The Los
Angelas Ministerial Alliance has
indorsed the CORE sponsored
'oyrott of the stores. The group
plans to extend Its picketing to
additional stores.
On February 28, Henry Hodg
'ORE national viee-ehairman het
otified local managers of the in
ention to picket West Const out
ets of the chains. Mr. Hodge said
‘The demonstrations are not gear
‘d to cast aspersions on the loca
stores hut are set up to focus atten
tion on the issue and to arous
ommunity support for the effort
'ndividuals in the South are mak
ing to secure their basic humai
rights.”
Student groups picketed outlet
of the chains in San Diego am
Seattle, Washington.
The following telegram was sen
to General David Baker, presi
dent of Capital Airlines today b;
James Robinson, executive secre¬
Newsman Suggests Pres.
Eisenhower Extend His
Tour to The South
|
FOR YOUR
« *■ r\
PLEASURE
«»? ?
. i* *
;
\ 4
Fifth Anniversary celebration ■ ‘f
March 16-20—The
of Rev. R. L. Byrd- as pastor of Abyssinia Baptist
Church. I
March 19—A Variety Supper sponsored bv Friend¬
ly Crusaders Club, 1012 Lynah St., Suppers 50c.
March 25—Concert Extraordinary at St. Philip A.
M. F. Church, featuring Miss Juanita Moon, soprano,
.indent, S. S. College. Donation $1.00. Patron $1.25.
March 26—Oyster Roast and Variety Supper at
2123 E. Waldburg Street by Mrs. Hattie Cohen. Sup¬
per 50c.
March 26—A Variety Supper at 529 E. Huntingdon
street by District No. 11 of the First Mt. Bethel Bap¬
tist Church. Ticket 50c.
April 9—Chicken Supper at 522 E. Jones street by
the Gikc" w Island Improvement Association. Ad¬
mission 50c.
April 8—Cpring Dance at Beautiful Tremont Inn
by the Moonlight Social Club. Advance $1.00; At the
door $1.25.
April 22—Jabberwoek at Municipal Auditorium by
Savannah Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta
Sorority, Inc. dults $1.00; Students 75c.
April 22—Teenage Scholarship Jamboree at the
Flamingo. Given by the Tuskegee Alumni. Dona¬
tion, Advance 50c; At Door 60c.
May 22—Scott Singers at St. Mark Baptist church.
Vote for the Scott Baby and the Riley Baby. Admis¬
sion Free.
April 35—Mr. E. Rajiah Ruffner, in an Organ Re¬
cital at Bethlehem Baptist Church, by the All Aux-
1
iiary Club. Donation $1.00. \ O
RAGE SEVEN
tary of the Congress of Racial
Equality (COREL
The decision of the New York
State commission against discrim¬
ination directing capita) airlincl**> 1
to hire Patricia Banks and tyj. T
-■ease discriminating against Negro
ipplicants for flight crew ^oh*
should he obeyed rather than an¬
nealed to the courts. CORE which
has appealed to the public to Roy-
■ott your airline because of yopr
discriminatory hiring practices
will be happy to ask for public
support for a fair hiring policy.
New York City CORE has been
working to end discrimination in
(he hiring of flight crews by major
lomeatic airlines since 1957. CORE
members have distributed thou¬
sands of leaflets calling upon pas¬
sengers and others to take action
o end discrimination.
In January, the CORE national
•ouncil asked local CORE groups
to take action to end this dis¬
criminatory situation which ex-
•ludes Negroes from high pay,
high prestige jobs.
t,he hone such a trip would follow
the President’s South American
tour.
BARNES WROTE:
“There are millions of Negroes
down here who would like to see;
vnu ride through the street* of
Atlanta, Birmingham, Montgo-
gomery, Augusta, Columbia, Char¬
lotte. Raleigh, Wilmington, Jackv
son, New Orleans, and even Dur.f
ham and teil them that Amerien
cannot strive half slave and half
„
free . . .”
have returned from Garnett, S.
p; after visiting her brother,
j P Jones and tw0 of h , 8
daughters, Misses Nora Lee an$
Louise Jones who were hospitalr.
ized after a school bus and car
accident. One is in a serioiw
t i
BFC Joseph Bright is home
from Germany and will report
to Fort Hood, Texas next week
to be retired after serving mqre
than 20 years in the V, St
Army.
Miss Margret Phoenix is kn¬
proving after an attack of the
FAB deacon board is sponsor-
ing a fellowship day rally at
the church April 3 at 3 o clock.
The speaker will be Caleb H.
Bias, a well known fraternal
and civic leader. Ben Baker
is chairman.