Memphis World Memphis World Publishing Co. 1964-04-04 J. A. Beauchamp NMA To Recruit Students For Medical Careers The National Medical Association, in its effort to increase the number of physicians and others in the field of health, is sponsoring a national conference on "Recruitment in Medical Careers." The workshop is being arranged through the Association's Council on Medical Education and Hospitals, Leonidas H. Berry, M.D., Chairman. The oneday workshop will be held at the International House of the University of Chicago, Saturday, April 11, 1964, from 9.30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The Honorable Ivan A. Nestingen, Undersecretary, Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, will be one of the featured speakers at the morning session. Dr. Virginia Lewis, Assistant superintendent of Chicago Public Schools, and Dr. Kenneth W. Clement, President of the National Medical Association, also will participate in the program. All fields of medical careers will be discussed, including medicine, dentistry, nursing, medical technology, medical administration, etc. A spokesman for the NMA said, "We can and must conduct aggressive local 'talent hunts' to seek out high caliber students in our localities . . . It is a part of the program of the National Medical Association to encourage students early in high school to pursue studies which will qualify them for admission to college and, later, to medical school." With the increase in population, it is most urgent that there be many more workers in the field of health. "With many fields now open to qualified college graduates, medical schools are no longer the chief competitors for the attention of such individuals. Often a lack of adequate financial resources forces such students to undertake less costly studies. It is also part of the NMA program to aid students financially so that the lack of funds will not be a barrier to completion of medical school." MEDICAL CAREER PERSONS ARE NEEDED The National Medical Association, in its effort to increase the number of physicians and others in the field of health, is sponsoring a national conference on "Recruitment in Medical Careers." The workshop is being arranged through the Association's Council on Medical Education and Hospitals, Leonidas H. Berry, M.D., Chairman. The oneday workshop will be held at the International House of the University of Chicago, Saturday, April 11, 1964, from 9.30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The Honorable Ivan A. Nestingen, Undersecretary, Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, will be one of the featured speakers at the morning session. Dr. Virginia Lewis, Assistant superintendent of Chicago Public Schools, and Dr. Kenneth W. Clement, President of the National Medical Association, also will participate in the program. All fields of medical careers will be discussed, including medicine, dentistry, nursing, medical technology, medical administration, etc. A spokesman for the NMA said, "We can and must conduct aggressive local 'talent hunts' to seek out high caliber students in our localities . . . It is a part of the program of the National Medical Association to encourage students early in high school to pursue studies which will qualify them for admission to college and, later, to medical school." With the increase in population, it is most urgent that there be many more workers in the field of health. "With many fields now open to qualified college graduates, medical schools are no longer the chief competitors for the attention of such individuals. Often a lack of adequate financial resources forces such students to undertake less costly studies. It is also part of the NMA program to aid students financially so that the lack of funds will not be a barrier to completion of medical school." 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Weaver, Administrator of the U. S. Housing and Home Finance Agency, will give the Godkin Lectures at Harvard University for 1964-65. He will speak, under the auspices of the Graduate. School of public Administration during the spring term of 1965. (The Godkin Lectures for 193364 will be given by Sir Eric Ashby on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, April 7, 8 and 9. Sir Eric President of the British Association for the Advancement of Science and Master of Clare College, Cambridge University, was chairman of an important recent survey of African education.) The Godkin Lectures on some aspect of "The Essentials of Free Government and the Duties of the Citizen" are given annually at Harvard by a leader in public life. Recent lecturers have included President Clark Kerr of the University of California, Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New York, Gov. Luis Munoz Marin of Puerto Rico, James B. Conant and C. P. Snow. The lectures, founded in 1903, honor the memory of E. L. Godkin, BritishAmerican journalist of the 19th century. Mr. Weaver, author of "Negro Labor, A National Problem" and "The Negro Ghetto," has had a varied career in scholarship, government office and foundation work. He was Vice Chairman of the Housing and Redevelopment Board of New York. City and Chairman of the Board of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, until entering U. S. service in 1961 under President Kennedy. Earlier, he served as Rent Administrator for New York. He was Director of the Opportunity Fellowship for the J. H. Whitney Foundation from 1949 to 1954, and has been a consultant to the Ford Foundation and Visiting Pro fessor at Columbia Teachers College and at New York University School of Education. A native of Washington, D. C., he holds the US. (1929), M.A. (1931) and Ph.D. (1834) from Harvard University. Arts Festival At Talladega College The fifth annual Arts Festival of Talladega College will open the evening of April 15 with the crowning of Miss Margaret Reddick, music major from Huntsville, Alabama, as Festival Queen. Miss Reddick was selected by vote of the student body to succeed Miss Virginia Lambert of Little Rock, Arkansas, who reigned over the 1963 Festival. Paintings by Mohan Samant, Indian artist featured in TIME, March 6, will be shown for the first time in the South when an exhibition from his collection opens in the Union Building April 16. Hans Bhalla, Talladega art instructor from India and a member of the Festival Committee, is in charge of the exhibit. NOW—POSITIVE HAIR CONTROL With New Improved MURRAY'S MURRAY'S POMADE This amazing hair pomade keeps hair neatly in place all day and evening. A tiny dab in the morning lets you feel well-groomed for business or social functions. Never greasy— never sticky. Contains no acids, alkalies or other harsh irritants. 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MURRAY'S SUPERIOR PRODUCTS CA. 456 charlotte Michigan MURRAY'S HAIR GLO MURRAY'S POMADE This amazing hair pomade keeps hair neatly in place all day and evening. A tiny dab in the morning lets you feel well-groomed for business or social functions. Never greasy— never sticky. Contains no acids, alkalies or other harsh irritants. Giant Size 35 ¢ Trial Size 15 ¢ plus tax A soft dressing for easy-to-manage hair contains lanolin and coconut oil. Simple to apply —makes hair easy to set in latest fashion. Men's and women's Hair — even children's soft fine hair becomes easy to manage—easier to control. 2-month supply just 35 ¢ plus tax Makes hair look smoother—softer. Lets you arrange waves, swirls, bangs —in minutes. Contains lanolin and other ingredients highly beneficial to hair and scalp. Helps banish the burnt, dried look so often associated with dyes and pressing treatments. 11/2 oz. tube only 49c plus tax 31/2 oz. jar just 79c plus tax You will find these fine Murray products on sale at ALL drug and cosmetic counters. If your dealer does not have Murray's Products send $1.00 and we will mail 2 giant size Hair Pomade or Hair Glo or 1 jar Hair Cream (tax and postage paid) in next mail. MURRAY'S SUPERIOR PRODUCTS CA. 456 charlotte Michigan MURRAY'S HAIR CREAM MURRAY'S POMADE This amazing hair pomade keeps hair neatly in place all day and evening. A tiny dab in the morning lets you feel well-groomed for business or social functions. Never greasy— never sticky. Contains no acids, alkalies or other harsh irritants. Giant Size 35 ¢ Trial Size 15 ¢ plus tax A soft dressing for easy-to-manage hair contains lanolin and coconut oil. Simple to apply —makes hair easy to set in latest fashion. Men's and women's Hair — even children's soft fine hair becomes easy to manage—easier to control. 2-month supply just 35 ¢ plus tax Makes hair look smoother—softer. Lets you arrange waves, swirls, bangs —in minutes. Contains lanolin and other ingredients highly beneficial to hair and scalp. Helps banish the burnt, dried look so often associated with dyes and pressing treatments. 11/2 oz. tube only 49c plus tax 31/2 oz. jar just 79c plus tax You will find these fine Murray products on sale at ALL drug and cosmetic counters. If your dealer does not have Murray's Products send $1.00 and we will mail 2 giant size Hair Pomade or Hair Glo or 1 jar Hair Cream (tax and postage paid) in next mail. MURRAY'S SUPERIOR PRODUCTS CA. 456 charlotte Michigan Effort For Freedom To Continue Despite Filibuster – Wilkins WASHINGTON — Whatever happens to the civil rights bill in the Senate, "the Negro drive for freedom from humiliation and inequality will not cease," Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the National Association for the, Advancement of Colored People, warned in an address before the annual forum of the Capital Press Club here, Tuesday, March 24. Citing the wide bi - partisan support the bill received in the House, which passed it by a vote of 290 to 130, as well as the firm call for its enactment by both Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, and the backing of religious organizations, Mr. Wilkins told the newsmen and their guests: "If the small senate minority, centered in the former slave-holding states, persists to the point of maiming the bill beyond usefulness, it may have destroyed confidence in the legislative process as a channel of redress. Not impaired, but destroyed." Turning to a recent proposal indicating violence as a possible weapon in the civil rights struggle, Mr. Wilkins pointed out: "The too - clever slogan, 'ballots or bullets 'overreaches itself, its author and its screaming adherents, for bullets in this issue can never substitute for ballots. That way lies disillusionment and death. "Yet, let those who sneer reflect upon the awful chain of repressions, the monumental hypocrisy that brought such a slogan to the surface." Negro youths and older persons alike he said, "are understandably weary and understandably cynical over a governmental philosophy which car cry over armored suppression of democracy in Hungary, pour out lives and millions for democracy in Southeast Asia, revamp Florida school systems and welfare agencies to help Cuban refugees, but cannot get its highest legislative body to respond to the cries of persecuted Negro Americans here at home." The NAACP leader expressed confidence that, "given the opportunity to vote, the overwhelming majority of the Senate would approve the civil rights bill substantially as it came from the House." He warned against the danger of allowing 19 filibusterers in the Senate to kill or water down civil rights legislation. WASHINGTON — Whatever happens to the civil rights bill in the Senate, "the Negro drive for freedom from humiliation and inequality will not cease," Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the National Association for the, Advancement of Colored People, warned in an address before the annual forum of the Capital Press Club here, Tuesday, March 24. Citing the wide bi - partisan support the bill received in the House, which passed it by a vote of 290 to 130, as well as the firm call for its enactment by both Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, and the backing of religious organizations, Mr. Wilkins told the newsmen and their guests: "If the small senate minority, centered in the former slave-holding states, persists to the point of maiming the bill beyond usefulness, it may have destroyed confidence in the legislative process as a channel of redress. Not impaired, but destroyed." Turning to a recent proposal indicating violence as a possible weapon in the civil rights struggle, Mr. Wilkins pointed out: "The too - clever slogan, 'ballots or bullets 'overreaches itself, its author and its screaming adherents, for bullets in this issue can never substitute for ballots. That way lies disillusionment and death. "Yet, let those who sneer reflect upon the awful chain of repressions, the monumental hypocrisy that brought such a slogan to the surface." Negro youths and older persons alike he said, "are understandably weary and understandably cynical over a governmental philosophy which car cry over armored suppression of democracy in Hungary, pour out lives and millions for democracy in Southeast Asia, revamp Florida school systems and welfare agencies to help Cuban refugees, but cannot get its highest legislative body to respond to the cries of persecuted Negro Americans here at home." The NAACP leader expressed confidence that, "given the opportunity to vote, the overwhelming majority of the Senate would approve the civil rights bill substantially as it came from the House." He warned against the danger of allowing 19 filibusterers in the Senate to kill or water down civil rights legislation. VIOLENCL DECRIED WASHINGTON — Whatever happens to the civil rights bill in the Senate, "the Negro drive for freedom from humiliation and inequality will not cease," Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the National Association for the, Advancement of Colored People, warned in an address before the annual forum of the Capital Press Club here, Tuesday, March 24. Citing the wide bi - partisan support the bill received in the House, which passed it by a vote of 290 to 130, as well as the firm call for its enactment by both Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, and the backing of religious organizations, Mr. Wilkins told the newsmen and their guests: "If the small senate minority, centered in the former slave-holding states, persists to the point of maiming the bill beyond usefulness, it may have destroyed confidence in the legislative process as a channel of redress. Not impaired, but destroyed." Turning to a recent proposal indicating violence as a possible weapon in the civil rights struggle, Mr. Wilkins pointed out: "The too - clever slogan, 'ballots or bullets 'overreaches itself, its author and its screaming adherents, for bullets in this issue can never substitute for ballots. That way lies disillusionment and death. "Yet, let those who sneer reflect upon the awful chain of repressions, the monumental hypocrisy that brought such a slogan to the surface." Negro youths and older persons alike he said, "are understandably weary and understandably cynical over a governmental philosophy which car cry over armored suppression of democracy in Hungary, pour out lives and millions for democracy in Southeast Asia, revamp Florida school systems and welfare agencies to help Cuban refugees, but cannot get its highest legislative body to respond to the cries of persecuted Negro Americans here at home." The NAACP leader expressed confidence that, "given the opportunity to vote, the overwhelming majority of the Senate would approve the civil rights bill substantially as it came from the House." He warned against the danger of allowing 19 filibusterers in the Senate to kill or water down civil rights legislation. Eugene D. Sawyer, USIA Africa Expert, Dies — Heart Attack Eugene D. Sawyer, 52, former United States Foreign Service Officer in India, Ghana and Cameroon, died Thursday morning at George Washington University Hospital here. Death was attributed to a heart attack. At the time of his death, Mr. Sawyer was an adviser in the Office of Private Cooperation at the United States Information Agency here, where he speciaized in African social, cultural and economic problems. He was born in Topeka, Kans., and received his education at Kansas state teachers College, where he was graduated with a B. S. degree in 1935. Following graduation, he joined the National Youth Administration in Topeka as a supervisor and later became director of health and physical education at the YMCA in Dallas, Texas. Mr. Sawyer subsequently worked in the physical education field in Baltimore, New York City, and Topeka before joining the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration in 1945 as a welfare officer in Traunstein; Germany He was appointed a Foreign Service Office in 1948 and served in that capacity in Monrovia, Liberia, New Delhi and Bombay, India; Accra, Ghana, and Yaounde, Cameroon. His survivors include his wife, Joan, a former British subject now employed at Howard University; a daughter, Margo, aged 5: and a sister,. Annabelle Sawyer, of Houston Texas. Miss. Jury Convicts Man In Four Minutes An official of the National Association for the Advancement of colored People has been sentenced to three months in jail or $100 fine after being found guilty of a charge which has come to be used here as a weapon against peaceful civil rights demonstrations — "parading without a permit." An all - white jury in the Hinds County Court took just four minutes of deliberation to convict Willie B. Ludden, NAACP youth field secretary, of charges stemming from a demonstration protesting segregation, May 31, 1963. Mr. Lidden was the first of 310 persons to be tried in connection with that protest march. NAACP defense attorney Carsie Hall of Jackson was successful in getting quashed an attempt by the prosecution to produce evidence and to have Mr. Ludden tried on perjury charges. Jack Travis, attorney for the state, was not allowed to put on the witness stand a Jackson police lieutenant who claimed Mr. Ludden gave false testimony when he said he was beaten by the law officer. According to the police lleutenant, Mr. Ludden merely "ran into my club." Tan Topics Howard O. Drama Professor Named To Shakespeare Unit Professor Owen Dodson, head of the Department of Drama at Howard University, has been named a member of the National committee of the Shakespeare Anniversary Committee, professor Dodson's acceptance of the appointment was announced today by Eugene R. Black, chairman and president of the American Shakespeare Festival at Stratford, Conn. The committee, which is planning the American celebration of the Shakespeare Quardicentennial, was proposed by the late President John F. Kennedy, president Lyndon B. Johnson recently gave his approval to the formation of the group. The observance of the 400th anniversary of the birth of William Shakespeare will go on throughout 1964. BUNCHE SPEAKER Or. Ralph Bunche, United Nations Under Secretary, will be the featured speaker at the 1964 National Convention Banquet of the American Veterans Committee, scheduled for Saturday, May 16, in the Hotel Roosevelt, New York City. METROPOLITAN NEW YORK TALIEDEGA COL- LEGE ALUMNI CLUB — The Talladega College Alumni Club of Greater New York met at the Brooklyn home of Dr. and Mrs. Aaron Brown and launched the United Negro College Campaign. It has been a custom, for years, to start the drive in March at The Brown's home. Among those shown are: Dr and Mrs. Wesley Hotchkiss (American Missionary Association Secretary and Trustee at Talladega), Mrs. Annie L Tucker, Trustee at Talladega, Mrs. Gwendolyn tepaheart, Club President, William Cope, speaker (UNCF Educational Director) and Miss Emma Crabb, Dean for the 1964 Drive. Southerners Launch Last Effort To Curb Passage Of Rights Bill Although the odds were stacked against them, Southern opponents of the Administration's Civil Right Bill this week launched a final effort to curb passage of the legislation. The few battered Senators who fought valiantly to send the Housepassed civil rights proposals to an uncertain fate in the Judiciary Committee, went down swinging wildly last Thursday as the Senate defeated the Morse motion, so to 34. Earlier in the day, they had been trampled by a vote of 67 to 17 after struggling to prevent the omnibus measure from being taken up at all by the Senate. Obervers now predict that the present talkathon in the Senatethe hottest in many years—will mark the eclipse of the power of the Southern bloc. They contend the Senate debate will be only a carbon copy of the February engagement in the House end that a strong civil rights bin will emerge before the hot winds of summer blow across Capitol Hill. The credit for last week's successes was shared by a small band of Democratic and Republican Senators who were aided and abetted by a host of supporters, beginning with President Johnson and ending with unidetified private citizens in the Senate gallery. Out front on the Democratic side were senators Mike Mansfield of Montana (the Majority Leader), Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota (the Majority Whip), Warren G. Magnuson of Washington, Thomas J. Dodd of Connecticut, and Philip A. Hart of Michigan. At bat for the Republicans were Senators Thomas H. Kuchel of California (the Minority Whip), Jacob K. Javits and Kenneth B. Keating of New York, Clifford P. Cafe of New jersey, and Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania. President Johnson was very much in the thick of things. He has been urging passage of the civil rights bill at his weekly meeting with congressional leaders and with anybody else who happened to come along. ELEANOR Friendship is the highest degree of perfection in society. — Montaigne. A friend is one who incessantly pays us the compliment of expecting from us all the virtues, and who can appreciate them in us. — Thoreau. Who will help you in the hour of sickness. Who will lend you a dollar without deducting the interest; Who will help you uphill when you are sliding down; Who will defend you in the hour when others speak evil of you; Who will believe in your innocence until you admit your guilt; Who will say behind your back what he says to your face; Who will shake hands with you where he meets you, even tho' you wear patches: and who will do all these things without expecting any return. —Dorothy C. Retsloff A blessed thing it is for any man or women to have a friend; one human soul whom we can trust utterly; who knows the best and worst of us; and who loves us in spite of all our faults; who will speak the honest truth to us, while the world flatters us to our face, arid laughs at us behind our back; who will give us counsel and reproof in the day of prosperity and self conceit; but who again will comfort and encourage us In the dav of difficulty and sorrow, when the world leaves us alone to fight our own battle as we can. —Kingsley A true friend is somebody who can make us do what we can, — Emerson. A friend hath the skill end observation of the best physician; the diligence and vigilance of the best nurse; and the tenderness and patience of the best mother.— Clarendon So long ea we love, we serve. So tong as we are loved by others. I would almost say we are indispensable; and no man is useless while he has a friend. — Robert L. Stevenson I love you not only for what you are, but for what I am when I nm with you. I love you not only for what you have made of yourself, but for what you are making of me. I love you for the part of me that you bring out. I love you for putting your hand in my heaped-up heart and passing over all the foolish and frivolous and weak things which you cannot help dimly seeing there,' and for drawing out into the light all the beautiful, radiant belongings that no one else looked quite far enough to find. I love you for ignoring the possibilities of the fool and weakling in me, and for laying firm hold on the possibilities of good in me. I love you for closing your eyes to the discords in me, and for adding to the music in me by worshipful listening. I love you because you are help ing me to make the lumber of my life not a tavern but a temple, and of the words of my every day not a reproach but a song. I love you because you have done more than any creed could have done to make me good, and more than any fate could have done to make me happy. You hare done in just by being yourself Perhaps that is what being a friend means after all. — From Leaves Of Gold, by Lytle. Friendship Friendship is the highest degree of perfection in society. — Montaigne. A friend is one who incessantly pays us the compliment of expecting from us all the virtues, and who can appreciate them in us. — Thoreau. Who will help you in the hour of sickness. Who will lend you a dollar without deducting the interest; Who will help you uphill when you are sliding down; Who will defend you in the hour when others speak evil of you; Who will believe in your innocence until you admit your guilt; Who will say behind your back what he says to your face; Who will shake hands with you where he meets you, even tho' you wear patches: and who will do all these things without expecting any return. —Dorothy C. Retsloff A blessed thing it is for any man or women to have a friend; one human soul whom we can trust utterly; who knows the best and worst of us; and who loves us in spite of all our faults; who will speak the honest truth to us, while the world flatters us to our face, arid laughs at us behind our back; who will give us counsel and reproof in the day of prosperity and self conceit; but who again will comfort and encourage us In the dav of difficulty and sorrow, when the world leaves us alone to fight our own battle as we can. —Kingsley A true friend is somebody who can make us do what we can, — Emerson. A friend hath the skill end observation of the best physician; the diligence and vigilance of the best nurse; and the tenderness and patience of the best mother.— Clarendon So long ea we love, we serve. So tong as we are loved by others. I would almost say we are indispensable; and no man is useless while he has a friend. — Robert L. Stevenson I love you not only for what you are, but for what I am when I nm with you. I love you not only for what you have made of yourself, but for what you are making of me. I love you for the part of me that you bring out. I love you for putting your hand in my heaped-up heart and passing over all the foolish and frivolous and weak things which you cannot help dimly seeing there,' and for drawing out into the light all the beautiful, radiant belongings that no one else looked quite far enough to find. I love you for ignoring the possibilities of the fool and weakling in me, and for laying firm hold on the possibilities of good in me. I love you for closing your eyes to the discords in me, and for adding to the music in me by worshipful listening. I love you because you are help ing me to make the lumber of my life not a tavern but a temple, and of the words of my every day not a reproach but a song. I love you because you have done more than any creed could have done to make me good, and more than any fate could have done to make me happy. You hare done in just by being yourself Perhaps that is what being a friend means after all. — From Leaves Of Gold, by Lytle. A Friend Is A Person Friendship is the highest degree of perfection in society. — Montaigne. A friend is one who incessantly pays us the compliment of expecting from us all the virtues, and who can appreciate them in us. — Thoreau. Who will help you in the hour of sickness. Who will lend you a dollar without deducting the interest; Who will help you uphill when you are sliding down; Who will defend you in the hour when others speak evil of you; Who will believe in your innocence until you admit your guilt; Who will say behind your back what he says to your face; Who will shake hands with you where he meets you, even tho' you wear patches: and who will do all these things without expecting any return. —Dorothy C. Retsloff A blessed thing it is for any man or women to have a friend; one human soul whom we can trust utterly; who knows the best and worst of us; and who loves us in spite of all our faults; who will speak the honest truth to us, while the world flatters us to our face, arid laughs at us behind our back; who will give us counsel and reproof in the day of prosperity and self conceit; but who again will comfort and encourage us In the dav of difficulty and sorrow, when the world leaves us alone to fight our own battle as we can. —Kingsley A true friend is somebody who can make us do what we can, — Emerson. A friend hath the skill end observation of the best physician; the diligence and vigilance of the best nurse; and the tenderness and patience of the best mother.— Clarendon So long ea we love, we serve. So tong as we are loved by others. I would almost say we are indispensable; and no man is useless while he has a friend. — Robert L. Stevenson I love you not only for what you are, but for what I am when I nm with you. I love you not only for what you have made of yourself, but for what you are making of me. I love you for the part of me that you bring out. I love you for putting your hand in my heaped-up heart and passing over all the foolish and frivolous and weak things which you cannot help dimly seeing there,' and for drawing out into the light all the beautiful, radiant belongings that no one else looked quite far enough to find. I love you for ignoring the possibilities of the fool and weakling in me, and for laying firm hold on the possibilities of good in me. I love you for closing your eyes to the discords in me, and for adding to the music in me by worshipful listening. I love you because you are help ing me to make the lumber of my life not a tavern but a temple, and of the words of my every day not a reproach but a song. I love you because you have done more than any creed could have done to make me good, and more than any fate could have done to make me happy. You hare done in just by being yourself Perhaps that is what being a friend means after all. — From Leaves Of Gold, by Lytle. Friendship: A Shining Armor Friendship is the highest degree of perfection in society. — Montaigne. A friend is one who incessantly pays us the compliment of expecting from us all the virtues, and who can appreciate them in us. — Thoreau. Who will help you in the hour of sickness. Who will lend you a dollar without deducting the interest; Who will help you uphill when you are sliding down; Who will defend you in the hour when others speak evil of you; Who will believe in your innocence until you admit your guilt; Who will say behind your back what he says to your face; Who will shake hands with you where he meets you, even tho' you wear patches: and who will do all these things without expecting any return. —Dorothy C. Retsloff A blessed thing it is for any man or women to have a friend; one human soul whom we can trust utterly; who knows the best and worst of us; and who loves us in spite of all our faults; who will speak the honest truth to us, while the world flatters us to our face, arid laughs at us behind our back; who will give us counsel and reproof in the day of prosperity and self conceit; but who again will comfort and encourage us In the dav of difficulty and sorrow, when the world leaves us alone to fight our own battle as we can. —Kingsley A true friend is somebody who can make us do what we can, — Emerson. A friend hath the skill end observation of the best physician; the diligence and vigilance of the best nurse; and the tenderness and patience of the best mother.— Clarendon So long ea we love, we serve. So tong as we are loved by others. I would almost say we are indispensable; and no man is useless while he has a friend. — Robert L. Stevenson I love you not only for what you are, but for what I am when I nm with you. I love you not only for what you have made of yourself, but for what you are making of me. I love you for the part of me that you bring out. I love you for putting your hand in my heaped-up heart and passing over all the foolish and frivolous and weak things which you cannot help dimly seeing there,' and for drawing out into the light all the beautiful, radiant belongings that no one else looked quite far enough to find. I love you for ignoring the possibilities of the fool and weakling in me, and for laying firm hold on the possibilities of good in me. I love you for closing your eyes to the discords in me, and for adding to the music in me by worshipful listening. I love you because you are help ing me to make the lumber of my life not a tavern but a temple, and of the words of my every day not a reproach but a song. I love you because you have done more than any creed could have done to make me good, and more than any fate could have done to make me happy. You hare done in just by being yourself Perhaps that is what being a friend means after all. — From Leaves Of Gold, by Lytle. A True Friend Friendship is the highest degree of perfection in society. — Montaigne. A friend is one who incessantly pays us the compliment of expecting from us all the virtues, and who can appreciate them in us. — Thoreau. Who will help you in the hour of sickness. Who will lend you a dollar without deducting the interest; Who will help you uphill when you are sliding down; Who will defend you in the hour when others speak evil of you; Who will believe in your innocence until you admit your guilt; Who will say behind your back what he says to your face; Who will shake hands with you where he meets you, even tho' you wear patches: and who will do all these things without expecting any return. —Dorothy C. Retsloff A blessed thing it is for any man or women to have a friend; one human soul whom we can trust utterly; who knows the best and worst of us; and who loves us in spite of all our faults; who will speak the honest truth to us, while the world flatters us to our face, arid laughs at us behind our back; who will give us counsel and reproof in the day of prosperity and self conceit; but who again will comfort and encourage us In the dav of difficulty and sorrow, when the world leaves us alone to fight our own battle as we can. —Kingsley A true friend is somebody who can make us do what we can, — Emerson. A friend hath the skill end observation of the best physician; the diligence and vigilance of the best nurse; and the tenderness and patience of the best mother.— Clarendon So long ea we love, we serve. So tong as we are loved by others. I would almost say we are indispensable; and no man is useless while he has a friend. — Robert L. Stevenson I love you not only for what you are, but for what I am when I nm with you. I love you not only for what you have made of yourself, but for what you are making of me. I love you for the part of me that you bring out. I love you for putting your hand in my heaped-up heart and passing over all the foolish and frivolous and weak things which you cannot help dimly seeing there,' and for drawing out into the light all the beautiful, radiant belongings that no one else looked quite far enough to find. I love you for ignoring the possibilities of the fool and weakling in me, and for laying firm hold on the possibilities of good in me. I love you for closing your eyes to the discords in me, and for adding to the music in me by worshipful listening. I love you because you are help ing me to make the lumber of my life not a tavern but a temple, and of the words of my every day not a reproach but a song. I love you because you have done more than any creed could have done to make me good, and more than any fate could have done to make me happy. You hare done in just by being yourself Perhaps that is what being a friend means after all. — From Leaves Of Gold, by Lytle. Indispensable Friendship is the highest degree of perfection in society. — Montaigne. A friend is one who incessantly pays us the compliment of expecting from us all the virtues, and who can appreciate them in us. — Thoreau. Who will help you in the hour of sickness. Who will lend you a dollar without deducting the interest; Who will help you uphill when you are sliding down; Who will defend you in the hour when others speak evil of you; Who will believe in your innocence until you admit your guilt; Who will say behind your back what he says to your face; Who will shake hands with you where he meets you, even tho' you wear patches: and who will do all these things without expecting any return. —Dorothy C. Retsloff A blessed thing it is for any man or women to have a friend; one human soul whom we can trust utterly; who knows the best and worst of us; and who loves us in spite of all our faults; who will speak the honest truth to us, while the world flatters us to our face, arid laughs at us behind our back; who will give us counsel and reproof in the day of prosperity and self conceit; but who again will comfort and encourage us In the dav of difficulty and sorrow, when the world leaves us alone to fight our own battle as we can. —Kingsley A true friend is somebody who can make us do what we can, — Emerson. A friend hath the skill end observation of the best physician; the diligence and vigilance of the best nurse; and the tenderness and patience of the best mother.— Clarendon So long ea we love, we serve. So tong as we are loved by others. I would almost say we are indispensable; and no man is useless while he has a friend. — Robert L. Stevenson I love you not only for what you are, but for what I am when I nm with you. I love you not only for what you have made of yourself, but for what you are making of me. I love you for the part of me that you bring out. I love you for putting your hand in my heaped-up heart and passing over all the foolish and frivolous and weak things which you cannot help dimly seeing there,' and for drawing out into the light all the beautiful, radiant belongings that no one else looked quite far enough to find. I love you for ignoring the possibilities of the fool and weakling in me, and for laying firm hold on the possibilities of good in me. I love you for closing your eyes to the discords in me, and for adding to the music in me by worshipful listening. I love you because you are help ing me to make the lumber of my life not a tavern but a temple, and of the words of my every day not a reproach but a song. I love you because you have done more than any creed could have done to make me good, and more than any fate could have done to make me happy. You hare done in just by being yourself Perhaps that is what being a friend means after all. — From Leaves Of Gold, by Lytle. Tribute to A Friend Friendship is the highest degree of perfection in society. — Montaigne. A friend is one who incessantly pays us the compliment of expecting from us all the virtues, and who can appreciate them in us. — Thoreau. Who will help you in the hour of sickness. Who will lend you a dollar without deducting the interest; Who will help you uphill when you are sliding down; Who will defend you in the hour when others speak evil of you; Who will believe in your innocence until you admit your guilt; Who will say behind your back what he says to your face; Who will shake hands with you where he meets you, even tho' you wear patches: and who will do all these things without expecting any return. —Dorothy C. Retsloff A blessed thing it is for any man or women to have a friend; one human soul whom we can trust utterly; who knows the best and worst of us; and who loves us in spite of all our faults; who will speak the honest truth to us, while the world flatters us to our face, arid laughs at us behind our back; who will give us counsel and reproof in the day of prosperity and self conceit; but who again will comfort and encourage us In the dav of difficulty and sorrow, when the world leaves us alone to fight our own battle as we can. —Kingsley A true friend is somebody who can make us do what we can, — Emerson. A friend hath the skill end observation of the best physician; the diligence and vigilance of the best nurse; and the tenderness and patience of the best mother.— Clarendon So long ea we love, we serve. So tong as we are loved by others. I would almost say we are indispensable; and no man is useless while he has a friend. — Robert L. Stevenson I love you not only for what you are, but for what I am when I nm with you. I love you not only for what you have made of yourself, but for what you are making of me. I love you for the part of me that you bring out. I love you for putting your hand in my heaped-up heart and passing over all the foolish and frivolous and weak things which you cannot help dimly seeing there,' and for drawing out into the light all the beautiful, radiant belongings that no one else looked quite far enough to find. I love you for ignoring the possibilities of the fool and weakling in me, and for laying firm hold on the possibilities of good in me. I love you for closing your eyes to the discords in me, and for adding to the music in me by worshipful listening. I love you because you are help ing me to make the lumber of my life not a tavern but a temple, and of the words of my every day not a reproach but a song. I love you because you have done more than any creed could have done to make me good, and more than any fate could have done to make me happy. You hare done in just by being yourself Perhaps that is what being a friend means after all. — From Leaves Of Gold, by Lytle. The conduct of labor unions could be "more consistent with and conductive to the national interest" by eliminating racial barriers, the Committee for Economic Development suggested Monday. In a statement on national policy, the 50-member Research and policy Committee of the CED included this suggestion Among 10 other measures designed to assure "the continued performance of unions' useful functions, while reducing the magnitude and dangers of their adverse consequences." The CED recommendation said racial, or other barriers to union membership, apprenticeship, or employment should be eliminated The equal right of all qualified workers to join in their trade or industry should be recognized by law. This basic right, the committee added, "should not be denied except for nonpayment of denied or similar good cause." Other recommendations by the CED, an organization of 200 businessmen and educators, included proposals related to labor violence union membership, injunctions lockouts, secondary boycotts, duty to bargain, unfair practices, and political contributions. Watusi Dancers: For N. Y. Fair Watusi dancers and warriors will leave their country for the first time to perform as the major attraction of the African Pavilion at the New York World's Pair. Mwami Mwambutsa FY, King of Burundi, hae given his permission for the troupe of 12 warrior dancers and 10 royal dancers to leave Bujumbuia, the capital, on April 5. Burundi, a former TRUST Territory administered by Belgium became an independent limited monarchy in 1962. Preferred first aid dressing because it's superrefined to guaranteed hospital quality! Relieves pain and Itching of minor burns, chute and skin injuries, Switch to Moroline, 1000 uses, Only 17¢— get over twice as much for 27¢