Memphis World Memphis World Publishing Co. 1963-03-16 J. A. Beauchamp Rowan Confirmed As Finnish Envoy By U. S. Senate The U. S. Senate on Friday confirmed Carl T. Rowan, one of the highest ranking Negroes in the State Department, as this country's Ambassador to Finland. Mr. Rowan, 37-year-old graduate of oberlin College with a master's degree from the University of Minnesota, succeeds Bernard A. Guffler, 59, who resigned from the Helsinki post after serving about two years. The new envoy is a former reporter of the Minneapolis Tribune. He is the author of four books, 'south of Freedom, "The Pitiful and the Proud,". "Go South to Sorrow" and "Wait Til Next Year", In 1953, Mr. Rowan was selected as one of the ten outstanding young men in the nation by the Uited States Junior Chamber of Commerce. He received the Sigma Delta Chi Medallion for distinguished reporting for the years 1953, 1955 and 1958. Mr. Rowan joined the State Department in Feb. 1961 as Deputy Asistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs, but spent much of his time as an alternate member of the U. S. Delegation to the United Nations. His appointment brings to three the number of colored Ambassadors presently serving this country abroad. The other two are Clifton R. Wharton, 63, Ambassador to Norway; and Dr. Mercer Cook, 59, Ambassador to the Niger Republic. The Senate also confirmed the nomination of William J. Porter, of Massachusetts, to be the first Ambassador to Algeria; and Edward M. Korry, a former foreign correspondent, to be Ambbassador to Ethiopia. SUBJECT OF AWARD The U. S. Senate on Friday confirmed Carl T. Rowan, one of the highest ranking Negroes in the State Department, as this country's Ambassador to Finland. Mr. Rowan, 37-year-old graduate of oberlin College with a master's degree from the University of Minnesota, succeeds Bernard A. Guffler, 59, who resigned from the Helsinki post after serving about two years. The new envoy is a former reporter of the Minneapolis Tribune. He is the author of four books, 'south of Freedom, "The Pitiful and the Proud,". "Go South to Sorrow" and "Wait Til Next Year", In 1953, Mr. Rowan was selected as one of the ten outstanding young men in the nation by the Uited States Junior Chamber of Commerce. He received the Sigma Delta Chi Medallion for distinguished reporting for the years 1953, 1955 and 1958. Mr. Rowan joined the State Department in Feb. 1961 as Deputy Asistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs, but spent much of his time as an alternate member of the U. S. Delegation to the United Nations. His appointment brings to three the number of colored Ambassadors presently serving this country abroad. The other two are Clifton R. Wharton, 63, Ambassador to Norway; and Dr. Mercer Cook, 59, Ambassador to the Niger Republic. The Senate also confirmed the nomination of William J. Porter, of Massachusetts, to be the first Ambassador to Algeria; and Edward M. Korry, a former foreign correspondent, to be Ambbassador to Ethiopia. CIVIL SERVICE 400 Africans have been posted to senior positions in the Kenya Civil Service during the past year, according to a report made here recently As of last January, the nuber was 1,564, compared with 1,098 in January, 1962; and 637, in July, 1961. Missionaries Of Color Outstanding In Africa YAOUNDE, Cameroun, West Africa — Several Negro missionaries are proving their outstanding capabilities in this country, where their race actually gives them advantages over white missionaries. Africans accept the Negro missionary as a brother in the skin." Initialy, this can cause misunderstanding: The Africans may regard the Negro as African in culture, as well as complexion. However, they come to realize that the American Negro is thoroughly American. At the same time, Africans continue to be more open and cinfiding with a Negro "brother in the skin" than they Often are with white missionaries. They feel that I will level with them," said Yenwith K. Whitney, Negro from New York who is teaching physics and math at Cameroun Christian College at bamba. Its campus was hewn from the rain forest in 1946. Yet, Mr. Whitney and his wife Muriel agreed 'the longer we're here, the more American we realize we are." Mrs. Whitney teaches English at the college. Her husband, a former fighter pilot and M. I. T. graduate, obtained a master's degree in teaching on his last furlough, they have two daughters. The church, as a regular part of its policy, gave the Whitneys more than a year of language and cultural study in France before sending them to their College post in this former French colony. The Whitneys have found that Africans are very curious about the racial situation in America, but know little of the story. They have heard that some Africans were sold by other Africans as slaves, and transported across the sea. Some have heard that there was a thing called the Civil War, and also 'a terrible thing called Little Rock." In explaining the struggle of the American Negro for selfrealization, the Whitneys have found that they have had to explain the whole history of race relations in America. Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Overton, Negroes who work out of the Foulassi mission stationed near the town of Sanbmelima have found much the same thing, Mr. Overton, a graduate of Rutgers University and Lincoln University Seminary, has built a town chapel into a thriving church. He has been especialy efective in reaching the oficials and bright young men in town. With these people, Mr. and Msr. Overton often discuss the right of men to personal freedom and dignity, Their race has helped them, they said to discuss these questions in a way that Africans find very sympathetic. The Africans seem to regard Mr. Overton as an American partner and something of a model in his leadership and family life. The Overtons have two little girls He comes from Texas, and she from Philadelphia. Another Negro misionary, Miss Jeanne S. Davis, teaches home econmoics at a girls' high school near Elat. Several people called her "the beauty in the group," and her students tend to regard her as a model of young womanhood. Miss Davis was born in Bristol, Pa., and graduated from Drexel Institute of Technology in Philadelphia. WIFE IS TEACHER YAOUNDE, Cameroun, West Africa — Several Negro missionaries are proving their outstanding capabilities in this country, where their race actually gives them advantages over white missionaries. Africans accept the Negro missionary as a brother in the skin." Initialy, this can cause misunderstanding: The Africans may regard the Negro as African in culture, as well as complexion. However, they come to realize that the American Negro is thoroughly American. At the same time, Africans continue to be more open and cinfiding with a Negro "brother in the skin" than they Often are with white missionaries. They feel that I will level with them," said Yenwith K. Whitney, Negro from New York who is teaching physics and math at Cameroun Christian College at bamba. Its campus was hewn from the rain forest in 1946. Yet, Mr. Whitney and his wife Muriel agreed 'the longer we're here, the more American we realize we are." Mrs. Whitney teaches English at the college. Her husband, a former fighter pilot and M. I. T. graduate, obtained a master's degree in teaching on his last furlough, they have two daughters. The church, as a regular part of its policy, gave the Whitneys more than a year of language and cultural study in France before sending them to their College post in this former French colony. The Whitneys have found that Africans are very curious about the racial situation in America, but know little of the story. They have heard that some Africans were sold by other Africans as slaves, and transported across the sea. Some have heard that there was a thing called the Civil War, and also 'a terrible thing called Little Rock." In explaining the struggle of the American Negro for selfrealization, the Whitneys have found that they have had to explain the whole history of race relations in America. Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Overton, Negroes who work out of the Foulassi mission stationed near the town of Sanbmelima have found much the same thing, Mr. Overton, a graduate of Rutgers University and Lincoln University Seminary, has built a town chapel into a thriving church. He has been especialy efective in reaching the oficials and bright young men in town. With these people, Mr. and Msr. Overton often discuss the right of men to personal freedom and dignity, Their race has helped them, they said to discuss these questions in a way that Africans find very sympathetic. The Africans seem to regard Mr. Overton as an American partner and something of a model in his leadership and family life. The Overtons have two little girls He comes from Texas, and she from Philadelphia. Another Negro misionary, Miss Jeanne S. Davis, teaches home econmoics at a girls' high school near Elat. Several people called her "the beauty in the group," and her students tend to regard her as a model of young womanhood. Miss Davis was born in Bristol, Pa., and graduated from Drexel Institute of Technology in Philadelphia. Good news for asthmatics Specialist's discovery now makes it possible for bronchial asthma sufferers to quickly relieve choking, coughing, gasping spasms and do it without use of internal drugs or painful injections. So safe you can get Dr. Guild's Green Mountain in either cigarettes or compound form without prescription. Ask your druggist for it. POSNERS BERGAMOT WATER REPELLENT CONDITIONER THERE'S MILLIONS of Satisfied HEADS Recommended by Beauticians everywhere POSNER'S THE AUTHOR AND THE ACTRESS — Poet-Author Langston Hughes presents selected readings during recent Brooklyn NAACP songplay "Sing for Freedom" as Miss Diana Sands, center, star of the Broadway success "Raisin in the Sun" listens. Both starred in affair which launched new sales campaign of "Fight for Freedom: The Story of the NAACP" by Mr. Hughes. Urban League Proposes Six Training Projects NEW YORK— Proposals by Urban Leagues in six cities for establishment of federally-sponsored training and re-training 'demonstration" programs in their communities, under provisions of the Manpower Development and Training Act of 1961, are nearing completion for submission later this month to U. S. Labor Department officials. The presentations, recommending programs the League believes most urgently needed in the various communities, are an outgrowth of Washington consultations held in February among UL oficials (national and local) and Labor Department representatives. Under provisions of the Act, the Federal Government is empowered to select, approve and finance a number of demonstration projects, basing its approval on proposals offered by local community leadership across the country. The six cities involved in the initial UL presentations are Akron, O.; Atlanta; Marion, Ind.; Milwaukee; Philadelphia, and Providence, R. I. Local League executives and staff from each city, along with Adolph Holmes, NUL asistant director for job development and employment, attended the February sesions with Labor Department officials. The UL is among the first voluntary community organizations to proposal setting up these specific demonstration projects. They would be federally financed, but conducted under the supervision of local ULs, working in concert with other civic organizations; public and voluntary. Mr. Holmes is in charge of coordinating the overall Leagues participation. Mr. Holmes, previously in the office of the Newark UL's industrial relations department, recently joined the national staff in New York. He holds a BBA degree from Hofstra Colege, Hempstead, Long Island, and is presently taking graduate work at Rutgers University. A veteran of 21 years' military service, Mr. Holmes is a retired Army major. He served four years in Germany as a personnel management oficer for the Army and, from 1948 to 1950, conducted a German youth activities program at Nuremburg, in which 6,000 young persons participated. He and his family presently live in Teaneck, N. J. ATLANTA INVOLVED NEW YORK— Proposals by Urban Leagues in six cities for establishment of federally-sponsored training and re-training 'demonstration" programs in their communities, under provisions of the Manpower Development and Training Act of 1961, are nearing completion for submission later this month to U. S. Labor Department officials. The presentations, recommending programs the League believes most urgently needed in the various communities, are an outgrowth of Washington consultations held in February among UL oficials (national and local) and Labor Department representatives. Under provisions of the Act, the Federal Government is empowered to select, approve and finance a number of demonstration projects, basing its approval on proposals offered by local community leadership across the country. The six cities involved in the initial UL presentations are Akron, O.; Atlanta; Marion, Ind.; Milwaukee; Philadelphia, and Providence, R. I. Local League executives and staff from each city, along with Adolph Holmes, NUL asistant director for job development and employment, attended the February sesions with Labor Department officials. The UL is among the first voluntary community organizations to proposal setting up these specific demonstration projects. They would be federally financed, but conducted under the supervision of local ULs, working in concert with other civic organizations; public and voluntary. Mr. Holmes is in charge of coordinating the overall Leagues participation. Mr. Holmes, previously in the office of the Newark UL's industrial relations department, recently joined the national staff in New York. He holds a BBA degree from Hofstra Colege, Hempstead, Long Island, and is presently taking graduate work at Rutgers University. A veteran of 21 years' military service, Mr. Holmes is a retired Army major. He served four years in Germany as a personnel management oficer for the Army and, from 1948 to 1950, conducted a German youth activities program at Nuremburg, in which 6,000 young persons participated. He and his family presently live in Teaneck, N. J. Do's And Don'ts SHUCKS! IT ISN'T MUCH — I'LL DO MY HOMEWORK TOMORROW!! CONTINENTAL FEATURES Harvey Gantt Lives In Vacuum No news it good news. That, in brief, is the story of Harvey Gantt's first month as the only Negro at Clemson College here. In the inevitable comparison between Gantt's experiences here and those of James Meredith at the University of Mississippi, Ole Miss and its students suffer. But, according to a local newsman, much of the difference is that which exists in the personalities of the two Negroes students, themselves. One of the few newspapermen to penetrate the barrier that has shielded Gantt and his on campus life from the public is John P. O'Keefe, whose reports appeared recently in the News and Courier Published in Charleston. O'Keefe's stories produced here in condensed form, are significant as coming from the pen of a southern white newspaperman. It is the genral opinion of the student body in this small college town that the aceptance of the first Negro student here — without incident — is due primarily to one person, Harvey Gantt. "If it had been anyone else," one student commented, "he never would have lasted, but Gantt has a sense of humor and that is the secret of his sucess." Harvey Gantt rests after classes or one of his long laboratory sessions these days in the quiet atmosphere of his room. Feet on the desk, relaxed, confident, he reads the newspaper after class or writes letters to his girl whose picture sits upon his dresser. But this is a somewhat different individual from the Charleston Negro who left the Low country last month to be the first member of his race to enter previously allwhite Clemson College. A month ago the 20-year-old Gantt was evidently apprehensive. He was nervous talked in stilted phrases as one who was not completely sure of his position. But his entry had been well planned beforehand with an understanding reached between the students an the school officials. Students said that the administration had secured the support of all the fraternities on the campus in effecting the smooth introduction of Gantt into the college community. However students did admit that they had tried to 'get to" the new student in their own inimitable way: "We would make, small cracks about him or yell facetious remarks at him across campus. But he would just smile and take it all in good spirits. Nobody does that anymore because they can't find anything to kid him about." All things considered, Gantt is still very much alone on the Clemson campus. He does not join in the dormitory room "bull sessions" he does not submerge himself into the massive crowd at sporting events, he does not spend his evenings chatting with contemporaries at the local lunch counter. He is known and seen and discussed by the crowd but he is not part of it. Gantt himself is maintaining a polite but firm "no comment" approach to members of the press. O'KEEFE STORIES No news it good news. That, in brief, is the story of Harvey Gantt's first month as the only Negro at Clemson College here. In the inevitable comparison between Gantt's experiences here and those of James Meredith at the University of Mississippi, Ole Miss and its students suffer. But, according to a local newsman, much of the difference is that which exists in the personalities of the two Negroes students, themselves. One of the few newspapermen to penetrate the barrier that has shielded Gantt and his on campus life from the public is John P. O'Keefe, whose reports appeared recently in the News and Courier Published in Charleston. O'Keefe's stories produced here in condensed form, are significant as coming from the pen of a southern white newspaperman. It is the genral opinion of the student body in this small college town that the aceptance of the first Negro student here — without incident — is due primarily to one person, Harvey Gantt. "If it had been anyone else," one student commented, "he never would have lasted, but Gantt has a sense of humor and that is the secret of his sucess." Harvey Gantt rests after classes or one of his long laboratory sessions these days in the quiet atmosphere of his room. Feet on the desk, relaxed, confident, he reads the newspaper after class or writes letters to his girl whose picture sits upon his dresser. But this is a somewhat different individual from the Charleston Negro who left the Low country last month to be the first member of his race to enter previously allwhite Clemson College. A month ago the 20-year-old Gantt was evidently apprehensive. He was nervous talked in stilted phrases as one who was not completely sure of his position. But his entry had been well planned beforehand with an understanding reached between the students an the school officials. Students said that the administration had secured the support of all the fraternities on the campus in effecting the smooth introduction of Gantt into the college community. However students did admit that they had tried to 'get to" the new student in their own inimitable way: "We would make, small cracks about him or yell facetious remarks at him across campus. But he would just smile and take it all in good spirits. Nobody does that anymore because they can't find anything to kid him about." All things considered, Gantt is still very much alone on the Clemson campus. He does not join in the dormitory room "bull sessions" he does not submerge himself into the massive crowd at sporting events, he does not spend his evenings chatting with contemporaries at the local lunch counter. He is known and seen and discussed by the crowd but he is not part of it. Gantt himself is maintaining a polite but firm "no comment" approach to members of the press. DIFFERENT INDIVIDUAL No news it good news. That, in brief, is the story of Harvey Gantt's first month as the only Negro at Clemson College here. In the inevitable comparison between Gantt's experiences here and those of James Meredith at the University of Mississippi, Ole Miss and its students suffer. But, according to a local newsman, much of the difference is that which exists in the personalities of the two Negroes students, themselves. One of the few newspapermen to penetrate the barrier that has shielded Gantt and his on campus life from the public is John P. O'Keefe, whose reports appeared recently in the News and Courier Published in Charleston. O'Keefe's stories produced here in condensed form, are significant as coming from the pen of a southern white newspaperman. It is the genral opinion of the student body in this small college town that the aceptance of the first Negro student here — without incident — is due primarily to one person, Harvey Gantt. "If it had been anyone else," one student commented, "he never would have lasted, but Gantt has a sense of humor and that is the secret of his sucess." Harvey Gantt rests after classes or one of his long laboratory sessions these days in the quiet atmosphere of his room. Feet on the desk, relaxed, confident, he reads the newspaper after class or writes letters to his girl whose picture sits upon his dresser. But this is a somewhat different individual from the Charleston Negro who left the Low country last month to be the first member of his race to enter previously allwhite Clemson College. A month ago the 20-year-old Gantt was evidently apprehensive. He was nervous talked in stilted phrases as one who was not completely sure of his position. But his entry had been well planned beforehand with an understanding reached between the students an the school officials. Students said that the administration had secured the support of all the fraternities on the campus in effecting the smooth introduction of Gantt into the college community. However students did admit that they had tried to 'get to" the new student in their own inimitable way: "We would make, small cracks about him or yell facetious remarks at him across campus. But he would just smile and take it all in good spirits. Nobody does that anymore because they can't find anything to kid him about." All things considered, Gantt is still very much alone on the Clemson campus. He does not join in the dormitory room "bull sessions" he does not submerge himself into the massive crowd at sporting events, he does not spend his evenings chatting with contemporaries at the local lunch counter. He is known and seen and discussed by the crowd but he is not part of it. Gantt himself is maintaining a polite but firm "no comment" approach to members of the press. Virginia Teachers Urged To Promote Voter Effort The Virginia Teachers Association (VTA) was urged to work harder for voter registration too "free Negroes of the Byrd machine" in the state of Virginia in 1964. "Voting is our chief weapon to all our rights. And in order to vote we must register," said Dr. Tinsley L. Spraggins, a professor of history at Virginia Union University, Active in voter registration for the National Democratic Committee, Dr. Spraggins was one of four panelists who appeared in a symposium before more than 100 VTA committee members attending a conference on contemporary problems here at Slaughter's Hotel. Others on the panel were: Dr. William H. Martin, dean of faculty at Hampton Institute; Alfred K. Talbot, Jr., president of the 8,500member VTA; and Dr. J. Rupert Picott, the organization's executive secretary. "Registration is our biggest problem," Dr. Spraggins said, "In the state of Virginia, there are over 451,000 Negroes of voting age; and of this number, only 150,000 are registered to vote. The problem for you, as teachers and as members of the VTA, is to help close this gap by teaching your students the voting registration regulations." The Virginia Union University professor also noted that fifteen states have aleardy ratified the proposed 24th constitutional amendment which prohibits the poll tax in national elections. Talbot, who was elected to head the VTA for the next two years last November, urged the VTA teachers to give greater consideration to travel, both abroad and in the United States. "Unless we come into closer contact with the peoples of the world, we are never going to make our teaching vitally alive," he said. Dr. Picott cautioned the VTA group to be aware of the alarming dropout figures of the past year among the schools' in the Commonwealth. He also cited the VTA' urging the establishment of a Vocational education program which would help to lessen the serious dropout problem facing the Commonwealth of Virginia. More than twenty-one of the Association's committees, recently appointed by Talbot, discussed problems in education that will be worked on during the next two years. Record Keeping In Powell Project Hit By Ohio Solon Ohio Republican John M. Ashbrook is out to "scalp" Harlem's Democratic Representative, Adam Clayton Powell, one way or another. Last Wednesday, Cong. Ashbrook placed in the Congressional Record a report which he said indicates that Mr. Powell's Harlem youth project is being run in such "a slipshod manner" that on its merits it Is "more political than real" Two weeks ago, Ashbrooks was one of the most outspoken critics of Powells budget for the 8th Congress. Operating funds for Powell's House Comitte on Education and Labor for 1963 were eventually slashed, as Ashbrook recommended, by $200,000. Ashbrook said a gvoernment audit of Associated Community Teams (ACT), a project set up in Harlem under the Juvenile Delinquency and Youth Ofenses Act of 1961, indicates the project is far from being the "model" described by Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy and other Washington officials. Powell is one of the directors of ACT. He told a recent press conference that he had attended no metings of the organization and had never met any of the other directors. Livingstone Wingate, a former administrative assistant for the Ha-r lem Congressman, is director of the project, which is housed in the Adam Clayton Powell Community enter in New York, at a rental fee of $2,000 monthly. His salary is given as $15,000 annualy, but Ashbrook said the amount exceeds the approved budget by 1,000. The audit produced by Ashbrook was conducted by the Department of Health, Education an Welfare (HEW(, which administers the juvenile delinquency grant program. Acording to the Ohioan, HEW's juvenile program director Bernard Russell, has been "obliged to mildly chastise" the $260,000 propject in Harlem for the folowing reasons: 1. "Many interesting discrepencies", attributed to "a very incomplete acounting and auditing system." 2. Inadequate time and other personnel records, and failure to maintain proper miutes of formal meetings. 3. Failure to carry forward the balance in the checking acount after Jan. 7, 1963, with the last posting to the cash book being Nov. 30, 1962. In a letter to Wingate on the subject, Russel said, "These and other deficiencies noted make it important that I discuss this with you and your regional auditor at your earliest convenience.' PROTECT DIRECTOR Ohio Republican John M. Ashbrook is out to "scalp" Harlem's Democratic Representative, Adam Clayton Powell, one way or another. Last Wednesday, Cong. Ashbrook placed in the Congressional Record a report which he said indicates that Mr. Powell's Harlem youth project is being run in such "a slipshod manner" that on its merits it Is "more political than real" Two weeks ago, Ashbrooks was one of the most outspoken critics of Powells budget for the 8th Congress. Operating funds for Powell's House Comitte on Education and Labor for 1963 were eventually slashed, as Ashbrook recommended, by $200,000. Ashbrook said a gvoernment audit of Associated Community Teams (ACT), a project set up in Harlem under the Juvenile Delinquency and Youth Ofenses Act of 1961, indicates the project is far from being the "model" described by Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy and other Washington officials. Powell is one of the directors of ACT. He told a recent press conference that he had attended no metings of the organization and had never met any of the other directors. Livingstone Wingate, a former administrative assistant for the Ha-r lem Congressman, is director of the project, which is housed in the Adam Clayton Powell Community enter in New York, at a rental fee of $2,000 monthly. His salary is given as $15,000 annualy, but Ashbrook said the amount exceeds the approved budget by 1,000. The audit produced by Ashbrook was conducted by the Department of Health, Education an Welfare (HEW(, which administers the juvenile delinquency grant program. Acording to the Ohioan, HEW's juvenile program director Bernard Russell, has been "obliged to mildly chastise" the $260,000 propject in Harlem for the folowing reasons: 1. "Many interesting discrepencies", attributed to "a very incomplete acounting and auditing system." 2. Inadequate time and other personnel records, and failure to maintain proper miutes of formal meetings. 3. Failure to carry forward the balance in the checking acount after Jan. 7, 1963, with the last posting to the cash book being Nov. 30, 1962. In a letter to Wingate on the subject, Russel said, "These and other deficiencies noted make it important that I discuss this with you and your regional auditor at your earliest convenience.' Good Grooming 466 MEHARRY PRESIDENT HONORED — Mrs. Mildred Freeman, chairman of the steering committee, presents Dr. H. D. West, president of Meharry Medical College, with a check for $3,000 for the development program. From left, are the Rev. Kelly Miller Smith, Leon Higginbotham and Dr. Montague Cobb, toastmaster. The program honoring Dr. West took place at Nashville's new Municipal Auditorium. ELEANOR —By Oriden Swett Warden We are planning a June wedding. Will you please give us a few points of etiquette in the case of the father and mother being divorced? Evangelina Why His Marriage Was A Failure —By Oriden Swett Warden We are planning a June wedding. Will you please give us a few points of etiquette in the case of the father and mother being divorced? Evangelina DEAR ELEANOR: —By Oriden Swett Warden We are planning a June wedding. Will you please give us a few points of etiquette in the case of the father and mother being divorced? Evangelina ANSWER: —By Oriden Swett Warden We are planning a June wedding. Will you please give us a few points of etiquette in the case of the father and mother being divorced? Evangelina NOW! You can be double-safe! Nix gives you that extra margin of safety you need for around the clock protection demand an extra margin of safety to guard against the more offensive type of body odor stimulated by emotional excitement or nervous tension. Use Nix, the extra-effective, double-action cream deodorant. Nix stops body odor, helps keep you dry... keeps you safe around the clock! Nix is gentle to skin, won't harm clothing, Nix stays creamy smooth, won't dry out in the jar. Nix is economical, too. . Nix Is made and guaranteed by Plough, Inc., makers of St. Joseph Aspirin 25¢ NIX DEODORANT Your money back if you don't agree that Nix is the most effective deodorant you have ever used. Louisiana Senator Still Unrepentant On Africa Issue Last December four emerging African nations slammed their doors in the face of Sen. Allen J. Ellender. He has never forgotten the rebuff. Said he at a press conference Wednesday: "The Negroes in Africa are no diferent from the Negroes in America. If you say the white man is a little bit ahead, it's just like shanking a red hankerchief before a fighting bul." The Louisiana Democrat, who isited Africa on Appropriations Committee business, added this for emphasis: "The people in charge of the new countries there are politicians of little or no experience and are very thin-skinned and can't take criticism." "Chicken-hearted" was the Senator's description of American diplomats who did not back him up when his critical remarks delivered in Northern Rhodesia led, to revoked entry permits in Tanganyika, Somali, Ethiopia and Uganda. The Best Way to COLOR HAIR NATURAL-LIKE is the STRAND Way Now, anyone with dull, drab, streaked, gray, mousy looking hair can transform it to beautiful, radiant young looking hair with wonderful "4 Capsule" Strand Hair Coloring Treatment. Take just 17 minutes, at home—the result is professional-like, and lasts months. Needs retouching only as new hair grows out. 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