Memphis World Memphis World Publishing Co. 1961-03-11 J. A. Beauchamp FAMU NEGRO HISTORY WEEK SPEAKER — Dr. Horace Mann Bond (second from left), dean of the School of Education?, Atlanta University, is shown posing with President George W. Gore, Jr., left, J. W. Riley- program chairman and head of the FAMU Department of History and Geography; and Dr. H. Manning Jefferson, dean of the university. Florida Governor Not To Oppose Bill To Sell Racial Segregation Rep. W, H. Reedy of Eustis said Wednesday Gov. Farris Bryant has promised not to oppose his bill to appropriate $500,000 for a publicity pot to send North the "true facts" about racial segregation in the South. Reedy said tie feels this amounts to a gubernatorial endorsement and be will proceed with plans to ask the 1961 Legislature to pass the measure over the 1853 veto of exGov. LeRoy Collins. "I have no doubt we can pass it now that Governor Bryant has indicated he might have some misgiving about spending money for the "hart sell" program on segregation. But Reedy said Bryant gave no indication of this in a conference with him. He said he told the governor he would not push to over-ride the Collins veto if Bryant would rather he didn't. "The governor said he had no objections, and told me to go ahead," he said,' He said Bryant asked" for a copy of the bill to study. Collins termed the measure a "waste of the taxplayers money" and expressed doubt that any four southern states could get together on such a program. The bill specificially provides that the Florida money could not be spent unless three other slates put up identical amounts. No other state has to date, buf Reedy said he has received numerous inquiries about it from other states recently and does not believe there would be any trouble geating the other states to cooperate if Florida leads the way. The funds would be used for a publicity campaign in the newspapers, magazines and on radio and television to show the progress Negroes have made under the "separate -but equual' doctrine, Ready said. TENN. BAPTIST LIMIT TENURE OF PRESIDENCY MEMPHIS, Tenn. The Tennessee Baptist Missions, and Educationat Convention has voted to limit the tenure of the presidency of the convention to four consecutive one-year terms. The vote was contained in a revision of the Convention constitution adopted today at a session held in the Eastern Star Baptist Church here. According to the revision, "neither the President of the Convention nor the President of any of the perspective auxiliaries of the Convention shall be eligible for election to more than four consecutive (one-year) terms until at least one year has elapsed." In other actions the Convention Voted approval of a Master Plan for the development of Owen College. The Convention operates the College, located at Vance and Orleans Streets here. The Plan calls for construction of a new dormitory and student union building in the first phase. Estimated cost of this construction is $300,000, The entire Plan is expected to cost between five and six million dollars. The Convention contributes $70, 000 annually to the support of Owen College, and is its chief source of income. About 250 churches are affiliated with the Convention. No judge is God. They are human beings clothed with certain authority and they look at this boy, who looks contrite. He may be a mental dweller. He may be in need of treatment. A judge looks at another youth and he is angry and mulling and defiant and all he may need is an arm around his shoulder. And this willy-nilly sentencing — throw him in the can, get rid of them, get them am of circulation — is the easiest thing for any judge to de. But a judge who is concerned, wanted and does not want to be frustrated wants to see the X-rays and the analyses so that he can determine where to operate. some of the have enable a juvenile court judge to send a way some poor defendant for the rest of his life to an insane He never would have known about it without the benefit on a thorough investigation. It is pretty much as though everybody coming into a hospital was immediately ordered to surgery with out the benefit of X-rays. some can certaintly be treated with and. If medicine fails, then surgery. is the same way the medical clinic was 50 years ago judge, pull out your magic and reconvert this human being, who has been molded already by so many factors: act handly grope in the dark, get him out of the same way. One of the first things that has got to be done is to alert the national community to the propesition that there is a very narrow line that separates their own youngsters from the majority of youthful offenders who come, into the court. They have got to be disabused of he notion that the Juvenile' courts are filled with young thugs. "" For years thousands of sufferers have blessed the welcome pain re that the salicylate action of C-2223 has brought time and tim ain. That's why it's such a "popular pain reliever," trusted so many times by so many loyal users! Help yourself to greater comfort — fast. Remember price of first bottle back if not satisfied! Get C-2223 today ... every time you use it you'll be glad you did! Ask for C-2223. C-2223 For years thousands of sufferers have blessed the welcome pain re that the salicylate action of C-2223 has brought time and tim ain. That's why it's such a "popular pain reliever," trusted so many times by so many loyal users! Help yourself to greater comfort — fast. Remember price of first bottle back if not satisfied! Get C-2223 today ... every time you use it you'll be glad you did! Ask for C-2223. C-2223 Protests Against Williams Claimed To Be Unnecessary Prime Minister Harold Macm Tuesday said protests to President y about remarks in Africa by U. S. Assistant Sec of State G. Mennen Willis are successsary. Asked to protest is Kennedy William a recent visit to Bh y in Macmillan told the House of Commons. "I have made no retions to President Ken about this a I do not think any are really necessary." However, he said "I shall have an opportunity or discussing this in a friendly and personal way with the President very shortly." Macmillan is scheduled to travel to Washington April 4 for talks with the President. Problem Keeping Reds From Congo, Williams Says G. Mennen Williams said Thursday one of the big problems facing the United Nations here is "not so much preventing the Congo from going Communist as preventing Communism from coming to the Congo." The touring U. S. Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs told a news conference that '"I am firmly convinced the only instrument for a working solution here is the United Nations." He said the U. N. could halt Communism from taking over this troubled area by helping the Congo to develop its own institutions and abilities. "Congolese leaders are aware of the Communist threat and are dedicated to fighting it," the former Michigan governor added. '"I am hopeful that the United States and other powers will help the Congo maintain its independence." He emphasized that U. S. policy is to "work with and strengthen the United Nations." Asked if he thought U. N. operations in the Congo should be headed by a miltary rather than a civilian chief, Williams replied: "I have not thought that out at all. I feel the civilian operation is the apex of the United Nations. It's not final but that is my philosophy." he side-stepped a request for his views on "the future of areas with white minorities" saying: "I've already discussed that question. Let it ride." Plan Exploration Crafts Io Moon, Venus And Mars The Space Agency plans to launch a dozen moon exploration wait and five or more Venus and Mars pe in the next few years. In the same period it also plans to p six weather and 11 communication satellites into orbits around the earth. Other goals include establishment of a manned scientific laboratory in an earth orbit in 1968-69, dispatch of a three man space crew around the moon and back in 1969, and landing a manned craft on the moon, in 1971. Officials of the National Aerocs and Space Administration NASA discussed the agency's plans at hearings this week of the Senate Space Committee. Moon exploration projects plans include: Rangers: Five 750-pound craft to be launched in 9161 and 1982. The first will go up in July, August or September this year. The last. Three Rangers will attempt to make "hard landings" of 300pound instrument packs rugged enough to survive impact at 300 feet per second. The instruments will include seismometers to study lunar vibrations and quakes if any for periods of one three months. The mother craft before crashing to destruction, will take television of the moon from an altitude of 2,000 miles to impact. Data and pictures will be raidoed to earth. -Surveyor; Seven 2,5000-pound to be launched in 1963-65. These craft will soft land 750-pound sules at 10 feet per second. The surveyor instruments more complex and sensitive than Ranger's will yze moon matter and take TV. Pictures in both color and black and white. FIVE IN TWO YEARS The Space Agency plans to launch a dozen moon exploration wait and five or more Venus and Mars pe in the next few years. In the same period it also plans to p six weather and 11 communication satellites into orbits around the earth. Other goals include establishment of a manned scientific laboratory in an earth orbit in 1968-69, dispatch of a three man space crew around the moon and back in 1969, and landing a manned craft on the moon, in 1971. Officials of the National Aerocs and Space Administration NASA discussed the agency's plans at hearings this week of the Senate Space Committee. Moon exploration projects plans include: Rangers: Five 750-pound craft to be launched in 9161 and 1982. The first will go up in July, August or September this year. The last. Three Rangers will attempt to make "hard landings" of 300pound instrument packs rugged enough to survive impact at 300 feet per second. The instruments will include seismometers to study lunar vibrations and quakes if any for periods of one three months. The mother craft before crashing to destruction, will take television of the moon from an altitude of 2,000 miles to impact. Data and pictures will be raidoed to earth. -Surveyor; Seven 2,5000-pound to be launched in 1963-65. These craft will soft land 750-pound sules at 10 feet per second. The surveyor instruments more complex and sensitive than Ranger's will yze moon matter and take TV. Pictures in both color and black and white. U. S. RUSS NEW CRISIS Russia's attack on the United Nations operations in the Congo threatened to touch off a new crisis in relations between Washington and Moscow. Further cuts expected in auto output. Kenyatta Still Restricted By Fearful Kenya Jomo Kenyatta, the man whom whites have accused as having -been behind the Mau Mau movement to terrorize whites in 1952 to leave Kenya, must live in a remote part of the country under restrictions "until the new Government is working well," Sir Patrick Renison, the Governor, declared 'Wednesday night. Kenyatta was sentenced to seven years at hard labor in 1953 and allowed to leave prison in 1959. Since then he has been banished to Ladwar, a primitive place in the Northern Province, 310 miles from Nairobi. He is 63. He is to be moved in Maralal, 160 miles north of Nairobi, in pleasant country, 6,500 fee above sea level. The Governor said this would "allow more people to see him." The British Colonial Office hastened to deny that this meant he was free to see all visitors. It said: "Applications to visit Kenyatta will continue to be subject to the same procedure as at present." The Governor's permission would have to be obtained in each individual case. During the campaign, in which Tom Mboya, leader of the Kenya African. National Union, scored a sweeping victory, the Governor was subjected to political pressure for Kenyatta's release. He said Wednesday that the campaign had prevented the progress in Kenya which might have justified the risk or releasing Kenyatta. Another factor was Kenyatta's refusal to make any statement or reveal his thinking about issues concerning African nationalism. A few hours before the Governor spoke, Mr. Mboya said that if Kenyatta was not promptly freed there would be a head-on clash between African leaders and the Governor. It has been expected by most African and Asian leaders. Du Pont earnings fell 9 per cent in 1980. Pirates are named top team of 1960 in poll. Sunday School Lesson Today we endeavor to help peopie understand the relationship between the Holy Spirit and tine Spirit of Christ, and we discuss ways in which we may make Christ's presence real to us in these days and times. Continuing our studies in the Book of John, we see how Jesus prepared the disciples for future witnessing. We study, in effect, the transition of Jesus in the flesh to Jesus in the Spirit and the resulting widening of Jesus' scope to influence the lives of his followers. John is stating irrevocably and with passion, that the Spirit of Christ is universally present to all men who trust in Him, His power and solvotion is available to untold multitudes the world over, and is not confined to the simple crowds of Galilee. Salvation is available everywhere, John depicts the glorious unity of man's spirit with the Spirit of Christ in the Father. The theme of the three chapters we are studying today is, in short, the presence, power, and help of the Holy Spirit. The early church believed vividly and vigorously in the swift, dramatic return of Jesus – his Second Coming. The early church, however, was sorely disappointed; Jesus did not return as soon as expected. But to Chapters 14, 15 and 16 John has the answer for those in the early church and for us also. In the abiding presence of the Spirit, Christ is with us now and always. John grasped the in ner, permanent, spiritual meaning of Jesus' return, and In these chapers he has discussed it for our profit and education. John, in stressing the fact that the coming of the Spirit universalized Jesus, also delineates the Spirit's work. "He will convince the world of sin" (16:8.) The Holy Spirit has an accusing as well as a comforting work. There is divine opposition to all evil, and when we oppose evil, God through his Spirit is working with us. If we fall into evil, God, by his Spirit tarns us. when we are attacked by evil, God, in his Spirit, succours us. The Holy Spirit will crane to our aid in hitherto ungrasped situations. Today we live under conditions unknown to the simple Galilean life Jesus, and we need light on how to make effetive Jesus' ideals and the Gospel message. The Christian religion is not static, and we must "know how to understand it in terms of changihg conditions. But this change must come about according to Christ, through the guidance of the Holy Spirit, The Spirit gives us foresight and and insight to deal with new matters, which come before us, according to the true Spirit of Jesus. The central theme of Chapter 15 is that we, possessing Christ's Spirit and abiding in Him, '"may bear more fruit." To bear fruit through the Spirit, we must literally immerse ourselves in die Spirit of the living Jesus and find life, strength and sustenance in Him." In order for us to bear this fruit, we must lead disciplined lives, in a determined effort to mold our lives in Jesus image. In these chapters John cries: Pray, and what you deeply desire in God will be done. Obey, and you will live in the love of God as one lives in a beautiful dwelling, Rejoice because the unquenchable joy of Christ's Spirit surges in you, Love and you become more than just a disciple, more than merely a learner at Jesus feet. You will become Jesus' friend. Suffer, and you are sharing through the Spirit the sufferings of our crucified Sav and this last is, indeed, the supreme gift of the Holy Spirit the sharing of Jesus' pains for the salvation of men. Eastman Kodak reports record sales, profits. CHRIST IS WITH US Today we endeavor to help peopie understand the relationship between the Holy Spirit and tine Spirit of Christ, and we discuss ways in which we may make Christ's presence real to us in these days and times. Continuing our studies in the Book of John, we see how Jesus prepared the disciples for future witnessing. We study, in effect, the transition of Jesus in the flesh to Jesus in the Spirit and the resulting widening of Jesus' scope to influence the lives of his followers. John is stating irrevocably and with passion, that the Spirit of Christ is universally present to all men who trust in Him, His power and solvotion is available to untold multitudes the world over, and is not confined to the simple crowds of Galilee. Salvation is available everywhere, John depicts the glorious unity of man's spirit with the Spirit of Christ in the Father. The theme of the three chapters we are studying today is, in short, the presence, power, and help of the Holy Spirit. The early church believed vividly and vigorously in the swift, dramatic return of Jesus – his Second Coming. The early church, however, was sorely disappointed; Jesus did not return as soon as expected. But to Chapters 14, 15 and 16 John has the answer for those in the early church and for us also. In the abiding presence of the Spirit, Christ is with us now and always. John grasped the in ner, permanent, spiritual meaning of Jesus' return, and In these chapers he has discussed it for our profit and education. John, in stressing the fact that the coming of the Spirit universalized Jesus, also delineates the Spirit's work. "He will convince the world of sin" (16:8.) The Holy Spirit has an accusing as well as a comforting work. There is divine opposition to all evil, and when we oppose evil, God through his Spirit is working with us. If we fall into evil, God, by his Spirit tarns us. when we are attacked by evil, God, in his Spirit, succours us. The Holy Spirit will crane to our aid in hitherto ungrasped situations. Today we live under conditions unknown to the simple Galilean life Jesus, and we need light on how to make effetive Jesus' ideals and the Gospel message. The Christian religion is not static, and we must "know how to understand it in terms of changihg conditions. But this change must come about according to Christ, through the guidance of the Holy Spirit, The Spirit gives us foresight and and insight to deal with new matters, which come before us, according to the true Spirit of Jesus. The central theme of Chapter 15 is that we, possessing Christ's Spirit and abiding in Him, '"may bear more fruit." To bear fruit through the Spirit, we must literally immerse ourselves in die Spirit of the living Jesus and find life, strength and sustenance in Him." In order for us to bear this fruit, we must lead disciplined lives, in a determined effort to mold our lives in Jesus image. In these chapters John cries: Pray, and what you deeply desire in God will be done. Obey, and you will live in the love of God as one lives in a beautiful dwelling, Rejoice because the unquenchable joy of Christ's Spirit surges in you, Love and you become more than just a disciple, more than merely a learner at Jesus feet. You will become Jesus' friend. Suffer, and you are sharing through the Spirit the sufferings of our crucified Sav and this last is, indeed, the supreme gift of the Holy Spirit the sharing of Jesus' pains for the salvation of men. Eastman Kodak reports record sales, profits. Six Killed As Ships Collide The 1.240-ton Uruguayan destroyer Uruguary collided with the small oil tanker Shellnave in the River Plate Thursday. The tanker exploded and caught fire, killing at least six and injuring 13 men on board. The collision occurred about noon in a drained channel just off the small port of Colonia del Sacramento opposite Buenos Aries on the Uruguay side of the river. Numerous Rescue craft plucked survivors from the flaming river while thousands of onlookers watched from vantage points on shore. The Uruguay, a former U. S. Navy vessel turned over to the Uruguayan government 10 years ago, reported no damage or casualties. The Shell nave, owned by an Argentine subsidiary of the Shell Oil Company and flving the Argentine flag, became a floating pyre when its 4,000 tons of high octane aviation gasoline and kerosene exploded and caught fire after the collision. Compact autos showed big gains in 1960. London mob protests death of Lumumba. Illinois NAACP Branches Work For F.E.P.C. Law The Illinois Conference of NAACP branches has launched- a statewide for passage of a fair employment practices law. Illinois is the only great industrial state without a fair employment act outlawing discriminatory job practices. "Joblessness and depressed areas," said Dr. L. H. Holman, state NAACP president, "are nothing new to the Negro in Illinois, Negro living standards have been depressed for too long in this state—with or without recession." More than 1550 NAACP leaders from every part of the state have resolved to mobilize the one million Negroes in Illinois info a program of concerted action to outlaw job discrimination. The first step in this action program, Holman reported, already was taken, "We organized a statewide PEPC Task Force committee who mapped plans which are being implemented by our 47 branches." AN NAACP-PEPC button campaign is underway statewide. More than 11,000 persons will wear the buttons to symbolize their support for this campaign. "Lip-service is out this year," added Holman. NATURAL HAIR COLOR Wonderful "4 capsule" BLACK STRAND Hair Coloring coaxes the return of youthful-like, natural hair beauty. Dull, streaked, grayish hair vanishes. Dark, lustrous, beautifully radiant hair is your reward for 17 golden moments of easy application at home. Looks professional-like. Defies detection. Will not rub off of wash out. Money back guarantee. Only 89¢ plus tax at druggists ever where. Gets package of BLACK STRAND or BROWN STRAND today. Choose from 5 Beauty Shads JET BLACK • BLACK • DARK BROWN MEDIUM BROWN • LIGHT BROWN PRODUCTS CO., 118.5 S. Clinton, Chicago 6, Hampton President Holland To Be Inaugurated Apr. 28 New frontiers for higher education will be examined at a conference April 28 to be held with the inauguration of Dr. Jerome H. Holland, president of Hampton Institute. Dr. Holland will be inaugurated in ceremonies to be held Saturday, April 29, making him the ninth president of the 93 year old college on Virginia's lower peninsula. At the all day conference on Friday, leading educators, civic leaders and government officials will examine and discuss, "New Frontiers For America's Private Colleges." During the conference the speakers' will "seek to identify and examine frontier policies and practices which should be considered, by America's prviate colleges as they prepare for bold arid imaginative leadership in the years that He ahead", according to Dr. William H. Martin, dean of faculty and chairman of the inauguration committee. Among the speakers will be Joseph W. Cohen, director, InterUniversity Committee on the Supericr Student, headquartered at the University of Colorado; Lester B, Granger, executive secretary, National Urban League; and Prank P. Graham, U.S. representative to the United Nations for India and Pakistan. According to Dr. Martin to the subjects to be discussed 'will include both the frontiers, within andwithout the college. The internal topics include consideration of maginative experimentation in teaching and, curriculum planning, and developing leaders and academically talented students. On the external side, subjects to be considered are mobilizing communiy resources, promoting concepts of freedom and democracy, and promotion of peace and international understanding. At a banquet session Friday session Friday evening, Dr. Benjamin E. Mays, president of Morehouse College, will give an address on "Future Role of the Negro Private College," Dr. Mays is also president of the United Negro College Fund which has 32 member colleges in the South, including Hampton Institute. The inaugural exercise will be held Saturday morning at 10:30 a, m. with Dr. Holland delivering the inaugural address. A former president of Delaware State College, Dover, from 19531960, Dr. Holland. 44 assumed the presidency of Hampton Institute July 1, 1950. He is a graduate of Cornell University where he earned the B.S. and M.S. degree. As an undergraduate, he was elected to both the Junior and senior honorary societies, thereby opening the groups to membership for others of his race. HIGH DISCUSSION New frontiers for higher education will be examined at a conference April 28 to be held with the inauguration of Dr. Jerome H. Holland, president of Hampton Institute. Dr. Holland will be inaugurated in ceremonies to be held Saturday, April 29, making him the ninth president of the 93 year old college on Virginia's lower peninsula. At the all day conference on Friday, leading educators, civic leaders and government officials will examine and discuss, "New Frontiers For America's Private Colleges." During the conference the speakers' will "seek to identify and examine frontier policies and practices which should be considered, by America's prviate colleges as they prepare for bold arid imaginative leadership in the years that He ahead", according to Dr. William H. Martin, dean of faculty and chairman of the inauguration committee. Among the speakers will be Joseph W. Cohen, director, InterUniversity Committee on the Supericr Student, headquartered at the University of Colorado; Lester B, Granger, executive secretary, National Urban League; and Prank P. Graham, U.S. representative to the United Nations for India and Pakistan. According to Dr. Martin to the subjects to be discussed 'will include both the frontiers, within andwithout the college. The internal topics include consideration of maginative experimentation in teaching and, curriculum planning, and developing leaders and academically talented students. On the external side, subjects to be considered are mobilizing communiy resources, promoting concepts of freedom and democracy, and promotion of peace and international understanding. At a banquet session Friday session Friday evening, Dr. Benjamin E. Mays, president of Morehouse College, will give an address on "Future Role of the Negro Private College," Dr. Mays is also president of the United Negro College Fund which has 32 member colleges in the South, including Hampton Institute. The inaugural exercise will be held Saturday morning at 10:30 a, m. with Dr. Holland delivering the inaugural address. A former president of Delaware State College, Dover, from 19531960, Dr. Holland. 44 assumed the presidency of Hampton Institute July 1, 1950. He is a graduate of Cornell University where he earned the B.S. and M.S. degree. As an undergraduate, he was elected to both the Junior and senior honorary societies, thereby opening the groups to membership for others of his race. School Issues Dominate Only Two Of 12 Southern Assemblies The school segregation - desegregation issue dominated only two of the 12 Southern and border state legisiatures in session during February, Southern School News reports in its March issue. And these two — Georgia and Louisiana — passed bills softening their "segregation or no schools" stand. For the first time since, 1957, Arkansas legislators convened, with desegregation in only a minor rote, although Gov. Orval Faubus proposed two constitutional amendments on the subject. Correspondents for the monthly publication of Southern Education Reporting Service reported that, the legislatures in Delaware. Maryland, Missouri, Oklahoma West Virginia, North, Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and South Carolina had little, if any, school-race legislation up far consideration. Another indication of a changing attitude on the issue in the region appeared in a Gallup poll, Gallup reported that its latest survey in the South found that 16 per cent of the persons questioned "say they believe now that the day will come when white and colored persons will generally share the same public accommodations in the Southern states." The copyrighted report noted that only 45 per cent of the Southerners interviewed in 1957 held this view, and 53 per cent in 1958. The same report on the survey said that the change "will view likely be highly unpopular." All Gallup testings of Southern opinion since 1954 consistently have recorded at least 71 per cent in opposition to the Supreme Court ruling in the school segregation cases. The courts continued last month to be a source of important develonments on the issue. President Kennedy figured in two legal moves A suit seeking to block the use of federal funds for segregated school named the president and three other federal officials as defendants. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare Abraham Ribicoff, one of the defendants, tins expressed opposition to denying federal aid to segregated schools. Within hours after the president received an appeal for help from the Orleans Parish school board, the U. S. Department of Justice applied more pressure to end stale in inference in the New Orleans public schools. Australia hopes U. S. will ease China policy. Dollar reovers its strength in Europe. Now Available POSNER'S HOME PERMANENT plus tax TENNESSEE STATE LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES State Library Division The Symbols Of Easter It wouldn't be Easter without baskets of brightly colored eggs, but how did they come to be associated with the great holiday of he resurrection.? World Book Encyclopedia's religion editor, Mrs. Francine Klagsbrun, reports that eggs represent the new life that begins in the spring about Easter time. The Anclent Persians believed that the earth had hatched from a giant egg, Persians and Egyptians used, to exchange colored eggs with their friends. Early Christians adapted the custom Of coloring eggs for ter. Some legends, credit the Easter bunny with bringing the eggs. The rabbit, too, is an old symbol of birth and new life. Moreover, the rabbit, or the hare, has long been associated with the moon, It may have become an Easter symbol because the moon determines the dart of the holiday. Lighting candles at Foster was a custom in Rome back in the 200's. One Church father declared that "on the right of the resurrection no one should sleep and everyone should hive a light, for on that night the Redemeer made everyone free from the darkness of sin and the grave." The large paschal candle used in Roman Catholic services represents Christ risen from the dead as the light of the world, It is blesse and studded with five grains of incense, symbolizing Christ's wounds. One of the traditional Easter foods and a figure in many decorations for the holiday is the lamb. This symbol comes from the Jewish Pesah, or Passover, celebration. The saw used to sacrifice a paschal lamb in the Temple at Jerusalem during Passover. Early Christians saw in this sacrifice a foroast of the sacrifice of Christ. They referred to, Him as "the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world (John 1:29). The most universal symbol of Easter, and of Christianity itself, si, of coupe, the cross. Many ancient peoples, such as the Phoenicians, Assyrians and Persians, considered the cross a religious object. To same American Indians it is said to have been a mystic symbol of the four cardinal points of the compass, At the time of Christ, however, it was representative of the most shameful and cruel form of execution, The death of Christ transformed it from an object of humiliation into a symbol of glow. Charlotte Colleges Are Desegregated Trustees of Charlotte and Carver Colleges, now segregated declared formally last week that the two institutions are open to all qualified students. "Race," the trustees said, "is not a factor in determining entrance qualifications." A delegation of white and Negro citizens, most of them members of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Council on Human Relations, a group that seeks to promote interracial good will, visited "the trustees Jan. 15 and questioned the racial admission policies of the colleges and the need for continuing both Charlotte and Carver colleges. Charlotte college,, now housed in what was once Central High School, serves a largely white group of students. Carver college, now in the Secand Ward High School building, serves Negro students. Army trains soldiers to bag groceries neatly. Fashion fabrics for spring biossom with color. STOP ... Use CIGARETTES OR COMPOUND Also on the rocking show were the El Salvadors and the popular combination of Eddie Powell and Homer Banks singing, "Don't Do It." Congratulations to the T & I Club for a swinging talent show, Bobby Lovett is president and Alvin Robinson is vice-president of the organization. TOP FELLOWS; Charles Powell, Willie Ward, Sherman Yates, Heshall Boone, Robert Pittman Leroy Weakley, George Jones, Edward Robertson, Bobby Lovett, Spencer Wiggins. TOP COEDS: Beverly Buty Jeanette Bates, Joan Ford, Martha Purnell, Elizabeth Prdent Joan Hampton, Bettye Jefferson, Evelyn Works Johnnie Lumpkin. Mary Franns Westbrook. TOP COUPLES; Georg, Jones, and Milo Webb. Thomas Elrod and Ruby Washington, Thurman Williams and Mussett Stinson, Errol Fong and Vivian Chaney, Carl Hubbard and Jo Ann Hooper Andrew Abernathy and Theme Perce. TOP PLATTERS "Mother-inLaw." "Spanish Harlem," "Onemint-Julip" "It's All In My Mind" "Letters From Tina" "The Dance is Over" Georgia" Hard-hearted Hannah" "Watest and" You C. "But, sir, isn't quite what we had in mind when we offered the L & N Family Plan!" While this plan may not be suitable for creatures from outer space, it's wonderfully economical for you. L & N's Family and Individual Round Trip Plans save you up to 25%. . . in first class comfort and safety, with deluxe steeper, diner, club car and reclining seat-coach accommodations, Call your L & N ticker agent for complete details. SERVICE — While this plan may not be suitable for creatures from outer space, it's wonderfully economical for you. L & N's Family and Individual Round Trip Plans save you up to 25%. . . in first class comfort and safety, with deluxe steeper, diner, club car and reclining seat-coach accommodations, Call your L & N ticker agent for complete details.