Lighthouse and informer. (Charleston, S.C.) 1941-1954, July 31, 1954, Image 7
SATURDAY, JULY 31, 1954
“South Car#Vs Leading Weekly'"
THE LIGHTHOUSE AND COLUMBIA, S. o
Militant, Progressi^® 1
PAGE SEVEN
Sports ( lose Up
^gg-ies Schedule
riO Game Card
By Fritz Pollard
NEW YORK, (GLOBAL) .. - all their wildest dreams aboj
OPEN LETTER TO WILLIE you this year. They waited
MAYS: Dear Willie: You must long time for you to come bai
know how tickled all of your Willie, and it has all been wo:
fans are that you are fulfilling waiting for. You are all th|
j said you could and would
Greensboro, N. C.—The' A&T :
Aggies football team faces a 10 1
game card for the 1954 season.
! Central State College, Zenia,
| Ohio, dropped from the 1953
I sc hedule, returns to Greensboro
I ^ or the season's opener on the
you could ana wouiu w | n ight of September 18, the In-j
and we’re glad, particularly If j ter sectional Classic. The encoun-
cause we thought perhaps th^ ( ter represents the only addition
had gone a little overboard P to Aggie woes,
you. You see, we happen Other home games, all to be!
know that in this hero-worshT i P^yed i n Greensboro’s Memorial!
ing country of ours, people /| Stadium, include: Allen Univer-
blown up all out of proportit*' | s ity, Sept., 25. 8 P. M.; Shaw
Not only that, but in this f a | University (High School Senior
of speeded up communicatf n D ay), Oct. 16, 2 P. M.; Morgan
When investigators checked into when this morning’s newspaf. State College (Homecoming),!
the causes of death m mass^re fe 0 ld hat at 2:00 P. M„ J Oct. 30, 2 P. M. and Virginia |
disasters ten years s 1 paper men have to dream lp State College, Nov. 13, 2 P. M
copy, and sometimes they cjp The Aggie road schedule calls ■
up fabulous characters out ^ jfor: Virginia Union University'
just plain Joes. j at Richmond. Oct. 2, 8 P M ;
But they S eem to have b^ n , Maryland State College at Nor- ; ,
right about you, Willie, beca 6e , f olk, Virginia, (Fish Bowl), Oct. From U. N. Termed
9. 8 P. A/T * "\A7ino+z-vw c?oi/-.rn.ao— I
Rowe To Appear On ..
SCIENCE
T'tPMING SERIOUS BURNS
By Science Features
; t a rs ten yea* a
that very* few people with severe
bums on one-third or more of their
b . 4 survived. Today, after major
research projects have developed
new medical approaches to the
Problem 75 per cent of those suf
ferine from serious^ second- and
th Of t^ncw b trStments now being you’ve lived up to every bit of 9 > 8 P. M.; Winston-Salem Tea-
pitted. rcpiadom-Ptof fluids ,»d
elements lost by
you keep your balance. A‘ er j University
dll, we know from expeii^ ce Nov. 6, 2 P
#From WATTS STEAM ENGINE
in 1769 to mighty locomotives
of today... "STAGE- COACH’’
CARS to Air-Conditioned
Streamliners...
1 MILES of Railroad in
.o30 to a vast network
of 'SteelHighways"...
Railroad development in
America is an epic of
> MENTION!
I
L T . S. Withdrawal
“Strike It Ri c h”
Wilhaff owe, former Deputy Lewls _ daughter of Mr. and Mrs
Hemingway News
HEMINGWAY*— Miss Estelle
DailroadVnventions
fssstS&z
&L0CK SIGNALS... A UTOIMMCOUPUR
CLOSED TRACK ClW"
AUTOMATIC AIR B ^,,. Pr . 0
REFRIGERATOR CAR. >
AUTOMATIC STtKER.^B SKGNAlS
oscillating heaoumt
DIE5ELS... CLECTRICS^rimWS
RAIL FLAW DETECTOR™*
centralized traffic control.
1,500,000 EMPLOYEES
DEPEND DIRECTLY ON
U.S. RAILROADS FOR
LIVELIHOOD- millions
more indirectly f
PRESENT ANNUAL
RAILROAD PAYR0LL-
$5000,00° n<w
Police Commissioner of the Ci
ty of N e * York and currently
editor oi l 10 Negro magazine,
| New Re' fl - Xv > win appear as a
| “Helping on the national
CBS tele' 13 ! 01 ! program, “Strike
I it Rich”, Friday, j u iy 39, H:30-
I 12:00 A. E - S. T.
PAsvAfted fy JL
flatianal PatSf^
■tut
Mr. R0* 6 will stand
some desAF' ing person,
to make 8 l^monal
and attend to
questions ^rrecUy to give him
some fina^ 15 ! aid
Julius Lewis, a graduate of Cha
vis High School is now a stu
dent nurse at Johnson Memorial
Hospital.
Rev. W. G. Walker is on tho
sick list.
Pfc. Friday Selph is home af
ter spending almost two years
with the army in Germany.
in for
unable
appearance, Subscr j be Now To
answer enough - nie lji!rhU , nuS e and informer
world is at your feet, and ou , Nov.
the body is very
important. Plas
ma or whole
blood and salt
solutions—often
12 to 20 pints—
are administered
during the first are ought after, lauded to
- — » ton
fluid depending s °mething of a god among f en ’ [
on the extent of < We know that others before ^ ou
t . ofthe patient VimmTns are have had a lough tlme ‘^ g ,
lost when the P b°dy secretes fluids the adulation of the thrA® 5 ,
it. So now, we have only ^ cher s College at V/inston-Salem,
;rn about you: We bP 16 ; Oct. 23, 2 P. M.; Flordia A&M
your balance. A' er University at Tallahassee, Fla.,
M„ and North Caro-
Siiicidai
NEW YORK — Withdrawal of
the Umtcd States from dle Un-
that it isn . t ea3 y to keep a Ima College at Durham "(Caro- c'okap^TL^mterna'uS^!
head when all the base 1 . Ima Classic), Thanksgiving Day,
" ou , Nov. 25, 2 P. M
the 1
and interference in absorption an( i t hey went off on tani nts ‘
takes place. D,xOn trated We remember that Babe iuth
compounds such as ASF, the anti- J °st hig equilibrium a t rtT1 “
‘ po designed for emof.
SHARE
YOUR WISDOM
by Dr. Thoma s R. Gaines
New York, (Global) _ Self-un
end "aliuost
two hunaj.gd
co-
getting along
by Laureen Wwite
when . 1 .t — . —- .. 111,. (, k . 11.1111■ i,.1, ,,
gamzation would
the only hope of
million people still held
lonial bondage and of j the serioUS ness of their meeting
hundreds of millions more ^ .^veral
have only recently gained their
independence,” a top
hold a m^bng to consider me-
Walter White, executi Ve se c- thods of circumventing it, then
comoounus . , — —o - . , I retary of NAACP, ^pressed Held hands have a right to hold
stress formula designed for emer- point; Jesse Owens allowed 111111 foldinent should be made a life- 1 this view in an interview broad- meetings to con sider methods of
Sencies. . eg an(J h self to be persuaded t o qult !ong ® dventure The sharing of cast over radio static^ WLIB cucumventmg any la w they feel
meats once administered to burned school; J- C. Caroline j s . irU S' our ’ ® 3; ’ m Ss and illuminations anc [ other stations- He discussed
areas have giYen^way^to the new gi inig now to get back 0 an - wlth ot h ers ^ always an act of the ^plications of U. s with .
^rrtz\«S mi „ a I finrrtI nmon + rnt_ _ 1
NEW YORK, (GLOBAL)— The as the editor who wrote: “Since
Southern Governors held a meet there can never be any guaran-
ing in Richmond, Virginia recent
]y They met to consider ways
and means of circumventing the
Supreme Com 1 decision outlaw
ing segreg ation in public schools.
Although these men hold impor
COLUMBIA’S PROGRESSIVE
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Where You Will Find A
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tees that in this age of wide-
spread civilization that U. S.
servicemen won’t behave like
savages, especially toward col-
be better that large numbers of
O-
COMPANY, INC
< tant positw^jmd should realize oured peoples, perhaps it might
them not be turned loose on our
If sever 31 governors do not
civil | like a la*' (which most civilized
, , rights , people would consider just) and
leader declared here today.
island at one time ”
The soldiers are not respon
sible. They are taught by gover
nors and other high officials
who are blinded by prejudice.
3715 N -
BA^WlN _ KIMBALL — WURLITZER
Main Street Phone ft-2401
“ 2 Miles From High Prices’’
“exDosure” treatment. This method , ,
only 0" natural fluid that the even keel
There are
name. Some
othe^ we
of tblem
way back of the
others fi 2zle< out
,r ” k r n
b .;75^^‘rte p £'S; , ' oreood
^Medical advances have al50 done
New development, h, S^aning have kept level ' he ad^ ^
and plaRioanrgery removed 0 f have become successf M b*s me3s
the VK'™*?** ot the injury to men and useful citi zetK They
help return the p*ti ent ^ a norm aI ns '
life.
! drawal from the UN with
nest Gross, former assistant
personal enfoldment. The abun
dant, peaceful and victorious
life is not attained by following, cre t ar y of State and former am-
fimte devices. We must learn bassador to the United Nations.
Gross is president 0 f Free-
Fellows like Harry Roy
Campanella, and Ralph jyptcalfe
to live so deeply in life that in
finite power will lead us as
well as our own powers of life
expression. As we live solely
in the ordinary consciousness,
we invite suffering. As we lift
our consciousness, we live so
we want the whole
world to “Share Our Hill.”
The fencer, who can count on
over 52 years of participation, has
the lonKf t active life in his .sport
of any a thl ete. Jockeys stay m the
saddle a" estimated 22 years, the
baseba 1 Player keeps [<>r
some I® seasons while the table
tennis player la sts for j6 years.
These figures emerged from ?.
atudy t * le lives of nearly 5,Ooo
— —■■■— persons partici.
pating * n 12 dlf '
ferent popular
sports m Japan.
WlX® The researchers
FVV, W'MF' found that held
athletes, I'Ve
rugby (lomi of
football) plac
ers, have the
shortest pro* '-
sional life of 8 !
years. Swim-
i.mers are next
, • Wlth 8'A years.
In vie^ incre asing impor-
tance placed on sports, sa id the
Canadian Medical Association Jour-
Jial, publishers 01 the survey, the
medical profession has taken some
notice of the ?P 0 ™™* n in relation
to health. This, however is one of
the few studies published about
the life span and health of the
athlete.
p The researchers exa mined the
reasons why athletes reti re . find
ing that decline in physical fitness
cuts off the careers 9 1 most wrest
lers and jockeys but is u nirnp or tant
in retiring tennis players and fenc
ers. Actual disease forced the re-
tirement 0 f 20 per cent of Japanese
athletes, the survey showed, with
tubercul osis st riking nearly one of
of every i 0 in th e group.
Injuries were the most imp 0r ( ant
factor i n s t 0 p p i n g cyclists (22 pc r
cerl j J mid football pl a )' cr s (10 per
cent). Wrestlers were not affected
by.. 6 injury factor y er y much, a
finding which sugge sl ®> a T Cc ording
t° -he Journal, that Japanese
wrestling is a lot jgss brutal than
the variety shown on American TV
screens.
have charted a good Cotf se for
you to follow. Our hof e for
you, Willie, is that y 0u follow
it. You have too mupj, talent avariciousness °f phoney publi-
to let it be dissipated by the city hounds who seek to attach
crowdg and the themselves to you.
a widespread nustaken
that admission °f China
cheers of the
Mr.
dom House in Now Yo r k.
Mr. White noted that there is
notion
to the
United Nations Would require
recognition of ^ e ^lng by the U-
nited States g° v,Jr nment.
Mr. Gross as serted that f° r
the U. S. to withdraw fro® the
UN would le ave the underpri*
ATLANTIC COAST LIFE I
INSURANCE COMPANY
“The Golden Rule Company”
HOME of F’ICE: — 149 WENTWORTH STREET
Charleston, South Carolina
District Offices:
HARTSV^® be.aufori
ORANGtf^G CHARLESTON
ROCK cOLUMBLA
SPARta^URG flORKNS*
StJMTRR gBKKHVHXJI
Our twenty-ninth year of serevic*
to the people of South Carolina
„ a Y - W. Scarborough, President
discrimination North Carohna, as acco 1, c
f cording to an announcement by
Staff At Bennett
GREENSBORO, N. C. —Frank-
associa
Savings
Do’s Ami -Donts
is not f° llleir interest. If gover Frank Bailey Joins
nors of st 3 * 63 have a right to
scheme t0 violate segregation
laws, then other individuals
have a to scheme to violate . . i v
laws on arson - larceny and hom- 1 L ' Balley, f '
icide disrespect for court deci- ted with the victory
sion s by m en in high places Bank of Colui n bia 35 teiler and
leads V> disrespect for court de- distant cashier, recently was
cisions by men in ordinary wa ik added to the faculty and staff
of ij fe . When the governor of a' of Bennett College, Greensboro,
state advocates
and segregation on account UJ -
race, the man on the street feels President David D. Jones ot
justified in being disrespectful Bennett.
and insulting anytime and any- ^ Bailey graduated from
where be 8663 someone not of Booker T. Washington High
School i n Columbia, and attend
ed Morehouse College where
his rac®-
PerhaP 3 the reported attitudes
vileged nation 8 of the world as
“prizes” for the Russians, °f som® of our American soldi- he received the A. B. degree in
“I believe to leave the field: er s a broad i s a reflection of economics and business admini-
to the Russians would seem to this ar r0 S ance - The editor of stration. For two years he was
be committing
Gross added.
cuicide,” Mr- “Spotlight newsmagazine wrote associated with the J. B.
a blist erin 2 attack on American ton, Yates and Milton
National Football
Classic Slated For
Blay-
enter-
snldie*., stationed in Jamaica, prise in Atlanta, Georgia, and
He states that there is a psycho- jferved Us field representative
logical g a p in the training of mid salesman for the Murray
U-S. soi d j e rs. According to Spot Superior Products of Chicago.
1 light’s editor, American soldiers
] feel that they can violate the Bailey is married to the
dignity of others. In Havana io ^ Miss Lois ^Greenwood
Try On, .
ONE STOP SERVICE
SIMKINS-
• gpU Service Station*
• GP««ry
• Di v e-In Snack Bar
SIMKINS’
^rk and Washington Streets
CLOTHES LINES FOR YOU
By Maria Caterine
‘The Childreniust Play l n The Street,
So Pletu Curb Your Dog."
BENEDICT COL.EGE
A Pioneer Institute of Higher Lear nig Located in the City
of Columbia, the Heart f the State.
The Following Degrees Are Conferred
A.B., B.S., B.TH., and B. V., PflE-MED^AL AND PRE-DEN
TAL training
Splenldid Opportunities forlntellecial Growth and
Character De v0 ^°Pment Co-Ed oration Institute of Class
‘A’ Rating’.
moderate expeses
For Further Information We:
j. A. BACOATS, Presid*
BENEDICT CGLXGE
Columbia 13, South Carolina
Greensboro
Washington — Juat about e- dignity 0 f
verything win b e changed about ! some y ears ago, they desecrated of Atlanta, Georgia. The Baileys
the Nationaj Football Classic, a'one 0 f Cuba’s most revered nav e three children— Franklm,
feature promotion of the CIAA.! monuments and got our govern- Jr - Beverly and Don.
except the name and sponsor- m ent ln trouble. Not long ago, p re sident Jones, commenting
shi P- Ameri can soldiers are reported on the appointment of Mr. Bai- j
.Tom Johnson, Howard Univ- to ba Ve committed acts against sa j d( “This is just another
ersity coach and chairman of Jamaicans in the form of verba] Qf 0UT e ff or t s at Bennett to not
the committee on arrangements 1 attacks and physical assaults. 0rd y run a sound educational
told reporters here this week a- Now, the officials of the Am- enterprise, but to carry the
bout the several changes con e ri car i government always make work of the college on in a
firmed at a committee meeting ap° lo gies and whatever other sound business way.” He ex-
held in Richmond, Virginia last amends they can when these pressed pleasure at the addition
week. incidents occur, but the offended pf the Bailey family to the Ben-
The event, wnich has been an people can’t forget. They feel, nett community,
intra-conference scrap for the I
last few years, takes on an in-1
tersectional flavor in featuring
current season champs of the!
CIAA and the Midwestern Con-'
ference. Arrangements were com!
pleted with officials 0 f the Mid-1
western group for a two year
working agreement to take ef
fect this coming season. The
two opponents will not be nam-
ed until fi na l games have been
played on Thanksgiving Day,
just 10 days prior to the big e-
vent
Next in importance W as th ( I
site shift of the 1954 edition to 1
Greensboro’s (N. C.) Memorial
Stadium. Greensboro was select
ed on the basis of its past gate
records for regular conference
encounters. The shift mark s the
first time that the Classic has
been held outside of Washington
since it was begun years ago. -
Introduction of the Classic to
Greensboro marks the second
CIAA event to move to the Old
North State. The conference’s
basketball tourney is held each
Spring in Durham
All of the other fanfare, sym
bolic of the National Classic, is
planned for the Greensboro
event slated for 2:00 P- M. on
Saturday, December 4. Johnson
stated that plans cal] for an ela
borate half-time show, featuring
at least two outstanding college
bands and a dance on Saturday
night with one of the national
“name” bands, furnishing the
music.
alben restaurant
We specialize in fine food* - Complete Fountain Service
Open 24 flours Per-day — 100% Air Conditioned
Special Breakfast Menu
SEAFOODS — CHICKEN — CHOPS — STEAK?
OZEE JACKSON, Prprtator
1607 Hard«a 8tre*t Phone 4-I21o
it’s Crystal Clear
‘r'pp.
it’s
Proof
4
\
is
Short cuts to
easy ironing
chores u e In the
proper drying anci
bangingofclothes,
according to Doris
ItfcWhirt, fre-
-quently heard as
actress on the
“Official Detec
tive” radio dram
atisations over
MBS. Not only
does this prove
to be a time saver
because garments
»re easier to iron,
*ays Doris, but
you will prolong
the life of rayon
clothing and
household linens.
Generally speak
ing, clothes should
be hung on the
straight of the
material with
clothespins placed
at the firmest part.
As demonstrated
here by this Interesting Dry Matter
charming young
woman, men’s shirts are better hung by the tails, wrong side out. Inci
dentally, the shirts are easiest to iron by pressing the collar first, then
yoke, cuffs and sleeves. The back and front of the shirt should be
ironed last.
Large articles of elothing such as cotton dresses and rayon materials
should be rolled in turklsh towels to absorb excessive moisture, then
hung on wooden hangers until but slightly damp, when they Iron best.
Lingerie, such as slips aod nightgowns, should also be placed on wooden
bangers for- drying. Girdles and knitted rayons should be placed over
the clothesline with the weight evenly distributed to prevent sagging.
This also applies to flat pieces such as towels, sheets and tablecloths.
Observation of these drying methods will gain for yourself much more
deserved time both for other duties and for relaxation.
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