Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / March 24, 1945, edition 1 / Page 8
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PAGE EIGHT THE CABOUNIAN SATURDAY. MARCH 24.1946 (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) TEN LEGISLATURES CONSID ERS ANTI-DISCRIMINATION the German barrage was one .where 5U prisoners were being 1 iktol. Several were killed. T -e lau' practices because of race, col- kepi up most of lire day on or, cieeU, language and , Miuch iJ, as the German para- al ancestry. Tiie proposed iegisla- tnjupeis snuggled to keep Irom lion applies the law to labor uni- pj^jr,g oQ t>y uie link up of ons as well as eiiiployeis. It pro- Division with the Canad- vides penalties lor violations and Ainiy ju^t north of here, has a good chance for passage in .j^uylls still were tailing Uie morn- view of the poiilical iinpoiTancc MarcJi 4, but Uie tankers of tiie Slate's large Spanisn- n^.uld oe brought up. The tank American population. battalion is commuiided by Lieut. TJie stale of Wusainglon mere- _-yionei George D. Dalia of 2id ly outlaws disci ijiiinaiion by any j^yutn New Hampshire Street, public olficial in tenuie ot, or ap- Angeles, California. plication toi, cmpioyinLiii. Tins y— liguilalion also extends to labor VETERANS NEED CIVILIAN unions. COOPERATION SAYS Kansas alsc proposes a Stale ;uIRS. FDR FtPC with a live memoer board . .. ,.,r, appointed b> the governoi. The j DeViiup good will in youi own applies to labor umons as well ' lamilKs ana unioug yvui iicign- as i^mployers. The Kansas legis- oors m youi stales, and men ex- lalion outlines cnfoicemcnl pio-j>ind uiis goi Iwill out uilo me cedurc and provides penalties. ..onu, Mia. itoo^evelt adMacU. The iNAACl' announced in N'ew one added that with this type ol York Uns week that its 74b local a...\i-.sal goodwill would assure ,iic success ol plans ellcelcd at .iietinalional peace nieelings, suen us liie coining San trancisco con- itiencc. , , . in nei' speech Tuesday mghi, A spokesman for the organ'ua-iMis. Kooseveli went to the heail lion said that it was expected oi what sne considered the pioD- llial nearly 20 bills will be intro- leiu ol the lylurnmg veteran and dueed m various stale h gislalures liis family, rust of all, Uie veur- during the yeai. It is 1 It llial agi- aii s lamily should understand talion lor FKl’C legislation in Uie |V.lial lesourees uie ava.laple to individual Stales will make eon- nien returning irom the bailie- giLSsmen more eonscious of tliejiionls, she said. Not oniy mus. need for national legislation. I'.iie lumtly In The Ware Qe The News BY ATTY. ROQEE U. O^ULLT days" at least to do loznelhing about it." the autnor states. Jail seemed to be the community's prime remedy for childish misdeeds. Of the 1.500 cases studied, 745 were ■ferred to the court by the police, more than 500 of them. Professor Porterfield's oplnlwi, "were for slight misdemeanors if delinquen cies at alt." He found children held in jail overnight for such offenses as stealing milk bottles, spark plugs, radiator caps, letting air out of Urea, hanging on a truck, picking up golf balls on the outside of a gnlf course or in the rough. Pilfering of gaudy trifles from accessible display was a common pitfall, merchandising establish ments, though possibly not peevish, "are not imn- me to the charge •>! PEOPLE WHO TAKE YOUNGST-; they get. according to the findings ERS INTO COURT .\SilAILED IN i a statistical study by Austin L. STUDY OE PROBATION Porterfield. Professor of Sociology, .ASSOCIATION Texas Christian University. The Ihese I’oevish and irresponsible people' study is reported in the annual to tmurt. in the author’s v\lio taKc youngsters into court are Year B^k of the National Piobation found that two stores in a :> real lacior In childrens' conflict Aswciation, issued on Mar^ 19th. 175 000 reported 67 per cent th the community, and in esUmat- j JllirJ: ^216 ilseTof Kopliftlognn the Dislike and antagonism of indivi '«hce 2':,'r±:;!,:mdTThrfTot endj.. w.ai.d. ni-cd more atlenuon ,i,an I onmlnalistlc. or ol best petty, peev^ ^ ish and irresponsible, emerged chuplci's active m ail ut uie btales except Montana, N'ew ilampsiiire, Veimonl, South Dakou and Maine, wuulr press for FKPC leg islation throughout the counUy. RANKIN DENOUNCES DEWEY FOR BILL during the 1U44 presidential cam paign so many ot the reforms re portedly conceived by the New Deal. ling „iid friends of return- ...bw undersUnd their prob- o ol economic adjustment, but bduculional and other agencies must be set up Uhat will under stand and help Uie servicemen in ihctr emotional readjustments to peacetime Ulc on a comparalive- from the record of complaints in y.mmunity. i.soo cases of a single ..ourt over Art Carter, Afro - 1 three years. Professor Porterfield declares, Newspapers war currespondeni, was scheduled to speak Thursday .-vening and again Friday morn- ;ng, prior to the closing address by Li. Col. Campbell Johnson, executive assistant to the Director of Selective Service, who was list ed for Friday night. The Institute was under the di- ection of Miss Barbara A. Ware who was assisted by members of the Bennett Collide faculty and re presentatives ol the Greens boro community. r Governor DeWey, he said, was ij untroubled horaefrunt, Mr like Mark Twain's jumping frog Ituosevell slalev because he had swallowed many New Deal pellets." ... V—— (leinoon piogram Tuesday witn NAACP HITS NAVY BIAS IN ” ^ PERSONNEL TROUBLES way up slowly,' Wilkins staUd, NAACP TESTIFIES FOR FEPC ■ WITH TEETH" not even contemplate Presiden- Ual intervention against those who refuse to comply with the orders of the Commission." Mr. Wilkins pointed out t^e fountain pen. a toy pistol, a toy airplane turned up in the court complaints, one boy stole a jews- harp and was sent to an institution; nd among them he found Ti^S one store in sending him to trac ing school. , , . —(Catherine Mackenile in the New York Times of March 19th. ig45>. DR. JAMES E. SHEPARD DE CLARES WINNER OF NEWS PAPER'S NATIONAL Miss Peggy Toatlc-y, hostess at of S. 459 to define spheres iieiincU College, ^pened influence over which the com- “ ’■ mission would have jurisdiction park attendants, police officers, merchants, school principals, as well as parents. He flnds the present .study supporting the conclusion of his earlier inquiry (Delinquency and Its Outcome In Court and Col lege), that bocial sUtus Is "a real factor" in a child's court appea'- ante; defin‘'s the juvenile delinquent. in part, as "a friendless young.per- tiTknVp^HIP POLL son who does not live in a good LEaDERSMIP home or in a college dormitory," While he finds that ‘‘the parenlii Durham, N. C. of children who get Into court are Shepard, presidei.. - y-- vin problem parents," he urges help fot olina College, , ’... them, not "cracking down" on them.lvotes u r National and concludes that this help is a'annual '/Who Is O u NMiona ^'er a kn^wn candi- Sw’earing at parents and washing suggested ^ edUor ehii. 'readtTs. Louis E._ Ausiin, _^iior . Dr. James E. thuusumis upon tiiouxunds ol while men iiave cone very recent ly iiitu the Navy l:om all walk.^ of civilian life and yet the Navy has discovered ability among them and has given tliem an op portunity to secure commissions and oUiei'wise to advance them- aelves. We believe there are many units and many installations where Negro commissioned offic ers can render a great service to their country oy ijie inspmalion and understanding they will bring to the enlisted personnel." . . y NEGRO TANKERS MAUL NAZIS WHILE CUT OFF IN GERMANY town had been largely cleared and in the words of tank Corpor al C. R. Roberts, of Tyleilown, Mississippi. "Those old guns sort of spit at tliem and we killed s right smart pile.” The Germans stayed just out side the town and poured in mor tar machineguun and shell fire all day. They apparently had ob servation inside the town as the shells hit with deadly effect and the outfit suffered its heaviest casualties since starting its drive Iconic address. She also failure to provide non-dis- uiiiuduced D.. David D. Jci iminalion clauses in contracts president of Bennett, who pro-goy^-mnnenl. ' More than dozen witnesses told ones hands of the other man's chil-Irtaders. dren is a popular current *'the clillege pr^ient Professor Porterfield states. Trading me jjP ^ ^ ing to the influences of environment le" president of^e N. C. and upbringing that have made ^^1 tif? ftsuyiiSe Co., and ^.vnted Dr. W. C. Jackson, admin isiralivc dean of the Womans College and chairman of the Ben- ncil Tiuslee board who introduc ed Mis. Roosevelt. Greensbord girl scouts and Sta tion WBIG presented flowers to the First Lady alter the broad cast. At me conclusion of hei speech she descended the steps and chatted for several minutes 1 with scores of while and Negro seiviccmen who crowded order- jiounii her. , Sue shook each mans hand and repeated hia name, Qsked numerous questions and smiled pleasantly throughout tins un scheduled part of the program which she had specificaly request ed. Mayor W. S. Sullivan of Greens boro and Miss Roberta Favors, Gic-ensboro senior president of the Bennett sUdcnt senate were heard in welcome addresses Tuesday night. Dr. President Jones of the college presided. The program started Sunday _ rrnoon during the vesper peri od when Dr. Katherine F. Len- rool chief, the Childrens Bureau, Department of Labor, addressed Senator Dennis Chavez, the sub committee chairman, that the Taft bill. S. 459, was wholy inade- oui.te, and urged support for S. 101. COMMITTEE FOR WILLIAMS science. Friends of Aubrey Williams 344 Carlton Hotel parenu own help Msnp-. wa, plain Mechanics and Farmers’ bank, ,n Irepuent complainu ol disobed- a, Philip Randolph, pres- lences and such requests as "since ^ i„,e,nalional Broth- Jlll wont mind m, you must «nU ^ Sleeplnj Car Porttra, her to training school, and a deal Mordecai W Johnson, ear turned to Ihe coun t recommen-i j,, jj^ward Univenity, dalion, "she needs a guidance, not Frank Crosawalthe. punishment." Jncw York labor man. 502,500. "A child may do any number of things which will cause a parent to • ri 1 req-iuest the police or the sheriff’s (,|V0 |o 1 hC KCO ijrOSS, office to "lock him up for a few .servatiun inside the tovvH as the shells hit with deadly effect and the outfit suffered its heaviest casualties since starting its drive February 25. "We had to refuel the tanks," Durandt said. "Every time the boys got o'Jt in the open, Jerry murlar.s fell all around them but they kept right at it until th.' tanks were refueled." One of the firaSl buildings hit bv _ mg me vespei ucn- od when Dr. Katherine F. Den- root, chief, the Children s Bureau, Department ot Labor, addressed the institute. On Monday the institute conven- ed at the Collins Grove Comniuii- ily where the Rev. W. Tycer Nel son, Jeanes Rural Church Coun- seloi, outlines a piogram ot co- ioperative action between the church and other agencies m the NECTAR TEA 1-4 Lb. Pkg 19c Pkg. l-2Lb. 34c FRESH FRUITS AND vegetables JUICY Fl.OKi'D.A (^ranjjcs FilESH GREEN (!al)baro 5 lb* u, s. NO. 1. .swet;t I’fitatoes 3 ll)s. 2i>(' U. S NO. 1. WHITE Potatoes H) lbs. IHe FRESH TENDER TURNIP SAI.AD ,»Hd MUSTARD II). 10c ENRK.'liEI) DAILY DATED rit BHKAI) Lge 1 1-2 Lb. 11c NTGOROL'S AND WINEY BOKAR COFIEE 2 s 51c HOINT-F'-tEE ".\Ni'Y EVAPORATED PEACHES 46-07, CAN 20 BLUE POINTS A &: P 35c GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 19-Oz CAN - 10 BLUE POINTS A & P 46-07 Crm 29c APPLE SAUCE SUNNYFIEI.l) ENRICHED SELF-RISLNC No. 2 Can 13c FLOOR SUNNYEIEI.D CORN 10-Lb Pkg Bag 52c FLAKES SUI.TANA SAIaAU 8-Oz Fk«. 5c DRESSING Pt Jar 19c BEEF ■ VEAL - LAMB - PORK FRESH FRESH SEA FOODS POULTRY 201 East Hargett St. • JERSEY • CREPES • COTTONS • SPUNS The first Prints of Spring— as bright and gay as the firat colorful blossoms . . . Yea you must have a Smart Print thU Spring and Easter . . . Chooee them Now—9 to IB Junion, 10 to 20 Misses — 38 to 46 Women's. 1 BUDGET PRICED 870 to 19^0 W RALEIGH m / iMOTHES^^^nfflU u t «»C. I
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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March 24, 1945, edition 1
8
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