'as. CAROLINA TOPS Bit, Aft! lfli EDITORIALS & COMMENT "M yoe will u a1 1 00 a S . a. J ji or wnireB III TUnift Qavn ftraf lOIIS. H Kved o great MMl block people vmh of iwmma.' IMS is MT Rv. Martin Luther King, Jr. who injected new meaning and Experimental Housing : T asJection of Durham Ootmtgr aa one of the communities to experi ment with the HUP housing allow or rent subsidy program should more low-income persons to find mora standard housing made available to them. It is well that approval was grant ad to Durham County Social Services Department by the Durham County Qnmmiasiopew to move ahead with the program as well. Tasks in the administration and survey area will define and dilineate the feasibility and possibility involved for nation wide rent subsidies for the many families now desperately in need for more and better standard homes that may be rented by low income fami lies. It is also nice to know that HUD will supply in the form of a grant, sufficient funds to carry out this planned program. One of the big questions that will1 attempt to be answered by the ex periment with 600 families in Dur ham as well as in the other eleven, communities will be to see how fam ilies will use their rental allowances and what kinds of housing they get. Specifically, also in Durham, will bo tested the ability of the Durham De partment of Social Services to ad minister a rent subsidy program. The idea for such rent subsidies has been kicked around for years since the 1930's, and in some in stances aa late es 1965, people who lived in privately owned housing got a boost In that instance, the rents went to the owners of new or rehabi litated housing who would rent to low income people or to public housing authorities who would lease private dwellings and then sublease mem to poor families. " So with this experimental program after the two year period, the Hous ing Authority would then take on the responsibility and lease and sub lease the housing to families falling in the required rental categories. It must also be remembered that the program will not become a cure all for all housing problems, but at least it will create new interest and lash away at some of the results left from the current freeze on housing, The World of Money One of the most intelligent and' helpful ways for parents to teach their children thrift, management of finances and good earning habits is to encourage them at an early age to take a summer job. With health permitting, one of the finest experiences a high school youngster can have is putting vaca tion time to productive use. Myriad jobs are available for the young student that can not only re ward him monetarily, hut will prove as highly constructive incentives to his or her future character and earn ing abilities. Whether your child takes a position as summer camp counselor, clerk, receptionist, baby sitter or mother's helper, or newspa per carrier, there are certain ways in which you can both help and encour age him. Some ways to mention a few are: See that he finds the job himself through classified ads or notices posted. Ton and your friends are good references, but he should be on his own when he lands a job. Stress the Importance of appearance and decorum. Make hhn aware of the significance of honesty in stating qualifications, giving dates he will be available for work, being dependable and being on time. Impress upon him that the sum mer job can be the first step in his business career. What he does to prove himself in this beginning work period will show up later on. Encourage his saving a portion of his salary each week. Now is the ideal time to get him acquainted with fin ancial planning end thinking of the future.; . v : v Let him know that his taking a job is a way of justifying his existence in the community. He is not only working entirely for money hut for meaningful contribution and occupa tion. Your own personal attitude toward your employment can be an excellent guideline. Children have a tendency to imitate their parents. If you gram-. ble about your boss and co-oworkers, chances are the kids will do the same thing. Point out the virtues of a sense of humor and loyalty. Try to always accent the positive outlook. Give ad vice only when he asks. And above all let him or her know you think he or she is A-OK, or aotd f wily together. We would hope that as we contin ue to climb the ladder of success, more and more youngsters will real ise the importance of getting an early insight as to the ecoonmics of money and the powers that it can offer If the values are channeled into the cor rect direction for greater self -awareness and self -development. Forgotten Minority Around the turn of the century American society, especially the "industrial barons," were con cerned about the development of the virgin West During that time, the Weet was and still is the territory to develop, or is it plunder. -y&bm in his haste to turn a profit, has ignored the ecological balance of nature, thereby imperiling man as an endangered species. Outraged citizen groups have been making efforts to alert the overall population of the impending crisis. At first, such groups as Common Cause, Save the Earth Committee, Earth Day Committee, were considered ''crackpots'' - fanatics. Now, with swelling air and water pollution, the Federal government has seen fit to establish special departments to rectify conditions already out of control jkHE PRIVATE SECTOR rather than the Federal government has been the protagonist for such needed reforms. Perhaps it is time to stop and consider whether our govern niMii is of the neonle. for the people, mnmrz tm ! i by the people, or u u is oi me r, by the oouar, ana ior uie doUa dollar Whenever the Federal budget m . 4t m A. I up tor consideration, ine nrsi areas cut, it seems, are Heaun, Education and Welfare. Apparently, "the powers that be" have decided that services to be provided for the people can be sacrificed for the maintenance of something they like to refer to as "national security." Granted, both are important;, however, priorities need to be reviewed. Those who have worked all their lives to enable this nation to grow are the "forgotten minority;" the elderly of this country. IT APPEARS SLABS of cement, steel girders, and asphalt have priority over the blood, sweat, and tears of generations of hard working men and women. They have been cast aside like molded bread to waste away in nursing homes and dingy, decrepit buildings. True some children make efforts to help their parents; true, the government offers subsistent support via medicare and social security ; fact, ends just do not; meet. More money is not all that is desperately needed; efficient management and an overall house cleaning are also among the needed remedies. A streamlining not a study committee of the bureaucratic "chain of command", within the Department of Social Security would be the first step toward efficiency. Not only is there a need for better management, an , ailment of all bureaucracy, but an improvement of attitude.' -JOURNAL AND GUIDE' s Time To Face The Problem Hf -'iVflw jH ' sBissM HLllk MrnKs, JPwutfl ssssL TO BE EQUAL M VERNON JORDAN Efc.cut.ve Director, Nilionsl Urban Usgue Great AmerlggnQajne Major league baseball has returned to foe" ptaving fields for another sewn and not one team will, be without a Mac player. The front office, however, it another matter. Twent six years after the late Jackie Robinson brake the color barrier, baseball has still to see its first black major league mm By Alem L. LaHar President, National Association - of Insurance AgentB . ' HIGHWAY FIGURES BAD HOPE SEEN FOR FUTURE A 28 year old managed to compile a driving reojpr in 10 years which included convictions for hit and run, reckless driving; driving while license was suspended, spewk ing, jumping traffic signs, and several other violations. He was also involved in seven accidents. A 40 year old from the same state put together a record in 19 years of driving including four oonvict ions for driving while intoxicated, six fo reckless driving and 1 1 for driving after, license sus pension or revocation. He had two accidents involving bodily injury. . These two drivers are no longer on the roads. Virginia saw to that under provisions of its Habitual Offender Law. However, these are only two, representing a group f heedless or arrogant drivers who may number as many as five million across the United States. Last year, Americans es tablished records for deaths, injuries, accidents and eco nomic loss by the way they drove. The actual statistics are: 56,500 dead, 5,100,000 injured ,23.5 million accidents and $19.1 billion last to our economy. Partly due to the record carnage, 18 state legislatures are considering adoption of Habitual Offender laws this year. These, as jn, the 135 states which previously pass ed them, are being sponsored or actively supported by state associations affiliated with the National Association of In- Congressman Hdwkins' Column By REP. AUGUSTUS F. HAWKINS i LaBar strotiu meas- inia, the leader laws SBSM.fi sura nee Agent Similar to i ures taken is new habitual! are aimed at fUnt group of people who cannot or will not drive intelligently. They are intended as a step to ward protecting the rights of 110,000,000 conscientious drivers to use our highways in safety. off The Abandoned Poor The President's proposed budget if a clear indication of the Administration's abdiction ot human responsibility While problem solving has not been one of the virtues of the Administration, die obvious attempt to abandon Us responsibility toward millions of citizens, old, infants, disadvantaged and minorities, ia now "perfectly clear" through the proposed budget. The efforts to scrap social programs manpower! training, education, day care under the guise of reducing the role of the government in the economy while at the same time imposing controls on the wages of working people, allowing prices and profits to rise and even promoting guaranteed loans to large corporations is inconsistent by all prudent standards. . -( . , WHILE SOCIAL PROGRAMS are among the hardest hit, the Administration is attempting to shift its responsibility by "giving the states and localities more power through several revenue sharing' plans." The fate of the Community Action Programs would be left entirely up to the local and state governments. The probability of local governments to finance them is highly unlikely. Subsequently, more than 15,000,000 of the nation's disadvantaged would be affected A Revenue Sharing plan would replace community" development programs such as Model Cities and Urban Renewal and permit local governments and decision to select which programs to pursue. . THE PROPOSED BUDGET offers a special Education Revenue Sharing plan which would be allocated for five specific areas to cover disadvantaged children, handicapped children, vocational and adult education, impact aid and support services. The dollar volume would be the same as the 33 individual programs it would replace. The ERS money could be shifted from one area to another. It can be assumed that with state and local officials determining the priorities many of the disadvantaged (and minorities) would have considerably less money allocated for men programs. The philosophy behind revenue sharing is that local governments are more knowledgeable about and are more responsive to the needs of their residents. It was the result of this kind of philosophy that created the need for the War on Poverty. To think that local government in today's political climate would look favorably upon community action programs, would be stretching the imagination. THE BUDGET IS QUITE GENEROUS in the area of defense. With the cessation of hostilities in South East Asia, it would appear that reductions would be in order for the Pentagon. Instead there are increases. It is quite apparent that the. President's unwarranted attempt at abolition of anti-poverty, manpower education and health programs under the guise of fighting inflation and preventing a tax increase, is without a doubt a political farce. THUS. IT APPEARS that in abandoning its responsibility to the millions of disadvantaged by shifting it through the "carrot" of revenue sharing to the states, the Administration has once again eluded the greater responsibility of problem solving. ""PiP , m. r.u- i ii 1 1 Things You Should Know I Braithwaite " BORN IN BOSTON, MASS., IN 1878, tjj HE LEFT SCHOOL TO HELP HIS MOTHER AhE WAS COM JU PLETELY SELF-EDUCATED, VET BECAME LITER- M ARY CRIT1QN THE BOSTON TRANSCRIPT ifl 1 AT THE DEATH OF HIS FATHER, HIS MOTHER 'HE WAS COM AT ED, YET BECAME LITER- rHE BOSTON TRANSCRIPT AUTHORITY ON LITERATURE - AUTHORED MANY WIDELY- READ BOOKS AND ARTICLES ON THE SUBJECTS ' HI8 OWN POEMS, PUBLISHED AND SOLD ON A NATION-WIDE SCALE, WON CONSIDERABLE ACCLAIM I cannot believe that in this period of time there have not been any blacks within tne sports wno iw capabilities The reasons for their absence must therefore lie in other directions. I suspect that at least part of the ex planation is to be found in the way the sports esUNujnment has traditionally seen the black athlete, not so much a man, : as a machine. I. Not too many years ago, the highest wcoledeleoukj be paid black athlete by white fans and snortswriters was that "he is a credit to this race." This meant easenrlally that in the athlete was good at what he did, be did not concern himself with social issues, and if he had any human weaknesses, he at least had the good tense not to display them too often in public. WE DON'T hear MUCH OF this anymore, but there is still a reluctance to accept the black athlete on any in tellectual basis. Thinking athletes are in a sense, dangerous. They can t be pushed too far, they are liable to question the decisions reached by management, and of course, they may decide that there is more to life than playing games. This upsets some people who think athletes should be the strong, silent type. , For several years after Robinson put on a Dodgers' uniform, he was under orders to keep quiet on and off the field Later when the tensions had eased to some degree, the restrictions were removed and Jackie was able to reveal his true competitive and aggressive nature. Some baseball followers never forgave him for that. It was one thing for Robinson to steal a base, but it was quite another for him to vocally insist on the right to act Just the same as any other ball player. IN THE EARLY DAYS OF HIS career when he was still Cassius Clay and projected the image of a brash, bojd, over v grown youth, white fans had an amused tolerance for the Louisville fighter. When he changed his name to Muhammad All, announced his conversion as a Muslim, and refused to submit to the draft, he was swiftly stripped of his title and thrown out of boxing aa an undesirable. Given boxing's reputation for conniving, cheating and dishonesty, there was a strong odor of hypocrisy about the treatment meted out to Ali in the name of morality and patriotism. One has to wonder whether it would have been the same had he been white, or not so outspoken. SOME SPORTS FANS CLING to the belief that an athlete, ami nartirnlarlv a black athlete, owes bis sport and-or his team a special kind of blind loyalty mat requires him to submerge his own personality and beliefs for the "good of the game." Increasingly, black athletes are saying they are no longer willing to do thus )n the college campuses they are striking out against what they consider prejudiced coaches and athletic departments. Curt Flood challenges the right of one team to sell him to another like a piece of furniture and then walks away from a lucrative contract because all the fun has gone, out of the game. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar insists on his right to be a private individual, whether the fans or press likes it or not. THESE ARE HEALTHY SIGNS of a coming to maturity of black athletes. By not being willing to accept things as they b, just because they are, black sports figures can help end therdtacrinunatlon that as long as they are suent, uungs win remain asiney are. As to a black manager in baseball, 1 think the move is long over-due, I recall the many expressions of sorrow mat came from the baseball world when Jackie Robinson died last year. I recall too that in his last public appearance he spoke of his wish for a black manager in the game he served so weO. To see Robinson's dream come true this season, Just might Justify describing baseball as truly the Great American Game. ' In Out Time . IV7AGMM hMh SlACKSUOmS HAVE SERVE P WITH THE U.S. ARMY SMCE THE cm WAR, THE 9&ANO oa cawry wrrs, 'mjffalo TROOPS? SERVEP W THE fAR WEST WITH HOHOR PtRMG THE B80'S, THE MEN PRO- TECTEQ WAGON TRAINS, SMAIL RANCHES AHP ISOlATfl? TOWNS FROM ATTACK. SPECIAL HISTORICAL BLACK SOLPKER MUSEUM MAS BEER ESTABLISHED AT FORT S 1 V.A. CARSON. COLORAPO, COMMEMO RATING THESE EVENTS. 4BBanS7 ISkrV WP1V . i t. - i?OPAV THERE ARE NINE BLACK SENERALS IN THE UHITEP STATES AMP POATISN NATIONS. THE LATEST BLACK OFFICER EZEVATEP TO BR6APtt 6ENERAL IS ARTHUR P. GRBS&, ARMY STAFF OFFICER. 3i 1n ,887. HENRY O. HIPPER BECAME TNE FIRST BLACK OFFICER TO 6RAPUATE FROM WEST POINT M.'LlTARy ACAPEMY. THERE ARE 0f BLACK QUIETS M THE STUPENT CORPS AT WEST POINT r - wj W" l J i Sterne jcDl" O there is nothing so i awkward as courting U 0 J a women whilst U she is making sausages." (Laurence ! Editor-Publisher 1927-1071' v L E. .AUSTIN. . iPublished every Saturday at DurharnT"NdT, by United Publishers. Inc. :Xf' '.MRS. VIVIAN AUSTIN EDMONDS, Publisher. . fc UARfeNE TWNNlSTTE . 7. i . . " r BuffiesT Manage?! if. J3LWOOD CARTER Advertista? Manager-,1 Second Class Postage Paid at Durham, N. C. 27.708 i SUBSCRIPTION RATES .United States, and Canada . United States and Canada ..... .Foreign Countries .:' n 'Stnale Copy . . . .--( . . Principal Office Located at m- F-st Pttirew Street j 1 ' Durham, NortihCarplinx 27702 J 1 Year S6.001 2 Ywrs $n 00 . 1 Yer S7.fJD 20 Cents! A BMm "REFLEt r0s- FROM NCCU It MAIt I0HAN0N .v ,4 On our church, Covenant Presbyterian, we choose eat tain projects pertaining to the happiness of the youngsters, the youth, and the elderly. As my life begins to go in its uneventful way I chose to seek the frankness, some times innoeenetlly brutal, of the youngsters, the eager questioning of the youth, and the wisdom of the elderly. My final choice was the elder ly. How much I learned!! 1. They are not essentially disturbed by the toll of time. 2. They do not distort the Truth. 3. Finally they have found a solace in the Acceptance of it all, without looking for a helping hand. 4. Their answers were live with the Omniscient will. From these ruminations came this: Hidden beneath the facade Of being untouched Is the inner pain, Too profound to divulge The stoicism ot those Who accept the Omniscient -.Mary Bohanon a Afro American straddling tne lence. which side is greener? Side oat A heritage, Strength, A culture, ,w, Nostalgia of prunlttve JrieV dont Side two A society, Power, A tradition. ery. Fact: Society the reality Heritage a wistful desire. Morris W. Barrier a '-: - KNOWLEDGE At the very core of my per ceptive faculties, Dr'ving currents of subcon scious data Rationalized, Processed. RecognisaoV r. - aca mi.-s.ri rrt -Win. F. Grlce, Ett .iveiaa Biatpfri ?liw NEGLECTED Nature gives birth to Spring. Winter recedes into hiberna tion. The earth sheds Its dreadful face of stillness To take on the transformed face of vitality. All creation wears the new wardrobe of Spring, But me. Gloria Harris see-. SEASON We do not touch "1 The contributors are mem- -o her nf thm Proariuo Wrilina 9 Class of North Carolina Cen- 1 tial Ilnkfarcilv nAr the t,,. V Mage of MissMarN Bohannon hoes talents she considers 1 worth developing The students ange from the freshman level .brought the graduate level. I joqoog e ju u u uu u uu uuaQMtal -fwpwwP rrwwewwwwwwwwi Writers By GEORGE B. RUSS ok MA ..tttt aar a ami am? aw aw ear . aar aw ear a . KAhAiBtAitidM ii ii - j i i i Or talk of things That matter. We let The empty pages Multiply, Flaundering amidst An endless winter. No time To penetrate life, Grasp an Unearthed essence Or become a part Of the entirety Of things. Toby Jones OLD MAN You're no beggar, you could not be Thnnnh vmf ctatlrl t h I I nn1ng Tn nn (ho wind Mowine Cold vestibule, now home rent-free. in your sweet youth and prime You toiled 'neath better clime Filled your cup, to Caesar 'hlS''dUe--' ajtr; ',. . . rf Bitter's the fruit, hunger in view. ' A quarter, did you ssy A few cents lor today How 'bout tomorrow, the to morrow Old man, America's sorrow. Linda A. McGloln .. . PRIME ENCOUNTER Occasioned wound shadows this prime encounter Once an enchanted transport of harmony. Accumulated resident feel- ing browse fli As brooding meditations on fledgling wing. GraM , of strength, aMonnno '1 faw Vm existence, - , , fflMsbff brush with veiled pain; Counter fate's insistent ex ternal urgings; Attend imperceptibly with constant force; Brace inner countenance un til aversion - Haunts temptation, and sub tle gildings pierce Only the flesh, penetrate not the heart. Rebound from this crush, soar as the phoenix Never more susceptible to broken flight. Rose Cox Most of us have, from time to time, heard the expres sion: "tell somebody about me!" And a straight face is hard to maintain until we dis cover that the person is seri ous. They don't say so in many words that they are lonely and seeking compan inship, but the truth is writ ten in the expression on their faces. ,,i ' Strangely enough, with all the opportunities available for persons of all ages to identify with, the excellent chances of meeting other per sons searching for compan ionship seeking other per sons to share their hopes and aspirations -remove the stig ma of loneliness that reap ers the moment the tale vision set is silenced! there are many who long for tile ideal companion. If one listens attentively, one will hear an assortment ot Don'ts in selecting a life companion People will talk and often times, unknowinly, they shell out some darn good free advice more often, warnings to lonely hearts that smirk of gullibility, for example, a spinster supervi sor was overheard warning a young, promising Food Oepra tor: "Don't sell yourself for -money or position. Don't fail to test thoroughly protracted association. Don't fail to con sider the grade of the one you are going to marry." Perhaps every grandmoth er you know has uttered this advice to bright eyed lassies of the third generation: "Dont throw yourself away; remember marriage is not for a day." Here is a Dont that has fallen upon more deaf ears than most Don'ts: Dont fail to seek the advice of your parents." Watch the guilty expression On tiie faces of persons Who give out these Don'ts: "Dont marry to please a third par ty," or "Don't marry to spite anyone;" or, "Dont marry because someone else is seek ing the same person." : '. i&tta particular Dont Is one of the first Don'ts that my attention was ever called to: "Don't marry to get rid of anyone or an unpleasant situ ation " it seems that one of my parents married to fst rid of the drudgry of farm Ufa. . "Don't marry from the im pulse of love; Dont marry without love." Until the meaning of the latter was fully realized, the latter Dont appeared to have been em ployed by a meddling old goodie-goodie. 8Dont marry because you have promised to do so" gives rise to much food for thought Who goes around making mere promises? "Here is a Don't to sit up with: "Dont marry to test thoroughly effects of separa tion." it takes a real mtellectural to give this Dont a fair shake of consideration: "Dont fail to consider the effects of heredity in your children. After hearing the pros and cons, the whytores and the therefores, tins Don't makes good sense: "Dont marry downward.'' IlnaUy, last, but to no .4.1. ,. aaaeAV wise the least oi ne Don'ts offered by parents, teachers, experts, prepeiw., the wise old owls who prefer to remain unattached, this Dont offers sane advice: "Dont marry suddenly. 8-- PEPSI mm 69c MERITA Sandwich BreadVSI.OO Robert Burns said Scotland was "far dearer than spicy forests or gold bubbling foun tains.'' He didrrVfecord how unusual it also is. He might not have realized--being born a Scot himself. Where ese could you sit ' in ' Burns':, own eHH? For only the price of a round of drinks for everybody at the bar? Or if that seems expensive, think of the friends you might meet, talking about it. Go to the "Globe Inn," near where the poet spent his last few years as a 'tax collector. The chair, in a corner, is labeled "Burns' Chair," and the thrifty local Scots keep an eye out for anybody who sits in it. The Burns Society meets at the Inn every Thurs day .night for recitation and songs. If you visit, they'll show you the odd version of "Comin thru the Rye," which Burns scratched on a window with his diamond ring. But don't sit in the poet's chair unless you feel philanthropic. You can arrange to be on hand at Selkirk, ,lum 15an.l 16. This is Sir Walter Scott country. He was sheriff here. You will arrive just in time for PINE STATE YOGART 5$1.00 SELF-SERVICE Gasoline 34 9 Gal. Cole's Sausage 16 oz. PKG. 89c I COME ONE! - COME ALL! GROCERY BOY Jr 1715 HOLLOWAY STREET OPEN 7:00 AJt TILL 11:00 P.M. DAILY ft 12:00 NOON SUNDAY i I av B--'-' sanwKlil 11 HM 'I ' I e j E iff' m,,.;;,.. I i i f Im IKiJi hkI I ft, fi 4 RliiHi HaTaafli Hal anH 9 ssnaH asH snnfrj bVsbWb1bbw i H BanaVaH snsKflH assnV . Dressed to kilt, Scotch dan assembles in battle regalia the annual "Common Riding," or as it's known locally, "The Great Morning." Selkirk has managed to telescope all its local pageantry into two days. It combines the ancient bor der watch for suspicious Eng lishmen, the Battle of Flodden observance, a horse race, a carnival and parade into a celebrattpfi thatr ftstSC ifrom the peep of dawn' till long after dark. Every riding horse in twenty miles is drafted for the race to the River Ettrick and the ride up to town bor ders. Edinburgh is a bit north and has more than its share' of the unusual. There's a Museum of Childhood which isn't for children.. It's a fas cinating exhibit of things con nected with children in all erathr's'la1Mset of crbwti jewels, at. the Castle, centuries older than the jewels at the Tower of Condon. DaC'l- II CINTURdTO rivii SHMV AAV a r t ItH I m m i 7 moomimu AmVltSSBsSSS. SIKSSEliS iiair'sriis ?a TM TRAC STEEL 21 AVmNOED BiLTED R4DltvL DESIGNED FOR AND TUNED TO AMERICAN CAR5 r-.... n.nr-l I 111-LI DCDCnQM A MCE HANDL ING rAMUU) rinci-l.1 niun rtm wnm?y"Y'VT AND QUIET, COMFORTABLE RIDE. tHW (.iniirlo CNb iiim aft guwmtfwd ID tulvt An miqiiMl tfiMfi lilfl nl 40.000 ntibn. Pr)l wtirnl Cfritt or ch ttlund (il fHtHi'i on wiual imiiMI l i"nwl milfi ml drliwin) m iidiwI by Nuiotul I'm vmt ol xliniiirii. mt iimn rxovninim ol im mi "' guannm Iwm w uihoiMii fjnlH OmUi by Tun, mm M imd on Airwirin nuno pmv wMcH on guwlnlM lorm ki fionnil nontommoteiol mint uninwi conhncnlal U S 53h55 Alkl. In M mwm ol wUly no 10 rnnnmn ixanlfO. CNbl niuM ht mounlnl in Ml Mil ft ln ttm tiMI Kid taHK.eil. liny ""'nl not ht kwi. run fill or unfmlun1. wini, v.irn ip mi i ol lignmonl or anlh oiKxtiK ihntki. bnkn or linuMf ntltcl. I'm II. ClIillMtfl CN& lirM t Hhn OJI.VMll OflKII in wrakiraiiMiip ami mtini.H and normol road Iwirdi. CroJil or NhmrJ b.Md on u ul Wirt rtmannnrj. 1 0 DAY FREE TRIAL NO OBUGATIONI CHARGE IT! Mi A Charge Nan Matter Charge BankAmericard wHi Bam MONTGOMERY AND ALDRIDGE CORNER MORGAN & RONEY OPPOSITE CAROLINA THEATER CALL 682 0441 Of peseefal Wendln MB ard rttes4 , And in the dawn they floated And mingled into one; t thought that morning elsajL was blest ft moved so sweetly ts'tte west. I saw two summer currents flow smoothly to their meeting, And Join their course, with silent force, In peace each other greeting; Calm was their course, thru banks of green While dimpling eddies played between. Such be your gentle motion. Till life's last pulse shall beat; Like summer's beam and Roxiwo Road sincTuTof iiifiprr fr t$ Carolina raffs-ia i y i' . in mmmmmmmmmmmmm NCNB Announces The Appointment Of Their Second Woman Branch Managrer DURHAM - North Caro lina National Bank has announ ced the appointment of its se oo voiDaUi branch nunastcr in Durham. Mrs. Patsy Yates, formerly a marketing represe n ta ti v with the bank, has been promoted to branch manager of the Roxboro Road branch, according to Sam R Sloan, Vice president and NCNB city executive here. Mrs. Yates will replace Rum Miller, assistant cashier, who summer's stream float on, In joy, to meat A calmer sea, where storms shan cease A purer sky, where all Is inc last ye for to th Nort hga te branch where he will replace f. Van Craven, jr . , w h o has resigned Mrs. Yates ic.ned the ban it In 1961 as a totsr ami kaa rved in several capacities She is married to Harold Yates, They are members of the Edge mo n t Baptist Church and tfja Broken Anchor Boat Club Soon also said that Mrs. Mary K . (Kitty) BtadVy, emv tomer ssrrtc es represent ativo at the Nort hgate branch, has been promoted to mavketing repre senUtive, replacing Mrs. Yates. MRS. JOSEPHINE TURNER HEAD CASHIER SELECT BEEF LIYH lb. Gold Seal FLOUR 25-lb.Bog $ ft Red Label Luzionne Coffee. Glove Kid Peanut Butter .. B LI S L Hti rwnif aw 40-0i. Jar 6Q OO Hermitage BACON Lb. TO 7 Frosty-Morn FRANKS M ef Monty ol Old Country nan, SaselSin ondSid.W.al-Fr.lh H,h Ul m M1AJ u - L L y, lijooi i.i 1A sew Pwnswev sewj swjavv swansaw vmwv pwwm Frosty Morn BOLOGNA CHITTERLINGS iou.'34' Cole's PURE LARD 25u.sm'4" HOT DOG' & HAMBURGER ROLLS 4 for I" mm TO9BanwaBasssasar- ttraweA Small Eggs 3B.,.$l Ice Milk Half Gal. On. Ito1!" SUPER MARKET 910 N. ROXBORO STRI Open 7 A.M. to 9 PJA. Daily amfV-T.raV' 1. j': t$ WwS V

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view