Ann. 'l. 2 ATHE CAROLINA TOMB 8, Ntf. 14, H7t BUCK'S CAN AND MUSI ORGANIZE THBR COMMUiTt ftStfe&P. Responsibility EDITORIALS DURHAM'S HOUSING PROBLEMS I The continuing problems of housing, and especially sub-standard housing have been a problem area for Durham as well as in most areas of the country. Discrimination in housing has been a most elusive issue to prove, but some restrictive parts have been outlawed. Most sub-standard housing in Durham for many years, even before Urban Renewal, was owned by two or three black and white landlored. Since an important part of the local downtown power structure owned much of the housing, according to tax listings, code enforcement and inspections were often sidestepped or merely brought up to the very minimum. After much serious study and many boycotts by low income groups and other interested coalitiona, no further public housing units were placed in the East Durham and southeastern sectors of the city. The change within the Housing Authority also brought about an easing of the many racial tensions from biased administration of the housing unite. . But the sub-standard housing remains in many areas of the city. This writer knows of one particular poorly constructed house where at different times children have been burned to death and the house is quickly, shoddily built and put up for rent again. Periodically the press of Durham will attempt to pin point and highlight the problem of sub-standard housing Unfortunately, nothing much appears to come from it. It would seem that continued pressure at all levels, regardless to ownership, would combat some of the continuing housing problems and begin to make for a better housing climate in Durham and elsewhere. INCOME OF MACK I AMERICANS IN 1972 WAS 51 BILLION DOLLARS, SAID Pfa j ANDREWS BRIMMER, BLACK MEMBER Ofr FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD ti AftA ntTT'tfCLirc it Metre tuc mwm INITIATIVE TO ORGANIZE 1 ' WEIR OWN COMMUNITIES $ A MAJOR FACTOR AN& IMPORTANT FACTOR CONTRIBUTING TO OUtt COMMUNITIES UNDER DEVELOPMENT,. DOUGLAS C GLASGOW, DEAN OFHOUARD UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WORK. V INCOME OF BIACH fl 3B Bro THINGS CHANGE AT UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA George Wallace, governor of Alabama, made the news again this week when he placed the crown on the Homecoming Queen, a 21 year old black co-ed at University of Alabama. Ten years ago, in 1963, Wallace gained national note by standing in the University of Alabama's Administration buildings to keep Miss Autherijfie Lucy, from enrolling as the first black student under court order. Prelintly, the University of Alabaml has eleven black football players on its team this year. Further, George Wallace attended the Black Mayors Conference in Tuskegee and offered them his support in their city administration and problems revolving around the cities such as revenue sharing, education and social services. This appears to be a complete turn about from his 1963 rabble-rousing activities. Yes, things change and time marches on. We hope that even more changes will continue as the ugly roots of prejudice appears to be knocked down in all parts of the nation and the world. Jordan Says Black Citizens Victimized if Federal Policies VERNON JORDAN Ltmm Executive Director, National Xhkm V union E. Jordan, Jr., executive director of the National Urban League, chargtonlght that black citizens had been victimized by federal policies amounting to "a Black Watergate" that left "the hopes and aspirations of black people to 'twist, slowly, slowly, in the wind,' and called on Congress to take steps in three major areas to 'avert a disastrous vacuum.' " Mr. Jordan spoke at the National Urban League's annual Equal Opportunity Day Dinner at the New York Hilton Hotel. The Dinner Chairman was David Rockefeller, Chairman of the Board, Chase Manhattan Bank and NUL President Donald H. McGannon presented the Equal Opportunity Award to former NUL President, James A. Linen. Mr. Linen, formerly President of TIME Inc was honored for his outstanding contribution to the League during his five years as President, from 1968-1973. Referring to the continuing crisis in Washington, Mr. Jordan stated; "Bl people insist that the current crisis be resolved, for while we lack the vindincthreness some people would consider understandable, we know above all that we have a stake in a government that is stable, that can govern, and that will reverse those policies that have been harmful to us. The reforms we seek and the goals we are fighting for depend in buge part upon governmental stability, public faith in the governing process and in the integrity of the courts and the governing institutions. Weaken these and you weaken the prospects for change. "With the Administration in a state of paralysis and incapable of offericonstructive initiatives in the area of equal opportunity, it becomes the reaponsbUity of the Congress to act on behalf of America's minorities and her poor-the ary people who have been excluded from the rewards and napnnsiliilitiri of our nation. "I would suggest that if the Congress wishes to avert a disastrous vacuum of progress in the coming years; if it wishes to avoid having our nation slink into its 200th anniversary covered with shame and humiliation, that it act boldly in the following areas: ": Revenue Sharing. The Congress should make clear its understanding that revenue sharing reflects an unacceptable withdrawal of the national government from national issues that demand federal involvement and resolution. It should strangle any attempt to shift the proper responsibilities of the federal government onto state and local governments that have demonstrated neither their concern nor their capabilities in dealing with these problems of minorities and the poor. And it should clearly label any attempt to abandon a proper federal role in key areas like housing, manpower and health as something that must be 'inoperative.' ": Welfare Reform. Reports from across the country indicate that welfare rare shrinking and federal and state ad m i n s itrators are congratulating themselves on doing such a good job in cutting cots. Their satisfaction concerned. Certain interim laborcontract changes were negotiated with the assistance of Federal mediators John Popular II, of Washington, and Joseph P. Santa-Emma, of Columbus. The National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health is coordinating the implementation of the new safety program, with the assistance of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the Ohio State agencies, the union and the company. Among the remedial measures are the wearing of respirators in key areas, rotation of workers requried to wear respirators, company-provided for eating meals away' from the work areas, and waiver of certain labor contact provisions during a 60-day test period. Mr. Usery stated that he was pleased the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service had been instumental in bringing the health agencies into agreement on the best scientific procedures and in assisting the employer and union to adopt them. Elections Spur New ' Hopes Among Macks BY LOWS MAK11N . In the Chicago DEFENDER Not even the most stubborn black sourpuss could resist the ex citement of the news from the po litical front this week. Coleman Young of Detroit, Clarence Light ner of Raleigh, N. Car., and Ly man Parks of Grand Rapids, Mich., joined the growing ranks of the nation's black mayors. In the history of so-called ethnic nolitics. the remarkable rise of the insn to power in the big cities many years ago led some political scientists to as cribe to the Irish a special genius for politics. Now it is beginning to appear that black Americans have shaBar gifts. This reminds me of some of the racist jokes about big cities 1 heard in my youth. One of them, which was current in the late twen ties, was that New York city was "owned by the Jews, controlled by the Irish and enjoyed by the Ne groes." A lot of water, some of it filthy, has flowed over the dam since those benighted days. We are in the midst of a phen omenal political period. Black Americans who so recently seemed to despair of ever overcoming ut ter powerlessness are winning ma jor elective offices. Some of the victories, as in Raleigh last week and in Los Angeles not long ago, have come from the support of large white majorities in addition to their black support The cynics, however, are still with us and they are still asking what do these political victories mean to the rank and file of blacks: There are at least a hun dred answers to that question. Many of us recall Senator Ed Brooke's comment on this subject at the annual dinner of the Con gressional Black Caucus in Wash ington a few weeks ago. He said: "Americans respect and respond to political power. Political power influences public policy at all lev els. Power changes people. If pow er does not at once change the hearts of men, it can indeed change the way the hearts respond. Laws can help encourage people to rethink and change their posi tions in order to protect their self interests. Often we forget, for instance, that the elected public officials hire and control the police and the whole law enforcement system of the nation. All of us are familiar with vast appointive powers of the elected officials. Further, the elect ed officials supervise and direct the collection and expenditure of all nubile moneys. It is said that there are two kinds of dollars, the public or tax dollars and the private dollars. Some of us complain that those tax dollars M i ' multiply faster than any dollar should. Nevertheless, these public dol lars controlled by elected officials have built all the roads and high ways, the streets and city struc tures and the costly instruments of war, from supersonic planes to nu clear submarines. Billions of pub lic dollars exceeding the riches of any nation on earth are in the hands of those we elect to public office. Historically black Americans have been economically short changed. We nave had limited ac cess to private dollars and until recently almost no access to pub lic dollars. By climbing the politi cal ladder and capturing important seats of power black Americans are beginning to change the pic ture. It is trite to say that we have a long, long way to go. The point to note, however, is that at last we seem to be on the way. In some respects fortune may favor us af ter all. We have been so effectively excluded from the high precincts of political power that we have not been infested with the virus of Watergate. v! j Blacks, of course, hive no im munity from this disease. Never-; theless, at this "point in time" all the major political crooks who are making history today are lily white. They have come close to wrecking the country. The time . has come for black Americans to rescue the nation. Should Nixon Resign to a lesser extent. The spate of worker illnesses caused some 700 members of the 950 man bargaining unit of Textile Workers Union Local 487 to leave their jobs for two months. They returned a week ago following adoption of the new safety program. Some five health agencies, two Federal and three representing the State of Ohio, had been investigating the disease, which they described as unique. Some of the workers most severely afflicted developed muscle weakness to the extent they could not even torn a door knob. Federal mediators initiated a series of meetings in Washington and Columbus bringing together the company, the union, and the health agencies to devise an effective safety program and to coordinate the efforts of all Energy Crisb Stop Bussing' JACKSON, Mlss- viississippi Gov. Ross Harnett suggested that one way to help save fuel would be to stop court PImm seriously consider doing away with the bussing of children to the schools throughout the nation," he said in a telegram to Presi dent Nixon. "Should this be dene, it 1 save billions mat g.rtsW swim fat have the freedom to walk to their neighborhood .: In Marlesvil while, Dr, S. B. "Pete" Abrmmaon, chairman of the American Party of Louisiana, claimed that school bussing was "consuming a tremen dous amount of fuel and en ergy" and said, "This energy must be conserved If America Is to have enough fuel for transportation. BY BAYARD RUSTTN The most distressing thing about the governmental crisis which has engulfed America is that the President does not seem to recog nize that a crisis in fact exists. In stead of facing the issues involved, he obscures them, projecting him self as the victim of a malicious press and questioning the motives of Special Prosecutor Cox. He per sists in the policy of concealment and subterfuge that has marked the Administration's response ever since the time, many months ago, when Nixon supporters dismissed the Watergate break-in as a "cap er." Neither the President's ac tions nor his words suggest an awareness that withholding poten tial evidence from a criminal pro secution represents a blatant dis regard of basic democratic and constitutional principles. The (institution demands that the President "take care that the laws be faithfully executed." This is an absolute responsibility, not subject to individual whim. And yet the President has chosen to ignore this responsibility, submit ting neither to its spirit or letter until forced to bend by the bipar tisan outrage of the nation. This is particularly unsettiinjij&. bllcks, since ottr civil liberties de pend above all else on the Presi dent's determination to enforce the law, regardless of his political philosophy. Although opposed to the 1954 Brown decision, President Eisenhower ordered federal troops into little Rock - when Governor Faubus defied court desegregation directives. Had he placed his na tural impulse above the obligation to ensure that the law is carried out, Eisenhower would have set back the civil rights movement for years to come, while destroying h ie-.K-rai system ot gc By surrendering the tapes to Judge Sirica, the President has done Utile to allay the worst fears of Americans. There are still un answered questions, and the Presi dent has made it abundantly clear that, short of another judicial con frontation, he will not provide the answers. These questions suggest broad implications about the func tioning of democracy. The ITT case, for example, calls to ques tion whether national policy was being formulated on the basis of law, or was determined by the . promises of campaign contribu tions. Then there are the questions about the President's land transac tions and other personal financial dealings; whether the President was taking advantage of nigh of fice for personal enrichment . , To prejudge these cases before the proper officials have examined all the facts would do an unconsc ionable injustice to the President and to our system of law. The di lemma facing Americans is that the President will not cooperate with a full and impartial investiga tion, thus thwarting the only means of removing the cloud of suspicion which hovers over bis office. As the AFL-CIO said, in calling for the President's resignation:, "When the President appears fearful of facing a Supreme Court composed in large measure of bis own ap pointees, the public can scarcely resist the darkest speculations." The crisis which the President . has brought upon himself and the nation has multiplied and deepened our problems. Our domestic policy can be summed up in one word: "veto." Our foreign policy is suf fering at a time it can least afford to suffer. I do not contemplate the possi bility of the President's resigning or his impeachment with any feel ing of elation. Nor do I call for his removal from office because of political differences, profound as they may be. The fact is, however, that the President no longer has the ability to govern effectively, nor the mor al legitimacy to guide the course of the nation. The only principled alternative left is for him to resign, and spare the country a protracted, agoniz ing period when we would be, I fear, without a leader. And if Nixon fails to resign, I feel it is incumbent on the Congress to in itiate impeachment proceedings. Should the President ultimately leave office, Congress would be then well advised to consider the appointment of a bipartisan gov ernment, with the two major par ties sharing the presidency and vice presidency, as has been pro posed by Sen. Inouye of Hawaii. I believe that the resignation of Richard Nixon would serve the genuine interests of the United States, for this country cannot ab sorb the almost daily crisis which the President seems Incapable of averting. As I write this, the White House has announced that the two most important tapes never exist ed; already there is speculation over whether this is part of the President's efforts to cover-up wrong-doing. Because of the pat tern he has established, every move the President makes evokes suspicion and cynicism. We cannot endure this for three more years. Lyndon Johnson was elected President in 1964 with a mandate in all respects as decisive as that Nixon received in last year's elec tion. Four years later, having com piled a record of unprecedented domestic accomplishment, Johnson declined to seek re-election, not because of any impropriety on his part, but because he was convinced that to do so was in the best in terests of national unity and world peace. If Lyndon Johnson, under the attack of a small though high ly vocal minority, was capable of an act of high statesmanship, it is not presumptuous . to expect Richard Nixon, having lost the con fidence of the overwhelming ma jority of Americans, to take the i same difficult step. ..t.,,k uHtiMi narties are nowhere mentioned in the written Constitution, the two-party sysem has become a major stabilizing influence in the nation's conduct of constitutional government. The knowtodge of the party out of power that It can reasonably look forward to holding office again serves to temper public passions on any given iwe and to keep alive a common sense of stewardship for the long-term public interest The knowledge of the party in power that its actions and policies face critical examination by the political opposition and a future judgment by the elec torate serves to keep power democratic and responsive. The many-sided Watergate scandal U a severe test of the two-party system because Watergate Is a uniquely political icandal. involving as it does corruption and lawlessness at the highest levels of the Government Some of the wrongdoing was directed against the opposition party; some of the wrongdoing was aimed at Perpetuating a political faction in power. And some wrongdoing was directed against ordinary citizens who protested against or disagreed with various Administra tion policies. Coming on top of all this was a cynical cover-up coordinated at the White House and involving perjured testimony, the destruction of incriminating evidence and the payment of "hush money." As a result of these grave and repeated abuses of poUtical authority and the many lies told to conceal them, the confidence of the people in their elected officials and in the integrity oi uw . profoundly shaken. How to restore that confidence? In facing up to that inexorable question, the Republi can party has the primary responsibility, one which its leaders in Congress and in the nation have scarcely begun to discharge. Indeed, too many Republican party leaders continue to reiterate the unctuous and silly argu ment that Watergate has nothing to do with the Republican parly and that it was all perpetuated by that disowned and illegitimate orphan, the Committee to Re-elect the President, that argument will not wash. President Nixon is the symbol of Watergate. Mr. Nixon has three times been the Presidential nominee of the Republican party. The committee to re-elect him was the central effort of loyal Republicans across the nation in the 1972 campaign. Numerous Republican candidates for Federal and local office benefited from the magnitude of his electoral victory. In short, Mr. Nixon is the leader of the Republican party and the head of a Republican Administration. The question is: What are Republicans going to do about him? They cannot shift the burden to the Democrats. The President and his allies have tried to spread the idea, that the public indignation over Watergate is really just an underhanded attempt to rob Republicans of the fruits of their 1972 victory. The charge is laughable on its face. The Democrats in Congress under the leadership of Speaker Albert and Senate Majority Leader Mansfield have been extraordinarily circumspect and passive throughout this crisis. To be sure, the Democrats initiated the Ervin inves tigation; they have most reluctantly begun consideration of impeachment proceedings in the House Judiciary Committee; and they support pending bills to place the office of special prosecutor under protection of the courts. But those three actions are the minimum that any opposition party could have taken. Moreover, the sentiment among Democrats in Congress is overwhelming that if Mr. Nteon is removed from office, his successor should be a Republican and one broadly in accord with the Nixon policies, in that conviction, appear Ukejy ito Represenuuve i-ora 'esideni-JM imaging information is forth- "SSfSISffii hi? character of competence. Against this background Republicans have no excuse to pretend that Watergate is just a partisan donnybrook. Mr. Nixon has destroyed his usefulness to his nation and his party. He should resign. As long as he refuses to resign, the House should move expeditiously to draw up articles of impeachment against him. At this critical juncture, Republicans can no longer dodge their respon sibility to decide where their own duty lies. To their credit, some Republicans have met the question squarely; but far too many Republicans are still looking for an easy way out The conservative establishment of the Republican party continues to extend Mr. Nixon its support. The business and financial communities that paid for his campaigns on an ever more lavish scale have been publicly silent. If the Nixon problem Is not resolved, the executive branch of the Government will limp along, crippled and discredited, for another three years. If the Nixon problem is not resolved, the Republican party will suffer a political holocaust in the 1974 and 1976 elections. The time has come for the honorable leaders of the Republican party and its influential adherents to assume the burden of leadership, painful though it may be, that inevitably accompanies political power and influence. THE NEW YORK TIMES, NAACP Accepting Applications For Roy Wilkins Scholarships NEW YORK - The NAACP Youth and College division has begun accepting applies noes for the newly established Roy Wilkins Educational Scholarships The first batch of seven scholarships of $1,000 each will be awarded on December 14 to deserving minority group high school graduates who are about to enter college. Applications should be sent to James Brawn Jr., national youth director, at 1790 Broad way, New York City, no latei than December 7. The scholarships were made possible by a donation of $V 500 from the Honeywell Corp., for this purpose at the recent NAACP 64th annual conven tion fat Indianapolis and will be continued for three yean. Qualities that will be consid ered by the awarding commit tee are scholastic record, lead ership potential, intellectual curiosity and creativity ana n nanctal i' o. sox sns DURHAM. NORTH CAROLINA 0701 L. E. AUSTIN Bdltor-Publlaher 1927-1971 by United PuM at Durham, N. C toe. MRS. VIVIAN AUSTIN EDMONDS, Publisher . tONNETTE Manager 3. IBLWOOD CARTER Advertising Manager Second Class Postage Paid at Durham, N. C. 27703 '. SUBSCRIPTION RATES . , United States and Canada 1 Year $8.00 United States and Canada 3 Years $11.00 Foreign Countries 1 Year $7.50; Itagto Copy SO Cento Principal Office Located at 488 East Pettlgrew street Durham. North Carolina 27702 VETS QUESTIONS I ANSWERS EDITOR'S NOTE: Veterans and their famines are asking thousands of questions concerning the benefits their Government provides for them through the Veterans Administration. Below are some representative queries. Additional information may be obtained at any VA office. n.Q'-Are WW II veterans eligible for pensions? I'm 65, and my wife and I need more than the $3,000 annual income we now live on. I served in WW II, but I wasn't wounded. A-Any 65-year old veteran who served a minimum of 90 days and received an other than dishonorable discharge is considered permanently and totally disabled for pension purposes. As a married man with your income, you could be eligible for $69 per month pension at current rates. QWhen a veteran who dies of service connected causes is buried in a private cemetery, will the Veterans Administration pay the $150 plot allowance in addition to the $800 allowance for funeral expenses? A-No. The $800 payment is for all funeral costs, including a burial plot. However, if death occurs in a VA facility, an additional amount if payable to transport the deceased to place of burial. Q--Is it true that veterans no longer have to apply for certificates of eligibility for education and training benefits? I hear that the Veterans Administration mails them to veterans so that they no longer have to apply in person. Because I didn't apply when I got out two years ago, will VA send mine through the mail? A Tim new system is keyed to the list of dischargees now being furnished by the Department of Defense. Because you were discharged before the automatic system was established, it Will be necessary for you to file application for your benefits at the local VA office. Q-An explosion killed my son during military service in Vietnam, and his body was never recovered. Will the Veterans Administration provide a memorial marker? A-Yes; : The memorial may : W ''TJrebflftf p rWaW'1 cemetary in a plot provided by the applicant, or in the memorial section of the national cemetery. Apply to the nearest VA office. Q--The Veterans Administration is giving my daughter dependents' educational assistance based on the service connected death of my husband. Since she plans to marry soon, I wonder if this will affect her assistance? A-Your daughter's marriage would have no effect on her education benefits. A widow's remarriage under the same program, however, would result in termination of benefits, unless the remarriage was terminated by death or divorce. o , Q-My husband was killed in action during World War II, and I never remarried Am I eligible for a Veterans Administration GI home loan? A-Yes. The Veterans Housing Act of 1970 restored unused, expired loan benefits to veterans of World War II and later periods, including their unremarried widows. Having A Child Isn't Risk Free Each day in' the United States, two women die, not of disease or of old age, but as the result of their becoming pregnant. Whether during the months before childbirth or m the re covery period after, almost 800 women lose their lives an nually due to, pregnancy and its aftermath. ' This sad truth' is revealed in the Government's official Vital Statistics Report, which notes that being born is haz ardous business for babies, too. Well over 100 newborn infants a day 60,000 a year fail to make it. One might shrug and say "that's life" except for the ironic fact that so large a number of pregnancies are unwanted to begin with. Enjoyment of water sports -the favorite summer pastime for millions of Americans re quires respect for common sense safety regulations. And these regulations should in clude measures to protect par ticipants against hazards to their hearing ability. Hm.M, lfTS THE CAROLINA This is the advice of the neltone ' rtiMo lor rte.iring Conservation. The sponsored by Be! tone Electronics Corpora tion, world leader in hearing aids nnd electronic hearing test instruments, ia dedicated to promoting hearing conser vation and the control of noise pollution. For example, outboard boat- crusade officials urge out board enthusiasts to use pro tective ear plugs. 1 E9 ES WOMEN IN HARD HATS - Linda Brown, left, consults with Ada Parker about the lubricating oil and the cooling mechanism on the giant fans which blow air into the boilers at Con Edison's Hudson Avenue electric generating station in Brooklyn. Mechanics for the utility, they have jobs once considered "for men only." iy BS: anaBBBaLaK BH am m '"'V-..'. . WHO KNOWS? What is the launch date for Skylab 3? Which President was born October 30, 1735? What significant histori cal event took place on October 19. 1781? In what war did this event occur? When did the United Na tions adopt an official flag? Who created "Huckleber ry Finn"? When does Daylight Sav ing Time end? When was the ZIP CODE introduced? cessful single-rotrMe4hs'i ., copter? i. it 10. Who is known as the "Father of the United Na tions"? , Answers To Who Knows November 11. John Adams, 2nd Presi- LET'S ASK THE YEAST PEOPLE As cool blustery winds blow autumn leaves about, more and more homemakers are busy in warm kitchens baking homemade bread. But many have never used yeast or kneaded dough, so they have questions. To make it simpler for first time bakers the test kitchens of Fleischmann's Yeast devel oped the Rapidmix Method for making bread. It makes dough easier to handle and speeds up the whole process. Active dry yeast is mixed with some of the other dry ingredi ents. Liquids are heated to very warm (120-130F.). An electric mixer is used to com bine ingredients which helps start the action of the yeast. One question the novice might have relates to knead ing. It does take a little know how. Start by forming the dough into a round ball. Fold it toward you with the finger tips of both hands. Then with the heels of your hands, push the dough away from you using pressure. Turn the dough a quarter of a turn and keep repeating for 8 to 10 minutes. With practice, you'll pick up speed and rhythm. The purpose of kneading is to stretch the glutn in the flour. This forms the structure of the finished bread. Here the Rapidmix Method is used in a recipe to please hew bread bakers and pros alike. 'v, HONEY-WHEAT CINNAMON BREAD 4-14 cups unsifted white flour (about) 2 cups unsifted whole wheat flour 1 tablespoon salt . 1 package Fleischmann's Active Dry Yeast 2 cups water - . 14 cup honey 3 tablespoons Fleischmann's .Margarine 1 cup golden raisins 14 cup sugar 14 teaspoon ground cinnamon Melted Fleischmann's Margarine Combine white and whole wheat flours. In a large bowl lIsL''; '7 .IsV. aaW -S bbbbbbhBbv AjyaMMBaVCv v aB BmaBaT - '... Ja Br aV BvaaB flB Bake this honey-wheat loaf to fill your kitchen with the aroma of freshly baked bread laced with honey and swirled with cinnamon. thoroughly mix 2-12 cups flour mixture, salt and undis solved Fleischmann's Active Dry Yeast. Combine water, honey and Fleischmann's Margarine in a sauce-pan. Heat over low heat until liquids arc very warm (120-130"F.) Margarine does not need to melt. Gradually add to dry ingredients and beat 2 minutes' at medium speed of electric mixer, scrap ing bowl occasionally. Add 1 cup flour mixture, or enough flour mixture to make a thick batter. Beat at high speed 2 minutes, scraping bowl occa sionally. Stir in raisins and enough additional flour mix ture to make a soft dough. (If necessary, add additional white flour to obtain desired dough.) Turp out onto lightly floured board. Cover dough with bowl; let rest 10 minutes. Knead until smooth and elas tic, about 8 to 10 minutes. Place in greased bowl, turn ing to grease top. Cover; let rise in warm place, free from draft, until doubled in bulk, about 1 hour. Meanwhile, thoroughly combine sugar and cinnamon. Punch dough down; turn out onto lightly floured board. Divide dough in half. Roll 12 the dough into a 12x8 inch rectangle. Brush lightly with melted Fleischmann's Margarine. Sprinkle with 12 cinnamon-sugar mixture. Roll tightly from the 8-inch side as for jelly roll. Seal edges firmly. Seal ends of loaf and fold underneath. Place loaf, seam side down, in greased 8-12 x 4-12 x 2-12 inch loaf pan. Repeat with remainirig dough. Cover; let rise in warm place, free from draft, until doubled in bulk, about 1-12 hours. Bake in a hot oven (400F.) about 30 to 35 minutes, or until done. Remove from pans and cool on wire racks. If desired, brush with melted Fleischmann's Margarine. Makes 2 loaves. dent. 3. Lord Cornwallis surrend ered at Yorktown. 4. Revolutionary War. 5. Octobef 20, 1947. '' 6. Mark Twain. 7. October 28th, 2 a.m. 8. July 1, 1963. by the U.S. Post Office Department. 9. Igor I. Sikorsky. A Rus sian who came to the U.S. after the Russian revolu tion. 10. Crii' 11 Hull, former Sec retary of stute. mveKtiouse SCOTCH g Also available in Tenths M HMsfaW Actual case history photo: North Carolina Mutual agent Ivery Brandon gives death benefit check to Mrs. Mildred McLean. "Making things a lot easier for people is what North ay tm ; m ''nafSr' .flap.'' P - 4 ; , t - : j H A I BiB M V bbbbV 1 Hgft. I I BBWfl l i'V ' "m, 1JMK B ' Mik. .m HBbw Iew"' sal ' ' am HL. ,bb1 vK; Wr bvJK EjjlB- bbMP: i&l-rr- 'WlsaBW iH "' ' " WWi'WV' bB' aai aMh' ' -assail ' L!lrVwB ft aBf bI BBBBfemy rjglB BP mm Wrm mm m-m m Wmv BBJ BaY . aBJ Bam. ""c That's been our business since 1898. And in these years, we've been able to help quite a few people through some rough times. Like when Mrs. Mildred McLean's husband suddenly died, insurance need. our agent I.C. Brandon was there with a check for her and her family. But we can help in a lot more ways than life insurance. We've also got policies for retirement, education, savings and any other ,91000 isJa'ta I. NORTH CAROLINA MUTUAL H I.IFSE INSURANCE COMPANY DUNHAM. NORTH CAROLINA St770t An Equal Opportunity Employer. We've got a way to help your family, and we'd like to tell you about it. So call your local North Carolina Mutual man. And let him explain how we can make things easier for you. 104 W. Parrish Street Durham, North Carolina Phone: 682-5154 27702