Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Dec. 15, 1973, edition 1 / Page 2
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V - s.t.. t is, ttfi Tine to Turn the Dreadful Tide EDITORIALS PUTTING YOUR EDUCATION TO WORK Recent advise and counsel given by Congressman Stokes to some 250 seniors from predominantly black colleges and universities comes at a much needed time. For it would seem in some instances that many of the bright young men and women have forgotten why they have come to many of our institutions. Citing the problems of poverty, hunger and inadequate education for millions of Americans, the minority student were urged to restructure their priorities and rededicate themselves to the senitivity regarding the plight of others. He further reminded them that they were the generation which had challenged the entire system under which we live and as we move on even greater challenges would face them. An even greater responsibility for all young people as they look to the future is putting their education to work for their fellow man. Most of them are in these positions as seniors today because of their intellectual capacity and drive. Therefore the greatest role for them to play is how they are and especially those who have been beaten down by the system. Perhaps such advise and counsel is needed even nore for all young people affluent society. The time is here for all young people to firmly realize that education is power and power is education. The most important way to use the power of education is by deeper concentration to the basic study of the techniques and tools to survive in this fast moving society. NIXON'S APPROACH More and more serious questions are continuing to be raised about Nixon and his political antics. It just seems appalling to many persons that somehow this administrator of the highest office of our country can continue to literally "pull the wool" over the eyes of so many of the best minds of our country and seems to be apparently getting away with it. Each day some new discovery has come up about Nixon and many grave questions are being asked and discussed on all types of the media. What has happened to the serious thinking individuals of this great country of ours? How much longer will we allow these serious behavioral actions to go on? We hope that the will to do right will prevail. Certainly a higher standard of behavior is usually expected from our tip leaders because they are expected to set the moral tone for the country. """" """ To Be Equal LH by Vmnom E, Jordan, Jr. TM mJM A National Director of Urban League Wr M ENERGY AND THE GHETTO Even if Jfee Aab states stop trying to blackmail us into abandoning our longstanding , commitment fo Israel, there will still be a serious oil shortage. The energy crisis appears to be here to stay. It is something that started years ago when world demand increased and prices rose sharply, and it will probably go on until new energy sources are found. The President has already called for a great national effort to attain self-sufficiency in energy supplies by the end of the decade, proving once again that Americans have almost unlimited capacity to set and follow through on national goals that don't directly tackle the human problems of living together decently . In the 1960s, the national goal was to put a man on the moon. In the 70s it will be to increase energy supplies. When will we decide to make the eradication of poverty and the re vital iz at ion of OUT cities a great national goal -in the 1990s? Meanwhile, the energy crisis continues and it has important implications for black people and poor people. As the government moves to conserve energy its policy must be based firmly on two important principles. Fust, the burden of the shortages should be borne by all. with the heaviest burden on the people who can most afford it. It s no great sacrifice to limit the use of gas-eating cars or for middle class homes to reduce thermostats to 68 degrees. But black people and working people whose jobs are dependent on site ItJkporatton shouldn't be bit with the same driving limitations and gas taxes as Sunday pteasurejrers. f And black people shouldn't be victimized by gougers using the energy crisis as an excuse. Every winter many hundreds of thousands of black people in urban ghettos freeze because their landlords don't provide enough heat. For them, the 68 -degree home beating target never existed. While it tries to cut back on energy use , the government shouldn't foster flue epidemics in the ghettos - housing codes should be enforced and gougers made to pay dearly . . Jhe. second, principle is- - that energy allocations should not hamper industrial users in a way that throws people out of work . While it may only be a scare tactic, talk is current that some factories will have to be shut down and their workers laid off. Most experts predict a sharp rise in unemployment, even without an energy crisis. This country's goal has to be that of full employment - a job for everyone willing and able to work. We've had enough experience with "jawboning" to know that voluntary compliance is non-existent. Regulations on energy use ought to be formulated now -before it is too late - to insure that there is rational use of scarce energy and that employment won't suffer. And I'd like to see some kind of watchdog committee set up to insure that the energy crisis doesn't, become everybody's excuse for placing more burdens on poor people and for evading social goals and responsibilities. Already , at least one southern school district has asked that court-ordered school busing directives be set aside to conserve fuel. All sorts of similar energy-saving patriots will be coming out of the woodwork now, saying it is their duty to cut heat to tenants to 55 degrees or to stop the school buses or close factories. Minorities and working people need assurances that the energy crisis is not going to become another excuse to put more pressure on their necks. Finally , in addition to pushing the search for alternative energy supplies, rational national policy demands pushing socially desirable goals at the same time. For example, one reason why the energy crisis is upon us is the fantastic road-building program of the past two decades, a program that created suburbia and downgraded cities. A commitment to mass transit systems and to reviving city centers would go a long way toward conserving fuel while improving the quality of American life. ESC States Largest Manpower Agency When Governor Hoiahouaer s recent an te public office, rich, mi nt Security Commission December I, the 38-year-old Charlotte baaaMaaman to North Carolina's largest Security la the State Service which manpower agency. One of two major divisions from Elizabeth City to Murphy. Through September of thia year, staff memb . th, offices had pUKov70,200 23,000 ftppttCflBtH for occupational skills, and placed farm workers in more than 175,600 agricultural Jobs. Operating entirely on federal appropriations, the State Employment Service comprises partof the nation's public employment system winch was established by passage of the Wagner Peyser Act in the mid 1930's. Singly and with other State agencies, it is involved in the administration of a host of federal manpower programs, including! The Manpower Development and Training Act, in which the Em ployment Service recruits and taste applicants for n occupational rams. It pays i who are in training and is responsible for finding them Jobs when training is completed. In 1973, the federal government has approved grants exceeding No. 3.7 million for MDTA training in North Carolina. The Work Incentive Program (WIN), a nation wide project providing training the Job placement for persons receiving AFDC welfare payments. The Concentrated Em ployment program (CEP) end Rural CEP which provides intensified training and job placement services to residents of high unem ployment areas. Ernrnrich's director of the N.C. Employment Service Is John B. Fleming who has 37 years experience in public employment work. ROY WHKINS SAYS Executive Secretary of NAACP RACIAL LABELS NOW & THEN Without fanfare , it has been revealed that the Gvil Service Department of New York state has begun using a code system to identify all state employes by race. The payroll record now carries a code number that classifies the worker as to ethnic origin. The excuse for this racial tag is that computerized tapes will make it easier to supply information on minority employment that is required by the U.S. Equal Opportunity Commission. Categories include whites, blacks and other minorities. Whites are in the first category, designated 00. Code number 0 1 has been assigned to black s with 02 to Puerto Ricans. Spanish surnamedare 03, Asian Americans 04, American Indians OS and others 06. A dry official said ethnic and sex data would also be kept. He said this had been done in compliance with a 1972 amendment to the 1 974 Civil Rights Act. For many years politicians, researchers and some civil rights groups have been seeking a way to get racial data on employees. New York state slipped in its own code shortly after it enacted the first state law in the nation against discrimination in employment. It was unofficial and illegal, but it helped employees get around the section on referrals of workers. Sincere politicians and crusading workers for civil rights laws were stymied by the lack of racial data. An employer might be told that he had a discriminatory hiring policy. But his lawyers and supervisors would stall for years while the proof, "by visual observance," was slowly assembled. Then came more years of delay in the courts. The exclusion of Negro workers became so blatant that, finally, black civil rights workers, although refusing to consent to the data plan, did not voice loud objections to it . Jobs for blacks remained the principal objective. Now the General Services Administration (GSA) in Washington is ignoring the law on hiring. It is charged by the Civil Service Commission with employing persons, regardless of job qualifications, who have been referred by the Committee for the Re-Election of the President, among others. The assistant administrator of the GSA office was formerly on President Nixon's staff in the White House. This is one way of getting around a law. . Another is to manipulate the clauses and amendments in existing laws in such away that , not only required data are secured, but racial discrimination irt hiring is cheeked. VoteVs can' be warned by Washington lobbyists but they seldom pay attemtion to amendments. Yet this is a favorite way in which friends (?) and foes of civil rights choose to "deal" and thus cripple original legislation. Because of the drive for black jobs, a lot of loose talk has been going around about "quotas." It is said that the procedures on minority workers and minority students in colleges are "unfair" to whites. An industrial plant that never in its history had a black member, a coDege where black students, if any, were strictly limited to one or two - all these are told that they must show their good faith (not their words) by removing their strictures. Their affirmative action is greeted by the black quota charge. Jobs are high on the priority Kst for Negroes, if not number one, These citizens must have the law and procedures that will enable them to break the strangelehold of centuries on "white" and "black jobs. This GSA caper is an indication that blacks and whites cannot even be certain that the language of the law will be observed. I LETTER TO THE VlgSlV I EDITOR J11- ... . . ..... Sirs: KING NIXON CONSERVATOR THE King Nixon - the Conservator sleeps In a king-sized $5000 bed. Commutes to beddown at San Clements. Buys Biscayne and Camp David, where the ponders our fate. Burns 30,000 gallons of gas going and coming. WORSHIPS TWO GODS L Money - the Almighty Dollar II Violence "Position of Strength" Military Department of fear, hate, and violence. 83 billion dollars lor instruments of death annually 500 billion dollars Viet nam, Cambodia, The 500 lb. lamb is in his coat of arms. The energy crisis. He would still be bombing hell out1 of Cambodia if we good guys among the American people had not stopped him. I am 1000 for Nixon if he would only repent of his evil ways and see things our way Sheffield Lane Rt. 2 Ernie Sheffield 0sseo' Minn- 55369 Thmrjg You Should Know mw- aw r Bom m viwawiA akounq tree, 9owofA3iyfwoMANawMrn om . ' r yljt WORMOttAOUIOt fOHWAOONTRAIUS tT WlfM THt I AST ANO CirprWIA, A TR APPtR, HUN US, K iiumtut ftmm rmmar mmmr n Htvw ejejwMCHwrjraoNAiMMONNRTHca -1- BLACK EYES By Rhett Tanner WHAT'S BEHIND THE RISE IN FOOD PRICES Durham's consolidation mania has struck again. The Bureaucrates in this town would consolidate "Consolidation" if it could be consolidated. (An intended Implied analogy takes from the "Last Poets" that some of us are familiar with). At the Durham County Commissioners meeting on Monday, December 4th, one item on the agenda was a request for funds for Edgemont Community Clinic. The issue was funding not alternatives. The clinic position was clearly stated. They want to remain a community based and controlled operation. County commissioner, Howard Essley's exorbitant wish for eight of these clinics is flattering but windy. We don't want etght clinics. We want one that can maintain its special unique method of operation. It is no secret of any discerning person that Durham has little to offer in the way of innovative creative services in any area. This if particularly true in the field of health services. Durham's Edgemont Clinic has made a great beginning toward such a service This a medical facility without CIA admission policies. This a facility with personnel who work because they enjoy their work and want to help patients. We realize that such an institution could pose a threat to guinea pig institutions that need the poor for experiments and to keep social workers in their positions. Edgemont Clinic is the one place where poor people in our community can get a fair shot at preventive medicine which is one concrete key to good health. If our County Commissioners are so aware of the good the clinic has done in the past, why must there be so much song and dance about giving it financial support. How long do they want Edgemont Clinic to stretch its boot straps. Five years of strap stretching is hell. The clinic merits one years' funding. We were very surprised that the voice of senility, Commissioner Easley, would suggest Federal Funding. We thought he was the Treasury Department's personal guardian, the way he rants and raves about spending. Of course, if that would become the case he would then become his usual self in the role of the TRUE RED, WHITE AND BLUE WHIPPING BOY. Bayard Rustin Says IN MEMORY OF ARTHUR LOGAN All who knew Dr. Arthur Logan were struck by his compelling gentleness and. compassion. He hated prejudice, not bitterly or blindly, but because he un derstood its destructive ness, and he grieved over human misfortune. Yet he was en dowed with a strength of character not found in ordinary men; his seK poeweealon during times of crisis was awesome. You could not meet Dr. Logan, even for a brief moment, without sensing his innate goodness, and you could not work with him without marveling at his unassuming, yet firm, leadership. Dr. Logan died last week, unexpectedly and suddenly, and those of us who were 6 bm as a valued b and as a close friend. Some may wonder why I am devoting a column to Dr. Logan, for while his con tribution to the civil rights movement wan significant, he may not be as well-known nationally as he is in New York. I write because be was a friend a man who saved my life after I had suffered a 1 serious heart attack and because the values and strengths which made Dr. Logan ao exceptional were the very ones which formed the solid underpinning of the civil rights movement Dr. Logan could easily have dedicated himself to a lucrative practice. He was a gifted surgeon and doctor one of the first black graduates of Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons. The pressures he endured as a young men were immense: for to be black and graced with ability was to confront terrifying responsibilities to yourself, to your race and to society. Yet he bore that pressure well, committing himself to the cause of racial ad vancement even before a mass dvO rights movement existed. Most of his work was done behind the scenes. He was instrumental in raising funds for Martin Luther King's most important campaigns; he was a brilliant organiser and administrator; and he had a genius for transforming embroyonic programs Into effective vehicles for com munity service. He was particularly con cerned with the lack of decent medical care in the ghetto. A confirmed utegrattonist, Dr. Logan held unwaveringly to this ideal in the face of the turbulence and shifting tides of public opinion of the 1980s. He served the ghetto, yet he believed that black people would be denied the full potential of human dignity until the ghetto was destroyed. Thus he headed an organization that was fighting to ensure that an urban renewal project on Manhattan's Upper West Side would be both economically and racially mixed. Dr. Logan was also com mitted to medicine, in all Its practical and psychological aspects. Dr. King, Duke EUintgon, Jackie Robinson and other promtont blacks looked to Dr. Logan not simply because of his talents as a doctor, but because he understood the emotional sufferings of a sick person, ' And while he had many famous and wealthy patients, Dr. Logan served the poor as well, making regular visits to Knickerbocker and Sydenham hospitals in Harlem. He worked tirelessly to root out discrimination from the medical profession. And he was forever encouraging young blacks to take up medicine as a profession, because he believed firmly in its worth. But he believed that black doctors should undergo the same discipline and meet the same standards as others. He wss adamantly opposed to the lowering of standards; he understood too well that this would irreparably damage not only the medical profession but also toe black community itself. Arthur Logan left a proud legacy to his wife, Marian, and young son, Chipper. Marian Logan is an effective activist in her own right: she worked side by side with her husband for many causes; together they accomplished a great deal Dr. Logan also left a great legacy to all black people, and to Harlem. Harlem was his life; during his funeral the procession passed by the hospitals, medical centers, settlement houses, touting projects and clinks which were established because of Ms efforts. It was a long procession, because Dr. Logan had many friends, and it took some time to com plete, because Dr. Logan was so essential a part of Harlem's social Institutions. And It was a sad, bat noble tribute to a gracious man, and dedicated leader. m OttCarMat p. o. box am DURHAM. NORTH CAROLINA BM L. B AUSTIN Idltor-Publisntr UtMfTl Published every Saturday at Durham, N. C. by United Publishers. Inc. , , MRS. VTVTAN AUSTIN EDMONDS, Publisher , . Oi iAKHNCE BONNETTK . . . , Business Manages1 OLWOOO CARTER Advertising Manager Second Glass Footage Paid at Durham, N. C 27703 United States tT. 1 Year tSflO; United States and Canada a Years ffgM Foreign Countries .... 1 Year WW Single Copy W Mndpal Office Located at East PettigreW Sow Nm r-nrnnnn zfna CAROLINA TIMES 8A Bat, Dec IB, 1978 A CHRISTMAS STORY 'Twas the night before i Christmas and there in his chair, father was moaning and tearing his hair. While upstairs in bed, sll still and asleep, The children didn't know what made daddy weep. The money had been paid, the gifts had been bought, and all was well with the world, or father had thought, He'd gone to the car, put the toys on the seat, and then to the market for good things to eat. He returned to the car, and what did he find? Some thief in the night had stolen him blind. U nfortunately, there are people beside Santa Claus tiptoeing around during the Christmas season carrying gifts. Where Santa Claus creeps down chimneys with bags of delights for the kiddies, the sneak theif creeps through darkened parking lots to steal bundles from cars of unsuspecting shoppers. With a few pointers from the Insurance Information Institute, however, it may be possible to thwart the thieves and save your presents for Santa's bundle. When you are out shopping and find it necessary to leave the car unattended with gifts inside, always lock your purchases in the trunk. Not only does this provide greater gifts, security, but by taking the package out of sight any temptation for thieves is effectively removed. Even with the package safely locked away, always lock your car doors and take your keys with you, the Institute cautions. The only thing worse than losing all youis losing your entire car. When possible, park your car in brightly lit, well-traveled area. Thieves don't like working where they can be seen. Mifcfi...' m BBSS' effHv e'iT Begin Mka Madie and Cora Mse stood Quietly in a huddle, gazing swe struck st the dosed door to "Mister Ben's" bedroom. "Will you tell me what's going on 'round here?" Miss Madie said aloud. , "Bests me," Cora Mae answered flatly. She was scared stiff because she had been the only person with "Mister Ben" when he passed. "Talking 'bout foul-play in th' death of her daddy." Miss Madie muttered supercilously. "How can she run in here outah the street'n accuse somebody of anything." "He passed quietly, Miss Madie, he didn't struggle one bit. He had been talking kindah like his mind was elsewhere. I had to ask him to repeat some things. One thing he asked me to tell you don't make much sense, but he wants you to keep your pepper'n vinegar and stay single." Cora Mae was over come by tears and covered her face with her hands; her slendor body shook convulsively as weppt into her trembling hands. Miss Madie was at a lost as what to do, therefore she did nothing. Perhaps she was too angry to weep; angry with herself because she had been lured away from his bedside to go shopping for a winter coat. "That beats bobtail," she said aloud, in an effort to abort drowning herself in the woes of self-incrimination, Cora Mae's weeping had steadily grown louder and more moanful. "There's a puke of misery if I evah seed one." Miss Madie said under her breath. However, she made no effort to comfort the wailing woman; A good cry, she decided, might do Cora Mse more gooti than a dose of medicine. An hour later, the apartment was full of people; women and children sat about talking in whispers. They had heard Cora Mae crying and guessed that "Mister Ben had passed. Miss Madie was grateful to her neighbors for stopping in to "comfort her in her hour of distress." Strangely enough, "misery courts misery," she told hereself as she greeted each new comer. Too, she felt awfully foolish thanking folk for their "heartfelt sympathy" when she had fco confirmation that Ben Prattt was actually dead. Doctor Stanford had come out to remove his brown leather bag from the divan; he had taken off his coat, and his shirt sleeves were rolled shove his knobby elbows; she had tried to question him about the goings on inside of "Mister Ben's room, but he had shaken his head sadlv and left all of her questions unanswered. There was no time to stand around with her mouth open, and wearing the expression on her face of one who isn't sure one has not i invert a flv The neitfhbors were beginning to bring in covered H,.k h hiA to hake a lee Duttina the food sway. Wane she was absored in the task of putting the food ks the ref sjdaire, the i,.m b, th i1m mam suddenly took on the aspect af a puvni www ' ' "b ?"".. ."w 7 Simrlav School Convention adjourning for the noon h,, cramm. h neck, she listened to "aero" wtsellM the mumble jumble. And to her surprise, she discovered that Emma Lou was the culprit She was saying, "you people go home. There to not going to be s sitting up around here. My dear, departed father wouldn't want you sitting around grieving ewer him," Miss Madie left off what she was doing and rushed to the doorway of the living room. She stood watching the women rise reluctantly from their chairs, giving supercilious side glances to their neighbors, however, they filed quietly out or the room. Emma Lou. looking very foolish, wss left standing in -the middle of the room, wringing her hands, huffing and puffing blowing like an angy bull. After awhile she spottea miss mmm standing inside the doorway and her ire wss rekindled. She stood; she said, "get your things togetherl am locking this house up--." "Whatcha mean, get my things together'.'" "Just what 1 said. "This joint has been s pest house for too long. My daddy would probably be alive if you had spent more time with him; instead, you left him in the care of Cod only knows who." Miss Madie suddenly snapped out of her indolence; she was ready to defend her character from the teeth and claws of this wind-bag of a she-wolf. Using her index Tinger to point, witn sne pointed out the discrepancies in Emma Lou's accusation; "your daddy died from natural causes long time ago-why God kept breath in his body is beyond me-but! Mister Ben, while in man care was never mistreated-God was on his Ps an Qs the day he led me to believe I should go to Mister Ben's bedside. If 1 hadn't he would've made his peace with the devil or somebody long ago. These Bayboro neighbors may be as foolishe as they looks, but they ain't crazy. The only fool in the crowd is Madie Perkins, the big hearted clown. If I had ah-grain of sense, I would've taken my pension and gone somewheres 'n sat down no mah haunches--and make no mistake- my haunches need sitting on. No, feebleminded me -all heart 'n no sense -I had to come here to nuss a stack of bones that nobody in this world card-ah-hoot aobut." Emma Lou was unprepared for the avalanche of pity verbose, therefore, she turned and walked swiftly away from the prattling, old woman. However, in a caustic tone of voice she hurled over her broad shoulders: "get your junk and get out-your services are no longer needed-." MISS JUNIOR CLASS-Wanda Louise Lewis, a junior social welfare major at Livingstone College, Salisbury, N.C., is the daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Floyd Lewis of 167 Chamber Street Newburgh, N.Y. A popular lass who answers to "Wendy," Wanda was chosen Miss Junior Class 1973-74. A dean's list student, Wanda holds membership in the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, the Marching Band, and the Julia B. Duncan Players (drama group). She is the second of three daughters born to the elder Lewises. Car Pool Interest Brings Ins. Questions With growing concern in North Carolina over the possibility of gasoline rationing and the lack of gasoline availability, the interest in car pools for work and school is reaching its highest point since World War II. Joining a car pool can be a convenience and a time and money saver-as well as a way of improving the quality of our air, but many people are reluctant to enter such arrangements. North Carolina residents fear they will expose themselves to a lawsuit which won't be covered by their regular insurance. The Insurance Information Institute advises that, in terms of insurance coverage, car poolers probably have nothing SUPER MARKET . 910 N. ROXBORO STREET Open 7 A.M. to 9 P.M. Daily Specials Good Thru Sunday - Open Till 9 P.M. and Sunday 12:00 A. M. GET MORE TO EAT from our i JMLEZKF S VALLEYDALE i SAUSAGE I FRESH HENS I PIG FEET 12 Or LB. IB. 69 69 29t 69t i BEEF SHORT RIBS BANANAS f 10t I CORN 4 S $1 .00 S 8 Oz. SAUER S i BLACK PEPPER 89 : THURSDAY THROUGH SATURDAY J SUPER MARKET . 910 N. ROXBORO STREET LiiiiiiiiiifmiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiifeii to worry about. However, a few words of caution and explanation are in order. Insurance on a privately owned, pool-shared vehicle is placed in jeopardy only If the pool is operated for a profit. In the situation where everyone in the pool uses his car an equal amount of time there is, of course, no problem. The problem most often arises when one of the car pool participants does not share in the, driving chores and thus pays a regular fee. ' ;.' ,, ,'. To preserve Insurance coverage, the Institute points out, any car pool fee should not be more than the fair share of the gas, oil, and general depreciation on the car. A simol er way for the non-charing passengers to reimburse the pool members is to give a gift sometime during the year to the drivers. This divorces the concept of "fee ' from the privilege of riding in a car pool and leaves the insurance protection intact. In the case of car pools involving children, the Institute stresses the importance of wearing seat belts not only to protect the children in the case of an accident but also to prevent the kind of antics that mieht distract the drivers attention. Once a car pool participant is convinced his regular auto insurance is valid, his next concern is the amount of coverage he has. He should consider bodily injury liability coverage with high limits, according to the Institute, since this is what protects him against claims which others-including his 'pool' passengers-can bring against him after an accident. As an example, says the institute, limits of $300. 000S500.000 would provide up to $300,000 coverage for one Injury in an accident with a $500,000 per accident limit. Medical payments is another important coverage. If written with limits of $1,000, each person in the car can receive up to $1,000 for medical expenses incurred within one year of an accident regardless of who is at fault. The Institute emphasizes that because the dollar limits applies to each passenger separately, there is no need to increase the limits in order to cover additional passengers. Property damage liability coverage, which protects the motorist against claims resulting from damage to other people's property, is not likely to be affected by Involvement in a car pool since the number of passengers would not ordinarily contribute to the amount of property damage done by the car In an accident. Architects say that many modern buildings waste energy. We have ' always felt that mankind's first mistake was moving ou of the cave. STORE HOURS WELLON VILLAGE 10 a.m. -10 p.m. ROXBORO RD. 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Sunday 1-6 p.m UNIVERSITY DR. 9 a.m. - 9 p.m Sunday 1-7 p.m 4-WHY- tm m tm ws m mm ws PAY-M0RE?:t7 SHOP BIG STAR and SAVE! LEAN BONELESS CORNED BEEF ROUNDS LB. $1.38 U . ..I 4 iu . CHOICE . . . HEAVY WESTERN BEEF . . . CHUCK ;U.. ROAST BONE-IN LB. 68 U. S. CHOICE . . . HEAVY WESTERN BEEF . . . CHUCK STEAK LB. 88 PURE VEGETABLE CRISCO SHORTENING 3-lB. CAN 99 SAVE ON spjft APPLE OR GRAPE I m, aw jellt 24 10-01 JAR LARGE FLORIDA TANGEL0ES OR ORANGES 54t BANANAS I itfelpTsI fssj ssssr tfeSoGOOD THUR SAT., DEC. 15, 1973 - QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVE!) ,-,A."
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Dec. 15, 1973, edition 1
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