Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / March 15, 1969, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 RALEIGH. N. C., SA' SWEEPSTAKES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) offices of this newspaper and was awarded $lO in cash. Mrs. Elsie Taylor, 314 Heck Street, visited Terry’s Furni ture, E. Martin Street, last week. She received number 4758, third prize, which won for her $2.50 To be valid this week, tick ets must be yellow in color and dated March 8, 1969. Number 5128, first prize, is worth a whopping S3O; 5377, second, worth $5; and 6251, third, will bring its bearer $2.30. Patronize businesses which advertise in The CAROLINIAN. They appreciate your patron age. Kindly Inform them that you saw their “ads” in this newspaper. Sweepstakes advertisers may be found on page 10 of this week’s CAROLINIAN. Look them over. Visit these mer chants as well as other CARO LINIAN advertisers, and lie sure to tell them that you saw their ads in this newspaper. RIOT IN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) The protest began when the students gathered in the down town Five Points area of tills city to discuss the withdrawal of some 100 black students from Duke University. Two local newsmen were roughed up while a Duke Uni versity Divinity student was arrested. Damaged to some ex tent were two city buses Following the window - smashing session, which lasted about an hour, the demonstra tors moved on to the all-black Haiti section of Durham, which wa|s the scene of destruction last summer, Some of the demonstrators wore helmets, police stated Others carried sticks and tried to;provoke police officers with taunts and by spitting at them. However, as the officers moved in, the demonstrators fled and no clashes of police with the protesters took place. The 100 policemen were equipped with riot material, including submachine guns. •Although aid from the State Highway Patrol was not sum moned, Governor Bob Scott was being kept informed at tiie Man sion in Raleigh, by the State Bureau of Investigation. The students had gathered in the Five Points section for the second night in a row in support of balck students’ de mands for a black studies at Duke. As store windows crashed to the streets, burglar alarms could be heard and there was nO one present to turn them off. ;The attack on the buses came as the rioters were moving from tire downtown area,to the Hai (fssjjy DIAL 128-9317 For I Welch dag eil lias* itr* 1 vie*, Ena heating ti! 1 and eil kurntc servite. I CAPITAL FUEL OIL 1 | ICE & COAL CO. ' j 600 W. Hargett St. I Everything For... BUILDING REMODELING REPAIRING ® LUMBER • MILL WORK <1 ATHEY’S PAINTS • BUILDING MATERIALS »* N ; At Our New Location On i RALEIGH BELTLINE i CAROLINA BUILDERS CORP. I; Between U. S 1 and 64 1 |Ph. 828-7471—Raleigh, N. C. EJNCi/LN Raleigh, N. C. Starts sun., march is : SAMSON AND DELILAH Starring HEDY LAMARR I —pIus— ;SHOCK TROOPS j Starring f JEAN CLAUDE BREALY Starts thur., march 20 ; 3 FEATURES THE HILLS RUN RED j RIOT ON SUN- I SET STRIP VENGEANCE OFI FUMANCHU j THE CAROLINIAN iTURDAY, MARCH 15. 1960 ti section. The buses, owned by Duke Power Company, reported no injuries to their passengers, or drivers, officers reported. MRS. KING (CONTINUED FROM PACt ONE) the march, making overnight stops on the 350-mfie march, at Winston - Salem and Greens boro. He said the march will be led by Golden Frinks, State field secretary for the SCLC, and will also be in support of Negroes protesting the H)’de County school desegregation plan and to protest the death sentence imposed upon a 17- year-old Negro girl, Marie Hill. Kennedy said the marchers will conduct a memorial serv ice for Dr. King in Raleigh at tiie end of the march. Kennedy also pointed out the march is planned as one phase of a national SCLC observance of the anniversary. NIXON HOSTS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) of minority groups in the United States. He also outlined what each Department of State is doing in order to make equality a reality in the very near fu ture. CAPITALISM (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) is at variance with what they consider to be needed for the Black man’s economic ad vancement: aforclble takeover of the institutions in the Black community. “Black capitalism” seems to Imply the “old-fashioned” idea o! building businesses through tedious, time-consum ing work, in contrast to some militants’ plans foi “instant” prosperity based on violent, re volutionary protest. Besides, there has not typi cally been an overriding em phasis on business success in the Black community. While there have been outstanding Ne gro businessmen, compara tively few Black people derive their incomes from Negro-own ed firms. Accordingly, there is little basis for interest in “Black capitalism” among people who have historically had little capi tal or means of obtaining it. Moreover, the term “Black capitalism” has a segregated riund that some people don’t like. They note that capital ism implies free markets, while “Black capitalism” seems to connote a restricted market. Another charge is that “Black capitalism” would be a means by which the federal, govern ment could manipulate the Black community’s economy, leaving Black people, as ever, In a dependent situation. It is also asserted that “Black capitalism” is a slippery con cept that could mean every thing from Nego ownership of businesses all over the country to ghettoization of Black-owned firms. The objections to “Black capitalism” are typified by two recent attacks on it voiced by the AFL-CIO executive coun cil and the Rev. Jesse L. Jack son, national director, SCLC’s Operation Breadbasket, Botli attacks cite Black capitalism’s “divisiveness.” According to the AFL-CIO unit, Black capitalism is a dan gerous, divisive delusion” and offers no hope for economic advancement of minorities. LAW DEAN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) tended class boycott by law students. Mr. Washington returned to the School of Law faculty in 1966 after five years as chair man of the Public Service Com mission of the District of Co lumbia. During the same period he was a member of the Na tional Capital Housing Authority of the District of Columbia. A native of Asheville, North Carolina, Dean Washington iiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiNiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiHmiliii Eyeglasses CONTACT LENSES HEARING AIDS Bring Your Prescription to f|l dgcuiayg OPTICIANS, Inc. FIRST IN THECAROUNAS RALEiGH—Professional Building ILKLETGi!— BO4 St. Marys St. Other Offices i GREENVISLLE GREENSBORO-CHARLOTTL' John W. Winters ~1 & Company Exclusive Sales Agent for Southgate Homes and Cedarwood Country Estates CALL US NOW! J. Samuel Hewitt—Joseph Winters—Alfonza Thorpe I JOHN W. WINTERS & CO. 507 E. Martin Street 1 Dial 828-5786 CAUGHT IN THE aL i - Saddle Hrook, N. J.; In photos taken by a hidden camera during the robbery of the Hackensack Trust Company here March 6. a masked bandit walked by a seriously wounded police officer (left photo) as two of his accomplices carry the loot while two women cover in the background (right photo). Police are seeking the identities of the five men who robbed the bank. (UPI). I 1 MU. HAY GOES TO PRISON - V.tslu ill.-, "'Fcnn: James Earl Ra\ (center) the man convicted of the murder of Or. .Martin Luther King. Jr., is eseorte 1 through the main gate into the sm’.u penitentiary by Greg O’Hf.tr, the Commissioner of Safety, and Mick • v McGuire, an In spector with the Tennessee Highway Patrol. (IT*]). graduated from Dunbar High School, her, and received a bachelor of arts degree from Howard in 1936. He graduated from the Howard Sciiool of Lav in 1939 with Ynagna cum laude honors and received an LI..M degree from Harvard Lav School in 1941. After four year's as an at torney for the Department of Justice, Mr. Washington was appointed a professor of law at Howard, He has served as visit ing professor at American Uni versity and the Georgetown Law Center. Dean Washington holds mem bership in Sigma Delta Tau and Phi Alpha Delta legal l eterni - ties and Is a member of the following boards: National Capital Area Council, Boy Scouts of America, Goodwill Industries, United Givers Fund, Health and Welfare Council and Travelers Aid Society. In recent community ac tivities, Dean Washington was chariman of the Police Com munity Relations Institute and the Model Cities Committee of tiie Health and Welfare Coun cil, He was a member of a com mute to assist the implementa tion on the report of the Presi dent's Commission of Crime in the District of Coulumbla. He was staff advisor, Board of Appeals arid Review, Civil Se r vice Comm is sion, and a board member, Citizens Plan ning Council for the Fort Lincoln Project, Inc. Since January 1969, he had been chairman of the Recon struction and Development Cor poration organized by the Mayor to plan the rebuilding of the riot areas of 7th, 14th aqd H Streets, MRS. LARKIN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) services. The Rev. P, R. Cou sin, pastor, St. Joseph’s AML Church, Durham, delivered prayer. Scripture was read by the Rev. John F. Epps, pastor. St. Paul AME Church, Chapel Hill. The Rev, Benjamin S. Foust, minister, gave the pas- tor’s meditation. Ministers of fering 1 1 Unites were (lie Revs. L. P. Perry, president, Ra leigh Ministerial Alliance, and A. J. Holman, representative, ministers of Western North Carolina. Interment took place'in Caro lina Biblical Gardens. She confessed religion at a very early age, joining the Saint Mary's Baptist Church in Wil son Mills in 1912, She late: join ed the Oak Chapel AME Church in Warrenton In !923,andtravel led and worked with her husband in the AME Church until the time of her passing. She was an ardent and devoted member of Saint Paul AME Church for more than 28 years, and served as a member of the O’Kelly Peace Bible Class and the East End Club. She was also af filiated with the Minister s’ Wives Western North Carolina Conference, the Conference Branch Missionary Society .uid the Eastern Star No, 2. Other survivors Include one son, George T, Larkin, head of t‘h e science department, Sev - enth, Ave. Jr. High School, Scotch Plains, N, J,; three daughters, Mrs. Doris L. Mc- Adams, teacher - librarian, Washington Park School, Cin cinnati, Ohio; Mrs. B. Gwendo lyn Holloway, teacher Pastorius Elementary School, Philadel phia, Pa.; and Mrs. Margaret J. Wilson, home economics teacher, J. s. Spivey Junior High School, Fayetteville; and one brother, George D. Vinsorr, teacher of social studies, Lib erty School System, Liberty, SHOOT-OUT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) however, Cause of the near - fatal argu ment was not disclosed by in vestigating officers. MISS WATKINS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE OVD an educator, she has, through the years, been a valuable mem ber of the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, having served In var ious offices In the organization. The young educator, who re sides at 1106 S. Person Street here, Is a native of Forsyth County. Miss Watkins holds the Bach elor of Arts degree from Shaw University here and received a Master of Arts degree at Co lumbia University recently. She cited dedication and pa tience as the secrets to her success In the classroom. “A student does not fall in my class,” Miss Watkins point - ed out. “Good, I’m proud of you. and keep trying” are her Pet expressions for the pupils in her class. This is her first year as a teachei at Wiley School. Miss Watkins taught for a number of years at the Jeffreys Grove Elementary School, Route 6, Raleigh. WIN STON-S AL’M (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) (and many evenings) “helping to handle the unbelievable prob -1 ems of these unemployed people those who have no other place to turn to,” he said re cently in an Interview. “We’ve to get jobs. Do you know that 90 percent of our un employed are Hack, and 80 per cent of these are women?” iie said. La.-t year the city held a Job Da., In Winston - Salem, Pennington said, “Some 190 People ' .■ •tv hired, and a follow up survey of S3l showed that tht■had previously required s2f>o,ooo war in welfare pay ments. At tin* time of the check they a ere earning at the rate of » ai Alter taxes, they had about $410,000 of spendable hiconu to put into our economy. This is Hie kind of thins we are looking for. We made these people taxpayers instead of tax consumers," Pei niugton’s new job has not, Isowevm . he -n without its frust rations; ‘T get most frustrated aiout the terrible amount of time re quired in dealing with state and federal agencies,” he said, “It just seems to take an inordinate amount of effort to get things done.” But the community coopera tion helps relieve Pennington of much of his frustration. “The cooperation betv een the vat ions agencies is very good,” said Pennington. “I can pick up the phone and get immediate In formation fi om any agency lri town -- from the mayor’s office down to the A MCA. He began to bubble with exu berance as he continued to talk. “There are so many people here involved with the community. That’s what puts Winston-Sal em ahead of every other city in the South. You could move Win ston - Salem to any other spot on the map, and with these same people, we’d still be lead ers.” Pennington, lauding the re cent announcement that black businessmen had decided to build a huge shopping center .in East Winston (the city’s pre dominantly black ward), said “This is the kind of progress we need In this nation. The Ne gro has got to own something. Recently, when Robert J„ Brown, President Nixon’s special assistant, was in town we had a top-level session with him and we assured him that Winston-Salem is working to get the black man in business sot himself.” Pennington, a native of North Carolina and a graduate of Duke University, came to his Hanes position after 20 years in New York City as a public relations counsellor. He had been on his new job for only a few months when he rec orn mended to management that the company make an even stronger commit ment to solving the city’s so cial problems. To assist in this effort, the company retained B&C Associates of High Point, N. C„ a block-owned public relations firm that was then headed by Robert Brown. Says Pennington: “Bobßrown is one of the most unusual men I have even known and I con sider it a privilege to count him among my friends. Mr. Nix on is fortunate in having such a dedicated man on his team RELIEF FOR (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) by world religious groups to supply and conduct the nightly mercy flights from the island of Sao Tome into Biafra. The two ICRC airlifts also operate every night from Santa Isabel in Equatorial Guinea, and Co tonou in Dahomey, just west of Nigeria. Through these two relief op erations, some 2,000,000 per sons in Biafra are now re ceiving daily food rations, ac cording to reports from ICRC and the U. S. Agency for Iri ternational Development (USAID). Food supplies being flown into and distributed in the territory average nearly 6,500 tons a month, 4,000 com ing from JCA and 2,500 through icrc. In the area held by Nigerian forces, approximately 900,000 Persons are receiving at least one meal a day in a relief pro gram sponsored jointly by ICRC and the Nigerian Red Cross. Also assisting with this effort are church and other organiza tions which form the National Relief Advisory Committee of Voluntary Agencies in Lagos, Nigeria. Some 4,000 tons of food a month are being dis tributed to refugees in federal territory. ICRC reported in Geneva last week that the cost of its relief activities on both sides of the fighting line from last Septem ber through February 1969 would exceed $15,000,000. It estimated that almost $20,000,- 000 will be required to con tinue this program from March through August of this year. A total of 101,000 tons of food will tie needed for its re lief work Ln both areas, the Committee said, with the peak coming in June when an es timated 5,750,000 refugees will need help - 3,500,000 in Bia fran territory, and 2,250,000 in the area controlled by Niger ian federal troops. ICRC has appealed for the continuing help and support of national govern men t, Red Cross societies and other agen cies and organizations through out the world. A sizeable portion of the funds and relief supplies for the Ni geria - Biafran program have come from the United States. USAID reported on February 15 that the total value of supplies and funds contributed for the mamouth relief effort came to $56,629,938, and that of this amount, $33,479,128 came from the United States, with the U. S. government providing funds and supplies valued at $26,211,- 067. The remaining $7,268,062 came in the form of cash and supplies in kind from various church and voluntary agencies in this country. A Z : Crimp fighters aren’t the only ones interested in finger prints— grime fighters worry about them. too. Fingerprints leave smudges and germs on doorknobs, doorframes and telephones. Sponge smudgy places with a pine oil cleaner solution. Not only will the "evidence” vanish, hut most of the germs will disappear as well. Here's another tip for telephones: Unsightly smudges caused by fingers, pencils, erasers, or whatever you use to din! can be whisked away easily hv dipping a cotton swab in pine cleaner solution and applying it to the surface un der the dial If the Imitseliahts seem dim. it mat be that oust, grime and AT YOUR UNITED CAB CO. 304 S. TARBORO ST. DANIEL L. HOOKER, Prop For Courteous , Prompt Drivers Call FROM 09/1 Off Qfk 18-HOUR 6 a.m-12 p.m. OO fj tJ \F SERVICE Study Shows H Out of 8 Women Need Leg Support! !!!!l!lil!ilT:|!: As o f"“ M OUT OF 8 (JL (Xl //Vi /T) WOMEN NEED WM \\/!j SUPPORT O %>'. \ JiW It » hosiery. m m 11 ill iii 1 f t BUT-ONLY ONE hf / fi OF THEM NOW iV / \Y M Ms iS GETTING THE ,| £s£k m \ M BENEFIT! L HjJ, “L n l. SOURCE : FLIMG WV., KENPAV.L CO, A widespread misconception about the purpose of "support” stockings is the reason millions of women are missing out on a good thing, according to George H. Howland, marketing execu tive for the Kendall Company, makers of Fling Support hosiery. "Statistics gathered by our market analysts indicate that 75 per cent of ali women who could benefit by wearing sup port stockings have never worn them." Howland said. Only one woman in every eight wears support stockings although four out of eight would be helped through their supportive qualities, according to Howland. Less than a dozen years ago, support stockings could not be found on the market. They are a development made possible by modern weaving techniques plus science's “elastomers" synthetic, highly practical, etas tic materials. They arc stilt a "new" item. But that is only part of the reason that three out of four women who would feel and look better with support stock mgs have never worn them. The biggest c a u s e, Howland pointed out, is: "Many women as a result of our own failure to commun icate the message - simply don’t understand the purpose of support hosiery. They think such stockings are designed for women with varicose veins, or with other serious circulatory problems. The truth is that women with su c h problems dead insects are beclouding chandeliers and light fixtures Use a sturdy stepladder to re move fixtures soak them in a bathtub using warm wafer and an all purpose cleaner Sponge off stubborn dirt, rinse and drv v, ith a soft cloth For safety's ACMt RIAITY CO. REAL ESTATE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT ihi SP A Kirp FIRE—HOME—AUTOMOBILE II xGU f \/A!N V« L AND WINDSTORM Call Us For Information PHONE 832-0956 | 129 E. HARGETT STREET R ALEIGH, N. C. ' ' ' - —., ..| r unffarmir [b7& j associates] I Accounting and Tax Services !; “Let lls Serve You” | J. H. BARBEE T. B. JILES \ < Co-Manager Co-Manager f S Tel. 834-7712 Td 834-7712 S f or 833-1102 ? ? 133 E. HARGETT ST. RALEIGH, N. C. 27692 > I BROWN’S PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 1 & INVESTMENT CO. Serving The Greater Raleigh Area SALES, RENTALS. REMODELING. ADDITIONS AND \ NEW CONSTRUCTION | (Building For The Future) j i H. A. GOODSON, Builder \ \ Agent For: Southgate Apartments Call 832-1814 or 832-1811—231 S. East Street j J. HENRY BROWN, President eassaHessaasaassoesass^^ should not wear support hos iery at all; rather, they should wear modem elastic stockings, which give much greater com pression. "Support hosiery, on the other hand," tie continued, “is designed to give comforting and bracing support to tired legs. It is true that it does stimulate circulation of the blood, and thus has a ‘massag ing' effect on the legs but this is purely supportive aid, and not therapeutic.” True support hosiery, such as Fling, is designed to give gentle pressure to the ankles, in a scientifically planned way. to provide needed support in the proper amounts at alt points on the leg. Once the confusion in wo men’s minds between the real purposes of elastic stockings and support stockings is clear ed up, millions of women wdll begin to benefit in two ways, according to Howland: "Those women who arc now wearing support hosiery for serious leg problems wilt switch to the more helpful elastic hosiery, and those wo men who have never worn support hosierv will begin to use it and to enjoy the many benefits it has to offer.” sake, no\ er wash a lamp or Six ture that is still connected Another tip. make sure vour electric light bulbs are the light watt powei for each particular use. Results of a clean up and a watt [lower survey? A bright er outlook overhead Mildew a menace in youi house > A good pine oil cleaner will remove mildew from household surfaces Scrub with the cleaner and at the same time as the unwanted mildew disappears so does the noxious odor that accompanies it
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 15, 1969, edition 1
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