Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / March 15, 1969, edition 1 / Page 8
Part of The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
8 THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH. N. C., SATURDAY MARCH IS 1969 1 ' AKA’S NEGRO HERITAGE COMMITTEE PRESENTS PROGRAM - The: 5 2 are panel participants on the program presented Sunday, March 9, by the Alpha Theta Omega Chapter of 'he Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, at the Olivia Raney Library. Left to right: Mesdames Carolvn Johnson, Ruby Greene, Frances Haywood, and Ann Fulford. Wake County Cancer Society Launches Kickoff Drive Here fit STAFF WITTER ttie auditorium of the Young The Wake County Cancer So- Men’s Christian Association, ciet;. conducted its annua! kick- Hillsboro Street. The session r .’f drive here Tuesday, March was a meeting of the Wake !t, with a Lunctieon Meeting in County Unit, Board of Di r' /I * FIRST LADY OF STATE GREETS MRS. STROUD - Mrs. Rolfert Walter Scott, wife of the governor, welcomes Mrs. Addie Stroud, 114 East Lenior Street, Raleigh, fluring a re cent Coffee Hour at the Governor’s Mansion. Mrs. Stroud is a member of the Wake County Cancer Unit. Volunteers from all over the state were attending the Mid-Winter Con ference. Mrs. Stroud is the Treasurer of the Wake County Cancer Society. Ligon [jijrh Celebrates National DECA Mo. Miss Joyce Hinton, a Dis tributive Education student at Joiui \\ . I.igon High School, l as been selected as chairman of National DEC A Month at I.igon High School March Ist-31st. National DECA Month honors the Distributive Education Clubs of \merica, the only National youth organization operating through public FOR REPAIRS TO ANY TV PHONOGRAPH TAPE RECORDER TRANSISTOR RADIO ANY SMALL APPLIANCE CALL TE 2-3950 —OR— VA 8-2343 TAYLOR RADIO & Electrical Co. "The Elouso That Service’’ Built” 224 E. MARTIN ST WPmkmm ' wtrasi i.jiimt nw ■hwm-ii schools to attract y oung people to careers in Marketing and Distribution. The purpose of the obser- MLSS JOYCE HINTON vance is to point out the many and varied careers available within the field of merchandise distribution. Special emphasis will be stressed during the month by members of the John W, Ligon DECA chapter. The John W. Ligon Chapter conducts a continuing program to develop Leadership among Distributive Education stu dents. Its 23 members study a half day In school and work part time In jobs which com plement their academic train ing. There are also 27 market ing students who work after school and on weekends. : . I-)!*, Buy U S. Savings Bonds, new Freedom Shares ~E V.y.y .-.S’-V rectors. Presiding at the 1 p.m, ses sion was Dr. Millard B. Bethel, president. Dr. Bethel is also director of the Wake County Health Department. Invocation was given by Al fred Partin. Mrs. -Jacqueline Chamblee, executive secretary of the So ciety, gave remarks and in formed board members that the women at the N. C. Cor rectional Center for Women had volunteered to help pre pare residential kits which will be distributed by the workers. Mrs. Donald C. Enderly, re sidential chairman, told the au dience that some 7*l students from N, C. State University were available to help In can vassing homes for contribu tions and urged volunteers from the eastern section of the city, particularly the Negro neigh borhoods. Mrs. Enderly was in troduced by Dan Boney, Jr., crusade chairman. Featured speaker was Dr. Al bert Edwards, Scotland-born pastor of the First Presbyter ian Church, who compared the volunteers to the Good Sa maritan of the Bible. He said, ! T am so happy to know, that you give not only your money, but so freely of your time, also.' 1 In an Interview following the luncheon, Mrs. Chamblee said that help Is needed In getting people who cannot afford (financially) to pay for cancer detection, to go to the Wake County Cancer Detection Clinic, located 3010 New Bern Avenue, for tests on Mondays of each week. Particular stress was placed on the Oral Cancer Detection Clinic, which will be open on Sunday, May 4, from 2 until 3 p.m.., also at the New Bern Avenue address. A new volunteer, Dr. Stacy Miller, dermatologist of Ra leigh, was introduced by the educational chairman, Dr. Elizabeth Nanof. Representing the Negro com munity at the session were: Mrs. Addie G. Stroud, county treasurer; Dr. N. M. Mc- Millan and Attorney F.J. Carn age, Mrs. Mildred T. James,, another member, could not at tend. The Negro community has set a goal of $2,300, one-tenth of the county goal, as its contribu tion. Mrs. T. C. Bray, service chairman, visits the homes of cancer patients, who have been released from the hospital, and gives serve as well as advice. Mrs. I.loyd Driver Is publi cation director for the Societv. Local AKA’s In Literature Presentation BY THELMAM. KECK “The Negro in Literature" was presented by members of the Negro Heritage Committee of the Alpha Theta Omega Chapter of the Alpha Kappa Sorority, Sunday, March 9, in the auditorium of the Olivia Raney Library. "Litany in Atlanta," by W, E. B. Du'Bols, was read by Mrs. Frances Haywood. Mrs. Ruby Greene’s contribution was "Cradle Song" by Owen Dod son, and "I Want to Die While You Love Me," by Georgia Douglass Johnson. Mrs. Carolyn Johnson, chairman of the Negro Heritage Committee, read short stories by Evelyn Farrington, "Daddy and John Wesley," and "No One Asked Me." Among the guests present were members of the panel of American Women, a group lr. which Mrs. Ruby Greene and Mrs. Carolyn Johnson hold membership. Mrs. A. G, Fulford was mis tress of ceremonies. Homemade coc-kB-s, r and tea wera vixi towt g the r>roy r tr'i. Teens To Represent 50 States At GOP Confab WASHINGTON, D. C. - As sistant Republican National Chariman Mary Brooks has an nounced that outstanding teen age girls from each state will serves as Pages for the 17th Annual Republican Women's Conference in Washington, D. C., April 14-17, at the Shera ton Park Hotel. The Pages will be sponsored by the Republican National Committee-woman in each state. They will be guests of the Assistant Chairman ac the opening nig! t Supper Gala and at the Wednesday evening "Grand Old Party Banquet." Appointed by Mrs. Brooks as Page Coordinator is .Mrs. Herb Police Department, Holding Tech Sponsor Training Courses Here The Raleigh Police Depart ment and Holding Technical In stitute recently offered a 420- hour Basic Police Science -Course to eighteen young men. Twenty - nine officers com pleted this course earlier this year and these eighteen will finish the course In May. This is one of the continuing paid in - service training programs offered all police officers dur ing their career as city law enforcement personnel. These officers, working on a forty hour a week schedule, spend the first week in the study of a general introduction to po lice work which encompasses such varied subjects as city code, personal morals, tele phone manners, emergency childbirth, abnormal behavior, etc. The second through the fifth weeks are spent In the stu dy of "Introduction to Police Science," This 120 hour course consists of course study developed by the North Carolina Department of Community Colleges,Special Education Division, Law En forcement Training, and Is con ducted by Holding Technical In stitute. The course Is designed to provide the law enforce ment officer with basic skills and abilities necessary to per form entry level police work. These homeowners enjoy the clean, comfortable, convenience of all-electric living. And something else, too. Zebuion Jerry Upchurch, his wife and three children enjoy the warm comfort of an electric furnace. A window air conditioner provides summer cooling. The 1292 square-foot home has these major appliances: range, refrigerator and water heater. Cost: An average of $28.00/month for electricity including heating and cooling. Our customers like a lot of things about electric heat. home, number and use of appliances, living habils and Cleanliness. Comfort. Performance. location. But what about cost? The best way to find out what electric heat will Operating experience has shown that electric heat cost you is lo call us. We can supply you with information compares favorably in price with other types of heal. on the kinds of cVc trie heat, estimate costs and assist Naturally, thecost will vary from home to home, in getting installation bids tor your home. No obligation, depending upon the number of occupants, size of the of course. Call us today. Live better tomorrow. Carolina Power & Light Company •.«• « t! II ■-! 11l —■■■■!—»■■■■■ T— > ■IIIIMBI ■■ | ■— I HlM—¥ll 1 1 -1 " ' - ' "' —" T ’' ' ' ' - ert 1,. Ztncke of Silver Spring, Maryland. Mrs. Zincke served as Chairman tor Volunteers for the Montgomery County, Maryland, Nixon-Agnew Head quarters in the 1968 campaign. “We are happy to bringthese outstanding young ladles to the Nation's Capital for the Con ference," said Mrs. Brooks. “The excitement of being re ceived by Mrs. Nixon at the W hite House and of assisting at the sessions where members of the President Cabinet and ti e top leaders of our Nation will be present will be a wonderful experience for these teenagers," Mrs. Brooks said. Material covered includes pub lic and human relations, rec ords and report writing, prob lems of patrol, Interviewing, interrogation, basic laws of evi dence, arrest, search and seiz ure, general criminal investi gation, court structure and pro cedure, and the basic principles of North Carolina criminal and motor vehicle law. The Police Department con t inues the course with additional weeks of detailed Instruction and practical application of many phases of the training, after the officers have com pleted the Holding Tech phase of training. Holding Tech, beginning March 11, Is offering another opportunity for training in Law- Enforcement, w!en the first class of Raleigh officers will begin work toward an Associate In Applied Science Degree in Police Science Technology. The Associate Degree Program will require six teaching quarters to complete the degree require ments. Because of part - time par ticipation, the officers enrolled will take approximately three years to attain their degrees. It is expected that 30 or 40 officers will be registered for the degree program. DR. WE A\ ER APPEARS AT ST. \UO. - Dr, Frank R. Weaver, minister, Watts Chapel Baptist Church, Holly Spring Road, is reviewing the subject of his message Tuesday night (March 4). "Your Bundle of Life.” Students, left to right are Misses Gays Harris, a junior sociology major of Rocky, Mount; and Doris Kinlaw, sophomore, business education major of Bolton. fj (/As (/at/y C'l/ffi/i 1 gf* irS ip f * CAMERON VILLAGE ,- ‘ 'Vs- |Pgg*l| RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA 27605 I ‘A Custom-Made Bas v>. d kets. Give your order \ f j N early. Easter is April v#M 6 - Pure Fun For Everyone .j® JJ At The Party Shop / Panorama Eggs— from 29e to $1.39 / Chocolate Bunny Eggs Filled with Cream | i Jelly Beans Galore TRY FANCY FARMER'S CANDIES Freshness Makes The Difference! Dial 828-4053 Cameron Village, Raleigh im—»in ihhmhih■■■■——b— mm iihiiimiiii— ——mmmm Raleigh Dale S. Ward heats his 2QOO square-foot home with radiant ceiling cable. A two-and-a half ton window air conditioner cools the five-member Ward household in summer. Major electric appliances include range, refrigerator, water heater, clothes washer/dryer, and dishwasher. Cost: An average of $36.00 month for electricity including heating and cooling. Zebuion Eva F. Liles and her two children comfort condition their 900 square-foot home with an electric heat pump (central heating cooling) The Liles family enjoys these major electric appliances: range, refrigerator, water heater, clothes washer dryer, and dishwasher. Cost: An average of $20.00 month for electricity including heating and cooling.
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 15, 1969, edition 1
8
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75