Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / April 5, 1969, edition 1 / Page 10
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THE CARGLiNIAo RALEIGH. N. C S.\ I URDAY Af-Uil. .> 10 NEW OFFICERS OF STATE CROWN AND SCEPTER HONOR SOCIETY- These are the newlj electee] officers of the North Carolina Crown and Scepter Honor Society which me* :u Saint Augstine’s College on Saturday, March 29. I.eft to right: Erir.h Brown, president, from Ralph J. Bunche High School. Weldon; Howtrd Manning, vice-president. R. B. Dean High in Maxton; Patricia Smith, secretary, Woodington High, Kinston; Barbara Hunter, assistant secretary, North Warren High, Wise; Milton Knox, treasurer, Robinson Union High. Win 1 "’- -Hie: l Glen Bland, reporter, Spaulding High, Spring Hope. mtUy* MOVED TO CAiTi TN ~ htsen bower is carried from Washington N • ti.anal Cathedral on March 30 to be moved to the U. S. Capitol to It. in state. Vmong the onlookers rec ognizable from left are: Gen. homer sruanther; Col. John S. Eisen hower (behind man with hat o\< r hen: t) and • ohn’s wife, Barbara; David Eisenhower; former Marylan i Gov. Theodore McKeldin, representing the state of Maryland (next to trooper) Tricia Nixon; Mrs. Nixon and Pres ident Nixon (hidden behind tree). (UPI). STARS OF PULPIT AND STACF - Singer Diana Ross does a bit of frolicking o- r i dish of soul food with the Rev. Jesse J. ekson, na tional director of SCLC’s Operation •id basket. Rev. Jackson had invited tht Motown entertainment scar along with Sup re me s Mac v Wilson and Cindy Birdsong to his Chicago home for a soul food dinner, prepared by his grandmother. Miss Ross and the Supremes had attended Rev. Jackson’s regular Saturday Morning Breadbasket meeting before joining the dynamic young minister and his family for dinner. (Motown Photo). Zefa Phi Beta Sorority, Inc. Holds Initial Basilei Workshop WASHINGTON, D. C. - Thirty-five Zeta Chapters, representing fifteen states and seven regions were called to gether from eight geographic regions last week to explore a comprehensive plan of ac tion for improving the de livery of effective services as emphasized in the 1970 theme - ‘ 'Meeting human needs through designing ,nri developing methods of im proving the delivering of ef fective service,’' Among the resolutions ■<- dopted was that a “Family -A dop 11 on-P 1 an-for -As sistance-to families of the Ft urfo ra, South Carol ina a rea,' ’ Each chapter wlli eontrinute 56 Makes Holding’s Pres. List Fifty-six students at Hold ing Technical Institute, Raleigh, have achieved the distinction of being named on *he President’s List for tia Vinter Quarter.To qualifty for this honor, the stu dent must maintain an average of 3.5 for the term. The following students from Raleigh are the President’s List scholars for .his term: Clarnita Aman, Architectural Techno log'. ; Harry L. Barrington, Architectural Technology; Mary Jane Britt, Second year Secretarial; Ronald D. Car penter, Civil Engineering Tech nology; Salvacion D. Deleon, Medical Laboratory Assistant; James JR. F.ddins, Electronic Data Processing; Sally Elling ton, Practical Nurse Educa tion; Dora L. Fox. Medical Laboratory Assistant; LarryE, Garver, Mechanical Drafting; Susan E. Godwin, Practical Nurse Education; Joel A. John son, Civil Engineering Tech nology; Patricia a. Jordan, Medical Laboratory Assistant; Hal A, Lindsey, Electronic Engineering Technolgy; Lloyd W. Martin, Industrial Engine ering Technology; also, Emily V. Mims, Medical Laboratory assistant, Charles L. Parker, Jr., Electronic Da,a Proces sing Peggy A. Pirman, practi cal Nurse Education; Robert E. Roberson, Business Admini stration; Richard A. Stevenson, Electronic Data Processing; Patricia a. Uimari, Practical Nurse Education; and David Winkler, Electrical Engineer ing Technology. t.o a family in such away as will help meet the ma jor needs. The states from which more than forty-delegates assembl ed, included Florida, Texas, Louisiana, Georgia, T_n nessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Illinois, New York, New Jersey, Oklahoma, Vir ginia, West Virginia, Penn sylvania, Maryland and Wash ington, D„ C, Mrs. Mildred C, Bradham, Grand Basileus, demonstrated a ''Plan of Programming,” as participants t V/ • ’,n< of interest ■ discus.- G, .. J at t> Ail Akmni Body Hosts New Officers GOLDSBORO - More than 75 members of the Mideast ern Region of the AS T State University General Alumni Association attended the or ganization’s semi-annual meeting here last weekend. Highlight of the meeting was the election of officers. Re-elected president of the group was George S. Green, Newport News, Va. The new vice-president is Jesse A, Francis, Southport. Other officers are Mrs. Doretha Branch, LaGrange, recording- secretarv: and Gar rett Laws, Garner,treasurer. Following the election of officers, the association was addressed b\ candidates for the national presidency of the General Alumni Association. These included C. C. Griffin, Concord, Mrs. Julia Brooks, Philadelphia; and Sampson Buie, Greensboro. Also nomi nated, but not present, was Harold H. Webb, Raftigh. Negro History Bafflers BY NEGRO PRESS INTERNA TIONAL In today’s Baffler, eight quotations from our people’s great thinkers will be given. In seven of the eight quotations, one word is wrong. The in correct word may be wrong grammatically or conceptually. You are challenged to find the correct quotation and to identi fy the wrong word in each of the incorrect quotations. Scoring; 8-10; excellent; 6- 7: good; 4-5; fair; 0-3; poor. Bonus Question count a total of two points. Other questions count one point each. Here's the quiz: 1. W. E. B Du Bois once wrote: “After the Egyptian and In dian, the Greek and Roman, the Teuton and Mongolian, the Negro is sort of a seventh son, born with a veil and gifted with second-sight in this American world, --a world which yields him no true self-consciousness, but only lets him see himself through the revelation of the otner world. It is a peculiar sensation, this double con sciousness, this sense of al ways looking at one’s seif through the eyes of others, of measuring one’s soul by the tape of a world that looks on in amused contempt and pity.” 2. Ralph J. Bunche once ask ed: “How could anyone in his senses expect young Negroes of this day and age, many of whom are called upon to give a couple of the best years of their lives to Uncle Sam’s mili tary service, to have their dig nity as human beings upheld and not defend it?” 3. Booker T. Washington once said; “It is important and right that all privileges of the law oe ours, but it is vastly less important that we be prepared for the exercises of these pri vileges. The opportunity to earn a dollar in a factory just now is worth Infinitely more than the opportunity to spend a dol lar in an opera house.” 4. Langston Hughes once wrote: “From, river to river,/ Up town and down,/ There’s lia able to be justice/ When a dream gets kicked around.” 5. Countee Cullen once wrote: “Yet does I marvel at this curious thing:/ To make a poet black, and bid him sing!;; G. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., once proclaimed; “I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia the sons of former slaves and the sons of former slaveowners will be able to sit in together at the table of brotherhood, ..” 7. Frederick Douglass once said: “If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who pro fess to favor freedom, and yet deprecate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground. . . .Power con cedes nothing without a request. It never did and never will.” 8, Ralph Ellison once wrote: “I am an Indivisible man. No, I am not a spook like those who haunted Edgar A.llan Poe: nor am I one of your Holiywood movie ectoplasms. I am a man of substance, of flesh and bone, fiber and liquids—and I might even be said to posses a mind.” * * * BONUS QUESTIONS: (Each counts one point.) Complete each of the 101 l owing quotations: A. Elijah Muhammad once asserted; “Integration is a clever trick of the( ).” B. Langston Hughes once ask ed: “'What happens to a dream ( )?»’ * # * ANSWERS: 1. The quotation is correct; 2. The word “as saulted” should replace the word “upheld”; 3. “More,” not “less”; 4. “Confusion,” not “justice”; 5. “Do,” not “does”; 6. “Down,” not “in”; 7. “Demand,” not “request”; 8. “Invisible,” not “indivisi ble.” * * + FOE , ■ •ffc.V.’EfcS? A. “De- 1. W. wrote: M1.,. ill,lilt 9 iPft! J ' " ' ■ / ■ if am tfjeJ&esaimctton anb tfjeJUfe” 22.3' MAR '69 Form 27 On Easter Sunday, Christ emerged triumphant from the tomb ... let us rejoice in the victory He has won for us! COME WORSHIP IN THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE: ! GLIDDEN PAINT CO. [ HARMON-ROWLAND, INC. 713 W. PEACE ST —834-0393 j 429 S. WILMINGTON ST. ! ___ L 1 LAWRENCE BROS. j BABY DIAPER SERVICE 212 S. SALISBURY ST. » 407 E. DAVIE ST I 9 MM——— mmm—mmmm—mmmm ■ - ■ ■ ■ i ■■ mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmßmmmmmm—mmmmmmmmmim- — i I DANIEL'S STORE I CONSUMER CREDIT CO. 213 S. WILMINGTON ST. 7 EAST HARGETT ST. ———m—— ■ - *- I " ■ ■ ■ - mi mmmmmmmmmmm mmmmmm n p> »■« WAKE TIRE CO. HUDSON-BELK 118 W. DAVIE ST.— 833-3004 RALEIGH FURNITURE CO. j BRITTAIN’S CHILDREN’S SHOES 118 W. HARGETT ST DOWNTOWN—CHILDREN’S DEPT FERGUSON’S HARDWARE CO. HARMON MOTOR CO. 2900 HILLSBOROUGH ST, j 515 FAYETTEVILLE ST.
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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April 5, 1969, edition 1
10
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