Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / May 17, 1969, edition 1 / Page 11
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Msuß >~ ■ ""' " j ., ■.•>.* ■' # f®® GROUP INSURANCE FOR BOTTLING COMPANY - \V. I). Morris (left). North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company district manager in Newark, presents G. S, Cobb (right), vice president of the Coca-Cola Bottling Company of New York, Inc., a group insurance policy on the bottling company’s New Jersey employees. Standing is W, J. Condon, insurance manager for the state of New Jersey. (See story). ’ 500 Students To Receive Degrees At A&T State University Finals GREENS BOR O-Some 500 un dergraduates are expected to receive degrees at the annual baccalaureate- commencement exercises at A&T State Univer sity, Sunday, June 1. Speaker for the graduation will be Judge El ret a Alexander of Greensboro, first black wo man jurist in the state, Her self a graduate of A&T, Judge Alexander will speak at 11 a.m. in the Charles H. Moore Gym Announces New Program To Help Disadvantaged In Jobs MEMPHIS-Twelve black and white agencies concerned with finding work for the city’s dis advantaged citizens have joined / forces in a united effort to placr as many youths into jobs this summer as possible. A joint venture of the re cently formed Memphis Man power Commission and the business community, the pro gram; will provide a clearing house to assure that informa tion on all summer job open ings is available to concerned agencies. The program will concen trate on finding employment for students under age 22 from poverty areas, stated Mayor Henry Leob. Twelve agencies co-operat ing ir. the program are the Mem Let Our Zxp«rta~ j * ™ ES „ „ ' » BATTERIES Keep Y©ur Car d auto accessories 3li Top Bh*p«i ft WASHING * LUBRICATION’ Licensed ) / il/ 1 Inspection W ( ,7 Station Credit Cards Honored DUNN’S isso SCRVfCINTER See Us For Complete Car Care! DIAL 832-9498 502 S. BLOOBWOKTH ST j We Appreciate Your Business! FRESH FRYERS—WhoIe Ih. 29c PORK CHOPS—End Cuts lb. 59c PILI.SBITRY or BORDEN'S BISCUITS 4 for 39c FRESH PORK NECK BONES 5 lbs. 99c ; GOLD SEAL FLOUR 5 lb. bag 49c FRESH PORK LIVER lb. 39c WHITE LEAF PURE LARD 3 lbs. 59c ALL MEAT WEINERS Ih. 55c GRADE A SMALL EGGS 3 Doz. 99c FRESH SPARE RIBS lb. 49c LEZIANNE R T COFFEE Ib. 59c CURED HAM HOCKS lb. 29c KRAFT FERE GRAPE JELLY 2 lb. jar 49c CROWN APPLE JELLY—IB oz. glass 3 for 99e OPEN 9:30 TO 6:30 MONDAY THRU THURSDAY OPEN 8:30 TO 7:00 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Horton’s Cosh Store I Wl'a-I, South Saunders St. Kalcigh. N. C. j nasium. Also during the exercises, master of science degrees will be presented to 30 graduate students. Other highlights of the com mencement weekend will be re unions of the classes of 1909, 1929, 1939, 1949, and 1959, the annual meeting of the A&T Na tional Alumni Association, and the annual alumni Awards Din ner. pnis Area Chamber of Com merce, through its new Human Resources Division, Memphis Area Project - South, Urban League, National Association for the Advancement of Color ed People, War on Poverty- Committee, the Memphis Em ployers’ Merit Employment As sociation, Housing Authority, Junior Chamber of Commerce, Park Commission, National Al liance of Businessmen, the Youth Opportunity Center, and the Tennessee Department of Employment Security, Co-ordinator of the program, which will continue until Sept. 1, will be Robert G. Atkins, 28, former community organiz er for the National Urban League in Atlanta. Judge Alexander, who had been a successful practicing attorney in Greensboro, last November won a judgeship in one of Guilford County's district courts. She was also the first Negro woman to earn a law degree from the Columbia Uni versity School of Law. Judge Alexander formerly taught school and has published a voll ume of poems, “When Is A Man Free?” Commencement activities will get underway Friday, May 30 with the Reunion Roundup at King’s Inn from 5 to 7 p,m. The national alumni meeting will be Saturday morning at 10:30 a.m. in the Memorial Student Union. Yes, We All Talk BY MARCUS H. BOULWARE PUBLIC SPEAKING OF CARMICHAEL one reader criticized me for say in g in one column that Stokeiy Carmichael is not an orator in the sense that an orator has been described as a good man skilled in speak ing. Stokeiy has crowd appeal, but his charism led his listen-, ers to destro y and burn down. Usually, his speeches did not have an orderly progression of ideas in describing his plan foi racial advancement. The listeners could not with a degree of clarity summarize what Carmichael had said when he finished. Most every one in the United States know what the program of Di. Martin L.uthei King, Jr., proposed. It was the gospel of human dignity and love for one another. RI.ADERS: For my free tele phone speech pamphlet, send two stamps and a long self addressed envelope to M. H, Boulware. Florida A&M Uni versity Box 310-A. Tallahas see, Florida -- 32307. * * * Any business that is going a head is continually trying to make a better product. HURLS COURT ORDER ON STEPS - New York: Black leafier James Forman (L) burns a court order on the steps of the Catholic Chancellory building May f j. He was served with the order prohibiting him from disrupt ing services at Riverside Church May li as he did last May 4. Fortran pledged to be in attendance at Riverside on May 1!, (UPI). PREGNANCY PLANNING AND HEALTH BY MRS. GLORIA RIGGS BEE Dear Mrs. Riggsbee: My wife wants to take the birth control pills and I’d be all for it except for one thing. I have heard that the pills can delay tie change of life so that a woman who has taken the pills for many years can still get pregnant, late in life . . .’like when she’s about 65. This is the only reason I won’t let my wife take the pills. Don’t you think I am being fair? She wanted me to write and get your opinion. Mr. R. M. Dear Mr. R. M.: I’m glad vou wrote, for your letter gives me the opportunity to clear up another of the many false rumors about the birth control pills There is absolute ly no evidence that the pills delay a woman’s menopause or “change of life.” Women who have been taking the pills are going through their “change” at the same time as the women who have never taken the pills. In other words, if your wife takes the birth' control pills, she will probably begin her menopause sometime between the ages of 40 - 50, the normal time for this period in a wo man’s life to begin. She will not be able to have a baby later in her lifetime. * * # Dear Gloria; I am 17 years old. My hus band and I have only been mar ried for six months and I am pregnant with our first baby. I have been to see the doctor, but I was too shy to ask him any personal questions about sex and having babies. I hope you will answer my question,ls it dangerous to have sex rela tions during pregnancy? Couldn’t it cause twins? Mrs. G. B. Dear Mrs. G. B.: No, it could not cause twins. Twins can only be “caused” in one of two ways. Either the wo man's body releases two eggs instead of one, and your hus band's sperms meet with both of them - thus starting the growth of two babies - or the egg in its earliest stages splits in half and two babies begin to grow from a single fertilized egg. Group Life Insurance Contract Is Signed DURHAM-Joseph \\. Good loe, president of North Caro lina Mutual Life Insurance Company, announced that the Coca-Cola Bottling C ompan y of New York, Inc., lias accept ed NCM’s proposal to provide group life insurance coverage for the bottling company's New Jersey employees. Speaking of the contract, Mr. Goodloe said: “North Carolina Mutual is pleased to join hands with the Coca-Cola Bottling Company of New Y'ork, Inc., in providing protection and se curity for its personnel. It is refreshing to make new nusi ness friends in these times of dissension and discord and to effect proiects that can mean ingfully improve and exter.:’re lationships. This sort of team work augurs well for the fu ture solution of the pressing problems of the black communi When you become pregnant, however, your body “knows” that it must not release any more eggs, so there is no possi bility that Intercourse during pregn an c y could cause a pregnancy (or a pregnancy on top of a pregnancy, as it were). Most doctors believe that it is safe to have relations up until the last few weeks for preg nancy. Check with him to be sure. Since this is your first baby and vou probably have many more questions, I would sug gest that you and your husband attend classes foi parents-to be. They are usually conducted at hospitals by doctors and nurses. Check to see if such classes will be held at the hos pital where your baby will be delivered. * * * Dear Mrs. Riggsbee; I have been reading in the newspapers about all the “battered babies” -- babies and small children who are brutally beaten, sometimes to death, by their parents. In fact, I begun to think about this on Mother’s Day and about what a tragic situation it is. Most of these parents must not have wanted children in the first place, or they could never be so cruel to them. It just oc curred to me that if these parents had used birth control to begin with, maybe this whole problem would not have come about. You always heai people claim that although a woman might not want her pregnancy, once the baby is born she will “learn to love It.” Now I see that this lust isn’t true in too many cases. P, D. Dear P. D.: I cannot add much to your fine letter except to sa that I agree one hundred percent. Ideally, every child born into this world should be a wanted child, born by choice to a couple who is eagerly looking forward to taking care of it. N'o child should have to be born by “ac cident.” The increasing num ber of battered and mistreat ed babies is just one more tact which, points up the need for birth control. ty.” The North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company of Dur ham, is the largest insurer in the world, operated b black Arnei icans. Leed s Poem !$ Published In Anthology • ALBANY, Ga -Miss Phyllis Clark, a sophomore at Albany (Ga.) State College has had her first poem published. An English major from Cairo, Ga., Miss Clark was notified that her poem, “A Dying, Dy ing Rose,” will be published in the Annual Anthology of Col lege Poetry. Miss Clark, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Clark of 894 4th Street, N. E„ Cairo, 4s a member ni the col lege’s Pierian Ciun ana me Speech Choir. The Anthology is a compila tion of the finest poetry written by college men and women of America. D. Hartman, editor of the Anthology, notifed the ASC coed of the selection of her poem for publication; OJ^Bome | Ai |*j 86 PROOF l«W STRAIGHT BOURBON lily* J WHISKEY XtNTUCXY ' A fMAMttT •WMCHf WHIP p; D T 4 • Q!,AR; OLDftC-ONt OiiTJLLKWV CO '■ charcoa; filtered OLD BOONE DISTILLERY /Weaefetwlewn, Kenfucky >A i HO' • '• RB UNIYKRSI I'Y -Washington: Feeler m i rsl nils police swept through Howard University campus before dawn Mav 9, ar resting at least 24 persons and ending a student occupation which forced the school to close two days ago. (UPI). Coca-Coh Company Reports Record Earnings For First Quarter Os ’69 NEW YORK, N. V.- Earning:* of The Coca-Cola Corr pany for the first quartet of K 69 were the highest of anvin st quar ter in the Company’s history, J. Paul Austin, president re ported Tuesday, following a meeting here of the Hoard of War Widows ..Jake Alt ete The widov oi a vetei 'an who died of a service-co, meeted condition may receive c'spend ency and indernnit: com pensa tion regardless of l.oi 1: icorr.e, ■icco. iing to W. R. Pi lillips, manager of the North Caro lina Veterans Adn.inls; ration Regional Office. But, i e added, an i ncome limitation does appi l to a widov. if the YA death pension is for a wartime veteran who d led of a condition not attributal de to set ■ ice. Com pice infot n..iti< >n on these and other benefit:-» for widows and dependents ol veterans i*, available ft on i any Y A office, Phillips concli tded. mKM gS&L antgraßjiS «j£§f "NoC!iMßaE(9blf&9a&&¥Saoifi9R»i!9i’kMnSli<‘ * BT ASTS “RIDICULOUS IDFA”-N’ev York; Civil righ ts leader Bayard Rustic says a demand that American church* 'S and s; -i;a cogues pay black peopi e SSOO million in reparations is a “ridiculous idea.” If ri y grea t gr andfather picked cotton foi "■ ’) yeai s then he may desert some t money, but he’s dead and gone and nobody owes mo anything,” Rust in said May 8 in an inter view* with UPI. (UPI). —~——— n THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH. N. C., SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1969 Directors. Net profit for the first quar ter, after provisions for ro se rves, taxes and other charges, was $23, 823,136, or 42 cents a share, an increase of H percent over the $21,525,- 663, or 38 cents a share earn ed in the first quarter of 1968. Provision for taxes in the first quarter of 1969 was $22,- A&T Approved For Project To Raise Level Os The Poor GREENSBORO - A&T State University this week received tentative approval for a550,000 federal grant to train 40 high sc 00l graduates- to work as leaders in low-income areas of Greensboro. The project, to be called the A&T-VIST A Consumer Ed ucation Project, was announc ed b University President Dr. Lewis C. Dowdy and is ex pected to get underway around June 2. B. W. Hai i is, chairman of the University’s Department of Adult Education and Communi ty Sei vice, has been appointed directo: of the new program. “This program,” said Har ris, “is designed to help poor people raise their standard of living. We want to train com- j TAKE*fSBSH^OP iLOOKfe | SERVICES St INTEREST % NEWCAR LOANS AUTOMOBILE LOANS Keep the cost of a new car down by using a bank finance plan. You pay only reasonable bank loan rates ; and improve your credit standing in the community, Say My Friendly Bank. That means the same as our signature below. Let us be your hank for all your banking needs . . in a ‘Soul-Fashion’ wav. MECHANICS AND FARMERS BAM Large- enough to serve you . . . Small enough to know you. RALEIGH -DUR H AM-C H A R L O T T E A 1 ember Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 230,000, as compared to $lB,- 960,900 for the first quarter of 1968. In other action, the Directors declared a dividend of 33 cents per share, payable July 1, 1969, to stockholders of record at the close of business June 13, 1969. The Board re-elected all of ficers of the Company. munity leaders who will help families to Increase their hir ing power.” * * * SAINTHOOD BACKED PHILADELPHIA - Sainthood for the late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., proposed L> Doth Catholics and non-Catholics, received ai othei boost las' week from Dr. James P. Sha - non, auxilian bishop, St. Paul, Minn., who deemed Dr. King a perfeci example of ‘'a saint a man who builds his life on fidelity to the teac’ ings of Christ.” Noting that the Catholic church has never can onized a non-C at hoi ic, Fr. Shannon said, “His canoni a tion would be an enormousr effective gesture of human uni tv." 11
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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May 17, 1969, edition 1
11
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