Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / May 31, 1969, edition 1 / Page 19
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Don’t Reject Other Races,” Dr. Baker «tea£sfr ■wJKy»yjw^^^^jj§gw^gßntgM|gHyßM|MpF7 l jf»^||asf i sflKyL CROWN CENTER - A private urban renewal project now under con struction in Kansas City, Mo., offers a welcome relief from the usual effects of urban renewal, property destruction, homelessness, and re~ of Black residents. The project, financed by Hallmark Card, Inc., is being built in a largely uninhabited area where only 19 houses will have to be demolished. Located 10 blocks from downtown, the 8115-million under taking will stretch over 25 blocks and 85 acres of the inner city. (NPI Photo). Morning Star Council Secures Stop Signs, Street Lights, Area Community Mailbox The Morning Star Improve ment Council and the Chavis H eights Community Action Center have long wanted to penetrate the impregnable forces of the established sys-. vtem. With the past three &nonths. the City of Ra leigh has been bombarded with letters, calls, petitions and complaints from the Council. As a result of these, the or gan izat io n s have gainful - ly been answered. The City of Raleigh lias assisted this community with stop signs, J street lights and a clean-up campaign. Recently, the Council want ed to attack a much larger and more powerful source— The Post Office Department of the United States Govern ment. “We want a mailbox in the area," President Jose phine Bailey, a community leader, said, “to avoid walk ing five blocks to mail a letter." Within a w r eek after the voice of the community reach ed Chester Pate, supervisor of the carrier devision at Raleigh’s main Post Office, the residents noticed an of ficial government car survey- \ „ „ „ ® BATTERIES J K*«p Y&& Cl t AUTO accessories /f\\ ©WASHING /JAi • LUBRICATION OFFICIAL y?J Licensed 'Vm "asSr Credit Cards Honored DUNN’S tsso SfRVfCENTIR See Us For Complete Car Care! DIAL 883-9498 808 §. BLOODWO*TH ST, &B*&Hmmmrnmmimmwk)iwmmiknti\wTwminmmmwM\n wimp mrwrr mtfimmnm *, We Appreciate Your Business! FRESH FRYERS—WhoIe lb. 29c CROWN APPLE JELLY—IB oz. Glass 3 for 99c* CURED HAM HOCKS lb. 29c WHITE LEAF PURE LARD 3 lbs. 59c PORK CHOPS -End Cuts lb, 59c FRESH PORK LIVER lb. 39c GOLD SEAL FLOUR 10 lbs. 95c I FILLBS3URY or BORDEN’S BISCUITS 4 for 39c FRESH PORK NECK BONES 5 lbs. 98c PORK FEET or PORK TAILS 4 lbs. 99c ARMOUR S COLUMBIA BACON lb. 59c BOOK MATCHES—Box of 50V .. ,10c GRADE A SMALL EGGS 3 Doz. 99c ALL MEAT K WEINERS 2 lbs. 99c 30 TO 6 30 MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 8:30 TO 7:00 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY rfon's Cisli Store oath Sauadwf St. Raleifeh. N. C. j ing the lack of mailboxes in the area, Mr. Pate said on Monday, May 19th, that it should tie about three days before he has his men plac ed a mail collection box at the Southwest corner of Bragg CP&L Owners Hear Power Pool Story Even greater reliability of electric power is being achiev ed throughout the nation by means of regional power pools such as theCARVA Power Pool, Shearon Harris, president of Carolina Power & Light Com pany, told the utility’s share holders last week at their 6ist annual meeting. The CARVA Pool is com prised of CP&L and three neigh boring companies, which are working together in building generating and transmission facilities to assure a depend - able power supply at the lowest cost to the customer, Harris explained. He said that eleven power pools in addition to C and State Streets. The last regular meeting of the Morning Star Improve ment Council was held on Tuesday evening, May 27, at 8;00 at the Morning Star Church. ARVA are interconnected na tion-wide to provide maximum reliability of electric service. Proposed Federal legislation would result in delays that would jeopardize rather than enhance the reliability of electric serv ice, he warned. For the 12 months ending with March of this year, CP&L’s re venues were up 12 percent and energy sales were up 14.9 per cent over the corresponding period last year, the president reported. Cold weather during the first three m onth sos 19 6 9 cont r ibuted to the increase, Harris said. Almost nine percent of CP&L's residential customers, as well as more than 9,000 commerlcal customers, use electric heat ing. Represented at the meeting was more than 84 per cent of the outstanding shares of the company. The shareholders voted to amend the company’s chartei to increase the number of au thorized shares of serial pre fer red stock from 400,000 shares to 1,000,000 shares. The Other Side of the Tax Coin The surtax was the first in crease in Federal income tax since 1951. During that time over a dozen changes iri Fed eral tax laws were made, which reduced taxes for the average taxpayer far more than the surcharge increased them. SPACE AGE FASHION - New York: A lady’s hands should be free for space age fashion maneuvering. The answer--a fluffy pink ostnch hat with a purse hidden in its crown. The hat-handbag accompanies skin-tight jump suit costume for evening. (UPi). “Maintain A Sense Os Black Id entity,’Ora tor ORANGEBURG, S. C. - Dr. Christian E. Baker, president of Cuttington College and Divinity School in Liberia, Africa, urged the graduates of South Carolina State Col lege not to reject people of other races but to maintain a sense of black identity. “Black men should avoid the easy temptation to re ject other people because of a difference in pigmentation or because of a group’s past performance,” said the African native of Monrovia. Dr. Baker, himself a 1951 graduate of South Carolina State College, addressed a crowd of more than 4,000 in the Smith - Hammond-Middieton Memorial Center last Sunday, at the 73rd combined baccalaureate-com mencement at S. C. State. First honor student in a class of 402 was Johnny Bis hop, Second was Miss Leola Adams and tied for third were Watson T. Ragin and Thomas M. Anderson, Jr. “I believe some people are genuinely motivated, because they see the dangers to surviv al of the human race, if racial disharmony were allowed to re main,” he said.. In support ing the black “search for identity” Dr. Baker said the age of computer and statistical anonymity, assertion of individuality by Black Ameri cans in language, dress, hair PREGNANCY PLANNING AND HEALTH BY MRS. GLORLA RIGGS BE E Dear Mrs. Riggsbee: My husband and I do not practice birth control because of our religion. But we would like to wait a while before we have another baby. We have used the rhythm method before (since that’s all we’re allowed to use according to our church’s be liefs), but it has never worked for us, even though we don’t have sex relations for about a week in the middle of my cycle between periods. Is there any exact way of knowing when i could become pregnant? Can I feel it when my body releases an egg? Please answer ir.y let ter in your column soon. Mrs. P. T. Dear Mrs. P. T.: Your doctor (or one of the doctors at your local public health department’s Family Planning Center) can show you how to keep a temperature chart which will give you a fairly ac curate idea of when you release an egg. Some women feel a mild, jcrajrspy pain about mid way between tneii per lexis. If this occurs, occasionally ac companied by a heavier-then normal discharge, you can be fairly sure that your body is re leasing an egg. But be sure to see a doctor for more information. He will help you make a chart which will tell you your safe and your fertile days each month. Al though this method of family planning does not work for every woman, your chances of suc cess will be better if your doc tor explains it to you. * * * Dear Gloria Riggsbee: My husband and I have a very style, food, art and diversion is in deed contributing to the kind of individualism which made America great. He said, that although Ameri can Negroes have a sense of kinship for people on the con tinent, “the mainstream of Black America is construc tively seeking to be, and in deed is being assimilated into American life.” He predicted that festivities honoring Black American’s past will in time provoke no greater excitement than does St. Pat rick’s Day parade down Fifth Avenue. Dr. Baker earned the doctor of veterinary medicine degree at Michigan State University whose distinguished alumni a ward he received in 1966. He has been president of Cuttington College and Divini ty School since 1961. © good sex life together., .so good that we have had three children in our five years of marriage. Now we couldn’t afford another baby if I were to get pregnant again. I would like to take the birth control pills, but I don’t want anything io change the wonderful relationship I have with my husband. Do the pills make you lose your interest in sex? I wouldn’t want that to hap pen, Mrs. B. L, J. Dear Mrs. B. L. J.: You’ll be happy io know that the birth control pills have no physical effect on your desire for sex. In other words, you and your husband will continue to have the same relationship you now enjoy. For many couples, the pills have a psychological effect on their sex life. Before using the pills, some couples could not feel entirely free in their enjoyment of sex relations be cause that were always wor ried about pregnancy. Foi these couples, then, the pills have actually helped them to a more satisfactory sexual relation ship. * * * Dear Mrs. Riggsbee; I have been married for al most a year now, and our mar riage is fine except for one thing -- my “nature”. 1 must have been horn without one or some thing. I’m always willingto have sex with my husband, but I have never had a climax. I’ve heard so much about the Importance of rny having a climax during intercourse. If I don’t, does that mean there’s something wrong with me? Also, can I become pregnant even if I don’t reach a climax? Mrs. P. B. Dear Mrs. P. B.: Yes, you can become preg nant ever: if you don’t experi ence a climax (orgasm) when you have relations with your husband. Your response in sex has little to do with your ability ga—MUTiMiiiHigirgawin ■iwwn i—nmnwiiiri—nwniMn—— L i—■■■■■■ i in ■■ ■iinfMMMHWiiii»wiiw4M»i—r«M pjj| OJkßoom |l'p|j 86 PROOF jggE|3k KENTUCKY HNMn STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY j, | te KEKTUSKY *0 50 SJOO i tiutsm ewwtP" PINT 4/5 QUART I 9LO 0,1 I mi »***• M | [ CHAHCOAL FILTERED j oID SOONS oismurr Moedowlewn, Xmnfveky Urges College Grads g sir • t i rip*?* E SKKUCr: RKCOHDS - Chicago: Burned Selective Service records are piled in an adjoining alley where antiwar protesters! broke into a local draft board and burned the records, May 25. Fifteen protesters were arrested, (l PI). Breadbasket Leader, Black Solon, To deceive A&7Alumni Citations GREENSBORO - The Rev. Jesse Jackson of Chicago, na tional director of Operation Breadbasket, and Henry £. Frye Breadbasket, and Henry E. Frye, only black member of the North Carolina Legislature, will receive top awards of the A&T State University Alumni Association at the Associa tion’s annual dinner here May 31. Jackson, who has gained na tional prominence with the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, will receive the Association’s achievement a ward and Frye, who is the first Negro this century to serve as a state lawmaker, will be presented the service award. Principal speaker for the dinner, to be held at 6.-30 p.m. in King’s Inn, will be Howard C. Barnhill, Charlotte, outgoing president of the Alumni As sociation. Both Frye and Jackson are graduates of A&T. While a stu dent, Jackson was an Aggie football star and led success ful student civil rights dem onstrations in Greensboro. After graduating from col lege, Jackson studied at the University of Chicago Divinity School on a fellowship. He was selected by the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., to head Oper ation Breadbasket. Frye, a native of Ellerbe, holds a law degree from the to become pregnart. Second, very tew women ex perience orgasm early in mar ried life. It may take some time before you relax suffici ently so that you really enjoy intercourse. Surveys have shown that even among women who enjoy sex a great deal, very few have an orgasm every time they have Intercourse. Somen women enjoy sex and rarely have an orgasm, A wife’s inability to have fre quent orgasm may often worry her husband more than her, for lie may feel that he is at fault or that he has not satisfied his w ife. It is Important for a man to realize that it is easier for him to have a climax than It Is for his wife. As long as he en joys sex, and he is attentive and affectionate, he is fulfill ing his role in the love-making. If this problem really bothers you, however, it is Important that you seek professional help. Talking the matter over with your doctor is probably the best first step in this direction. iHE CAHOLINIAN RALEIGH, N C.. SATURDAY, MAY 31. 196? University of North Carolina. He formerly served as assis tant attorney for the U. S. Middle District Court and taught law at North Carolina College. Other activities scheduled for THE VETERANS’ CORNER EDITOR'S NOTE: Below are authoritative answers by the Veterans Administration to some of the many current ques tions from former servicemen and their families. Further in formation on veterans bene fits may be obtained at any V.A office. Q I pay premiums on mj G. I insurance quarterly and am concerned because I have not received my premium due notice. Should I wait until I receive this notice before pay ing my premium? I certainly don’t want to take a chance on my policy lapsing. A-- By all means pay your premium when it becomes due even though you may not have received a premium due not ice. Be certain to include your policy (ft nn VIGOUR U SJUU S\ // BAN K l SERVICES ; l INTEREST OHLY S/• NEW CAR ! |' ' ‘ LOANS I 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. j | Say My Friendly .Bank. That means j 3 the same as our signature below. Let | I us be your bank for all your banking { l needs.... in a ‘Soul-Fashion 5 way. I MCCHANKS Am j 1 FARMERS BAM j | Large enough so serve you . , Small enough to know you. g RALEIGH— DURHAM— CHARLOTTE 1 Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation the A&T Alumni Association include a reception at King’s Inn on May 30 at 7:30 p.m. and the annual meeting on May 31 at 10:30 a.m. in the Memorial Student Union. number with your payment. Q -- I was wounded in Ylet- Nam and evacuated to a mili tary hospital in the United States. I will be separated from service at this hospital. Will I receive any counseling or in formation about veteran bene fits before separation? A-- Yes, A Veterans Ad ministrative representative will visit you at the hospital to advise you of your veteran benefits. Furthei he will help you file for these benefits. After separation, your records will be forwarded to the V.A region al office having control over your records. That ouice will follow up to insure any ap plications you filed ai the mili tary hospital are processed in timely manner. 19
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 31, 1969, edition 1
19
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