Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / June 14, 1969, edition 1 / Page 8
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THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH. N. C„ SATURDAY. JUNE 14. 1969 8 CLUB NEWS IDLE-A-WHILE SOCIAL CLUB MEETING Wle-A-Whlle Social Club members were greeted cheerfully For it was time for the hostess to show her versatility. The meeting was at “Miss ’Lizabeth ” Pridgeon’s on Pock Quarry Road. And it is to her gracious hospitality that we writ,- this ou . Thanks to Mrs, Hazel Williams, club president, That the business session was very well spent. Now on to the hostess for the finest cuisine. And, believe me, it was ‘‘fit for a queen." Now the feasting is over and it’s time to U- ga;., So Pinochle is on and it's time to play. Mrs. Louise Nunn and Mrs. Louise Walk.-v pla >. ■: v. \ ii, While Mrs. Mary B. Graham went down at the hell. Playing too were Mrs. Hazel 'Williams and M: Ho.S' t'a ! They were more than Mrs. Esther Ha. .vood could v.itl*stai It’s over with Mrs. Catherine Holden getting ■ ig- scon Mrs. Dorothy Powell got low, but it didn’t make her so; e. Mrs. Margaret Baldwin and Mrs. Chloe Chupi --i. > ' ’ t • inert. We knew that one would miss it - Mrs. Ca ’ m iue t. So did expect Mrs. Dorothy Jeffers a; J M; . I. i >' Ku ~ And felt that Mrs. Jennie Charles might He abh to .> i .g. To the members who aren’t up to par. We hope that you’ll soon be eating ca G: And will be well and soon up and about. That goes for all - hope no one was left mi. * Thanks a million to Mrs. Pridgeon an . man; > For the club members had plenty of fun, fun t.aloi , Now we anticipate the next meeting date, Get ready Mrs. Rand - we gonna celeb; at. KITTRELL COLLEGE KITTRELL COLLEGE has gram aimed at the real r.■ have had limited preparau *n • KITTRELL COLLEGE p. - schooling in the liberal ..its ..ml students who want to t nter .1 iou‘ .a - (Over half our grad .at . s i . di colleges and do well.) KITTRELL COLLEGE pup,. meiate good-paving jobs thfo-ig.. tern.m programs in secretarial science uaaas administration. KITTRELL COLLEGE is on the ...... .\n ter of learning in the five-re : i> ren, Vance, Franklin. Granville .. i T\ Apply Now For The Fall SMm-sU r THE REGISTRAR KITTRELL JUNIOR COLLEGE KITTRELL. N C 2 7 ii { "THE IRON GATE” [ ti C7 sp«ious ♦ i Y&f 37 lo,s j 4 *ss " RTS of a truly iov, !;, puna . ; 'jtjlF " BIC SriU K‘V li ill ; f.u <§ of l )ints - P°J >laI ’ s and uUu r : \,). s . 4 |JP \ flowing Reedy Branch and ..:. ♦ ' °~" : ’" * I Fti tv ! PASH I TO “* WBi i 4 a SS^^ e, | |, l |;,7| :^^^B^^^^^ \ hbhhi SP* 4% c rnon^s up to thirty si . 4 JISOT™ " §m m H ill < A REASONABLE PM #' A \#|» 11 W ) POSIT WILL RESERVE 4 4 A ■*■>** I i ANY LOT! # ♦ H UK- W ? FROM RALEIGH: U. < Mil ||_ |S. Rte. 1 south to High- h W *ni ®* ® ; way 55. proceed to the | _ ® A \ stop sign in Apex then 1 * 5 ||%ipA i*i> * 4 T “The Iron Gate” is a beautiful subdivision local, don < turn left on S Salem |llll|ltJl I Hill A 1 P flvcd State Road No. 1153 less than on. rni •ft :n Street proceed approx: ( B W Consolidated High School and the fast-growing and matclv one-quarter mile It is easy to own ah, u ▼ 4 attractive town of Apex. “Tlu Iron Gate” is only nun to State Road 1 5 53-an- < ful lot at "Th. Iron Gat, ' ♦ A U* ° A . pex ,nduslry and convt ’nient to all of K ] f one mile to “THE No red tap, .no prolong A tV theßaletgh area s mdustnal and commercial cent, rs IRON GATE”. !l investigations no rlosh .• I ST r?• 6 B , yPaSS T k ° Ut \ ’ costs, no service charge f The County s finest schools are clos, by churches o. ™ -< only pav for th f ~, f a al denominations dot the area, a modern hospital is a ▼ within minutes of “The Iron Gate” and important. 4 too, is the fact that “The Iron Gate" is located ;n a— —“ * ———“ “ A tcomn,u ni ,y noted for its friend,in, ss »nd for pi. ns™, fQg jgQgg MfOfiMATION: ♦ Apex is 3 self-supporting, prosperous community that . MffiynAyn 4 contains all of the services necessary for family lift t«LL vUriSIUT A A, Modem stores and service sources of all types abound _ _ _ . 4 ♦ on Salem Street, the main shopping area 365-7/5/ ©f 467-1©33 a Apex is a great place to liv in or to invest in. p _____ _________________ -J i - owe AT "THE IKON GATE” DAILY FROM 4:00 TO 6:00 PJM. j 4 t V ♦♦♦♦♦ +++++++ 4 “Campus Unrest Will Destroy Us And Good W e Have Fought For: ” NCC Dean ALBANY, Ga.-'‘Theoutrages and outreaches of campus uti rest and student dissent will end when you stop it.” These were the words of the 50th An nual Commencement speaker here at Albany (Ga.) State Col lege as he addressed the col lege's largest class ever. "YO’i fashioned and built this Frankenstein,” Daniel G. Sampson, dean of the School of lav. at North Carolina College at Dm ham, said, “and now you will i ave to control it or it will destroy you and all the good you have fought for.’ Recognizing that many of the ■ .tests and criticisms of our 9 * . ' CITED AS OUTSTANDING CA ! >l. i - . >■ it o ff ne r of Greensboro, receives t rojj) retired Air Force Brigade General Job a \\ Richardson after Shoffner was named outsi v d i)Vg cadet in A&T State University Dr i . ■ GOTO unit. Shoffner was commissioned ond lieutenant last Sunday. educational facilities and pro grams may lie justified nn i n ;t on substantial grounds, Sami son said, “. . .toooften'u ha- - been r unn ing educatloiui it 1 - St it ut ions as though the i a constitutional rights ofstuden! s stopped at the college gates a 1 did not penetrate the c<hle : walls. We have operated or; t faulty premise that a colle; e education even for those wi .-* qualified was a privilege rath than a right. Such monarc: autocratic notions with ti.eir corresponding practices . . ~ ted to many of our disot dvrs.” “While most of our camp..-' disorder of a violent, natu: <.- are caused by 27 or less of our students, this disruption is ; .a !• possible by the fact that a s-.i stantial number of our stuoents, if not a majority, are in sympathy with many of the g-ipes, criticisms and demands of t - v can.pus rebels,” Samp son pointed out. T.he Sumter S. C. native, who 1 as been a member of the NCC 3 av. faculty since 19~0, declar ed. “Peri aps man\ of the stu at nt demands are not the an swei, but the responsibility is ours ... to come up with some answers.” Although he suggested that the l lack studies program that is at the top of the list of stu dent iernands has ludicrous o-.ertor.es, “it is a serious in •imtment that so few schools prim to the current student v. , h ..id a black studies rn _ a .. However, ” tie said, “it took this present genera tion of students to make us p.ilnfulh awaie of how totally an ; s- s; diuically Mack people 1. been excluded from this coil!,; 1 y’s history.” • i ( ne step further, Samp said, “Not only should we 1 ... 1 a black studies program, Rf 4 A 44l | ii 11 II ANY SIZE I wbBI I,I UNiohi * SANK AWSRiCARD I BUFFALO ’ fvi i|Ay- I 4 Rob Pollock helps malce your morning coffee. He directs production ot more 1 than a million kilowatts at CP&L's Roc boro Electric Plant. There's a good chance some of that power found its way to your coffee-maker this morning. With halt-a-miihon customers, we help brew a lot of coffee. And while you mar run out of coffee, we're hard at work to make sure you don't run out of electricity. We re also working to keep the price of your electric Serv ice low. That's why we're adding larger and more efficient generating units such as the new 685,000-kilowatt generatot at the Roxboro F’lant. Units like this one produce more electricity per pound ot coal than older, smaller generators. At CP&L “dependable electric service at low prices" is not just a nice-sounding phrase . . . it's our daily way of doing business. Carolina Power & Light Company , i%. 'jL? ■ * ' <io,--rtq p;•! but the history of this country has to be written.” Some of the historical heroes may loose their “halo of glory and re spect” and in their stead may -be installed black men. Referring to the currend de mands for black dormitories on many campuses, Sampson said the demand seems to be out of step v, ith the prevailing notion that our society should be an integrated society. “How ever, when you consider that student life is a full like and includes more than attending classes, . . you can see that these students are asking foi a nucleus of a campus society about them, which includes and does not exclude,” Sampson said. “They are asking for a neighborhood of understanding . . . and what they might be saying is that the racism of white society has not accepted them and that they abhor the continual loneliness of facing this racism in every moment of their life.” A graduate of Morehouse Col - lege and the Boston University- Law School, Sampson said that once we face the that so much of the dissent about us has a genuine historical and factual basic (a legitimate foundation), we should recognize that “our students are patriotic persons with strong beliefs in the ideals of equality, democracy and virtue. In the main, they ?.re honest, moral and loyal to the institutions to which they are associated. It should not re dound to their disadvantage that they detect an unforgivable gap between what we do and what we say . . Speaking directly to the ‘69 graduating class, Sampson said, “You, by doing these immoral acts, confuse the issues and alienate many people who would otherwise support vou.” a co director of the CL DO Institute, a joint consortium at NCC and Duke University for disadvant aged persons interested in a law career, Sampson added, “Aon Hit Pre-Recorded 8-Track Cartridge AND Cassette ' fAASf Rcq.s6 95 Reg. $5.95 8-TRACKS CASSETTES 5 4.69 5 2.97 » THE DELIS . SUPREMCS • TEMPTATIONS • BEATIES • IMPRESSIONS . JAMES SHOWN . ASSOCIATION • CLIN CAMPBELL » JOHNNY CASH • DEL REEVES . KING RICHARD & THE ELUEGEL KNIGHTS • AL HIRT e FRANK SINATRA . DUKES OF DIXIELAND • MANY OTHERS Our Vhh I ffir iri I'llrtmrurf • bilk AmeriCi-4 J 4U HILLSBOROU6H ST [EiKtmwICS phons 828-2311 cannot change the present, or build the future by destroying everything that the older gen eration was built, i had hoped it could be said of you that you came not to destroy, but to fulfill.” AatbDamastntkm \ Law BATON ROUGE - Like many other state legislatures, those of Louisiana and Illinois are engaged in putting 'a law on the statute books aimed at making a crime any demon station conducted on high school or college campuses. The Louisiana measure, In committee, has been approved by a 5-2 vote. The Illinois House has passed its version by a 72-46 vote, over the pro tests of Black legislators.
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 14, 1969, edition 1
8
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