Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / June 28, 1969, edition 1 / Page 12
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Project NAME To Study Racial Attitudes In Suburbia ! j H j J I " jj^ - n%yOXiSViTin^i | li tffiwtf yW^iwV'<7 ' T^irl Man WSmm M'. YOU T \K!.' < > VIT! - flna ’ .; . 1 ~ "‘~ ... shown i: is first Negro mayor of a municipality in m. I ~- P:. ; ]si.. HaroH S' i'.• . right. Clerk of Court offici itc-s. I) ni* i. .•, '! r -sh-iil, ;•-: Los his oath for sth time. (CPI). 1\(! W omen Told To Pool Their Strength For A Better Society < SAI.ISBUI '. - Dr. Dorothy Fer<a :■.<?■‘A autliority oii obstcf: :• 1 v . •’ • No:tb Car* i men* Cl ' 'NCJ NWC) that the-;. v.’olJ'J a ■<. to pool their strong!• a.vl ;■ sourevs if they arc to a'i-v,. a- h. today's so ciety. Tin- ocean ion as the Sixtieth AruJ-f-rsa; oi NCTtavC, Liv . • ’ 12-14. Dr. Feiei.f-f a; • <■• featured speake: a: u .. a;.;.: .■<:i sa; yt<an quet. More t* a:. 700 :r sons heard Dr. Ferebf-' ' - plea in h e Ag gt e;- Student Union Building. Others on F.e program included Livingstone College President Dr. F. George Shipman, Salis bury Mayor Paul F, Bernhardt, Dr. John Larkins, N. C. De partment >i ]> :; lie v.- ifare; atSS Mrs. F, T. N« ■■■some, Federa tion president. "Women can make a major impact or. :; ->- lerns ot today.*' Dr. Ferebe- said "In these years nl ext re me violence, ■'.Fie! on 1 d - m oust rates shameful exau ; of Low little good •• iolence ca: accomplish, ■women n:t st < o- < ’ogeiLcr with Innovative programs r a* can provide some positive 1 ope for all Americans.' "Violence can be traced to the following: television, the war in Vietnam, gun control, war-like to: -s for c 1 ildren, po lice brutaliU and the disruption on college campuses. By coining together , . or en can and must rutOurE<pm>i * BAITEBJEs K«p You, to . AOTO <ccessoru;s /f\ 114 T°P Shape! *WASHING AA, » LUBRICATION <§f?J OFFICIAL Licensed I /ft/ ? Inspection w * Station Credit Cards Honored onwaw—«— l ll—mw iiT—iii i ■- wmwmffwartW DUNN’S HSO siatfatm* See Us For Complete Car Care! • DIAL 832-949 S 50? 8. BLOODVVOK fll ST Tllli II - ■ I t-mmr immin him mninn mu thih —in. ■ n-r rTnnifl 111 II ill ■iiwiii I im i n. IWe Aooreciate Your-Bosiness! LARGE ROOSTERS lb. 23c RIB STEW or BOLOGNA lb. 19c GOLD SEAL FLOUR 25 Sb. bag $1.99* FRESH FORK L NECK BONES 4 lbs. 89c LACE TOILET TISSUE ...A rolls 29c FRESH FORK SPARE RIBS !b. 55c WHITE LEAF PURE LARI) 3 lbs. 57c ALL MEAT WEINERS 2 lbs. 99c PORK ( HOPS or PORK STEAK ib. 69c SMOKED HAM HOCKS lb. 29c NICE FAT BACK lb. 23c FESXKBURY m BOftDCVS BISCUITS 4 for 39c I’ET nr ( 3RN \TJON MILK tall can 2 for 39c GRADE A SMALL EGGS . 3 Doz. 99c PURE PORK SAUSAGE lb. 49c OPEN 0 30 TO 6 3( MONDAY THRU THURSDAY OPEN 8 30 TO 7:00 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Horton’s Cosh Store i4l r>- 1 * South Sounders St. find some solutions to v -s --problems,” she said. "Women car, help alleviate violence by word of mou* •, electing progressive indivi duals to office, wi itlng letters to legislators and by being ad ventrous,” she continued. Highlight of the convention was a pageant recalling the six ty years of growth and progress. Wsfbst’s First Hack Computerized Accounting Service is Organized MEM PH IS-Of all recent ef forts on the part of government and the private sector to sus tain and encourage small busi ness, one of the most promis ing is the creation of a firr: in Memphis called Mainstream Computer Service, Inc Mainstream, owned and oper ated predominantly by Negroes, was formed to provide small and medium size business wit! all of the computerized account ing tools now available to major industries. Already, Main stream management envisions franc! ise operations nationwide "serving any business of air size.” Tie firm is granting fran chise under the tradename Z Data". To its small business customer, E 7. Data offers a total plan, including forms for management reports and re cords for every business func tion from inventor: control to 4r" The pageant, i;. -vords, music and dance, was directed by Miss \V. >.. Crossor and she was assist:-'; ; - Mes'.Dines A. C. Davis, 1 vel-.Ti T:.o:pe and Mrs. E, X. Johnson. Mrs. F. T. Newsome was narnc-d “Woman of » e Year.” The award was presented by Mrs E, M. Spellman. sales analysis. According to Mainstream :■. ■: A manager, Charles Ho- 0.., charges for the s*r: dec- «aft a? S2O monthly. 'TOOL-PRO; I ’ SYSTEM ROblnson s;,j "What wt-have developed is & 'fool-proof’ svs teri. of ;-ccO! :,m ; ioi the small businessman a- <ll as the medium sized firm. We will providi the i.‘ dees of a con sultant to ear potential customej ft. r). «... . ). . ’ -,7 this S’- ston sl.'/nld ' • au-pted to fit his special needs. "Aft< ! - (• ’.a"* < stabllshed (i c- method of accounting best we pro gram : is lecords into a com- P' u -id send i j periodic reporter. • accounting pro cedure he subset ibes *o. “On. higges* io' ill be to sejt small buste-.-sses o*. t.he profit potential of accurate, dures.” Students Win Fellowships For Medics OVr.i NSBOFf--Three mem bers efo ... ipey graduating class at Ac T «'• .•*• Universit; have b-'t-ij a’-’.ai . : p< ial fellov.- S: ips >h signed to attract more .r .' i». >*nd.'.'!.- s into the inedi- Clil pi OLvSSIOu,. T'.’ S t;:r U t -. *;; -;S Linda Rankin oi Greens 1 oi ~ Wa: land McKenzie - : v.: io vil’.e and Le ro. poh-:ts oi i. :.<•!.!urg, Vir ginia, ave each beenawardeda post-: ,iccahi ir< ate fellowship for st'■ : t .■ r:.<vr and during • next school year. The st all biology majors, at- ' • expected to cominii t -vii education in medics! sc 00l Miss Ranklr. il; us- • r fellov ip at Bryn Ma- r, and McKenzie and Rob erts ' ill stud- at Ha-erford College. All oi f <- 3' i* * 3TP fepon so:eb the Jo&iai Macy, Jr., F oundation oi Nev. Yoik. MUST SETTLE CAIRO’S PROBLEMS - Cairo, 111.: Two persons who will have to work to gether to relieve Cairo’s racial trouble are Pre son Ewing (L), Cairo president of NAACP, and new Police Chief William H. Petersen (R). Petersen took office, June 15, and was greeted with another round of sniping and fire bombing in the city. Ewing, critical of Petersen’s ap pointment, wants a Negro police chief, and blames the incidents on the white organization called the “White Hats.” (UPI), Community I *rogram To Aid Race Attitutes MEMPHIS, Ten.. - Mem } i s *n *' tunte! 'N A M E ). a. com - ;• rrog; am tc stud-. Negro ■ it' racial attic des in the civ's suburbs Las kicked oil • is mo:.' as 30 Catnolic nuns ca -ttnc o.v-w jte citizens selected M< : is area com munities. Project NAME is sponsor 'd •• "The Centers Fo: Con ti :i:.: Aduh ; iucatio:.” of c dlege and Southwest ern at Memphis. The nuns, accompanied by Memphis lay women, will contact a pro’ected 20,000 homes, June 23 - Aug. 8, to race relations attitude ere r.- vif.'d, discuss at'itudes and problems wit; white sub :Fan ww-owners The nuns, who are on sutn • r vacation from their regular assig: meets, are from orders m 17 states and Canada. Mrs. Fred Driefus, NAME member, emphasized, "The purpose of the program is to confront residents of white sub urbs of Memphis with the urgency of the racial ana urnan crisis. Ultimately, we hope to \ ~RE TIRING CUSTODIAN CITKO-Booker T. Staton, who retired last week as a custodian at A&T Slate University, receives gifts from I t. Col. William Graves, professor of milit ary science at A&T. Staton worked for the ROTC Department since 3955. New Careers Project Opened In Wake County For 80 Poor Folks WASHINGTON, D. C.-Eighty poor and unemployed adults in V.akt County, North Carolina ••’•'ill get a chance to enter nev careers, it was announced last eek by Secretary of Labor George P. Shultz. T ie workers will be employ ed as aides to professionals ir, education, recreation, social service, and community rela tions, under the U. S. Depart ment of Labor’s New Careers program. Federal funds totaling $230,- 130 have been set aside for the project with the projects spon sor Wake Count y Opportuni ties, Inc,, of Raleigh providing an additional 5'7,050. Nev. Careers seeks to re lieve critical national shortages of professional service person nel in health, education, and public welfare by opening up lobs ''ith built-in advancement opportunities to unemployed a dults. These* persons are train ed as aides to librarians, teach er s, nurses, medical technici ans, social workers, and police office! s. A The . free professionals from performing tasks that ‘do not challenge •! eii full profession al capabilities. At the same time the Nev. Careerists move up a “career ladder” to posi tions which demand greatet skill and pay higher wages. To be eligible, an individual must Ire at least 22 years old, e".lighten man- or; the issues involved, and both challenge and assist them in undertak ing positive forms of action to-m.d lessening racial mis understanding, tensions, and injustices in cur city which is truly a symbolic and signifi cant southern metropolis.’ The program is a joint Jew ish., Catholic. Protestant effort, she stated. The research aspect of the : rogram is cited as being dis tinctive. Tie Memphis NAME program, whici is patterned after Cleveland’s "Summer in Suburbia" activir-, p rovides for scientific investigation and data gate: ing in me area of race relations. Those conducting the work ' avr- been instructed in the proper administration of the data gathering pro ess. ' at' on racial attitudes will tie analyzed and will serve as base for fol low-up programs in Memphis. Mrs. Driefus stressed the lov -km nature of the- program. "Out aim is to find out more a!>ou' attitudes ir our suburbs, *’ she said. "Obviously, there are many who prefer not to par ticipate, and we acknowledge their feelings.’ umemployed, and generally come from, a familv whose an nual income is below the pov ertv line as defind by the Man powe r Adm it: ist rat ion. 1000 B lack Studies For WSSC WINSTON-SALEM - The Winston-Salem State College library will have a new collec tion of about 1,000 books on blacks studies next year. The special collection will be primarily paperback and is valued at SI,OOO. A student-faculty committee working with the college li brarian will purchase the books through the Southern Associa tion of Colleges and Schools (SACS) wit! funds furnished b; the Ford Foundation. The Ford Foundation granted SACS $90,300 to purchase simi lar look collections for Wins ton-Salem State arid 84 othei predominantly blajk colleges. A panel of distinguished scho lars, teachers, librarians and students chosen tr SASC will collect titles of paperbacks which could form, the basis for a black studies collection. The list of titles will be distrihuted to each of the 85 (MtSoone Yp*j 86 PROOF KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON *|Hf! WHISKEY 1 Q&fii uJW , KCMTWCKY *0 50 SIOO ! wu»nt mmw owner Jki PINT m 4/5 QUART 9 - • <1 i etc »oo«u o.STtuxffv co !*• CHARCOAL fUTEREC CHD BOONE DISTIUJRY Mmodowiowa, Kentucky nWi m i l l ■i'll an—BifiMWiiiWMßMiWiw wimwinn u <ac»iii«jrjß»tzr'iA. a« .a njmssm, » % * •% iliillglw? * i mdRBRBL \ I f> . . - , , r «• uill-b MKST BLACK JUDGE - Chattanooga, Term.: The Chattanooga City Commission June 17 appointed Bennie Harris as the city’s first fulltime city judge. Harris, shown in a June 17 picture, has been acting city judge for several months in place of Judge Riley Graham, who was ill. Harris will serve on a second division of the court recently created. (UPI). Colleges RecipientsOf Huge Library Grant ATLANTA, Ga. -The United Board for College Development has received a grant of $233,000 from, the Cat - neige Foundation to establish the Cooperative Library Centei in Atlanta for six Negro col leges, according to Dr. Charles C. Turner, Director of the Unit ed Board for College Develop ment, an agency of the Nation al Council of Churches. Participating ir: the Cooper ative Library Center are Miles College, Oakwood College, Stillman College; Talladega College, Tuskegee Institute -- all in Alabama -- and Tougaloo College in Mississippi. Throng! the Center these six colleges will be as>le to improve the num ber and quality to their library holdings through the savings from cooperative buying. The books will also be processed and cataloged at the Center. They will be ready for immedi ate shelving when they arrive at each institution. It is ex pected that the number of par ticipating colleges will rise to an eventual maximum of about 30 additional colleges. An initial grant was made by the Jessie Smith Noyes Found ation of New York for a work shop on cooperative library planning involving the six col- Show’s Faculty And Staff Honors Cheek At Banquet The Shaw University faculty arid staff sponsored a banquet in tribute to Dr. James E. Cheek, their 71st President on Monday, June 23, at 7;30 p.m. In the Student Union Ballroom. The program paid tribute to “James E. Cheek The Student -The Man--The Boss.” The president received his undergraduate degree from Shaw University where some of t : e faculty that taught him later became member of his faculty. colleges, and a local selection committee will order SI,OOO worth of books. They will be purchased by SACS to take advantage of bulk discount rates. The average cost of each book is expected to be one dollar. THE CAROLINIAN , BATPTOH. N. C„ SATURDAY. JUNE 28 1969 w leges librarians. Mrs. Henry Collins of Montgomery, Ala bama provided the funds for the feasibility and planning study which led to the proposal for the cooperative librarv center. Hillis Da vis ha s been appointed Director of the Center and will come to this new post on August 1. Mr. Davis has been head librarian at Hampton Institute for the past four years. He is a graduate of Johnson C, Smith University and the school of Library Service at Atlanta U niversity. The Center w ill be in full operation toward the end of the year. * * * Former mental patients can become good, steady employees according tc the labor Depart ment. a study of these employ ed by the California State Gov ernment showed that employees with a history of mental history of mental illness had a lower rate of turnover than other em ployees on similar jobs. ’TlBSar | | INTEREST | % NEWCAR | LOANS AUTOMOBILE LOANS I 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 he your hank for all your hanking | needs ... in a ‘Soul-Fashion* way. MGMMiCS A» I mmms mm | Lur&e enough to serve you . H Small enough to know you. RALEIGH—DURHAM—CHARLOTTE Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Memphis To Hmfßhtk Bummsmen WASHINGTON, I;. C. - More than seven hundred black busi nessmen and guests of the Na tional Business League have planned to spend August 20-23 at the Holiday R:Vermont Inn in Memphis, Tennessee for the 69th Annual Convention of the Oldest business members! ip organization in the count: y. This vear Bt : kele', G. Bur rell, president of NBI., called the meetine of fifty-eight C r .B) chapters across An.eiica com prising more than 10,000 mem bers by starting, "The force of NBI is ! x-.ing recognized by offers from private and govern ment agencies as .t ■ iaHe or ganized crotip of entrepreneu ers read- to play a leading ole i:. soivtr.r \ - ica’s prob lems." A new feature at t •• Memp his meeting will "re a special session ot: "Women in Busi ness”, whore the significant ly successful Carmen Murphy of Carmen Cosmetics in De troit will report her acquisi tions of a major old line cosmetic firm; and Gloria E. A. Toot, Esquire, of New York City will present her acclaim ed Town Sounds Recording Studio story. Another highlights o i the three-day meet will be Mr. Burrell’s report on "The status of Black Business", which is the basis so: this vear's theme: "Black Business In The 70’s - Tomorrow Is Now.” Leading business and govern ment personalities are schedul ed to participate including: Daniel Parker, Chairman of the Board, Parker Pen Com pany; Abraham Venable, Deputy Administrator, Office of Min ority Business Enterprise; Jame Robinson, Esquire, President of Urban East, Inc., and tiie National Housing Pro ducers Association; and John Chandler, Program Associate of the Danfort! Foundation. The Program Committee from the Memphis Chapter of XBL, George St evens, Law ~ rence Wade and Leonard J. Small, Jr., report plans for local participation have already exceeded expectation from ex hibitors and sponsors wishing to express support foi black business as well as meet now markets and executive person nel. * * * The cry of "School’s Gut'” in the summer of 1960 means that 13.4 million youths will be added to the summer laior force - 400,000 more than last year, the labor Department re ports. 11
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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June 28, 1969, edition 1
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