Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Aug. 2, 1969, edition 1 / Page 13
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Carmichael-Nkrumah Alliance Seen,- k Eldridge Cleaver In On It, Too? , PREGNANCY PLANNING AND HEALTH BY MRS. GLORIA RIGGS BEE Dear Mrs. Riggsbee; My marriage is in a terrible mess and I’m real unhappy, so I hope you can help me. We have four children and we have been married for six years. I know it’s wrong, but ever since the last babv was born I don’t want to give my husband his V ‘rights” because I’m so af raid of getting pregnant, and I just don’t want any more chil dren. Lately my husband has been staying away from the house a groat deal, and 1 sus pect another woman. Our mar riage is no good anymore. What A can I do' 1 Mrs. P. R. Dear Mrs. P. R.: There is no reason for you, your husband, or your marriage to suffer. The answer to your problem is family planning - using one of the many medical ly approved methods of birth control so that you will not have to be afraid of pregnancy each time you have relations with your husband. Visit the Wake County Health Depart ment, 3010 New Bern Avenue, or your family doctor for informa tion about family planning. * * * Dear Mrs. Riggsbee: I am a Roman Catholic and I will be getting married in September. My husband-to-be Is still in school and I will be working for the first two years to support us while he fin ishes his education. So you can see how important it is that I do not get pregnant and have to quit my job. My church only believes in the rhythm method of birth control, and I would jkiike your opinion on how ef fective it is. Miss McL. Dear Miss McL.: The rhythm method - not have Intercourse during the wife’s fertile period - is ef fective if the couple is willing to adhere rigorously to the required period of abstinence, which varies according to the regularity of the menstrual cy cle The cycle can be upset by emptional strain or even by a change in environment and cli mate. Thus, the rhythm method is certainly better than not control at all, but it is more difficult and less reliable than, for instance, the pill, the ‘‘loop,” or the dia Ut Oui ScpertTl ® T,RES Kmp Your Car * *-'*” E *' ES / v ® AUTO ACCESSORIES SjT\ 9 WASHING M ® J OFFICIAL $?/ Licensed "lIL ffi)/it)2 Inspection w\7 Station Credit Cards Honored DUNN’S isso SmKMTEt See Us For Complete Car Care! , DIAL 832-9436 582 S. BLOODWORTH ST - - T -. | FRESH FRYERS—WhoIe Ib. 33c GOLD SEAL ' FLOUR 25 lb. bag $1.99 FAT BACK lb. 17c WHITE LEAF PURE LARD 3 lb. pkg. 57c VESPER TEA % lb. pkg. 29c GRADE A SMALL EGGS 3 Doz. 99c PORK NECK BONES ~ .... 4 lbs. 89c RIB STEW or BOLOGNA lb. 19c PIG FEET or PIG TAILS lb. 25c FRESH GROUND BEEF lb. 59c or 3 lbs. $1.39 WHITE HOUSE APPLE JELLY 2 lb. jar 39c PURE PORK SAUSAGE lb. 49c FRESH PORK ROAST lb. 55c ] FRESH PORK LIVER lb. 39c FRESH BEEF LIVER lb. 49c OPEN 9:30 TO S:3O MONDAY THRU THURSDAY I OPEN 8:30 TO 7:00 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Horton’s Cash Store 11415-17 South Saunders St. Raleigh, N. C. I SaMßtßa^aigßaMH«Baigtei>iißßßß»iii»Kawßß!£gauwaßgiMEgaM«MwaMßaaa^^«Mß»«a»iiganjW © phragm, * * * Dear Gloria: I have been taking birth con trol pills for four months now and they work fine. My only problem is that I still fell kind of sick to my stomach after I take them. Is there any other medicine I coulcf take so I wouldn’t feel nauseated after every pill? Mrs. R. W. Dear Mrs, R. W.: The women who seem to have the most trouble with nausea are those who take their pills on an empty stomach. For ex ample, the woman who gets up early every morning, takes a pill, then spends several hours getting her children dressed, fed, and ready for school By the time she has a chance to relax and have breakfast she is already nauseated because she took her pill on an empty sto mach. It is recommended that you take your pills with your main meal - usually dinner - or at bedtime with a glass of milk. If your nausea continues, see your doctor for further instruc tions. Idbor Dept. Off kid Is Cited Hem Raymond G. Cordellihas been awarded a withingrade increase in his annual rate of pay irs recognition of exceptional per formance of his work as com pliance officer in the Raleigh office of the Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Divisions, U. S. Department of Labor. The award was presented to Cordelli by Julian E. Parker, director of the Raleigh Office. Cordelli, a native of Eynon, Pennsylvania, received a B. S. degree from the University of Scranton. Scranton, Pennsyl vania. Prior to hts present as signment in Raleigh, he was a compliance officer at Miami and Fort Lauderdale, Florida and Grainesville, Georgia, He pre * viously was a labor economist MMS. MARGUERITE ROGERS HOWIEAXD STUDENT AFRICA BOUND-Mrs. Marguerite Rogers Howie, top, associate professor of sociology, and Miss Ethel Brown, a sociology m.tior, both of South Carolina State College, board an airplane at the Columbia, S. C., air port on the first leg of thier flight to Ghana. For six weeks, they will study African history and culture, music, art, literature and contempor ary Africa at the University of Ghana at Legon. Mrs. Howie’s parents reside on S. Person Street in Raleigh. Negro Employment In Textile Ind ustry Rise Negro employment in the textile industry during the first quarter of this year rose to 10.6 per cent, placing textile above the national average for all-manufacturing for the first time. V hile the textile industry added 11,000 Negroes tons pay rolls, employment increased by only 8,000. Figures available from the Bureau of Labor Statistics show that non-white employment in the textile industry has advanc ed four times faster than the national average. Practically ali of the non-white workers in the textile industry are Ne groes. In 1960, non-white employ ment in the textile industry was in W ashington, D. C. He is past president of Labor Lodge 2515 0968-1969), and vice president of the National Coun cil of Field Labor Lodges (1969- 1971). Ho served with the U. S. Army from May 1956 to May 1953. -■ W * -' A • 's#* - ’ .. • ' ik "> “BEAUTIFUL STAR” OBSERVES 120TH BIRTHDAY-Los Angeles: Tatzumbie DuPea reached the age of 120, July 26, and was plac ed in the category of possibly the oldest living person in the country as well as being the old est living Californian. Tatzumbie, which means “beautiful star,” is a Piute Indian born July 26, 1849, in Lone Pine, California. She spent more than 30-years in the movies and is a veteran of 40 films. Tatzumbie, who lives in a convalescent home, received a letter from President Nixon and about her age said, “I’m pretty old”, (UPI). 3.3 per cent while the all-manu facturing percentage was 7.6. Textiles and all-manufacturing now stand at 10.6 and 10 per cent respectively. The figures show that the textile industry in 1969 has some 105,000 non-white workers compared with 94,000 in 1968 or a gain of 11,000 non-white jobs among the 993,- 000 people currently employ ed by the textile Industry in 42 states. In 1968, 9.5 per cent of the textile workers were non white. Non-white employment in the apparel industry during the first three months of this year is running at an average of 13.5 per cent compared with 12.7 in 1968. The apparel industry employs some 192,000 non white workers among its 1,- 43;i,000 employees. + * * The unemployment rate for teenagers is approximately 11- 6 percent,’ more than three times the national average. Sociology Professor Sees Pod BATON ROUGE, La.-(NPI)- A suspected alliance between Black-power advocate Stokely Carmichael and Kwame Nkru mah, president-in-exile of Gha na, is seen by Dr. St. Clair Drake, sociology professor at Chicago's Roosevelt university. Declaring that the two may be charting a revolution, Dr. Drake said the coalition would be a result of ideological simi larities and the two men’s proximity to each other. Bilti are living in Guinea. A third person involved Li the revolutionary efforts could be Eldribge Cleaver, Black- Panther leader, who has fled to Algiers after being wanted in the United States on a pa role violation. Carmichael split with the Panthers while in the United States, but he might find areas of agreement with someone like Cleaver in Afn :a. According to nr. Di ake, Nkrumah has “bent over back wards to be friendly to the United states,” only to be re buffed in his efforts. "Nkru ma'. like Carmichael, hoi is a lot of bitterness for the U. S., and we cannot avoid spec ulating about the outcome of Nkrumah's proximity to Car michael.” Speaking at Southern Univer sity on "Black international ism: The Myth and the Really ty,” Dr. Drake said Nkrumah’ is "thinking, writing, and ad vising on the completion of the Black man’s emancipation.” Just last year, the professor sail, Nkrumah published a lit tle volume called "Handbook for Revolutionary Warfare.” Referring to Guinea on the West Coast of Africa as a "haven for some harassed Black nternationalists,” Dr. Drake pointed out that Cona kry, the capital, is not the only African city that has given hos pitality to exiled Black revolu tionaries Dr. Holley Will Serve As ECSU Dean ELIZABETH CITY - Presi dent Marion D. Thorpe announc ed to the Advisory Council that Dr. Floyd B. Holley will fill the position of’Dean at’Eliza beth City State University, ef fective as of August 1. 1969. Thomas E. Carter, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, who had done a very commendable job as Acting Dean at ECSU since the death of Dr. William Anderson, in June, 1967, will assist Dr. Holley in his new position. In making the official an nouncement, Dr. Thorpe gave a brief resume of the new dean, who is well known in east ern North Carolina. Dr. Hol ley, a native of Hertford, has served in this area as.- county supervisor in the WPA adult education program, Hertford; Camp Educational Advisor, Civilian Conservation Corps, Jacksonville; Dean of Boys and Social Studies Teacher, Hert ford High School; and as As sistant Principal at formerly Williamston High School. Following his graduation from Shaw University in 1937, Dr. Holley’s experiences in Perquimans County provided valuable information for his Thesis; "The Perquimans County Civic Forum.” He re- j|J O&Boofie jh n| 86 PROOF KENTUCKY ffMMp STRAIGHT BOURBON *5:; KENTUCKY j 070 4b® I itwumtMMWW WW J| £» PINT g 4/5 QUART { OLD DOOMED:«TII.LtITV CO ji > CHARCOAL FILTERED : OLD BOONS OiSTiIIERY Mmudowltswn, Kanfvety mmmmM „ J “MOON MEN’’ IN QUARANTINE-Aboard USS Hornet :Fi rst men on moon Buzz Aldrin (L) and Neil \ urn strong catch up on the news of the world in their mobile quarantine facility (MQF) on board the carrier Hornet. The big ship is steaming to Hawaii. (UPI). Sigmas To Hold 55th Conclave In Baltimore August 10 To 16 BALTIMORE, Md.-Delegates representing undergraduate and graduate chapters of the na tional body of the Pi ii Beta Sigma Fraternity, Incorpor ated, which will hold its 35th Anniversary Conclave in the Sheraton Beleveaere Hotel, Baltimore, Maryland, August 10 through 16th, will be asked to discuss as well as suggest solutions on how, ‘Brother hood as a universal necessity can be made a reality instead of the myth it seems io bo to day; find new methods of in terpreting as well as im plementing new programs in political and social actions, so that the Black community may continue to move into the main stream of American life on all RECEIVES INTERN AP POINTMENT - Miss Marcella Johnson, a graduate in the South Carolina State College, Class of 1969, has received a dietetic in ternship appointment with St. Luke’s Hospital in Cleveland, Oiiio, beginning in September. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Quitte Johnson of Chester, S. C., she majored in home ec onomics and specialized in the area of foods and nutrition. She was a recipient of the South Carolina Dietetic Association scholarship at the annual meet ing of that organization last a pril. This summer Miss John son is serving as an assistant dietitian at Overlook Hospital in Summit, N. J. ceived the Master of Science degree in Sociology from Co lumbia University, in 1947. Dr. Holley, who is presently a School Psychiatric Social Worker in the Bureau of Child Guidance, in New York, will bring to ECSU a wealth of know ledge ar.d experience in social work, psychiatry, education, and administration. He received the Ed. D degree in Sociology from New York Universitv in 1964. THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH. N. C , SATURDAY. AUGUST %. 1968 levels of performances and will devote attention towards trying ] to learn about the reasons for student unrest on today’s col lege campuses. The extraordinary program i announced by Dr. Alvin J, Me- i Neil, national president of the 75-year-old National Greek : Lettered Black Collegiate or- i ganization, will be hosted by the i members of Zeta Sigma Chap- | ter of Phi Beta Sigma of Balti more, of which Attorney U, Theodore Hayes is president. "Recent reaction is dis satisfaction with the apparent change in policy in the present administration in Washington in regards to Educational guide lines. as well as an attempt to water down the Civtl Rights Voting Act of 1965, makes it Imperative for our delegates to take a new look at the current administration, that Sigma men come forward with new courses in political and social actions that w ill protect and re spect the rights of the Black community in our society’ , Dr. McNeil said Because we feel the new change in direction is dangerous to the well being of Black America, if remained unchallenged. 1 have redirected the course of this 55th Conclave, to develop resolutions of new courses of actions commensu rate with the reality of tire times. j mo j^pp )! See us! We can do almost anything f } (financially speaking) except pay | your bills. You’d be surprised how § ; many services we offer. Come in jj \ and find out how we can help you. | j i | I You will find that besides providing the traditional g banking services, such as Savings and Checking ac- * counts, wt have and can create services to fit your % special metis. Think of us as vour financial one-stop g service store. Why not investigate full service bank- 8. ing? Comt in and put us to work for you . the 2 sooner the better. You won’t regret it. IMCHAMS Aim I FARMERS SAM fl Large enough to serve you . . . $ Small enough to know you. ! RALE IGH—DUR H A M—CH ARLO TTE S Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation | To tins end, I have asked our National Directors of Social Actions Education and Bigger and Better Businesses to come forth with new programs in di rections in their particular fields or responsibility. Panel discussions and work shops on new political actions, social actions and business, in cidentally the national pro grams of Phi Beta Sigma will be presented to the national body during our stay in Balti more.’ Cutoff WASHINGTON-(NPI)-The U. S, Department of Housing and Urban Development on August 1, will cut off riot reinsurance for new business written by in surance companies in Ar kansas, Florida, Georgia, and Tennessee. HUD cancelled con tracts with respect to new in surance policies in those states because there was a lack of compliance with certain terms of the 1968 Urban Property and Reinsurance act under which the reinsurance is provided. * * * In 1968, 1.7 million women constituted 98 percent of all private household workers The median wage for full-time workers in 1967 was $1,289 and in 1968 their median ed ucational attainment was 8.8 years. 13
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Aug. 2, 1969, edition 1
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