Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Oct. 4, 1969, edition 1 / Page 11
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1 M usie Notes And Half Notes | | BY MRS. E. M. M, KELLY £ The fourth Interfaith Com munity Thanksgiving Service, sponsored by the Central North Carolina Chapter of the Ameri can Guild of Organists, will be Vield in the Memorial Auditori um on Sunday afternoon, No vember 23 at 3 p.m. Again, a reoreseritative of the city gov ernment and clergy of the Catholic, Jewish, and Protest ant faiths will participate. Junior, Youth and Bell Choirs of all chu r ches associat ed in any way with the uuild will participate. Three num bers have been programmed for each group, and one of the Junior and Youth Choirs and congregation combined. We are fortunate in having two dynamic and will-qualifi ed directors this year, Dr. Preston Hancock and Dr. Mel vin Good, both of the Music Department of the State Of fice of Public Instruction. All participating churches f ire invited to contribute from w their music budget to the ex- IN EBONY FASHING FAIR- The beautiful model above will be a part of the fabulous Ebony Fashion Fair that will be held in Raleigh, at the Memorial Au ditorium Friday, October 17. The fashion show, consisting of 10 beautiful female models and two male models and featuring high fashions from Europe and the United States, will be spon sored by the Raleigh Chapter, Hampton Alumni Association. If JICTTAA’C GROCERY STORE UmJItMU J TRANSFER CO. LIGHT AND HEAVY HAULING . PULL LINE OF UK'.U A LONG DISTANCE GROCERIES i Courteous—Prompt Efficient Your Patronage Appreciated MARY A. UMSTEAD. Manager 602 S. Daws, n Sreet Tarbcro & Martin Streets DIAL TE 2-0478 —-TE 2-9218 ' I HAVE A DREAM: THE LIFE AND TIMESOF Martin Luther King Jr. At Your Bookstore or Stend $4.95 to I HAVE A DREAM BOOKS ' P. O. BOX 1261 SALISBURY, N. C. 28144 Raleigh’s Newest Furniture Mart (DISCOUNT PRICES) x3.s- n 0 Opposite Municipal Airport f o Just Beyond King’s To Our Showpime For Home Fmhkm One look at our collection tells you that your search ends here. You’ve come upon a treasure - trove of fine bedrooms, living rooms, dining rooms, tables, lamps. borne in soon and learn whv we re t the ideal pi ■»< • for one - stop • shopping. • AMPLE PARKING SPACE ! • FINANCING ARRANGED I METROPOLITAN FUMITUM COMPANY __ TJ. S. 401 SOUTH pense of the service (s2t> m suggested). This is not a re quirement for participation, but an invitation to support the on ly truly ecumenical event plan ned for our community each year. Checks should be be sent as early as possible to our Treasurer. Mr. Kenneth Kerr, with your registration. Wehave already heard from the Raleigh Ministerial Association ex pressing their interest in this festival and their desire to help in every way possible. The music chosen for the fes tival is listed on the attached •sheet Tt can be bought at Bur rage Music Company, 428 Nortn Salisbury Street, at a ten per cent discount. Following your suggestion after last year’s fes tival, we have chose three mem bers from former years. Some of you will already have this music for your libraries. Please send in your regi stration as soon as possible. The program follows: Jun ior Choir: “A 11 Night, All Day” Arr. McNair, Broadman Press, Code 454-040. JF 040, Price: 25 cents. “We Thank Thee, Lord” . .Red, Broadman Press. Code 454-053, JF 053, Price, 25 cents. “A Joyous Psalm” . .Eugene Butler, Choristers Guild Anthem Series, No. A74 (Choristers Guild, P. O. Box 38188, Dallas, Texas 75238) Price: 30 cents. “Two Songs by Suzie: No. 1, Sing Alleluia” . .Sue Ellen Page, Choristers Guild Anthem Series, (address above), No. A-60, Price: 30 cents. Youth Choir; "Great God and God of Our Salvation”. . C. F. Mueller, Carl Fisher, CM 70- 87, SAB. ‘‘Holy, Holy, Holy” . .Schubert, Schirmer No. 24- 27. “Now Let Us All Praise God and Sing” . . .Young, Ga laxy Music Corp. No. 2108. All Choirs and Congregation: ‘‘An American Hymn”. .Arr. Cecil Effinger, G. Schirmer, Inc. No. 11522, Price: 30 cents. Hymns: “Come, Y'e Thankful People, Come”, “God of Our Fathers, Whose Almighty Hand”, “Men and Children Ev erywhere” (If you do not have this hymn in your hymnbook, copies can be obtained from Nancy Burroughs. Secretary, N. C. Chapter AGO, Phone 8- 34-4756, 323 Sunnyb’rook Road, Raleigh, N. C. 27610). The Raleigh Concert Music Association, headquarters: North Hil's Upper Mall, Phone, 787-8827 or 787-9143, invites you to join the 1969-’7O season for the following outstanding attractions at Raleigh Memori al Auditorium: 1. Nell Rankin, Mezzo-Sopra no of the Metropolitan Opera OPPOSE HAYPS'VORTH SOOpJATION-'VashinEton: Eight N„rc»s, rv ing in Congress said September 25 that Judge Clement F. Haynsworth’s record on civil rights demonstrated his “infidelity to the principles of racial equality which are contained in the Constitution.” Rep, John Con yers, -Jr., D-Mich. (left) and Rep. Shirley Chisholm, D-N. Y., are two of the black legislators who went before the Senate Judiciary Committee Sep tember 25 to oppose the Haynsworth nomination. (UPI). Mmem To Exhibit Works Os Biarks NEW YORK-(NPI) - Works of a dozen new Black artists will go on display at the Brook lyn Museum, Oct. 7 through Nov. 10, under the sponsorship of the Harlem Cultural council, with an assist from the Urban Cen ter of Columbia university. Numbered among the artists whose works will be exhibited are Ellsworth Ausby, Clifford Eubanks, Jr., Hugh Harrell, William J. Howell, Tonnie Jones, Charles McGee, Ted Moody, Joseph Overstreet, An derson J. Pigatt, Daniel Press ley, Charles Searles, and E rick W. A. Stephenson. The four-week showing is but the first phase of the program, in which the American Fede ration of Arts is also partici pating. After it closes at the museum, the exhibit will be shown at Columbia university from Nov. 20 to Dec. 12, and later will be included in the AFD traveling exhibition pro gram. The Brooklyn museum is the first large New York mu seum to host a recent collec tion by Black artists. The show does not purport to make a doctrinaire statement about Black Art. It does hope to raise the valid question of the role of Black feeling and experience in shaping tne ex pression of Black artists. It is seen as explorative, and as a tool for developing dia logue and creative exchange be tween cultural and educational institutions and the predomi nately Black communities in which they are now located. In addition, it is an opportuni ty to introduce the 30 paintings and 39 sculptures by relatively unknown artists to a wider au~ Co., Oct. 28. 2. Hallelujah Train, featur ing The Eva Jesse Choir, de picting History of American Music, Dec. 8. 3. Howard and Patricia Barr, Duo - Pianists, March 12. 4. “Marne”, Broadway musical with Shelia Smith; A pril 17, 1970. SUBSCRIBE TO THE CAROLINIAN CAMS $2.140ff AND f E the Regular $7.80 Per Year Newsstand Price j Clip This Coupon And Mail To: THE CAROLINIAN i 518 E. MARTIN ST. RALEIGH, N. C. 27601 SAVE ME $2.14! j Enter my one year subscription to THE CAROLINIAN 1 North Carolina’s Leading Weekly At $5.50 plus 16c Tax (Total $5.66) i NAME . j ADDRESS | I 'i CITY j j SIGNATURE j Make Checks Payable to THE CAROLINIAN dience. The artists, although indivi dualistic in approach, have a common denominator in their cern for communication and Black identity. They also share a belief in dramatic statements, a feeling for brilliant color and Social Security News Evidence of age continues to be a problem to some persons claiming social security bene fits. A person claiming retire ment benefits must establish he is retirement age, Robert A. Flynn, District Manager of the Raleigh Social Security Office said. Many people retire and and claim benefits at the end of the year, now is the time to be getting the necessary docu ments togetner. Those with birth certificates filed during infancy should have them ready. For persons born outside the U. S., it is particulary import ant to send for the record ear ly. The social security office can help write for the birth certificate if you wish. Some states did not record births until fairly recently. North Carolina started birth records in October 1913. Con sequently, it is possible that birth records may not be avail able. Where it is not possible for a person to get a birth certi ficate, the SS Administration uses other records to establish a person's date of birth. Gen erally speaking, documents re . cording age in childhood or early adulthood is more likely to be accurate, Mr. Flynn said. For example, baptismal cer tificates made tr. early child hood, a Federal Census record made as close to your birth as possible, a family Bible or other early family record or a marriage record or other re cords made long ago be ade quate. The best advice that can be given to Individuals planning to retire said Mr. Flynn is to get in touch with the SS office If a sense of form, that is deli berately simple and straight forward. An illustrated catalogue, with a foreword by Edward Taylor, executive director, Harlem Cultural council, accompanies the exhibit. any problem Is encountered. They can help people in obtain ing the necessary documents since they have had lots of ex perience with these problems. Additional information may be obtained at the Social Securi ty Office in Raleigh at 1122 Hillsborough Street. They are open from 8:30 a,m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday and from 8:30 a.m. io 6:30 on Friday. ASSAULT STANDS SANTA MONICA, Calif. - Ac tor Jim Brown last week fail ed in his bid to have an assault charge against him set aside on the basis of insufficient evi dence, and his case was con tinued to next Jan. 12. | LENNOX PljM FURNACES ... !’ jjHHS Heating needs. jflF ||P\J • ELECTR?C OR HEAT PUMP |P jp Terrific Cash $$ j Savings During This Sale! tAST WWTS#? FACTORY-TRAINED Is your furnace ready? Be ready for the gVfe r*24hour cold weather — that's coming, with a maintenance dependable LENNOX home heating system and emergency —properly installed & adjusted. service —FREE KSTBM VES— —-- » | C Sfufyntm# 1i— B 6* 731 Pershing Rd. Raleigh Ph. 632-5961 j RESIDENTIAL and COMMERCIAL .HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING CONTRACTORS V—^.■ iniiriri .. _ M| n |M| M m j Katzenbach Credits Urban Coalition For Proposed Reforms By Many Cities WASHINGTON, D. C. - Nicho las deß. Ration bach said last Wednesday, that more than a dozen cities from. Newark, N. J, to Riverside, Calif, have launched significant programs to reform their sys tems of criminal justice be cause of Impetus generated this year by the Urban Coalition. Katzenbach, former U. S. At torney General and Chairman of the Urban Coalition’s Law and Government Task Force, said the programs range from re form of bail abuses, to job training for young offenders, to improvement _ of police-com munity relations. At a news conference in Washington, be touched on these local programs: In Newark, the Newark Ur ban Coalition is sponsoring a community-run project based on the Manhattan Court Employ ment Project, which provides training and jobs instead oft rial and jail for some young offend ers. The local coalition in De troit, the New Detroit commit tee, at Mayor Cavanaugh’s re quest, has undertaken a broad au<iic a.n.idKA’Jti w*. v..v < police - community relations program to recommend ways of improving and restructuring it. The Riverside coalition works with the local correction agencies to provide vocational training for offenders about to JlwkrtJlie | a STRAiHT kK fCEHTtJQKY Jhk )\ BOURBON JlOigl $11)10 ITte^il lif 1/2 GAL. I| JF # STMIEHTXIKTUCKY BSUXBOKWHISKY • 86PH00F • ANCIENTAGE OISI CO. FRMfOST. KY THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH, N. C„ SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1860 return to the community. The police departments of New Orleans and Detroit have announced they will set up de toxification centers modeled af ter the Manhattan Bowery Pro ject, which views alcoholism as a disease and alms at rehabili tation instead of the hopeless treadmill of repeated detention and release. The Denver coalition is de signing a project to reform ball procedures. Members of the Los Angeles coalition’s task force monitored the Watts Summer Festival inan effort to reduce tensions be tween police and the people at St. Augustine’s Roundup Gsmnia Eho Chapter of Delta Sigmas Theta Sorority at Saint Augustine’s College, will spon sor the season's second Fash ion Show, October 5, at 3;3C p.m. in the Emery Health and Fine Arts Center. Purdie Anders, director of Public Relations and associate of Development, at Saint Au gustine’s College, will attend the meeting of the Program Committee of the N 3. t tonsil A lurnnl Council of UNCF, which will convene at the Sheraton Cadillac Hotel, Detroit, Michig an, Saturday, October 4, at 9 a.rn. Nu Chapter of Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc. on thecamp- tending the Festival. In Bridgeport, Connecticut, the coalition has devised a pro gram to improve police rela tions with Bridgeport youth. Much of the impetus for these and other similar programs, Katzenb&ch said, came from an Urban Coalition conference of 70 municipal and local coali tion leaders in New York in April. He released a report of that meeting at the news conference along with a state ment submitted by him for the Urban Coalition earlier in the day to Congressman Claude Pepper’s House Select Commit tee on Crime. us of Saint Augustine’s College will present a Fall Fashion Show, Thursday, October 2 at 7;30 p.m. in the Emery Health and Fine Arts Building. The af fair is given in the honor of the Freshman Class. Fashions from Burton’s ar.d Nowell’s of Cameron Village will be model ed. HyftESTOfflC th« wily mattress with the ‘msrveioui midair for firm, nonuj comfart through the center sf the mittrws where the heavies? par! si ihe b*3y rests, free Parking—free Delivery— Open Fri. Ni!e» SOUTHERN SOUTHERN FURNITURE, inc. —SINCE 11 3 S. WiJmmgfow 5». • 132 « 11
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Oct. 4, 1969, edition 1
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