Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / July 17, 1971, edition 1 / Page 20
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6 » r THE CAROLINIAN PALEIOH, N. C.. SATURDAY. JULY 17. 971 \HMSTHONG’S FIRST INSTRUMENT - New Orleans: Teddy Riley of the Onward Brass Band stands solemnly holding the great Louis Armstrong’s first instrument - the eornet Louis played in the New Orleans Colored Waif’s Home Band - before returning it to its case. Police couriers brought the tarnished horn from the New Orleans Jazz Museum to a Sunday jazz tribute to the late Satchmo, where Riley used it to play “taps.” Museum officials say it will never be played again. (UPI). Ossie Davis Joins Jordan At Urban League Banquet PHII. A DEI PHIA, Pa. - Na tional Urban League Executive Biroctor-Designee Vernon E. Jordan, Jr., will outline ins views of the national civil rights scene and possibly sug gest now directions for theagen c in a speech at the July 28 annual banquet of the League’s Annual Conference being held at Cobo Hall in Detroit, Mich., Juh 2 5-28. Jordan’s speech will markhis li-t national appearance since beine named National Urban Leaauo Executive Director on Juno 15th. and will be his first m tjor address to delegates and < "i’si ituents of the National Ur ban League. He will join the a: 'nc\ it: January after com pletin' the 1971 fund - raising t ainpaign of the United Negro t "in • Fund, which he now li ads. Tin - 3 5-year-old lawyer and civil rights activist has been Geor ia field director for the NAAC'i', assistant to the exe cutive director of the South ern l!o ioii.il Council, and con sultant to the Office of Econom ic Opportunity. He won national Jk Two Local UtlHobs 740 S» Goldsboro • SKILLED TIRE | 237-7111 Tire Balancing - Wheel Alignment j ! DIAL - WE SPECIALIZE IN THE NEW j £**g| WRAP AROUND TREAD RECAPPING j f HyPMlff • WILSON -* NEW BERN » GOLDSBORO WILSON j midtown mi narms Recapping Wheel Balancing PHONE: 243-4962 iAMMIICAN) Cor Goldsboro & Green St. Wilson, N. C. Front End Alignment ! unuoemmmmmmmmmmmmumummmmumnmmmammammummmmmmmmmHmsmsmumammmk i Ponder Package Storo 1 400 PENDER ST. PHONE 237-MS? WILSON, N. C, For a Complete Line of Groceries *FISH ’MEATS ’WINE ’BEER ’CRUSHED ICE Free Hum Mhm WK SHALL QVIKODME smk§ WBm ml Wtm Csmff Am NDS 4 Member of Dardtn Mutual Snrlt! AMoalattoa Darden I*l ! fame as Director of the Voter Education Project of the Southern Regional Council, and has been executive director of the United Negro College Fund since mid-1970. Also speaking at the annual banquet will be writer, actor and producer Ossie Davis, who re cently electrified the Congres sional Black Caucus Inaugural Banquet in Washington, D. C. with his call for a Black sur vival strategy. Davis has achieved interna tional fame via Broadway, Hol lywood and TV, as a writer, lecturer and dramatic speaker, and as master of ceremonies of the 1963 March on Washington and the Poor Peopfe’s Solidar ity Caiupaign In 1968. Presiding over the annual banquet at which Jordan is guest speaker, will l>3 National Ur ban League President James A. Linen, who is chairman of the Executive Committee of Time, Inc. Awards and citations will be given at this concluding ses sion of_ the League’s annual conference, including the annual Ann Tannevhlll award to a Lea- Dr. Mays To Hod hsi For Sharecroppers Dr, Benjamin t. .Mays of Atlanta, distinguished scholar, educator, and champion of human rights, has been e lected chairman of the National Sharecropper Fund, it has been announced by Dr. Shirley E. Greene, executive committee chairman. Dr, Mays had pre viously served as secretary :reasurer. Long associated with move ments to help the rural poor, 'he was co-chairman of the Cit izens Board of Inquiry into Hun ger and Malnutrition and was a member of the National Adviso rv Committee on Farm Labor, Dr. Mays suceeds former NSF chairman Frank McCallister, whose untimely death on Octo ber 21, 1970, cut short an active career of service in the cause of world peace and the rights of the oppressed. Associated with NSF since its inception, Mr. Mc- Callister at the time of his death was director of Roosevelt Uni versity's Labor Education Di vision. Owens Dump* Temps Still See DETROITMich. - The nation wide search by Motown's world famous Temptations for a sing er to replace lead tenor Eddie Kendricks has resumed with the departure of Rich Owen-s, former lead singer for The Vibrations, who had been selected from a mong 300 applicants. Introduced two weeks ago at an appearance by The Temptations at the Los Angeles Forum, O wens had performed with the male vocal group on a proba tionary basis following a break in appearance with the Temps at the Twin Coaches Supper Club, East Stanton, Pa. Following the Los Angeles per formance a subsequent per formance at the Carter Barron Theatre, in Washington, D. C., the group decided the search should continue when Owens’ probationary period ended. Richard Street, who has been substituting for the ailing Paul Williams during the Carter Bar ron appearance, will continue singing with the group when Paul rejoins the Temptations this month, temporarily filling the vacancy left by Owens while the group continues its search for a new lead tenor, head to come Several Saint Augustine’s Col lege graduates and students have gue employee "for excellence and extraordinary commi 1 - ment” to the movement. The League’s annual confer ence is expected to draw 5,000 League delegates and distin guished representatives of la bor, government, industry, non profit organizations and the poor to Detroit, in this year’s larg est race relations forum. Among principal conference speaker will be Acting Nation al Urban League Executive Di rector Harold R Sims; U. S. Representative Ronald V. Del lums (D. Calif.); U. S. Office of Management and Budget Di rector George P. Schultz; U nited Auto Workers President Leonad Woodcock; Senior Eb ony Editor Lerone Bennett, Jr.; National Urban League Trustee and president of Americans for Indian Opportunity, LaDonna Harris, Stanford University Professor Richard F. America and National Urban League Trustee, Daniel H. Kruger, Di rector of the School of Indus trial Relations at Michigan State University. SHOP ROSE’S—Downtow n and Park- Wood Shopping: Center KNOWN FOR VARIETY AND VALUES You Can Really Save at Moses " ■■■■■■■"■l .M , Visit the Home of Muscular Cars More Than a Hundred to Choose From LOOK IN THE WINNER’S CIRCLE AND YOl WILL SEE DODGE A Complete Service Department COX DODGE ISM Mwy. SOI South— Phone 891-3131 Wilson, N. C, One Day Service Shirts & Dry Cleaning IT PLEASES US TO PLEASE YOU. ALTERATIONS—REPAIRS Friendly Cleaners §OS South Pender Street— Wilson 237-2878 K mm iii.imiij. !■——J —^ ——————on— fapeffe, Mississippi Receives $ 680,000 Gnat FAYETTE, Miss. - The town of Fayette, Miss,, has been a warded a federal grant 0f5680,- 000 to fund a two-countj Com munity Health Service Juh 1 Mayor Charles Evers his an nounced. If funds permit, an ad ditional $4.38 million can be ex pected bv mid-1974. Mayor Evers, the first black mayor of a biraeiaj town in Mississippi, celebrated his second anniversary in office on July 7. The two counties to benefit from the health service are Jefferson, of which Fayette is the seat, and Clailxtrne, whiclv adjoins it. The grant was made by the U. S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare . ed As k Lead Tenor obtained meaningful summer jobs in the Raleigh area. The 19- 71 graduates have been employed in the following areas. Miss Do rothy Jones is a summer intern at the North Carolina Correc tional Center for Women, at the reception and diagnostic center. Miss Jenny Peyton is’secrotarj for the Communitv Council of ' Wake County, Inc.. Miss Peyton ‘ plans to teach in Sept. Miss ' Phyllis Harden has a summer • position as receptionist for N. C. 1 Representative Henrv E. Frve. ' Miss Harden plans to attend graduate school in September. 1 Eddie Smith, a chemistry ma jor, is working with the North ; Carolina State Department of ' Agriculture, Chemical Analvsis j Division. Smith plans to pursue studies at Temple University in J September. John Monroe is a 1 counselor at the Central Youth. ’ Center. Monroe will study at the Howard University Law School, 1 Washington, D. C. in September, j Benjamin Neal is an intern at the N. C. State Institute Government 1 State Public Health Department. The students who are employed in this area for the summer are as follows: Chester Clack and Thomas Carter junior business administration majors. They are working in the Audit and Col lections Department of Internal Revenue. They will be employ ed with 1. R. after graduation. Lenwood Long, a senior socio logy major is a counselor at Polk Youth Center. There are a number of students who are working with the local U. S. Postal Service. Bob Mathes, director of Career Planning and Placement stated that the jobs listed are only a few of the many summer po sitions held by Saint Augustine’s students. J Health & Science Shorts Physician's advise that per sons with a severe cold or acute sinusitis should not fly Chewing and frequent swal lowing during descent may help the passenger whose ears get “stopped up A nasal spray containing phenylephrine hydrochloride (NeoSyne phrine brand, for example) can he used shortly before or dur ing descent to shrink the naso pharingeal mucosa. I'HL- W'i through Its Atlanta Re _ iomil office. I.ast y ear, HEW granted Fay ette 5132,00 C to plan the Com munity Health Service, The planning was conducted by Dr. Charles R. Humphrey, Jr., the town s first black doctor, who also server, as director of the Medgar Evers Clinic. The lat ter, supported by the Medgar Evers Fund, was founded in September, 1969. Since June, 1970, about 70 doctors from Michigan have served two-week tours of duty in Fayette, usually in three-man teams without compensation. As a result, the Medgar Evers Clinic provided free or low-cost medical care to about 6,000 patients in its ' •fist war of activity. The neyv federal grant will pern it both the expansion of medical services, including dental treatment, and a major outreach program to extend medical care to the most re mote parts of the two counties. 1 lie HEW grant enables the town to purchase five small buses for this purpose. In a letter to Mayor Evers, HI \\ noted that It had recom mended future support for the program over the subsequent four years, totalling $4,382.- 391, "subject to availability of funds.’ - Thus, in addition to the $680,000 provided for the first year, the following schedule recommended: second year - $1,072,139: third year - $1,136,- 467: fourth year - $1,204,- 655; fifth year - $969,130. The town is now constructing a multi-purpose community center which will, among other things, house the new clinic and health service. HUD provided a grant of $317,000 for this pro ject, and thr 'ocal share was funded yvith a SIOO,OOO grant from the Medgar Evers Fund, plus equipment. The new fa cility more than covers the re quired local share of $32,000 for the new HEW grant. ***** For the second consecutive year, the number of births in the U.S. has increased, after a downward trend which lasted from 1 957—1968. An esti mated 3,718,000 births were recorded in 1970. According to a U.S. government report, the rise can be attributed primarily to the increase in the number of women of childbearing age rather than to any increase in the rate at which women are hearing children. ***** Physicians advise that clear ing up dandruff also helps to clear up skin blemishes (acne). Dying—Orthopedic New & Used Shoes—Shoe Shines WE FIX THEM W HILE U WAIT Over 70 Years of Combined Experience Thompson Shoo Shop ENGLAND HINES, Owner Phone 237-7237 Wilson humh u-zz YOU’RE ALWAYS JUST AS VNj | WELCOME LOOKING AS IJko/lIU BUYING AT *** of iflaAonCMlllo. US|dffl Pnrkwooda Htarf %r WILSON STAR CREDIT STORES Just Say Charge it Mr. Star” CLOTHING FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY Fvraitart ftsrtlisr*, Tilavlsim, Jvvralry opposite SCL Station - Wilson, N, C. Shop the M. W. W&y and Save Open Until 9 Six Days A Week Closed on Sundays We Have A Full Line In Meats and Groceries Come and See PETE on Pettigrew Street M. ft W. BROCRY Pettigrew Street—-Wilson, N. C. BH«aPMßaiiMe^4»a>i««iww«a»aw^ Yes, We All Talk BY’ MARCUS BOULWARE ’’The determining factor In the 1972 presidential campaign may not be what the candidates say, but how, they sav it," .according to Professor J.'Clark Weaver, of Florida State Uni versity. He coneluied this fact after a 10-year study In " Psy chophonics,” or the Influence personality has on an Individ ual’s creation of his vocal sounds. We can draw this conclusion concerning candldaies on the trail. In the future, not only will the campaigners be ex pected -to know the issues and the answers, but they must be aßle to make their voices sound like the kind of candidate the voters want to elect. Professor Weaver adminis ters his voice test to students to Identify the weajc areas of their voice. He said that pol itics is not the only area In which psychophonics can be used. For example, some atten tion now is being given to po licemen trainees in order to help their voices. Thus they voice training in addition to pis tol-packing. Retraining the voice is fair ly easy, although for the stu dent it Is hard work and group effort Is probably the most re warding. I have told my stu dents that supervised practice helps to make the voice and speech more perfect. READERS: For my free pamphlet on discussion, semi two stamps and a long, self addressed envelope to M. if. Boulware, Florida A&M Univer sity, Box 193, Tallahassee, Fla. 32307. ***** According to the results of a recent study, the life events most likely to cause depression are death of a child, death of a spouse, a jail sentence, death of a family member, unfaithful spouse, major financial diffi culties, business failure, loss of job, miscarriage or stillbirth, and divorce. * * * Fayetteville State Univer sity’s 1971-’72 academic year will commence with registration August 25-27, EARN EXTRA MONET Wanted: One Hundred boys to sell THE CARO LINIAN in Wilson and surrounding trade zone. Apply at Pender Street Package Store, Pender Street, Wilson. N. C. All news and pictures can bp left at the above ad dress. * BEATING THE HEAT - Lorain, Ohio: Cool water gushing from a fire hydrant proved an irresistible lure to Margaret Noble, 3. Margaret romped in the unexpected waterfall until city workers, testing hydrants along street, returned to end the fun. (UPI). Urban League Holds Annual Conference Fourteen high-ranking Fed eral offfleals from Washington led by George P. Shultz, di rector of the Office of Man agement and Budget of the Ex ecutive Office of the President, will participate in the National Urban League’s Annual Confer ence scheduled for July 24-28 in Detroit’s Cobo Hall. Schultz will lead off the par ticipation of government JJ ficals by servflig as guest speak- CI die Conference luncheon For the Finest In Foods STOP AT QUICK STOP Self Service Gas COME SEE AND SAVE QUICK STOP South Pender Street Wilson, N. C. > i The Discount Store GENERAL MERCHANDISE CLOTHING. SHOES AND NOTIONS FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY C. J. NASSIF 116 E. Barnes Street Manager Phone 243-6232 Wilson, N. C. George Hicks Chrysler-Ply mouth FULL SERVICE DEALER WARD BLVD. & LIPSCOMB RD. WILSON BANK FINANCING PH ° N£ 243 ~ 2139 BARGAIN HOUSE FURNITUR! Wilson’s Only Discount Furniture Warehou. j • Largest Select!®! ‘Lowest Prlcti LINOLEUM RUGS $4.45 HIGHWAY 301 SOUTH Open 'til 9 p.m. For Your Weekend Specials Visit With Us Shop the Super Duper Fond Store and Save...Sov*...Sav*. I A Complete Line In Meat& and Groceries Swpe r Utiper Food OFF STREET Store PARKING I 603 S. Pender Street Wilson, N. C. ODELL TANT, Owner § on Monday, July 26. He will speak on "Effective Partnership in Funding” with Lindsley F. Kimball, Associate of the Rockfeller Brothers Fund and an Honorary Trustee of the Urban League, presiding. On Tuesday appearing at a session dealing with "The Plight of the Black Poor in the Crimi nal Justice System” will be Thomas Clark, Assistant Chief, Deputy Program Division of the Justice Department; Robert Foster, Deputy Commissioner, Y’outh Development and De linquency Administration; Ro bert Lamb, Community Rela tions Service, and Richard Velde, Associate in Adminis tration, Justice Department. Go To Church Sum.
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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July 17, 1971, edition 1
20
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