THE CJUIOUmAN
RALEIGH. N. C.. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1971
2
CONYERS
(CONYINUBD FROM BACK 1)
ed as the senatorial nominee
most likely to defeat Griffin
dext year.
} Conyers noted that there are
no blacks among the 55 Demo
crats presently In the Senate,
although 85? f: of blacks who vote,
vote Democratic
CRJ CALLS
(cotmKUES rmoa* back »
lng Joyner to as staff
coordinator for the Task Force.
He said he hoped it could be
gin its investigations within the
•month.
“The explanation given for
jthe death of Brother Jackson,'*
jMr. Cobb said, “leaves num
erous questions In the minds
'•of many people. This Incident
the need for Black
Headers to conduct a national
investigation to determine what
direction Black people should
follov In alleviating the con
ditions that led to the death of
iGeorge Jackson."
Indications are that the Con
gressional Black caucus will
•take positive action on the pro
posal.
The Commission for Racial
Justice Is responsible for co
ordinating and mobilizing the
resources of the two-million
•member United Church of
■ Christ for minority rights, fair
employment, housing and edu
cation. A major effort of the
Commission has been opposi
• tion to capital punishment,
■• The United Church of Christ
’is a union of the Congregational
Christian church and the
Cvangellcal and Reformed
•churches.
THEY SAY
.fCONTDfUBD FROM FA*« 1)
“I’m going to register because
I lielievc one will have sorrie
thing to liis advantage by doing
•so. One has to vote in order
to exercise power."
'Karon Gibson, 19
;Miarrii, Fla.
]“l have already registered to
;vote. I feel that it is neces
•sary for everyone to have a
tvoice in government and voting
;is one way of doing it."
|Evon Sanders, 20
Carncr
•"1 registered at Garner Senior
Hligli School and I voted once
Hast year. Voting can lie worth
while it the majority of people
woto.’’
•Veronica Torrence, 20
•South Plainfield, N.J.
.'"Most definitely. I have al
lways felt that if hoys can !«
;sent to Vietnam they should
;bo able to vote and have a
•say-so in their government.
•And every little bit helps."
lAdoll Cl umpier, 20
jAsbury Park, N.J.
;“Tf I do register to vote it
•will have to be for a good
cause - somelxxly worthwhile.
.Jv haven't done so yet since I’ll
• he waiting to see if each cir-
Everything* For...
BUILDING
REMODELING
REPAIRING
* LUMBER
® MIU.WORK
• ATHEY’S PAINTS
* BUILDING MATERIALS
$ RUSSWIN HARDWARE
• At Our New Location On
RALEIGH BELTLINE
i Carol iM
Buildors Corp.
Between U. S. 1 and 64
Ph. 828-7471—Raleigh, N. C.
tpglassM
r
CONTACT LENSES
HEARING kM
Bniag- Your
Prescription to
|{ld g *m«y«
OPTICIANS, Inc.
FIRST JN THE CAROUNAS
MlHGE—Jwifwiora!
BttsJMinr
ISIffIGM- IM St m St
oases- flaßßgamw-t.g
CBRNHNMMi-CitAIILOTTC
Acmmimo.
OE A I ECTATE RENTALS—BUILDING
f\L Mt CD IA ! C AND REPAIRS—
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
lkiesinjLki/>» FIRE—HOME—AUTOMOBILE
INSURANCE SND WINDSTORM
Call Us For Information
ACM MALIYCO.
Phone 832-0956
129 fi. HARGETT STREET RALEIGH, N. C.
cumstance Is worth my effort;
My vote could be significant,
however."
Nydia Coleman, 20
Philadelphia, Pa.
"I haven't really given It any
thought. I think I want to re
gister but I’m not sure how
meaningful it will lie."
James Moore, 19
Louis burg
“Yes I will vote. I feel that
our vote will help change who
will lx? In office for the next
four vears.’’
ONLY BLACK
rcONTINUSD from if Aar. n
because their parents and
grandparents had to serve as
stewards is no proof that's the
only place they can serve.”
The 29-year Navy veteran,
who received word of his
selection last April, said of
his own appointment: "It meant
that I had been a success in
life. It made me feel real good
to’know that tnyjather, a hard
working man, and my mother,
who died when I was 15, had
not worked in vain on my be
half."
According to the interview,
by Lacy J. Banks, ‘Gravely feels
the Navy's new anti-discrimi
nation programs--not merely
his promotions—are enough
to sell that service to blacks.
The magazine attributed Gra
vely’s success to the fact that
lie “simplj- stuck it out," coupl
ed with qualities of ability and
diplomacy.
The magazine credited the
Navy with initiating many new
programs and policies to open
the doors of equal opportunities
to blacks. Such plans include an
end to the policy of recruit
ing Filipinos solely as
stewards; a plan to put 10 per
cent of all Navy ROTC programs
on black college campuses by
1975; naming new ships in hon
pr of blacks; assigning black
minority affairs officers at each
of 37 recruiting stations and at
each base; stocking of black
consumer goods in exchanges;
and increasing black enrollment
at the naval Academy.
It noted the success of the
Navy in recruiting blacks at
the Naval Academy, claiming
some 50 are now enrolled. How
ever it quoted one black mid
shipman, Ron Stanton, of Phila
delphia, who said, "The .situa
tion here (at Annapolis) is one
that blacks tolerate and cope
with." He claimed, "It'sthe lit
tle things that bother you -like
being labeled an extremist or
Communist because you see
some goal in Rap Brown or Eld
ridge Cleaver. But Pm deter
mined to make it, and I will."
Another midshipman, John
Porter, of Dover Del., said he
was gratified by local black
residents who congratulated
him on the street. "It really
makes you feel good and proud. ’'
And Forest Kirk, a fresh
man from San Diego, added, "It
makes you say to yourself, 'I
got to make it now. I’m going'
to make it for those people
also!"
Spearheading the new equal
opportunities policies for
blacks in the Navy, the maga
zine says, is Admiral Elmo R.
Z urn wait, Jr. Chief of Naval
Operations. "The two most im
pressive things about Zumwalt
so far as blacks are concern
ed comments Elxmy, "are his
frank focus on and admission
of the Navy's racial problems
and his strong active interest
in solving those problems."
Zumwalt told the magazine:
‘•Traditionally, the black mail
has had to work harder than
the white man to get ahead in
the Navy, but lie has been doub
ly handicapped. It hasn’t just
been a question of starting off
unequal. The black man has
had to move over into the white
man's cultural environment and
be better."
A Navy recruiter added, "Our
statistics are low because
blacks won't join. On the other
DIAL m-miUr
W*tcK deg cal fast *•»*?*»,
£s«« HMtioj Oil end Oil
Swrcm Strcict.
CAPITAL FUEL OIL
ICE & COAL CO.
; hand, blacks won't joint because
, they won't join the Navy, but
because they won’t stay in after
they do join.
HUMPHRIES
(CONTOTUBD FROM .BA9* t)
i turning and new faculty and staff
personnel attended the Presi
dent’s Dinner, the first activity
during the three-day Faculty
t and Staff Conference.
) Dr. Humphries, vice presl
t dent of the Institute for Serv
ices to Education, proceeded
to state that "Black institutions
of higher learning wore con
ceived in adversity; born in
j nain; and dismissed with gloo
; ful arrogance." ms very cie
• failed history of the education
' of Blacks, prior to and after
, ißbs, very accurauuj docn
-5 mental his contention,
f After looking at the mariner
t whites have handled integration,
1 and the growing rejection of the
1 system by young Blacks, Dr.
• Humphries emphasized that
> "Something is basically wrong
> with a society that finds nothing
worthwhile in the institutions
of a large segment of its pop
j illation," The closing of for
-3 merly all Black elementary and
■ secondary schools, the reduc
>‘ tions in status of Black prin
i cipals, the firing of Black
• teachers, and the current es
“ forts to gradually phase-out
t Black institutions of high
er learning, have put the pro
i cess of effectively educating
Blacks in a questionable state.
? Looking both at how the nation
tries to handle the process of
i educating Blacks and how armed
s troops handled the "May Day"
i confrontation, Dr. Humphries
• set that "The American society
has lost its humaness."
However, he stressed that
"What is at stake is not just
Black higher education. What
is at stake is the whole of a
democracy.”
, The following morning, Dr.
Humphries lectured on the pur
pose and importance of ISE in
aiding Black higher education,
especially In the area of cur
riculum development. These es
, forts are best reflected in the
nation’s largest curriculum e
vision and developmental proj
| ects through the Thirteen-Col
lege Curriculum Program. E
CSU participates in this pro
gram through the Five-College
, Consortium.
, While stressing the need foi
more relevancy in higher ed
ucation, Dr. Humphries expres
sed that since "It is impos
sible for any one person to
learn all that needs to be learn
ed In a four-year college sit
uation, institutions should rea
lize that students not only ned
to know and learn that which is
traditional in education, they,
1 also need to know and learn
about change and how to deal
with it."
"The emphasis should be on
how to solve problems, and on
the development of a set of
skills that will enable students
to function efficiently and ef
fectively in society," he ad
ded.
Dr. Humphries, who earn
ed the doctorate in Physical
Chemistry, from the University
of Pennsylvania, pointed out that
the "Five-College Innovative
it Thrust Realized that teaching is
just an important an aspect of
higher education as laboratory
research."
BURNS CROSS
(CONTINUED FROM FAG* 13
tim of a racially overtoned
cross burning on the church’s
lawn.
At a press conference last
week Chavis told newsmen that
around 5 a.m. (last Tuesday
morning) the United Klans of
America attempted to provoke
fear in the Black community
of .Wilmington by placing a cross
in front of our church. The
cross bore the initials U. K. A.
He said members of the A
frican Peoples United Front
Intelligence Division, an arm of
the African Peoples United
Front of North Carolina and
Virginia, were on hand when
a red station wagon, which he
claimed was the same type and
model used by the Wilmington
City Fire Department, sport
ing permanent state license
plates, stopped in front of the
church.
Allegedly, a white male got
out of the station wagon and
placed the cross in an upright
position in front of the church
entrance.
Rev. Chavis expressed the be
lief that white vigilantee groups
are on the offensive to destroy
Black people in Wilmington and
other areas of North Carolina.
"There is a federal Injunc
tion against all of our people
who have tried to speak to the
needs of our community re
garding the public schools in
Wilmington. Black schools are
still being closed and integra
tion is still working to the dis
advantage of Black people," he
said.
On hand with Rev. Chavis was
Rev. Leon White, head of the
N.C. Virginia Committee
For Racial Justice (under the
auspices of the United Church
of Christ).
When asked by newsmen
whether he believed in separa
tion, White said, "I most cer
tainly do believe in separation
of the races. One cannot help
/ but feel this way when inte
gration works hardships upon
the Black community that St
does."
hi making the cross burning
known, Chavis also stated that
the relatively new organization,
the African Peoples United
F ront, already has offices in
Granville, Bladen, Vance, War*
ren, Cleveland, and New Han
over Counties, with the cen
tral office presently In Raleigh.
Chavis went on to say, "We
today come as members of a
new Christian fellowship that
has grown out of the indigen
ous survival struggles of Black
people in the state of North
Carolina. The African Peo
ples United Front of North Ca
rolina and Virginia was born
out of the struggles of African
people during the last year.
"Highway patrolmen still
shoot down unarmed African
people and it is abundantly clear
that the federal injunctions ob
tained by the New Hanover.
County School Board were only
directed toward restraining
Black people from controlling
their own destinies,’’ he con
cluded.
The creed of the idoalogically
Pan-Africanist group says "I
believe that Jesus, the Black
Messiah, was a revolutionary
leader of African decent, sent
by God .to rebuild the Black
nation of Israel and to liberate
Black people from powerless
ness and oppression from the
white gentile world. I believe
that both my survival and my
salvation depend upon my
willingness to reject individual
ism and commit my life to the
‘Liberation’ struggle."
The headquarters of the A
frican People’s United Front is
in Raleigh; P. O. Box 1721.
Other offices include: Gran
ville, Vance and Warren coun
ties (the northern front); Bla
den and New Hanover counties
(the southern front); and Cleve
land (the western front). New
offices will be opening across
the state in the months to come,
Chavis said.
ATTEMPTS TO
(CGjrrmvm from paob n
being arrested; Ollie Donnie
Hooker, 19, 12 Chavis Way;
Robert Hamilton Austin, 19,430
S. Swain St.; Harry Dunn, 27,
Rt, 2, Wake Forest; Flovd Lu
ther Roberts, 23, 23 Smith Pla
za; Harry Lee Jones, 23, 13
Chavis Way; Frederick Douglas
Gartrell, 18, 592 E. Lenoir St.;
William Stokes, 23, 121 W. Len
oir St.; Luther Calvin Casey,
18, 612 Quarry St.; and Dar
nell Watkins, 19, 524 E. Har
gett St.
Maj. Goodwin described the
group as friends who "coopera
ted in crime," as he also stat
ed that more arrests are pos
sible when investigation into the
case continues.
One shotgun, believed to be
a robbery weapon, was found
according to Goodwin. Officers
to date haven't recovered any
other weapons or any of the sto
len money he said.
Several of tiie yoqng men ar-*
rested allegedly must support
hard drug liubits which were
said to be costing thorn from S4O
to SIOO each per day.
The suspects were picked up
at their homes or at places
where they were generally
known to hang-out. Hearings on
the charges will be held in the
Wake County District Court,
Sept. 27.
CITY NATIVE
(CONTINUED FROM FAGS
Central University, Durham.
He has done further study at
the University of Cincinnati,
Hamilton College, Clinton, New
York, and Biarritz American
University, Barritz, France.
Mr. Ilaywood was also a lec
turer in education at the Uni
versity of Cincinnati, and Mi
ami University, Oxford, Ohio.
He is the son of Mrs. Berta
Rush Haywood who resides in
the Oberlin Community, and the
Late Chosley Cabot ilaywood,
Sr.
He is married to the former
Mary Elizabeth Fields, daugh
ter of Mr.and Mrs. Spurgeon
Fields,' Sr., who also live in
the Oberlin community.
Mr. Haywood formerly taught
in Currituck County andFuquay
Springs, North Carolina, before
moving to Cincinnati, Ohio in
SHOT THREE
(CONTINUED FROM PAOt 53
times with a .22 calibre
pistol on \V. South St.,
around 12:30 a.m. Sun
da v.
According to Officer Kenneth
J. Johnson, he received a call
to go to the 300 Mock of the
street, where he*learned that
following a ‘‘fuss’’ over a game
of billiards (pool), Avery pro
ceeded to shoot Jeffrles-once
behind the left ear, once In the
upper right chest and once in the
left lower stomach.
The incident is said to have
occurred in front of John Sci
pio’s Recreation Center, 315 W.
South St.
Witnesses’ statements were
received bj the Raleigh police
Department, but wor** not re
leased to the press in he case.
A check with the jailer at
Wake County Jail Wednesday
morning revealed the fact that
young Avery is being held under
a bond, pending the outcome ol
Jeffries.
Mrs. Strickland, head nurse
at Wake Memorial Hospital
said, also Wednesday, that Jef
fries' condition is “stlli ser
ious."
Avery will face trail in Wake
District Court as soon as Jet
feies is able to testify tn the
case. However, should Mr. Jef
fries die from hLs wounds, the
charge will bo changed to mur- j
der.
FACES RAPS
fCOWTOfIJra FROM FAG* 13
sou oeiore tne episode, he was
charged with slipping Jackson
the gun which authorities say
the. convict concealed under a
Black Afro wig. To date Bing
ham ’ as not been found.
A request that the FBI enter
the case and warrant asking
that Bingham bo arrested and
iieia without ball were issued
by a California municipal judge.
Bingham was charged with al!
the deaths, except that of Jack
son, under a state law which
makes an accomplice equally
guilty of a crime.
Even though security is said
to be among the tightest at
San Quentin, Bales said lie was
convinced that “there was no
other way George Jackson could
have obtained the . death gun"
other than from Bingham. He
indicated that the attorney is
believed to have smuggled it
into San Quentin’s visitor’s cen
ter in a tape recorder.
Jackson was carrying the gun
when lie and another convict
burst Cut of the celiblock and
ran across a courtyard where
guards shot him from a gun
•tower, Bides said.
The district attorney said
Jackson received the gun from
Bingham during a one-hour visit
in a small room in which there
were no other persons.
Before entering the room,
Bales said, Bingham filled out
a request form to take a tape
recorder into his meeting with
Jackson, and when he entered
the room, ho was said to be
carrying an open folder of do
cuments.
As Jackson was being escorted
back to the adjustment center
after the conference, a guard
claimed that he noticed Jack
son’s hail' "looked somewhat
different."
The guard and another officer
started to search Jackson,
"where-upon he pulled a black
wig from his head and took
from it a 9-mm pistol and clip
containing live cartridges and
forthwith took the searching of
ficers as hostages,” the affi
davit said.
The case is similar to that
of the Marin County shooting
August 7, 1970, in which Angela
Davis was accused of murder,
kidnapping and conspiracy for a
gun she allegedly provided in
a episode which'left a Cali
fornia judge dead.
The charges against both
Bingham and Miss Davis were
filed by the same county where
Miss Davis is now held await
ing trial.
The charges against both par
ties involved furnishing guns to
Black revolutionaries for a
bloody attack upon the "estab
lishment’’, but not for taking
part in the actual killings.
Like Miss Davis, Bingham is
highly educated. A graduate
of Yale and the University of
California Law School, he is the
grandson of Hiram Bingham,
former Connecticut governor
and United States senator. One
of his uncles Is Jonathan Bing
ham, a Democratic congress
man from New York.
LOTT CAREY
(CONTINUED FROM FAG* !)
Washington, D.D.; Dr. J. J.
Freeman, recording secretary,
Norfolk, Va.; Dr. C.W.Wurd,
assistant recording secretary,
Raleigh; Dr. L.J. Shipman, sta
tistician, Youngstown, Ohio;
and Dr. M.G. Wood, director
of promotions, Baltimore, Md.
Dr. W.1.. Ransomo, Richmond,
Va., was returned as chair
man of the executive board.
In the Women’s department,
Mrs. Agnes Jordan, of Ports
mouth, Va., was elected for the
second time to lead this depart
ment. Associated with Mrs.
Jordan will be Mrs. Nettie Gait
her, first vice-president, Mr-
Keesport, Pa.; second vice-pre
sident, Mrs. Vers Slade,’Ra
leigh, N. C.; Mrs. Inez C.
Thomas, recording secretary;
Mrs. Alice Mckinney, assistant
recording secretary; Mrs. L.
S. Hobbs, financial - corres
ponding secretary, Philadelphia;
treasurer, Mrs. Ruby Marshall,
Washington, D.C.; historian,
Mrs. Jennie Hall, Washington,
D.C., and Mrs. M.A. H me,
Winston-Salem, N.C., chairman
of the executive board.
James M. Oliver, N.Y., N.Y.,
was selected to direct the Lay
men League and Miss Wanda
Hollinger, of Akron, Ohio was
choosen by the Youth to be
their new president. Mrs. Tho
mas Slater, of Phidelphla, Pa.
is their supervisor. M.1.. Wil
son ol New York, N.Y. has been
choosen to head a special com
mittee on convention structure.
This committee is to plan and
to seek methods as expanding
the convention's work on the
mission field.
At the Thursday night session
at Orange High School where
the women wore meeting,
a bomb scare announcement,
came while President Agnes
Jordan was in the midst of her
first annual address. Public
EAST LANE ST. APTS.
Now Ready For Leasing
TWO-BEDROOM LUXURY UNITS
CENTRAL HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING
Carpeting Throughout Apartments
Ranges and Refrigerators Furni shed
$125 Per Month Exelndinr Utilities
For further information call
J. HENRY BROWN 332-1811 or 832-ism
«—* •—*—*— 5— V • .MI Mil
noni.. ■danier Haywood, Raleigh native, to the position of Regional Director, M id-Atlantic Com -
niumty Relations Service, United States Department of Justice, in Philadelphia, Pa are shown
above. Left to right, front tow are; Mrs. Marian Jackson. Raleigh,and Mrs. Mary Havwood wife
ot Haywood. Buck row, from left: Mrs. Mary Haywood Spencer, sister of Haywood, Raleigh Hav
iSrmnin Augustlo! C ' "' U ° ° f/llay ' vood ’ s brother > New York City. The ceremony
Relations Director S.R. John
son, Jr., of Salisbury, N.C'.,
went to the rostrum where Mrs.
Jordan was speaking and ad
vised I)r. Sommerville, the
convention’s executive secre
tary that firemen, Orange police
bomb squad experts, emer
gency vans and fire trucks were
standing by for any emergency
after a brief conference with
the police, Dr. Sommerville
returned to the rostrum and ad
vised that the building be clear
ed. Under the supervision of
Mr. Sommerville, Dr. C.H.
Jordan, of Portsmouth, Va.,
Johnson and other convention
officals the delegation that num
bered more than two thousand
left without a mishap. Because
of this kind of alertness there
was calm and the meeting im
mediately broke up. The
closing session that had been
planned to be conducted at the
school was returned to Union
Baptist Church on Friday night
where a capacity audience that
overflowed was in attendance.
Dr. Paige in his first annual
address told the more than two
thousand delegates assembled
on Wednesday night that, "Man
knows more today about the
physcial world, than ever Be
fore. He has been allowed to
tap the secret veins of nature
and is now a voyager l>oth in
space and outer space. Man
has seen new visions, heard
new sounds and has at long
last learned how to defy the
laws of gravitation and to mas
ter some of the secret forces
of nature. But the world is
no better off spiritually than
it was yesterday.
Our convention has gone to
far with God, Mr. Paige con
tinued and advised his delega
tion that they must not turn
back. It is our responsibility
to use His plan to accomplish
our goals. We are challenged
to meet the needs of this cur
cial hour with love and pa
tience.
Nixon's Fopularify-
Defflocrats Encoisraged-
New left Party?
Jackson's Chance-
Washingtnn,!).(!, The latest
polls show President Nixon’s
popularity at a low ebb. Demo
crats are immensely encouraged
and Republicans discouraged.
But it is, of course, more than
a year until the next presiden
tial election, in which time the
comparative picture could
change.
As of July, a respected pri
vate poll showed Senator Ed
mund Muskie of Maine, a lead
ing contender among Demo
crats, leading Mr. Nixon by
five percentage points, 47 to
42. This alone means little
since there are so many more
Democrats than Republicans
but as a trend the poll reflects
a continuing decline in the
percentage of approval for Nix
on policies.
Some Republicans argue that
better than forty percent sup
port at this time, when eco
nomic conditions are unsatis
factory, is not bad. They can
also historically point to low
popularity ebbs of other Presi
dents in the year before an
election.
But obviously no G.O.P.
figure wants the percentage to
drop. In this connection, the
greatest fears are not concern
ing Vietnam but the national
AII There Is To
Know About * Afro J
Everything you’ve ever wanteu
to know about the Afro (but
didn’t know who it ask is an
economy and the recent Nixon
decision to stick with present
economic policies, which.some
feel are not working, produced
considerable controversy.
The White House feels its
economic policies will work,
and that progress will be seen
before Christmas, or by then;
this will have an effect'on
public opinion. But the White
House timetable on economics
has been wrong before and if
it is again, little time will be
left in which to correct the
situation before the 1972 elec
tion.
Meanwhile, the Democratic
Party may be losing some of
its left extremists in the coming
campaign. In a recent conven
tion of leftist party leaders
in New Mexico a joint national
ticket and an organization in
all fifty states emerged as
goals of some 250 delegates
from 25 states.
If George Wallace drains
support from the right, and a
leftist ticket drains from the
left, this could have a major
effect on the 1972 election.
The leftists say they will hold
a nominating convention in
November..
Though no- on > can yet say
how much effect a leftist bolt
would have on the Democratic
Party, the departure of extrem
ists mi gilt be a boost to more
moderate candidates such as
Senator Henry Jackson ot
Washington. Until now one ot
Jackson’s major handicaps has
been the conviction of many
that he could not be nominated,
since leftwing elements have
long controlled Democratic
conventions.
Muskie, is still considered
the front-runner, one reason
being the belief that he can be
nominated,anotherhis religion,
Roman Catholic, presently
viewed as an asset in the big
cities.
(Jur years of serving the bereavedwß^^^H
have taught us what is most import-gga^^^M^^|
ant in making’funeral arrange
ments. We are here to give you the l|l|l
haywoodl
FUNERAL HOME, INC™
Offr « JtaJf cictatr a# wrwaee to Retaigh and
R*leia* MiM&l AcmcmOmi
um ctn tmmM. mmmpmm wkm
»*< *. c*aAMwm m-$m \
swered in “All About The Na
tural, ’’ a 42-page illustrated
booklet from Clairol written by
Lois Liberty Jones and John
Henry Jones.
Written by blacks for blacks,
the authors tell it like it is
about today’s look...about Black
Is Beautiful...about “letting go
of other people’s beauty stan
dards and wearing a hairstyle
that Is a life stylo.”
“All About The Natural’’
jovers the history of African
hairstyles and Afro-American
culture, tells how, to* choose ajf
natural hairstyle and how to
achieve it by following easy
step-by-step illustrated in
struptions, The booklet discus
ses pressed and processed hair,
the “natural” of black cele
brities, and outlines a program
for the care and nurturing of
the Natural Look.
Lois and John Jones are both
noted in the fields of beauty
culture and science. As early
as 1952, Lois Jones was pio
neering the natural look. John
Jones, one of the founders of
the Harlem Writers Workshop,
is known as an editor, critic
and scientific journalist. When
the Jones team up with Clairol,
long the undisputed leader In the
field of hair beauty, the re
sults are bound to be all there
is to know about the natural...
in one handy book!
Issued as a public service
by Clairol, Inc., “All About
The Natural” may be obtained
by sending name and address
plus 25£ to cover postage and
handling to “All About The Na
tural,” c/o Clairol, P.O. Box
630A. Yonkers, N.Y. 10701.
71 Gal 500 2-dr.
H.T. ATUOPS
FBA/C 3299
Wiygul-Sanders
Ford
834-7301
401 DOWNTOWN BLVD.