Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / July 28, 1956, edition 1 / Page 8
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PAGE EIGHT •' -u- W»—’N »IW«—j . THINGS?YOUjSHOULD,KNOWj SHOMBURG JfcRH m SAN UUAN Pr-ÜBTO RICO, | EDUCATED IN THE DANISH WEST INDIES, | j | HE CAME TO N.Y.C, IN 1901. AS FOUNDER '. / J§ QFTHC NEGRO SOCIETY FOR HISTORICAL RE- f. \ '^/ y / If i SEARCH AND PRESPENT OF THE AMERICAN |f j NEGRO ACADEMY. HE TOURED THE WORLD WL SEEKING DATA’ IN 1926, HE. WON THE HARMON W’ AWARD FOR HiS WORK, AND SOLO HIS ENTIRE COL- Jp; LECTION TO THE CARNEGIE CORPORATION FOR *50*000! - • - —— r und For Republic Spends Millions On Race Relations I TAKE OFF I i THOSE I | "BUMPERS" | M%d me=- ~\ e coin© tssiyhoumo sou so tut sciNSßr* NOT rat XOADt Too see Ataefkft dnte-up when you travel in tb* low-cost luxury offe-nd by Greyhound*—on hon« deeds of trips like these; Buses One Daily Way Vcor York ~ ..... 17 $10.95 yen York 17 $10.85 Philadelphia .17 K.fin Chicago 3 19.40 Win?ion-Salem .. .. 3 2.90 Baltimore, 17 6.H0 Athnia 5 8.90 Ws.sh.mHon 17 8.75 Cincinnati 3 13.25 Detroit 3 19.35 Bichtnond .......... 17 4.10 Pittsburgh 12 12.95 Goldsboro .......... 8 1.45 Norfolk . ....... 5 4.05 Fayetteville .17 1.60 Henderson 15 1.10 A-k vonf Gmyhouert »R™l, ether ’tf.wel ejttras like Y* TkL Ft.ANN JMG SERVICE, LOW COS . C HAR T E RS no d ti n, *;*»Y’”* package express service. Union Bus Terminal 217 W. Morgan St. Phone 5536 tti'd aF<yrnm if fhsfx frss />*i BSHHEI Detroit e«« m@t# m»«* Os Femily Try • ch«eMng amount for ymir perswial **©ess FIRST-CITIZENS BANK AND TRUST COMPANY airraMiwif">irnii«ni ran min iinn ,i mvusta/ummrjmaieKSnrjHHßM nwnw*j •»"if#? 1 j CHICAGO rANP I The Fund j for the Republic, created by the Ford Foundation in 1952 with two immediate projects • to do re search into the extent and nature of Communist activities in the U. S and to evolve a clear statement in contemporary terms of the legacy of American liberty is expend ing more and more of its millions for the betterment of race rela- j tions. Robert Maynard Hutchins, presi dent of the Fund and former chan cellor of the University of Chicago, reported recently that during th< pasi. three years, $5,414,201 had been spent, to support activities de signed to ‘’defend and advance the principles of the Declaration of In dependence and the Constitution." Since its very start. The Fund for the Republic has been under almost constant criticism by small but vocal croups in and out of Congress w hich op j posed its directors, staff, aetiv | Hies and tax-exempt status for j a variety of reasons. The controversy between the Fund and its critics has many fa cets Part of the criticism is per sona? and.- political against the Fund's officers, notably Paul G. Hoffman and Hutchins; part is iso- I lationism vs. international co-oper ! ation; part is caused by different •: concepts of a citizen's constitution -1 al rights and obligations; part, and , 1 this is likely to increase in the fu ; turn, is :o different approaches to F the question of Negroes, j The Fund is granting more mon- I j ev than ever before to a field it ■ calls equality before the law and ' i equality of opportunity". This is »; the racial and minority group 1 1 problem, m the- North as well as > i ’ ! • SLvtesMfflk MiiH Ti' ITWITTT 1 r -J ; [kje/Y :Y. ■: >s dw ’f.| ; j PF SPARING GREEN VEGETA ,' BLES To prepare fresh green ' • vegetables for cooking, discard any ; bruised, wilted, or yellowed outer leaves, and cut off tough or dried stem ends. If you are preparing kale, strip leaves off the woody midrdis in the South ! In this field the Fund had made | its largest cumulative grant $455 • ; 000 b the Southern Region;.! Coun cil with headquarters in Atlanta, j Ga. and interracial boards and staffs in 12 Southern states. Hoffman said the Fund started its school desegrega tion studies before the. •su preme Court decisions in 1954. Tile report made public by !! .: ' chins showed the amounts a Holed i to various groups for racial Gudios. : Many of the av arris wore to church ; groups. Hoffman told reporters that an; : such group that could produce a ' practicable program for hettei mrni i of race relations could got a grant i from the Fund Typical of the way the Fund has ! alloied grants arc: $176,600 to t.hi i American Friends Service for edu ! cationa! work in the District of I Columbia, for job opportunities fe; Negroes in North Carolina and | Texas, and for an Indian program in the southwest: $50,000 to the - AACP's legal Defense and od ;; a- : . tiona! fund: SIOO,OOO m Vandei hilt 1 University for a bimonthly race . i ialions la\v reporter publication; : $50,000 to the National Urban League to expand employment op- 1 ; portunilies for .Negroes in tF.c South; $23,000 to the Cat’holit in terracial Council of Chirac.? to w , duce racial discord, mostly ovei housing, in Chicago. The Fund has expended $105,221 during the pu f threi years on tch vision and radio programs. One of ' these projects is a documentor-' film in preparation for TV use , showing how St Louis lias met the problem of segregation in its I schools, j | Wash vegetables thoroughly, us | ing plenty of water for !<•-. | greens Lift vegetables out of the j | water instead of pouring the water ! j off (he vegetable. That way. grit, j ! which settles to (ho bottom of the ! pan. isn't poured back over the : ' vegetables, | Soak Brussels sprouts and broe- • j roll SO minutes to an hour in cold i salt water to remove any insects ; ■ in the tight leaves of flower buds i | QUICK COOKING FOR BUST : : QUALITY Cook green vegeta- I htes quickly for best, quality, i Use ts cover on the pan to speed ; cooking and cook until vegetable 1 is just tender and still slightly crisp. Lons cooking makes the veg- 1 etable limp, and changes color and j flavor. WINDOW WASHING Wash windows with warm soapy water containing a few drops of kerosene and a little bluing for extra spar kle. A bottle-washyig brush dipped in suds picks up dust from corners j of window pane molding. Rinse j with warm water and polish dry i with a clean, lintless cloth. ! Dust Venetian blinds weekly 1 with a lamb's wool duster or vac- I uum attachment. Then tilt the slats down and wipe with a eloth or I sponge wrung almost dry from ; warm soapsuds; repeat with slats turned up. When necessary, im : merse blinds in a deep washtub or bathtub full of warm soapsuds. Scrub tapes on both sides with a j well-lathered brush, ami lift the | opened blind up and down through ; suds and rinse. Drain, wipe, and j let blinds hang free while drying 1 to prevent tapes from shrinking. I SELF RULE FOR AFRICA I IN 50 YEARS PREDICTED • GENEVA <ANP> Arnold J. Toynbee, English historian, pre dicted last week that ‘it will he surprising if a European minority is still dominant in any African! ! country 50 years from now | A study oI Wisconsin dairy *ei- j : enlists showed that cows in "good' j i condition at calving produced an ] ! average of 2,000 pounds more milk I ! than those In ‘fair” condition. 1 College Prof Authors | Seek Do Religious Life i' TALLAHASSEE G. Edwin Covington, an asrlrtant. professor of religion at Florida A and M University, is the author of “What 1 They Believe," a pi evocative an alysis of 11h religious and ethical concepts of modern youth. The 109-page hook was published by Philosophical Library of New York City, one of the major pub lishtng house.: in th< rotuvtyy, The K<*v. Mr, Covington, on the \ and M faculty since 1950. was graduated from Tai ladcga College with the v it. ISiti cauHi'r y .: ’_ M i fT -f -ite' ansWRS /’-: ~-.f v ,r s ;y Y - : l; •* sfvyC i'. QUESTION: What's the cheapest • way to harvest corn for silage? LSoyd Price Hits Hotel Coiiilifians NKW YORK. iANF) ~~ Hcir-l j condition:-; that performers have to j put up with on the rood are dls : justing, said blues monger Tdoyd ! Price, who spends most of hsr time «>n ohe-night u»uis and •■en-Lit • himself an expert on the >;i.yeci. And to make nuiftcrx worse he athhui. the owners tell you to take what they offer or Set out They adopt this at-ti tude he explained, bee a use most towns have onl> one no tel and the next best Hurts: would be to sleep in your ear if you turn down % room pulous hotel U'A'M- ; who )r!C)t ijp . coming to town.” Priro sakb ■; iitayf fi u f.i- ■ *p • . •• i and when 1 took my stage clothes : out of my sinteaw, hundred* of Calf Show Set For .lag. 2 On St. kug. Field RALEIGH -- Four-H Club .slid : NFA memhr:-! from Wake and Johnston Counties will hold their fourth Dairy Calf Show on Thurs day. Aug 2. on the athletic field i of Seim Augustine's College. The show is sponsored annually ! bv the agricultural workers of the ; two counties and financed bj the ; , Raleigh Merchants Bureau. re' - which G. Wesley Williams is eg . ecu live secretary i A t 930 a.m greetings will he i brought by Dr. .lames A. Bover. ; J pr'-stdi nt of Saint Augustine's. R. j j I, Wynn dairy specialist of A and • : T -.VI!: give a -ho;!, dem- i I onstraiion on the quality points of | I a good dajiy animal. J. D. George, j | dairy specialist of State College, j j will serve as the official judge, j The committee L composed of, j W. C. Davenport and C. L. Boone, ! Wake extension agents:.! T. Locke, i T. J. Culler, G. L. Laws, Leroy I 1 Burton, B, T. Wilrants and W. L j ; Grahaii}. Vo-Ag teachers, all of ! ! Wake County; i-- - - -w-ev.wvy I LIGHTNER’S Funeral Home I ! 24-HOUR AMBUkiANCK SERVICE j Ca 11... TE 3-1676 * . . 3 TFIE CAROLINIAN degree, from the Yale Divinity ■•school with the B. D. degree, the Hartford School of Religi ous lidiHMtion with the M, A degree, and Teachers College. ( oltimhia flniversity with the v. lyi. degree. The Rev, Mr. Covingion serv'd with the Chapi.-uns Corps of tb» V, S Army during the World W.e- j If with the rank of captain. He has j I taught at friul Quinn CoJlege, W,-. - I ; Tfand as a write-' of Fur,- j ; day School litc: a hue for the CM i'C j Church in J nek son. Tennors: e li" { has pastorud in Key West, Flmi'i::, i , ANSWER; If you have enough corn, a foragi harvester. In the Piedmont, with labor at Si rn hour, i a power take-off harvester if, ec onomic."'! if you have as much as ■OO tons of corn. Ts labor costs less, ray 60 rents, you won Id have to have 125 tons of corn h-fore it would pay to buy a forage harvos i ter. QrR:~T;ON r : How Inns' does it j fake to cool egg : to 69 degrees? ANSWER: Ts you put them in a wire basket and plaec in a room with a me (><•• .tiiiv <>f 6f» degrees, il wdi take six te seven hours. Frys .mould be at this fumporatllrc -1" fore packing into cases or car tons. QUESTION: How important is it to top and sucker tobacco? ■ ANSWER: North Carolina farm ers lose S3O million n ’ ear by fail ing to top and sucker, says Roy Bennett, extension tobacco special ist Topped and suekered tobacco yields 270 pound- an acre motv than tobacco not topped and suck ■ • red, tests show. -n- irf-ft-nurmniiTiitin nr it r «i riiiii>n«w»a»mi».'iiiiii i ■ viiiirnu n jhiii .ii.j i : TIE FINES iOTEL !NEW.. j .. MODERN Air Conditioned j l l / 2 Miles North on U. S. Highway 29 CHARLOTTE Owned and I Operated By Race People Any child can quickly learn to .... ki e,- MAUS Piano Co. 430 Fayetteville St Phone 2-4 RBI Solon From ‘Deep South’ Criticizes Jazz, Especially ‘Dizzy’’ Gillespie s Style WASHINGTON >'ANP. F.lk-n ; the senator from i.-suA: ■ l ;s. s(il! has his dander i! r> about 1,1 ; ■ jazz medium particularly »s u is expressed inslrumentally by Diz zy Gillespie and his cote; k- Jazz, to the sen au i . i no' a nr. tional asset, and even if it happens to be dispensed by th< great Diz G. His im ■ I r,,ithei-st of i age jazz anri Diz came at a wri meeting of tin; senate approprta gf ;’; *. ' sr • , j CI Kentucky I W.S-: l ,j ; JyM Bourbon j jQp Whisky LQfJ $4.35 4/5 q " I „*% M*s . f i I Sr-w s<*73 pins | ■ nmmißvw^ 1 ' i J St touiivim mwru£«‘ Lp; ':r f—— , 1IM „—, —i 'IS y "•--’■••e. ...-.I- . sS****-'"' KENT UC K Y SIRA iG H T B6UR BO M WH! SK Y E A RLY T IM£S D iSTILLERY COMPANY L© U ISVILLE 1 , KENTUCKY • 88 PROOF iiiiwiMiwnwiiwui—»<iimi*rrnr~tiinnimnriri rnrin 1 r-i -: iwrwt"' i. •5 . i : ■' i liiJS ■ ||i || >-< C P. & L to double supply of electricity by 1965 meet#?)*. '•*■••:- >*KWf ?•. '■■-.■• yy Ay • -v?.>y r* • • *... ••• • .' . . .-.: •/•••O', .y •:•■•■'"•:■' ’ _.■ ’ •'; .• '■:•>•■'■■• • \ :.••■•• v.: :v' v y V. v i : • - ;". ;■• • •;< '«££ y : A ••ip- ' < 1.. ,yu »_~x~. ~ ... * * When you buy another appliance, or your family increases,, you need mor* electricity. And ii's always ready and waiting at the end of the wire. That's because CPSL, as an independent, business-managed power com* pony, is always planning and building ahead for your future needs. There's no waiting for an act of. Congress or for tax money from the Treasury. By 1965, CP&L expects to have twice as much electricity available to its customers as it has today. The money to finance t -a new conr.burlier will come from thousands of individual investors who ni: have cgn'inc-nre ir the business management of American Industry. (CAROLINA COMRANY J mwaMinwM -i -.■-»• ■ v. ——• -•-...... z'-esvianw.-i nu--ra.- WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, JULY 28, 195 ft ; tiers committer where state and i | other department officials weir | ' ked $» million in funds for a i special international program, i arliei. the house of rc.pre seniatiers hat! slashed the ro tjiii’st ht It covered “Mcfrtio lor artistic and aih lelic presentations. This includ ed ii ifeOt) to finarin appear a ores of 11. S orchestras a hroad. Dep.i; Intent .spokesman declared that ‘'American jazz is one of our ; assets.' adding that reports of Git i lespie's appearances in Lebanon. 1 Pakistan and other countries were ’ highly favorable, ‘winning friends i for this country " At ihis point, Eflenrier h ok- tr io r-ck, ‘Did you get any criH ; risni?" i "No,” was the repjv, “except ; Iron, people who weren't eole ic i get tickets-.'
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 28, 1956, edition 1
8
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