Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Aug. 29, 1964, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THE CAIOLDfIAK RALEIGH. N. C„ SATURDAY. AUGUST 29. IH4 4 Editorial Vie wpoint WORDS OF WORSHIP Often Jesus *u not always in the crowd* that flocked to listen to him. Re had bis lone hours of withdrawal when, in communion with his Pathei. he refilled the deep reservoirs of hi* strength and love. Toward the end he was more preoccupied. He knew months in advance that If he made an* other Journey to Jerusalem his fate would be sealed; yet he never wavered in his decision to 50 Years - An Achievement The golden anniversary of the Raleigh Fun eral Home ie a Signal achievement in the changing world of business with its many cas ualties. Founded fifty years ago by ten people who. thoee of humble circumstances, bound themselves together and began a business that baa met the challenge of time and competition r -through progressive, and aound management. Located first in the Masonic Building, cor ner of Cabarrus and Blount Sta., later at Ca barrus and Bloodworth Sts., moving again to an imposing building now occupied by the Y WCA and some 20 years ago it moved back to an expanded and modernized facility at 322 E. Cabarrus St. where it now does business. One of Raleigh’s economic assets, this busi ness has had the benefit of one management and philosophy for the greater part of its life. Its services, personnel, facility and equipment hgve been kept up-to-date. Nothing seems to be spared in seeing that ita clientele is afforded " It teems a* if educator* or politician* who are responsible for the training of the hands are evading, possibly unknowingly, the real crux of technical training. The so-called on-the-job training or Indus trial Cooperative Training as it will be known at the local J. W. Ligon Junior-Senior High School this year is evading the real need as is the 30-odd Industrial Education Centers in North Carolina. Educators of trades education know that there must he nepesssry equipment, time and properly trained instructors who can not only tell but show students the operations and techniques of any given trade, skill or craft in a school if it is to be promoted and controlled by a school. Before more tax dollars are thrown down the drain under the heading of industrial educa tion a head-on look should bf taken with clear • night at just what is needed and is feasible in the industrial education world. We would con tend for industrial high schools under which a complete training could be offered and a worthy product moulded. Industrial Arts or trades application course* should be reverted - to the fifth grade where students would learn early some of their interests and talents in the technical world and be directed accordingly. The continued begging of questions in train ing a reservoir of skilled peopla to supply ex Osteopath’s Mystery Needs Solution We have in each of our nation's commu nities medical practitioners known as “osteo path". and for soma reason their practicing priviliges in hospitals never seem clear. Most certainly It is confusing. Just recandy the Florida Cabinet ducked when asked to order the University of Florida Teaching Hospital to accept patients sent there by osteopaths. The Cabinet threw th* “hot potato" into the lap of the Board of Con trol over Florida's institutions of higher learn ing. Until the present, no action has been taken upon the case. Wa have read dosens of similar stories of Hospital privileges being denied to osteopaths. Many of the reasons given are illogical. The U. S. Department of Health defines "osteopathy" at “the school of medicine, or the art and science of prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of diaeaaea and injury which majors in manipulation and include* drugs, surgery and other specialties of the healing arts." Education requirements in terms of years are same for the osteopath and the medical doctor: four years of college, four years of os* taopathie (or medical) school, with additional yean of training if a specialty is added. On* year of internship is required for genera! osteo pathy. For aoasa reason, prejudice against th* os teopath has been made manifret. There are few places in this country where oateopathie and medical doctors practice together, and af ten the AMA frowns upon it This prejudice or bias lad osteopaths to establish their own U th* medical doctors have a complaint to Whitney Young's Leadership . Whitney Young, Jr., national director of th* Wtm League, doesn’t turn "tha world upside down" with demonstrations; but when you ■trip pour evaluation of tha “showmanship” of other leaders Ilka Jamea Fanner of CORE and Dr. King*—Young to rapidly rising to the fore front as a forceful leader. Thto man Whitney Young explains his phi tn|Ay lor tha Negro In a book which he au thored under the title To Ba Equal and pub- Htef for McGraw-Hill Book Company. 80 far. wo vontuio to aay that thto to the beat book h? • Negro on the subject of dvfl rights. ' Withfal foam 354 pages, one finds a contarae thre racial approach which is moderate in tone, affirmative to Mi prapoaato. eloquent in moral apfinal Aa one reviewer points out, tide book fw-teilly the owed for white Americans to involve themselves to On Negro revolution ” rax motto png a**** am SKSsW2Hrs=t‘£ ,i 2: wit r--*?*— •—*rr-\ Who Sets Criteria? mslu the Journey. Standing out ea it. his mind filled with ths approaching conflict, his shoulder* burdened with the whole worlds’ need, ha beard his name called out from the roadside in thrill, unfamiliar tones, and a Mind man said. "Jesus— Jesus—thou son of David—have mercy on me." And the Matter responded to the plea. •11 of the services, courtesies and economies at its command. C. A. Haywood, Sr., its president his sons and other associates at Raleigh Funeral Home have the plaudits of The Cabounian and should have a salute from Raleigh and Its en virons for long faithful years of outstanding service. Instead of showing any wear and tear of year, Raleigh Funeral Home seems to blossom forth with freshness and added zaal in staying young in spirit, mellow in experience and fun damental in it concept of the best for the least. It affords this newspaper modi pleasure in Its long years .of service, through which it has seen many rough roads in the Raleigh busi ness community for many of its colleagues, to •ay congratulations for a job well done and beat wishes to the fine people at Raleigh Home in the years ahead. peetsd Industry and continued growth In B progressive world is expressive and should be objective. Courses as set up by IEC are baaed on a certain number of students. This is bArdly a foundation from which to set ■ technical program, however, there could be poeeibiHtiae should the location of the schools have been more aeeeasiblc to urban population. Event ually we hope persons in charge of setting up schools for technical training will take into consideration the major element involved . . . the trade or craft in which students are to be come a working part. A good tradesman, like a good professional man or businessman, must have die needed time, place, instructors, tools and machines to be trained. He must master a definite performance of production in a given time of acceptable quality. His aptitudes and abilities in whatever area he chooses to train himself must be ascertained along with bis in terest. To afford the beet trained people in the technical fields we believe North Carolina ed ucators might reevaluate the way in which they are approaching this vast world. It is much too important to our young people, to ouf economy and to our expected technical growth to underestimate the value of proper place, tools, time and personnel to experiment too long in known quantities make against die osteopaths, it cannot be made on the basis of laxity in requirements to practice. In obtaining a license in moat elates, the oateopathie and medical doctors taka tbs •amt basic science test the first half of their examination. The clinical second poetise as tha examination is given by two different boards of examiners, however. Criticism of osteopathy, In tha second place, cannot be made on the premise that tha ad* ence has no historicity. Osteopathy was founded in the 1890’s, based on tha premise that disease is caused by interference with nerve traaamiaaion. through seme disturbance or deformation of th# body’s mechanteal In tegrity. The '■■rly osteopaths bslievad healing eould ba ad d by manipulation iwnolty of tha ■pine. The art of healing called ehbopratie began at tha same time, based on the asm* theory, and chiropractors today atQl base thrir prac tice upon this original premise. Chiropractors in Florida, for example, may not prescribe me didne or do surgery. However, osteopathy has ehangad to inctuds soma spheres formerly only In the areas of mo dictn* such as surgery, obstetrics and drags Many osteopaths rely much leas on manipula tion today. The oeteopetha have Sad to publish hill page pieces in newspapers explaining thair au thenticity. because of tha prejudice against them. If osteopathy is a legitimate and legal science in this country, we cannot prsndt bins to deny these practitioners tha use of our hos pitals. Otherwise, we should abolish the eeiencc of osteopathy altogether. Tha American white man has beard again and again the Negro’s need for batter educa tion. housing, jobs, ate. But Mr. Young erys ta liras for white readers tha extent as "the de privation gap" which has to be abridged. Thus, whites sat the Negro's problem from a differ ent viewpoint With wisdom. Young roan daw tha entire fieid at race relations, shedding th* fight of reason ableness on everything ha dtoramsa. Ha never rants, rtoammrts or even raises his voice. Ha a n_ _ -_ o s —a a— nftpi fvakf morn itsiips. nut ncvW in nfciunng fashion. Tha claims ha mahaa for tha Negro rests firmly on tha principle of justice and e quality inherent in tha U. 8. Constitution. Ha doesn’t damn Mgrigatl unfair but ha points out that to the world of tomorrow to which two thirds of the people will ba nan-white, tt will handicap the white child whs has been raised to believe in whits supremacy. Jnsf For Fan ST MARCUS B. BOULWASS VACATION'S OVER school was «*w oa August U, sad in a tew days wa shall ba starting Ml over again. Wa report to work at Florida A * M Univarsity on August 2nd on ths trimester plan. Sometime ago I mentioned that I was working for ths ad vanead certificate in cpeech pathology issued by Etc Ameri can Speech and Hearing As sociation (ASHA). Whan re ceived this certificate will cer tify I am competent to practice speech pathology (speech correction) without supervision. All directors of •pMoli ind huriaf should held this type of certi fies ta. Since graduating tram tbs U nlrarslty of Wisconsin with a Ph. D. degree la general speech, and since about MM I have hsan taking these additive! rnnrsw for ffMHeptVti As certificate really means that one in theory has earned at least the M. A. or M. S. degree In speech pathology some 60 odd ONLY IN AMERICA BY HARRY GOLDEN THE SEOEEOATIONIST WOMEN The white segregationist who works to hard protecting Southern womanhood has a einglelarly thankless Job. In fact, ths segregationist muss has curiously failed to provide the American scene with an articulate woman mokesman. I do not mesa they bars not provided their own Eleanor Roosevelt This they aren’t going to da Ths wartime Republicans produced a Clare Booth Luce who gave the lan guage such expressions as “glp galoney” and “OX Jim" and who almost suoeumbed some yean later to poisoned paint ohimatly applied by Italian workmen to the oeillng of her villa where she was serving as Nor have the segregationists produced sa Oveta Culp Hobby at ths Elsenhower Repubie&ns. Mi*. Hobly. who WM the first Secretary of Health, Welfare and Education in Elsenhower's cabinet once explained the shortage of Salk vaccine with the oomment that no me could have foreseen the demand. Mr*. Oeorte C. Wallace’s public comments indicate only pride in her husband and I have yet to hear from Mrs. Orval C. Paubus. If Senator Eastland’s wife has any thoughts on the separation of the races, she keeps them to herself. Tet the civil rights advocates have produced a Gloria Rich ardson In Maryland and Olorta Baker Motley of the NAACP’d Legal Defense Fund and a Baptizes Poinsett* Clark It is trua the segregationl*t can point to the shouting wo men mobbed around the Little Rook Central High School and It ia trua that one of them screamed, “My Ood. they're letting the niggers In." It is true that the segregationist can collect women to shout at the Negro student arriving on Other Editors Say... THK BLACK BACKLASH Civil rights leaders who are their fact on th* pro posed “moratorium’' on mass demonstrations misjudge the tsnmsr of tbs Negro as gall as th* whits, In our opinion. Th# ao-eaUed hootlaSh Isn’t •setuatvaly the property o t the whits dttaen—reacting to his inner feeling that agitation for social change has gone too far, too fast In ttanas of boated contro versy it la the load-mouthed rabbi* rouaars who are Inclin ed to gat attention. These, a long with awn* well-intention ed civil rights leaders with act ually little acquaintance with oonrtlttaaa In city stums, have been doing a lot of talking foe such places as Harlem. Th# great, decent, respect able Harlem majority la Inco herent or afraid to get Into worm trouble by masking up. But even In tha uproar caused by th* riots, soma of these voices have come through. Pram these we Judge: The daaant majority is re santful of polios, not as much bsoauss they are too tough, but because they aren’t tough e nough. The polios have failed to put down open gambling, the open daps peddling and drunkenness In tbs streets where thair children have to play and ta walk to go to They want ta gat their chil dren Into desegregated schools, not especially because they want them to associate with srhlts children, but because a believe, right or wrong. tbs all-Negro schools are being neglected that no pro per effort I* being made to give thetr children an education. They want aooess to housing, not MDsalafiy because they want to “m far with wtetee but tranche whlah thsy m presently trap- These are human being#, ta arty and Injustice m human bates* react everywhere, re— gardlam of color. They have a Hon, thetr troubles with the aator as thahndda. which Settled tha poUca leSr t SwMe*to B be lt gmiS sMbas In those tense Haas*. In the summer of MM I task a course in "stuttering" at Georg* Peabody College for Teacher in Nashville, Tann.; ia summer, 1962, I earned nine hours in speech correction at Indiana University; two yean ago, I began taking eat course each term in speech pathology at the Florida State University —just across town Bern whan I (each. To date I have earned at PSU around M boon in this field and have about nine mors hours of work to take. TWO OF A TTWfc A Dutch man was explaining the red, white, and blue Nethariand flag to an American. "Our flag has a connection with our taxes,” he said. "We get red when w* talk about them, white when w# get our tax bills, and ws pay them ‘till we’rs blue in the face. “That’s Just how it is in Em United States," said the Ameri can, “only ws sea stars; too.” (Exchange) Ha-ha-hs—haass— "That’s not funny, oh boy." tbs campus to register. » Is strange that ha caimot produce articulation. In fact. Southern woman who are articulate tend to despise segregation. I sometimes sus pect. their Intelligence and forthrightness is inspired by their recognition of injutties. On the record, the Southern woman is absolutely unconcern ed about “mongrellxatton.” She doesn't even think about it. Bhs only thinks and writes about how cruel and misguided the Southern male ia apt to gat considering the Negro. A century ago. Mary Boykin Chestnut, the wife of one of Jefferson Davis's cabinet mem bers wrote. "Under slavery we live surrounded by prostitutes, yet an abandened woman ia sent out of any deoent house. Who thinks any worst of a Ne gro or mulatto woman for be ing a thing we cwb't name? Ood forgive us, but ours is a an inequity 1" It was a Georgia gill. Lillian Smith who, with her friend. Paula Snelllng, edited the first antisosregation publication be low the Maeon-Dixon line. If anyone can be said to have "discovered” the Negro writers of our oountry, it was she and Miss Snelllng in “South To day.” I have aeen on Confederate Memorial Day and In the heat of a political campaign the wives of Southern politicians look with shame and embar rassment at husbands promis ing to defend the home, wife and daughter, against the non existing sexual Incursions of the Negro. The ladles Indeed look as If they want to disap pear from that platform. Ia the open society, they have promised chastity, virtue and faithfulness and the hus bands are prophesying that if the State grants Negroes their constitutional rights all of this goes out ths window. which might provide the ex cuse for mar* such disorder. Indeed, thsy have a great deal to lose. Thsy have hops of a better life in the civil rights law end In other mas sums, both local and national, aimed at dis crimination. alums, unemploy ment and Inferior schools. This legislation Is to a wry gnat extent tha handiwork of the majority at Negro leaders of national stature who now urge a breathing spoil from mam The promise of this legisla tion may be false but even tha promise represents progress. Th* promise is more likely to prove false If impatient ro omers, plus congenital trou blemakers, continue to promote or eondone civil disorder which jxsvenujjhea* laws rom hav- THE MEMPHIS PRESS SCIMITAR war pat rom job? Republican Representative Robert Taft, Jr. should follow up bis Investigation of the United States Employment Service. Last week Rep. Taft leveled oritlohm at that agency for Its failure to do th* Job aa- tbs congressman was —jct\y is in Una wttht first hand knowledge of many em ployers and unemployed per sons who have visited this *- cency. Over the years thetr methods end technique# have bean flgr*» to question. Their Interest In making thair ope ration one at service to tha uianmunttT H hi doubt as wit nessed by the following stete ahe 'ZT BrttSsed* arT* lilanaumrt consetoua’’ A Job inter a native Cincinnatian, has said: *Tve never bean abis to get a Job at tha employment office." An employer hat said: -I have net been aMa to find qualified persons through this 44i-lkcy * tetetTto tbs Individuals speak ing. aMata ttwCtaeto^ Stt office of tha united Statro Mate aad*mttng tkatStJatMabratg A* tha y pSSjvjreu tea partteuiar UTM CALL BT EMORY O. DAVIE, DJL (For Negro Press tatnatisnat) “RELIGION AT TIB TOLLS" Tour years ago whan the late and gsaaUy k» mented President John P. Kennedy was establish ing a precedent as a successful presidential can didate of the Roman Catholic faith, many church leaders and followers of tbs Praatestant faith were Influenced by religious bigotry. At one point In the presidential campaign, Tt imvu*il that op ponents to a Catholic president wars winning their bigoted viewpoint Today, wa have a more deep seated “religious” Issue Involved In tbs campaign and tt to not based upon a nun’s religious faith—Protestant. Catho lic or Jewish—but on a man's BeßgVta If. by some stretch of the Imagination. San. Barry Gold water’s political philosophy ban be loosely called his religion, than we have a religious Issue in tbs X 964 campaign. Most of the nation's religious leaden and pub lications have, since Ooldwater’s nomination, con sistently and openly condemnad his stated posi tion on civil rights, nuclear control, extremism and anti-poverty legislation. Than same leaders and publicists have branded his position as “Un moral,” and have explained the necessity of . break ing long established precedent* to speak out an candidates When a candidate’s sxprugid philosophy to condemned as humoral." whether you Ilka It or not. you have a religious problem on your hands. Politics, economics, oybarnsttos, may or may not have anything to do with morality, but religion must yet bathe “watchman upon tha wall" wet calls nun to a God-fearing sense of morality and decency A classic ease of religious opposition to Gold water oomes from the Bishop whs baptised him into the Episcopal church and another whoa Ooklwater refer* to ao being the people, "to whom he owed most, next to hi* mother." so re ports Religious News B*rvto* Retired Bishop WB uam Scarlett says, "we seem, in our thinking to have taken opposite paths." Retired Bishop wai ter Mitchell says, that ha. “immediately wrote his friend (Goldwater) to inform him that they ware mils* apart on aoeial and political questions." NEWS AND VIEWS BT J. K BARREN “ALL WILL BE BUST ..." ROCKY mount Th* words of Martin Lu ther King. Jr. ring truer today Hun whan origin ally mokan "W* must moat HATH with BOOT#- FORCE" if wa are to win our whits toothers and our RIGHTS In this tttontte struggle to bring meaningful rectal EQUALITY to Amertra King’s words are tha answer to the challenge so atedar fully stated last weak by Pnddant Lyndon & Johnson whan ha declared that ALL America must exert Itself in this herculean task as bring ing true democracy to our land. We must continue to repeat this stem wanting "agate and agate” as our beloved FDR said during his triumphal years of bringing rececvery to American sconoasy dur ing the hectic thirties and early foftfos. Whether many of us realise tt or not, America —our own USA— is ta imminent denier of in in ternal revolution much after the fashion of a century ago. This Urns the Negroes. bates par tially free, are attempting to fight their own bat tle for oompleto freedom, with the aid of thou sands at syumpathetlc whites, hoping to avert bdoodshed; iiwplte of the holheadednam as Ne gro and white extremists who want to fight phy sically. and with reddest abandon regardless of the daman to all oonoomad Thoughtful persons of all reoas continue to plead for reoonoblonaas rather that reekismnsii in this freedom fight. There must bo sonesra for the welfare at the nation tempering our domonrts they he nom positions con sidered for him. Kmptapoea on courteous. hot M don't won tlm^Oto^avaflabto^At SHBt agenatei MB to have man JOto than they aw find people far. The feeling that Joho ore not SmSiwPtobtalnn toNrt'k *55? iaftomrili mpnaho Bishop Soartstt added thto Ooldwater’s stead on •till righto, tha antt-pavarty program end foreign policy “scares” )*■ Bvun non across the At lantic oomes the voice ol a renowned relliious , leader. Or. Martin Mtiaoeßir, saying, “Ooidws tei' means the eni cf t rtst* cf e f fe’rs t*»t « tnl give* hops for pans*." Christianity and Grids, a Protestant opinion Journal warns however. *Tt often sounds a* though Ooklwater regards himself as th# prophet of true religlan and of true morality ... The Christian Century, ona of tha first Proatoatant weeklies to oppose Goldwaterb nomination, now warns that thorn campaigning against Goldwater mutt act with moderation—“ Panic eould lead to his vic tory In November. For Heaven’s sake, let's rut make a martyr out of him.” 80, w* do have a religious problem in this -- -4 The settlement of a religious prc'j’.-m to a dear mandate to people who call th:.n.. *> religious—those who preach about a Go:! ,:d Father of all creation. Who loves the worU— ’.jc-e who dnosrdy practice a God-centered those whose only testimony may be. “I belttv in God.” If Playing to th* racist* and playing v h power and Ignoring the causes of so oiv.h abject poverty and mlnimtoing the needs o' o ir growing matobar of senior eitiasns to Unmoral, our role at tha polls in November is blatantly clear. Behold another new ALTAR—THE ALTAR O? POLITICAL MORALITY. Be ye, Republican. Dem ocrat, Socialist or Communist, this Is no ma te” for those who boast of their “label” but rathei a matter for those who have some content of God-fearing morality and decency, to ttond up and be counted as voters against expressed re ligious “immorality." It makes tittle sense to dt up In church %nd synagogue on days for worship seeking God’s help, and on one day In November going to the polls to vote for what Dr. John C. Bennet, president of Unton Theological seminary, calls in a recent editorial, a vote for "an Immoral nationalism, an immoral auelaar wreckleesnese, and immoral rac lan and an Immoral economic individualism that fails to taka account of tbs needs of the people who Inhabit our Cities. ” during tha struggle for a change of adtotetetfo tion or the continuance of the present leaders ta Dee Ca* which every colored person desires. That’s why our national Negro leadsre declar ed a moratorium on demonstrations until after tbs November elections so as to not fipthar In flame the pamhwis of our die-hard opposition, nor alienate our allies who are understandably Itchy*. Not one can rightfully blame or think the late of Atty-Gencral Bobby K for asking for a ’mode rate” Civil Rights plank until wa have exerted all our opportunities granted under prevaltng Civil Rights laws, not the least at which Is our FAIL URE to get our people to the POLLS In sufficient numbers to VOTE OUT our enemies and VOTE IN our friends or ambers of our OWN RACE GROUP. In that connection, TarhoeUa mould be proud that two colored men—Bull CUy banker John JL Wheeler, and Twinston-Salem mortician-fri ter - nallst Clark ft. Brown, are among our National Democratic State Committeemen for an improve ment). So let ua NOT baa cow nor bull which anil KICK OVER our pail of milk which Is steadily INCREASING each day; apd will continue to do ao. unices we keep on with senseless demonstra tions which win undo our aoerued gafiu. Let’s Increase our non-violence insistence, JOIN NAACP. even DONATE EXTRA MONET, so te can be really free Indeed and still alive in sixty five. Let freedom ring all over Tarbeella and the Southland) Then tt will ring all over American tha purpose Wa hope that Bob Taft moves to see that this agemy to over hauM and serves the function for which tt was design* il —THE CSNCSHNATI HERALD CARDINAL BtoDfTTBS Tbs Inlianslgsnl position of Los Angeles' femes Francis Cardinal Mclntyre on the Ns groqoaatian the deL fijs wtth^retaet nom* Ms*aiMHvJ , aMmUami| n nwttw as vttel as dvfl rights, and when ha pon ao to frocked priests for sermons In behalf of Metro right* Hi chancery office is adorned with slotana of the John Birch So* eiety. The lateet victim of bis wrath la the Rev William H Dußay who was removed from hts parish for hi* criticism of the Cardinal's failure to pro vide etvU right* leadership in this cractal period in American history. Cardinal Udntrye is next in One to suoeeed TS-yemr-old Francis Cardinal Spellman of Hoar lark aa chairman of the M* Wabopa of this country. Be BBawaflasig majority prmatoa am tar more_ ptopet* etoa an the otvfl righto itooe aai look to Cbicapot Cantons! Albert Meyer as tlMtr Me -T*B CfaCADO fioSStt
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 29, 1964, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75