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r H. C.. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER It. IM4
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>1 FRIENDLY GESTURE Lt. Col. Willia J. Hubert, who
ratfred thia month from the U. S. Air Force and aa professor and
tammander of the Air Force ROTC Detachment at AST College,
preeenta a eat ot flaga lor uee in the office of the AST College
Preeident, Dr. Lewie C. Dowdy, right, a gift from the Air Force
ROTC Detachment.
Miss Margaret E. Rogers:
City Native Memorial
Library Trainee In Md.
Miss Margaret Elisabeth Rogers
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ollla
Roger* of 1313 New Bern Avenue,
Raleigh, has been accepted by the
Prince Georges Cmmty Memorial
Library as a librarian-trainee.
T*-'- nv- f, r*t ? L luJi
by the 8 take a I Maryland,
Mm two e allege gradaatee
each year to participate la Its
training pregram. This year,
ieatroea of hiring a Negre
graduate, the chief librarian
■jarvtewed Mies Regers and
gTC%SS.^‘L“
Tha program beglne Rile Rap*
*750
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M BELLOWS 9 COMPANY 1
Av Ho sonm Aittie S/xc* 1830
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BELLOWS
CLUB BOURBON
Kentucky Straight Bourbon
■aOewiACik, Louisville, Ky,«KantuclvSt>aicht Bowboo Whakey-86 Proof
tember with Miss Rogers working
a year In residence at Prince
Oeorgee County Regional Library
as children's librarian. Next year
*in- will be given a study grant
of 14.200 to study at a School of
i-v«-4,vt. iui lit t msbeti
degree. She Is considering Drexel
Institute, in Philadelphia. Pa.
Mlm Rogers received her
secondary edueatlon In Ra
leigh. She attended J. W. Llg
on High School. Upon gradu
ation. she entered North Car
olina College at Durham. Be
fore graduation this spring,
•he did her practice teaching
In Library Science at Ligon.
BEHIND THE HEADLINES
BIGOTED BAUER’S HAIRCUT
HOG WASH
That bigoted’ Ohio barber who
recently closed and fold his shop
rather than accept Negro customers
gave, as his reason for doing so.
one of those all too common and
vacuous excuses that bedevil race
relations in the United States.
He claimed that certain
“special skills” are needed to
work on Negro hair. Such hair,
he claimed, presented “great
difficulties.”
Now if one la to believe this
barber, one needs be a mechani
cal engineer or skilled in operating
a power lawn mower to give
Negroes a haircut.
All that bunk about imagined
“problems” faced in cutting Negro
hair is just so much hogwash blurt
ed out to befrog obvious bigotry.
Furthermore, just what is “Negro
hair?" Negroes have different kinds
of hair just as many white people
do. Some Negroes have kinky hair,
some have curly or wavy hair,
and some straight hair.
All these Negro hirsute differ
ences exist, es course, thanks to
large infusions of white blood over
the generations.
It Is quite possible, too. that
some Negro barbers, fearing
Immediately after graduation.
Miss Rogers came to Washington.
D. C.. where she resides with her
cousin, a teacher in the D. C pub
lic school system. For two months
she worked as a sales clerk-U
--brartan in Bretano's Book Btore
in downtown Washington.
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2808 S. WILMINGON ST. • GLENWOOD VILLAGE • Nurthaide Center • CAMERON VILLAGE
loaa of mm of the* trade to
white barber ahopa, helpad to
apread and perpetilo the'
myth of “apeclal problmoa*
faced and “peculiar tethnlMW*
needed to perform halreute on
Negro head*.
This writer, who has a typo of
“Negro hair,” haa had haircuta o
broad—from Sweden and England
to Italy and Greece and from France
to Ruaaia.
THIS WEEK IN NEGRO HISTORY
An NFI Fenton
Sept. 6, IMS—Joel Augustus
Rogers author and newspaper col
umnist, was born in Jamaica,
Sept. 9. 1739—Slave revolt in
Stono, Ga.
Sept. 14, IBM—Bert WUUaas.
teacher of entertainer Eddie Can
ton, started successful Broadway
career.
Sept. 16. 1886—Claude A. Bar
nett. founder and director of the
Associated Negro Press, was horn
in Sanford, Fla. .
Sept. 18. 1808—The North Caro
lina Mutual Life Insurance Com
pany was founded In Durham, N.
C , by Johnson Merrick.
Sept. 18. 1850—Second Fugitive
Slave Act voted Into law by Con
gress.
Sept. 10, 1814—Oen. Andrew
Jackson acknowledge heroism of
colored troops In the Battle of
New Orleans and decorates them.
WE RE ALL EQUAL but differ
ent. and different but equal.
The barbers In those countries
many of whom bed never seen a
Negro, let alone give one e hair
cut—faced no “special problems.”
They sent out no hurried calls for
They expertly used the same tools
They expertly used he aametoois
they used on their white customers'
heads. They gave me some of the
best haircuts I have ever had.
Last year this writer went la
te a barber (hap la Maabal
O'^^^UwnMSTMHMI
m For Better Pay
Day or Night Classes—College Level
Good Jobs Aye Waiting
FOB )
Men and Women With Business School Training
Secretarial Science Accounting
General Business IBM Key Punch
FREE JOB PLACEMENT SERVICE
RALEIGH BUSINESS COLLEGE
5#7 E. MARTIN STREET RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA
REGISTER FOR FALL QUARTER SEPTEMBER 14
Area Code 919-828-3160 P. O. Box 1968
Nagra bafare. Ha gave m aa
excellent hstreat with Ms reg
“ How WM It?” I asked him.
“So easy, one of the easiest jobs
I ever did,” he answered.
Barber shops are public places
catering to the general public. Un
der the new Federal Civil Right:
law, they must accommodate all
members of the public.
Thera were never any practical
problems before In cutting Negro
hair—except in the bigoted minds
of certain mythmakers.
' WHEN EVERYBODY puts his
best foot forward, as each of us
does, somebody’s heel or toe must
be stepped on.
A SMALL CHILD surmises what
the parents would like to forget
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