Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / May 20, 1967, edition 1 / Page 9
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f v ■ jk I I fl B M PARENTS VISIT Attending the Mother-Daughter, Father- Son weekend held recently at North Carolina College in Dur ham were, left to right, Mrs. A Tale Of Two Decades .. . • ■ ... is reflected in the DC-4 with which SABENA Belgian World Airlines began transatlantic service on June 4, 1947, and the Boeing 707 jet flying Belgium's colors today. Anniversaries are glad occasions and the line celebrates a particularly happy milestone 20 years of transatlantic service —on June 4, 1967. Founded in 1923, SABENA has 44 years of experience and is the world's third oldest air line. Since its fledgling trip between Brussels, Belgium and Kent .in Great Britain in 1923, it has grown to include 64 cities in 38 countries on 4 continents. In its far flung organization ars over 10,000 employees and more than 200 offices staffed with "local specialists" are maintained throughout Europe, the Middle East and Africa. In About Books 'SIPPI A NEtv NOVEL BY JOHN OLIVER KILLENS Saul Bellow has called John Oliver Killens. whose third novel. SIPPI, will be published by Trident Press on 1# • June 1967. "a writer of' gre#t hon esty. whose talent Is for soli dity and doing justice." He is widely held to be one of the most important and represen tative spokesmen for the Ne- Sioes in America today. In SIPPI. he explores the funda mental change that has taken place in the attitudes of Ne 2roes to white men and of white men to Negroes since the historic Supreme Court de cision to integrate the public schools in 1954 In scope, structure, and subject matter, this is his most ambitious novel to date. GORDONS GIN %?4/SQT/PI » GORDONS , w 'JC ou*m\Trtr* Jfoooi i » DISTILLED M JL LONDON DRY A. OLN F, dK DISIHUO » 10111(0 111 IHI US« l» W IH( OlSlltK*S COHfUlir limit! • W 1/*' UW. * 1 • H»l»lltip. HI t y W m 1 mi IBSESt* " - • '■'•"* ' low KIITMI SPIRITS DISTILIED f»OM OAIN. 90 PtOOf COHOOH SIW 01* CO. ITO.. LIMUI. Hi. Glenn R. WiWong, Hickory, with her daughter Frances Wil fong, a sophomore sociology major; and Donald R. Ingram, North America the line has 24 sales and reservation offices in the U.S. and 6 in Canada, as well as offices irt Mexico and Latin America. In looking forward to future decades of service to new generations pf travelers, and the exciting changes that the | coming super • sonic era por- I tends, SABENA, While keeping in the vanguaird of technical progress, will remain dedicated to being Europe's most help ful airline. SIPPI describes a political struggle, but dpsf£gp_by depict ing iti effects on"the lives of ordinary people. In it, Mr. Kil lens traces the ljves of richly varied characters from that momentous day in 1954 to the present A black boy grows up on a Southern plantation, is sent to college by the "nigger loving" white man (who sees every "good" Negro as Gunga Din), and finally has to choose between his ambitions for a career in New York and his loyalties to the struggle back home. A white girl. Southern, spoiled and clever, shares a room with a Negro in a north ern college and learns painful ly the real meaning of political commitment. Plantation work ers are evicted when they reg ister to vote: half a nation mourns the death of Malcolm playing host to his father, John Ingram Jr., High Point. Young Ingram is a freshman music major. Court Orders Dixie Union Admit Negroes NEW ORLEANS, La The National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo ple won an unprecedented le gal victory in this Deep South city, when a U. S. District Judge ordered a previously all white union to "admit imme diately" into membership Ne groes and Mexican-Americans. Judge Herbert Christenberry also enjoined the defendant Local 53 of the International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Asbestos Work ers from maintaining any of the following requirements for future membership: "Recommendation or en dorsement by p-'esent mem bers. relationship by blood or marriage to present members, election to membership by present members." NAACP General Counsel R. L. Carter and NAACP Associ ate Counsel Barbara A Morris had charged that the 275-mem ber union, which represents some 1.200 workers. had re peatedly refused to accent Ne groes or issue them work per mits, in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 banning racial discrimination Irt employment. The Asbestos Workers local is the sole supplier of employ ees for the asbestos industry in the New Orleans and Baton Rouge areas. The NAACP l'awyeis filed ac tion in Federal Court here last November and received a temporary restraining order against the union to halt a planned election that was called to circumvent the inclu sion of Negroes as mertibers. Legal sources and courtroom buffs contend that the prelimi- ( nary order won by the NAACP and the subsequent injunction issued by Judge Christenberry is unprecedented in a case of, this kind in this part of the country. The plaintiffs included a Negro, a Mexican-American and and a Mexican-American and a a white man, the last pf whom was fired from his job at Mc- Carty, Inc.. a contracting firm, when he sought to help inte grate the union. They filed complaints of discrimination X; and the Negroes' desperate struggle for full equality mush rooms throughout the land. The story moves from Missis sippi to New York and back to Mississippi again, as scene after scene teaches the reader never again to feel complacent about America's largest minor ity group. In 'SIPPI. John Oliver Kil lens evokes in fiction the prob lems of violence and commit ment that he has explored in nuemrous articles and essays written over the last few years. The violence in his novel may shock some readers, but it re flects his firm convi?(ion— frankly expressed in an article ho wrote for the Saturday Eve ning Post: "We black folk must never surrender one single right guaranteed to any other American. The right of self defense is the most basic of human rights, recognized by all people everywhere. In the psychological castration of the Negro, the denial of his right to self-defense has been one of iJae main instruments . . . Nonviolence is a tactic, but it must never be a way of life for the black American." These extreme views, with their con notations of "black power," may shock and alienate some readers. Nevertheless,- in Black Man's Burden, published in 1966, Mr. Killens expressed similar ideas in six trenchant essays, and his book received nationwide acclaim from black and white men alike. Sound Business Practices WRITING CHECKS SAVES MONEY By Wllford L. Whit*, D.C.S. WASHINGTON, D. C. ln business, where competition is keen and where success de pends on doing the little things well, you must know your trade. One area in which many small businessmen fall down is that of keeping accurate rec ords of financial transactions. It may seem strange, but many small businessmen do not know the proper way to write, record, and file cancelled checks. Most can get by wh«i it comes to writing checks that will be honored at the bank, but, for some, that's about it. HILLSIDE CHOIR IN CONCERT AT ST. MARK SUN. The St. Mark A. M. E. Zion Church School will present the Hillside High School Concert Choir in a program on Sunday afternoon, May 21, at 5:00 at the church. The Choir, under the direction of Ernest Mas senburg, will perform in honor of St. Mark's Sunday School pupils \?ho will be graduating from high school, business school and college this Spring. Superintendent of .the Sun day School is Guy Mazyck. The minister is the Reverend Law rence A. MiHer. Local Births Only one Negro birth was re ported to the Durham Health Departmet during the week of May 8 through 13: John and Eva Wilder, boy. with the Equal Employment Commission in March and April of 1966. The Commission found "rea sonable cause to believe that a violation of the Civil Rights Act by defendants had oc curred," and the NAACP filed suit. These women are looking forward to cooking this summer. \ » They coolcon flameless And the ovens are fully electric ranges. insulated, so oven heat stays So their kitchens are going where it belongs. .to be up to 16° cooler. That's why kitchens stay Because electric ranges cooler, and that's why cook more efficiently. Heat of these women enjoy cooking surface units goes right into during summer, what's being cooked, You can, too. Just see your not around it and into the favorite electric appliance kitchen. dealer or jg&jg Duke Power @ Too many small businessmen write checks that record no -e4ue as to their purpose and even fail to make out stubs. The check and check are important records. Successful businessmen code all checks sa that'they can be rapidly identified. The coding system need not be complex Indeed, the simplier the sys tem, the better. A system de vised by you can serve .-your needs as well as one devised by a Wall Street broker. When checks are returned from the bank after they-have been honored, they should be matched against whatever pur pose they were written to serve. The easiest way to do this is to attach the cancelled check to the bill it was used to pay. When this is not possible, a brief notation attached will serve the purpose. Here is a simple check list on * larl.f timely Tlr. [pi t. h#! p th til J m ° r * dw,nd * bl * " rv ' c * 'rem y.ur tlrn. f- V ( 1 M jli I ' OVER INFLATION ... a proven ( (B L r li /FT V'/ •■ki IS Contrary to common belief, too much sir ■ j a■H ■ I > i */'/.'/ Vj i 4H 4s destructive to your tires as too little elr pressure. V *\| Killf - ( \ 1 ' Wl* Over Inflation places excessive strains on the cord C I 9b ■zlsf | ' y jB bodv ,h# cen,#r ** crown ,he J H i * ftJ !!',> } > A REMEDY: Check inflation pressures frequently. MP U riWwtfiSl DON'T OVERINFLATE your tires. Use th* tire I ' H WffiA c I >✓/, k SjKßn manufacturer's recommended Inflation pressure for ', ■ I- i \ ' vour cart siz * and ,ype Using the recommended V ft D ' 1-1 \, f \ i pressures will produce maximum tire life. orotlicri ( 1 111 A > I ■ 7 /,r Although you may notice higher pressures when your Operation® Mgr. Wm\ \\ MMSMkym ( } s A 1 tires are hot, this Is a normal Increese due to heat 4 i\\\ ' m JKOSw-# * I and voor tire will still be within safe limits. When jf > ,h# *' res Coo ' inflation pressures will return to p. l f When overinflated, a tire is under constant stretch fcrs VOU th# fin6St .■* and is more subiect to Impact breaks, cuts and cenv/irr 1 ) iv.MgyßKHw bruises. Rubber, when stretched, wears at a more btRVICE On all itOmS r. • 'irapid rate than if relaxed as Is the case when proper . ( I alr pressurM ar# maintained. SOla, th® best PRICES Tires are engineered and built to hold a certain air pOSSiblfi and fltxibl# pressure for best performance. If you carry an TCDUC .... ( amount different from that pressure the tire cannot I tKMj. (W# hand I# J operate under the conditions for which It was made. f ' Closed Wednesday 1 p.m. • Open All Day Saturday J i RIGSBEE TIRE SALES ZZ » 108 Lakewood Avenue—272o Hillsborough Road 1 for businessmen who use checks as a regular part of their business operations— 1. Always fill in the date. Back-dating or post-dating of checks should be avoided. It's bad business and creates a bad image for you at your bank. 2 Write the name of the payee clearly. Always use the full, official name of the per son or the firm. 3. Write the figure of the amount to be paid clearly in dollars and cents. Put a period between dollars and cents. In addition, underline cents; for instance, SIOSOO. This elimi nates any possible confusion between slos.Off and $10,500. The same figures are used in both amounts, but there is a difference enough to ruin some small business firms. 4. Be sure to spell out the same amount that you indicate in the figure. Failure to do this can cause undue delay in the SATURDAY, MAY 20, i 967 THE CAROLINA TIMES— check being honored. This can be costly when bills are due at a certain date and, also, you may lose a discount. 5. It is Important to fill in your check stub with equal care—date, amount, name of payee, and purpose of pay ment. This information can be invaluable in the future. 6. Affix your signature the same way every time you write a check. When feasible, use a signature known only to your immediate acquaintances. A simple, routine signature is easy to forge, and your ac count may be drained before you know what is happening. 7. Match your check stubs with the cancelled checks from the bank. This will show you what checks are still outstand ing. If you add the outstand ing checks to the bank balance (make allowance for any bank service charge), the resulting figure should total the cash balance on your last cancelled check. Do this matching within a week after your check* come from the bank. It takes only a little time for a mis take to crop up, but it often takes a long time to straighten it out. An ounce of prevention is still worth more than a pound of cure. Colonial Declares 35c Dividend ATLANTA, Ga. Directors of Colonial Stores Incorporated, 428-store Southeastern and Midwestern supermarket chain, last week declared a quarterly dividend of 35 cents a share on common stock the same ;S last quarter The regular quarterly cash dividend of 50 cents per share was declared on outstanding 4 percent preferred stock. Dividends are payable June 1, 1967 to stockholders of rec oid on May 18, 1967. 1B
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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May 20, 1967, edition 1
9
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