Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Jan. 20, 1968, edition 1 / Page 7
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THE KNOvJ^ L—. **fV7 By Jean Kingsley, Women's Consultant, The Travelers Insurance Companies Be A Safe Driver How many of remember the last time you bought a °caf? Chances are, you thought it a pretty high price to pay. But, #whnt would ySii say ton car that cost $00,000? That's what it cost the Fletch ers! What did 2 this price? Mrs. FletcheT got a hack injury, and a the hospital. Mrs. Fletcher stepped into the family car one wintrv morning to go shopping. The road was slippery and she didn't antici pate thcTarge gasoline truck that swung out ahead of her at the bottom of a hill. .Mrs. Fletcher hit the braki. hard-and skidded into the truck with such force that gasoline (lowed into the street, ignited, and the fire that resulted damaged a nearbv store and restaurant. Of course, it's Unlikely that an accident of such magnitude will ever happen to you. But. each year, almost 4,000,000 people are killed or injured in the United States in automobile accidents. Especially in.bad weather.-when the woman'of the house spends a lot of time as chauffeurand errand-runner Behind the wheel, it's a good idea to be extra cautious. Women in the know keep their car? and themselves in tip-top shape all year rouml-and espe cially in winter. Bad brakes, had lights, and unaligned*-- wheels mean trouble. women know that \Voi**e^trouble may come when thc/ilriver is drowsy, ill or anjrry. Automobile insurance is al ways a pood idea, especially a personal automobile policy that includes all five of the' basic automobile coverages. Check with your Travelers man to learn more about the benefits kind of total insurance SPECIALS Special Purchase! Special Purchase! LADIES' Ladies' SUITS Untrimmed __ Assorted styles and COATS 9HI &«oo 24.90 ' jjllj I I STATE PRIDE j g Twin Fitted . 1.80 One Group Ladies' 68x108 .... 2.00 LADIES' .. BONDED Double Fitted 2.00 DRESSES WOOL SLACKS 42x38 Cases . 96c Value, to 12.00 Reg. 6.99 - Muslins: 63x108 .... 1.49 172x108 .... 1.49 Ladies' One Group Twin Fitted . 1.49 BONDED . LADIES' WOOL SLACKS DRESSES 81x108 1.69 Double Fitted 1.69 | R eg . 6.99 Values to 36x42 Cases . 80c 1 5,88 - . 3 - 97 -■ ' WHITE SALE ITEMS! State Pride Electric Blankets »» 9.44 Now 77c — 1 i State Haviland NBEGSQmSEH mM E3 r w ■ ivvm COVER GIRL —The above pho to of Mildred Ann Duffie, a Bethune-Cookman College coed from Winter Garden appeared on the cover of the January edition of the METHODIST STORY, a national magazine published by the Methodist Church in Evanston, Illinois. The photo was chosen from many submitted for the maga Minister Decries Self-Sufficiency JACKSON, Miss. - Rev. E. \V\ French, college minister of Living-1 stone College. Salisbury, N. C., and J pastor of Bethel A.M.E. Zionj Church, Concord, N. C., told an| zine's January Theme "Rpce Relations Sunday" to be cele brated by the Methodiat church during the week of February 11th. Miss Ouffie a native of ter Garden, Florida is a sopho more majoring in Sociology. She is a former majorette at Drew High School, Winter Gar den. audience of the Board of Bishops Ministers' and Laymen's Associa tion and the executive committee of the Woman's Home and Foreign Missionary Society that too many so-called church-people had reach ed the state of self sufficiency and that was not good. Rev. French was one of the original civil rights leaders, when the movement started in Alabama. He told the audience that he per- haps is now at the crossroad* of decision, as to whether the Negro wanted desegregation, integration and complete equality. He referred to the'fact that therel are young Negroes who say now! that they want to save the black heritage that was handed them by the founding fathers, which have been the foundation of the contri bution that the Negro has made to America's civilization. f, Dick Gregory Goes 'Broke' DICK GREGORY Talented comedian put his money where his mouth was in his fight for civil rights'. Not only did he give a fortune in money for the cause, but he also placed his very lite in jeopardy when he fasted for more than 30 days and lost >0 pounds. Also featured: "Flunk Dick and Jane," an enlightening article that tells why Negroes are excluded from American textbooks; "Who's Bugging You," the shocking article (hat lets you in on the "big steal" of your privacy, exposes your love life and makes it harder to get worthwhile jobs. Along the enter tainment line, Sepia presents Ernie Freeman: Man with a Record; School for Strippers where the girls go to leam how to 'take it off; and Carlton Johnson's long, hard fight for fame, in "Portrait of a Dancer." MRS. MILLER NCC Nursing ; Head to Be Feted by Ass'n Mrs. Helen S. Miller, chairman of the Department of Nursing at North Carolina College, has been nominated to receive the Mary Ma honey Award, presented biennially by the American Nurses' Associa tion for significant contribution to integration within the nursing pro fession. One of the highest professional nursing honors, the Mary Mahoney Award is named for Mary Eliza Mahoney, the first Negro graduate nurse in the United States. The 1968 award will be at the Ameri can Nurses' Association convention in Dallas, Texas, In May. Mrs. Miller was nominated by the North Carolina State Nurses' Association. The which originated with faculty mem bers of the Department of Public Health Nursing of the University of North Carolina School of Public Health, was endorsed by various local, district, and state nursing associations, hospital nursing groups, associates in nursing educa tion in several colleges and univer sities, and student*. The nomination of the NCC educator for the national award cites her accomplishments in inte gration of the nursing education program at NCC, a predominantly Negro institution. Since she joined the faculty in 1956, integration of faculty and students has Increased. Currently there are two white fa- 1 culty members and 17 white stu dents in the Department of Nur sing. About one-third of the 150 students who have received degrees from the department have been white. Mrs. Miller, under whose direc- j tion the NCC program received national accreditation from the Na tional League for Nursing, is cited also for her emphasis on quality in nursing education standards. Her efforts to upgrade the qut taty of nursing education and to integrate nursing education and ser vice have been consistent through out her career. She was the first Negro to be named coordinator of in-service education for nurses of the Fulton County Health Depart ment, Atlanta, Ga., in 1939. In 1949 and 1950, as area supervisor in maternal and child health for Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina, and Florida, she taught white and Negro nurses. In 1953, under her leadership as public health coordi mttor of the School of Nursing at Florida A A M University, Negro students were accepted for the first time for clinical experience in lo cal health departments. J T? \ jj^l ( j l "Negro Troops" New Book Title BALTIMORE, Md. Negro Troops of Antebellum Louisiana, a history of the battalion of frey men of color by Dr. Roland C:' McConnell, chairman of the de partment of history at Morgan State College, will be released this June by the Louisiana State Uni versity Press. An important facet of both Lou isiana and Negro history is ex amined in this 160-page account J of a Negro battalion that played a conspicuous part in the security and defense of New Orleans and the adjacent area prior to the Civil War. Dr. McConnell describes how these slave soldiers who served under the French during the In dian War emerged as a Battalion of Free Men of Color under the Spanish and climaxed their service under Andrew Jackson in the Bat tle of Now Orleans. A graduate of Howard Univer sity with a Ph.D. from New Yoik University, Dr. McConnell joined the Morgan faculty in 1947. His doctoral dissertation was on "The Invest In His Future Now, before he takes his first step, is the time for YOU to take an im portant step. Now is the time to invest in one of North Carolina Mutual's Educational Endowment policies in the name of the child who means so much to you. In giving any child up to eleven years of age this policy, yon assure his college education. North Carolina Mutual's Educational Endowment policy offers you one of the largest returns for the money invested. Wifh one of these policies you can he sure that when your child is readv for college vou will be ready to send him. Contact your North Carolina Mutual agent and find out how easy it is to own and give such a policy. T 0 •-»- \ • • "* " 1 ) Cll NORTH CAROLINA MUTUAL Tyi LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY MUTUAL PLAZA DURHAM. NORTH CAROLINA 17701 Negro in North Carolina Since Re construction." His research area has included early and late American history particularly the Civil War, Recon struction and Negro history. Sihanouk Says U. S. Threatens PHNOM PENH, Cambodia Prince Norodom Sihan ouk charged Wednesday the United Stales was threatening nis small country with invasion and was "flouting" a recent apreement designed to keep neutral Cambodia out of the Vietnam war. Sihanouk msde the accusation at a gala reception which was part of an exuberant welcome given President Tito of Yugosla via Tito arrived from Pakistan on a state visit after Sihanouk announced discovery of a plot by pro-Peking Chinese in Cambodia to kill both heads of state with hand grenades. Indicating he will be directed SATURDAY, JAN. 20, 1968 THE CAROLINA TIMES— neither bv (."hina nor the United States, Sihanouk said at the reception that "the faint heartedness of many countries allows the United States to continue its aggression j n Vietnam, to openly threatefi Cambodia with invasion by its armed forces and to flout ail pledges " "We have had a new example of this in the recent State Department declaration which oroclaimed cynically that the United States was not bound by the promise made by President Johnson's representative and in wh ; ch it reaffirmed its right to launch military operations nine miles deep into our territory," Sihanouk said. Sihanouk was referring to a Jan. 11 statement by McGeorge Bundy, special assistant for national security affairs, that 'he United States had not given up its right to pursue Vietnam Communist troops into Cambo dian sanctuaries. Bundy's statement followed by 24 hours an announcement by Sihanouk that he had reached an agreement with special presidential envoy Ches ter W. Bowles to keep Cambodia out of the Vietna mese conflict by increasing the role of the International Control Commission (ICC),. VICE PRESIDENT IN AFRICA —Jomo Kenyatta, the popular President of Kenya, dramatizes a point as he welcomed Vice President Humphrey to the Kenyk State House. To the left of Mr. Kenyatta is Daniel Arap Moi, Kenya Vice President and Minister for Home Affairs. The Vice President and 77 year-old Kenyatta held private talks of the economic development of Africa and Afro-American rela tions. PORTABLE LUGGAGE . . WRIST WATCHES STEREOS RECORD PLAYERS ~ DIAMOND 'RINGS ' * Sam's Pawn Shop 122 E. Main St. Ph. 652 2573 Durham, N. C. 7A
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Jan. 20, 1968, edition 1
7
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