Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / July 27, 1968, edition 1 / Page 14
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6B —THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, JULY 17, I#6B ||^K.Vk^^H3^| \ -MTT& *IU 1 fl I , V Jgf J JH ■■ BT I L/L HWB ffi ■■ fla I -- - Jmlßm Hv 9 ■ ATTEND COCA-COLA USA SEMINAR!"— (Atlanta, Georgia) Thomas C. Law, Jr. (center) vice president and general sales manager for Coca-Cola USA, is shown inspecting a market sur vey report with Ulysses Stud still (left) of the Palm Beach, Florida; and Milton Gerald Corn Products Co. Donates Grant to SFF ATLANTA, Ga., - A SIOO,OOO grant has been made to the Southern Fellowships Fund by the Corn Products Company, Dr. Samuel M. Na brit, Executive Director of the Fund, announced today. The grant will be used over a three-yeafc period in the Fund's program of fellowships for graduate study for faculty and administrators in colleges and universities attended pri marily by Negroes. In presenting the grant, Com Products Chairman, A. N. Mc- Farlane said," One of the trag edies of our times has been the inequality of educational op portunity that has stifled the talents and frustrated the as pirations of a large segment of the American population. Through this contribution, and through out other widespread activities in the educational field, we hope we can help close this educational gap." Dr. Nabrit stated that the program of the Fund would be significantly enchanged by the grant, and that through it a large corporation like Corn Products Company, could par ticipate in a vital program to strenghten the faculties of these institutions, to enliven academic instruction, and to produce a larger cadre of pro fessors with terminal degrees. One hundred eighty-three (183) fellowships were award ed by the Fund for the 1968- 69 academic year, he said, with approximately sixty per cent (60%) of the recipients study ing toward doctoral degrees. Com Products, although pri marily known as one of the world's leading food proces sors, is involved in the know ledge field through three sub sidiaries engaged in programs to help improve the employ ability of the hard-core un employed and underemployed. They are MIND, Inc.; Woolman Systems, Inc., and information Science, Inc. The firm also participates in the Summer Fellowship Pro gram of the National Urban League. The Program, designed to improve educators' know ledge of bow Industry utilizes the skills they teach, brings faculty members from predom inantly Negro institutions to Jobi at many of the nation's summer months. 11M Southern Fellowships Fund is an agency of the Council of Southern Univer sities. The Couiadl was organiz ed in 1962 and now comprises nine (9) institutions . Duke, Emory, Toutsiana State Unhrer *ty, Rke Tuiace, VanderbUt, and the Universities of North Garattu, Texas, and Virginia. The Fund was established by faota. Dr. Nabrft was ftxmetiy junKm* of Itaaa Southern the Mamie hn j 4M. ■ I from the Grensboro Coca-Cola Bottling Company, Grensboro, following his address to a three day marketing seminar held in Atlanta, Georgia recently. Participants in the series of meetings included bottler mer II ith In llnliiiii Ictcrit : New Way With Chicken & & Jtßt jfcyyM^r Z Pleasing: to the palate; beautiful to the budget; always plentiful and everybody's favorite. What could be nicer than chicken for dinner? As a change of pace from familiar broiled-fried-roasted bird, try giving your next chicken dinner an Italian flavor. It's easy—with the help of the Progresso Italian food section at your local supermarket—and it's sure to be popular. After all, Italian cookety is America's all-time favorite food import. Best of all, this tested recipe is good enough -'for guests—and easy enough for a family meal! POLI.O AI.LA MARINARA (CHICKEN MARINARA) , 1 3-pound broiler-fryer cut into '» cup Chlanti quarters 2 teaspoons salt 4 tablespoons imported Italian V» teaspoon freshly ground pepper olive oil ' IV4 teaspoons oregano "i cup chopped onion 2 tablespoons flavored Italian H cup chopped celery bread crumbs 2 large cloves garlic finely chopped 12 pitted and sliced ripe olives 2 8-ounce cans Progresso imported 8 ounces fusilli or any other pasta Italian peeled tomatoes 3 tablespoons butter 2 cups chicken broth undiluted 3 tablespoons chopped parsley Wash chicken pieces and dry on paper towel. Saute chicken in hot olive oil in heavy skillet a few pieces at a time until browned all over. Remove chicken as it browns. In same oil saute onion, celery and garlic about five minutes, scraping bottom of pan occasionally to stir in chicken drippings and prevent burning. Add tomatoes, broth, wine, salt, pepper, oregano and chicken pieces. Simmer, covered, about 25 minutes or until chicken is tender. Add bread crumbs and olives and cook five minutes longer. Meanwhile cook pasta as package label directs. Drain well and toss with butter and parsley. Turn pasta into serving dish and arrange chicken on top. Spoon some of the sauce over the chicken and serve the remainder in a bowl. Makes four servings. FREE POLLARS^gg With Each Claim Check For 3.00 or Mora In Dry Cleaning Brought In Mon., Tues. or Wed. thin Sonrtca EXAMPLE: Hit* I ntU I I__ SHIRTS eleaneS at tti regular price I I L> •f S3.M and w« wtll refund I I BrmwM H Mm. rn ONE m EE DOLLAR! , Q T»«».-W«4. Lm» j I I dorW A Finland I(1 jj (In Units *f> Yoar alothii look bettor Ul (j I **•' ** loafer! Colors brighter with U U U "Marttnfadnf," the most In | I J SIK SIJW Dry Cluudsf . • . and yw 111 ■arc. too! Opm 7 MU " TOM'S Sh (M. Mill* Ml ft I mminim .* Nfl TMI HOST IN DRY CLEANING *"■ (•»». Perm MM IB I——m»i— ri—in nan raw OAlßoone if A 86 PROOF KENTUCKY R9BB STRAIGHT BOURBON fhl Pffin WHISKEY »2 50 *4°° 7" nSZmmmmwmm £, PINT 4/5 QUART CHARCOAL FILTERED ■| THE Srf ' 010 BOONE DISTIUERY chandising and sales represen tatives, fountain sales territory managers plus account execu tives from Coca-Cola USA. Cer tificates of attendance at the seminar were awarded at the conclusion of the meeting. Coca-Cola and Shriners Give Scholarships for Qualified Grads ATLANTA, Georgia - The establishment of a college aid scholarship for qualified high school graduates was revealed recently in a joint statement made by Imperial Potentate John Henry Hester of the Prince Hall Shriners and Kelvin A. Wall, Market Development Manager for Coca-Cola USA, sponsors of the scholarship award to be presented to a selected male student by the Imperial Council, the govern ing body of the Shrine. Hie winning high school senior will receive the scholar ship grant on the basis of his college board examinations, leadership qualities, and the de sire to pursue a college educa tion. Student screening assist ance for the selection of a recipient will be provided by the National Scholarship Ser vice and Fund for Negro Stu dents with headquarters in New York City. NSSFNS is widely recognized and acclaim ed as a leading educational organization dedicated to pro viding counsel and financial COMPARE!!... ... Ounces... Price.. fQuality... CQJCC "'ln Half-Quarts Soft Drink Buy V"'-, : WTMED^ H * MAREA Hr ||uft DURHAM COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. —————B^——^— help to deserving college hope- Alls throughout the a Ails throughout the nation. Applications for the scholar ship will be made through local Shrine temples. Imperial Potentate Hester expresses this statement: "In this rapidly changing world, there will be fewer, and even tually no Dlace, for the un skilled and fewer even for semi skilled persons. More formal educational and specialization are wanted and needed. Prince Hall Shriners must assist young people to achieve these goals." In commenting on Coca- Cola USA's participation in the scholarship program with the Shrine and its member Temples, Wall stated that the purpose of the activity was "to provide needed funds for deserving young people who could not otherwise afford to begin a college education." Announcement of the 1968 scholarship winner will be a highlight of the Imperial Coun cil sessions to be held in Mil waukee, Wisconsin, August 19- 24, 1968. POLITICAL CONVENTIONS FEATURE MOBS, MADNESS AND MANEUVERING I, ...... ,1 . /,/( ' i.,.,..1 .1 .1, , •' pviii r It could only have happened in America and during the special daftiness of a national political convention. And it did. The time: 1948. The place: Philadelphia. The speaker: Mrs. Emma Guffey Miller, self-styled "Old Gray Mare" of Pennsylvania's Demo cratic regulars. Climaxing a woman's club speech on "world peace." plump, out landishly-hattcd Mrs. Miller gestured to an aide who flung up the lids on hampers containing dozens of pigeons. The bemused and befealhercd conventioneers, however, refused to take flight, forcing the Old Gray Mare's deputy to heave them frantically into the air. Once airborne, the pigeons went berserk, flapping on the rafters, clinging to draperies, committing nuisances and harassing such onstage dignitaries as Alben Barkley, Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and President Truman himself. When one herd elected to land on Chairman Sam Rayburn's bald head, he swung his gavel wildly, igniting the sort of pandemonium that has become part and parcel of the nominating game. -The incident is just one of sev eral described in an article on memorable political conventions of the past appearing in a spe cial July 5 issue, of I ifc. The magazine is now preparing depth coverage of the August conven tions of both the Republican and Democratic parlies. Proving that convention she nanigans can fuel a kind of mass wisdom, Ihc Republican conven tion of 1860 saw Lincoln trailing Seward by l\Vi ballots on the lirst ballot. While Abe's backers traded shrewdly for votes, Lin coln's grassroots supporter, who had lugged fence rails to Chicago as evidence of their faith, com menced howling in the galleries. I hc roar continued unabated un til Lincoln was nominated. One observer wrote, "Ten acres of hotel gongs and a tribe of Comanchcs might have min gled in the scene unnoticed." Lo comotive whistles, cannons and church bells began a clangor which went on for 24 hours. Examining the absurdities and shortcomings of the presidential convention, as well as its unique relevance and importance within the framework of our nation's political life, LIFE magazine, in its special July 5 issue, "The Presidency," recreates the atmos phere at conventions from the early days of the Republic to modern, air-conditioned and tele vised times. John Fitzgerald Kennedy is credited with having rewritten the book of tactics, if not the book of strategy, for successful conventioneering. "No candidate before him ever indulged in so long or relentless a courtship of county politicians and convention delegates (four years of Christ mas cards, personal messages, personal calls)." LIFE writer Paul O'Neil adds that no one has ever "managed so accurate and penetrating a surveillance of delegations—spies for every state, telephones at every floor station, hour-by-hour checks of every change in group sentiment, daily reports on the reactions of every individual dele gate." Documenting the sound ' and fury of delegates in convention and the antic and Machiavellian processes at work, the LIFE story concludes with a penetrating ob servation by Russian-born Moisei Ostrogorski. He concluded that a conven tion—"ls,(MM) people all attacked at once with St. Vitus' dance"— is certain proof that God in his infinite wisdom watches benevo lently over drunkards, children and the United .States of America.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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July 27, 1968, edition 1
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