Newspapers / The Tribunal Aid (High … / July 23, 1975, edition 1 / Page 3
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WEDNESDAY. JULY 23,1975 THE TRIBUN AI. AID jPAGE3 1 Jl CHURCH WHAT IS YOUR QUESTION Dying-Death-Estate Planning A. J. WOLFE RELIGIOUS AND FEATURES Democrats Name Countyf COMMUNITY CAN YOU HELP ME OUT? I WOULD LIKE TO GIVE MY BODY TO SCIENCE, BUT DON’T KNOW WHO TO CON TACT AND HOW TO DO IT. THANK YOU. (R.R.) You can contact one of the following and they can send you the necessary forms. It is advisable to have an alter nate choice of arrangement, in case at the time of death the body is not usable. N. C. Eye and Human Tissue Bank, Inc. Maplewood Avenue Winston-Salem, N. C. Wake Forest College Bowman-Gray School of Medicine Winston-Salem, N. C. Duke Medical Center Dept, of Anatomy Durham, N. C. University of N.C. School of Medicine Chapel Hill, N. C. WHAT HAPPENS IF A PROPERTY OWNER (CEMETERY PROPERTY) DISCOVERS THAT SOMEONE ELSE HAS BEEN BURIED ON THEIR PROPERTY BY MISTAKE? CAN THE CEMETERY BE MADE TO REMOVE THE BODY? IF SO, AT WHOSE EXPENSE? (IN THIS CASE, THE PROPERTY OWNER REFUSES TO SELECT A NEW LOCATION.) (M.J.) P.S. IF THE CEMETERY REFUSES TO REMOVE THE BODY, WHAT THEN? If the cemetery, by mistake, did in fact bury on the wrong property, they are responsible for the disinterment and the reinterment and must bare the expense to do so. First, they must secure from the Health Dept, a disinterment permit with proper authorization of the next of kin. If the cemetery should refuse to do so, then legal action would be appropriate. From your question it is not clear as to who is refusing to select a new location and why, because both would consider themselves owner of the property. Please give more definite information on exact ly what happened, why, and how long it has been. I then can give some alternate suggestions for a satisfactory so lution ot this unfortunate situation. IF IT IS TRUE THAT EMBALMING IS NOT REQUIRED BY LAW, HOW COME IT IS ALWAYS DONE, AND NO ONE EVER ASK THE FAMILY IF THEY WANT IT? (Mary) It would be most unusual for a responsible member of a bereaved family to instruct the mortician, in so many words to “embalm” the body of a deceased relative. The mere fact that the body is entrusted to a funeral establish ment implies permission to embalm. . . unless stated other wise. (Some religions do not permit it.) ***** What is your question? Direct it to; A.J. WOLFE c/o; THE TRIBUNAL AID P. O. Box 921 High Point, N.C. 27261 CROSSWORD Continued funding for Party operations. It has been hailed by Demo cratic Party leaders as a “fundamental reform in polit ical fund-raising”, broadening the base of financial support for the Party and decreasing dependence upon large con tributors and special interest groups. Half the net proceeds of the Telethon go to support the program and operations frctn Page 2 of the National Democratic Party. The remaining half is returned to the individual states where the donations originated for support of State and County Party oper ations. “Proceeds from this Tele thon are the lifeblood of our North Carolina efforts at voter registration, voter education, and Party operations,” said Sugg. A&T Approved For $630,000 Grant “IN 4 MM ^ TIME” 'W \\\hJs i g by ««v. I.M. WUte ^ THE SERVANT OF ABRAHAM Area Deaths : GREENSBORO JOSEPH HILL, 57, of Reid Street, and a former resident of High Point, died in N.C. Baptist Hospital, Winston-Salem. Funeral ser vice was conducted at the Haizlip Funeral Chapel, High Point, by the Rev. Belvin J. Jessup. Burial followed in Greenhill Cemetery. HAIZ LIP FUNERAL HOME was in charge of all arrangements. HIGH POINT MRS. OPHELIA COR BITT, of 1716 Kivett Drive, died in High Point Memorial Hospital. Funeral service was held at First Baptist Church by the Rev. F. L. Andrews. Burial followed in Carolina Biblical Garden. HAIZLIP FUNERAL HOME was in charge of all arrangements. GWENDORA YORK GIBSON, 8 year old daugh ter of Climpson and Elizabeth Johnson York Gibson, 1015 Granby Street, died in the Murdoch Center, Butner. Funeral service was held at the Olga Street Church of Christ by Brother Lonie Smith. Burial followed in Carolina Biblical Garden. HAIZLIP FUNERAL HOME was in charge of all arrange ments. MRS. MABLE M. KIR BY, 54, of 216 Underhill St., died in the High Point Memor ial Hospital. Funeral service was held at Mt. Vernon Bap tist Church by the Rev. F. 0. Sr. Burial followed in Greenhill Cemetery. HAIZ LIP FUNERAL HOME was in charge of all arrangements. LEXINGTON MRS. ERMA JEAN HAIRSTON, of 104-D Lon don Court, died at Lexington Memorial Hospital. Funeral service was held at Love Tab ernacle Church of God in Christ by the Rev. Curtis Cole. Burial followed in City Cemetery. MORRISON- STUDENVENT FUNERAL DIRECTORS were in charge of all arrangements. THOMASVILLE MR. JOHN ENSLEY CLARK, 81, of 800 John- sontown Road, died in Com munity General Hospital. Funeral service was held at Central United Methodist Church by the Rev. W. P. Cole. Burial followed in City Cemetery. THOMAS-HAIZ- LIP FUNERAL HOME was in charge of all arrangements. PFC HALL PERKNITE, 27, of 813 Bowerwood Drive, died in Womack Army Hos pital, Ft. Bragg. Full mili tary rites were held at Bet hel Tabernacle Holiness Church, the Rev. Donald Fant and the Rev. J. W. Flake officiating. Burial fol lowed in Carolina Biblical Garden. HAIZLIP FUNERAL HOME was in charge of all arrangements. “AS FOR ME, THE LORD HA TH LED ME IN THE WA Y TO THE HOUSE OF MY MASTER’S BRETHREN ” Genesis 24:27 We have heard in our time a great many things said against human nature. Indeed, there is an immemorial tradition against its trustworthiness. Our humanity has descended to us wrapt in a cloud of scandal leagues in depth, which only the wind of regeneration can disperse. We have come to enterain serious suspicions of our honesty and of the honesty of our fellow men. Perhaps this mood is not altogether viithout reason. Our behavior and the behav ior of others have not always been true. On this ground of justifiable disappointment with ourselves and our friends we have come to think meanly of human nature. The er rors, the follies, the vices, the crimes, and the sins of men are laid at the door of human nature. That is the fountain of all our woe. Corrupted in Adam, or in our pre-human ancestors, or in the polluted stream of vast and regular inheritance, we have come to think there is no health is us. Nothing good is to be expected for mankind until this corrupted humanity is renewed, re-created, glorified in God. It requires some courj^e to question the truth of this tradition in the face of all the weaknesses, vices, crimes, and inhumanities that seem to support it. These terrible things are here; but they should be counted, not against human nature, but against the abuse and outrage of it. When we complain of the mysterious order of the world, when we arraign the dumb indifference of the cosmos to human need, when we confess to a great moral disappoint ment as we survey the law of life and death under which we exist, we are searching in the universe for something as good and high as the soul of man. When we look for God, we look for the face that answers to our face and that is, infi nite, for the nature that corresponds to our nature and that is eternal. When we look for God, we look for something, for some one, worthy of the complete love and the perfect trust of our humanity. We condemn ourselves and others, we arraign the cosmos, we seek God, because our nature is great and high; our nature is great and high because God is evermore in it. This is what regeneration means; it is the renunciation of the godless life as false to our humanity; it is the affirmation of the life in God as the truth of our . existence as men. The twenty-fourth chapter of the Book of Genesis is one of the loveliest storeis ever written by the hand of man. Those of you who are familiar with it will wish to read it again. Those of you who have never read it have in store a delightful experience. The chapter is complete in itself. Every word in it is as pure as a dewdrop, and the whole story shines with the peace and lofty light of a star. Every lover of youth must feel the beauty of it, the delicacy of it, its exquisite and rare touch. Every one who reveres noble parenthood must feel its pathos and dignity. ACROSS 1. Drinking cups 5. Tough fiber 9. Biblical mount 10. Banish 12. Cavities (anat.) 13. Flower 14. German, (abbr.) 15. Beer ingredient 17. Thorium (sym.) 18. Spoken 20. Perform 21. Sound, as a dove 22. Othello's adviser 24. Foot covering 25. Tantrums (colloq.) 28. Copied 29. Sound, as a clock 30. Disen cumber 31. Pronoun 32. England's Duke of 35. Half an em 36. Broad 38. Tree (P.I.) 39. Dangerous woman 41. Conscious 43. Drench 44. Domesti cates 45. Seines 46. Old 'W'orld lizard DOWN 1. Collier 2. Not instructed 3. Fish 4. Thailand 5. Greeting 23 6. Egress 7. Part of an 24 inch 25, 8. Subdivision 26, of police 27, 9. Pudding starch (E.I.) 31, 11. Rever- 33 berates 34 y«ur tlairtt Took as 10 ajR. Disem bark Suffo- sot ponn M.AS Oktt tot WATER-STIKS OFFER 375 KINOS HWY. IMITKTOWN, N.y. 11717 eating: (abbr.) 36. Compass point 37. Dines 40. Regret 42. Woe (dial. var.) Judgment Palm (Braz.) Nostrils Digits JiMmy hvites you to listen to 132 to 3 p m- WC06 Themoreyoolisteiiithebetteritsounds. Listen for fun and games! uaaeoQaoopooocxaBcaDBi 2 3 4 s 6 7 i 9 10 II 12 15 i6 17 18 i9 20 21 d % 22 25 25 26 27 28 29 iO SI 52 IS S6 i7 3H 39 hO kl kZ % •ts kb KADUTC THE DEADLINE for ncwS an4 pictures to appear bi the TRIBUNAL AID is THURSDAY Material arrivinR at this newsitaper afterwards ^ be published the following week. MAIL TO: THE TRIBUNAL AID P. O. iBcix 921 High Point, N.C. 27261 DID YOU KNOW? Less than 1% of newspaper advertising dollars is being spent in the Black Press olthough Blacks represent 11% of the notion’s work force? GREENSBOkO - A&T State University has been approved for a $630,000 grant to assist with the devel- opinent of several new aca- mic programs, a new re cruitment effort, and improve ments in its registration office and planning department. Announcement of the grant from the U.S. Depart ment of Health, Education and Welfare, was made by Dr. Levris C. Dowdy, chancellor. Dowdy said the grant was supplementary to an earlier one made by HEW, giving A&T $2.63 million in AIDP funds for the next four years. He said the new grant and the entire AIDP program will be administered by Dr. Willie T. Ellis. Ellis said the new funds will be used to upgrade the Dies In Continued from Page 1 Work Educators, the National Council of Social Workers, and the American Association of University Women. She had served as a con sultant during the two-week period prior to her death at the University of South Caro lina School of Alcohol and Drug Studies and at Norfolk (Va.) State College to assist in the establishment of a Department of Gerontology. She was selected to appear in the Personalities of the South and in the Distinguished Young Black Americans pub lications in 1972. Several of her articles have appeared in journals in her field. At the time of her death, she had an article pending for inclu sion in the October 1975 in formational series of Social Casework. capability of the university’s Department of Industrial Technology, to implement a new cooperative food science program between A&T and the North Carolina State University at Raleigh; and to initiate a new interdisciplinary program in mass communica tions. Included in the Industrial Technology project will be the development of a metro logy and quality control laboratory so students can gain experiences studying the behavior of metals under environmentally controlled conditions. The new food science program is designed to expand career opportunities of minor ities in the food industry. The program will be operated through the school of Ag riculture. In the mass communica tions, program the depart- Continued on Page 5 Denture problems? OraFix holds dentures better because It spreads better. Tests prove OraFix" spreads better than the other leading denture adhesives — cream or plastic. Other adhesives can leave gaps between dentures and gums. So food particles and air can get in causing dentures to slip. But OraFix spreads tjetter so it can fill even tiny gaps. Result? OraFix seals and holds dentures tight. ORAFIX, EVERYDAY, FOR THE SEAL OF CONFIDENCE.« We carc... HAIZLIP FUNERAL HOME INC 206 4th St. - High Point - 882-41,31 108 Church St. - Thoma.svillc - 476-7472 1 ^et^indonii’ JKWILBIIS IVMI ^ulity Costs No More....Often Less Beamon’s Grocery 601 Vail St. Thomas Fuller, Proprietor Fresh Moots Neck Bones Pork Feet Turkey Necks Collords Tirnip Greens mm
The Tribunal Aid (High Point, N.C.)
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July 23, 1975, edition 1
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