Yale Chaplain
Morgan Orator
BALTIMORE , Md. The Rev.
William S. Coffin, chaplain at
Yale University, spoke on “The
Racial Problem The Christian
Prospective” at the Morgan State
College Christian Council Dinner
recently.
The Rev. Coffin, one of the
original seven “Freedom Rid
ers” whose conviction in 1961
to 30 days at hard labor was
reversed by the IT.l T . S. Supreme
Court, Monday, has been on
the Morgan campus since Sun
day as main speaker in the
Religion in Life Program.
“Prejudice is universal and in
one or mere forms it is found in
all of us,” Mr. Coffin stated. He
said the “roots of prejudice are
deep and very hard to trace.
"Prejudice has to be understood
in terms of man’s insecurity. He
needs redemption before education
. . . not until the heart is in the
right place can you begin to func
tion ...” he said,
The Rev. Mr. Coffin said
that “you can’t legislate mor
ality, but you can regulate the
conditions more conducive to
morality.”
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He compared his conviction by
the Alabama Court on charge of
“disturbing the peace” with the
statements of gangster leader, A1
Capone, who often said, “We don’t
want no trouble,” (As long as
someone else goes on paying.)
A new modified life insurance
plan will be available to all GI
term insurance policyholders after
May 1. 1965. It will have a fixed
premium which does not increase
as does term insurance.
i&tOid TidTWV
“The modern parent has to
spare the rod—so Junior can
dde around in it,”
"LIBBY ” KOOir 1 Z RLCc.lv>-.: :> u.i i t.-v- r riOm Oianamg o ...rs.
Elizabeth Konntz. president-elect NEA-DCT , as she receives the presentation of luggage by Dr.
Lafayette Parker, immediate past president of the North Carolina Teachers Association. At left, in
the background. is Mrs. Mary Dawson, editor. The National Elementary Principal magazine. Mrs.
Dawson spoke following the banquet as a substitute for Dr. Mary H. Scott, Friday, April 9.
Bennett Prexy Dr. Willa B. Player
Now On A Tour Os Korea And Japan
GREENSBORO —Dr. Willa B.
Player, president of Bennett Col
lege, left last week for a six-week
trip to Japan and Korea made
possibe by a fellowship and travel
grant from the Carnegie Coopera
tion of New York.
Among the places that she
will visit are Tokyo. Nagoya,
Hiroshima ar.d Osaka in Ja
pan ami a number of cities in
Korea— Seoul among them
where she will spend five days.
Dr. Player's .specific interest in
/* V- ' I
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Homes from Si 1.000.00 To
517.000.00
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baths, storage room and util
ity room, kitchen and dining
area with a spacious living
room.
$16,500.00
Semi-Split, three bedrooms,
living room, kitchen and din
ing :- rea, one bath.
$12,000.00
Ranch type home, three bed
rooms, one and half baths
kitchen and dining area, liv
ing room.
$12,750.00
Henry Brown or Samuel Hewitt,
will be at the Sales Office each
Sunday from 1:00 p. m. to 6:30
p. sn. to discuss home ownership
with you.
1100 BUNCHE DRIVE
Sales Office
Exclusive Sales Agent:
JOHN W.
WINTERS & CO.
507 E. MARTIN ST.
828-5786
BUILDERS:
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4700 YADKIN ST.
787-1231
W. R BURNHAM, President
women's education in Japan will
lead her to the campuses of some j
of the major institutions there j
where she will have an opportuni- j
ty to «alk with administrators, sac
u /■> i i rour rr.eiitbers of the Bennett
College modern dance group meet members of the Ballet Chaffee
dance group or New York C>ry following their performance at the
Greensboro Institution, last week. Students, left to right are :
Misses Rulene Molock of Vienna, Md.; Claudia Hubbard (par
tially hidden ) of South Hill Va.; Norma Hester, of Thomasivlle,
Ga.. and Barbara James, of Charleston S. C.
Banking in Braille
NEW YORK (CFN) —For the first time in the long his
tory of banking, blind depositors can have as much privacy
in handling cheeking accounts as sighted people.
This advance, for the benefit ,
of blind people the v.-orld over, j
results from the invention of a
device for writing' checks in
Braille and script, and also a
system of rendering sta'te
ments of account in Braille.
".'toJawh-'
Keith M. Urmy, executive vice |
president of Chemical Bank.
New York Trust Company,
seated, a! left, opeife the hank’s
initial checking account *‘in
Braille” for Stanley Warten
hurg, director of employment
service* of the New York Asso
ciation for the Blind. Looking
on are Wesley D. Sprague, ex
ecutive director of the Associa
tion, left, and William S. Ben
chard, president of the bank.
Inventor of the checkwxiter
is Norman Henderson, 34-year
old officer’s assistant in the
credit division of Chemical Bank
New York Trust Company at
20 Pine Street, New York. An
application has been filed by
him with the U.S. Patent Office
in Washington for a patent to
be: assigned to the bank.
It was two years agrr, when
a blind young woman student at
the Julliard School of Music
visited Chemical’s office at 60th
; Street and Lexington Avenue,
ultv members and students.
She wil' return in time to make
her interim report to the execu
tive committee of the board of
trustees which will be meeting In
New York City on May 20.
asking: what the batik could da
to help sightless people to write
their own checks independently.
Challenged to find a solution by
Walter E. Flinch, assistant vice
president in charge of the office,
Mr. Henderson busied himself
at the nearby Lighthouse (New
York Association for the Blind)
to learn the tools of communi
cation used by blind people.
Working closely with Thomas
F. Gilmartin, blind administra
tor of training at the Light
house,“lnventor” Henderson de
vised a dozen or so experimental
check-writers. The most useful,
as proven with several blind de
positors, is a pair of hinged
aluminum plates, with cutouts
in the top one corresponding to
the blank lines on a standard
check and Braille cells for per
forating other parts of a check.
The device also has Braille
cells for the check stub so the
user can keep full records in
Braille.
Chemical New York also has
developed a system for render
ing monthly statements to blind
depositors in Braille. To facili
tate the handling of such ac
counts a central bookkeeping
j department has been estab
lished at the 60th Street and
Lexington Avenue office where
the staff has mastered Braille
reading and printing.
In announcing the Braille
: ckeckwritcr, William S. Een
| chard, president of the bank,
j said: “Chemical New York is
l pleased to offer the first oppor
] tur.ity for blind people to con
j duct their personal financial
j a •airs with the same privacy
j available to sighted people. As
j a public service, we shall, be glad
j to furnish the device at cost, ex
clusive of our development
expense, to other hanking insti
tutions anywhere in the world.*
United Negro College Fund
Opens $5 Million US Drive
PHILADELPHIA. Pa. —Meeting
in Philadelphia, Pk., against a
background of three days’ delib
erations, work seminars and lead
ership institutes, William T. Gos
sett, Chairman of the Board of
Directors of the United Negro Col
lege Fund. Inc. announced the op
ening of the UNCF's National
Fund. Inc. announced the opening
of the UNCF’s National Fund
Drive, thi year increased to a
goal of $5,174.000.
Citing the fact that from the
33 colteges of the United Ne
gro College Fund must come
. . . “the principal means of
education for young Negroes;
and in these (33) Negro col
leges between 60 and 90 per
cent of the doctors, clergymen,
teachers, lawyers, nurses and
leaders of the Negro commun
ity will be educated during the
years just ahead of us" . , .
Gossett stated that the in
crease in the Fund National
Goal from its 1964 figure of
53.000,000 to the 1965 $5,174.-
FLV TO KINGSPORT, TF.NX.
GREENSBORO—Two senior bus
iness education majors at Bennett
College, Misses Gloria Miller, of
Charlotte, and Alice Powell of
Lenoir, flew to Kingsport, Tenn.,
this week for employment inter
views with Eastman Kodak Co.
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THE CAROLINIAN
RALEIGH, N, C., SATURDAY, APRIL 17, 1965
090 goal has been approved by
the Directors of the United
Negro College Fund.
Gossett's announcement was
made at a luncheon where United
States Secretary of Commerce,
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| John T. Connor, was guest speak-
I er. The luncheon ended a three
i day Convocation of Presidents of
I the 33 member colleges and serv
i ad' to open the National Fund
1 Drive.
9